GERRY'S LADIES: Gerard Butler forum italiano

300 - Interviste ed articoli

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*shaula*
view post Posted on 1/11/2006, 19:37




CITAZIONE (Chiara... @ 1/11/2006, 14:00)
Vorrei poterlo fare io..ma attualmente ho lo scanner fuori uso,quindi se tra voi c'è qualcuna che ha modo, farà un enorme piacere a questo forum!


Domani andrò in edicola e poi farò la scansione.
 
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*shaula*
view post Posted on 2/11/2006, 13:23




Da Ciak - Novembre 2006

UOMINI VERI


imageimage



imageimage

cliccare sulla pagina per ingrandire
 
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Roby66
view post Posted on 2/11/2006, 13:24




CITAZIONE (Chiara... @ 31/10/2006, 14:28)
Un'importantissima notizia per noi fans italiane!!Finalmente Ciak ha fatto un servizio su 300!!! (numero di novembre ragazze, accattatevillo !!! :lol2.gif: )
Tra poco nevica!! :lol2.gif:


Ok!..Seriamente...alla pagina 54 nel servizio:
UOMINI VERI
...La battaglia delle Termopili secondo 300,il kolossal innovativo dal fumetto di Frank Miller

CUOR DI LEONIDA

l'HO COMPERATO OGGI!!!!
C'E' L'INTERVISTA AL REGISTA DOVE RACCONTA COME GERARD SI SIA ACCAPARRATO LA PARTE SLATANDO SUL TAVOLINO DI UN BAR MIMANDO MOSSE DI GUERRA.....
HI HI HI HI HI
ESSERE Lì E VEDERE LE FACCE DEGLI AVVENTORI DEL LOCALE E DEL REGISTA!!!! :lol.gif: :lol.gif: :lol.gif: :lol.gif:
 
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Elcant
view post Posted on 2/11/2006, 13:37




Grazie 1000 Shaula, correrò in edicola a prenderlo!!
 
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view post Posted on 2/11/2006, 13:53
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8° Liv. TOP - Membro del comitato G.F.D.M.C.C.V. (Gerard Fai Di Me Ciò Che Vuoi)

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BRAVISSIME, CHIARA E SHAULA!!!!!
:clap: :clap:

FINALMENTE!!! Anche noi abbiamo il giornale che parla del film!!!!! :love2.gif:
 
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mrs butler
view post Posted on 3/11/2006, 14:36




Grazie per l'articolo. :kiss.gif:
 
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Brin14
view post Posted on 3/11/2006, 19:11




Pensavo al solito trafiletto che esce in questi casi...ed invece no!!!! La mia reazione è stata quella di saltare dalla sedia..infilarmi le scarpe..ed uscire di corsa, con tuta e felpa ancora addosso, per andare dal mio giornalaio(qui vicino, per fortuna...non ho spaventato molte persone con la visione di me in tuta, che corro mentre tremo dal freddo) ed accaparrarmi le ultime 2 copie(una per me, l'altra per la mia consorella Merenwen)...E pant,pant,pant...è mio.....

Grazie ragazze...
 
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Chiara...
view post Posted on 4/11/2006, 13:54




saltare eh!? :lol2.gif:

Edited by Chiara... - 15/1/2007, 14:46
 
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SindyPhantom
view post Posted on 5/11/2006, 11:49




Se c'è già una discussione così spostate il il topic, o se non va bene postato qui cancellatelo!

Ieri ho comprato ciak, e ho notato che c'è un articolo su 300! Una piccola intervista col regista. Volevo cercarla su internet e copiarla nel forum, ma ciak non ha siti :cry.gif: così ho ricopiato a mano...

Per gli attori inglesi è poco elegante avere un fisico molto curato, muscoloso> e questo per Zack Snyder; regista americano di 300, era un problema non indifferente. Nella violentissima battaglia delle Termopoli, dove 300 spartani andarono incontro a morte certa nel tentativo di fermare le potenti armate persiane, schiere di soldati si fronteggiano vestiti solo di elmo e perizoma. <Anche quando i volti sono nascosti, olevo che i corpi fossero quelli dei miei attori, così come l'abilità di combattere in estenuanti piani sequenza> 300 è la trascrizione fedele del coomic book di Frank Miller e ne ha mantenuto intatto lo splendore barbarico. <Ho scelto di seguire le orme della versione cinematografica di Sin City, l'opera famosa di Miller> aggiunge Snyder, <e realizzare il film interamente in studio, davanti a schermi verdi dove poi avrei inserito scenografie fastose ma volutamente finte. Il risultato credo sia sorprendente>.


E con gli attori come è finita?

Gli inglesi si sono convinti ad affrontare allenamenti seri e a lasciarsi depilare. Le statue greche sono così e volevo rispettarne l'iconografia. L'australiano David Wenham (Il Signore degli Anelli) sapeva che avremo girato in Canada e quando ha visto il pezzetto di stoffa che avrebbe indossato, si è seriamente preoccupato di beccarsi una polmonite. Gli ho dovuto assicurare che non sarebbe mai usicto dallo studio. Gerard Butller; lo scozzese in Il fantasma dell'Opera è Leonida. Voleva a tutti costi quel ruolo. Ci siamo incontrati in un bar di Hollywood e lui si è tolto la camicia ed è saltato sul tavolino per mimare posizioni da combattimento. Ero sbalordito come tutti i presenti ma Gerard si era aggiudicato la parte. Però non sapeva che ad attenderlo c'erano tre mesi di duri allenamenti.

Lei partecipava?

Mi allenavo con loro. Ho sempre fatto pesi. Quando "componevo" il cast mi guardavo ogni tanto allo specchio e mi chiedevo <Cosa mi mancherebbe...?>. Scherzo, recitare non fa per me.
Quarant'anni, quattro figli dal primo matrimonio e una nuova moglie con la quale ha formato una società dal suggestivo nome Cruel and Unsual Films, Zack si è affermato nel mondo della pubblicità e dei videoclip.
<Ho lavorato molto in Italia> ricorda <e quando ho fatto il primo dei miei film, L'alba dei morti viventi, pensavo che fosse importante staccarmi il più possibile dallo stile pubblicitario. I miei produttori sulle prime erano delusi: perchè strutturare un quotato regista di spot se le sue radici non si vedono? Ma li ho convinti ce era giusto così>.

Perchè tanta atenzione al corpo maschile?

Cominciamo col dire che c'è anche il bellissimo ruolo della regina Gorgo, che è Lena Headey. Ma è vero che la mia sensibiltà e il mio senso estetico sono quelli di un quindicenne e 300 rispecchia una fantasia adolescenziale di estrema forza virile e violenza. Non ci sono rottotesti politici, i persiani non sono gli inviasori moderni. Anche se nessun film può più sfuggire a una lettura politica, c'erano metafore più trasparenti in L'alba dei morti viventi. I persiani sono visti attraverso gli occhi carichi di odio degli spartani e li loro re Serse è una sorta di superuomo di quasi tre metri. Ma gli stessi spartani non sono degli esempi di virtù e moderazione, protesi sino all'esaltazione verso una onorevole morte in battaglia. Sarebbe interessante poter raccontare la stessa storia anche dal punto di vista dei "nemici".
 
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*shaula*
view post Posted on 11/11/2006, 10:59




Grazie Sindy, in effetti la notizia è già nell'altro topic.

Comunque grazie mille per aver copiato tutto l'articolo!

:kiss.gif:

Edited by *shaula* - 15/1/2007, 10:42
 
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*shaula*
view post Posted on 9/1/2007, 17:03




C'è questo articolo che è a metà con un'intervista (in inglese). Lo metto qui. Eventualmente lo sposteremo.

Articolo completo Filmstew

Ten Gets You 300
Despite the fat comments in Italy and some initial on-set snickers, there is absolutely no doubt that with 300, Gerard Butler claims his standing as an action star for the new millennium.
Friday, January 5, 2007 at 4:00 PM
By Daniel Robert Epstein

I was one of a number of online genre writers recently invited in Los Angeles and New York to view about 20 minutes of scenes from the upcoming movie 300 (Warner Bros., March 7th). I consider 300, which is the story of how an army of 300 Spartans was able to defeat 10,000 Persian soldiers in the year 480 B.C., to be graphic novel creator Frank Miller’s greatest work.

From what I’ve seen, Zack Snyder’s film perfectly translates to the screen Miller’s art and Lynn Varley’s color palette. But besides the surprise of how amazing the footage is, the big shock was how Gerard Butler looked. He seemed slim and calm, which is in direct contrast to how Butler was when I visited the set of 300.

At that time, they were just a few weeks from wrapping principal photography, with Butler still in full-on King Leonidas mode. When he sat down for the interview, he had a full beard and - even through his long sleeved coat - you could see his bulging, muscular arms. Normally, Butler speaks in soft tones, but in the spirit of Leonidas on this day, he barked out his answers as though he needed to speak as quickly as possibly in order to get back to killing Persians.

Turns out that is essentially exactly what Butler needed to do, because after the interview he was back into the thick of a battle scene. And what battle scenes they are! In the past, many directors have commented that overseeing a multi-million dollar movie shoot is like commanding an army. But 300 director Snyder is truly the general of this army of Spartans.

I’ve visited numerous movie sets, but there is nothing quite like the visceral thrill of seeing 40 men in full battle trappings, slamming their swords and shields against one another. Warner Bros was nice enough to let us peek in on number of other sets, including one associated with the leader of the Persians (Xerxes, played by Rodrigo Santoro). But the biggest shake-up was how disturbingly real a giant wall of dead Persians looked.

When I asked Butler about the kind of training regimen that was required for him to turn into a lean and mean Leonidas, he admitted that the spark was somewhat accidental. During a summer holiday in Italy before 300 pre-production began, people he didn’t even know would volunteer the opinion that he looked fat.

“That made me think that I had a bit of work to do,” he recalls during his recent chat with FilmStew. “My frame’s always been pretty good since the days of Attila (2001) and I’ve been fortunate that I’ve done various jobs that have required me to work my body.”

“But when I started training for this, I was probably at one of my lowest levels of fitness,” he adds. “So I felt like I had a mountain to climb. In fact, I did have a mountain to climb. I always work hard for my roles, but I think I trained harder for this than I did for any other role.”

Butler also dedicated a great deal of time during the making of 300 to the examination of the original Miller comics. He says that he and Snyder deliberately tried to emulate some of the incredible Leonidas stances and positions depicted on the page.

“They are certain moments that if you read the comic book, they stick in your mind,” he explains. “But you’ve got to temper it. If you take certain things too far, it would just look ridiculous standing next to everybody else that you’re working with. It’s trying to find that fine line between believability and the comic book nature of the piece.”

“It’s all hyper-real and real at the same time,” Butler observes. “I paid a lot of attention to trying to get the power of this thing which you really feel when you read the graphic novel, but then at the same time without making it stiff and lending the guy some more humanity.”

“I think if you were to play him as severe as in the comic book - he almost kills his best friend and captain right at the start just for beating one of the soldiers - immediately you’d have an audience absolutely hating you.”

Butler got more than his fair share of injuries from 300, although not quite as many as the number of the film's stark title. Ironically, he says some of that was again due to what he did before things got rolling.

“I think I overdid my training at the start,” he admits. “That’s what I do; I dive into these things and I don’t always judge it very well, but I’m glad now. Anytime that I’m feeling like that, I imagine our king would be feeling that as well. Because I’m sure he’s had a few bumps and bruises in battles.”

“I got a scar on my knuckle from when I tried to spear somebody and ended up punching the shield,” he adds. “I’ve had a bunch of bruises: I pulled my hip flexor; I’ve got tendonitis on both my elbows and shoulders. I’ve gone through a lot in this film. After a couple months of that it really starts to take its toll, but to me, it’s all part of the experience.”

Butler looks simply smashing in his leather cod piece, despite a rather inauspicious costuming debut. When he first tried the prop on, he was not only the first actor to do so, but also the first actor to do so with only the accessory of a pair of trainer’s black socks to go with it.

“The crew was watching me walk past and I could see the smiles on their faces,” he recalls. “And I thought, ‘Is it going to be months of this?’ But the funny thing is, later on, they didn’t blink an eye. When you work so hard on your body and you’re proud of the way you look, I’m quite happy to show off.”

“I’m quite happy to walk about pretty much naked any chance I get, because I know as soon as this movie finishes, I’ll never look like this again. So I might as well enjoy being seen [like this] while I have it.”

Except for two brief moments, the entirety of 300 was filmed in front of green screens on a Montreal sound stage. And unlike Butler’s experience on The Phantom of the Opera, where he had the luxury of retiring to his underground lair and the company of dancers and spectator extras, here it was along the lines of standing next to one fake rock and looking into the eyes of an army that isn’t there.

“You’re talking to an army of 300 that might only be made up of about 10 guys,” he reveals. “Sometimes it’s 40 guys, but it just depends on the shot. What I’ve often learned as an actor is you don’t necessarily trust what you’re feeling inside because often when you’re performing, especially in this environment, it doesn’t feel as truthful as it does in other films. That makes it more interesting, because you have to go to different places.”

“Sometimes I found myself doing a performance in theatre or film where in my head I thought it was just awful, but people later tell me it’s the best they have seen me do,” Butler continues. “So I’ve learned not to trust what is going on in my head. The other thing is in a movie, you do a performance and it feels one way, then you see it and it comes out so differently.”

“It’s challenging and different and fresh, and doing it without the advantage of full sets makes it in some ways different, slightly to the left or right of what is real and what is normal. All that adds to the film’s slightly unnatural feel.”

Given all this, it’s hard to think of a better preparatory routine than the one that Butler followed in Los Angeles for 300. In addition to about four hours of straight training every day with his own trainer and a Warner Bros. taskmaster, the actor spent two hours in a San Fernando Valley building with no air conditioning, practicing his sword fighting skills.

“That was a good way to lose weight, because I sweated so much there,” he says. “But it’s taken its toll on my body I have to say. I really feel it. It’s as much mental endurance as physical endurance. And I also knew that when you take a look at the way Leonidas has to braid his hair [in the film], it requires a big body underneath that hair.”

“No matter how strong I was, it wasn’t going to work if you saw a skinny body underneath this hair,” Butler insists. “So I knew I had to get big and strong for that as well.”

Butler says that the stuntmen he worked with on 300 are the best he’s ever had the pleasure of collaborating with. A key element when you consider the weight of the sword and shield, and the fact that after twelve hours, even a cape starts to feel heavy.

“It’s not just in terms of the stuntmen’s incredible talent, but also in terms of how much they give you of their souls and how encouraging they are, how patient they are,” Butler explains. “I feel that I’m doing a pretty good job with the action in this film, but it’s due to this incredible training that they’ve given me.”

“However good I look on screen, they make me look ten times as good as I actually am,” he suggests. “When you watch the scenes back in playback, you’re like, ‘Holy sh*t, I look like a monster.’ I know I’m being pretty tough, but I know I’m not being that tough.”

Although Butler did read a number of books on war, generals and the philosophies of ancient battle, he confesses much of his Leonidas research was done on-set on a daily basis, supported by the surprising accuracy of Miller’s comic book. “It’s finding that fine line between this man’s absolute brutality and that he’s a hero that pushes the definition of hero to the edge,” says Butler.

“Sometimes you might feel that the Spartans are the bad guys because we kick so much ass the whole way through the movie. We’re not just killing them but we love it. This is what we were born and bred to do, and I really wanted to put that aspect into the movie.”

Edited by *shaula* - 9/1/2007, 17:27
 
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Chiara...
view post Posted on 9/1/2007, 17:58




Altro articolo: ehi!questo ci riguarda in parte...
Ten Gets You 300
Author: Daniel Robert Epstein

Despite the fat comments in Italy and some initial on-set snickers, there is absolutely no doubt that with 300, Gerard Butler claims his standing as an action star for the new millennium.

I was one of a number of online genre writers recently invited in Los Angeles and New York to view about 20 minutes of scenes from the upcoming movie 300 (Warner Bros., March 9th). I consider 300, which is the story of how an army of 300 Spartans was able to defeat 10,000 Persian soldiers in the year 480 B.C., to be graphic novel creator Frank Miller’s greatest work. From what I’ve seen, Zack Snyder’s film perfectly translates to the screen Miller’s art and Lynn Varley’s color palette. But besides the surprise of how amazing the footage is, the big shock was how Gerard Butler looked. He seemed slim and calm, which is in direct contrast to how Butler was when I visited the set of 300. At that time, they were just a few weeks from wrapping principal photography, with Butler still in full-on King Leonidas mode. When he sat down for the interview, he had a full beard and - even through his long sleeved coat - you could see his bulging, muscular arms. Normally, Butler speaks in soft tones, but in the spirit of Leonidas on this day, he barked out his answers as though he needed to speak as quickly as possibly in order to get back to killing Persians. Turns out that is essentially exactly what Butler needed to do, because after the interview he was back into the thick of a battle scene. And what battle scenes they are! In the past, many directors have commented that overseeing a multi-million dollar movie shoot is like commanding an army. But 300 director Snyder is truly the general of this army of Spartans.

I’ve visited numerous movie sets, but there is nothing quite like the visceral thrill of seeing 40 men in full battle trappings, slamming their swords and shields against one another. Warner Bros was nice enough to let us peek in on number of other sets, including one associated with the leader of the Persians (Xerxes, played by Rodrigo Santoro). But the biggest shake-up was how disturbingly real a giant wall of dead Persians looked. When I asked Butler about the kind of training regimen that was required for him to turn into a lean and mean Leonidas, he admitted that the spark was somewhat accidental. During a summer holiday in Italy before 300 pre-production began, people he didn’t even know would volunteer the opinion that he looked fat. “That made me think that I had a bit of work to do,” he recalls during his recent chat with FilmStew. “My frame’s always been pretty good since the days of Attila (2001) and I’ve been fortunate that I’ve done various jobs that have required me to work my body.” “But when I started training for this, I was probably at one of my lowest levels of fitness,” he adds. “So I felt like I had a mountain to climb. In fact, I did have a mountain to climb. I always work hard for my roles, but I think I trained harder for this than I did for any other role.” Butler also dedicated a great deal of time during the making of 300 to the examination of the original Miller comics. He says that he and Snyder deliberately tried to emulate some of the incredible Leonidas stances and positions depicted on the page.

“They are certain moments that if you read the comic book, they stick in your mind,” he explains. “But you’ve got to temper it. If you take certain things too far, it would just look ridiculous standing next to everybody else that you’re working with. It’s trying to find that fine line between believability and the comic book nature of the piece.” “It’s all hyper-real and real at the same time,” Butler observes. “I paid a lot of attention to trying to get the power of this thing which you really feel when you read the graphic novel, but then at the same time without making it stiff and lending the guy some more humanity.” “I think if you were to play him as severe as in the comic book - he almost kills his best friend and captain right at the start just for beating one of the soldiers - immediately you’d have an audience absolutely hating you.” Butler got more than his fair share of injuries from 300, although not quite as many as the number of the film's stark title. Ironically, he says some of that was again due to what he did before things got rolling. “I think I overdid my training at the start,” he admits. “That’s what I do; I dive into these things and I don’t always judge it very well, but I’m glad now. Anytime that I’m feeling like that, I imagine our king would be feeling that as well. Because I’m sure he’s had a few bumps and bruises in battles.”

“I got a scar on my knuckle from when I tried to spear somebody and ended up punching the shield,” he adds. “I’ve had a bunch of bruises: I pulled my hip flexor; I’ve got tendonitis on both my elbows and shoulders. I’ve gone through a lot in this film. After a couple months of that it really starts to take its toll, but to me, it’s all part of the experience.” Butler looks simply smashing in his leather cod piece, despite a rather inauspicious costuming debut. When he first tried the prop on, he was not only the first actor to do so, but also the first actor to do so with only the accessory of a pair of trainer’s black socks to go with it. “The crew was watching me walk past and I could see the smiles on their faces,” he recalls. “And I thought, ‘Is it going to be months of this?’ But the funny thing is, later on, they didn’t blink an eye. When you work so hard on your body and you’re proud of the way you look, I’m quite happy to show off.” “I’m quite happy to walk about pretty much naked any chance I get, because I know as soon as this movie finishes, I’ll never look like this again. So I might as well enjoy being seen [like this] while I have it.”

Except for two brief moments, the entirety of 300 was filmed in front of green screens on a Montreal sound stage. And unlike Butler’s experience on The Phantom of the Opera, where he had the luxury of retiring to his underground lair and the company of dancers and spectator extras, here it was along the lines of standing next to one fake rock and looking into the eyes of an army that isn’t there. “You’re talking to an army of 300 that might only be made up of about 10 guys,” he reveals. “Sometimes it’s 40 guys, but it just depends on the shot. What I’ve often learned as an actor is you don’t necessarily trust what you’re feeling inside because often when you’re performing, especially in this environment, it doesn’t feel as truthful as it does in other films. That makes it more interesting, because you have to go to different places.” “Sometimes I found myself doing a performance in theatre or film where in my head I thought it was just awful, but people later tell me it’s the best they have seen me do,” Butler continues. “So I’ve learned not to trust what is going on in my head. The other thing is in a movie, you do a performance and it feels one way, then you see it and it comes out so differently.” “It’s challenging and different and fresh, and doing it without the advantage of full sets makes it in some ways different, slightly to the left or right of what is real and what is normal. All that adds to the film’s slightly unnatural feel.” Given all this, it’s hard to think of a better preparatory routine than the one that Butler followed in Los Angeles for 300. In addition to about four hours of straight training every day with his own trainer and a Warner Bros. taskmaster, the actor spent two hours in a San Fernando Valley building with no air conditioning, practicing his sword fighting skills. “That was a good way to lose weight, because I sweated so much there,” he says. “But it’s taken its toll on my body I have to say. I really feel it. It’s as much mental endurance as physical endurance. And I also knew that when you take a look at the way Leonidas has to braid his hair [in the film], it requires a big body underneath that hair.” “No matter how strong I was, it wasn’t going to work if you saw a skinny body underneath this hair,” Butler insists. “So I knew I had to get big and strong for that as well.” Butler says that the stuntmen he worked with on 300 are the best he’s ever had the pleasure of collaborating with. A key element when you consider the weight of the sword and shield, and the fact that after twelve hours, even a cape starts to feel heavy.

“It’s not just in terms of the stuntmen’s incredible talent, but also in terms of how much they give you of their souls and how encouraging they are, how patient they are,” Butler explains. “I feel that I’m doing a pretty good job with the action in this film, but it’s due to this incredible training that they’ve given me.”

“However good I look on screen, they make me look ten times as good as I actually am,” he suggests. “When you watch the scenes back in playback, you’re like, ‘Holy sh*t, I look like a monster.’ I know I’m being pretty tough, but I know I’m not being that tough.” Although Butler did read a number of books on war, generals and the philosophies of ancient battle, he confesses much of his Leonidas research was done on-set on a daily basis, supported by the surprising accuracy of Miller’s comic book. “It’s finding that fine line between this man’s absolute brutality and that he’s a hero that pushes the definition of hero to the edge,” says Butler. “Sometimes you might feel that the Spartans are the bad guys because we kick so much ass the whole way through the movie. We’re not just killing them but we love it. This is what we were born and bred to do, and I really wanted to put that aspect into the movie.”

“But at the same time also remembering that we didn’t start the war. We were being attacked and now we are going to make it as bloody and as much fun as possible. Because this is what we live for.”




------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

e ancora....

A change of scenes
Author: Jack Mathews

riporto solo la parte che ci interessa...
300 March 9

Adapted from Frank Miller's graphic novel and directed by Zack Snyder (2004's "Dawn of the Dead"), this is an epic re-enactment of the 480 B.C. Battle of Thermopylae, where a relative handful of Greeks blocked a mountain pass and delayed the invasion of a million Persian troops. With Gerard Butler. The flashy visuals look like "Sin City" meets "Gladiator."


 
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Chiara...
view post Posted on 9/1/2007, 18:13




e non è finita!..Ma questo su 300 sarà..pressocchè impossibile!

ComingSoon ha visitato il set

300: The Set Visit!
Source: Edward Douglas
January 5, 2007

It's been over a year since ComingSoon.net/Superhero Hype! visited the Montreal set of director Zack Snyder's 300, based on the graphic novel by Frank Miller. In that time, Snyder has kept busy doing all of the editing and computer processes used to recreate the distinctive look and feel of Miller's original work. For those who hadn't been following Miller's career at the time, he created "300" during a break from his "Sin City" mini-series, basing the tale on the story of the 300 Spartans who held off an army of thousands of Persians at the Hot Gates at Thermopylae.

Back in December '05, we weren't really sure what to expect. It would be months before we'd see any of the trailers or footage pop up at San Diego Comic Con and on the 'net. At that time, Zack Snyder was primarily known for his remake of Dawn of the Dead, a fun little gorefest, but it seemed very ambitious to try to bring Frank Miller's 300 to the screen, especially so soon after the success of Miller's own Sin City earlier that year.

Using that film as a blueprint, Snyder decided that the best and cheapest way to capture the look of Frank Miller's work was to have all the actors shoot their scenes in front of a green screen and then add the backgrounds later using computers. He hired actor Gerard Butler to play Spartan King Leonidas, who leads his men into a seemingly impossible battle, and Lena Headey as his wife Queen Gorgo.

Over the course of our day on set--day 41 of a presumably grueling 60-day shoot--we were escorted around the huge complex, being allowed into every corner and facet of the production process, as well as seeing one of the film's fantastic battle sequences being shot right in front of our eyes. The attention and respect the entire production was paying to Miller's work was evident by the numerous copies of the graphic novel that we would see in every department we visited.

Before our tour began, we were shown a few examples of how the film would be produced. Two panels from Miller's graphic novel were on the wall next to their respective storyboards, a picture taken of the scene on the green screen set, and then a final scene after the computerized visual treatment.

The Weapon Room

The first stop on our journey into the world of Miller's Spartan epic was the props room, which may as well have been called "the weapon room" since it was mostly filled with the swords, shields, and spears that would be used to recreate the battle scenes from the graphic novel. Our host for this section of the tour was propsmaster Annie Carpentier, who told us that not all of the weapons and shields we saw would be used for actual battle. Much of them were decorative, being lighter than normal shields to be carried by the actors during the non-fighting scenes, and of course, a lot of the flying arrows and spears would be created later using CG animation. Still, they spent two months in preproduction constructing over 125 shields, 250 spears and 75 swords for the different battles, although Annie admitted that they recycled some of the weapons used in Troy and Alexander, two other historic war epics from Warner Bros., in order to save some time and money. All of the shields and weapons would be made to look more worn as the film progressed to show the damage from swords and arrows. As Zack would tell us later, everything had to be painted differently than how they would appear on screen due to the special color treatment the entire film would be put through in order to make it look more like a Frank Miller comic. (More on that later.)


The Fine Line Between Training and Torture

Something that's not often covered in set visits is the training regiment of the actors and stuntmen and for 300, it had to be pretty intense because everyone involved in the battles had to be in the type of shape and fitness expected of a Spartan warrior. Because the Spartans wore very little clothing (calm down, ladies!) there's no way to really hide their physique, so with that in mind Zach hired Mark Dwight, a former mountain climber, with his mission to forge his actors, stuntmen and even some of the crew into a cohesive, physically-fit group.

Mark Dwight is a muscular fast-talking guy with a personality more like Henry Rollins than Jack LaLanne, who was obviously very passionate about his unique fitness regimen. He told us that 300 was his first Hollywood film, since he usually trains martial artists and cage fighters with a program that has his victims… er… clients lifting and dragging heavy objects, climbing, jumping and pushing themselves to their limit. The rigorous program involves a lot of teamwork, a bit of competition and more than a bit of "suffering and vomiting." That being said, Mark's #1 rule was that nobody gets hurt and that egos be left at the door, which was the case as the film's star, Gerard Butler, would often be training along with the stuntmen.

Not one to slack off while cast and crew suffered for his art, Zack Snyder joined his men in the training regimen himself. As we'd see later, it probably came in handy while filming, because Snyder likes to do a lot of his own camerawork. You can see some of the crazy tests the men were put through in the videos on the website for Dwight's company Gym Jones. You might even spot Zack in some of those videos, believe it or not.


Horses, Wolves, Immortals and Unfortunate Scouts

The next stop on our journey through Snyder's ambitious production was a visit to the Creature FX department, where we were handed over to Mark Rappaport, the creature FX supervisor who had also worked on "The Chronicles of Narnia," and Chris Bridges, one of his team. Although a lot of the film's visuals would be created using computers, the department had to create a lot of realistic creatures to interact with the actors in front of the green screen.

Usually, their workshop would be busy with the 130 people working on Mark's team, but it was pretty quiet that day, filled only with all of the cool creations one might expect in a movie based on a Frank Miller comic. What jumped out immediately were the lifelike bodies lanced and mounted on spears, the points protruding from their mouths, which prominently adorned the top of the large, storage shelves. These were the Persian scouts that Leonidas used as an example for the impending Persian army. Mark told us they used likenesses of guys in the shops for the sculptures.

Even more impressive than the mounted scouts was the enormous animatronic wolf with fiery red glowing eyes that Leonidas would face as a youth. Requiring five people to operate it, the wolf was capable of twenty different facial features and sported "the most articulated tongue we've ever made," Rapaport declared with glee. They also had constructed a number of Persian Immortals, the beastly super-soldiers who would take on Leonidas and his men, to allow us to see what lay behind their eerie gold masks, something which isn't even shown in Miller's graphic novel. The crew had also built 13 mechanical horses that could be killed and flipped using spears, rather than worrying about injuring the real horses, but Mark said that a few of them were damaged while filming their scenes.

Part of the department's duties included the prosthetic and special make-up effects for characters like the sad hunchback Ephialtes and a satyr (half-man, half goat) that would take part in an orgy scene inside Xerxes' tent. For things like that, Mark's team worked alongside the film's regular make-up division, which is whom we were introduced to next.

Scarz!

We spent a bit of time lingering in the make-up department, where we could see many of the character designs and sketches used as reference for the special make-up. Most of them were done by costume designer Michael Wilkinson, though our tour was given by make-up supervisor Shaun Smith and make-up department head Scott Wheeler, whose team consists of 20 make-up artists.

The sketches included our first look at the hunchback Ephialtes, an amazing make-up job which takes over five hours to transform British actor Andrew Tiernan into the pathetic creature. We were shown a few photos of the process as it took place, and we gazed admiringly at sketches of the Persian executioner who has giant tusks for arms and designs for the gold-chained outfit worn by Persian king Xerxes, to be played by Brazil's Rodrigo Santoro, who recently joined the cast of "Lost." At the time, Santoro hadn't shown up to shoot his scenes, but his outfit would require full body make-up to recreate the distinctive way that Xerzes' skin gleaned to make him look more godlike. We also got to see the sketches for a giant "Über-Immortal" which wasn't in Miller's graphic novel, but was designed by Zack with (of all people) his tattoo artist, specifically for the movie. The giant would be played by a 7' 2" professional wrestler who looked a bit like Nathan Jones, the giant soldier that Brad Pitt kills at the beginning of Troy.

This was all very cool, but the most fascinating thing to see was the make-up department's special "scar room" where literally hundreds of different types of scars, made out of molded glue, were hanging on the wall, each one given a specific number so they could be applied to each of the actors using a specialized "scar by numbers" system to maintain continuity from one day to the next. We were told that the stuntmen, many of whom worked on "Pirates of the Carribean" and "The Matrix" films, could spend anywhere from 2 to 3 hours a day having scars and make-up applied to turn them into the various Spartan and Persian warriors.

Project Runway: Spartan Edition

Fortunately, there were one or two women along for the set visit, because they probably were more interested in the fashion segment of our tour, hosted by costume designer Michael Wilkinson, who showed us books full of images that inspired the costumes for Queen Gorgo, the Oracle and other characters, including pictures of sculptures, museum displays and some taken from art books. Wilkinson's team would wind up making 600 to 700 costumes for the production, with Xerxes' gold-chain outfit being the most complicated, involving 33 fake body piercings. Michael told us that he was looking forward to seeing how the dance of the Oracle turned out, because they were going to shoot it in a special water tank to recreate her graceful movements; he designed for her an outfit made from a special polyester that would flow in the water as if it were silk.

Designing the World

The film's production designer Jim Bissell, the man behind the look of the cult classic The Rocketeer, gave us a comprehensive tour of his offices, which were filled with models and blueprints of the sets. We were told that many of them were based on sketches drawn by Zack himself, which were then realized inside the computer as 3D models.

Although the majority of the movie's backgrounds would be created in the computers, they still needed to build rough approximations of the landscape for the actors to walk across, building a number of reusable rock sculptures that could be modified and reused as needed. The largest actual set that was built for the production were the actual Hot Gates, which wouldn't even fit inside the studio's largest soundstage, so it was built outside. Otherwise, everything was done on the soundstage with fans used to create the outdoor feel. Jim's team even created a type of rubber dirt that would look real under the battling soldiers' feet but wouldn't hurt anyone when it started to fly. When we visited one of the green screen sets later, we'd see how that dirt and fake rocks were incorporated into the otherwise sterile setting. A lot of thought went into how to incorporate those sets into the computer process, though Jim restated that the plan was to try to make the movie look more like Frank Miler's stylish artwork than going for the realism that most other historic epics try to achieve.

Jim and Visual FX supervisor Chris Watts gave us a first-hand example of something called "The Crush," a color filtration process used on the entire film to give it the look of Lynn Varley's distinctive coloring from the graphic novel. It literally crushes certain colors out of the palette, leaving only the colors seen in the graphic novel.

Before getting back to work, Bissell brought us onto one of the soundstages where Xerxes' tent was being constructed. Following the Persian king's normal wont for extravagance, the enormous interior of the tent would be held up by pillars made out of gold with a solid gold staircase at the back of the tent, which Xerxes could walk down for full dramatic effect. Nearby, we could see the pieces of Xerxes' amazing golden throne that would bring Xerxes to his first meeting with King Leonidas before the start of their battle. We'd see this finished scene in a special presentation of footage from the film, which showed Xerxes' grand entrance on the throne, being carried by slaves whose backs were used by Xerxes as steps to dismount.

War is Hell

The day we visited the set, Zack was shooting an all-out battle scene with Butler and nearly 50 stunt men battling away, half as Spartans and the other as Immortals. Right there in the thick of it was Zack himself, carrying a heavy camera on his shoulder, getting up-close to a soldier being thrown into the air by another. We were told that there'd be a lot more warriors fighting once they're replicated using computers, since it would be cheaper than having hundreds of soldiers spending time in make-up and wardrobe.

Either way, it was a nice change of pace from the usual dialogue scenes we tend to watch being filmed, though it was hard to imagine what it might look like in the end, since it was all taking place in front of a green screen. Although the set was very green, there were a lot of seemingly real rocks everywhere and in the background, one could see an enormous stack of bodies, and the coolest thing of our visit, a giant wall built from large stones and Persian corpses, which looked just like the scene from Miller's graphic novel.

Zack probably had a good idea how the battles would turn out, because even before the film was greenlit, he assembled a group of stuntmen to shoot a 2-minute battle teaser to give Warner Bros. and the financiers some idea how the movie would look. We were shown the quickly-produced teaser, which hopefully will be included on the 300 DVD, if only for the cool way the WB logo turns into a soldier's shield. Were also shown a few finished scenes that would later be used for the various trailers. (The best scene is still the one that shows the Spartans pushing the Persian soldiers off the edge of a cliff.)

Over the course of the day, we had a chance to talk with Snyder, the film's producers including Zack's wife Debbie, actor Gerard Butler and "300" creator Frank Miller, who was visiting the set for the first time himself the day we were there. Hopefully, in the next two months leading up to the release of 300 on March 9, we'll try to post the best parts of these interviews.
 
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view post Posted on 11/1/2007, 14:46
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Questa è un' intervista, ma dato che è su 300, la metto qui.
Se è da spostare, la sposteremo. :wink.gif:


http://joblo.com


Scottish actor Gerard Butler has appeared in films like DRACULA 2000, ATTILA THE HUN, TOMB RAIDER 2 and the most recent rendition of PHANTOM OF THE OPERA. In 300, he plays the lead Spartan King Leonidas and word on the street is that this might be the film that catapults him to "Mel Gibson" status. I sure hope so, he's a great actor! We met up with the charismatic and good humored Butler on the set of 300 and and here's what he had to say about the physically and emotionally draining shoot.




Where was your body prior to making this movie and what you had to get to what we get to see in the film?

GB I let myself go a bit. I remember I got some comments whilst I was on holiday this summer in Italy about being fat. I didn’t even know so I had a lot of work to do. My frame’s always been good since the days of Attila the Hun and I’ve been fortunate in so much that I’ve had various jobs that have required me to work my body, but I was probably at one of my lowest (laughs) ebbs (?) so when I saw the training I think I trained harder for this than for any other role. There were times in the first couple of months when I was training about 6 hours a day. I trained with Mark and with my own trainer too. It's as much mental endurance as physical endurance but it's taken its toll on my body I have to say.

When I spoke to Terrence Stamp, he has played two comic book characters last year and about how to play the character, he said he very seriously took a look at the comic to try and figure out the way the guy moved between panels. I was very impressed. I was wondering if you’ve done anything like that?

GBAbsolutely. I spent a lot of time looking at the comic and so does Zack. We’ve done the same thing. I often find myself referring to the comic just to get a feeling of the mood he’s in, the position he’s in. and how he moves, but then you have to temper it with the fact that this isn’t a comic book, so you have to find that fine line between believability and the comic book. Hyper real and real at the same time. I pay a lot of attention to try to get that, the power of the pen when you read the graphic novel.

We were watching some before lunch, and it looks like it might be some fun up there with the swords and the shields and all that. Is it fun?

GBIt’s great. Listen it’s hard as well at the end of the day. I finished at 9 a.m. on Saturday morning, I was aching and my back, shoulders, all killing me. The cape starts to weigh heavy on you after 12 hours. It’s tough, but also so much fun, I wouldn’t change it for the world and I am working with the best stunt men I’ve ever worked with, and not just in terms of their talent, but also in terms of how much they give you of their souls and how encouraging they are, how patient they are. They’re amazing. They make me look ten times as good as I actually am.

Wearing the leather loincloth?


GB No, codpiece. (Laughs.) I don’t think about it. I’m quite happy to walk around naked any chance I get ‘cause I know that as soon as this movie finishes, it will all disappear again so I might as well enjoy it while I have it.

Did you read the script or the graphic novel first?

GBI read the script first and I then read the graphic novel 3 days after I read the script. It was about 5 months before I got involved with the film ‘cause the film wasn’t even greenlit at that point, but I had a fantastic phenomenon (?) meeting with Zack where he couldn’t keep me on my chair, I was like jumping like all over the place. I felt like every Spartan should be at least Russell Crowe, in terms of toughness.

After reading the script, where you surprised by the look of it, like when you actually saw …?

GBYes, I didn’t realize at first that it was all filming in a studio. But when I saw the teaser, it’s like….breaks off. The teaser explains the action more than anything, and when I saw that, after I had a great meeting with Zack, I wanted to take it to so many places that I wanted it to go. There are certain films, they choose you, but I think I chose this one.

In a film like Phantom you were able to physically touch the sets. Here there’s hardly nothing due to the green screen. Talk about that as an actor...

GBThis is definitely more challenging, I think. It is more different to experience the feelings that you would naturally experience just by being surrounded by the true environment, or as true an environment as possible in a studio, and in Phantom you had that. I had my lair downstairs, you know. I had those elements to look at, to feel, to touch. Whereas here, sometimes you’re just standing next to one false rock, and you’re looking at an army of a million Persians that aren’t there, there’s a blue screen. It makes it in some ways more interesting, because you have to go to different places, I feel I can change my approach in a subtle way, I just feel it changing naturally and I have to trust that.

Is it more like being in theater where you have to create the world around you?

GBYes, that’s a good point. Yes, it feels often like theater. The only one difference in theater, you get to tell the story from the start and when you’re in the middle of it, you’re not even thinking about it, you’re just there. I miss that, that’s a big difference between filming. It’s one of the constant things that I am always checking with myself, is getting that nice balance between the comic book character and the real person, or the theatrical element and the cinematic element and not pushing it too much either way.

Have you done a lot of research? Did you know the story before?

GBI knew the story, I hadn’t studied the story but I knew of the story. I did a bunch of reading into that, books on carnage and culture, books on war, on generals, on philosophies of battle, but most of my research was on a daily basis as I’m walking around being obsessed with the character that I’m playing.

Minor injuries going on? How have you done?

GBI got a scar on my knuckle here when I tried to spear somebody. I have a bunch of bruises, I have got tendonitis right now in both elbows and shoulders, I’ve gone through a lot in this film. I went from no training at all to training very hard. I overdid it at the start. I’m glad now, ‘cause anytime I’m feeling like that, I’m sure a king would be feeling like that as well, cause I’m sure he’s had bumps and bruises and sort of you know. It all works.

Thank you guys!

Edited by demrilla - 11/1/2007, 15:01
 
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Chiara...
view post Posted on 11/1/2007, 15:32




molto interessante... :lol2.gif: :sbav:

CanMag- 300 Muscle Men
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300

300 is the type of movie that makes you want to hit the gym harder. All those half naked, buff and bulky Spartans with their six pack abs fighting each other… They even show off a perfect moon lit butt shot, even though the film was shot entirely on a blue screen stage.

Interview: Zack Snyder on 300 Fitness
"That was difficult," said director Zack Snyder. "We had to brighten it a little bit, I gotta admit, when we were in the telecine. They composite it a certain way and then we have it, and then you've got to go, 'Okay, put a little power window on the butt and brighten it.' Debbie, my wife, was in the telecine going, 'you know, it's probably bright enough' or 'No, not bright enough' so I deferred to her a little bit for that. If it was up to me, it'd be super bright. No, just kidding."

As for the bodies in general, that was no special effect. "I had the guys train really hard. They hate me probably. I will be perfectly honest with you. There is a little bit of makeup, airbrushes to help some of the abs, but I've got to say, 99% is just sweat and muscle and caring. Because the actors really, Vince Regan, who plays the Captain, when he came to Montreal, he had no idea that he was going to be basically naked in the movie. I showed some of this footage in England and we were in London and I was talking about the movie, most of the actors in the movie are English. I told them, 'I cast English actors because they're notoriously health conscious people who love fitness over most other pursuits.' And that is totally not true as you know. So they love fish and chips and beer. They don't love turkey breasts and weights. So they really worked hard."



 
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