[scifinoir2] Peter Jackson takes rookie director under his wing for District 9

2009-08-12 Thread ravenadal
http://gaijeic.notlong.com

chicagotribune.com

Neill Blomkamp's 'District 9' wins over fanboys and Peter Jackson
The science fiction film tells the story of aliens who get stranded in South 
Africa

By Chris Lee

Tribune Newspapers

August 11, 2009

LOS ANGELES
clear pixel

-- In the docu-style, sci-fi thriller District 9, which arrives in theaters 
Friday, hundreds of thousands of aliens become stranded in South Africa after 
their massive spaceship comes to a standstill above downtown Johannesburg.

Unable to fix the craft, this massive population of tentacle-waving, 
exoskeleton-sheathed aliens eventually outstays its welcome; they become 
reviled by humans for burdening the country's welfare system, even though all 
they really want to do is go home. Corralled into District 9 -- a 
rubbish-strewn refugee camp that calls to mind Mumbai's septic squalor, 
captured to striking effect in Slumdog Millionaire -- they are segregated 
from the general populace by barbed wire. There, the film's sentient yet 
excitable aliens are denied such basic necessities as running water and are 
denigrated by native earthlings as prawns for their resemblance to 
Sasquatch-sized shellfish.

Given the film's real-life setting amid Soweto's teeming townships and its 
segregationist signage -- For humans only! Non-humans banned! read placards 
in the movie -- it's impossible not to correlate the aliens' predicament with 
recent South African history. And that's no accident. Call District 9 the 
world's first autobiographical alien apartheid movie.

Writer-director Neill Blomkamp grew up in Johannesburg during an era of white 
minority rule; later, memories of the apartheid government's social 
divisiveness and authoritarian control became the most powerful influence in 
shaping his creative vision.

It all had a huge impact on me: the white government and the paramilitary 
police -- the oppressive, iron-fisted military environment, Blomkamp said over 
breakfast recently in a Santa Monica hotel. Blacks, for the most part, were 
kept separate from whites. And where there was overlap, there were very clearly 
delineated hierarchies of where people were allowed to go.

Those ideas wound up in every pixel in 'District 9.' 

Arriving as one of the hottest properties at San Diego's recent Comic-Con, the 
movie wowed its fanboy premiere audience and set the TweetDeck alight with 
reports that District 9 is the real deal: one of the most original sci-fi 
films to come along in years.

It should boggle the imagination of anyone who sees the movie to discover, 
then, that for all its narrative assuredness and engrossing neo-realism, 
District 9 is the debut feature of a director who has not yet reached the 
tender age of 30. Moreover, despite showcasing more than 600 computer-enhanced 
shots of bizarro aliens, high-tech weaponry and crazy spaceship blastoffs -- 
much of it shot in cinéma vérité-style that one-ups last year's Cloverfield 
-- Blomkamp, 29, managed to shoot District 9 on a modest $30 million budget.

Those merits aside, however, Sony's decision to roll out the film during the 
competitive summer season boils down to three words attached to District 9:  
Peter Jackson presents. Jackson, the Oscar-winning writer-director behind the 
blockbuster Lord of the Rings franchise, was key in actualizing Blomkamp's 
vision for District 9, producing the film, arranging its independent 
financing and helping Blomkamp iron out kinks in the script.

He saw South African society -- both the good and bad of the society there -- 
and he wanted to put a science fiction spin on what he witnessed growing up 
because he's a science fiction geek, said Jackson, who had traveled from New 
Zealand to Comic-Con primarily to sing Blomkamp's praises. I really like the 
idea that here was a guy who was making a movie based on life experience, not 
just on some movie that he was a fan of. 'District 9' is not reflective of any 
movie that I can imagine. It's really very original, which I love about it, and 
that's totally Neill.

But before there was a District 9, Blomkamp was attached to Halo, a planned 
$145 million movie adaptation of the popular space age shoot-'em-up video game 
of the same name. In 2005, Jackson signed on to write the script for what would 
have been a joint production between 20th Century Fox and Universal, also 
serving as its producer with the intention of hiring someone young and new to 
direct.

Blomkamp pulled up stakes from Vancouver, Canada, to move to New Zealand and 
set to work at Jackson's production facility, Weta Workshop. He was just what 
we were after, Jackson said, one of these guys who lives and breathes film.

But after months of preproduction on Halo, the project fell apart. I don't 
know the specifics -- it was Universal and Fox duking it out, Blomkamp said. 
Blomkamp was ready to go home in defeat when a brief conversation with 
Jackson's partner and frequent collaborator, Fran Walsh, changed the course of 

Re: [scifinoir2] Peter Jackson takes rookie director under his wing for District 9

2009-08-12 Thread Amy Harlib

ahar...@earthlink.net
I AM SO THERE!
Amy

Subject: [scifinoir2] Peter Jackson takes rookie director under his wing for 
District 9


http://gaijeic.notlong.com

chicagotribune.com

Neill Blomkamp's 'District 9' wins over fanboys and Peter Jackson
The science fiction film tells the story of aliens who get stranded in South 
Africa

By Chris Lee

Tribune Newspapers

August 11, 2009

LOS ANGELES
clear pixel

-- In the docu-style, sci-fi thriller District 9, which arrives in 
theaters Friday, hundreds of thousands of aliens become stranded in South 
Africa after their massive spaceship comes to a standstill above downtown 
Johannesburg.

Unable to fix the craft, this massive population of tentacle-waving, 
exoskeleton-sheathed aliens eventually outstays its welcome; they become 
reviled by humans for burdening the country's welfare system, even though 
all they really want to do is go home. Corralled into District 9 -- a 
rubbish-strewn refugee camp that calls to mind Mumbai's septic squalor, 
captured to striking effect in Slumdog Millionaire -- they are segregated 
from the general populace by barbed wire. There, the film's sentient yet 
excitable aliens are denied such basic necessities as running water and are 
denigrated by native earthlings as prawns for their resemblance to 
Sasquatch-sized shellfish.

Given the film's real-life setting amid Soweto's teeming townships and its 
segregationist signage -- For humans only! Non-humans banned! read 
placards in the movie -- it's impossible not to correlate the aliens' 
predicament with recent South African history. And that's no accident. Call 
District 9 the world's first autobiographical alien apartheid movie.

Writer-director Neill Blomkamp grew up in Johannesburg during an era of 
white minority rule; later, memories of the apartheid government's social 
divisiveness and authoritarian control became the most powerful influence 
in shaping his creative vision.

It all had a huge impact on me: the white government and the paramilitary 
police -- the oppressive, iron-fisted military environment, Blomkamp said 
over breakfast recently in a Santa Monica hotel. Blacks, for the most part, 
were kept separate from whites. And where there was overlap, there were very 
clearly delineated hierarchies of where people were allowed to go.

Those ideas wound up in every pixel in 'District 9.' 

Arriving as one of the hottest properties at San Diego's recent Comic-Con, 
the movie wowed its fanboy premiere audience and set the TweetDeck alight 
with reports that District 9 is the real deal: one of the most original 
sci-fi films to come along in years.

It should boggle the imagination of anyone who sees the movie to discover, 
then, that for all its narrative assuredness and engrossing neo-realism, 
District 9 is the debut feature of a director who has not yet reached the 
tender age of 30. Moreover, despite showcasing more than 600 
computer-enhanced shots of bizarro aliens, high-tech weaponry and crazy 
spaceship blastoffs -- much of it shot in cinéma vérité-style that one-ups 
last year's Cloverfield -- Blomkamp, 29, managed to shoot District 9 on 
a modest $30 million budget.

Those merits aside, however, Sony's decision to roll out the film during the 
competitive summer season boils down to three words attached to District 
9:  Peter Jackson presents. Jackson, the Oscar-winning writer-director 
behind the blockbuster Lord of the Rings franchise, was key in actualizing 
Blomkamp's vision for District 9, producing the film, arranging its 
independent financing and helping Blomkamp iron out kinks in the script.

He saw South African society -- both the good and bad of the society 
there -- and he wanted to put a science fiction spin on what he witnessed 
growing up because he's a science fiction geek, said Jackson, who had 
traveled from New Zealand to Comic-Con primarily to sing Blomkamp's praises. 
I really like the idea that here was a guy who was making a movie based on 
life experience, not just on some movie that he was a fan of. 'District 9' 
is not reflective of any movie that I can imagine. It's really very 
original, which I love about it, and that's totally Neill.

But before there was a District 9, Blomkamp was attached to Halo, a 
planned $145 million movie adaptation of the popular space age shoot-'em-up 
video game of the same name. In 2005, Jackson signed on to write the script 
for what would have been a joint production between 20th Century Fox and 
Universal, also serving as its producer with the intention of hiring 
someone young and new to direct.

Blomkamp pulled up stakes from Vancouver, Canada, to move to New Zealand and 
set to work at Jackson's production facility, Weta Workshop. He was just 
what we were after, Jackson said, one of these guys who lives and breathes 
film.

But after months of preproduction on Halo, the project fell apart. I 
don't know the specifics -- it was Universal and Fox duking it out, 
Blomkamp said. Blomkamp

[RE][scifinoir2] Peter Jackson takes rookie director under his wing for District 9

2009-08-12 Thread Martin Baxter
The line of your directors who'd like to be under that wing would probably wrap 
around Manhattan Island.





-[ Received Mail Content ]--

 Subject : [scifinoir2] Peter Jackson takes rookie director under his wing for 
District 9

 Date : Wed, 12 Aug 2009 15:08:37 -

 From : ravenadal ravena...@yahoo.com

 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com


http://gaijeic.notlong.com

chicagotribune.com

Neill Blomkamp's 'District 9' wins over fanboys and Peter Jackson
The science fiction film tells the story of aliens who get stranded in South 
Africa

By Chris Lee

Tribune Newspapers

August 11, 2009

LOS ANGELES
clear pixel

-- In the docu-style, sci-fi thriller District 9, which arrives in theaters 
Friday, hundreds of thousands of aliens become stranded in South Africa after 
their massive spaceship comes to a standstill above downtown Johannesburg.

Unable to fix the craft, this massive population of tentacle-waving, 
exoskeleton-sheathed aliens eventually outstays its welcome; they become 
reviled by humans for burdening the country's welfare system, even though all 
they really want to do is go home. Corralled into District 9 -- a 
rubbish-strewn refugee camp that calls to mind Mumbai's septic squalor, 
captured to striking effect in Slumdog Millionaire -- they are segregated 
from the general populace by barbed wire. There, the film's sentient yet 
excitable aliens are denied such basic necessities as running water and are 
denigrated by native earthlings as prawns for their resemblance to 
Sasquatch-sized shellfish.

Given the film's real-life setting amid Soweto's teeming townships and its 
segregationist signage -- For humans only! Non-humans banned! read placards 
in the movie -- it's impossible not to correlate the aliens' predicament with 
recent South African history. And that's no accident. Call District 9 the 
world's first autobiographical alien apartheid movie.

Writer-director Neill Blomkamp grew up in Johannesburg during an era of white 
minority rule; later, memories of the apartheid government's social 
divisiveness and authoritarian control became the most powerful influence in 
shaping his creative vision.

It all had a huge impact on me: the white government and the paramilitary 
police -- the oppressive, iron-fisted military environment, Blomkamp said over 
breakfast recently in a Santa Monica hotel. Blacks, for the most part, were 
kept separate from whites. And where there was overlap, there were very clearly 
delineated hierarchies of where people were allowed to go.

Those ideas wound up in every pixel in 'District 9.' 

Arriving as one of the hottest properties at San Diego's recent Comic-Con, the 
movie wowed its fanboy premiere audience and set the TweetDeck alight with 
reports that District 9 is the real deal: one of the most original sci-fi 
films to come along in years.

It should boggle the imagination of anyone who sees the movie to discover, 
then, that for all its narrative assuredness and engrossing neo-realism, 
District 9 is the debut feature of a director who has not yet reached the 
tender age of 30. Moreover, despite showcasing more than 600 computer-enhanced 
shots of bizarro aliens, high-tech weaponry and crazy spaceship blastoffs -- 
much of it shot in cinéma vérité-style that one-ups last year's Cloverfield 
-- Blomkamp, 29, managed to shoot District 9 on a modest $30 million budget.

Those merits aside, however, Sony's decision to roll out the film during the 
competitive summer season boils down to three words attached to District 9:  
Peter Jackson presents. Jackson, the Oscar-winning writer-director behind the 
blockbuster Lord of the Rings franchise, was key in actualizing Blomkamp's 
vision for District 9, producing the film, arranging its independent 
financing and helping Blomkamp iron out kinks in the script.

He saw South African society -- both the good and bad of the society there -- 
and he wanted to put a science fiction spin on what he witnessed growing up 
because he's a science fiction geek, said Jackson, who had traveled from New 
Zealand to Comic-Con primarily to sing Blomkamp's praises. I really like the 
idea that here was a guy who was making a movie based on life experience, not 
just on some movie that he was a fan of. 'District 9' is not reflective of any 
movie that I can imagine. It's really very original, which I love about it, and 
that's totally Neill.

But before there was a District 9, Blomkamp was attached to Halo, a planned 
$145 million movie adaptation of the popular space age shoot-'em-up video game 
of the same name. In 2005, Jackson signed on to write the script for what would 
have been a joint production between 20th Century Fox and Universal, also 
serving as its producer with the intention of hiring someone young and new to 
direct.

Blomkamp pulled up stakes from Vancouver, Canada, to move to New Zealand and 
set to work at Jackson's production facility, Weta Workshop. He was just what 
we were after