Category: Press

  • Ender’s Game London Q&A: Part 1

    Ender’s Game London Q&A: Part 1

    “No flash photography, or else very bad things will happen – like, I don’t know, your youngest sibling will be sent to Battle School, or something…”

    Craig Stevens stands on the stage at the Odeon Cinema, warming up the audience as we wait for the star-studded Q&A panel to take to the stage – as if we need any warming up. Harrison Ford, Asa Butterfield, Hailee Steinfeld and Sir Ben Kingsley’s names are met with a lot of cheering, along with joint applause for producers Gigi Pritzker and Bob Orci, and of course Gavin Hood, whose reimagining of Ender’s Game, Stevens reminds us, hits screens on October 25th in the UK.

    A surprisingly quiet cheer answers the question of how many book fans there are in the building – a lot of people are here primarily to catch a glimpse of the stars, it seems. We get an idea of age demographics when the presenter asks how many have come for Mr Ford and how many for Master Butterfield – Harrison’s cheer is louder, but Asa’s comes in at a slightly higher pitch.

    Within minutes, though, the ‘hyping up’ section of the evening is over, and seven pretty magnificent people walk onto the stage. The cast, as Stevens points out, reads ‘like a Who’s Who of Academy Award winners and nominees’.

    And now it’s time for the questions, submitted ahead of time by fans on Twitter. A lot of them are reiterations of things we’ve seen asked in previous interviews, but there are some really eloquent answers given.

    Here’s part one of the transcript. The rest should be up tomorrow!

    Ender’s Game was published nearly thirty years ago; why has it taken so long to become a massive motion picture?

    Stevens directs this to the two producers, who look at each other with wry smiles.

    Orci: Why’d it take you so long to get the rights to the book, Gigi? What happened?

    Pritzker: I had a nephew who read the book a long time ago and loved it, and this was a boy who had a hard time reading, so the fact that he read a book was shocking to me, and I decided I needed to read it as well. And it was a terrific book, he was right, and… it took me thirteen years to find Bob.

    Orci: And the technology didn’t fully exist, you know, the effects had to be great, it had to be wonderful, and audiences needed to be hungry for it, they’ve seen so many things that we’ve already seen. This book is very original, and hopefully audience will be satisfied by the fact that it’s nothing they’ve seen before.

    With the advancement of CGI, was [Ender’s Game] something that couldn’t have been made many years ago, is it now the right time to make this movie?

    Hood: I’m hesitant, in the presence of Harrison Ford, to say that something to do with science fiction couldn’t be made. [To Ford] And you spoke very eloquently on the way that the battleships were made in Star Wars… He’ll tell you all about that. But, you know, the point is that technology is something that… what’s happened is that we’ve reached the point now where visual effects really are so good that they can either be well used, or abused. You can slam visual effects all over a movie, and audiences go, ‘That’s really cool…i-is there a story in here anywhere?’ So what I love about Ender’s Game is that it does have fantastic visual effects, Bob’s absolutely right, we now can render the Battle Room, which fans love, in this beautiful photorealistic way – but it’s also a story that, at its heart, is about great characters, and great character interactions. So I hope you guys get two things, I hope you get fantastic visuals, and I hope that you still have the themes, and ideas, and challenges of the book. I hope the movie will be all that.

    Harrison, turning to you, then, you’re obviously a man who has worked in this genre for many years, so you’ve seen CGI grow and change. What are the fundamental differences that you saw, working now on Ender’s Game, that maybe you didn’t see, back in the late 70s and early 80s?

    Ford: Well, in the olden days, when I was there, we had sort of horse-drawn effects. You know, you put bits together, and then you made a physical prop. Now you create it in a computer. And that’s basically the difference. And both methods work, but computer graphic perhaps allows you a little bit more latitude. But it also allows you the potential, as Gavin mentioned, to exceed human scale, to get beyond, to overpopulate the screen in a way that confuses the eye, and the emotions. And I am convinced, by what I’ve seen, that we have not done that here. But it’s a great aid to imagination. And one of the best things about science fiction is the bandwidth of the imagination that you can use. I mean, a realistic film, on earth, only has a certain visual, a certain potential. Once you get into the future, it broadens. You can imagine things. And this book did imagine, twenty-eight years ago, things like the internet, touch-screen technology, drone warfare, all of which is now a part of our lives, for better or for worse. So there’s a lot of wisdom and understanding in the book, and, potentially, we’ve captured quite a bit of it.

    Hood: Thank you. I hope so.

    How was it for you, Asa and Hailee, then, working with this – venturing into the world of scifi? Obviously you had some physical work, but working with CGI as well?

    Butterfield: It was really exciting. Neither of us had done a film with this level of special effects or this level of CGI. When you’re hanging there, twenty feet off the ground, surrounded by green screen, and all you’ve got is the other actor, a metal star, and the wonderful Gavin Hood shouting instructions at you as to what’s going on, it’s a really interesting experience. And we honestly couldn’t do it without all of those instructions being shouted out. We had a lot of fun experimenting. Gavin had his, what we call ‘pre-vis’, which is what his idea was, what the film would look like, but nothing can compare to the final image.

    How familiar were you all with the book? We know that in America this is part of your curriculum now, at school, people read this book, but over here in the UK it wasn’t so known. Although this room knows it very well, right? [cheers.] We love it. So how aware were you, growing up with this book?

    Orci: I’m excited to read it. It sounds great. No, I read it in seventh grade when I was twelve years old, and I loved that it didn’t talk down to me, I loved that it celebrated intelligence, I loved that it had complicated themes, I loved that it was, you know, a good adventure. It kind of ticked all the boxes, for a twelve-year-old.

    Pritzker: I read it as an adult, and I loved that a thirteen-year-old boy and his aunt could sit and talk about those themes and those issues, and dig into something, and the fact that a book could inspire a conversations among generations was terrific to me.

    Kingsley: I wasn’t aware of it at all, until I met Gavin, […] and he had his laptop with him, and showed me all the beautiful graphics, talked me through what he intended for the film, and I realised, I wasn’t looking at the graphics, I just thought, this is a really unique guy: strong and passionate, he’s a great leader, and he had a very broad intelligence and imagination, so his map of the book is what I took as my map of the character, and the world that we were inhabiting. I know that Gavin struggled to adapt the book to screen, because the novel by definition is an internal process, and what we have to do here is massively externalise what’s going on in people’s minds and imaginations, and what they’re struggling with. So my first impression of it, and my lasting impression, will be Gavin’s interpretation of this clearly wonderful book.

    Butterfield: I read it just after I got the script, and I’m a massive fan of science fiction, so it was right up my street, and I loved it as much as I loved the story. For me, not just the character of Ender, but the whole world is so beautifully crafted in the novel, that I wasn’t sure how it could be brought to the screen, but Gavin has done it justice, and he’s done it amazingly.

    Gavin, when you’re adapting a book to a screenplay, it’s a book, as Sir Ben says, that’s going on internally. When you’re writing this, do you not think, ‘hang on, you can write this, but can you direct it?’ ‘I’ll just change that bit, this’ll be easier’?

    Hood: First of all, let me just say thank you to my fantastic cast for their kind words, because they… you don’t make a film on your own, I’m hugely supported by their talents, and the talents of people who aren’t here – the great visual effect supervisors, and so on. It’s a little embarrassing, but thank you so much. And we had a fantastic time, as you can tell. This wonderful family has, I hope, delivered something that all you fans will like. Yes, in terms of adapting the book to the screen: it is a very internal journey, but also it’s a fantastic, sort of, spectacle. The Battle Room, which is just a beautiful vision to create something about, the final simulation battle – they were challenging, those environments, because when you’re sitting there with a book, you know that… I hope this doesn’t come across the wrong way, but it is a black box room. And it reads brilliantly in all the battles. But suddenly, I’ve taken on this job, and I was all keen, and I got there, and I… oh, boy. Now I have to actually decide what it’s going to look like. If it’s a black box, why am I up in space? So you know, inspiration comes from crazy places, but I remember thinking, okay, well it’s a huge glass sphere. I hope you guys will forgive me, and embrace this, because here’s the thinking: I’m in space. I need a huge glass sphere, so that when you jump out… you really feel like you’re in space, you look up, and the sun’s there, and the earth’s down below. And I took this idea to Gigi and Bob, and I was so enthusiastic, and they go… ‘budget, budget, budget…how are we going to do this?’ But they immediately jumped on board, and we developed it, with the wonderful concept artists and wonderful production designers, Ben Proctor and Sean Haworth, built this thing out, and then took it out into the world as a 45-second teaser piece – the battle room was the first thing we developed – and took it to can, and you know, it wasn’t made in a big studio. Big studios were, I don’t know, afraid to make this film for many years. Tried, gave up. And so we had to raise the money from places like England, and France and Germany, and all over the world, and—

    Orci: I sold my house.

    Hood: I beg your pardon?

    Orci: I sold my house.

    Hood: …so, it was, um, a great opportunity to get an international group of people to…

    [We’re all still laughing at Orci, and Gavin kind of trails off at this point and laughs himself.]

    Hood: …That’s my cue to shut up.

    He had such a lovely house. Hailee and Asa, let’s talk more about your characters, because they’re at the real heart of this. We’ve talked about the CGI, and we’ll talk more about the physical elements in a moment, but it’s your relationships, and the journey that you go through – talk about the character relationships that you guys have. 

    Steinfeld: When you meet my character, Petra, you meet her at a time when you know she’s been at the Battle School for quite a while. And when you meet Ender, he’s instantly shut down, he’s instantly doubted by everybody else at the Battle School, because you look at somebody at that point and it’s, ‘how are they going to catch up with us? How is he nearly going to be as good as us? We’ve been here forever, we’ve worked so hard.’ Especially when he’s coming in, and our mentors are already telling us that he’s the best of the best. And you can assume that my character, being one of very few girls in the Battle School, and being the only girl in the Salamander Army, you get quite a bit of that doubt in her to, from all the people around her. So when they meet each other, they’re really not looking for anything but a friend. They’re placed into this world where they don’t know who they can trust and who they can’t trust, or, you know, they don’t really have anybody to look to. So when they meet each other, they find that within each other, and it’s a really special friendship.

    ~

    Part Two and hopefully some pictures coming tomorrow!

    As a side note, it’s interesting what Hailee says here about girls in Battle School. We’ve been thinking it’s a lot more gender-balanced in the movie than in the book, from shots we’ve seen of Dragon Army, but Hailee implies here that female students are still a rarity. Maybe Dragon ends up with a higher ratio of girl soldiers because of the ‘misfit’ category all the Dragons fall into? Interesting!

  • VIDEO: Sir Ben Kingsley on Acting with Tā Moko

    VIDEO: Sir Ben Kingsley on Acting with Tā Moko

    Sir Ben Kingsley spoke with HeyUGuysUK in London tonight about what it was like for him to act with Maori tā moko on his face.

    I didn’t feel any conscious difference on my face and it’s not a tattoo on my arm that I can look at on my arm and sort of enjoy or have a rapport with but […] it changed the way the other actors looked at me and that was really interesting, how they were trying to decipher my face and wonder what it meant and how dangerous and threatening it was. It affected them more than it affected me. It’s good, it was great.

    Source: HeyUGuysUK

  • VIDEO: Gavin Hood on Why ‘Ender’s Game’ Could Be Made

    VIDEO: Gavin Hood on Why ‘Ender’s Game’ Could Be Made

    Gavin Hood spoke to HeyUGuys UK on what drew him to the project of Ender’s Game.

    I am not per say, a sci fi fan, for me, I love the fact that this is a story that’s set in the future which allows us to explore ideas that the story deals with in a way that would be perhaps too uncomfortable to deal with if we explored them in the modern context. So for me it doesn’t really matter if a story is set in the future or set in ancient Greece or set on one continent or another. What matters is that the environment is a helpful, visual way of telling what is essentially a timeless universal story about characters interacting with each other. Human beings have evolved their technology, but emotionally, we haven’t evolved that much.

    Source: HeyUGuysUK

  • VIDEO: Ender’s Game Cast and Crew in Madrid

    VIDEO: Ender’s Game Cast and Crew in Madrid

    Several members of the Ender’s Game cast along with director Gavin Hood and producer Bob Orci were in Madrid on October 4th to promote El Juego de Ender. Watch video below from the photocall:

    Here is another of better quality:

    Thanks for Fernanda for the finds!

  • VIDEO: Harrison Ford Talks Ender’s Game on Wetten Dass …?

    VIDEO: Harrison Ford Talks Ender’s Game on Wetten Dass …?

    As promised, here is Harrison Ford talking about Ender’s Game on Wetten Dass …? last night in Bremen. He is pretty hard to understand due to the tranlsator’s voice being much louder than his own, so there’s a transcript below the vid. Enjoy!

    Translation/Transcript:

    Host: A young boy is asked to save the world. What is the general idea behind this?
    Ford: He does save the world. This takes place in the future. Obviously it’s a kind of science fiction, but I think unlike the kind of science fiction you see, you’ve seen before, it has real heart and emotion. It’s, I think, a very powerful story about a young man who learns leadership, the challenges of leadership. I play the man who’s responsible for training him. It proposes that in the future, there is a world government and we have a combined military force, the International Fleet. And we have been invaded once before by an alien life form that you got a brief glimpse of there [in the CLIP they aired before] and suffered real damage from this alien life form, and we know they are coming again. And the proposition is that young people really integrate complex data more quickly than adults. So the soldiers, or warriors, of this period are fighting with drone warfare. The book, which is 28 years old, and this is a bestseller, predicted the internet, predicted touch screen technology, predicted drone warfare. And all of that has come true, and its a … the story is very compelling.
    Host: A very interesting story, of which we shouldn’t give away too much, and a very visionary book this film is based on. The movie will have its great opening in Germany on October 24th.

    I had hoped for a bit more information concerning the production of the movie, his co-stars etc., but I guess between having him talk about Indiana Jones and his planes and having him bet on whether a guy could throw five eggs over a beer tent and catch them on the other side with a frying pan, there just wasn’t enough time to talk about this movie some more. Meh. Still, it’s something, and we got an awesome clip with that.

    Source: ZDFneo

  • Harrison Ford to Appear on Wetten Dass …?

    Harrison Ford to Appear on Wetten Dass …?

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    Listen up, everyone! Harrison Ford is going to be on German TV in about 20 minutes, and he is most likely going to promote Ender’s Game! Harrison is to be a guest at Wetten Dass …? (“Bet you that …”), the biggest German show in existence (or at least it used to be). Other guests include Silvester Stallone and Cher. The show airs live, and you may even be able to stream it here: http://www.zdf.de/ZDFmediathek#/hauptnavigation/startseite (the show will be available there for a number of days afterwards)

    A fair warning, though: the show has a high potential to be embarrassing. Tom Hanks and Halle Berry were apparently quite “perturbed” last year. Also, it runs for 2 and a half hours, although Harrison may not be there for all of it.

    tom hanks

    Source: ZDF Mediathek, Morgenpost

  • GALLERY: Asa, Hailee, Gavin, Ben, and Harrison in Madrid

    GALLERY: Asa, Hailee, Gavin, Ben, and Harrison in Madrid

    Madrid10

    The cast of Ender’s Game have made it to Madrid, Spain for another photo call! Check out photos of Gavin Hood, Hailee Steinfeld, Asa Butterfield, Ben Kingsley, and Harrison Ford below!

    Source: Zimbio

  • GALLERY: Photos from Paris Photo Call

    GALLERY: Photos from Paris Photo Call

    Paris7

    Asa Butterfield, Hailee Steinfeld, Sir Ben Kingsley, Harrison Ford, and Gavin Hood are currently touring Europe for press junkets and photo calls. Check out photos taken in Paris yesterday!

    Source: Zimbio

  • Submit an Entry for ‘Ender’s Game’ Panel Tickets in London

    Submit an Entry for ‘Ender’s Game’ Panel Tickets in London

    Ender-Panel-MCM

    London Comic Con is hosting an Ender’s Game panel next week and Launchies wanting to attend can now apply for a free ticket in the door at their website.

    Exclusive Panel Q&A with Stars and Filmmakers
    7th October 2013 – West End – London

    Guests
    HARRISON FORD, ASA BUTTERFIELD, HAILEE STEINFELD, BEN KINGSLEY
    Director and writer GAVIN HOOD
    Producers BOB ORCI and GIGI PRITZKER
    Includes never seen before footage and props from the film

    Provisional times:
    DOORS OPEN: 6.30pm – EVENT BEGINS: 7pm – EVENT ENDS: 7.50pm

    Go HERE to enter for a ticket!

  • VIDEO: FilmClub Talks to Asa Butterfield

    VIDEO: FilmClub Talks to Asa Butterfield

    British educational charity FilmClub recently had young reporter Matt talk with Asa Butterfield about Ender’s Game. Watch the video below.

    One of the things that we really wanted to do is keep the core themes and ideas from the original novel into the screenplay and it was a bit of a challenge and it was a lot of weight on my shoulders playing this character, but I think we did it justice.

    Having a novel as an actor is so helpful in having small ideas, things that you can draw upon when creating a character. I’ve done a few films where they’ve been adapted from novels and it’s always really helpful.

    Asa also mentions that he hasn’t seen the film yet, though it’s unclear when this interview was actually conducted.

  • Ender’s Game Cast Watch #12

    Ender’s Game Cast Watch #12

    Hey guys,

    it’s been two weeks, and while the cast have not been overly busy on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram, we still have tons of news and pretty pictures to share with you.

    Let’s start with Hailee Steinfeld, who has been by far the busiest of the young cast, having signed on to not one but two new projects in the last couple of weeks. First, she is going to play teen assasin Megan in Kyle Newman’s Barely Lethal alongsinde Samuel L. Jackson and Jessica Alba. Second, she’s set to appear as Vince Vaughn’s daughter in his adaptation of Term Life, a graphic novel by A.J. Lieberman and Nick Thornborrow. Not to forget all those other projects she’s either currently working on, like Three Days to Kill and The Homesman, or recently finished shooting, like Loveship, Hateship and The Keeping Room. No wonder German GLAMOUR editor Wolfgang Hertel calls her “A Girl for All Occasions.”

    12_hailee_glamourcollage

    Hailee’s latest project, the new adaptation of Romeo and Juliet, just premiered in LA. Here she is on the red carpet with “Romeo” Douglas Booth and BFF Taylor Swift.

    12_hailee_redcarpetcollage

    I like the dress. It proves again that Hailee Steinfeld is quite the fashionista. Which is probably why she made time to attend several events during New York Fashion Week, such as the Donna Karen 25th Birthday Bash, the Estee Lauder “Modern Muse” Fragrance Launch or the Calvin Klein Spring 2014 After-Party. I don’t know about you, but while I’m not sure about the Donna Karen one I’m partial to the Calvin Klein outfit.

    12_hailee_fashionweek

    Hailee herself has often admitted that fashion is hugely important for her. So too in the October issue of ASOS, the magazine published by the online fashion shop of the same name. E-Online published five shots ahead of time, along with a little article. Check them out HERE! (Update: More shots and a making-of video HERE at the Daily Mail Online.)

    12_hailee_asosselection

    Speaking of fashion magazines: Several pictures of Abigail Breslin appear in digital magazine ContentMode’s current issue #11, together with a video in which Abigail talks about August: Osage County, Ender’s Game, and her fashion philosophy. Check out the photos and the video HERE!

    12_abigail_contentmode

    Since then, Abigail has been keeping busy. She did a number of interviews recently to promote her various new and upcoming movies. She talked to ShockTillYouDrop about Haunter and Zombieland, discussed the terrifying experience of being locked in a trunk in The Call with DIY, and chatted to ALLURE about this and that. And according to Comingsoon.net, she has just started working on her newest movie, zombie thriller Maggie with Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    12_abigail_allurearnold

    While it’s not exactly a new movie, Khylin Rhambo also had news to share. He recently booked a guest role in the cop show Ironside!

    12_khylin_gueststar_1109

    Conor Carroll, on the other hand, has been walking down memory lane, sharing THIS awesome little ad with the world. Looks like little Conor already had the bully role down pat. Otherwise he’s been keeping busy getting into boxing and Facebook. Check out his new account HERE!

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    And since we are speaking of new social media accounts: Moises Arias finally decided to share his awesome photography on Tumblr. Here are a few examples of his work. Go check out his Tumblr 490tx for the rest HERE.

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    Finally, let’s briefly talk about the older cast: Ben Kingsley has joined the cast of Learning to Drive. Harrison Ford will receive the Hollywood Career Award at the 17th annual Hollywood Film Awards. He’s also keeping up the Han Solo act by angering leading politicians. Viola Davis appears on the cover of the October issue of ESSENCE. You can see a video of the shoot HERE. And while I couldn’t find the entire article online, several online news outlets have published parts of her interview with the magazine: Check them out HERE, HERE and HERE.

    o-VIOLA-DAVIS-ESSENCE-570

    Sources: The MarySue, The Wrap, Amazon, German GLAMOUR, JustJared, E-Online, ASOS, ContentMode, ShockTillYouDrop, DIY, ComingSoon.net, HuffingtonPost, People, HipHollywood, ESSENCE, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr

  • VIDEO: Abigail Breslin Talks Valentine Wiggin

    VIDEO: Abigail Breslin Talks Valentine Wiggin

    Online fashion magazine ContentMode recently published a photo series they did with Abigail Breslin for their current issue. In addition to a number of awesome pictures they also posted a video of Abigail talking about her fashion philosophy, filming August: Osage County with Meryl Streep, and Valentine’s relationship with Ender in Ender’s Game! Watch it below. The Ender’s Game part starts around the 2:55 minute mark.

    Source: ContentMode

  • Metropolitan Films Launches Massive Lasertag Competition for ‘La Stratégie Ender’

    Metropolitan Films Launches Massive Lasertag Competition for ‘La Stratégie Ender’

    Laser-Tag-France

    Metropolitan Films, the French distributor of Ender’s Game, has just announced that they will be holding a massive lasertag competition in various cities across France, Luxembourg, and Switzerland. Registration is now open and you can register as a team or as an individual.

    The tournament will have two stages, with the first beginning on October 9. In the second stage on October 25, the top 20 players will be granted a special advanced screening of Ender’s Game in Paris. On October 26, they will compete for the grand prize of a weightless flight.

    We’re still waiting to confirm the details on the weightless flight.

    Locations you can participate in:

    FRANCE  : Amiens, Angers, Angouleme, Annecy, Annemasse, Avignon, Beziers, Bordeaux, Bourgoin Jailleu, Brie-Comte-Robert, Caen Bretteville / Odon, Caen Les Rives de l’Orne, Chalon-sur-Saone, Chambery, Charenton, Cherbourg, Clermont-Ferrand, Creil (Saint Maximin), Dijon, Dunkerque, Grenoble, Istres, La Rochelle, La Roche sur Yon Le Havre, Le Mans, Lille, Limoges, Lognes, Lyon, South Lyon, Macon, Marseille Campaign Plan, Merignac, Odysséum Montpellier, Montpellier large M, Mulhouse, Nantes, Nice, Nimes, Niort, Perpignan, Poitiers, Portet Sur Garonne, Quimper, Reims, Rouen, Saint-Brieuc, Saint-Etienne, Saint-Quentin, Sallanches, Toulouse, Tours, Troyes, Valencia Valenciennes Vannes, Varennes-sur-Seine, Vernon, Villefranche sur Saône, Villeneuve d ‘Ascq.

    LUXEMBOURG  : Howald.

    SWITZERLAND  : Geneva, Lausanne and Villeneuve.