Tag: Ender Wiggin

  • Hi-Res Version of Ender and Graff Still

    Hi-Res Version of Ender and Graff Still

    Thanks to Summit, we now have the unwatermarked version of the first official still. The image has been uploaded to the EnderWiggin.net Gallery.

    With a hi-res still, we can do a better analysis of the details of the image including something Kelly and I talked about on the premiere episode of EnderCast: Graff’s shoulder pin.

    Graff

    As you can clearly see, his pin does indeed have the IF Phi on it. As mentioned on the EnderWiggin.net Facebook, it’s possible we’ll be sitting in line for midnight premieres of Ender’s Game on Halloween 2013! Any cosplayers out there ready to start making their IF costume for SDCC? I know if I knew how I would be!

    Another thing to note about the still is that you can now clearly see that there are six people standing on the same side as Ender, which makes it safe to assume that there are only 12 launchies to a barracks, since the soldiers are standing on numbers starting from 01 with the girl in yellow on the left and then going to 02 under Ender’s feet. There also appears to be an additional girl on Ender’s side of the barracks.

    Pick up any other details? Comment and let me know what you find!

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ in Dec 14 Print Edition of Entertainment Weekly

    ‘Ender’s Game’ in Dec 14 Print Edition of Entertainment Weekly

    Entertainment Weekly December 14, 2012

    While we’ve all seen the first official still from Ender’s Game online, the still is also present on a full-page First Look in the December 14, 2012 print issue of Entertainment Weekly. So if you’re looking to get a copy of the image in your hands, run out and grab the issue before next Thursday!

    Look for the one with a variety of collector’s covers of The Hobbit.

  • “Is that Han Solo?!”

    “Is that Han Solo?!”

    Yesterday while reading all the reactions across the net, most people seemed to have one of two reactions:

    Ender’s too old…

    and

    IS THAT HAN SOLO?!

    We can’t have people reacting like that and not crack some jokes, can we?

    And one more…

    And yes, I know Ender says that to Anderson, but it worked here. 😉 If you want to create your own, here’s a blank for you! If you make one, send it in to valentine@enderwiggin.net or post them on the EnderWiggin.net Facebook wall.

  • PHOTO: First Official Still from ‘Ender’s Game’ with Ender and Graff

    PHOTO: First Official Still from ‘Ender’s Game’ with Ender and Graff

    This morning brings to us the first official still from next year’s film adaptation Ender’s Game, brought to us exclusively by Entertainment Weekly.

    The still, which shows child military genius Ender Wiggin (Asa Butterfield) with Colonel Hyrum Graff (Harrison Ford), is from the barracks at Battle School in space, where Ender is in training with the International Fleet among the world’s brightest young soldiers.

    In the background, you can see the insignia for the International Fleet as well as their beds, no doubt a cold contrast to what they’ve just left at home. Alai (Suraj Partha) stands next to Ender. Behind Graff there’s a female cadet and several unidentified cast members (most likely background).

    In the photo above, we get a first glimpse of Hugo’s Asa Butterfield (right) as Ender, standing in line with other new recruits (a.k.a. “Launchies”) early on at his time in the Battle School. He’s facing off with the imposing Colonel Graff (Harrison Ford, center) over whether his emails to home are being blocked. It’s telling that the two characters are clashing over communication, since they’ve got major communication issues with each other. In the novel, Ender could never be sure whether Graff was manipulating him, or whether he simply saw great potential in him and wanted to foster it.

    The actors tried to mirror their characters’ emotions. “The relationship between [Harrison] and Asa was very close,” explains Hood, “but he didn’t overly befriend him off the set. He helped Asa by allowing that slight sense of intimidation to be there.” Getting intimidated by Indiana Jones himself? Sounds like a cinch! What was harder for the cast of children was filming the movie while going to school. “The kids have to attend school for at least three hours of class every day, plus do homework, so you can only shoot with someone like Asa for five hours of your day,” says Hood. “There was no time for fooling about or not knowing your lines or being unprepared.” To everyone’s delight, Butterfield (along with every child actor) proved himself a true professional. “Asa being prepared meant that we could focus on the scenes, and these are complicated scenes for a young actor,” says Hood.

    Source: Full article at EW.com

  • The Consequences of Placing the Weight of a Fandom on a Child’s Shoulders

    The Consequences of Placing the Weight of a Fandom on a Child’s Shoulders

    The internet has been buzzing lately with the big news of Disney buying LucasFilm and the even bigger news that Star Wars Episode VII is now in the pipeline.

    What started off just a few days ago as the mention of a movie has now turned into what sounds like actual pre-production, with EW getting the exclusive story that Harrison Ford (Colonel Graff in Ender’s Game), Carrie Fisher, and Mark Hamill are all up for making appearances in the film. Today, Vulture reported that Michael Arndt is being lined up to write the script.

    With all this talk of Star Wars going on, eventually I began to wonder: whatever happened to that little kid that everyone blamed for Episode I being a suckfest? After some Google searching and YouTube videos, I found a rather sad story of a kid who grew up being endlessly teased about being Anakin Skywalker and ended up taking the brunt of the fandom’s anger over the film in general. Add to that, he claims he was made to do up to 60 interviews a day. That’s brutal for an adult. He was ten.

    I was as disappointed in The Phantom Menace as everyone else was. I’d grown up on Star Wars and when I finally sat in the theater after waiting for months, watching the trailer over and over, and sitting in a snaking line that took me all the way into some hot and humid parking garage in Waikiki, I couldn’t believe how different it was and how apparent it was that the magic was simply gone. And I’m ashamed to say that I criticized little Jake Lloyd’s performance along with everyone else.

    Still, I did this among friends. Back then I had no blog. There was no Twitter and Facebook was still restricted to certain colleges. As a fan you could pretty harmlessly criticize an actor without them feeling the sting of it. But apparently there were tons of kids and fans out there who did know him and who did make his life miserable. And there seem to be a lot of people that think he has no right to complain simply because, hey, he got to be Anakin Skywalker.

    He’s destroyed all his Star Wars memorabilia and has been criticized for blaming George Lucas for what he went through but really, is he wrong?

    Jake Lloyd did not write the script. He did not make up those ridiculous lines and he did not direct himself in the movie. He was ten years old for crying out loud. A child. And really, how do you place the weight of the Star Wars franchise onto the shoulders of a 10 year-old boy?

    You don’t. Or at least, George Lucas shouldn’t have.

    Which brings me to Ender Wiggin and Asa Butterfield. If there’s been any one major complaint about this movie (and I’m sure the discussion will continue to heat up quite a bit over the next year) it’s the fact that Asa Butterfield is 15 years old and Ender Wiggin was five when he left home for Battle School. I’ve written about this topic before and will continue to defend the studio’s decision to age Ender up because the fact of the matter is, when you have a large fanbase counting on a movie adaptation as centered upon a character as it is on Ender, it’s not a good idea to base all your hopes and expectations on a child.

    I mean, how real does this experience have to be for us to have our “true” Ender? Do we have to mentally stress some little kid to the point of a nervous breakdown as Graff and Anderson tried to do for so many years? The answer is no, simply because we’re not the International Fleet and this is just a movie.

    Sure, they could have searched the world for a 5-10 year-old actor to play Ender, but I think a book that has been around for 30 years and has been studied in schools for almost as long needs to have an older actor who is better equipped for the work both during and after production and needs to be able to deal with the modern backlash that can happen if all doesn’t go as planned.

    After writing and watching how things work in the movie business, I have only a small glimpse of what child actors go through and with the legions of vicious cyber bullies on Twitter, Tumblr, YouTube, and Facebook, I can only imagine how much worse it can be for them now than it was for Jake Lloyd 13 years ago.

    And while I’m not saying Ender’s Game is going to be as big as a Star Wars movie, the same concept applies to any body of work that has a large fandom sitting out there waiting.

    I’ve briefly met Asa and he seems to have a great head on his shoulders. He takes his online presence in stride and is very well composed on the red carpet, crediting his mother for dressing him and charming those he speaks to and works with on set. This is a boy properly equipped to deal with the side effects of playing Ender Wiggin. I find it hard to believe that a much younger actor would come out of this experience as unscathed and unphased as he probably will.

    As for Jake Lloyd, he has my apologies and he has my sympathies. None of it was really his fault and I wish Lucas had had the foresight to age his little Anakin up for the sake of a young boy’s childhood and young adulthood.

  • A Look at Ender’s Monitor

    A Look at Ender’s Monitor

    Ender's Monitor

    This week’s production entry over at Ender’s Game Blog gives us a better look at Ender himself… sort of. This photo is an image of Ender’s monitor, which we learn at the start of the book is how the military monitors the children they’re screening for Battle School. Both Peter and Valentine had their monitors removed and were allowed to remain on Earth to grow up with their parents, but then they were given permission to have a third child.

    The book begins as Ender has his monitor removed, which ends up being a painful ordeal, despite reassurances that he won’t feel a thing.

    The novel was amazingly prescient about a great many things: remote controlled drone wars, the internet, the influence of blogging, hand held computing tablets like the I-Pad, and of course, electronic surveillance implants.  Implanted tracking and monitoring chips are no longer a science fiction concept.  They exist now.  And one day, they may be as advanced as the monitor implanted into Ender, which allows Colonel Graff to “see through his eyes” and know:  HE’S THE ONE.

    It’s funny how they mention the iPad because that’s what came to mind when I re-read Ender’s Game last year. I marveled at how the desks seemed to be just like the tablets of today, with the students sending IMs to each other in creative ways. It would be an interesting marketing tactic if they were to develop a smartphone game mirroring Giant’s Drink. (hopefully without the suicidal tendencies feature)

    Source: Ender’s Game Blog

  • First Look at Ender Wiggin’s Bedroom

    First Look at Ender Wiggin’s Bedroom

    Ender's Room

    For this week’s production entry on Ender’s Game blog, we get a look at Ender’s bedroom, which is full of knickknacks, space decals, and model planes.

    The more futuristic the world, the more invisible its technology. So why shouldn’t Ender’s room look just like any normal kid’s room?  And not every future is a dark dystopia.  The world that Ender lives in is a world worth saving.  That’s why he is willing to leave his family to go into an orbiting Battle School and risk not seeing his sister, Valentine, again until they are both adults.

    I like that they gave him a modern room. I’ve never really imagined Ender’s home to be dystopian and run down.

    We will keep your room for you just as you left it, Ender…

    In other news, cast member Khy Rhambo tweeted that today they worked on Salamander Army scenes in the Battle Room.

    Amazing day of shooting with our flash suits @ImNotMoises @HaileeSteinfeld @asabfb @bsoohoo Salamander all day son !!!

  • Asa Butterfield Confirms Casting for ‘Ender’s Game’ Movie

    Asa Butterfield Confirms Casting for ‘Ender’s Game’ Movie

    Just over a week ago, it was reported that Asa Butterfield, the young star of Martin Scorscese’s Hugo had been offered the part of Andrew “Ender” Wiggin for the film adaptation of Ender’s Game.

    Today, Butterfield confirmed that he has accepted the role via Twitter.

    Asa ButterfieldThe film, which is set to begin filming early next year, will be released in March 2013. Fans of the novel have been waiting decades for this film to be made and this casting is definitely a sure sign of it finally happening.

  • Asa Butterfield Offered Role of Ender Wiggin

    Asa Butterfield Offered Role of Ender Wiggin

    There’s big news to report today in regards to the film adaptation of Ender’s Game, with Deadline reporting that 14 year old Asa Butterfield, who stars in Martin Scorcese’s Hugo opening next week for the Thanksgiving holidays, has been offered the science fiction role of a lifetime: Ender Wiggin.

    It’s already been reported that the book’s main characters have all been aged up significantly, but the young actor doesn’t necessarily look like he’s 14, which is a good thing because the younger Ender can look, the better it will fit with the overall theme of the book.

    A professional actor since the age of 8, Butterfield has a decently sized film resume to back him up. It’ll be interesting to see who will be cast next. Will it be precious Valentine Wiggin or sociopath Peter Wiggin? Are they going to be able to find a kid smaller, younger, and spunkier than the commanding Ender for the role of Bean?

    Ender’s Game is set to be released on March 15, 2013.

    Source: Deadline

  • Casting Calls Go Out for Ender Wiggin and More

    Casting Calls Go Out for Ender Wiggin and More

    According to io9, casting calls have gone out for the film adaptation of Ender’s Game, which is a strong indication that things are finally moving for the movie going into production.

    An obvious concern is finding quality actors at such a young age and while Ender is only 5 when he’s recruited, that’s obviously an incredibly difficult age to cast for such a crucial and “smart” role. The script indicates that Ender is 10 instead of 5. While this is a significant jump in age, it’s an understandable change.

    Details on the characters they’re casting:

    Ender Wiggin: He’s depicted as smart and sensitive, but also incredibly ruthless. There are a few scenes where he worries about being like his cut-throat brother Peter, and confides in his sister Valentine. Just like in the book, he dishes out a rough treatment to Bonzo Madrid, his former platoon leader, when Bonzo tries to bully him too much. And then he feels bad about it. The screenplay also includes some scenes where Ender has weird nightmares about the buggers — and he tries to understand where the buggers are coming from, and what their children are like. Ender is pissed at Graff because he keeps changing the rules in the war “exercises.”

    The scene where Ender finds out that his final victory was not, in fact, a game is pretty intense, and features Ender and Graff both trying to talk at the same time. Ender is saying “They came to establish a colony, we chased them away… in fifty years they have never returned,” while Graff is saying, “It makes no difference now,” and then Ender is saying “Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds,” at the same time as Graff is saying “What are you talking about?” Finally, Ender is saying “I will bear the shame of this xenocide forever,” at the same moment as Graff is saying, “You will be remembered as a hero.” It ends with Ender getting an injection, knocking him out.

    Bean: We get to see Bean watching a heavily edited video of Mazer Rackham’s famous victory over the formics, in which Mazer fires his nuclear warhead into the formics’ exhaust system. And Bean is so thrilled he throws his hands in the air and shouts with joy — until Ender bursts his bubble, explaining that the video is edited so we don’t see Mazer die. (And later, Ender also hints that Mazer’s victory might have had a darker side, that’s also edited out.) In another scene, Graff shows Bean and Ender to the famous zero-gravity training room, where they float around with a bunch of other kids. Ender explains to Bean that there’s no “up or down” in zero-G, and then they discover their weapons actually freeze anyone they shoot at, by causing the spacesuits to swell up. They team up to go freeze some of the other kids.

    Peter Wiggin: Ender’s brother is fully a psychopath in this version of the screenplay. He’s insanely jealous that Ender was chosen for the battle school, and completely enraged when it seems like Ender has washed out of the program. At one point, he locks their sister, Valentine, out of the room and forces Ender to put on a Formic mask so they can play Formics and Astronauts, which basically consists of Peter beating the crap out of Ender.

    Valentine Wiggin: She’s the gentler, sweeter member of the Wiggin family, who’s always there for Ender — except for when the people in charge of the school won’t let Ender communicate with her. She tries to protect Ender from Peter, but mostly fails — and just like in the book, she convinces Ender to return to the school when he tries to drop out after he hurts Bonzo Madrid. She explains to Ender that what makes us human is our brains, and we didn’t evolve those brains so that we can lie around lakes — we evolved them for killing, or else we wouldn’t still be around. We’d have been killed by wild animals. She alone grasps that Ender has to understand his enemy to defeat them, and in understanding the enemy, he grows to love the enemy — right before he destroys it.

    Bonzo Madrid: Just like in the book, he’s a swaggering idiot whose platoon has won most of its most recent battles, and he resents being saddled with a useless, untrained snot like Ender. He orders Ender to stay out of the way during battles, and not even use his weapon. Later, he takes a group of his homies to try and ambush Ender in the shower.

    Rose the Nose: The commander of Rat Army, where Ender gets traded after he leaves Bonzo’s toon. Rose has a high opinion of his own leadership skills, even though he knows that his platoon leader, Dink, is “God.” Rose has a terrible fear of losing, but can’t face the fact that he’s winning thanks to Dink and Ender.

    Dink Meeker: In the script pages we read, Dink is one of the characers who befriends Ender in the Rat Army, helping to protect him a bit and showing him how to go float in the zero-G chamber to relax.

    Petra Arkanian: The only girl in Ender’s first toon, she also befriends Ender and tries to protect him — and when Bonzo decides to keep Ender out of combat, Petra offers to help him train in their spare time. Later, she and Dink are both in Ender’s Jeesh, and she’s a key part of the final assault on the bugger planet.

    Alai: Just like in the book, he’s a gentle Muslim boy who moves Ender with his friendship and his professions of peace.

    Mick: He’s a heavyset boy who just wants to make it through this school in one piece and get home — and he’s happy to help himself to other people’s desserts.

    Source: io9