Tag: Ender’s Game Movie

  • Ender’s Game Prop Auction to Begin March 9, 2015

    Ender’s Game Prop Auction to Begin March 9, 2015

    Prop-Auction-Ender9

    A couple of weeks ago, we mentioned something on Facebook about a prop auction happening soon for Ender’s Game and now we’ve officially got a date for you launchies to mark on your calendars: Monday, March 9, 2015.

    PropStore.com will be auctioning off nearly everything from the set, including original costumes, props, and key set dressing pieces. The auction will be running exclusively on PropStore.com for two weeks, with forty new items added every week for ten days. Those of you interested can register here: http://propstore.auctionserver.net/view-auctions/info/id/21/

    See some images of the items that will be available below!

    Images used with permission from PropStore.com.

    Will you be bidding on any of the items? It’s a chance to own a piece of sci-fi movie history!

  • VIDEO: The Cast of ‘Ender’s Game’ at Space Camp

    VIDEO: The Cast of ‘Ender’s Game’ at Space Camp

    I mentioned in my Blu-ray review that part of the featurette showed some cool footage of the kids at Space Camp and Just Jared Jr. has a video preview of that part of the featurette. Watch Gavin get in Aramis Knight’s face to show them what it’s like in the military:

  • VIDEO: ET Gives Inside Look at Ender’s World Featurette

    VIDEO: ET Gives Inside Look at Ender’s World Featurette

    Ender’s Game is out on Blu-ray today and ET Online has a short snippet of the Ender’s World featurette for you to watch below:

  • GIVEAWAY: Ender’s Game Blu-Ray Combo

    GIVEAWAY: Ender’s Game Blu-Ray Combo

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    Ender’s Game is out on DVD and Blu-ray tomorrow and EnderWiggin.net is giving away two Blu-ray combo sets thanks to Lionsgate Home Entertainment. Entering is easy, all you do is read our review (you can skim it if you don’t want to read spoilers) and tell comment on this post telling us which deleted/extended scene you’re looking forward to the most. If you’d like an additional entry, you can tweet the following:

    I just entered to win @EndersGameMovie on Blu-ray/DVD from @EnderNet, enter here: http://enderwigg.in/1gnRnWx  #EndersGame

    One winner will be chosen randomly from the comments and another will be drawn randomly from the Twitter entries. Limit one prize per person.

    This giveaway will end on Thursday, February 13, 2014 and is open to residents of the USA only. Prizes will be sent directly from Lionsgate.

  • REVIEW: Ender’s Game Blu-Ray/DVD Combo

    REVIEW: Ender’s Game Blu-Ray/DVD Combo

    Ender-BR

    Tomorrow, Ender’s Game will be released on Blu-ray and DVD combo pack, giving Launchies the chance to watch Ender’s Game in the comfort of their own homes. Sure, we won’t get to watch Ender dominate on futuristic televisions, but at least we’ll get to watch it whenever we want.

    A couple of weeks ago, Lionsgate was nice enough to send me a copy of the Blu-ray to review and so I got to watch the Blu-ray exclusive featurettes Ender’s World: The Making of Ender’s Game and Inside the Mind Game along with six deleted scenes from the movie. Since deleted scenes are what most people are looking for, I’ll get right to it.

    Say Goodbye

    Deleted-Goodbye

    The original goodbye scene in the movie was ridiculously short, with just a tearful hug from Valentine and some voiceover and watching this extended scene with goodbyes from Mr. and Mrs. Wiggin, Peter, and Valentine made it feel like the final scene sums up how people felt about the movie in general: it was way too cut down.

    You can watch each scene with commentary from Gavin Hood and he expresses regret on losing the scene with Peter, something I agree with, but it would have been more important if they’d made Valentine and Peter a constant presence in the film. Valentine gives a rather nerdy goodbye with a quote from Shakespeare, but this fits with what I always saw Valentine as: a really cool nerd.

    The part I felt should have stayed in was Anderson objecting to Mrs. Wiggin giving Ender a token to take with him. I feel like that would have contributed to Ender’s isolation and outweighed any “break in pace” that Gavin mentions was the concern here.

    A New Recruit

    Deleted-Mick

    This is one of the few completely deleted scenes in which Ender has just entered the mess hall and sees Bonzo and Fly Molo obsessing over the current battle between Rat and Asp, which will determine whether or not Salamander remains on top. After being yelled at by Bonzo, he’s ordered to go sit in the corner with O’Reilly (who he later replaces) who turns out to be Mick. He takes Ender’s dessert and gives him his roll, basically like in the book, which was a nice touch. Gavin talks about how he was particularly sad to lose this scene and that his original cut was 15 minutes longer. Another little homage to the book, we later see Ender trying to fall asleep by counting doubles, a trick he’d picked up from Valentine.

    It’s For His Own Good

    This scene is an extended one of a conversation between Graff and Anderson and Gavin mentions that it was cut simply because it would have tipped the audience off on what was really going on. As we know from the final movie, the studio chose to preserve the twist of the book, contrary to what the trailers were implying during promotion.

    Leadership

    Deleted-Dink

    Gavin mentions that this scene follows the mess hall scene, but while technically true, I think this actually comes right after Ender wakes up from his nightmare about Peter. He’s in the bathroom washing his face and Dink comes by to check on him while Graff still wears his pissed off, slightly sweaty from bed look after his fight with Anderson. Like in the book, Dink talks about how he was promoted twice, but he turned it down because power drives people crazy.

    We Need Ender

    Although this is the extended version of a scene in the movie with Graff and Valentine in the car, I’m not really sure I understand why it was cut. At one point, Valentine looks at Graff in shock and simply says, “I hate you.” His reply was nicely done and I agree with Gavin that it’s a pity it was cut.

    They Should Know

    This extended scene between Mazer and Graff is actually one that we saw in the trailers and promos and was eventually cut out to help preserve the twist. Be sure to read my editorial on why I thought that a spoiled twist would have made for a powerful movie too.

    The saddest part about the deleted scenes was that you see a ton of odes to the novel, including Val’s “I love you forever!” I’m not sure all of them would have worked, but some seem like they would have fit into the film just fine.

    Featurettes

    Although you can buy the DVD, the Blu-Ray of Ender’s Game is a combo pack, meaning that you get three copies of the movie: Blu-ray, DVD, and Ultra-Violet. The two featurettes are available only on the Blu-ray and if you don’t yet have a BR player, on the assumption that you will probably eventually get one, you might as well just buy the BR combo.

    The featurette on the Mind Game was sadly pretty underwhelming and raw. There was no special introduction or commentary, it was basically just splices of raw footage and behind-the-scenes stuff. That being said, you do get to see Gavin act as the Giant, which was pretty cool. It just didn’t impress me production wise.

    Featurette

    The 45 minute Ender’s World featurette, however, was very satisfying to watch and is worth the extra cost for the BR. The featurette is split into 8 chapters and features interviews from not just the big stars, but our favorite characters from the book such as Aramis Knight (Bean), Khylin Rhambo (Dink), Brandon Soo Hoo (Fly Molo), and Suraj Partha (Alai).

    Hidden in the featurette are some little snippets of deleted scenes that aren’t highlighted in the deleted scenes section such as a brief flash of Bean presenting the deadline to Ender and  Bean in tears at the end saying, “He lied!” There’s really cool Space Camp footage, as well as training footage that Launchies will get a real kick out of. The creature design was very detailed, with their creature designer even going so far as to determine how Formics digested things.

    Set designer Ben Proctor gives you a look at his iPad app that shows the final set as he videos the set live, something that almost seemed like it couldn’t be real. That’s how cool it was.

    I haven’t yet had a chance to watch the movie with commentary from Gavin Hood, Roberto Orci, and Gigi Pritzker, but hope to soon. As I mentioned earlier, if you’re still deciding between DVD and BR combos, keep in mind there’s only a $5 difference between the two sets on Amazon. Having the added benefit of a BR and two exclusive featurettes is definitely worth $5 in my book. I will be launching a Blu-ray giveaway later today, so be sure to stay tuned for that!

  • io9 Gives Sneak Peek into Creation of the Formics

    io9 Gives Sneak Peek into Creation of the Formics

    Formics

    io9 has an exclusive behind-the-scenes video from the Ender’s Game Blu-ray featurette “Ender’s World: The Making of Ender’s Game” that shows a little bit about how they went about creating the Formics for the film.

    Ender’s Game will be released on Blu-ray and DVD on February 11, 2014.

    Watch the video at io9.

  • VIDEO: Gavin Hood Talks Ender’s Game for Blu-ray Release

    VIDEO: Gavin Hood Talks Ender’s Game for Blu-ray Release

    Gavin Hood spoke with The Movie Interview about Blu-ray release and sadly dashes our hopes for a director’s cut of Ender’s Game.

    “The tricky thing with director’s cuts when you’ve got a huge visual effects movie is that in order to have those cuts you need the shots and the shots require an enormous amount of money to make the shot. So if you haven’t made the shots…”

    Big bummer there because you can hardly argue against that. There’s one deleted scene in the car between Valentine and Graff that had very basic VFX done for the DVD (you could see green outlines around Val’s head), so you can imagine that anything that included the Battle Room would end up looking like a terrible mess, which is such a shame.

    Don’t forget to pre-order your copy of Ender’s Game!

    Watch the entire video below:

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ Sponsoring Starcraft 2 Tournament for Blu-ray Release

    ‘Ender’s Game’ Sponsoring Starcraft 2 Tournament for Blu-ray Release

    EG-BR

    Lionsgate and Odd Lot are gearing up for the Ender’s Game home video release with a Starcraft 2 tournament with Major League Gaming and Twitch. Prizes total $20,000 with a grand prize of $10,000.

    Two qualifying rounds featuring 16 players each will take place over the next two weeks: The first will run from Feb. 5-9 on Twitch, and the second will run from Feb. 11-16 on MLG.TV.

    Twitch is reaching out to “key StarCraft communities,” according to a press release, in order to find top talent for the Twitch round of the tournament. MLG will invite 12 players in the 16-person field for its round, while fans can vote from Feb. 3-5 on the other four participants at the GameOn website.

    Starcraft2

    As I mentioned on Twitter, they should make it a stipulation that no one can play Protoss to make it fit a little bit better with the Enderverse. I’m assuming the players aren’t actually controlling some real Terran troops somewhere, though. That would be a little too immersive.

    Source: Polygon

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ Brings in $10M First Week in China

    ‘Ender’s Game’ Brings in $10M First Week in China

    Chinese-Poster

    Ender’s Game, which recently opened in China, brought in a strong $10M at the box office in its first week, boosting its worldwide total to $112M.

    Meanwhile, in second place, the Harrison Ford-starring adaptation of Orson Scott Card‘s sci-fi novel Ender’s Game took $10.96 million in its opening six days, showing on 110,947 screens with 2.1 million admissions.

    That’s a powerful showing when you consider it took $28 million in its opening weekend in the U.S.

    Source: THR

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ DVD Release Date Set for February 11, 2014

    ‘Ender’s Game’ DVD Release Date Set for February 11, 2014

    Ender-DVDUK

     

    According to IGN, Summit has announced that Ender’s Game will be released on DVD and Blu-ray combo pack on February 11, 2014 in the United States.

    Both the Combo Pack and DVD extras include deleted and extended scenes with optional audio commentary with director Gavin Hood, as well as a feature-length audio commentary with producers Roberto Orci and Gigi Pritzker.

    The DVD release will also feature a 45 minute featurette on the making of Ender’s Game.

    You can place your pre-orders now on Amazon.com!

  • Steve Jablonsky on ‘Ender’s Game’ Score and a Bizarre “Alternate” Ending

    Steve Jablonsky on ‘Ender’s Game’ Score and a Bizarre “Alternate” Ending

    soundtrack-front

    Ever since I was in high school, I’ve been a huge fan of movie scores. Open up my old CD case from 15 years ago and you’ll find it full of things like Titanic, Congo, Crimson Tide, Legends of the Fall, and Braveheart. Movie music can make or break a film and it’s a subject I’ve always wondered about.

    EnderWiggin.net recently got the chance to talk to Ender’s Game composer Steve Jablonsky, who I’d previously met on the red carpet at the premiere in Los Angeles. We talked about what influenced his choices in developing the Ender’s Game score and I was very pleased to hear that the score was inspired mostly by his initial reaction to the film. Jablonsky had never heard much about the book other than the synopsis and the studio did not supply him with much more than an inquiry as to whether he’d read the book.

    “I’m glad that they didn’t because I had such a reaction to watching the rough cut that they showed me, so instantly I realized it wasn’t what I was expecting and the story was so much more complicated than just saving the planet from some aliens. So right from the start I had ideas of how musically I could treat the story differently than I have in the past because it’s such a unique story.”

    With the book’s twist preserved in the film, Jablonsky was very moved by Asa Butterfield’s performance. “Usually the final reel of a film like this is just one long action scene of the hero saving the world,” he explained. “But [with] this there was no action in the final reel. It was all story-driven and all about Ender and his meltdown and how he’s dealing with the revelation he had. All of that took me by surprise.” That surprise caused him to approach the film’s score differently than he normally does and in the first meeting with the filmmakers this contributed to an early decision to incorporate strings into the score.

    Jablonsky-Composing

    “I’m not sure who said it first, but we all knew it should be orchestral. It needed that importance of a big orchestra and the filmmakers told me they liked the sound of choir and could I experiment with that and I said yeah because I love choir.”

    Although he didn’t discuss things with Gavin Hood, there was little argument over the tone they wanted. “The emotion of what the music was going to say, we were on the same page right from the beginning. After that first meeting I just started writing and we would tweak and fine tune the score as I got towards the end. I felt it was a fairly smooth process because we were all in agreement of what the music should be saying.”

    Although the score was recorded in London, when I asked if he’d invited Asa to the studio while they were working, he seemed to get a little shy about it. “That would have been cool, I didn’t even think of that! I should have had producers reach out and ask him if he wanted to stop by, but I don’t know, he’s probably busy.”

    Even though I’m a fan of movie scores, I admit I’m still just a fan. So being that I was talking to a composer for the first time, I couldn’t resist asking him about some processes. I’m sure some of you have wondered whether or not they have to score a specific cut of the film and if more edits are made if they have to go back and score again. Turns out, sometimes composers do need to go back and re-score, but Jablonsky came into Ender’s Game late enough where it wasn’t necessary. “When I came on board they had just gone through that process of shifting the mood a little bit with the film and that’s the one they showed me.” he explained. “But had I been on a month or two earlier I probably would’ve scored the other one and then we would have had to change tone and I would have had to change a lot of the music.”

    As you can imagine, that can make the job of the composer very difficult, which is why Jablonsky says a part of him was glad he came on board later in the project. With that, talk shifted to what happens if an extended version is released. Does he have to go back and re-visit the score and compose something new? Turns out, not usually. “For most film scores there’s usually more music written than actually appears in the film, so they have a lot to work from.”

    Jablonsky is a fan of more serious tones in films, so when I asked what his favorite scenes were from the movie, he gravitated right away to the scene with Stilson in the beginning. “It’s when Ender beats that bully at the game in the beginning and gets his thing pulled out, his monitor, and then they corner him and they’re going to beat him and Ender unleashes his inner rage and nearly kills this kid. I mean we’re watching this 14 year old boy nearly kill somebody and I think it’s so great to open a film with something like that or have it that early in the film. For me, it set the tone that Ender is a really complicated character and he’s capable of extreme violence even though he’s so innocent looking.”

    ENDER'S GAME

    His second favorite was, of course, the final battle scene and the big reveal. “You would hope that people who saw that bullying scene in the beginning would then understand at the end that he has figured out that his actions have these consequences,” said Jablonsky. “That’s not who he is and that’s not who he’s going to be and he’s learned his lesson and so it’s a harsh lesson but that message is one of my favorite parts of the film and hopefully I have the same reaction when I read the book.”

    When I asked what his favorite track from the album was, Jablonsky said he had a particular liking for two tracks, one being Ender’s War, which is the main theme for the film and used throughout. His second was actually the same one as mine, Ender’s Promise, though his favorite part was the first half that scores Ender’s encounter with the hive queen and mine is the second half when it segues into the booming credits music. After listening to me rave about how important credits music is to a film’s closure, he related a rather odd and humorous story to me.

    “A little inside funny thing, the first time I watched it, when he opens his eyes, the U2 song Beautiful Day kicked in right when his eyes opened; the chorus of that song. […] It felt so strange.” he laughed. “Suddenly we have this pop song coming in after everything that just happened. Maybe the first thing I said to them was, “Tell me you don’t want to actually use that song right there.” Fortunately, it was just an idea someone had and they definitely weren’t going to go with that.

    Still, imagining such an alternate ending is funny in hindsight. “It’s not the song’s fault. It’s a great song but it just did not fit that moment at all. But we got that right out of there.” I think I speak for a lot of us when I say that’s something we’re grateful for.

    The Ender’s Game score can be purchased on Amazon.

  • Ender’s Game Total Moves to $53M Worldwide

    Ender’s Game Total Moves to $53M Worldwide

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    Ender’s Game, in its second week at the box office, suffered from the God of Thunder’s debut with Thor: The Dark World but still climbed up to $44M after pulling in $10M over the weekend.

    This coming weekend nothing too big is opening, but next week Lionsgate’s box office giant The Hunger Games: Catching Fire will blaze into theaters. Predictions for Ender’s Game were originally around $75M and the movie looks on track to do just about that. The film has performed very poorly overseas, with only $9M in box office sales to date. Ender’s worldwide take is currently at around $53M.

    Source: BoxOfficeMojo.com

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ Score to be Pressed for Vinyl Record

    ‘Ender’s Game’ Score to be Pressed for Vinyl Record

    soundtrack-front

    The Ender’s Game score, which was composed by Steve Jablonsky and released by Varese Sarabande, will be pressed for vinyl records that are already up for pre-order on Amazon.com.

    The record will be available on December 10, 2013.

    Via Modern Vinyl