Tag: Ender’s Game Movie

  • Check-in to Ender’s Game and Get the Opening Weekend Sticker

    Check-in to Ender’s Game and Get the Opening Weekend Sticker

    It’s NovEnder 1st, which means that you can now get the Ender’s Game Opening Weekend sticker on GetGlue!

    GetGlue-Opening

    There are three Limited Edition stickers available for Ender’s Game so far. Do you have them all?

  • VIDEO: Sir Ben Kingsley with Ender’s Game Fansites

    VIDEO: Sir Ben Kingsley with Ender’s Game Fansites

    At the Ender’s Game premiere on Monday, October 28, 2013, the fansites got the chance to talk to Sir Ben Kingsley about Ender’s Game, his tattoos, and whether he’s open to sequels. He also gave us a brief message for fans.

    I have to say, he’s an incredibly nice, nice man and what a difference from the time we met him on set. Last May, we were waiting in a dark Eros room which was in the process of being dismantled (which turned out to be Ender’s quarters on Eros as I found out after watching the film!) and when Sir Ben walked in that day he had this incredibly INTENSE stare that frankly terrified me.

    That being said, when we met him on Monday, he was warm, friendly, and funny. It’s pretty clear to me now that we met him while he was still in Mazer Rackham mode, which just goes to show you what an amazing actor he is.

    Other questions were asked by Ender News and Ender’s Ansible.

  • GIVEAWAY: Ender’s Game Poster Signed by Asa, Hailee, and Producers

    GIVEAWAY: Ender’s Game Poster Signed by Asa, Hailee, and Producers

    It’s the eve of NovEnder 1st, Launchies! To help celebrate the launch of a movie 28 years in the making, I’ve been offered an Ender’s Game poster to give away signed by Asa Butterfield (Ender), Hailee Steinfeld (Petra), producer Bob Orci, and producer/founder of OddLot Entertainment Gigi Pritzker!

    The poster is the Dragon Army soldier poster:

    Enders-Game-Final-HR

    To enter to win, all you have to do is go see the movie and then return and post your reaction to the film on our Fan Reactions Page. After that, return to this page to log your entry into the widget below.

    I’ll say again, entering is a TWO step process. Posting your movie reaction and logging your entry in below.

    This giveaway will end on November 15, 2013 and is open to the US only.

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ is #1 on Fandango’s Fanticipation Buzz Indicator

    ‘Ender’s Game’ is #1 on Fandango’s Fanticipation Buzz Indicator

    Fandango-Buzz

    Fandango has just issued a press release announcing Ender’s Game as the #1 film fans want to see this weekend. Buy your tickets NOW!

    LOS ANGELES  October 31, 2013 – According to Fandango, the nation’s leading moviegoing destination, “Ender’s Game” is the #1 film that fans want to see this weekend, scoring 85 out of 100 points on Fandango’s Fanticipation movie buzz indicator.  The sci-fi action-adventure epic is leading the weekend’s releases with strong ticket sales, outpacing Tom Cruise’s “Oblivion,” Matt Damon’s “Elysium” and Guillermo Del Toro’s “Pacific Rim” at the same point in their sales cycles.

    A Fandango survey of “Ender’s Game” ticket-buyers revealed that:

    • 94% consider themselves Harrison Ford fans;
    • 71% are already looking forward to a possible sequel;
    • 53% have read the 1985 novel.

    The critically acclaimed “12 Years a Slave” goes into wider release this weekend, and has entered the top-five on Fandango’s Fanticipation chart.  According to a Fandango poll of “12 Years” moviegoers:

    • 89% claim the supporting cast (Brad Pitt, Michael Fassbender) boosted their interest in seeing the film;
    • 57% said they’re more inclined to see the film because of its Oscar buzz.

    “’12 Years a Slave’ is a tough movie that demands to be seen, and its strong ticket sales demonstrate that audiences are always looking for smart, challenging movies, and not just escapist fare,” says Fandango Chief Correspondent, Dave Karger, and host of the movie recommendation show, “Weekend Ticket.”  Karger adds, It’s also the movie of choice for fans wanting to get a jump start on next year’s Oscar front-runners, with likely nominations for Best Picture, Actor, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Director and Adapted Screenplay.”

    About Fandango’s Fanticipation

    Known for having its finger on the pulse of moviegoers, Fandango’s movie buzz indicator, Fanticipation, provides statistical insight into the movies fans are planning to see in a given weekend. Fanticipation scores (based on a 1 to 100-point scale) are calculated via an algorithm of Fandango’s advance ticket sales, website and mobile traffic, and social media engagement.  Fanticipation is not intended as a forecast of the weekend box office; it is a snapshot of movie fan sentiment.

  • Grantland Documents the Incredible Development Journey of ‘Ender’s Game’

    Grantland Documents the Incredible Development Journey of ‘Ender’s Game’

    ENDER'S GAME

    If you’re a longtime fan of Ender’s Game like me, watching hopefully and wistfully from the sidelines as the years and decades went by, you’ve probably wondered just what in the world was going on that it took nearly 30 years for NovEnder 1st to arrive. Even with my involvement as a fansite, I’ve never known exactly how it all went down and I’ve always wanted to know.

    Today, Grantland’s Matt Patches posted an incredibly insightful piece documenting the long journey Ender’s Game took through the Hollywood circuit and why all the right pieces had to fall into place in order for them to make the film that I saw (and loved) just two days ago.

    Ender’s Game was published in 1985. The film adaptation Hood was told would never happen arrives in theaters this week. What happened in between makes Ender’s Game a rare Hollywood miracle. Sifting through the timeline, Card’s cynicism had merit — Hood wasn’t the first guy to try his hand at adapting the sci-fi book into a blockbuster. He wasn’t even the fifth. Producers and studios have been trying ever since Card’s book was published.

    The piece then goes on to describe all the reasons why it never worked out in the end with studios, directors, producers, writers, and executives. They even had D.B. Weiss and David Benioff working on it at one point!

    In May 2002, Chartoff made a deal with Warner Bros. to finance and release Ender’s Game. Almost instantly, their team found “the guy”: Wolfgang Petersen, just off his hit adaptation of The Perfect Storm. Warner Bros. hoped to combine Ender’s Game andEnder’s Shadow into one film. At first, Card was the intended screenwriter, but as time passed and Petersen took on one film (2004’s Troy) and then another (2006’s Poseidon), Petersen’s interest waned. Other writers were brought onboard to stoke that interest: Hot off X2 in 2004, Dan Harris and Michael Dougherty took a first pass at adapting the book. Then in 2005, future Game of Thrones writer-producers D.B. Weiss and David Benioff (also a writer of Troy) worked with Petersen to develop another take. Two years later, Card announced he was taking over scripting duties once again.

    Patches continues to document Card’s involvement and frustration over the development and writing process and just when Card had basically given up, things finally began to come together.

    When Gavin Hood told Orson Scott Card that he planned to adapt Card’s science-fiction classic Ender’s Game for the big screen, the author replied with a familiar refrain: “Good luck, kid.” Card was done trying to bring his book to the screen. If someone else wanted to spend years of his life spinning in circles, so be it. But before removing himself from the development process, he left Hood with a bit of wisdom, one the director would hear over and over again throughout his journey: Ender’s Game was an utterly unfilmable book.

    The second half of the article gives fans an incredible look into how OddLot founder Gigi Pritzker assembled her team of “Ender’s Game Avengers” including Bob Orci, Gavin Hood, and eventually star Asa Butterfield.

    With the reset button pressed and Card all but out of the picture, Pritzker and OddLot set out to find a team that understood the treasured tome. The key was finding a writer-director who could build the movie from the ground up and carry it to the end, their very own Ender. Pritzker found him in Hood, a South African filmmaker who brought his memories of apartheid and life in the military to the project. After a turbulent experience on the ill-fated X-Men Origins: Wolverine, where multiple writers tinkered with the script on a daily basis in the middle of shooting, Hood craved the immersion required for Ender’s Game. He had a vision: a script that would allow a preteen actor to engage with challenging, emotionally raw material. That was all Pritzker needed to hear.

    Still missing was Hendee’s keystone, a fan who grew up with the novel, a person who would flock to the movie if they weren’t involved. Essentially, a visible champion and guide. They found him in writer Roberto Orci (TransformersStar Trek), who boarded the movie as a producer after regaling Pritzker with his memories of reading Ender’s Game at 12 years old. Orci became the movie’s Card proxy — a devout fan without a preservationist instinct. When the team felt it couldn’t make changes to aspects of the book, Orci would say, “Sure we can — I’m the guy who blew up Vulcan! I know what we can do and can’t do.”

    […]

    Genuine support begat money begat production on a real-life movie, the kind that needed a cast and crew and cameras and sets and lighting and props and wasn’t just a promise forwarded around in email. There were more hurdles to jump; finding an Ender was always a frightening prospect for Hood.

    “We had a script, we were hoping to make it, but no one was going to green-light us until the right kid was onboard,” he said. The director auditioned hundreds of boy leads for the role, some as young as 8 years old, before landing on Hugo’s Asa Butterfield.

    People say all the time that things happen for a reason and with Ender’s Game, that certainly seems to apply. Having seen the film and loved what they did while still staying ultimately loyal to the story, I’m genuinely glad that this is what it took for it to finally be in theaters.

    To read the entire piece, head over to Grantland.

    Ender’s Game hits theaters tomorrow at 8 PM in advance of the official release date of November 1, 2013.

  • VIDEO: New ‘Ender’s Game’ TV Spot ‘Another Way’

    VIDEO: New ‘Ender’s Game’ TV Spot ‘Another Way’

    Watch a new TV spot for Ender’s Game called ‘Another Way’. Warning: this one has egg footage too, so if you don’t want to see it, don’t click!

  • VIDEO: Ender’s Game ‘The 28-Year Journey’

    VIDEO: Ender’s Game ‘The 28-Year Journey’

    Watch an official preview of Ender’s Game called ‘The 28-Year Journey’ featuring new footage from the film and soundbites from Gavin Hood, Bob Orci, and Gigi Pritzker.

  • VIDEO: Asa Butterfield on Conan

    VIDEO: Asa Butterfield on Conan

    Before returning to London, Asa Butterfield made an appearance on Conan. Watch the videos below!

    He talks about being introduced as “Assa” and about how the legend of In-and-Out burgers didn’t quite live up to expectations. He then gives Conan a UK cussing lesson.

    In this second clip, he describes a rather amazing self-injury he sustained when he played rugby and then talks about Ender’s Game. The clip shown is the Ice Battle scene. (which I can now confirm is cut from different parts of the movie)

    Thanks to Team Coco for the videos!

  • Summit Entertainment and Sandboxr Announce 3D Battleship Replica Printing for Ender’s Game Fans

    Summit Entertainment and Sandboxr Announce 3D Battleship Replica Printing for Ender’s Game Fans

    motherhsip-pipe-base-rat-filter

    Lionsgate/Summit has issued a press release announcing a unique opportunity for Ender’s Game fans to order custom 3D replicas of various ships from the Ender’s Game movie.

    For the First Time Fans Will Be Able To Customize and Print Their Own 3D Replicas From Summit Entertainment’s ENDER’S GAME

    App by Sandboxr Available for Download Prior to Theatrical Release

    Salt Lake City, Utah, October 29, 2013 – Sandboxr, a 3D print and software development company from Utah, announced today its 3D print creation app for Summit Entertainment’s ENDER’S GAME.  Sandboxr’s 3D print creation app has been in development for the past two years, and through the ENDER’S GAME-licensed version, fans will be able to create and bring home exclusive replica battleships from the film generated by cutting-edge three-dimensional printing technology.  Fans will be able to check out the ENDER’S GAME 3D printing experience at Sandboxr.combefore Thursday’s release of the movie in theatres and IMAX October 31 at 8pm. Summit Entertainment is a LIONSGATE® (NYSE: LGF) company.

    Nancy Kirkpatrick, Summit’s President of Worldwide Marketing, said, “This is the first 3D experience of this type to coincide with a major cinematic movie release, and Summit is excited to work with Sandboxr to offer this amazing experience and great new technology to our ENDER’S GAME fans.”

    At Sandboxr.com, fans of ENDER’S GAME will be able to enjoy an interactive product experience that extends their engagement with the film and that they can access from their computer. Fans can choose from a selection of CG images from the movie studio file archives and bring home their own ENDER’S GAME 3D printed spacecraft and accessories.

    “With an experience as sophisticated as Sandboxr’s, the challenge is to make it easy to use by the average guy or girl.  3D experiences are typically exclusive to tech savvy makers and designers.   However, we’ve worked hard to make a 3D printing experience that is accessible in a meaningful way to everyone. Bringing 3D design and print technology into the hands of the ENDER’S GAME fans is a thrilling opportunity for us at Sandboxr,” says Berkley Frei, Sandboxr CEO.

    To experience the app for yourself log onto sandboxr.com and follow the links to ENDER’S GAME.

    View more samples here:

    I headed over to Sandboxr to take a look at their app and it’s pretty cool. Once you install it, you can customize your printing by choosing a base.

    Sandboxr1

     

    Once you add parts to your Parts List (add a base and a ship), you can move on to Color.

    Sandboxr2

     

    Once on the color screen you can choose the army logo you want on the base and set all the colors of the base for various parts.

    Sandboxr3

     

    Once you’ve set everything how you want it, you go to Print, where you place your order. The site says to allow 3-6 weeks for printing and delivery.

  • Ender’s Game Review: The Good, the Bad, and the Awesome

    Ender’s Game Review: The Good, the Bad, and the Awesome

    EndersGame_IMAX_Poster

     

    Review by EnderWiggin.net founder Crystal Watanabe

    Yesterday I had the amazing pleasure of watching the result of years of hard work by Gavin Hood and his amazing cast and crew after covering my very first red carpet premiere. For the last week I’d been half-reading reviews, scrolling through one-line Twitter reviews, and going through a hand-wringing roller coaster of anticipation and apprehension.

    I’ve talked a lot with Kelly from Ender News about the mutually shared terror that we might have done all this work only to hate the movie. When I saw The Hunger Games at the world premiere last year, I left the Nokia with the dull buzz of disappointment in my head as everyone around me raved about the movie. I never really truly got over that opinion and so going into Ender’s Game, I had no illusions about the fact that I might actually end up in a moody funk at the after party.

    Fortunately, I had nothing to worry about.

    The Good

    The first thing I have to say that it was a dream come true to watch Ender’s Game sitting next to my Ender BFF Kelly, so Summit Entertainment has my sincerest thanks for inviting us to the screening, giving us carpet access, and inviting us to hang out afterwards as well. When you share your geeky hopes and dreams about a movie for 36 weeks on a podcast, you really start to cling to the idea of experiencing the movie for the first time with that person.

    The fansite girls! L-R: Ender's Game Fandom, Ender's Ansible, EnderWiggin.net, Ender News
    The fansite girls! L-R: Ender’s Game Fandom, Ender’s Ansible, EnderWiggin.net, Ender News

     

    Thankfully, Kelly is a movie-talker too because we were constantly leaning over to say things to each other. At one point, she whispered in my ear, “This is surprisingly good! I’m really enjoying myself!” and I could only say, “I know! Me too!”

    I don’t know why we went in with so much apprehension. Perhaps it’s because we’d heard a bad vibe from Germany. Maybe it was the fact that Gavin Hood recognized us on the carpet right away and came at us like Chunk in Goonies, sure that he was in trouble because he thought we’d already seen it. Either way, we were happy and once again found ourselves on the same level of thought.

    I think what surprised me the most was how light-hearted and funny the movie was. With the cast focusing their interviews on the serious aspects of the movie, it was easy to walk in assuming it was going to to be strictly saving the world business the entire time. When you get down to it though, the movie still stars kids and with kids being kids, there were quite a few laughs. There’s one particular line of Bean’s that was truly hysterical and made the whole theater crack up laughing.

    I know some people hate voiceover, but with the majority of Ender’s Game taking place inside Ender’s head, Gavin Hood needed some kind of method of getting inside his head. To do this he had Asa do voiceover of emails Ender writes to Valentine. These occur throughout the film and I felt it helped to really move the story along. Without it, I think fresh viewers would have been extremely confused.

    The Mind Game was beautiful, though parts of it were excised. I’d seen a lot of concept art from it in the official companion and on screen it looked great. And seriously, Gavin Hood’s giant is one of the most epic director cameos ever.

    The Bad

    I think Orson Scott Card summed up the bad the best when he recently spoke to a newspaper in New Zealand and said that the movie “rockets along at a breakneck pace”. The movie clocks in at under two hours, which, if I’m being honest, shocked me and so I went in expecting to feel like I was watching the movie on fast forward.

    The pacing of Ender's Game, taking off from Desert Salt Flats.
    The pacing of Ender’s Game, taking off from Desert Salt Flats.

    The film definitely suffered from a rushed feeling and I’d really love to see an extended version released because I really did feel like some parts could have benefited from just a couple of more minutes here and there. I had this odd feeling throughout the movie like I was seeing the movie through some weird movie version of parent goggles and that people walking into this movie without reading the book would find that while the acting, visuals, and sets were simply stunning, it was all just going too fast. But then again, perhaps the feeling of urgency is easier to accept without prior book bias.

    For diehard book fans, change will probably be the hardest thing to swallow.

    Since I had the chance to go to the Ender’s Game set, talk extensively with the people behind the movie, and have interacted with the cast over the last two years, I feel like I’ve been inoculated to the changes that were going to be coming at me in the movie. With that in mind, it’s possible that because of this I was more accepting of changes that may be stark and jarring for fans just hearing about the movie last month and going to the theater to see what’s up with their favorite book from high school.

    Knowing as much as I did, there were more changes I did not know about and while I felt they were all necessary for the film Gavin Hood made, I think some fans will find it hard to swallow. One in particular is on the subject I’d brought up last year on the death of Stilson.

    In Pondering the Fate of Stilson, I laid out why I didn’t think Stilson needed to die and why I felt like his death was too dangerous a message to send out on the big screen. Response was almost 100% against me. Everyone felt that Stilson had to die, even though I argued in discussions that since Ender didn’t know it happened until years later, it didn’t have any bearing on his development as a character.

    People can argue with me until they’re blue in the face; I will never be convinced that reading about a child’s death is equal to watching a child die in a movie. The two are completely different forms of media and what a pre-teen or teen imagines while reading a scene such as Ender and Stilson’s fight will range anywhere from tame to excessively violent depending on the individual and you can’t put a fight to the death on screen and expect that wide spectrum of youth to experience a single visual vision the same way.

    In the movie, it is never specifically said that Stilson or Bonzo die; their fates are left ambiguous and most moviegoers that haven’t read the book will assume that they live. This is a choice that I fully agree with. The risks the studio would have taken sending that kind of message out on the subject of bullying was not one they should be expected to take. Bullying is a serious, serious issue with today’s youth and justifying Ender’s actions that led to another child’s death would have been stepping over a line no book fan should expect to be crossed for the sake of a film adaptation. Ender lives in an extreme situation, but you can’t assume everyone will fully understand that, especially when a lot of people will see this movie without having read the book.

    In the end, my advice to fans is to go in with an open mind.

    Ender-Petra-Training

    One last thing that can fall into the bad category (and yet not) is the relationship between Petra and Ender. The cast, director, and producers talked a good deal about their friendship and how drawn they are together as friends, but the fact of the matter is that there is an underlying connection between the two of them that hints at something more.

    From the things Petra says to Ender to the way they smile at each other while training to the mysterious way Petra sits while talking to Ender from her room on Eros, that teen love interest angle is very carefully there.

    That being said, it doesn’t come across as a bad thing. These kids are, after all, at that age and to excise even a hint of young love completely would have probably felt a little too rigid and made Ender seem unrelatable to teens his own age. If Ender had been 8 having a crush on a 12 year-old Petra, then I can see there being a valid argument, but as the movie stands, what they did felt appropriate.

    The Awesome

    Asa Butterfield is an amazing Ender. I did catch one time where his American accent seemed to slip slightly, but other than that, I was very impressed with his performance. His smile makes you happy and sad at the same time, but when Ender is crying you get to see the emotional core of the Ender that book fans know and love. I never really felt like I was watching Asa Butterfield. I felt like I was watching Ender Wiggin.

    ENDER'S GAME

    On a similar note, I’d read criticism that Abigail Breslin is underutilized, but I was surprised at how well she pulled off the character of Valentine with practically nothing being said about how intelligent she really was. From her clothing to the way she walked and talked, she felt like Valentine to me.

    Peter did not have much screen time, but Jimmy Jax Pinchak pulled off the character really well. One of my favorite Peter scenes in the book wasn’t present, but I didn’t even notice. Seeing Jimmy at the after party in a suit and tie wearing glasses was like a knock in the face. I was like, wow, the movie’s over and here’s Peter Wiggin the Hegemon! It was surreal in an amusing book nerd kind of way.

    The Battle Room was grand and at one point I just wanted to blurt out, “LOOK at that Battle Room!” Graff’s hook was really cool and the way these kids hit the stars made me cringe every time. When we interviewed the kids on the carpet, we usually asked them their favorite scene and a lot of them went straight to the Battle Room. They weren’t wrong as the battles were amazing to watch in such an amazing arena.

    The only drawback was that before you know it, the Battle Room scenes are over. However, when you have the director telling you that some 3 second shots cost $100,000 to produce, it puts the lack of more Battle Room into perspective. Gavin told us he did try for more, so we’ll all have to trust that the did what he could.

    Building0193

    The impressiveness of the Battle Room aside, what amazed me the most in terms of VFX was Ender’s simulator on Eros. We were lucky enough to be able to stand on that platform that Ender stands at and it was in this gigantic green screen room. I remember standing there looking up and just being in awe over what they were going for and I wasn’t disappointed. Being a former hardcore MMO gamer, I loved the look of happy awe on Ender’s face as he saw what they’d set up for him.

    In terms of writing, I loved the way Gavin wrote the final reveal to Ender. The scene that follows his last victory is sad, tragic, and emotional in all the ways you expect it to be with Asa Butterfield’s Ender. I also loved how he tied the Battle Room into the finale because it was an issue I’d always had trouble understanding with the book.

    I got to talk to Gavin about it at the after party and he said the same thing: how do you explain the correlation of such rigorous physical training from the Battle Room to pure simulation, basically kids sitting on their butts playing “games” all day, in Command School? I thought how he explained that on film was a great choice in storytelling.

    Overall, I thought the film was an amazing accomplishment and one kick ass ride. The cast turned out great performances and I’m proud and happy for all of the kids who stood around Ender making him who he is. Throughout the entire movie I kept thinking to myself: I have to see this again. I have to see this again. And I will.

    Some fans will enjoy it, others may walk away disappointed. But what’s particularly exhilarating for me is that it’s finally here. My mother gave me this book twenty three years ago and as soon as I finished it, I could only wait for a movie to be made.

    I waited a long time.

  • GIVEAWAY: Advance Screening Tickets for ‘Ender’s Game’ in IMAX in Honolulu

    GIVEAWAY: Advance Screening Tickets for ‘Ender’s Game’ in IMAX in Honolulu

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    Gavin Hood wants YOU to see Ender’s Game!

    Thanks to Summit Entertainment, EnderWiggin.net has 10 passes (2 persons each pass) to give away for an advance IMAX screening of Ender’s Game tomorrow, Wednesday October 30, 2013 at Regal Dole Cannery Theatres. We are also doing a giveaway of 35 additional passes at the local Air Force base here on Oahu.

    If you can make it to the screening, it will be at 7:30 pm. I just saw it yesterday and am dying to see it again!

    To claim a ticket, simply email me at valentine@enderwiggin.net with the subject ENDER’S GAME IMAX HONOLULU and your full name. One pass per person. Each pass is good for two. These are being given out on a first come, first serve basis. Please do not email if you can’t make it.

    I will be there, so hope to see you there to see Ender’s Game early! Winners will hear from me by tonight when I return to Honolulu!

  • Ender’s Game Movie Review (by EnderWiggin.net Staffer Dee)

    Ender’s Game Movie Review (by EnderWiggin.net Staffer Dee)

    Hey guys,

    in case you didn’t know: I saw Ender’s Game last night! Finally! And since it’s still a few days until November 1st and some of you may still ponder the question whether  or not to go see it …. kidding, of course you’re gonna see it, but you may wanna know what to expect, so here is my spoiler-free review! (And with spoiler-free I mean that I’m not gonna tell you any details about the movie. The plot and everything that’s known through trailers and clips already is fair game.)

    BTW, if you don’t want to read it all, there is a bottom line at the end!

     
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    1. Book v. Movie

    Let’s start off with the most pressing questions: How does the movie compare to the book?

    I thought it did pretty well in that respect. This is a movie made with book fans in mind, but it’s not a 1:1 translation. It couldn’t be, and this movie makes this very clear, because while it is packed with references to the book, it still leaves you wanting more. There are so many little scenes, so many memorable quotes that they could not fit into this 2 hour movie. Gavin Hood really tried – he even rushed stuff a bit to fit more stuff in – but there are still so many scenes missing that I am now convinced that this book has to be made into a 20-episode-series to do it justice.

    But for what it is it does remarkably well. Many things are streamlined, some are simplified, others re-interpreted, still others completely changed to make for a coherent movie that still tells Ender’s story. As I pointed out elsewhere, we will probably not all agree on what that story is. This movie is not trying to incorporate all possible interpretations – it can’t. It is ONE interpretation of the book, Gavin Hood’s, and instead of trying to satisfy everyone he is trying to stay true to what he believes is the essence of Ender’s Game. That is the narrative line he his following systematically, even if it means that he has to leave some most beloved scenes and quotes out.

    Characterwise, the focus lies mostly on Ender and, to a lesser degree, Graff. Minor character stories are often even more reduced to make more room for the major characters who tell the major story: Ender’s story – his morality and immorality, his strength and his vulnerability, and ultimately his guilt.

    2. Directing and Composition

    So how does Gavin Hood do as a screenwriter and director?

    As I said, this is a movie for fans, and Gavin Hood tried to put as much of the story in as he could. This is mostly well done, but I have to admit that if I have any beef with this movie, this is where it lies. Because, let’s face it, this movie is rushed and a little too episodic to really achieve smoothness. There were two moments where I thought: “what? how did we get here? shouldn’t X have happened before this?” Ender’s Game could have used at least half an hour more time to establish certain plot points, because the way it is now it sometimes feels like you just blacked out and missed a bit. This gets better towards the end, and while Hood has by no means enough time to completely tell the entire Eros story, he does put in enough of the strenuousness and urgency to make the ending what it is supposed to be.

    As a director, he doesn’t take any risks. It’s solidly directed and shot pretty traditionally. Gavin Hood’s great strength lies not in innovative angles or compelling camera movements  but in how he directs his actors. Their interactions are uniformally smooth, engaged, and believable, and that is not just the actors’ achivement, but also that of a director who manages to convey to his actors exactly the mood they are supposed to be in, and exactly the things they feel towards the other. This is one of the great strengths of the movie.

    3. Visuals

    The other is the visuals. We already knew they were stunning, and they don’t disappoint on the big screen. There is not a single scene that isn’t absolutely beautiful. The landscapes and space scenery are sublime, everything in space and even on the desks looks 3D without being 3D, and nevertheless completely convincingly real. You literally don’t see the CGI unless you are supposed to see it (like in the mind game). My friend, who is a fan of 1980s and 1990s SciFi movies said it reminded her a lot of the good old times before CGI. She said while it looked totally up to date, it also looked as if all of these things were actual sets, not animated backgrounds.

    As for the mind game – I loved it. I understand that that is a matter of taste, but I thought it was pretty damn cool. I wanna play it.

    4. Acting

    The acting is this movie’s finest feature. Asa Butterfield is solid to excellent – he has very few iffy/unconvincing moments, very many convincing ones (if you don’t notice the acting, it’s good), and some absolutely brilliant ones. His Ender is lovable but prone to violence, more confident than I imagined him (but he is older, plus a drastic character change would not have been believable over this short period of time), but also vulnerable; he has darkness, and yet a fundamentally clear understanding of what is right and wrong. Butterfield portrays him with all those facets – what an actor at 14-15!

    Harrison Ford is stellar – engaged, passionate, subtle and complex, even more complex really than Graff in the book. I’d nominate him for an award, but I doubt it will come to pass.

    In comparision to these two, the other actors have rather little to do. And yet, everyone without exception excels at their role. And I’m not just saying that because they are all so nice. I was looking for flaws in the acting, and I found very little.  I was surprised how even the very small roles (like Enders parens, who each have 2 lines) were totally and utterly believable and natural. Let me mention three major “minor” characters in particular:

    • Val/Abigail Breslin: I totally believe that her Val is a genius who nearly made it to battle school.
    • Bean/Aramis Knight: Absolutely natural, exceptionally subtle for a kid. He’s going places.
    • Bonzo/Moises Arias: People (including me) were/are really afraid that because of his height he can’t be a convincing Bonzo. But while he needs a few scenes to find himself, he does become a convincing antagonist. That kid is seriously vicious!

    5. Score/Soundtrack

    Do I really have to mention the score/soundtrack? I love those big, orchestral, slightly bombastic pieces, and here they fit super well. I’m particularly in love with the theme that we hear in Ender’s War and other pieces. I call it Ender’s theme, and I’ve been  humming it all day. Daaaaaaaaaaah, daaa deeee daaaa …

     
    BOTTOM LINE : 4 out of 5

    I loved this movie. I loved it because it focuses on those parts of the story that I happen to find most important. I loved it because the actors are simply wonderful, and that is usually the most important thing for me. And I loved it because it is the most beautiful movie I’ve seen in a long while (and that includes The Hobbit and Avatar). But I won’t deny that, objectively, there are quite a few things you could complain about, especially if you are the nitpicking kind. I tend not to be a purist. As long as the essence is there, I accept that details change in transition, and that a lot of the more complex elements need to fall by the wayside. The changes that Hood made – and when you think about it, most of them make sense – will probably anger book purist and lead a lot of people to give this movie less credit than it deserves. But if you accept that this is one version, one vision, one interpretation, then you should be fine. People absolutely should give this movie a chance, because despite its shortcomings it has done very many things very right.

     
    Let me know what you think. I’ll gladly answer any and all questions and comments. I’m dying to talk about this movie!

     

    Note: This review is based on the German dubbed version of Ender’s Game, as seen in a regular movie theater.

  • VIDEO: Ender’s Game Behind-the-Scenes with Audi

    VIDEO: Ender’s Game Behind-the-Scenes with Audi

    Summit has posted a behind the scenes video detailing how Digital Domain and Audi collaborated to create the Fleet Quattro car in the movie. You can see Abigail Breslin in the car, presumably when Graff brings her to the lake.