Tag: Roberto Orci

  • Bob Orci Talks ‘Ender’ Sequels with Crave Online

    Bob Orci Talks ‘Ender’ Sequels with Crave Online

    Speaker

    While the fate of any Ender sequels is still up in the air, Crave Online spoke with Ender’s Game producer Roberto Orci and discussed possible sequels to the film.

    “They have rights to certain of the books,” Orci said. “I’m not sure which ones, and it’s two companies so I’m not sure who controls it. Or it could be potentially original because in Speaker for the Dead you pick him up when he’s already a man. There might be an in between step if that happens.”

    The article speculates the possibility of Ender in Exile, but the problem with that is the only Battle School cadet from the previous film would be Ender himself, with a wealth of new characters and, let’s face it, a wholly different tone. With the type of film Ender’s Game was, any interested people who haven’t read the book may end up disappointed in what is simply a political jockeying for power of a faraway colony with few familiar faces.

    “That’s why I think the rights that they worked out is it could either be one of the books or it could be original or a mix so that you can do what you need to do for a movie,” Orci said.

    What do you think, Launchies? Should there be an original sequel or should they recast the entire thing and head straight for Speaker?

    Read the full article at Crave Online.

  • VIDEO: IGN’s Extended Interview with Gavin Hood and Bob Orci

    VIDEO: IGN’s Extended Interview with Gavin Hood and Bob Orci

    Watch IGN’s extended 17 minute interview with Ender’s Game director Gavin Hood and producer Roberto Orci. A lot of what they talk about we’ve heard already, but it’s still a good interview to watch.

    Gavin Hood talks a bit more about why he eliminated Locke and Demosthenes, explaining that writing on the computer isn’t visually exciting and early on he made the decision to make the entire movie about Ender and cutting away to an Earth storyline would create a disconnect between the audience and Ender.

    They also get asked the question: Are you afraid the fans will hate the movie?

    Source: IGN

  • 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!

  • 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!

  • Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci in September Issue of Elle

    Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci in September Issue of Elle

    Alex-Bob-Elle

     

    Producers Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci spoke with Elle magazine for the September issue and talked Star Trek and Ender’s Game.

    Another of your upcoming films is the Ender’s Game adaptation, which hits theaters in November. What drew you to this project? 

    RO: I read that book as a child. The same uncle who got me into Star Trek actually got me to read that book. I just thought it was fascinating that you could have young protagonists in a very adult-themed book, dealing with real issues like war, peace and leaving your family. It didn’t talk down to anybody, and both children and adults liked it. At the time I read it, it seemed unfilmable, but today we finally live in an age where the technology is available to do it. All the pieces came together and it was something we just couldn’t pass up.

    I have to admit I’m a little confused by the photo and the magazine credit, since it’s clearly from an Asian magazine, but still love the photo of the two of them!

    Source: Cool Hunt

  • Straight from the Set Part 1: Producers Talk Ender’s Game

    Straight from the Set Part 1: Producers Talk Ender’s Game

    You are reading Part 1 of a five-part Ender’s Game set report series scheduled for the next week.

    Michoud

    As of today, it’s been 464 days since I was on the set of Ender’s Game in New Orleans, Louisiana, staring up at vast green screens and sets in what can only be described as complete and utter awe. Never in the week leading up to that day had I imagined the place I ended up in.

    I live in Hawaii, so when my journey began, I was put on a 10 hour direct flight from Honolulu to New Orleans. Seven hours into the flight I was ready to jump out of the plane, but consoled myself with thoughts about what was to come. I met Erin Gross from Ender’s Game Fansite at the airport and we shared a cab to the hotel.

    After checking into one of the most gorgeous hotels I’d ever been in, I looked out the window to check out my view, then relaxed until it was time for dinner with Erin. I’d already “known” her by name through our Hunger Games websites, but this was the first time we’d spent some serious time together. It was great to finally talk with someone doing the exact same things that I was doing and who also loved Ender’s Game.

    We met up with Kelly from Ender News, who would later become my podcasting partner in crime, and Cassandra from Ender’s Ansible. After a bit of chit chat, we said good night. I tried to prep questions, tried not to get too excited about the next day, and tried the impossible task of falling asleep.

    In the morning, we met in the lobby and found a group of other press that would be touring with us including journalists from HitFix, IGN, J-14, and Nerdist. We were given Ender’s Game set badges (which I still have!) and hopped into a van to be driven out to Big Easy Studios at the old NASA Michoud Facility.

    Once we got on site, we were taken to the production offices and lead into a conference room wallpapered in concept art and notes. I saw refreshments to the side including my weakness, strawberries, but I was too excited and almost too nauseated to eat. Bob Orci, the producer, was in the room. I’d had no idea he’d be there and being a big fan of a lot of his work, I was more than a little starstruck. Then we sat down and he and fellow producers Lynn Hendee and Linda McDonough proceeded to spew out everything I could have ever wanted to know about the movie they were making.

    Ender’s World

    Although they hadn’t yet taken us on a tour of anything, the initial producer’s presentation was a gold mine of imagery. If you can recall how long we all have been analyzing and scrutinizing each of the stills and imagery that come out, imagine having 50 of those flash before your eyes in a matter of minutes. I had to force myself not to shriek, “STOP! Go back! I didn’t stare at that one long enough!” Still, Bob Orci continued to flick through them one after another.

    An International Fleet school on Earth. Image courtesy of Summit Entertainment.
    An International Fleet school on Earth. Image courtesy of Summit Entertainment.

    Even though I’m a longtime fan of Ender’s Game, I admit I never put too much thought into the world that the Wiggins lived in on Earth. Judging from the still above, which Summit provided to us for this report, Ender lives near some type of metropolis. But while in the book, the Wiggins live in the city, that won’t be the case with the film. The Wiggins in the film will live in a home closer to what you may have imagined Bean visits in Shadow of the Hegemon.

    “We want[ed] what’s happening on Earth to contrast to the technology of space. So many sci-fi novels present a dystopian future, kind of an ugly place, we wanted to present Ender’s world as one worth saving, one that’s become utopian in many ways.” said Orci. He showed us a slide of a beautiful home with classic columns. “Just like the Vatican is alive and well the way it’s been existing for the last five hundred years here, […] why wouldn’t there be classic houses?”

    The Wiggin home is utopian indeed. We were shown photos of Harrison Ford as Colonel Graff and Viola Davis as Major Anderson inside a very picturesque living room, presumably when they’ve come (together, I might add) to take Ender to Battle School. Last month, we actually got to stand in that very same living room at the Ender’s Game Experience at Comic Con.

    While a lot of the stills they showed us have been erased from my memory by time, one that managed to stick with me is an overhead shot of Valentine looking up at something with a sad look on her face, presumably at that point Ender is already gone. I can’t remember if it was a mobile or something else, but it could possibly be the plane hanging from the ceiling of his bedroom.

    The homes aren’t the only things carrying “classic” themes. At school on Earth, the classrooms are designed after typical science classrooms just like one that you might have learned in yourself. When it comes to Battle School, however, you can see the contrast Orci talks about when you compare the classroom you know with this image (below) of a classroom in Battle School. We also saw a still with Ender facing off against a rather intimidating Stilson.

    Battle-School-Needs-You27

    Some of you may remember we all got to see a photo of Ender’s monitor last year and during the presentation they showed us a photo of Ender sitting on a medical examiner’s table, with some concept art of the utopian society shown on a window behind him.

    Trailer2-HR0648

    In the trailer, there’s a shot of a rocket shooting into space and I’m assuming that this is Ender and Graff launching from Earth to go to Battle School. Orci mentioned that they’d started with concept art of a space shuttle taking off like an airplane, but they were promptly shot down by SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, who they’d been consulting with. “[Musk] said, “No, that would never happen. Since you’re trying to get up, just point the damn thing up.””

    Next: Battle School and the Battle Room >>

  • GALLERY: Comic-Con 2013 “Ender’s Game” Press Conference

    GALLERY: Comic-Con 2013 “Ender’s Game” Press Conference

    I know they’ve been long in coming, but here are the final photos from the “Ender’s Game” press conference held on 18 July 2013 at San Diego Comic-Con!

    I had the amazing opportunity to sit second row, a mere ten feet from a fabulous ensemble: Writer/Director Gavin Hood, Producer Roberto Orci, Asa Butterfield (Ender Wiggin), Hailee Steinfeld (Petra Arkanian), and of course, Mr. Harrison Ford (Colonel Graff).  I’m not really sure what they talked about, since I spent most of my time trying to snap photos and take video simultaneously.  Though I’m pretty sure one of those surlier photos of Harrison came shortly after some silly reporter said the words “Han Solo”…

    (These photographs are the property of Elizabeth C. Spencer and may not be utilized without permission.  If you want to share them, link to them, no problem – just please make sure to credit your source!)

    written by Elizabeth Spencer

     

  • VIDEO: Bob Orci On Maintaining Ender’s Game’s Original Storyline

    VIDEO: Bob Orci On Maintaining Ender’s Game’s Original Storyline

    The Comic Con rush isn’t over, guys. During the convention, Clevver TV caught up with Asa Butterfield and Hailee Steinfeld as well as producer Bob Orci and director Gavin Hood, but while they released their interview with Hailee and Asa weeks ago, they only made the ones with Bob and Gavin available on Youtube a couple of days ago.

    In this one, Bob Orci talks trying to get the Ender’s Game movie done in a way that would keep the integrity and storyline of the book. Spiderman and Star Trek fans can look forward to brief mentions as well. Watch it below!

     

     

    Watch ClevverTV’s interview with Asa and Hailee HERE!

    Watch ClevverTV’s interview with Gavin Hood HERE!

     
    Source: Clevver Movies on Youtube
     

  • Roberto Orci and Gavin Hood on Adapting Ender’s Game

    Roberto Orci and Gavin Hood on Adapting Ender’s Game

    HoodOrci_wired_alexwashburn

    While at Comic Con, producer Bob Orci and writer/director Gavin Hood sat down for yet another Ender’s Game interview, this time with FirstShowing.net’s Alex Billington. This interview focuses almost exclusively on the challenge of adapting Orson Scott Card’s complex book for the silver screen. Here are some of my favorite parts.

    Bob Orci on why the time is right for an Ender’s Game movie:

    [Audiences ha]ve seen everything. They are tired of the usual fare. This is a book that has a unique structure and has complicated themes. But it’s also a grand space adventure.

    Gavin Hood on the different media:

    The tricky thing in the adaptation of this is how do you make these characters and what’s going on in their heads real on screen when you can’t use what the author can use, which is lots of description of what he’s thinking. … [H]ow do I use different tools, the tools of cinema — lensing, long lenses. When do I go tight? When do I go wide? What kind of structure do I put into the scene? How do I put these characters against each other? To generate the same feeling in the audience that those descriptive passages generate in the book.

    Check out the rest of the interview HERE.

    Source: FirstShowing.net

     

  • Bob Orci on Filming the Unfilmable Book

    Bob Orci on Filming the Unfilmable Book

    Bob+Orci+Ender+Game+Stars+Pose+Comic+Con+gumUcGpD83Xl

    During the obligatory Comic Con press line, Ender’s Game producer Roberto Orci talked to Zap2It about spoilers in the trailer, sequels, and the Orson Scott Card controversy. Asked about why this new script was the right one to finally make an Ender’s Game movie when the book had always been called unfilmable, he answered this:

    I heard various pitches of the movie over the years that totally changed the ending and made it like ‘Star Wars’ in a sense, like totally like ‘and then they go and they blow up the Death Star,’ essentially. Completely changed what the intent of the book was. … We just thought audiences have seen everything nowadays. They’ve seen all the big spectacle, now they can handle this movie, and it’s still spectacle but it’s still a young protagonist in an adult situation dealing with war and peace and tolerance and all kinds of other things.

    Check out the rest of the interview HERE!

    Source: Zap2It

  • VIDEO: Harrison Ford and Bob Orci with Josh Horowitz

    VIDEO: Harrison Ford and Bob Orci with Josh Horowitz

    Since I cover The Hunger Games, I end up watching a lot of videos of MTV’s Josh Horowitz, who is a fantastically hilarious nerd. When I heard he’d done an interview with Harrison Ford I knew immediately it would be good, but I had no idea it would be 20 minutes long. Watch the entire hysterically funny video of Josh interviewing Harrison Ford and Bob Orci of Ender’s Game below. It’s got weird things called telephones, nerd quizzes, and Harrison’s thoughts on the con.

     
    In case the video above doesn’t work, HERE is a write-up of it by Josh Horowitz. It lacks most of the giggling, but the content is there.
     
    Source: MTV

  • VIDEO: EnderWiggin.net Interviews Bob Orci and Gavin Hood

    VIDEO: EnderWiggin.net Interviews Bob Orci and Gavin Hood

    Here’s our video interview with producer Bob Orci and Gavin Hood outside the Ender’s Game Experience.

    Gavin did talk to us a lot more about Ender and Bonzo after we’d turned off the camera, so Liz will have to help provide us some of those bits with the notes she took afterwards.

    To provide some context on why this is so short, we weren’t even aware we’d be able to do this, so we had nothing to ask. We stood at the very end of the press line and they seemed anxious to leave, with their press people saying we could only talk to Gavin. So when our time came we had really only came up with two things to ask them since we didn’t want to be rude. However, they seemed more than happy to talk to us further, so Liz and I would like to thank them for that.

    In the future I’ll definitely make sure to have lots of things to ask at the ready for emergencies such as these. 😉

  • An “Ender’s Game” Roundtable – Conversations With the Director, Producer, and Cast!

    An “Ender’s Game” Roundtable – Conversations With the Director, Producer, and Cast!

    by Elizabeth Spencer

    Ho, Launchies!  Crystal and I have just returned home after an absolutely fantastic (if exhausting) five days at San Diego Comic-Con!  We had a marvelous time exploring the sights and sounds of one of the coolest places around… We posed with Jedi, sat in the Iron Throne, explored a replica of Bag End made entirely of Legos, and one night were ushered into a bunker to stock up on supplies for the upcoming zombie apocalypse.  Oh, wait.  That was just me.  Crystal spent her whole trip camped out for Hall H.

    And oh yeah, we also did a bunch of stuff for “Ender’s Game.”  It’s been a busy few days, so our apologies for the late reporting!

    Roundtable

    On Thursday, July 18, I had the privilege of sitting down to a roundtable discussion with “Ender’s Game” Writer/Director Gavin Hood, Producer Roberto Orci, Ender Wiggin-actor Asa Butterfield, and Petra Arkanian-actress Hailee Steinfeld.  Also in attendance were Kelly and Aidan (from Ender News) and Cassandra (from Ender’s Ansible).

    The four of us had an awesome opportunity to get right down to it and ask the questions that real fans want answered.  So here I present to you our biggest takeaways:

    1)      The New Trailer!  Yes, there’s a new trailer, and for those of us who didn’t get to see it during the Hall H panel, it will be released to the public with the premiere of “Elysium,” due to hit theaters on August 9th.  There’s a chance that it may also hit the internet a few days prior, so we’ll keep our eyes peeled!

    2)      Sequels!  Everyone’s being pretty tight-lipped about possible sequels right now, and for good reason.  As Gavin reminds us, “There’s a large amount of money at stake and we would need the approval of the studio.”  Gavin and Bob are all for it, but couldn’t speak to possible plots or timeframes.  The fact that this first adaptation even made it off the ground was miracle enough.  As Gavin said, “This property is something that people wanted to make for a long time and didn’t, couldn’t, wouldn’t, and so I think everybody is a little bit in shock that we actually made it.”  So no news for now, but we’ll keep our ears to the ground.

    3)      Locke and Demosthenes – Gone for Good.  Gavin spoke about cutting the Locke and Demosthenes sub-plot, a matter of contention among some fans: “The main decision that we made is that we would stick with Ender Wiggin, never do a scene without him.  Any scene that happened without him, the only ones we chose to do were a couple of scenes with Graff and Anderson where they talk about him, so that the audience is truly on Ender’s journey in order to bond you visually and cinematically with this lead character and identify with him.”

    This makes perfect sense for a two-hour movie, and while some fans may be upset that this story line doesn’t make it to the screen, we think it was the right move on the writer’s part.  While Peter and Valentine are obviously central figures to the plot, it is because they form a foundation for Ender’s own journey, and their activities outside of Ender’s world don’t serve to advance the story that Gavin wants to tell.    Now if we ever do get those sequels, they might have to fit in a bit of, “Meanwhile, back on Earth…”

    4)      On Violence: Gavin and Bob answered a few questions regarding the level of violence that they adapted from book to screen.  Those who have read the book know that there are several severely violent actions that are vital to the development of Ender’s character and the progression of his journey.

    To avoid spoilers, we won’t go into specific details here.  But from what we heard, it sounds like the team found a good balance between showing the seriousness of the act without dragging it out for the sake of spectacle.  As Gavin Hood explained: “We’re walking a very fine line in a PG-13 world…you can’t have an “R” movie where half the people who love the book can’t see the movie, and yet you also don’t want to soften it up… We never wanted to indulge the violence for the sake of violence. We wanted the violence to happen, for you to feel the shock of it in a real way, but more importantly for you to deal with the aftermath of the violence…”

    The most important thing, he said, was to show what effect the violence had on the characters (specifically Ender) and how the impact of that violence carried across in their reactions.  Gavin spoke several times throughout the interview about the abilities of all the actors to portray subtle, emotional, and nuanced performances, helping to convey the depth of what is largely an internal struggle that takes place in Ender’s own mind.  We can’t wait to see how these scenes play out on film.

    5)      Why Not Reading The Book Might Be A Good Thing: For fans of any book-to-screen adaptation, it can be hard to imagine that someone would take on a movie role without having read the source material.  We know that Asa Butterfield and Hailee Steinfeld both read the novel, but other actors (such as Harrison Ford and Viola Davis) did not.  When asked about how this affected their understanding of the characters, Gavin stood firmly behind the script’s ability to provide all that was necessary for the actors to comprehend their roles and motivations.

    In fact, he said, not reading the book can sometimes be a good thing: “Their feeling was that to engage in conversations about scenes that are not in the movie isn’t helpful.  They need to know that what’s on that page in the script, which is going to be on screen, is going to have sufficient weight and substance and merit to give them fully-rounded characters in the movie […] There’s a lot of actors who don’t want to read books, some do – these guys (indicating Asa and Hailee) used the book as a form of research, and fantastically so.  Other actors say, ‘Wait a minute – we’re not making the book.  You’re asking me to play the role based on the script.  This script better have enough substance and weight and nuance for me to feel that my character is going to be nuanced.’

    And that was their approach, which I think is absolutely fine.”

    6)      Ender and Petra…In Love?  Our group went ahead and asked the big question that’s had many fans worried over the last few weeks.  Ever since photos were released showing Ender and Petra holding hands, as well as Petra grasping Ender’s arm, we have wondered about the possibility that they built a teen romance into the script. Say it isn’t so!

    While the answers we received from Gavin, Bob, Asa, and Hailee all point to a platonic relationship, there’s still a little doubt in my mind about how much teen angst will actually show up on the screen.  Asa told us that “I wouldn’t say it was anything at all like a love relationship, cause they’re both dependent on each other for support.  They’re both in the same situation, they’re both not entirely accepted by the community they’re in.”  Hailee also spoke about the similarities between Ender and Petra, and how there is a connection formed between them based on that outcast role and the need for acceptance.

    “I think that it’s sort of expected in a way, and what’s great about the relationship between them is – not only did I not really see it as sort of a romance thing, but I don’t think the characters do either.  I think they’re looking for a friend, and somebody to trust and feel comfortable with, and that doesn’t necessarily mean boyfriend/girlfriend or whatever.”

    Gavin summed it up by assuring us that “there is genuine tenderness between these two characters at certain moments, and there are genuinely sweet moments – when she teaches him how to shoot, it’s both exciting and really tender, but it’s not, ‘let’s be cute.’  None of that, no.”

    7)      And “Ender’s Shadow?”  Also Out.  Gavin Hood confirmed that there will be none of “Ender’s Shadow” in this movie – Bean’s storyline will be restricted to what is present in “Ender’s Game” and nothing more.  It was hard enough, Gavin said, trying to fit as much as they could of the original novel in to a two-hour movie, and they chose early on to stick to Ender’s story alone.

    And that’s just about it, folks!  A few more questions were tossed around about the score and Asa’s American accent (he practiced in the shower), and we learned that they are 90-95% done with the final cut of the movie.

    All in all, I’d say it was a pretty successful day.  A huge thanks to Gavin, Bob, Asa, and Hailee for making time to sit down with the four of us – every time I hear them talk, I am more and more confident that this adaptation is in the right hands, and will meet our expectations and then some!

    Stay tuned for some additional post- Comic-Con write-ups, and feel free to ask any questions about our time in San Diego!  More pics will also be coming soon!