Tag: Set Photos

  • PHOTO: New(ish) Behind-the-Scenes Picture

    PHOTO: New(ish) Behind-the-Scenes Picture

    Ender_Graff_on_set_Empire

    Empire Magazine has released a new behind-the-scenes still from the filming of Ender’s Game. They already put it out in print in their August 2013 issue a couple of weeks ago, but this is the first time they officially used it online. In it, we see director Gavin Hood talk to Asa Butterfield and Suraj Partha about a scene that apparently happens in the battle school corridor and in which they are wearing pyjamas. Can anyone guess which scene this is? And what are those rainbow-colored rings?

    Read Empire’s accompanying article about the Ender’s Game Comic Con panel HERE!

    Source: Empire

  • Production Blog Photos: Gate to the Battle Room

    Production Blog Photos: Gate to the Battle Room

    Null G

    Even though principal photography is now truly over, with Asa Butterfield returning to his home in the United Kingdom yesterday, Bob Orci managed to give the fans one more production blog entry to oogle over. In what appears to be concept art of the gate to the Battle Room, we get to see another glimpse of the rounded doors we previously saw in the background of a photo of Mr. Orci.

    On the floor are the ominous words: “WARNING: NULL G BEYOND THIS LINE”

    Ask anyone to quote ‘Ender’s Game‘ and the majority will probably say, “The enemy’s gate is down.” Yet it can be easy to forget that it’s only “down” in the battle room. The concept of up and down can be so hard to deal with that it induces vomiting, something that happens to some of Ender’s fellow Launchies on the way up from Earth. Part of Ender’s training included teaching his soldiers that quick reminder of how to re-orient themselves once they entered zero gravity.

    The Battle School operates with gravity, which means that up until the soldiers enter the room, the gate looks like any other doorway. Look down at the floor to read this warning and your brain will likely automatically attribute the floor as being down. Enter the Battle Room and down could shift to being above your head.

    B Gate

    This photo shows “B Gate”, though it’s hard to tell if this is artwork or an actual still. The inner area looks to be padded and quite wide, so it’s possible this is the outer door and the null g warning appears on the floor on an inner chamber pictured to the right.

    Orci gave a bit of background on production designers Ben Proctor and Sean Haworth by asking them about their fan background and they didn’t disappoint.

    For Ben, he read the founding short-story at age twelve, and has been a fan ever since. “Fans of the book will hopefully recognize what they’ve been imagining for years, but also be impressed with the level of detail. And as a fan, you have an actual emotional reaction finally seeing the Zero-G action you’ve always visualized.”

    As for Sean, having read the book in his twenties, [he] vividly remembers not only the science and technology, but the terrifying human elements behind it all.

    “I was torn between wanting to be Ender but never having to be faced with that kind of a future,” he said.

    Just looking at the photos posted, you have to wonder just how set designers go about taking concept art and making that a reality. Do they order parts? Do they literally make them from scratch themselves? It’s mind boggling, really.

    “We tried to imbue the spaces and vehicles with a gritty, engineered realism that would help sell the seriousness of the training our hero kids are going through. The visual style of the Formics, on the other hand, needed to be both exotic and beautiful to represent a society not deserving of extinction.”

    Ask them to describe the Formic world and you’ll get excited tales, imagining a Formic method of manufacture that was distinctly inhuman — a kind of biological 3D printer, with the drones building living spaces and spacecraft layer by layer.

    It’s interesting to hear their perspectives on the need to make the Formic sets exotic and beautiful because they could have easily gone the other way and made their sets simply terrifying (Aliens comes to mind) or simply more technologically advanced than the humans. To read the full entry, head over to Ender’s Game Blog.

    With production at an end, it’s understandable that the production blog comes to an end too, but hopefully we get to see something else down the line as they move into post-production. Eventually, we’ll probably see the launch of a full blown website, Facebook page, and Twitter. Hopefully that’s not too far down the road.

    And in other news, we’ve just cracked through the 500 day mark to the premiere of Ender’s Game! Woohoo!

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ Officially Wraps Production in New Orleans

    ‘Ender’s Game’ Officially Wraps Production in New Orleans

    Ender's Game Chair

    Many cast members began tweeting that they’d wrapped Ender’s Game earlier this week, but some cast and crew were still on set for a final day of filming today including Hailee Steinfeld, stunt coordinator Garrett Warren, and Mandy Safavi.

    Hailee Steinfeld tweeted about her last day and wrap.

    Hailee Steinfeld

    Garrett Warren posted the photo of his chair back with a caption of the movie officially wrapping today.

    Removing my chair back! Enders game new Orleans is officially wrapped!!! Wheels up!

    Congratulations to the cast and crew on finishing up today! All us fans can’t wait until we start seeing stills, posters, teasers, trailers, and clips in the torturous 508 days to come!

  • Photo Gallery: Last Week of Production on ‘Ender’s Game’

    Photo Gallery: Last Week of Production on ‘Ender’s Game’

    Here’s a gallery of images collected from around Twitter coming off the set of Ender’s Game as they wrap up production today (June 9) in New Orleans, LA.

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ Set Photos; Young Mazer Wraps

    ‘Ender’s Game’ Set Photos; Young Mazer Wraps

    Keen observers on Twitter may have noticed a few new photos from the set of Ender’s Game, which is nearing completion in New Orleans, Louisiana. Actor Kyle Clements (@kyle_clements) tweeted that he wrapped his Ender’s Game scenes yesterday. He plays the young version of Mazer Rackham, who is played by Sir Ben Kingsley.

    Bob Orci and David Coatsworth

    This is a photo of producer Bob Orci (left) talking to executive producer David Coatsworth (right) tweeted by @ManSafGo. You can see in the background that the entire area is painted green for filming!

    David Coatsworth

    The last of these photos shows above-mentioned David Coatsworth having lunch with his phone.

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ Production Team Accepting Fan Questions

    ‘Ender’s Game’ Production Team Accepting Fan Questions

    This week’s image in the Ender’s Game Production blog features a photo of producer Roberto Orci holding papers and hovering over his chair with a set of headphones on.

    What’s even more interesting, however, is what appears to be a piece of the set behind him. You can see what looks to be a curved doorway and the interface of a computer system behind him.

    In addition to the usual photo and image, they’ve opened themselves up to questions from fans!

    “I need you to be clever, Bean.  I need you to think of solutions to
    problems we haven’t seen yet.”

    In Dragon Army, Ender encourages input.  So do we.  That’s why we’re
    opening this blog up to you, the readers.

    Ask us a question about ENDER’S GAME — something you’ve been dying to know.  We’ll select our favorites (or as many as we can) from the comments section and start answering them.

    To submit a question to the makers of Ender’s Game, head on over to the Ender’s Game Production blog.

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ Production Blog Posts Utility Deck Photo

    ‘Ender’s Game’ Production Blog Posts Utility Deck Photo

    Utility Deck

    The Ender’s Game production blog posted a new image today of Utility Deck G in Hall Number 0058 with the following:

    If you think regular school is tough, try it in a rotating space station.  And by the way, do you have a hall pass for hall number 0058?  Because if you don’t, you could end up scrubbing the showers.  When you first arrive at Battle School, all you perceive is its utility, its functionality… that is until you enter the BATTLE ROOM, where there is no up, no down, and ZERO G’s.  Movie making can become overly reliant on digital worlds, and nothing can replace a well-built set that you can see and touch and stand in the middle of, fooling you into thinking you are really there. Enjoy this small taste of Ender’s big world. We’ll see a lot more in the weeks to come.

    The really strange part? The description on this image is “BEVERLY HILLS CHIHUAHUA 3”. I’ve been wracking my brain trying to come up with a connection, but so far I can’t make anything out of it.