The Time Machine
EDITORS
LEAD EDITOR:
Uri
Send me news!
E-mail me!
ASSISTING:
Scooby
(Wanna help out?)
GOT INFO?
REGISTERIT'S FREE!
Register Now!
RECEIVE custom news
TRACK your favorites
BUILD your fan profile
POST messages
LOGIN | SIGN UP TODAY
THIS WEEK
Ninja Assassin(11/25)
Nine(11/25)
Old Dogs(11/25)
MORE
NEXT WEEK
Brothers(12/04)
MORE
The Time Machine Buy The Time MachineRent The Time Machine
New Post Chat - Coming Soon! Submit Info Write Review Track This
EW's Time Machine Preview

SUBMITTED BY Movieman129

February 10, 2002

Entertainment Weekly reports on The Time Machine:

FOR AUSSIE ACTOR PEARCE, THE LEAP TO BIG FAT Hollywood fantasy films required some Mememto-like mental reconfiguring. "We shot the film in 95 days," he says. "In Australian terms, that's four movies!" Yet no one had more adjustments to make than rookie live- action director Wells, an animator and the great-grandson of H.G. Wells, the man whose novel inspired the film (as well as a 1960 version). First came Wells' debilitating bout with exhaustion during the movie's final month of principal photography, for which he was relieved by The Mexican's Gore Verbinski. Then, the week after Sept. 11, DreamWorks announced it was bumping the movie from Christmas 2001 to distance it from Harry Potter and The Lord of the Rings. Oh, and there was that shot of a falling chunk of moon slamming into the World Trade Center. When Wells saw news footage of the second plane hitting the second tower, he realized the movie had a similar image, from a similar angle. "We went, 'Oh, damn, no. No way,"' says Wells, who reshaped the sequence. "My agent asked me recently, 'Knowing what you know now, would you do it again?' But yes. Yes, I would. Okay, so it came close to killing me. But hey, I survived." BOTTOM LINE Pearce has heat, the F/X took neat, and no one's hiding the behind-the-seenes travails--a seemingly confident move. (March 8)

Source: Entertainment Weekly
PRINT THIS PAGE ADD COMMENT SEND TO A FRIEND
NEW POST REPLY
  [1] 2 Next Page
CountingDown.com © 1998-2006. All Rights Reserved.
BACK TO TOP Learn more about us. Read our terms & conditions, and our privacy policy.
Want to contact us? Click here. Lost? Try the site map.