2014-10-02, 17:01 | Link #1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
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Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (Indiana Jones 5) [6/5/2023]
"Six years after his last big-screen appearance, Indiana Jones may ride again.
Variety has printed what appears to be confirmation that Indiana Jones 5 is going into production. Buried in an article about an online filmmaking course is this line about cinematographer Janusz Kaminski: “His next project is the upcoming fifth Indiana Jones movie.” (A frequent Steven Spielberg collaborator, Kaminski was the director of photography on 2008’s Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.) Insiders have been anticipating the announcement of a fifth Indiana Jones movie since December, when Disney acquired the rights to the franchise (following its acquisition of Lucasfilm in 2012). Spielberg and George Lucas have reportedly been developing the movie since 2008, but plans seemed to have stalled after Crystal Skull met with a mixed reception (albeit fantastic box office). One rumor circulating earlier this year was that Disney had agreed to develop one or two new Indiana Jones movies for Harrison Ford in order to secure his participation in Star Wars: Episode VII. If Ford is indeed reprising his role as the archaeologist- slash-adventurer, it would make sense to get the ball rolling while he’s still in Star Wars shape." See: https://www.yahoo.com/movies/indiana...985700432.html |
2014-10-03, 01:38 | Link #3 |
ゴリゴリ!
Graphic Designer
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Vancouver, British Columbia
Age: 32
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George Lucas wants more money, it seems. Poor Spielberg wanted this dead after Crusade too.
Since it will be made regardless, my only hope is that they don't shove so much pointless CG as last time. It seriously felt as bad as the Star Wars prequels.
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2014-10-04, 01:56 | Link #6 |
Logician and Romantic
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Within my mind
Age: 43
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At this point using practical effects is more impressive than CGI. It is like how they built a full size and moving Jaeger cockpit for Pacific Rim, and functional pilot suits. No one is impressed with CGI these days.
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2014-10-04, 02:26 | Link #8 |
Gamilas Falls
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Republic of California
Age: 46
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They don't have the budget (usually) to hire thousands of extras for the massive scale epics they made in the 30s, 40s, 50s, and into the 60s. When you'd have whole armies worth of people running around on location because there was no other option. Even camera tricks would be difficult.
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2014-10-04, 03:33 | Link #9 |
Sleepy Lurker
Graphic Designer
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Nun'yabiznehz
Age: 38
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True, you can't shoot films like this anymore without the studio (and its backers) going bankrupt. Well, at least the CGI would be decent enough, as they'll probably hire ILM (another of Lucas' creations and one of the top 5 outfits in the CGI industry) to cover that part; no risk of IJ5 becoming a cheap and pretentious Sundance movie.
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Last edited by Renegade334; 2014-10-04 at 04:09. |
2014-10-05, 15:04 | Link #11 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
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Quote:
"When every summer movie is like 80 percent special effects and 20 percent actual people (mostly Gary Oldman), it might be time to stop calling them "special." It's gotten so ridiculous that pretty soon IMDb is going to have to create new categories for all those digital hair tracers, ab sculptors, and dick jiggle physics specialists working on every movie. Unfortunately, past the flashy visuals and explosions of the big screen lies the seedy underbelly of the visual effects industry, which involves shady dealings like ..." See: http://www.cracked.com/quick-fixes/4...getting-worse/ |
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2014-10-05, 22:04 | Link #12 |
Did someone call a doctor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Age: 41
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^ that to.
Also, perhaps studios should stop paying the actors tens to hundreds of millions per movie. I'm sorry, but no one is worth that much. Not when those VFX companies struggle to even stay open because they're getting screwed.
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2014-10-05, 22:39 | Link #14 |
Did someone call a doctor
Join Date: Apr 2007
Age: 41
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Keanu Reeves is good for it to apparently. He's quite happy with his small apartment and comparatively modest pay checks. So he donates the bulk of his pay back into the movies he is in to pay for other things to make the movie better.
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2015-02-21, 00:05 | Link #15 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
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Steven Spielberg reportedly wants to direct the Indiana Jones reboot:
"Word has been circling for some time that Disney is mulling a reboot of the Indiana Jones series and wants Guardians of the Galaxy star Chris Pratt to take the whip. Deadline is now reporting that Steven Spielberg himself is interested in stepping behind the camera should all the pieces fall into place." See: http://www.theverge.com/2015/2/20/80...ng-chris-pratt |
2015-02-21, 01:23 | Link #16 |
( ಠ_ಠ)
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Somewhere, between the sacred silence and sleep
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They'd have to move the setting to the early 80s
Imagine old grumpy Indy complaining about new fangled things like Michael Jackson and dudes in permed hair wearing jean jackets.
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2019-09-22, 18:29 | Link #18 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
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Here's A Mildly Confusing Update About Indiana Jones 5:
"“Is that still happening?” you ask. We, uh, we think so? Indiana Jones 5, which was initially slated for next year before being pushed back to 2021, is a movie that may or may not be happening, that we’ve had precious little news come out of even though all the principal players—Harrison Ford, Steven Spielberg—insist they’re absolutely committed to seeing it through. Last we heard, the script was being reworked by Dan Fogelman (This Is Us), who inherited the project from Jonathan Kasdan, who himself took it on from David Koepp. Now, according to Den of Geek, Koepp is—back on it? That’s what Koepp himself said during an interview to the publication, anyways, commenting, “I’m working on it again. We’re still trying. I think we’ve got a good idea this time. We’ll see.” That’s not exactly promising? But it does mean that the project is still ongoing, though stuck in the writing stage. After The Crystal Skull (which Koepp wrote), it’s good they’re taking it slow. But who knows when they’ll get something to make a movie around." See: https://io9.gizmodo.com/heres-a-mild...s-5-1838336641 |
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