- Joined: February 2003
- Post Count: 208
I remember very vividly Peter Jackson saying that he had promised Fran that they would do a smaller film next, after LotR, something like Heavenly Creatures. So unless King Kong is smaller than i think it is, i am kinda surprised
My Top 20My Bottom 20My DVD CollectionS&S film club, seen 74, last one(s) Once Upon a Time in a America (A), Jules et Jim (C), A Bout de Souffle (B-)
\"He\'ll Live\"
- Joined: January 2002
- Post Count: 2,233
Where's Jeff Bridges when you need him? Or Charles Grodin? Actually, I think the only way I'd go see another version of KING KONG would be if done by someone like Jackson. He obviously has the passion. 2005 is going to be an interesting year.
And you believe, at heart, everyone's a killer...
- Joined: February 2002
- Post Count: 1,317
Jackson can do no wrong. I'm looking forward to this.
- Joined: February 2003
- Post Count: 208
Quote:
| I am pleased Jackson is at the helm of this, and that Michael Bay is at the helm of Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Each director gets the movie he deserves. |

Michael Bay...BAH!
My Top 20My Bottom 20My DVD CollectionS&S film club, seen 74, last one(s) Once Upon a Time in a America (A), Jules et Jim (C), A Bout de Souffle (B-)
\"He\'ll Live\"
- Joined: August 2001
- Post Count: 7,526
Well, this is Peter's "dream movie", and I am quite happy things worked out (or seemed to). I'd like to see him make some smaller films (As Nature Made Him sounded very promising), but this is his BIG ONE. I can't imagine a better fit for him as a director, and this will top my 2005 list if it turns out to be true.
Good to hear the news! As I said a while back, when a truly gifted director gets his dream project going, and he gets the support he needs, rarely can magic NOT flow!
Take care,
Chuck
Hey buddy...did you just see a real bright light?
- Joined: April 2002
- Post Count: 7,129
this is great news indeed. let's hope that Ray Harryhausen & possibly Fay Wray will be involved somehow as well.
Toastmasters International
Communication is Everything
- Joined: December 1969
- Post Count: 4,184
It's amusing to see that Edgar Wallace is still getting story credit 70 years later; according to the Making Of book, he died before he wrote a word of it.
- Joined: December 1969
- Post Count: 9,306
It's interesting to see that Jackson is making this a top priority; I seem to remember that five years ago he was basically doing it because if he didn't, Universal would probably hire Ronald Emmerich or some other hack.
Jay's Movie Blog - A movie-viewing diary.
Transplanted Life: Sci-fi soap opera about a man placed in a new body, updated two or three times a week.
Trading Post Inn - Another gender-bending soap, with different collaborators writing different points of view.
"What? Since when was this an energy ball...
- Joined: March 2001
- Post Count: 922
I remember reading an article in Premiere a few years ago where they called Jackson's script for King Kong one of the best unproduced screenplays; from the synopsis they provided, it was pretty faithful to the original, with some Jackson-esque touches (ie, more opportunities for gore and some bits of black humor). Glad to hear it's going into production.
I like shiny things. |
2002 Film List |
Best & Worst of 2002 |
2003 Film List |
2004 Film List\'I\'m sucking up juice from the generator!\' - Brian Eno,
\"I Fall Up\"AIM: KevinLeonard81
(because SexGod9451860 was already taken)ICQ: 55259446
(or just search for \"John Shaft\"...can you dig?)
- Joined: June 2000
- Post Count: 810
Quote:
| I never read the script that was floating around the net a few years ago but apparently it was fairly close to the classic original |
I did read an early Jackson/Walsh draft on the net a few years ago (presumably the same one linked above), and while that script would undoubtedly have been the ultimate monster movie (Jackson's take on Skull Island can best be described as
Jurassic Park on anabolic steroids, crack, and PCP), it still had a number of rather cheesy moments and some humor that fell flat.
That said, I'm happy to see that the script is being revised and that they've enlisted Philippa Boyens to assist in that process. I can't say that this is necessarily the project I'd most like to see Jackson take on next, but I'm onboard for anything the man does. And if he does cast Kate Winslet (my favorite actress in the whole wide world), I'll be doubly thrilled.
--Jefferson Morris
"If fakes, they were masterpieces."
--The New York Times commenting on Willis O'Brien's dinosaurs in The Lost World (1925).
"From the two trailers I've seen, the movie looks like AIDS."--Recent thread post on AICN
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Patrick McCart
- Patrick J. McCart
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- online
- Joined: May 2001
- Location: Georgia, USA
- Post Count: 7,212
WHV stated that the DVD is held back because of quality control issues.
I don't see why they'd make up something just to cash in on a film that hasn't even been shot yet.
Tell The Weinstein Company to release Richard Williams' animated masterpiece
The Thief and the Cobbler on DVD in Panavision widescreen and uncut! See and hear what you're missing from their
Bitsy Award winner of Worst Standard Edition DVD of 2006 on
YouTube!