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Weekly Ketchup: Bryan Singer takes on Battlestar Galactica

Plus WB announces a LEGO movie.

This week's Ketchup features the usual smorgasbord of movie concepts. An old TV show? Check! A video game? Check! A popular toy franchise? Check! A biopic about a dead musician? Check! David Mamet doing The Diary of Anne Frank and some Brits are making 3D musicals based on the works of William Shakespeare... Check?


#1 BRYAN SINGER MOVING FROM X-MEN AND SUPERMAN TO BATTLESTAR GALACTICA

Universal Pictures has signed Bryan Singer to produce and direct a feature version of the popular sci-fi TV franchise, Battlestar Galactica. Bryan Singer's career got started with the award-winning The Usual Suspects, but most fans might best know him as the director of the first two X-Men movies and 2006's Superman Returns. Years ago, Singer had been developing a new Battlestar Galactica TV series, but reportedly plans were scrapped after the events of September 11, 2001, when it was felt a TV show about a city being attacked and destroyed wouldn't be well received. A few years later, Ronald Moore produced his own take on a Battlestar Galactica relaunch, and the show just went off the air after 73 episodes. It is unknown if Moore will be involved at all with this new Galactica movie, and it's being produced by Glen Larson, creator of the orginal 1970s show. Since Singer's approach is being called a "complete re-imagination," it's expected that there will be no direct ties between Moore's recent series and this new movie, which will relaunch the concept for a second time. There's no word yet as to who will be writing the script for this new Battlestar Galactica either. My hunch is that we can probably expect Singer's Galactica to have a lighter tone than Ronald Moore's rather dire and dark TV series. I'm basing this upon a suspicion that Singer's inspiration will be the actual original 1970s series (as opposed to Moore's version). That would gel with a lot of what we know about Singer's tastes, as he's long talked about developing a Logan's Run remake, and his Superman Returns slavishly paid homage to 1978's Superman. So, Bryan Singer definitely likes 1970s science fiction properties, which suggests he might like the original Battlestar Galactica more than the 2000s remake, right? Having said that, here's hoping he doesn't include the cute little kid and his robot dog.


#2 WARNER BROS BUILDING A LEGO MOVIE ONE CGI PLASTIC BRICK AT A TIME

With Transformers 2 and G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra both being big hits this summer, Hollywood's newest fascination with toy-inspired movies continued this week with the news that Warner Bros is developing a movie based on the building bricks of LEGO. Screenwriting brothers Dan and Kevin Hageman (the upcoming CGI animated Hotel Transylvania) are said to be writing a family comedy that will be a mix of live action and CGI animation. The exact details of the plot are being kept secret, but it's described as being an adventure in a world of LEGOs. The Danish toy company has worked with Hollywood before, on the Bionicle direct-to-DVD movies, but this project is much more ambitious. Although the news of this project seems inspired by the recent successes of toy-inspired movies, Warner Bros has actually been already been developing the LEGO movie for the past year. That makes sense, considering that Warner Bros has worked with LEGO in the past, allowing characters like Batman, Harry Potter and Speed Racer to be adapted as LEGO game sets, as well as collaberating on the LEGO Batman video game.


#3 HITMAN AND KANE & LYNCH PRODUCER NEXT TAKING ON A JUST CAUSE

Adrian Askarieh, producer of the Hitman and Kane & Lynch projects at Lionsgate, has acquired the rights to another Eidos videogame property, the 2006 hit, Just Cause. In Just Cause, players take on the role of The Scorpion, a CIA black ops assassin who specializes in using base jumping and grappling hooks for high-altitude action adventures. The developers have described the character as "as a mix of Jason Bourne, James Bond, Wolverine, and Rambo, with a touch of Enrique Iglesias." Eidos is currently preparing for the release of Just Cause 2 in 2010. Askarieh is looking to make Just Cause an independent production, and is rounding up a budget of $30 million, which seems a bit on the low side for an action thriller. While Just Cause is being developed, Askarieh also expects filming of Kane & Lynch, which will costar Bruce Willis, to start in 2010.


#4 HAMLET 3D: TO BE OR NOT TO BE... IN YOUR FACE!

In order for Hollywood's fascination with 3D to evolve into something other than a cheap trick, the technology will have to eventually be used for something a bit more upscale than say, Space Chimps 3D. A British producer may have figured exactly what that might be, with news of plans for a series of 3D movie musicals based upon the works of William Shakespeare. Based upon the musical adaptations produced by a company called Shakespeare 4 Kids, the first movie will be Hamlet, with the other titles in the series being Romeo and Juliet, MacBeth, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Twelfth Night and The Tempest. The movies will be produced at a fast pace, with the first three expected to be finished within a period of 18 months. Simultaneously, the producers will also launch Movie Quest: A Romeo 4 Juliet, a competitive reality show that will seek young British talent to star as the starcrossed lovers. As for Hamlet, here's some examples of what the producers expect to wow people with in 3D, "a ghost that hovers in front of the audience's eyes, cannon fire that flies into the auditorium and a sword fight that appears to happen all around viewers." What, no floating skull in our laps during Hamlet's "Alas, poor Yorick" monologue?


#5 DAVID MAMET TO APPLY HIS UNIQUE SENSE OF LANGUAGE TO THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK

Screenwriter and playwright David Mamet, who is known for both his loose use of obscenities in movies like Glengarry Glen Ross and Homicide and for a style of dialogue that is heavy on pauses and short, often interrupted sentences, has found strange bedfellows for his latest project. Walt Disney Pictures has acquired the rights to David Mamet's adaptation of The Diary of Anne Frank, the frequently-adapted memoir left behind by a young Jewish girl who did not survive the Holocaust. Mamet's script will reportedly be a hybrid of Frank's diary, the stage adaptation and Mamet's own take, which reframes the story as a young girl's rite of passage (although that's what I was taught it was in school some 25 years ago). It's worth noting that David Mamet has indeed gone outside what might be considered his comfort zone in the past, most notably with his adaptation of The Winslow Boy a drama set in the early 20th Century. Anne Frank was, of course, a 15 year old girl who died at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1945 after living with her family in hiding in Amsterdam, where she wrote her famous diary. A 1959 big screen adaptation of The Diary of Anne Frank earned Shelley Winters an Oscar, and the memoir has since been adapted for television several times.


#6 NASHVILLE TO HANK WILLIAMS BIOPIC: HEY, GOOD LOOKIN'

Nashville-based 821 Entertainment Group and Strike Entertainment have teamed up to develop a biopic about the life of country music legend Hank Williams. Growing up poor in Alabama during the Great Depression, Hank Williams rocketed to country stardom in the 1940s, releasing 11 #1 hits, before his addiction to alcohol and morphine led to his death at just 29 on New Year's Day, 1953. Williams' hit songs included "Hey, Good Lookin'", "Lovesick Blues," "Moanin' the Blues," "Long Gone Lonesome Blues," "Your Cheating Heart," "Cold Cold Heart," "Take These Chains From My Heart," and "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive." Williams' children and grandchildren have also followed him with careers in country music, with the most obvious one being Hank Williams, Jr., who many people know as the "Are You Ready for Some Football?" guy. Strike Entertainment partner Marc Abraham, who wrote some episodes of Moonlighting and 21 Jump Street, will adapt the Colin Escott book, Hank Williams: The Biography. 821 Entertainment has been on a bit of a run recently; they are also developing a trilogy of King of the Cowboys Roy Rogers movies and an adaptation the 1999 John Grisham novel The Testament.


#7 FRANKENSTEIN SAYS: LET'S DO THE DEATH RACE AGAIN

Paul W.S. Anderson is producing a prequel to his 2008 remake of Death Race, which grossed $74 million in the U.S. Death Race was a futuristic action thriller about inmates who are forced to drive destructive vehicles against each other. The prequel, which is based upon an idea by Anderson and is being written by Tony Giglio (who may direct) will focus on the origin story for the racer who became known as Frankenstein. Frankenstein was the character played by the late David Carradine in the original 1975 film, and was also voiced by Carradine in the 2008 movie. Paul W.S. Anderson is currently busy on pre-production of Resident Evil: Afterlife, but after that film wraps, he will move on as producer to focus on development of this Death Race prequel.


#8 MEET THE NEWEST VAMPIRE HUNTER IN CRIMINAL MACABRE

Universal Pictures has acquired the rights to Criminal Macabre, a Dark Horse comic book mini-series by Steve Niles, whose 30 Days of Night was adapted as a horror movie in 2007. Criminal Macabre follows the daily adventures of a hard living private detective named Cal McDonald who uses a network of friendly ghouls on his own personal mission to take out the worst of the vampires, ghosts and other supernatural monsters that plague Los Angeles. Kyle Ward, who is also working on screenplays for Hitman 2 and the videogame adaptations Kane & Lynch and Uncharted: Drake's Fortune, has been hired to adapt the script.



#9 ALEXANDER PAYNE'S FOLLOWING THE DESCENDANTS TO HAWAII

Director Alexander Payne (Election, About Schmidt) and Fox Searchlight are reteaming again on Payne's next movie, The Descendants, his first as director since 2004's Sideways. Payne expects to start filming The Descendants in Hawaii in late 2009 or early 2010. Payne is currently polishing the script by comedians/actors Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, adapted from the novel of the same title by Kaui Hart Hemmings. The Descendants is about a trip from Oahu to Kauai that an affluent attorney (who's related to Hawaiian royalty, hence the title) takes with his two daughters to meet their mother's lover after she falls into a coma following a boating accident. Payne had been expected to direct a comedy called Downsizing, which Paul Giamatti, Reese Witherspoon and Sacha Baron Cohen are signed to star in, but Payne has decided to direct The Descendants first. That will allow for more prep time for Downsizing, as it is a more involved production (since it involves shrinking Paul Giamatti).


#10 ED HELMS JOINS THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

Universal Pictures has acquired a spec script called Central Intelligence as a starring vehicle for Ed Helms, star of NBC's The Office and this summer's The Hangover. Written by Ike Barinholtz (MadTV) and newcomer Dave Stassen, Central Intelligence is the story of an accountant who becomes involved in the world of international espionage and intrigue after reconnecting with an old friend via Facebook. Helms' next movie will be Cedar Rapids, in which he plays an insurance agent trying to save his friends' jobs, and in the fall of 2010, he will start filming The Hangover 2.



ROTTEN IDEA OF THE WEEK: SPACE CHIMPS PRODUCER ADAPTING THE OZ WARS

This week's Rotten Idea is a doozie. First, the set up: Vanguard Films is the animation company responsible for Space Chimps, Valiant and Happily N'ever After. They're currently preparing for the release of Space Chimps 3D, which will wisely go direct-to-dvd in the United States (but the rest of the world won't be as lucky), and something called Alien Band: The Battle of the Bands Just Got Ugly. But wait, I haven't even gotten to the Rotten Idea yet. Last month, Vanguard's boss John H. Williams was at the San Diego Comic-Con, which is increasingly where Hollywood types with a lot of cash in their pockets go, looking for a cool new movie idea. At Comic-Con, Williams saw a gallery for an upcoming graphic novel called The Oz Wars, which was written by an "established screenwriter," writing under the pseudonym of Dorothy Gale. The Oz Wars is the story of a war between the Witches and the resistance fighters led by Wizard of Oz. I suspect that really, the producer of Space Chimps was just excited that this would give him an excuse to use CGI flying monkeys (although the movie itself will apparently be one of Vanguard's first live-action movies... it'll still probably have CGI flying monkeys). Vanguard also picked up a graphic novel called Circus Galactus, which is unfortunately not about the great, purple Devour of Worlds attending and enjoying a three ring circus. That, I would produce myself. Going back to the concept of someone, anyone, making a new movie based upon L. Frank Baum's Oz, I think that would be fine, perhaps, but if you're going to do it, do it right. Actually adapt one of the many great books that Baum actually wrote, not some comic book you found at Comic Con. Hey, I love comic books, but like any medium, they're not all Watchmen, Hellboy and Kingdom Come. In fact, plenty of comic books are pretty crappy. And the same is true of video games or toys or whatever Hollywood decides will be their next hot new thing. Keep that in mind, producers, the next time you feel the urge to throw money at an idea.


For more Weekly Ketchup columns by Greg Dean Schmitz, check out the WK archive, and you can contact GDS through his MySpace page or via a RT forum message.

nthnmartin

nthnmartin on 08-14-2009 03:07 PM

I think Bryan Singer might do justice to the BSG franchise...Good luck!

Valmordas

Valmordas on 08-15-2009 10:00 AM

Hell no, except for the first X-men Brian Singer has pretty much bungled everything he has worked on.

arendr

arendr on 08-15-2009 02:30 PM

I'm not a big Singer fan, but are you really willing to say that The Usual Suspects was bungled by Bryan Singer? And I also disagree. The first X-Men kind of sucks. The second is okay, but still not all that great.

jimb14red

jimb14red on 08-15-2009 02:36 PM

Everything Singer had done is good. He has not made a bad movie yet. It sucks he is not going to do more Superman movies as Returns was excellent.

Playboy Slim

Playboy Slim on 08-15-2009 02:59 PM

"Superman Returns" was awful. "The Usual Suspects" was awful.

frankdozier

frankdozier on 08-17-2009 12:19 AM

Wh-, wh-, why is there an Art of War III?

chewie louie

chewie louie on 08-17-2009 07:22 AM

There was an Art of War II?

Funkmaster Flex

Funkmaster Flex on 08-14-2009 03:29 PM

The Rotten Idea of the Week was the fact that I just saw an ad for Art of War III at the top of the screen.

Glenn W.

Glenn W. on 08-14-2009 04:48 PM

so does this mean that he won't be involved in a future Superman movie? it's probably for the best considering how Superman Returns turned out. he had such a hard-on for the first two movies that he made Superman Returns into a rehashed version of the first one just with better special effects. besides, now that the Siegel family was won control over the use of depictions of Superman's origins, that's less material for Singer to rehash. find a new director that'll take the franchise forward instead of backward.

RamALamADingDong

RamALamADingDong on 08-14-2009 05:24 PM

Rotten Idea: The Oz Wars. Return to Oz wasn't that much of a success because while it was faithful to the books it just couldn't shake the memory of the Judy Garland version. I highly doubt those winged monkeys could make a movie that's faithful or good.

Rottener Idea: Death Race Prequel. The original was campy good fun. The remake was awful. Did enough people really subject themselves to it to warrant another?

Rottenest Idea: Lego Movie. There are some ideas that seem doomed from the start. Lego is one of those ideas. The games work well as parodies more than anything else. At least the Transformers and G.I. Joe were able to come up with a story for the toys before heading to the big screen.

Vortex&Vertigo

Vortex&Vertigo on 08-14-2009 05:25 PM

That criminal macabre sounds good, kinda like the frighteners but with ghost and vampires. Hey I did a Hollywood pitch!

Playboy Slim

Playboy Slim on 08-14-2009 05:36 PM

Another lame video game into a film? It dosen't surprise me it's from the guy who brought the classic "Hitman".

And "Lego"? What the hell?

greg_dean_schmitz

greg_dean_schmitz on 08-14-2009 05:51 PM

All I know is, April Fool's Day jokes get easier to come up with each year. The problem is that it's easy to come up with the jokes, but hard when you realize you have to make them ridiculous enough to be jokes, but also still credible as something Hollyweird would actually develop.

Having said that, Matt Atchity and I already came up with the lead story for 4/1/10 a few months ago, and hoo boy, it's a doozie. Just over 7 more months and I get to spring it on you !

Bahamut_Ultima

Bahamut_Ultima on 08-16-2009 02:33 PM

Easier? Shouldnt you say harder with all the awful ideas mainstream movies coming out? A large portion of the great movies this year have mostly been indie or werent highly popular (Hopefully District 9 will do great :])

And im sure that movie producers will out think Matt soon enough xP

On another note. BSG could be good if they take the time with it like JJ Abrams did with star trek.

David J.

David J. on 08-14-2009 07:06 PM

Enough with these toy movie adaptations already. People see these movies because they say they enjoyed playing with the toys as kids; as if what those toys helped them create in their imagination has anything to do with the movie.

Ive never played or heard of "Just Cause" but it sounds like the action sequences will be sort of similar to "The Eiger Sanction"

These 3D Shakespeare movies sound like an attempt to get youth to dig his plays. It might be affective but I still dont like the idea. Im against this whole 3D revitalizatoin movement in Hollywood. Its just a cheap trick and a marketing gimmick. It in no way looks real, and just distracts from the movie instead of complimenting it.

King Kubrick

King Kubrick on 08-14-2009 10:26 PM

On the 3d front: I found Coraline employed 3d with wonderful results. It alleviated some of the misgiving I harbor for 3d. I agree it seems more like a gimmick at the moment than anything else. I will withhold judgment until the release of Avatar.

tomwaitsjrHAPPYICONOCLAST

tomwaitsjrHAPPYICONOCLAST on 08-14-2009 08:30 PM

Are you on CRACK?

Space Chimps isn't just a movie. . . it's a movement. . . and not of the bowel kind, but the kind that will cleanse your bowels!

Space Chimps, for those that "get it" was life changing.

In 3-D? Ha ha ha, fools, for those in the know, it's ALWAYS been in 3-D, just the special ones of us don't need the glasses! this new 3-D space chimps is for the mentally defunct, like you good sir, that didn't get it the first go 'round.

SPACE CHIMPS UBERALLES!

Steve R.

Steve R. on 08-14-2009 09:39 PM

Eh, Lego. Could be like an Indian in the Cupboard kind of thing.

arendr

arendr on 08-14-2009 10:02 PM

Duh, those guys have already proven they can make monkeys fly. Oz, with its flying monkey soldiers, is the natural next step.

King Kubrick

King Kubrick on 08-14-2009 10:13 PM

Kid friendly Shakespeare eh? Exceptionally mixed feelings on that one. I really don't see how you could make his tragedies kid friendly without grossly sanitizing them. Midsummer Night's dream, and, possibly the tempest could be skewed to a younger audience...I guess. As long as it exposes the youth to the greatest literary genius in history (yeah I just went there, took a picture and came back already) and perhaps gets them to take a look at his works later in life when a greater maturity allows them to appreciate the play's fathomless insights into the human condition. But leave King Lear alone goddamnit, its perfect the way it is (and yes I'm away of the two contradictory texts so don't bother bringing that up)as a secularist King Lear is as sacred to me as the bible. (Yes I'm aware the ending was changed to a happy one to suit modern tastes for decades in the British theatre so don't bring that up either).

Mister_Prophet

Mister_Prophet on 08-14-2009 11:41 PM

As someone who was rocked pretty hard by the new BGS, it seems rather pointless to remake the old series into a flick. I mean, they just had a whole series that did just that, "re-imagine." And it was awesome. In fact, it was more awesome than a great many other shows I've seen in the last ten years and certainly the best sci-fi show I've seen since X-files. It's kind of a cold shoulder to just brush that off, and most of the buzz this movie is gonna generate is gonna be due in part to the new show...I promise you that.

Flash T.

Flash T. on 08-15-2009 02:07 AM

Isn't a stage production a 3D version of Shakespeare?

John Mclane

John Mclane on 08-15-2009 08:06 AM

I was never a fan of BST so i'm not that upset they've handed it to the franchise rapist. Lego could be funny if they use the same kind of humour as is in the games. everything else.... meh

thereign

thereign on 08-17-2009 04:33 AM

@John Mclane;

LOL! "The franchise rapist"! That's the perfect description for Singer now...I feel like I'm watching an episode of Law & Order: SVU. Munch: "Dammit...the Franchise Rapist has struck again! He left Battlestar Galactica battered and knocked up in an alley!"

While I couldn't stand the new "re-imagining" of BSG, I have to say it is pretty disrespectful to everything the cast, crew and producers accomplished for the fans, to just toss their ideas out on the street like an unwanted orphan, just to do yet ANOTHER "re-imagining" of the old TV series. I mean, really...what the hell's the point?

ParanoidAndroid

ParanoidAndroid on 08-15-2009 08:29 AM

A BSG Gallactica remake in the form of a movie is absolutely pointless since there's no way they can top the absolutely extraordinary series that ended a few months ago.

tomwaitsjrHAPPYICONOCLAST

tomwaitsjrHAPPYICONOCLAST on 08-15-2009 03:28 PM

I found returns boring, and bordered on total BS with all the Christ allusions. . .I'm glad he's gone from it.

Playboy Slim

Playboy Slim on 08-15-2009 05:49 PM

It was so boring, people can now say "Man, this (etc./etc.) is sooo "Superman Returns."

BobaFettBntyHntr

BobaFettBntyHntr on 08-15-2009 06:01 PM

Battlestar was one of the worst TV shows ever in the 70's The folks behind the remake/reimagining took a turd and made into a gem. It was without a doubt one of the smartest and most complex shows on television over the past few years, rivaled only by LOST. God forbid you have to deal with loss, drama and thinking while watching a TV Show. A movie would be a ridiculous mistake. Singer's superman was subpar. He should quit while he is ahead.

pinkincide

pinkincide on 08-15-2009 09:43 PM

Criminal Macabre:
"...uses a network of friendly ghouls on his own personal mission to take out the worst of the vampires, ghosts and other supernatural monsters that plague Los Angeles."

sooo....they reinvented the TV series, Angel.

GreenBastard

GreenBastard on 08-15-2009 11:16 PM

I hope Brian Singer doesn't screw this one up to. I love BSG. I'd hate to see it get the Singer Superman X-men treatment!

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