Morgan Freeman – Seven Inches of Your Time https://seveninchesofyourtime.com Mon, 01 Jan 2018 01:49:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.11 WonderCon 2014: Luc Besson’s “Lucy” Panel https://seveninchesofyourtime.com/wondercon-2014-luc-bessons-lucy-panel/ https://seveninchesofyourtime.com/wondercon-2014-luc-bessons-lucy-panel/#respond Mon, 21 Apr 2014 16:56:57 +0000 https://seveninchesofyourtime.com/?p=1948 Get hard]]> lucy

After the FOX presentation, many in the arena filtered out. I’m not sure why, because based on what we’ve seen from Luc Besson’s Lucy, it could be better than many in the FOX slate (aside from Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, which is gonna destroy). Scarlett Johansson can do no wrong right now.

Drew McWeeny of HitFix is the moderator for the panel, and of course, Luc Besson is in the building today for Universal Pictures’ Lucy.

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Hollywood is finally catching up to Besson, in that they know women can kickass, and have been borrowing his script for it that he used in La Femme Nikita and others.

What inspired Lucy was the notion of human intelligence. Lucy took him ten years to write. He was fascinated by the theory that humans only use so much of the brain, and started to work with professors, and got crazy with it. So it’s basically a crazier Matrix-y Limitless.

Many times, he writes a screenplay and lets other people direct it if he thinks other people can make it better. For this film, no other director could do it better than him.

Besson writes action films from the POV of characters first and foremost. Need “emotional charge before action scene.” Otherwise, action films can get boring. Amen.

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What makes Scarlett Johansson perfect for Lucy? He equates their first meeting to like cats and dogs, feeling each other out. They met at bar for a couple hours, and then she read the script and she was in. You need to have a connection to film someone for six months.

Besson’s international cast and flavor is complimented, and rightfully so. Besson wanted to start the film in Taipei, so he brought Min-sik Choi, the star of Oldboy, the “Asian Gary Oldman.”

Not only did Besson bring the trailer we’ve all seen from Lucy, but we also got two scenes from the film. The movie isn’t done in terms of music and FX, but we essentially see a few sequences that link many of the scenes we see in the trailer (when Lucy spreads her legs, kicks the guards ass, kills a few more guards, eats Chinese food, “Do you speak English?” and then the hospital). The second one is mostly all new, with a car chase (Lucy’s never driven before) and some more hospital sequences, leading up to the moment where Lucy has a slew of guns pointed at her in the hallway. Interestingly enough, the footage ends with a big 60% superimposed on screen, which is clearly the connective tissue of the film, as we see Lucy use more and more of her brain.

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When the film starts, Lucy basically wonders, “What can I do with my life? Now she knows…”

When a brain is at 20% capacity, nothing that makes us us is there any more. They have defined every step from 9.5% to 100%. At the studio they had a cardboard chart showcasing the percentages and what she can do with each stage, and Scarlett would take notes every time she arrived on set.

For Besson, producing is the easy part. Directing is the difficult part. He started writing at 13 years old. The first 5,000 pages were shit, then it became a little better. He’s felt comfortable for ten years. Starts every day by writing for two hours. “I write with pen and paper,” he doesn’t own a computer. Old school.

When Besson made LeonNikitaThe Big Blue, critics were negative on the film, so he’s not bothered by any of the recent poor critical receptions for his films. “I don’t care… I do films for you, and that’s it.” Cue applause.

Besson is asked if he’d be interested in directing a Black Widow movie starring Scarlett Johansson? “I’m afraid of spiders.” That’s all he said.

Besson’s known for championing the strong female, and a fan asks what inspired that, whether it was a strong female role model in his life or what. Essentially, Besson is interested in opposites. We always see the strong guy – “hasta la vista, baby,” – so he’s very interested to see the strength of men and the weakness of women. He wants to see Terminator break down crying because he misses his Mom; he’d be touched.

Random other notes:

  • Besson operates the camera himself on most of his films.
  • Lucy wasn’t filmed in chronological order.
  • A questioner mentions that he’s the 3rd best filmmaker ever (“kill the two others”), which is nice.

And that’s it for that panel.

Lucy will be released in theaters August 8, 2014.

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Random Rankings: Best Fictional Movie Presidents https://seveninchesofyourtime.com/random-rankings-best-fictional-movie-presidents/ https://seveninchesofyourtime.com/random-rankings-best-fictional-movie-presidents/#comments Sun, 30 Mar 2014 01:10:41 +0000 https://seveninchesofyourtime.com/?p=1303 Get hard]]> GET OFF MY PLANE EDITION. As far as I’m concerned, this list should really only be two entries long. But I’ll attempt to come up with a few fictional movie heads of state that also deserve recognition.

Before I begin, I just want to clarify: this isn’t a list of portrayals of actual presidents in films. You’re not going to see Daniel Day-Lewis’ Abraham Lincoln or Frank Langella’s Richard Nixon, or the 53 actors who have played JFK. These are all fake presidents, which should be abundantly clear.

This is specifically for MOVIE presidents. Fictional TV presidents would be an entirely different list, but if you must know, it would have Martin Sheen’s President Bartlet at #2, AFTER Laura Roslin of BATTLESTAR GALACTICA, because I’m the worst. David Palmer of 24/Allstate would be 3rd place.

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Many old men in Hollywood have practically made a career of playing the POTUS. If you’re a grizzled character actor with a nice clump of white hair and you ooze authority, you’ve likely played the thankless role of a president in a film.

Ronny Cox  (above) wins the award for most portrayals, with four, including the craptacular 1990 CAPTAIN AMERICA, MARTIANS GO HOME, MURDER AT 1600 and NADIA’S PROMISE. Since MARTIANS GO HOME came out in 1989, he’s played a President in 4 different decades, and is still doing it. NADIA’S PROMISE came out this year.

JAWS’ Roy Scheider played the President three separate times. As did Gregory Harrison. Stanley Anderson (Michael Bay’s first call, for ARMAGEDDON and THE ROCK), Henry Fonda, Louis Gossett Jr., Sam Waterston, Leslie Nielsen, Peter Coyote, Jonathan Pryce and David Rasche have each played a POTUS twice on the big screen.

TRIVIA TO IMPRESS YOUR FRIENDS: Jeff and Beau Bridges aren’t the coolest sibling duo who have both played presidents. That award goes to Dennis and Randy Quaid. Dennis for AMERICAN DREAMZ…

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Whereas Randy Quaid had the country in the palm of his hands in the classic MAIL TO THE CHIEF. The movie came out in 2000, six years before Dennis ever sniffed the oval office.

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14 years ago, Randy Quaid was playing the President in Disney movies and I thought I’d play for the Kentucky basketball team. Life’s weird. Speaking of…

…Charlie Sheen was the President in MACHETE KILLS.

Eric Roberts was the head of state in FIRST DOG. I don’t want to look that movie up to shatter the illusion of what it is in my head (AIR BUD + White House).

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Terry Crews was the President in IDIOCRACY. His name was Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho.

Robert Rodriguez’s SPY KIDS movies didn’t fuck around. In the second film, Shooter McGavin himself played the President. Then they took a step down in SPY KIDS 3-D, opting for a little guy named George Clooney:

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Lame. Far superior was the fake but judicious U.S. population who elected Jack Nicholson to the White House, right before the world became under siege by aliens in MARS ATTACKS!

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Is Jack not exactly who we want making the all-important decisions for our country?

PRESIDENT THAT WON’T SNIFF MY BALLOT:

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Chris Rock as Mays Gilliam in HEAD OF STATE (2003). I just hate this movie. Maybe I’m just mad that I actually paid to see this one in theaters.

HANGING CHADS/SNUBS (in no particular order):

Michael Douglas (THE AMERICAN PRESIDENT, a redundant title), Kevin Kline (DAVE), John Travolta (PRIMARY COLORS), Alan Alda (CANADIAN BACON), Tim Robbins (AUSTIN POWERS 2: THE SPY WHO SHAGGED ME), Henry Fonda (FAIL SAFE), Jeff Bridges (THE CONTENDER) and Stephen Colbert (MONSTERS VS. ALIENS). Yeah, I blew it.

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5. Billy Bob Thornton as the President, LOVE ACTUALLY (2003)

Billy Bob Thornton exudes sleaze and a stinky odor that can only be described as pure, unadulterated America in the brilliant British romcom. It’s a master stroke of casting, as arrogance and charm seep out of Billy Bob’s pores in this small role. He’s inappropriate with Hugh Grant/the Prime Minister’s squeeze, he’s a bully, presumably a philandering alcoholic, and he’s exactly what the Brits and the rest of the world think of American politicians. And they’re probably right.

I’d still vote for Billy Bob Thornton in a heartbeat.

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4. Morgan Freeman as President Tom Beck, DEEP IMPACT (1998)

James Earl Jones delivered the first depiction of a black president in THE MAN (1972), although Sammy Davis Jr. dreamed of being the black president as a 7 year old in RUFUS JONES FOR PRESIDENT (1933). You could make a convincing argument that 24, DEEP IMPACT and other pop culture entries featuring black actors as the President paved the way for Barack Obama. It shouldn’t have required that, but Morgan Freeman’s portrayal in DEEP IMPACT might be one of the most influential of its kind. It doesn’t get any more regal, comforting, stately and presidential than “The Voice.”

Like in life, when everything seems lost, or when humanity is on the brink, we need heroes the most. Or at least, that’s what the movies teach us, and in DEEP IMPACT, a comet could destroy the planet. Leave it to Morgan Freeman and his voice to soothe our worries, and lead the way.

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3. Peter Sellers as President Merkin Muffley, DR. STRANGELOVE (1964)

In Stanley Kubrick’s hilarious black comedy about the Cold War, nuclear paranoia and the folly of politics, Peter Sellers gets a new high score. He plays three of the main characters, including the titular Dr. Strangelove, a maniacal mad-scientist role that overshadows his Captain Mandrake and…the President.

In DR. STRANGELOVE, Sellers’ President is shocked to discover that the U.S. has ordered a nuclear attack on the Soviet Union, without his permission. He finds himself in an impossible situation, amid a sea of incompetent and unruly advisers in the war room, while not exactly the brightest man himself.

Here are two classic scenes from the movie, though it’s one of those movies where every scene is famous:

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2. Harrison Ford as President James Marshall, AIR FORCE ONE (1997)

In the 1990’s, we wanted a President who could kick ass and murder with the best of them. Leave it to Harrison Ford to bring the badass to the Oval Office, as he turns the President (an ex-soldier) into a 90’s action hero in Wolfgang Peterson’s AIR FORCE ONE. It’s honestly one of Ford’s best roles, as he takes down a malicious Gary Oldman and his ring of terrorists WHILE IN FLIGHT. He also delivers arguably the best line from a Fictional Movie President, in a way that only Ford could:

This list will not go quietly into the night…

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1. Bill Pullman as President Thomas J. Whitmore, INDEPENDENCE DAY (1996)

There are no words, especially when Bill Pullman stole them all, in probably the greatest movie speech ever:

All of the goosebumps.

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