Coriolano : aggiornamenti sulla produzione

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nikuzzact
view post Posted on 22/10/2009, 18:42




e direi...speriamo bene...tanto,ormai,nn gli danno + parti marginali...è famoso il nostro Gerryno adesso!!!
:woot:
 
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gra70
view post Posted on 22/10/2009, 19:29




Il mistero è risolto:

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It looks like I might be doing Coriolanus, the Shakespeare play, the movie version… the adaptation of. Ralph Fiennes will be directing and playing Coriolanus and I’d be playing Tullus Aufidius his nemesis!”

E' uno dei protagonisti!!! :cheeerleaders: :cheeerleaders: :cheeerleaders:

Altro che una mezzoretta sullo schermo!!!

(Ariel mi fai paura.... image)

Qui l'articolo http://www.aintitcool.com/node/42805
 
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Kyriem
view post Posted on 22/10/2009, 19:51




CITAZIONE (gemini78 @ 22/10/2009, 16:21)
Spero non abbia deciso di fare l'eterno co-protagonista chenonhapoituttoquestospaziosulloschermo!

A volte va bene lo stesso... Sam Worthington aveva la parte da coprotagonista in Terminator Salvation ma hanno notato tutti lui e lasciato un pò indietro Christian Bale che è molto più famoso!!!

Meglio una parte tosta da coprotagonista che una schifosa da protagonista, no???

Aggiungo anche un'altro link per chi fosse interessato:

http://www.cinematical.com/2009/10/22/gera...-in-coriolanus/
 
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nikuzzact
view post Posted on 22/10/2009, 22:08




:wub: :wub: :wub: ke bello Gerryno...basta azione e smancerie...film seri...emozione... :wub: :wub: :wub:
ehm...ok...ariel,potrei sapere cosa mi riserva il futuro!?! :shifty:
 
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nikuzzact
view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 11:12




Articolo su Coriolano...
http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Gerard-Butl...Next-15345.html
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So long as Butler yelling "Rome!" has the same ring to it that "Sparta!" did, we'll be on board.

 
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view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 11:19
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sono ufficialmente entusiasta per questo nuovo progetto!! :woot:

ps:ariel resto in attesa anch'io dei numeri per superenalotto e vari :P
 
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view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 12:46
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Ma vi ricordate Gerry in versione antico romano nel Trailer for a Remake of Gore Vidal's Caligola di Vezzoli??

sicuramente gerry sarebbe bellissimo,ma vorrei farvi notare che si tratta di una rilettura 'moderna'...e se guardate la locandina su IMbD c'è in primo piano un'arma tipo kalashnikov... inoltre si gira in Serbia(Belgrado)... penso che potremmo avere una ambientazione tipo guerre recenti(Bosnia)...e quindi... niente toga ed elmo...
(a parte che Gerry non griderà certo Roma! se sarà Tullo Aufidio... capo del Volsci!)
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 12:57




CITAZIONE (arielcips @ 23/10/2009, 13:46)
sicuramente gerry sarebbe bellissimo,ma vorrei farvi notare che si tratta di una rilettura 'moderna'...e se guardate la locandina su IMbD c'è in primo piano un'arma tipo kalashnikov... inoltre si gira in Serbia(Belgrado)... penso che potremmo avere una ambientazione tipo guerre recenti(Bosnia)...e quindi... niente toga ed elmo...

:o: :o: :blink: :blink: :wacko: :wacko: :sick: :sick: :sadangel:

Edit: ma ci stai a pijà per...?? (dove l'hai vista tu la locandina, che non c'è su imbd??)
 
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nikuzzact
view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 13:12




nooooooooooooooooooooo...rilettura moderna nooooo :angry:
 
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view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 13:17
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... allora se andate su GB net,c'è la locandina: il volto di Coriolano appare attraverso una sagoma di mitra... ma ovviamente posso sbagliarmi e quell'immagine non ha nulla di ufficiale... comunque del Coriolano di Ralph Fiennes si parla già da un po',anche in italiano e conferme o smentite alla mia tesi possiamo cercarle in giro!

http://www.gerardbutler.net/career-achieve...oriolanus-film/

A contemporary version of Shakespeare’s dangerous political thriller.

The citizens of Rome are hungry. Coriolanus, the hero of Rome, a great soldier and a man of inflexible self-belief despises the people. His extreme views ignite a mass riot. Rome is bloody.

Manipulated and out-manoeuvred by politicians and even his own mother Volumnia, Coriolanus is banished from Rome. He offers his life or his services to his sworn enemy Tullus Aufidius. Coriolanus and Aufidius march on Rome intending to destroy the city. Volumnia appeals to her son. He tries to reject her but eventually breaks. Aufidius, feeling bitterly betrayed, brutally murders Coriolanus.

Edited by sabrinta - 23/10/2009, 14:42
 
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view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 13:45
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ecco che mi entusiasmo meno...speriamo che ne venga fuori qualcosa di buono,voglio essere ottimista ^_^
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 14:02




Ralph Fiennes revs up thrilling Corialanus with Icon, ScreenDaily.com
http://www.screendaily.com/ralph-fiennes-r...ing-corialanus- with-icon/5001242.article

Ralph Fiennes spoke exclusively to ScreenDaily yesterday (May 16) about his directorial debut Corialanus.


The project is set to start shooting early next year in Belgrade. And he is determined not to make a stale cinematic version of Shakespeare. “People who have read the script think it’s a page-turner,” he said. “I want it to be an edge-of-the-seat film.”

Fiennes will also star in the film playing Corialanus, Vanessa Redgrave has signed on to play his mother Volumnia and rising star Jessica Chastain (The Debt, Tree Of Life) his wife Virgilia. William Hurt will also star.

John Logan, the US writer of Gladiator, The Last Samurai and The Aviator, has written the script for Coriolanus which Fiennes first played on stage in London in 2000. “I became obsessed with the play and couldn’t lose the idea from my mind of it being a film. If you are rigorous in adapting it, it ends up like a political thriller.”


Logan, Fiennes said, has “aggressively edited” the original text and fortified the “high tension story” revolving around the family dynamic at its core and the subject of inter-state conflict. Fiennes and Logan have moved the setting from ancient Rome to “a power state today”. Belgrade, he adds, is perfect for his anywhere location with its blend of neo-classical and contemporary architecture. “Belgrade also has something bruised about it which is appropriate for this story,” he says.

Fiennes references Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo + Juliet (1996) as setting the bar for making Shakespeare accessible to contemporary audiences. “I don’t want it to be in that Shakespeare voice that puts you off,” he says. “Audiences want to hear Shaksepeare and they understand more than they think they are going to. The second film I ever saw was Olivier’s Henry V when I was nine years old and I loved it.”

He also says that he is referencing Gillo Pontecorvo’s The Battle Of Algiers for its neo-realist portrait of a city in conflict.

Fiennes says he will work closely with his DP Barry Ackroyd, a Ken Loach regular who also shot United 93 and Fiennes-starrer The Hurt Locker. “He has a brilliant eye for composition but also a very simple style that works for Ken Loach,” he says.

As for directing, he says he is naturally nervous. “I’ve become more and more clear that it is what I want to do,” he says and cites the different styles of film-makers he has worked with including Anthony Minghella, Robert Redford, Steven Spielberg, Istvan Szabo, Stephen Daldry and David Cronenberg.

“I wouldn’t know how to be baroque with a camera,” he says. “I want honest camerawork to reflect the scene that is going on. I loved how Istvan Szabo shot which was very simply capturing the actors.”

Icon came on board when Bill Pohlad’s River Road Entertainment dropped out last year, but Fiennes says that River Road played a “huge part in the development process.” Pohlad also recommended that Fiennes meet with Chastain who starred in River Road’s Tree Of Life for director Terrence Malick.

Yesterday in Cannes, he presented a “mood reel” to buyers which included footage of sample scenes which he and Redgrave have shot to show how their mother-son relationship will play.

He says that he and Ackroyd have collected hundreds of images from current conflicts which will act as visual references for the film. “The story is about the eternal war that never stops,” he says. “It could be Israel and Palestine or Russia and Chechnya.”

Icon Entertainment International has take on sales for the film. Producers on the film are Julia Taylor-Stanley of Artemis Films and Gabrielle Tana of Magnolia Mae Films.
 
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view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 14:10
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Logan, Fiennes said, has “aggressively edited” the original text and fortified the “high tension story” revolving around the family dynamic at its core and the subject of inter-state conflict. Fiennes and Logan have moved the setting from ancient Rome to “a power state today”. Belgrade, he adds, is perfect for his anywhere location with its blend of neo-classical and contemporary architecture. “Belgrade also has something bruised about it which is appropriate for this story,” he says.

Fiennes references Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo + Juliet (1996) as setting the bar for making Shakespeare accessible to contemporary audiences. “I don’t want it to be in that Shakespeare voice that puts you off,” he says. “Audiences want to hear Shaksepeare and they understand more than they think they are going to. The second film I ever saw was Olivier’s Henry V when I was nine years old and I loved it.”

...
...ecco,il regista dice appunto che ha spostato l'ambientazione dall'antica Roma in un qualsivoglia stato di potere di sempre,che ha scelto Belgrado perchè ha una architettura fuori dal temp,che vuole conservare il testo scespiriano ritenendolo comunque comprensibile(se non lo si recita con quel tono di prosopopea eccessivo)... Fiennes aveva 9 anni quando ha visto il suo primo Shakespeare...e ha compreso tutto!!!
 
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nikuzzact
view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 15:28




vabbè...speriamo bene...anke perkè,la rilettura in chiave moderna di Romeo e Giulietta (Romeo+Giulietta),nn è ke mi sia dispiaciuta...anzi(a parte DiCaprio)...xcui...vedremo!
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 23/10/2009, 19:12




Ragazze raffreddate gli entusiasmi un attimo... nell'intervista di ieri Gerry ha detto che potrebbe fare il film Coriolano, non che lo farà!

CITAZIONE
“It looks like I might be doing Coriolanus, the Shakespeare play, the movie version… the adaptation of. Ralph Fiennes will be directing and playing Coriolanus and I’d be playing Tullus Aufidius his nemesis!”

 
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238 replies since 22/10/2009, 05:24   3721 views
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