Showing posts with label Star Trek Into Darkness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Trek Into Darkness. Show all posts
Star Trek Into Darkness Trivia
From IMDB
Screenwriters Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman explained that the dilemma for the sequel was whether to pit the crew against another villain, or to have an "exploration sci-fi plot where the unknown and nature itself is somehow an adversary," like in Star Trek.
According to J.J. Abrams, the time travel-alternate reality concept used in the previous film was a deliberate ploy to enable a reboot for new sagas/films: "The idea, now that we are in an independent timeline, allows us to use any of the ingredients from the past - or come up with brand-new ones - to make potential stories."
Hayley Atwell and Teresa Palmer auditioned for the role of Carol Marcus.
Benicio Del Toro was in early talks for the role of John Harrison, but eventually declined due to monetary issues. Demián Bichir, Édgar Ramírez and Jordi Mollà were considered afterwards, before Benedict Cumberbatch was finally cast.
Paramount Pictures requested director J.J. Abrams to make the film in 3D. However, Abrams wanted to shoot the movie two dimensionally on film using IMAX cameras. The two compromised, and as a result this film marks the first time in cinema history that a movie was filmed in the IMAX format and then converted into 3D in post production.
Benedict Cumberbatch was recommended to J.J. Abrams by his Super 8 co-producer Steven Spielberg, who directed the actor in the film War Horse.
Peter Weller previously starred in The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension, along with former Trek villain Christopher Lloyd; and in RoboCop alongside fellow Trek veterans Ronny Cox, Kurtwood Smith and Miguel Ferrer.
Benedict Cumberbatch is best known for playing the title character in Sherlock. Leonard Nimoy played Sherlock Holmes on stage in the 1970s, and even makes reference to this fact in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, citing Holmes's logic that "when you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." Cast member Christopher Plummer also played Holmes, and also speaks a trademark line, "The game's afoot." Nimoy also recorded a song in the 1970s, "The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins", inspired by The Hobbit. Cumberbatch voices the dragon Smaug in The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, in which his Sherlock castmate Martin Freeman plays Bilbo Baggins.
Benedict Cumberbatch recorded his screen test at his best friend's kitchen using an iPhone.
Benedict Cumberbatch and Alice Eve have worked together twice before, in Hawking and Starter for 10.
Of all the titles proposed for the film, including many joke titles, Damon Lindelof preferred "Star Trek: Transformers 4" best: "It's technically available, we can go there!"
Michael Dorn, who had played the Klingon Starfleet Lieutenant Worf, was contacted for a role during the start of filming, and was asked to play an officer. Eventually the filmmakers decided that "they didn't want to mix the old with the new" and cut him out.
According to writer Damon Lindelof, the story began with deciding whether Khan Noonien Singh would be the villain, and they weighed the pros and cons of him appearing. J.J. Abrams felt it would be "be fun to hear what Alex and Bob are thinking about Khan. The fun of this timeline is arguing that different stories, with the same characters, could be equally if not more compelling than what's been told before. Certain people are destined to cross paths and come together, and Khan is out there... even if he doesn't have the same issues."
The screenwriters studied sci-fi novels by Arthur C. Clarke and Larry Niven for inspiration.
This marks the first time a Star Trek film has shot outside the United States, with shooting in Iceland for special effects sequences.
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Simon Pegg: 'I don't have a great wish to be in Star Wars'
From Digital Spy
Simon Pegg has revealed that he is not pursuing a role in Jj Abrams's Star Wars: Episode VII.
The actor reprises his role as Scotty in Abrams's Star Trek Into Darkness, but says he has no particular desire to collaborate with the director on Disney's new Star Wars films.
"It's not one of my great wishes to be in Star Wars," Pegg told Industria magazine. "I'd love to go to the cinema and just watch it."
He went on to express relief that George Lucas will be involved with the new films only as a creative consultant.
"I'll always have a soft spot for George Lucas because he made the original films, but those prequels were dreadful and if he were making more Star Wars films, I'd be worried."
Pegg recently suggested that Abrams will save the Star Wars franchise by "bringing the fun back" to it.
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Simon Pegg has revealed that he is not pursuing a role in Jj Abrams's Star Wars: Episode VII.
The actor reprises his role as Scotty in Abrams's Star Trek Into Darkness, but says he has no particular desire to collaborate with the director on Disney's new Star Wars films.
"It's not one of my great wishes to be in Star Wars," Pegg told Industria magazine. "I'd love to go to the cinema and just watch it."
He went on to express relief that George Lucas will be involved with the new films only as a creative consultant.
"I'll always have a soft spot for George Lucas because he made the original films, but those prequels were dreadful and if he were making more Star Wars films, I'd be worried."
Pegg recently suggested that Abrams will save the Star Wars franchise by "bringing the fun back" to it.
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Alice Eve on her new Star Trek adventure
From The Telegraph (UK)
It’s been a long road to Hollywood, but Alice Eve never really doubted she’d get there. For as the latest recruit to Star Trek tells John Preston, there’s only one way to boldly go. And that’s up.
The first time Alice Eve was beamed aboard the Starship Enterprise things didn’t go entirely to plan. Clad in her skin-tight uniform, her thick, blonde hair freshly coiffed, she ran on to the set of JJ Abrams’ £120 million production of Star Trek Into Darkness – and promptly fell on her bottom.
‘Literally, this was the first take of the first day’s shooting’, she says. ‘It was pretty bad for me, but everyone else seemed to find it very funny.’
You might assume that this would have rather knocked the stuffing out of her – except that Alice Eve isn’t like that. If she does self-doubt, she keeps it more deeply buried than anyone else I’ve ever met.
Instead, self-possession comes off her in waves. As we sit in a club in Soho, she even manages to eat a mouthful of very gloopy hummus in a way that is as controlled as it is delicate.
The daughter of the actors Trevor Eve and Sharon Maughan, Eve knew pretty much from the moment she could walk that she wanted to be an actress.
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It’s been a long road to Hollywood, but Alice Eve never really doubted she’d get there. For as the latest recruit to Star Trek tells John Preston, there’s only one way to boldly go. And that’s up.
The first time Alice Eve was beamed aboard the Starship Enterprise things didn’t go entirely to plan. Clad in her skin-tight uniform, her thick, blonde hair freshly coiffed, she ran on to the set of JJ Abrams’ £120 million production of Star Trek Into Darkness – and promptly fell on her bottom.
‘Literally, this was the first take of the first day’s shooting’, she says. ‘It was pretty bad for me, but everyone else seemed to find it very funny.’
You might assume that this would have rather knocked the stuffing out of her – except that Alice Eve isn’t like that. If she does self-doubt, she keeps it more deeply buried than anyone else I’ve ever met.
Instead, self-possession comes off her in waves. As we sit in a club in Soho, she even manages to eat a mouthful of very gloopy hummus in a way that is as controlled as it is delicate.
The daughter of the actors Trevor Eve and Sharon Maughan, Eve knew pretty much from the moment she could walk that she wanted to be an actress.
READ MORE
J.J Abrams: Star Trek is more 'sophisticated' than Star Wars
From: Express (UK)
The two franchises have been compared for years, but Abrams is adamant that the two are completely different, and that the fact that he has directed the past two Star Trek films will have no influence over his upcoming movie.
"It’s a completely different universe and it feels very, very different... I don’t feel that there’s much of an overlap of the two," he said.
He even admitted that he was never a fan of Star Trek growing up, and much preferred its counterpart.
(More After The Break)
"When I was a kid and saw Star Wars for the first time it blew my mind and around the same time I had friends who were huge fans of Star Trek and I don’t know if I was smart enough to get it, or patient enough," he admitted.
"What I loved about Star Wars was the visceral energy of it, the clarity of it, the kind of innocence and big heart of it," he went on. "Star Trek always felt a little bit more sophisticated and philosophical, debating moral dilemmas and things that were theoretically interesting, but for some reason I couldn’t get on board.
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Surfs Up! - A Star Trek Into Darkness Sydney Photoshoot
Source: Getty Images
'Star Trek: Into Darkness' is set to premiere in Sydney, Australia on Tuesday and while in the land down under many of the films stars were called out of bed on Sunday morning for a photo opp featuring 'Trek' themed surfboards.
In case you've been living under a rock:
When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew. - Paramount
Here are some of the photos:
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 22: Zachary Quinto, J.J. Abrams, Lifeguard Dean "Deano" Gladstone, Chris Pine and Karl Urban pose at Bondi Beach at the "Star Trek Into Darkness" photo call on April 22, 2013 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Marianna Massey/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures International)
Zachary Quinto, J.J. Abrams, Chris Pine and Karl Urban pose at Bondi Beach at the "Star Trek Into Darkness" photo call on April 22, 2013 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Marianna Massey/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures International
"Star Trek Into Darkness" special editon surfboards at Bondi Beach at the "Star Trek Into Darkness" photo call on April 22, 2013 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Marianna Massey/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures International)
'Star Trek: Into Darkness' is set to premiere in Sydney, Australia on Tuesday and while in the land down under many of the films stars were called out of bed on Sunday morning for a photo opp featuring 'Trek' themed surfboards.
In case you've been living under a rock:
When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew. - Paramount
Here are some of the photos:
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 22: Zachary Quinto, J.J. Abrams, Lifeguard Dean "Deano" Gladstone, Chris Pine and Karl Urban pose at Bondi Beach at the "Star Trek Into Darkness" photo call on April 22, 2013 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Marianna Massey/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures International)
Zachary Quinto, J.J. Abrams, Chris Pine and Karl Urban pose at Bondi Beach at the "Star Trek Into Darkness" photo call on April 22, 2013 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Marianna Massey/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures International
"Star Trek Into Darkness" special editon surfboards at Bondi Beach at the "Star Trek Into Darkness" photo call on April 22, 2013 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Marianna Massey/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures International)
JJ Abrams talks Star Trek Into Darkness
From TG Daily
Can it truly be a little over a month away before Star Trek Into Darkness finally hits theaters?
Without a doubt, the film is one of the most anticipated sequels in recent memory, and it took a lot of time for JJ Abrams to get all the elements right before he was comfortable enough to move ahead, otherwise we would have seen the sequel out several years ago already.
Nevertheless, we, the fans, are hoping it’s all been worth the wait, and if it takes more time for the sequel to be ready, we’ll wait it out, providing it really delivers on arrival. Abrams recently spoke to Collider about Darkness, and one of the biggest challenges was the logistics.
(More After The Break)
"This movie is so much bigger than the first film we did," Abrams said. "It’s enormous in size, so really one of the biggest challenges was figuring out how to do it. I didn’t want things to be shot mostly on green screen or blue screen. Part of it was figuring out, what do we build, where do we shoot this stuff, how do we possibly realize this?"
By and large the geeks liked how Abrams reinvented Trek, yet Abrams also said, "I think there are a lot of Trek fans who embraced and loved what we did, and had a great time, and there were a lot of others who would maybe call themselves purists who felt like it was not the original series…the irony for me is if you’re a real Trek fan, it’s about ‘boldly going where no one’s gone before.’ I’m grateful for anyone who likes the movie, whether they’re an original Star Trek fan or not."
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High-Res Star Trek Into Darkness Stills
From Empire Online
This month's issue of Empire is a J.J. Abrams spectacular, and so, as you might have guessed, it features plenty of Star Trek Into Darkness goodness, including out fold-out three-sheet front cover, exclusive on-set access and many, many stills - stills you can now check out online to whet your Trekkie appetite. A few things to note: Spock looks a little like Dr. Manhattan/any number of Prometheus cast members in that space suit, Bones seems to be giving Harrison his number and that Mc-3921 thingummy is very intriguing indeed. Do you have any of your own guesstimations to make? Let us know in the comment box below.Also, check out our Star Trek Into Darkness trailer breakdown here for lots more extra detail...Featuring Chris Pine's Captain Kirk to Zachary Quinto's Spock, as well as newbies Alice Eve (Carol Marcus)
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(Photos After The Break)
MORE STILLS
Star Trek Into Darkness Release Date Pushed Back To August
From Fansshare
Fans of the Star Trek franchise have been eagerly awaiting the release of the new movie Star Trek Into Darkness but it seems that their patience is about to be tested, as they will now have to wait even longer for the official release date of the movie.
While we all thought that we would get to finally cast our eyes over the Star Trek Into Darkness movie on the big screen next month, it seems that we will now have to wait even longer for it to be released, as the release date has now had to be changed.
It has been confirmed that the Star Trek Into Darkness release date has had to be pushed back and, instead of being released on May 17, as we had been led to believe, it has now been delayed and will be released on August 9 in both the US and the UK.
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Spock gets in touch with his human side
From Yahoo
J.J. Abrams' "Star Trek" reboot had gorgeous production design, stunning action and enough lens flares to make you think the entire universe was encased in some sort of glass dome. But perhaps even more striking was the unique humanistic spin on the character of Spock, played with pitch-perfect precision by Zachary Quinto.
Quinto's young Vulcan made for a much more emotional Starfleet science officer than the, well, more logical Spock played by Leonard Nimoy. Quinto's Spock was a man struggling with his duality as his human passions often conflicted with his reserved Vulcan upbringing. It was both strange and incredibly cathartic to see Spock lash out in violence after Kirk's rebellious antics and chiding pushed him too far.
Spock's internal struggle will be a focal point of "Star Trek Into Darkness" as well.
"I think we tapped into something in the first film that a lot of people weren't expecting, which is the emotional undercurrent and how powerfully it runs through him," said Quinto in an interview with Entertainment Weekly. "That continues in this film. There are things that happen to him -- and things that he's part of -- that are incredibly personal. That was really exciting for me both physically and emotionally."
READ ARTICLE
J.J. Abrams' "Star Trek" reboot had gorgeous production design, stunning action and enough lens flares to make you think the entire universe was encased in some sort of glass dome. But perhaps even more striking was the unique humanistic spin on the character of Spock, played with pitch-perfect precision by Zachary Quinto.
Quinto's young Vulcan made for a much more emotional Starfleet science officer than the, well, more logical Spock played by Leonard Nimoy. Quinto's Spock was a man struggling with his duality as his human passions often conflicted with his reserved Vulcan upbringing. It was both strange and incredibly cathartic to see Spock lash out in violence after Kirk's rebellious antics and chiding pushed him too far.
Spock's internal struggle will be a focal point of "Star Trek Into Darkness" as well.
"I think we tapped into something in the first film that a lot of people weren't expecting, which is the emotional undercurrent and how powerfully it runs through him," said Quinto in an interview with Entertainment Weekly. "That continues in this film. There are things that happen to him -- and things that he's part of -- that are incredibly personal. That was really exciting for me both physically and emotionally."
READ ARTICLE
Star Trek Into Darkness - Official Teaser (HD)
Is it sad that the only new movies I give a crap about are this one, 'Godzilla 3D' and the next 'Planet of the Apes?'
Actually, is it also sad that my taste in movies hasn't changed even one bit since I was ten years old? It's like living in 1977 all over again ... oh well.
Here is the info:
In Summer 2013, pioneering director J.J. Abrams will deliver an explosive action thriller that takes Star Trek Into Darkness. When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.
Official Site: http://www.StarTrekMovie.com
Actually, is it also sad that my taste in movies hasn't changed even one bit since I was ten years old? It's like living in 1977 all over again ... oh well.
Here is the info:
In Summer 2013, pioneering director J.J. Abrams will deliver an explosive action thriller that takes Star Trek Into Darkness. When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.
Official Site: http://www.StarTrekMovie.com
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