Tom Holland would call "Spider-Man" producers from "The Odyssey" set in order to "lay down the law" about filming blockbusters the Christopher Nolan way:
“I'd say, ‘We are not going to come to set and figure it out. We need to know why we are making this movie beyond the fact that it’s ‘Spider-Man 4’ and they make loads of money and we’re going to just have a big summer. Why are we making this movie?’ And Destin was super instrumental in that, but it was just really great to constantly be calling up the studio and [producers] Amy [Pascal] and Rachel [O’Connor], who I love, and be like, ‘Well, Chris is doing it this way. This is how I think we should be doing it.’ ” (via GQ)
https://t.co/Gf5DPJBs9r
Greedy LA cinephiles getting yet another magical temple of movies while the rest of us live on scraps from the garbage like common peasants. I hate you guys
This is a REALLY bad sign of how dire things are in the LA film industry right now. Quixote is the go-to production rental resource for commercial, film, or tv productions. :-/
We need comic book movies looking like this but unfortunately people want serious comic movies. Give me a new Flash movie with this and people would love it
Forget Dune 3.
Forget The Odyssey.
Coyote vs. ACME is the most important movie for you to see in a movie theater this year simply because David Zaslav tried to take it from you.
Show the CEOs good movies of ALL shapes and sizes are worth fighting for.
Disney just fired the man who designed the visual identity of the entire MCU.
16 years. $30 billion at the box office. And they replaced him with freelancers.
I’m going to put all of Andy Park’s contributions in the comments so you realize who this man actually is.
This scene from Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011) stands among the most complex in visual effects history, with the robot built from 77,000 moving parts and some frames taking up to 72 hours to render.