Monday, January 19, 2009

New Image from MONSTERS VS. ALIENS!

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"MONSTERS vs. ALIENS"
DreamWorks SKG Presents
"Monsters vs. Aliens"
Produced by Lisa Stewart
Directed by Rob Letterman Conrad Vernon

Cast: Reese Witherspoon, Hugh Laurie, Will Arnett, Seth Rogen, Rainn Wilson, Stephen Colbert, Kiefer Sutherland and Paul Rudd

Synopsis: When California girl Susan Murphy is unwittingly clobbered by a meteor full of outer space gunk on her wedding day, she mysteriously grows to 49-feet-11-inches tall. The military jumps into action and Susan is captured and secreted away to a covert government compound. There, she is renamed Ginormica and placed in confinement with a ragtag group of Monsters: the brilliant but insect-headed Dr. Cockroach, Ph.D.; the macho half-ape, half-fish The Missing Link; the gelatinous and indestructible B.O.B.; and the 350-foot grub called Insectosaurus. Their confinement is cut short, however, when a mysterious alien robot lands on Earth and begins storming the country. In a moment of desperation, the President is persuaded to enlist the motley crew of Monsters to combat the Alien Robot and save the world from imminent destruction.

"Monsters vs. Aliens" is DreamWorks Animation's first InTru 3D Movie. A 2D version will also be available.

Release: March 27, 2009

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Sunday, January 18, 2009

DreamWorks boss banks on 3D effect as films' future

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NORMALLY people I interview don't throw around the "jerk" word until they think I'm out of earshot. With Jeffrey Katzenberg, he's dropped it into his first sentence.

The DreamWorks Animation boss has just shown a cinema of 100 movie writers 20 minutes of footage of Monsters vs Aliens, DreamWorks's first 3D animation that Katzenberg promises will change the world when it's released in June.

This new generation of 3D effect defies easy explanation, suffice to say that seeing is believing.

"If a picture is better than 1000 words, a 3D picture is better than 3000 words," Katzenberg says.

The first thing to note about Monsters vs Aliens is that it's missing the gimmick that most people associate with 3D movies. Nothing jumps out of the screen and threatens to push the viewer out of the seat.

"As a joke, at the beginning we actually do something just to get it out of the way," Katzenberg says in a hotel suite overlooking Sydney Harbour a few minutes before he's due to head to the airport and jump on his private jet to head home to the US.

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"It was the director's way of saying to filmgoers this is the first and last moment that we want you to think about watching a 3D movie. You're watching a story. It's a good story if you saw it flat. And the fact that it's in stereo to add a level of dimension and excitement to it, is unlike anything you've experienced before."

Katzenberg was in Australia to promote Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, the sequel to DreamWorks' successful animated animals abroad tale featuring the voices of Chris Rock, Ben Stiller and David Schwimmer.

What he really wanted to talk about was his passionate belief in the power of 3D to transform cinema.

Katzenberg talks of having his moment of conversion in an Imax cinema while he was watching Polar Express in 3D.

"It's my eureka moment. I have to give credit to (Polar Express director) Bob Zemeckis, he is the guy who showed me the path to it. Now I'm taking it to a level that I'm not sure even he imagined."

It's because of the depth of that passion that the jerk word has come out. Fortunately it's not aimed at me, but at LA Times blogger Patrick Goldstein who wrote a piece ridiculing Katzenberg's vision.

Read a review of Madagascar 2

"Had he seen the movie, then I would never have opened my mouth," Katzenberg says of the missile he fired back at the blogger. "He wrote a stupid column. To say that since the introduction of colour there has been no good movies made, that the great movies were made in black and white – I don't think I've ever had someone open themselves up so stupidly and I couldn't help myself."

It is the scope of Katzenberg's vision that has some people unconvinced. Katzenberg says it is only a matter of time before most movies will be made in 3D.

"When was the last time you saw a black and white movie?" he asks, offering a question in response to my own about that bold prediction. "When was the last time you saw a silent film?"

He is just the most vocal proponent of the extra dimension, with other big-name directors Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson also firmly in his camp . . . but not everyone is convinced.

In a deja vu moment, The New York Times recently ran a summary of stories from the coverage of the release of the first 3D feature Bwana Devil in 1952. There are big promises in the start (this is the death of 2D movies, says one) but within a year the birth notice had turned to an obituary.

"Showmen now admit that the decline of stereopix is due in part to technically faulty, quickly made B pix rushed on the market to make a 'quick buck'," Daily Variety reported in 1953.

That rush to follow the trend is happening again. There are as many as a dozen 3D movies to be released in the next year, with the first being Disney's Bolt that comes out on January 1, and combines the voice of Miley Cyrus and John Travolta. Bolt will come out in America on nearly 1000 screens, making it the widest 3D release.

Read a review of Bolt

Even that figure raises the chicken and egg problem. Cinemas don't want to invest in expensive 3D projectors if there is not enough product to justify it and studios are hesitant to make 3D movies when there are not enough screens to show it on.

The transformation, after unsettled debate about who should pay for the new projectors, is happening, in the US and slowly in the Australian market.

Katzenberg says the last Shrek movie was released in the US on 10,000 screens. When the next Shrek adventure comes out in 2010, he believes 7500 screens in the US will be able to show it in 3D.

"The price we pay for being first is that it will not be as widely available as we would like it to be," Katzenberg says.

"We feel confident we will at least get back the investment we are making.

"The good news about coming first is that you're the pioneer. The bad news about coming first is it won't be as widely adapted at cinema levels as we would like it to be."

Katzenberg, who has a background in Disney theme parks, says the new 3D is not about a gimmick. It's about taking people into the picture, rather than having the picture come out of them.

It is a technology that offers filmmakers the ability to pan a shot along a different axis and Katzenberg has advice for another journalist. He's on a mission, and he wants me to join him in spreading the word.

"You're in for a film experience that's not in this world. It's something more fun, more exciting, more compelling, more immersive, it's not a gimmick, it's not a trick, it's not goofy glasses," he says.

"It is an exceptional way to see an experience of storytelling that's unlike anything that we've seen in our lifetime. That's pretty good, you could say that."

Bolt opens January 1.

Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa now showing.

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Saturday, January 17, 2009

Ginormica's Origin Explored in New Trailer of 'Monsters vs. Aliens'

Watch TV on PC - 12,000 TV Channels and Movies A brand new trailer of "" has been released. Giving out more footage as well as story to the comic animation than the previous one, this new trailer chronicles when and how Susan Murphy grows to 49 feet, 11 inches tall and becomes the "monster" called as Ginormica. The video also teases the time she is first introduced to the other monsters captured by the government.

Beside focusing on Ginormica, this trailer also shows how the clueless and wacky monsters are sent to stop an alien from invading the Earth. Providing a deeper look into some of the monsters, like the time the jellylike B.O.B. flirts with a jello, the end-half of the promo video captures some of the scenes in which the monsters are fighting the alien.

Featuring the voices of , , , , and many else, "Monsters vs. Aliens" is directed by Rob Letterman, the helmer of "" and Conrad Vernon, the helmer of "". Produced in real 3-D, this DreamWorks Animation film will be available in the U.S. theaters on March 27, 2009.

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Friday, January 16, 2009

New Trailer for DreamWorks' MONSTERS VS. ALIENS

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A new trailer for DreamWorks Animation's next feature film Monsters vs. Aliens has appeared online just in time for the holiday. The film which reinvents the classic 50s monster movie era for the modern day will feature the voicework from Reese Witherspoon, Hugh Laurie, Will Arnett, Seth Rogen, Rainn Wilson, Stephen Colbert, Kiefer Sutherland and Paul Rudd. The production was co-directed by Rob Letterman (Shark Tale) and Conrad Vernon (Shrek 2), produced by Lisa Stewart and co-produced by Jill Hopper and Latifa Ouaou. The film marks the theatrical debut of DreamWorks Animation's Ultimate 3-D, the studio's proprietary production process of authoring its animated films in 3-D from start to finish.

You can check out the new trailer by clicking here.

Plot Concept: When California girl Susan Murphy (Witherspoon) is unexpectedly clobbered by a meteor full of outer space gunk, she mysteriously grows to 49-feet-11-inches tall and is instantly labeled a "monster" named Ginormica. The military jumps into action, and she is captured and held in a secret government compound. The world learns that the military has been quietly rounding up other monsters over the years. This ragtag group consists of the brilliant but insect-headed Dr. Cockroach, Ph.D.( Laurie); the macho half-ape, half-fish The Missing Link(Arnett); the gelatinous and indestructible B.O.B.(Rogen); and the 350-foot grub called Insectosaurus. Their confinement time is cut short however, when a mysterious alien robot lands on Earth and begins storming the country.

As a last resort, under the guidance of General W.R. Monger (Sutherland) on a desperate order from The President, the motley crew of Monsters is called into action to combat the aliens and save the world from imminent destruction.

Monsters vs. Aliens will hit Ultimate 3-D, standard and IMAX theaters March 27, 2009.

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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Full-Length Monsters Vs. Aliens Trailer Unveiled!

Watch TV on PC - 12,000 TV Channels and Movies DreamWorks Animation has just unveiled the full-length trailer for Monsters vs. Aliens, which is set for release on March 27, 2009 in conventional theaters and IMAX. This will be the first film released to utilize the Ultimate 3D format. Click on the player below to check out this new trailer for yourself.

When California girl Susan Murphy is unexpectedly clobbered by a meteor full of outer space gunk, she mysteriously grows to 49-feet-11-inches tall and is instantly labeled a "monster" named Ginormica. The military jumps into action, and she is captured and held in a secret government compound. The world learns that the military has been quietly rounding up other monsters over the years. This ragtag group consists of the brilliant but insect-headed Dr. Cockroach, Ph.D.; the macho half-ape, half-fish The Missing Link; the gelatinous and indestructible B.O.B.; and the 350-foot grub called Insectosaurus. Their confinement time is cut short however, when a mysterious alien robot lands on Earth and begins storming the country.

Monsters vs. Aliens opens in conventional theaters and IMAX on March 27th.pix71029

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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Conor Nolan finds 3D animation in Monster vs Aliens very exciting

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THERE has been much debate recently about 3D and its potential growth in the UK. So when the Dreamworks' big boss Jeffrey Katzenberg invited me to see a preview of his new 3D animated movie, Monster vs Aliens, I simply could not resist, writes Conor Nolan.

3D is of course not new and has been around since the 1950s, but the advent of digital projection technology has allowed it to advance leaps and bounds.

As I sat down in the cinema I was given a pair of odd looking sunglasses to watch the latest Dreamworks animated flick and what an experience it was: I was treated to about 30 minutes worth of clips from Monster vs Aliens and it was dazzling.

You literally feel that you are in the thick of the action as it unfurls on the big screen and on several occasions I actually ducked and moved my head to avoid objects hurtling towards me.

Monster vs Aliens opens next Easter and a slew of 3D movies are set to follow including Toy Story 3D, A Christmas Carol, Shrek 4 and the highly anticipated James Cameron blockbuster, Avatar.

Katzenberg said: "3D is the next revolution in the cinema-going experience." But with the costs of installing the technology so high, I wonder whether the cinema owners in The South West will be prepared to invest in the hugely expensive servers and hard drives required to plug into existing digital projectors?

There are only 65 digital 3D screens in the UK so we may have to wait a while longer to see it in 3D – although the film is also released in a format cinema goers can enjoy without 3D specs.

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

New Monsters Vs. Aliens Trailer Includes Ginormica's Secret Origin!

Watch TV on PC - 12,000 TV Channels and Movies After watching this new trailer, the only question is, will Monsters Vs. Aliens be the greatest movie of all time — or merely among the greatest? Also, some descriptions of new footage below.

Dreamworks supremo Jeffrey Katzenberg has been traveling around showing off footage from MVA to select audiences of journalists. In particular, there are three clips he's been showing off:

Clip one:

We see a flurry of helicopters and attack planes in the desert. The President (Stephen Colbert) walks out of the White House helicopter and comes face to single eye with the alien robot. He uses a Casico keyboard to communicate with it, in a Close Encounters riff. Unfortunately, his keyboard noodlings only awaken the probe and it sets about demolishing the U.S. military. "Do something violent!" the President screams at his soldiers. Unfortunately, none of the Army's weapons have any effects. Cut to a briefing room, where general W.R. Monger (Kiefer Sutherland) says "We need... monsters."

Clip two:

Susan/Ginormica (Reese Witherspoon) is in a holding cell, dreaming of the honeymoon she never had after being hit by a meteor on her wedding day. Then her cell turns into an elevator and whisks her to a conference room. She inches into the room, with a chair and table, and a voice whispers, "The new monster is only a giant pair of legs!" Then a dollop of gruel and a bug drop into the room, and Susan almost swats the bug with a spoon. But the bug says, "Careful! This brain of mine will be in the Smithsonian one day!" The other monsters come into the room. The Missing Link grouses: "I was hoping for a wolfman."

Clip three:

The monsters face the alien robot in a deserted San Francisco. At first the robot is in hiding, then it steps out and dwarfs even Ginormica. Susan escapes from it, using two cars as rollerblades. The slimy B.O.B. comes out a manhole and joins the other monsters — Dr. Cockroach, PhD has put rockets on a street car. Dr. Cockroach hurls himself inside the probe, declaring that nothing can hurt a cockroach. Insectosaurus also attacks, but the probe hypnotizes him.

The assembled journos said the footage looked spectacular in 3-D, and Katzenberg promised this is just the tip of the iceberg, because the alien Gallaxhar (Rainn Wilson) has plenty more surprises in store after the probe. [Footage report Empire]

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Monday, January 12, 2009

Coming (at You) Soon: Jeffrey Katzenberg's cure-all for an ailing movie economy, in all three dimensions

Watch TV on PC - 12,000 TV Channels and Movies As far as Jeffrey Katzenberg is concerned, up to now there have been but two "revolutions" in the movie business: the mass introduction of sound with 1927's The Jazz Singer (itself, a process 30 years in the making) and, a year later, the debut of The Viking, the first feature presented in Technicolor. All of cinema's other advancements, from CinemaScope's widening of screens in the early 1950s to Lucasfilm's THX sonic boom in 1983, were mere evolutions — giant steps, yes, but in others' tracks.

At least, this was the theory advanced by the chief executive officer of DreamWorks Animation as he traveled the country earlier this month touting the film business's "third revolution": 3-D movies. (And yes, this revolution too has been more than a century in the making; Brit photographer William Friese-Greene, who saw in stereo, would no doubt appreciate his due.) No longer, says Katzenberg, will 3-D serve as a cheap "gotcha" gimmick — an exploitation hustle — but as a way to advance storytelling and "emotionally immerse" the audience into the film. 3-D , he insists, "captures the essence of being there in a unique way. And it reenergizes in a very big way what it means to come to the cinema...which is a shared, communal experience."

As opposed to, oh, that home-theater system and high-def TV keeping you home most nights. Especially now, as everyone's pinching their pennies instead of someone else's overpriced popcorn.

To prove his point, Katzenberg screened three scenes from DreamWorks' March 2009 release, Monsters vs. Aliens, starring Seth Rogen and Stephen Colbert, in an homage to the kind of '50s films that used paper-glasses 3-D to compensate for the lack of, well, everything else. Katzenberg is right to be excited about the future: For the first time, a 3-D movie isn't a gateway drug to ibuprofen. Specks of dust and chunks of rubble fill the theater, and a 50-foot-tall woman, voiced by Reese Witherspoon, does indeed look ready to bust out of the cineplex ceiling.

But rendering the passive into the interactive comes with a steep price tag at precisely the wrong time. A planned $150 million movie wound up costing an extra $15 million, for which DreamWorks will charge moviegoers an extra $5 at the ticket booth. And theaters will have to upgrade their equipment: Screens will need to be more reflective, and projectors will have to throw a brighter light. Such redos will cost theaters "tens and tens of thousands," Katzenberg acknowledges — an exorbitant price tag evidenced by the relatively low number of theaters that have made the upgrade thus far, despite such successful recent 3-D releases as Journey to the Center of the Earth and the Hannah Montana and U2 concert films. Katzenberg had hoped there would be 5,000 3-D screens ready to show Monsters vs. Aliens by March; in reality, he'll be lucky to find half that many.

"The implementation timeline has been extended by the economy," Katzenberg admits.

Indeed, though 2008 box-office receipts are on pace with 2007's record-setting $9.6 billion haul in the U.S. alone, actual ticket sales are down — due, in large part, to the rising cost of the average ticket. (Estimates are $7.08 per ticket in '08 — or 20 cents more than those in 2007.)

"In order to prosper, in order to survive, in order to grow — whatever you want to say — movies are..." Katzenberg pauses. "Look, even though we're having a pretty good year this year, movies are in decline. Now, I'm talking about in movie theaters, not in life. Movies are seen in more ways, and at more times, and by more people than ever before, but the movie-theater experience is declining and has been declining for years and years and years. To me, this seems like an opportunity to reverse that. So it's a business opportunity and a creative opportunity.

"As of today, there are only three businesses in America that seem to be doing well: Wal-Mart, McDonald's and movie sales. The gross revenue for movies is going to be slightly up from last year, which was a tremendous year. We'll be slightly under $10 billion, even though admissions are going to be a teeny bit down from last year. Tell me any business that can say that about themselves in 2008."

But a bit of history to keep in mind: Just as talkies were booming, literally and figuratively, the Great Depression struck — and, yes, even then studio chiefs insisted theirs was a "Depression-proof business." As Tom Schatz us reminds in his definitive early-Hollywood history The Genius of the System, "1930 was Hollywood's biggest year ever, as theater admissions, gross revenues and profits reached record levels. Economic reality quickly caught up with the movie industry, though, and the studios paid dearly for their blissful ignorance. Falling attendance, depleted reserves and tight fiscal policies staggered the studios by 1931-32, especially those that had expanded most aggressively in the 1920s."

The current recession, expected to last well into 2010, may be the least of Hollywood's problems; that pesky actors' strike, now more promise than threat, may prove considerably more staggering than folks sitting on their couches and their wallets. And DreamWorks Animation is hardly the best benchmark: Though it released only two films in 2008 — Kung Fu Panda and Madagascar 2 — both were among the top-grossing films of the year. The fact that they were also smart, entertaining films aimed equally at children and adults didn't hurt. Beats the hell out of a second mortgage spent on a day at the amusement park.

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Sunday, January 11, 2009

New Monsters vs. Aliens Trailer Gives More Detail

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monsters-vs-aliensDreamWorks has released another fun-filled trailer for their 3D animated comedy, Monsters vs. Aliens. This second trailer reveals more of the story as well as more of the 1950s style monsters they’ve chosen to include in the film.

The story revolves around California girl Susan Murphy (Reese Witherspoon, Legally Blonde), who is hit by a meteorite from outer space and grows to 49-feet-11-inches tall. A secret part of the military swoops in to capture her and she’s introduced to other “monsters” the military has been rounding up over the years.

When a mysterious alien robot lands on Earth, the unlikely group of misfits are brought in under desperate order from the President (Stephen Colbert, TV’s The Colbert Report). With the guidance of General W.R. Monger (Kiefer Sutherland, TV’s 24), this crew of monsters are called to combat against the aliens and save the world from imminent doom.

The animated feature also includes: The Missing Link (Will Arnett, TV’s Arrested Development), Dr. Cockroach Ph.D (Hugh Laurie, TV’s House), B.O.B. (Seth Rogan, Knocked-Up), and alien leader Gallaxhar (Rainn Wilson, TV’s The Office).

Monster vs. Aliens is directed by Rob Letterman (Shark Tale) and Conrad Vernon (Shrek 2) is produced by Lisa Stewart (I Think I Love My Wife) and co-produced by Jill Hopper and Latifa Ouaou. One thing that’s very odd about this film is that there is no mention of who the writers are - anywhere. Not on any of the movie database sites, official sites for Dreamworks or the film itself, or even in press releases for the movie. More than likely, the film is a studio-wide project with many members contributing to it. This potentially portends a disconnected project, but what they’ve put together looks pretty good so far.

From the first trailer, nothing seemed too out of the ordinary but this latest clip looks like an attempt to set a new bar for animated action. Along with 50-foot-woman Susan come action sequences on a massive scale. From what must have been a huge array of scattered ideas, DreamWorks has whittled this down to a handful of characters that look to provide a (hopefully) fun film.

Monster vs. Aliens arrives March 27, 2009.

Source: MSN.com

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Saturday, January 10, 2009

Movie exec sees future in 3-D

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Jeffrey Katzenberg, the movie executive behind mega-hits "Beauty and the Beast" and "Shrek," now sees the future of the movie theater in 3-D films, complete with those pesky glasses.

On Thursday, the DreamWorks Animation CEO outlined his vision in front of a small group at the AMC movie theater downtown.

"The movie theater experience has not changed in many decades," Katzenberg said. "Meanwhile, the home experience has gone through extraordinary innovation in just the last decade. ... To some degree, people have stopped coming to movie theaters."

A solution? "Immersive story telling," Katzenberg said. The method? Three-D.

So all of his company's forthcoming releases, starting with "Monsters vs. Aliens" in March, will be best seen in theaters with glasses donned.

Katzenberg showed off three clips from "Monsters vs. Aliens," which tracks the fate of several monsters, who are forced by the U.S. government to repel an alien attack.

With the 3-D glasses, rubble from a collapsing Golden Gate Bridge flies out at the audience. Without them, everything looks slightly fuzzy.

Katzenberg said technology has advanced since the days when 3-D films frequently induced nausea.

Back then, he said, 3-D movies were typically seen using glasses with both a red and a blue lens. Two projectors would project the film side-by-side, often not perfectly in sync.

Now, Katzenberg said, 3-D films are viewed using glasses with polarized lenses (The reusable ones at Thursday's event looked like standard sunglasses). Only one projector is needed.

Taking advantage of the advances, Katzenberg said he had retooled his studio to work exclusively in 3-D from the first storyboard.

That contrasts with the approach of other studios, which have typically animated films in 2-D and then post-produced them in 3-D (such as Walt Disney Animation Studio's "Bolt").

"It raises the quality of the work in a very big way," Katzenberg said.

Katzenberg is imaginative about the shift, which he repeatedly equated in importance to the introduction of sound and color to films.

Still, the move to 3-D presents a number of logistical challenges that could threaten its widespread adoption.

It costs about $15 million more for DreamWorks to create a 3-D movie. In addition, it costs about $100,000 to update a movie theater so that it can show a film in 3-D.

That means that a customer will have to pay roughly $5 more to watch "Monsters vs. Aliens" in 3-D. Also, only certain theaters, mostly in the U.S., will be able to show the film in 3-D.

A 2-D version will be simultaneously released to movie theaters and later on DVD.

Katzenberg said he thought customers would be happy to dole out additional money for a "premium experience."

In fact, by the time the next Shrek movie comes out in 2010, Katzenberg expects 80 percent to 85 percent of theater admissions will be for the 3-D version of that film.

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Friday, January 9, 2009

DreamWorks Animation bets big on InTru 3D technology

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Jeffrey Katzenberg is a man on a mission.

That's why the head of DreamWorks Animation flew up to Boston earlier this week to meet with exhibitors, film students and members of the media. With the hope that he'd then be able to win a few more converts over to his new world view. Which holds that the future of film lies in 3D.

Mind you, this is not -- to quote Katzenberg -- "your father's 3D" that we're talking about here. Waving a pair of the old red-and-blue anaglyph lenses about, Jeffrey talked about how the old version of 3D used to " ... give some people headaches, make others nauseous. And that's supposed to be good for business?"

Katzenberg certain hopes that this new version of 3D is good for business. For he's pretty much betting DreamWorks Animation's future on this new film format. Starting with the release of "Monsters Vs Aliens" in March of 2009, all of his studio's forthcoming releases will be produced in 3D.

And this is not going to be an inexpensive bet. According to what Jeffrey said at Monday's presentation, the 3D rendering process (i.e. once for the left eye, once for the right eye and once for the middle distance) will add approximately $15 million to the cost of producing each DreamWorks Animation feature. Which -- given that the average cost of a new DWA project already hovers around $150 million -- is a considerable chunk of change. Though DreamWorks Animation does hope to quickly recover these additional costs through the sale of higher priced tickets to these new premium presentations of its motion pictures.

Which may be a challenge. Given that -- as of this moment -- there are only 1500 screens in the country equipped to show movies in the InTru 3D format. Though -- when you fold in the 120 IMAX screens nationwide that can show 3D films as well as the thousand new 3D-equipped theaters that are expected to come on line in early 2009 -- that then bumps the number of screens that will be able to show "Monsters Vs Aliens" in 3D up to around 2500. Which is where Jeffrey says 35 - 40% of the revenue for this new DWA film (Thanks to that on-average $5 additional fee for this new premium viewing experience) will come from.


Photo by Nancy Stadler

Which is admittedly impressive. But wait. It gets better. Now jump ahead to 2010. When Katzenberg expects that there'll be 7500 screens in the country that will be capable of showing InTru 3D presentations. He anticipates that 80 - 85% of the audience for "Shrek 4" will to pay a higher ticket price in order to get that premium movie-going experience.

Okay. I know. Some of this sounds like pie in the sky. Especially given what's going on with the economy right now. But let's keep in mind that it's not just DreamWorks Animation that's getting serious about 3D's profit potential. Take -- for example -- the Mouse's Disney Digital 3D efforts. Which no longer just involve the studio's newer releases like "Bolt" but are now being expanded to incorporate older, more popular library titles like "Beauty and the Beast." Which is right now in the middle of being converted from 2D to 3D.

Of course, one of the other reasons that Disney & DreamWorks are so hot for 3D these days is that this new film format is virtually pirate proof. Which means that -- at least for the immediate future -- they no longer have to worry about people with camcorders stealing & then selling their intellectual property.

But that's only if people deem these new 3D films worth stealing. During his presentation on Monday, Katzenberg kept circling back to the idea that " ... all of this investment, all of this new technology won't make a bad movie good."

But the upside of that situation is ... Based on the 3D minutes of "Monsters Vs Aliens" I saw last week, InTru 3D can make a good film seem even better.

The production team of this new DWA feature have done a very clever thing. With the exception of two very brief homages to old style 3D (i.e. when things used to fly off the screen at the audience) at the very beginning and the very end of their movie, "Monsters Vs Aliens" uses this technology to draw moviegoers into this film. To create some real emotional depth.


Photo by Nancy Stadler

Which -- I know -- sounds kind of unlikely. Given that "Monsters Vs Aliens" starts off as a Mad Magazine-style spoof of 1950s-era sci-fi and monster movies. With the Earth being threatened with alien invasion and the only thing that can possibly stop this attack from outer space is the U.S. 's super-secret stash of ... Well ... monsters.

But do you remember how "Kung Fu Panda" took a totally ridiculous premise and then turned that into a genuinely entertaining motion picture with exciting action scenes and characters that you actually cared about? "Monsters Vs Aliens" does that too and then folds in 3D.

Case in point: There's a sequence in this motion picture where the monsters are doing battle with this mountain-sized probe that's laying waste to San Francisco. And as you might expect, the apex of the action comes right in the middle of Golden Gate Bridge. As Susan, the 49 & 1/2-foot tall woman finds herself trapped inbetween Insectasaurus, a 300-foot tall good guy, and the previously mentioned probe. And as Susan dodges the probe's killer claws while trying to rescue commuters that are trapped on the bridge ... "Monsters Vs Aliens" went from being this jokey parody to this genuinely engaging action-adventure that was filled with -- dare I say it? "Incredibles" -like laughs and thrills. Which was then made all the more exciting by this new 3D element.

You know what else I found intriguing about this footage? That DreamWorks Animation didn't go the theme park route. That "Monsters Vs Aliens" 3D elements weren't gratuitous. But -- rather -- they were all story-driven and added to this film in order to help create excitement & emotional depth. To help draw movie-goers into this motion picture.

So will InTru 3D really be able to do everything that Jeffrey Katzenberg says it will? Will this next generation of 3D film-making technology actually be the biggest thing to hit Hollywood since sound came in in the 1920s and color came in in the 1930s? To be honest, I don't know.

But what I Do know is ... Given "Monsters Vs Aliens" 's obvious affection for the films of the 1950s that inspired this new DreamWorks Animation release, this is one baby boomer who knows where he'll be in late March of 2009. Which is seated in some dark theater wearing polarized glasses, hoping that the rest of "Monsters Vs Aliens" is just as good as the 30 minutes of InTru 3D clips I saw earlier this week.

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Thursday, January 8, 2009

Dreamworks 3-D riding out economic crisis

Watch TV on PC - 12,000 TV Channels and Movies One of Hollywood's top producers said the ongoing financial crisis is hampering his efforts to release digital 3-D movies.

Jeffrey Katzenberg, chairman of DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc., said all future movies from his studios will be made in digital 3-D. But today only about 1,500 of the 36,000 theater screens in America are capable of showing such films,

"Until the financial markets come unstuck, which is probably late in the first quarter, the next round of the digital rollout is on a very slow pathway," Katzenberg said during a visit to Boston earlier this week to show off clips from his studio's upcoming film, "Monsters vs. Aliens."

It costs about $70,000 to convert a single movie screen to the digital projection system for the 3-D films. But many theater owners can't afford to make the switch. Theaters are finding it tough to borrow the money, as banks tighten their lending practices after years of ill-advised loans.

Katzenberg said about 2,500 screens should be converted to digital 3-D by March, in time for the release of "Monsters vs. Aliens." Katzenberg thinks credit markets will have loosened up by May 2010, when DreamWorks Animation releases the fourth in its series of Shrek movies. He expects there will be 7,500 theaters capable of showing the film in digital 3-D.

Katzenberg noted the percentage of Americans going to movies has steadily declined for decades. Last year, the industry sold 1.4 billion movie tickets, 38 million fewer than in 1998, even though the US population grew about 30 million during the period. Katzenberg called digital 3-D cinema "the greatest opportunity of my time to reverse this," and compared it to the introduction of soundtracks to movies in the 1920s and color films in the 1930s.

Today's 3-D animated movies are made using two-dimensional technology, and the footage is then converted into a 3-D version. DreamWorks Animation is doing it the other way around; all its movies will be made in 3-D, with 2-D versions produced for home video sales and for theaters that lack 3-D projectors.

It already costs around $150 million to produce a full-length computer-animated film. Katzenberg said making such a movie in 3-D adds about $15 million. But theaters charge extra for the 3-D experience — generally $5 per ticket.

"It suddenly changes the economics of the movie business," said Katzenberg. Theater owners and movie studios each get more revenue. Because the movies are digital, distribution costs are much lower. Instead of being delivered as a set of heavy film cans, each movie comes on a single lightweight hard drive. Eventually, the movies will be downloaded to theaters over a digital data network, eliminating all shipping costs. Digital delivery may help reduce the threat of theft and piracy. And 3-D makes it almost impossible to make illicit copies of a movie by aiming a video camera at the screen during a performance. The camera can't capture the 3-D effect, and the resulting video is a murky mess. "This is the silver lining inside the golden opportunity," Katzenberg said.

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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Reese Witherspoon Signs On For Two New Comedies

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Commanding somewhere between 15 and $20 million per film appearance, and locked in a two-year battle with Angelina Jolie over the distinction of being Hollywood’s highest paid actress, Reese Witherspoon is a heavy favorite to overtake Jolie in the new year.

Witherspoon’s latest film, “Four Christmases,” has been a runaway hit, taking in over $100 million for studio Warner Brothers in less than three weeks. Budgeted at $80 million, “Christmases,” (currently residing in second place behind last week’s “The Day the Earth Stood Still”) has been predicted to remain in the box-office Top 5 throughout the holiday season, making it a strong candidate for one of the year’s most profitable films.

No surprise then that studio bosses are eager to sign the 32 year-old to co-star in director James L Brooks’ latest project, a comedy tentatively titled “How Do You Know?”

Reported Monday by Variety, Witherspoon has been cast as one of three main characters in the film, which will begin shooting in March for Columbia Pictures. Brooks’ past films include 2004’s “Spanglish,” 1997’s “As Good as it Gets” and “Terms of Endearment,” which won the Oscar for Best Picture in 1983.

Additionally, Witherspoon will be lending her voice to the main character of Dreamworks Animation’s upcoming “Monsters Vs Aliens.”

Due out in early Spring, Witherspoon will play Susan Murphy, a young girl who turns into a super-monster named Ginormica and is tasked with saving the world after being struck by a meteorite.

Witherspoon has also signed on to star in an as-yet untitled romantic comedy - alongside Ben Stiller - for “Almost Famous” and “Jerry Maguire” director Cameron Crowe. Filming is expected to begin in July.

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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Jeffrey Katzenberg Digs into the Future of 3-D Movies and "Monsters vs. Aliens"

Watch TV on PC - 12,000 TV Channels and Movies Newsarama has posted two parts of a three-part interview with DreamWorks Animation SKG CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg. In part 1, Katzenberg elaborates on why he believes that 3-D movies are the third revolutionary event in moviemaking (after synchronized sound and color), how he came to this conclusion, what kinds of opportunities true 3-D filmmaking offers, and how the current economic hard times will affect the roll-out of 3-D.

In part 2, Katzenberg discusses the upcoming movie Monsters vs. Aliens, especially how 3-D will be used in the movie and what kinds of challenges needed to be overcome to produce it.

UPDATED December 18, 2008: In part 3, Katzenberg discusses the future of DreamWorks Animation in alternate entertainment venues, such as the Madagascar penguins TV spinoff.
Discuss this news in The Toon Zone - General Animation Discussion.

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Monday, January 5, 2009

An Examination of Alien Technology

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Monsters vs. AliensPhillyist was lucky enough to be among those invited to the Bridge theater yesterday morning for a special presentation by DreamWorks Animation's co-founder and CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg. Katzenberg came by to talk about DreamWorks' new 3D technology, and show us clips from an upcoming film that takes advantage of that technology: the computer-animated movie Monsters vs Aliens. Katzenberg started things off by saying there have been two revolutionary changes in film technology—the introduction of sound in the '20s and the introduction of color in the '30s—and that this new 3D technology will be the third revolutionary change. That's pretty big talk, especially considering the fact that 3D was already introduced some years ago, and disappeared along with other movie fads of the time. But Katzenberg was quick to separate this new 3D technology from what he called "my Dad's 3D." He said the problems of the old 3D (the two different images being out of sync, the ugly blue and red coloration, the blurry image, the glasses that hurt your head and could even make you sick) have all been solved. Now the glasses are comfortable, and the image is smooth and flicker free. He used a metaphor from music distribution to explain the difference between 2D movies and this new 3D: it's equivalent to the step up from a vinyl record to a digital recording. It's a more perfect representation of reality. He also stressed that DreamWorks has completely altered the way it makes movies so it can film in 3D, rather than take a 2D film and convert it to 3D after the fact (which he compared to the process of colorizing black and white films). He expects 3D films to re-energize what it means to go see a movie in the theater. It will bring people back out into the theaters in larger numbers, because it will be a premium experience that you can't have at home. Unfortunately, that also means you'll have to pay a premium price for it; we're talking $5 on top of the already pretty ridiculous price you have to pay for a movie ticket.

But enough about how great 3D is supposed to be—how great is it actually? How about those movie clips? A detailed description can be found after the jump.

After a short explanation of the film's premise (which is that aliens are attacking the Earth, and our last hope is the monsters that the American government has secretly captured and imprisoned over the years), Katzenberg showed us three clips, each something like five minutes in length. The first opens with a huge alien probe that has landed on Earth. Its one giant eye is staring around at the military personnel and vehicles arranged around it. The President of the United States (voiced, appropriately enough, by Stephen Colbert) steps up to personally make contact with the alien, using an amusing method: he plays it some familiar music on a keyboard. The probe reacts violently, pulls itself out of the ground, and turns into a giant rampaging robot. As one might expect, conventional Earth weapons have no effect on it. The President retreats to a war room very like the one in Dr. Strangelove and discusses options with his advisers. General W.R. Monger (Kiefer Sutherland) offers the only reasonable plan: to unleash the monsters on the aliens. He profiles for the President each of the monsters, including the most recent addition to the team: a woman named Susan Murphy (voiced by Reese Witherspoon) who grew almost fifty feet tall, and got super strong to boot, after being struck by a meteor on her wedding day.

In the second clip, we pick up with Susan right after her traumatic growth spurt. She wakes up inside a metal room, not sure where she is or how she got there. She's pushed out into a much larger enclosed area where she meets her fellow monsters: the half-bug mad scientist Dr. Cockroach (Hugh Laurie), the indestructible (but very stupid) gelatinous blob known as B.O.B. (Seth Rogen), the Missing Link (who looks sort of like the Creature from the Black Lagoon), and Insectosaurus, a huge (even bigger than Susan) caterpillar-like thing whose roars only the Missing Link can interpret. Susan is horrified of them all, and grateful when General Monger comes in to escort her to her orientation.

The third clip opens right after the monsters have been dropped into San Francisco to face off against the alien probe. Susan is still getting used to her new height and strength, and at first flees the probe by roller skating on cars. When the probe attacks the Golden Gate Bridge, she realizes she has to help, and turns back to fight, trying to get the other monsters to help her (and they do, a little, although there's also a lot of bumbling and confusion). After a lot of damage to the bridge (and probably a good number of fatalities amongst the innocent bystanders, which was a little surprising, given the movie's otherwise very light, comedic feel), the monsters do succeed in destroying the probe—but as Katzenberg pointed out afterwards, they've only won the battle, not the war.

After the clips, there was a Q&A session, which Katzenberg used as an excuse to cover the rest of his talking points. One of the most encouraging things he said was that all the money and technology in the world won't make a bad movie good, and that the story is still all-important. It's very good to hear him say that. A company that's spent all the time and money building this technology might be tempted to relax on the other aspects of filmmaking, and just trust on the razzle dazzle of 3D to get them by, but it sounds like Katzenberg is not content with that. Another interesting point he made, again to highlight the differences between the old 3D and the new 3D, is that whereas in the old days, filmmakers would deliberately try to break the fourth wall and push things out at the audience to show off the technology, and thus bring you out of the movie, the new 3D filmmakers will never poke at the audience or break the fourth wall, because they're using 3D to bring you into the movie, to make it a more immersive experience.

Katzenberg is a huge believer in the future of this technology, and thinks it can be applied equally well to any genre, even a cop drama like The Departed. But it's a technology that's still growing. Right now only about 1500 theaters around the country are equipped to project the new digital 3D. By the time Monsters vs. Aliens is released, Katzenberg expects 1000 more theaters will have been converted. By 2010 (when the next Shrek film is supposed to come out), he figures 7500 will be equipped. Of course, if a theater near you isn't equipped, that doesn't mean you can't see the movie at all; you'll still be able to see it in regular old 2D, and for cheaper, at a standard theater.

But will people pay the premium ticket price for the full experience, even if they have the option? Katzenberg is betting they will. He pointed out that the movie business is doing just fine, even in the current shaky economy, and that really in terms of things you can do for entertainment, going to see a movie is a great bargain.

Katzenberg also talked about the further advances in technology that are down the road—getting 3D in the home (which he downplayed as impractical, because obviously he wants you to come to the theater to experience it); owning your own pair of 3D glasses that might double as sunglasses; spreading 3D to all forms of video, even portable players like iPods; and getting the 3D effect without glasses (which is already possible—it's called autostereo—but only on a very small scale). He also talked about what inspired him to go down this road in the first place (Polar Express 3D really excited him, and he saw a lot of promise in the technology), and another big advantage that should come out of 3D: a big decrease in piracy! Apparently 90% of piracy is people in theaters recording the movie with a camcorder, and if you tried to do that with a 3D movie, it would look like garbage.

And that was it for the presentation. This Phillyist walked out reasonably impressed, but with reservations. When we caught an old school 3D screening of The Creature from the Black Lagoon a few years ago, it made us wonder why 3D never caught on, and why they hadn't fixed the problems with the technology and brought it back. So we're excited to see all that happening now. That being said, despite Katzenberg's claims, we found the new glasses, like the old ones, still gave us a mild headache (although that could be because this Phillyist had to wear them on top of his regular glasses, and also has a pretty large head that the one-size-fits-all 3D glasses clung to a bit more tightly than was entirely comfortable). And although the effect was impressive and immersive, it didn't seem nearly as revolutionary as Katzenberg was making it out to be. The movie itself, technology aside, seems entertaining, imaginative, and funny, and we'd definitely like to make it out to see the whole thing in all its 3D glory when the time comes. But we'd really rather do it for free, and review it for Phillyist, than pay that extra $5 for the ticket.

Image Credit: DreamWorks Animation

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Sunday, January 4, 2009

Reese Witherspoon To Star In New Comedy Film

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Anne Lu - Celebrity News Service News Writer

Los Angeles, CA (CNS) - Reese Witherspoon is set to star in a Columbia Pictures untitled comedy with filmmaker James L. Brooks.

According to Variety, the film is described as an ensemble project boasting of at least three major characters. The 32-year-old actress is the only lead to have confirmed so far.

The production is scheduled to begin in March.

Brooks, who acts as the executive producer of "The Simpsons," last directed the 2004 Adam Sandler film "Spanglish."

Witherspoon, meanwhile, is currently starring in the comedy "Four Christmases," and will be next seen - or heard - in the computer animated DreamWorks film "Monsters vs. Aliens" in

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Saturday, January 3, 2009

Economic crisis slowing theatrical 3D transition

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The economic downturn means 3D films will take a little longer getting to your local multiplex. Or so says DreamWorks Animation Chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg.

Katzenberg promised in March that all future DreamWorks cartoons would be in 3D. But when Dreamwork's Monsters vs. Aliens comes out in March, it will be in fewer 3D theaters than they had hoped for.

Outside of Imax, today's 3D systems require digital projection -- which means an expensive upgrade for theater owners. It costs about $70,000 to add 3D-compatible digital projection to a single auditorium. With banks reluctant to loan out money, that's a difficult investment for theaters to make, especially if cash-strapped customers are reluctant to buy movie tickets.

Hollywood studios have been pushing digital projection for years, but theaters have been reluctant to jump on the bandwagon. They have good reason. It's a big investment with questionable financial gain. The studios, on the other hand, save a bundle distributing a movie on a hard drive rather than thousands of feet of 35mm film. The studios hope that 3D, by adding something special to the theatrical experience, will move theaters to make the transition.

As a rule, 3D adds about $5 to the price of a ticket, explains Katzenberg. DreamWorks Chief Financial Officer Lew Coleman estimates that that premium would have added $80 million in profits to last year's Shrek the Third, had that been made in 3D. And that's factoring in an additional $15 million in production costs the process would have required. "It suddenly changes the economics of the movie business," said Katzenberg.

The next Shrek movie, due out in 2010, will be in 3D. In addition to Monsters vs. Aliens, at least six 2009 releases will or may be released in 3D, including James Cameron's Avatar, a Robert Zemeckis version of A Christmas Carol, and a re-release of The Nightmare Before Christmas.

Images: nlnnet and DreamWorks Animation

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"Monsters Versus Aliens" Trailer Makes Us Blobby With Joy

Watch TV on PC - 12,000 TV Channels and Movies B-Movie monsters activate! Three cheers for Aliens vs. Monsters, a good, old-fashioned Dreamworks flick about a group of goofy American monsters sent to defeat invading aliens. Many of my favorite actors are in it (Stephen Colbert plays the President to the United States and Will Arnett voices The Missing Link). Plus it's got all the best of the old-timey inspired monster characters from The Blob to Attack Of The 50 Foot Woman. And? It's going to be in 3D.

Monsters Versus Aliens is going to be released in Tru 3-D which is supposedly the latest in popping out of the screen technology.

In an interview with USA Today , animation head Jeffrey Katzenberg called this 3D flawless. "The digital projection puts a perfect image on the screen," he said. "There is no ghosting, no eye strain or nausea." Plus all other films will start to follow in MVA footsteps including Toy Story 3 and Disney's motion capture A Christmas Carol (out in November 2009). Sounds amazing, as long as it doesn't make me sick like all of the past IMAXy 3D experiences have.

It will be released in theaters in March of 2009. Now it's your move, Wall-E.

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Friday, January 2, 2009

Second Monsters Vs Aliens trailer online

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The new trailer for Monsters Vs Aliens has arrived on the Interwebs.

This new promo features more from Reese Witherspoon’s Susan, AKA Ginormica, including her origin story.

Turns out she was a normal girl just trying to get married when she’s struck by a meteorite and becomes 50 feet tall. Soon, she’s recruited to help fight off an alien invasion.

Featuring the voices of Seth Rogen, Hugh Laurie, Reese Witherspoon, Stephen Colbert and Will Arnett, Monsters Vs Aliens already looks like a winner.

3D Release


DreamWorks’ big hope for 3D, the trailer alone is packed with solid gags – Colbert’s “code brown” moment alone is one for the ages.

Check out the footage over at MSN and wonder what Seth Rogen has on the DreamWorks team that lets him voice every single one of their recent releases.

[Source: MSN]

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Monsters vs. Aliens Movie Trailer #2

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Dreamworks Animation has released the second full movie trailer for their computer animated sci-fi comedy Monsters vs. Aliens. This trailer is a little bit sillier than the last one, focusing more on the wacky monster characters who, turn out to be our only hope against an alien invasion. Leave your comments below.



Plot Synopsis:
“Monsters vs. Aliens,” which is slated for a domestic release date of March 27, 2009, reinvents the classic ’50s monster movie into an irreverent modern day action comedy.

The cast of “Monsters vs. Aliens” includes: Oscar® winner Reese Witherspoon (”Walk the Line,” “Rendition”) as Susan Murphy, a.k.a. Ginormica; Golden Globe winner Hugh Laurie (TV’s “House,” “Stuart Little”) as Dr. Cockroach, Ph.D.; Will Arnett (TV’s “Arrested Development,” “Blades of Glory”) as The Missing Link; Seth Rogen (”Knocked Up,” “Superbad”) as B.O.B.; Rainn Wilson (”Juno,” TV’s “The Office”) as Gallaxhar; Emmy winner Stephen Colbert (TV’s “The Colbert Report,” “Bewitched”) as The President of the United States; Golden Globe winner Kiefer Sutherland (TV’s “24,” “Phone Booth”) as General W.R. Monger; and Paul Rudd (”Knocked Up,” “Night at the Museum”) as Susan’s boyfriend, Derek.

“Monsters vs. Aliens” is directed by Rob Letterman (”Shark Tale”) and Conrad Vernon (”Shrek 2″), produced by Lisa Stewart (”I Think I Love My Wife”) and co-produced by Jill Hopper and Latifa Ouaou. The film marks the theatrical debut of DreamWorks Animation’s Ultimate 3-D, the studio’s proprietary production process of authoring its animated films in 3-D from start to finish.

When California girl Susan Murphy is unexpectedly clobbered by a meteor full of outer space gunk, she mysteriously grows to 49-feet-11-inches tall and is instantly labeled a “monster” named Ginormica. The military jumps into action, and she is captured and held in a secret government compound. The world learns that the military has been quietly rounding up other monsters over the years. This ragtag group consists of the brilliant but insect-headed Dr. Cockroach, Ph.D.; the macho half-ape, half-fish The Missing Link; the gelatinous and indestructible B.O.B.; and the 350-foot grub called Insectosaurus. Their confinement time is cut short however, when a mysterious alien robot lands on Earth and begins storming the country.

As a last resort, under the guidance of General W.R. Monger (on a desperate order from The President), the motley crew of Monsters is called into action to combat the aliens and save the world from imminent destruction.

Watch the trailer in High Definition on MSN . Monsters vs. Aliens hits theaters on March 27th 2009.

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Reese Witherspoon signs on for untitled Brooks comedy

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Reese Witherspoon has signed on for an untitled comedy from Columbia Pictures and director James L. Brooks.

Variety reports Brooks (who hasn’t directed since 2004’s"Spanglish") is at work on the screenplay – which is described as an ensemble film with three major characters. Witherspoon is the first actor to sign onto the film.

Although most of the details are being kept quiet, the title could be "How Do You Know?", and filming could start in March.

Witherspoon was ready to start work on the new Cameron Crowe romantic comedy, but the project got delay until July which created an opening in her schedule.

She is currently spreading some holiday cheer on the big screen with "Four Christmases," and has provided voice work for DreamWorks Animation's "Monsters vs. Aliens."

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'Monsters vs. Aliens' in 3D Looks Like a Win-Win!

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monsters vs. aliens

Animated films have fallen short recently. Way short. Dreamworks has tried to keep pace by releasing sequel after sequel of the try-try again franchise Shrek, along with a bevy of sloppy underachievers such as Shark Tale, Madagascar and Over the Hedge, along with the voice-talent-heavy, uninspired Kung-Fu Panda (Hey, did you think it was funny when we made Jack Black a shark? Now he’s a panda! It sounds like an episode of South Park involving one Mr. Rob Schneider…) Pixar has gone from making charming, inspired features such as The Incredibles and Toy Story to abandoning storytelling and instead shoving dazzling computer-generated effects in our faces, like the lackluster Ratatouille and the grossly-overrated Wall-E. I won’t even attempt to explain my confusion over how films like Flushed Away, Surf’s Up and Happy Feet get made – the latter two replacing substance with star turns for penguins, Hollywood’s newest incumbent novelty animal (move over, monkeys!). So you’ll understand my reluctance to get psyched walking into a screening of three sequences from Dreamworks Animation’s latest flick, Monsters vs. Aliens. Well, monster and alien lovers alike can take a sigh of relief when I say THIS MOVIE LOOKS FREAKIN’ AWESOME!

The film starts out on the right foot by borrowing its story and even its design of the titular monsters and aliens from old-school exploitation flicks and studio horror. Ginormica, a.k.a. Susan Murphy, the film’s lead character (voiced by none other than All-American Girl Reese Witherspoon) is clearly a nod to Attack of the 50 Foot Woman, while Seth Rogen’s BOB and Will Arnett’s The Missing Link point to The Blob and classic Universal Monster Movies, respectively, for inspiration. Even J-horror/sci-fi finds its place in the well-purposed cast of monsters, with Insectasaurus, who, aside from being the best-equipped to throw down with Godzilla, is also quite adorable. I know, I know monsters aren’t supposed to be adorable. Well then I’m gonna have to ask all of you to create a large bonfire with your Gremlins and Never-Ending Story DVDs… Yeah, that’s what I thought.

monsters vs. aliens

The coolest thing about the screening was that the sequences were presented in 3D. If you have the chance to see this movie in 3D when it releases in March, I highly recommend doing so. The 3D is done to perfection with the help of state-of-the-art, never-before-used Tru 3D. The reason the third-dimension holds up so well in this film is because it’s not the star of the film, merely an aid to help immerse its viewers in the story. During scenes that don’t involve Monster/Alien cage matches (complete with fireballs erupting in the audience, and military aircraft shooting missiles up your nose), the third dimension is used to adjust the viewer’s depth perception rather than to protrude the action off the screen – something I’ve never really seen done with a 3D film. This could be because most 3D films are transferred over in post-production, but Monsters vs. Aliens was shot in 3D. Just as The Dark Knight shot four of their action sequences on IMAX film to give the viewer the full IMAX experience rather than blowing it up to fit the screen and in turn creating a water-downed image, on March 27th you can see your first truly 3D animated feature.

So what did Dreamworks reveal from the film? Below are descriptions of the three sequences screened:

Sequence #1

In the first scene we’re introduced to the alien invasion taking place on Earth, something which will incite the events that are to take place over the next eighty to ninety minutes. The scene opens by introducing the character of the President (voiced by Steven Colbert). While a bumbling, clueless, unintentionally comical president is not exactly a stamp of originality in films (nor in real life either, sadly enough), you’d be hard-pressed to find someone who pulls this off better than Mr. Colbert.

The President upon his arrival climbs a large set of makeshift stairs which leads right up to the alien spacecraft – a cycloptic, egg-shaped iron structure. Here the President attempts to make “peace” with the UFO by playing an ‘80s song, the name of which escapes me, on a keyboard atop a wooden staircase. As you can imagine, this doesn’t go well with the antagonistic extra-terrestrials and the giant spacecraft begins its attack, the President narrowly escaping death.

An incredibly and beautifully animated fight ensues between the giant spacecraft and the U.S. military, the scope and magnificence of which is only amplified out of the universe by the vast detail of the Tru 3D experience. Helicopters and jets fly in and launch missiles as the military extracts the President from the battle, which is awarded in favor of the alien spacecraft, leading us to…

Sequence #2

This sequence focuses on introducing the monsters and developing the characters. MvA goes in the right direction in two ways with this sequence… 1) It develops the characters within the story, so you’re not wondering why the hell you’ve followed them on this adventure (which I cannot say is done in any of the other animated films I’ve seen recently) and 2) It showcases the importance of the three-dimensional aspect outside of action sequences.

It begins by traveling down into the secret, underground bunker of the United States government – a scene, again, enriched by the multi-layered nature of the 3D print. Some knuckle-headed, buffoonery involving the President ensues, making for a few nice comedic moments, before we’re introduced to General W.R. Monger (voiced by Kiefer Sutherland – doing his best R. Lee Ermey impression) – the man charged with capturing and wrangling the monsters. Monger, the kind of four-star general you might expect, suggests that the President solve his alien invasion problem with the use of Monger’s team of captive monsters, which leads us to precisely that.

The monsters are held in a maximum security prison, and to illustrate such we open up in one of the cells therein. Witherspoon’s Susan wakes up in the metallic chamber thinking that her transformation into a 50-foot tall woman the day before was just a dream – boy, is she wrong. As a light goes off in her cell, the room suddenly begins to shoot down some kind of elevator shaft, bringing her into a large dome-like room. Here we’ll meet the rest of the monsters: Arnett’s Link, Rogen’s BOB, Hugh Laurie’s (i.e. House M.D.) Dr. Cockroach, and that big furball Insectasaurus (who only speaks through a series of inaudible roars).

Many comedic and decidedly quirky moments later, the rest of the monsters are shepherded back into their respective cells and W.R. Monger floats in on some jet pack-like device to debrief Susan and give her a tour of her new home – which is assumedly the same military facility where were first introduced to Monger just a scene before. This leads us onto our final adventure…

Sequence #3

I’m not gonna say much about this because this sequence just about blew the theater doors off their hinges, and I want this to be as special for you as it was for me upon first sight. All I’m gonna say is this: battle on the Golden Gate Bridge. That’s right… Susan, Link, Insectasaurus, Dr. Cockroach, and BOB all team up to fight (in what figures as Susan’s first battle with the team) the gigantic, egg-shaped spacecraft from the first sequence. This scene was incredible. Inventive in its way to put the characters into danger and think of a smarter, more organic way to get them out as well as brilliant in its use of the 3D technology (and even graced with what, out of what I saw today, turned out to be some of the film’s greatest comedic moments). Really cool. You’re in for a treat.

After all the footage was screened, Dreamworks chief Jeffrey Katzenberg (who also introduced all of the footage) took the stage for a short round of Q&A. Katzenberg spoke of the newly implemented Tru 3D (a never-before-seen technology designed by a partnership between Dreamworks and Intel), the evolution of 3D film, and the challenges presented by this filmmaking process. It’s hard to explain most of this without shoving a bunch of industry jargon in your faces but here are a few of the key points Mr. Katzenberg touched upon:

Monsters vs. Aliens will be released in standard and 3D. 3D will cost you five extra dollars a ticket – but you do get to keep the 3D glasses, which are actually really cool looking and surprisingly comfortable to wear if you’re a weirdo like me and want to cherish the memory. You will also only be able to see the film in 3D during its theatrical run, as 3D home video has not yet been perfected.

It costs 15 million dollars more than a normal movie to produce a 3D Dreamworks animation. Apparently rendering all that animation is a real pain in the arse – and judging by the 16 hours it takes my Mac to turn a Final Cut Pro file into a Quicktime file, I can only imagine the woes of Dreamworks animators.

There are 10,000 theaters in the U.S. equipped to project 3D films, Dreamworks estimates that about half of these will play Monsters vs. Aliens upon its March release. Katzenberg says that by the time Shrek 4 is released in 2010, it will play in about 7,500 of those.

Upon wrapping up the Q&A, an audience member asked Katzenberg what kind of creative marketing possibilities the 3D aspect of the film held for the Monsters vs. Aliens campaign. “Ohhh… just you wait and see,” quipped Katzenberg. So watch out, looks like the three-dimensional glory of Monsters vs. Aliens could be spilling out onto the street come the New Year.

monsters vs. aliens


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DreamWorks' focus on stage and small screen

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DreamWorks Animation will bolster its programming line-up between cinema releases with television series and Broadway theatre productions as entertainment companies prepare to protect profits amid a weak outlook for consumer spending in 2009.

The studio, renowned for the blockbuster Shrek franchise, historically relies on two new feature film releases annually, but next year, it is planning only one release, Monsters vs Aliens , its first 3D film.

DreamWorks Animation is betting big on 3D films, which could boost its profits by as much as 30 per cent in the coming years, according to executives, as the US economic recession takes its toll on the industry.

Even without the new technology, the industry has fared relatively well this year. "Movies [theatrical revenue] will be up slightly over 2007, just under $10bn and admissions will be flat or just a hair down," Jeffrey Katzenberg, chief executive of DreamWorks Animation, said in an interview. "Other than Wal-Mart and McDonald's, I don't know how many others can say that."

Meanwhile, DreamWorks has developed a television series based on its Madagascar franchise as well as a pilot based on this year's Kung Fu Panda for Viacom's Nickelodeon kids cable network and specials for network TV stations NBC and Walt Disney's ABC.

A Broadway theatre production, Shrek the Musical , is set to open this Sunday in the US and the studio is considering developing more travelling theatre companies to produce the show in the next two years, as well as create more new productions based on its films.

Combined television projects are seen generating $40m to $60m in annual incremental revenue and up to $30m more in gross profit, executives told analysts yesterday.

Theatre productions could bring in an additional $100m to $150m and $30m to $50m in gross profits as early as 2010, Ann Daly, chief operating officer of DreamWorks Animation, told analysts at a presentation. Executives said it had relied less on home video profits, which have been endangered by a maturing market and small contribution from Blu-ray discs across the industry.

It currently generates 40 per cent of gross profit, down from 55 per cent of profits from DVDs as revenue from international box offices and television projects have increased .

It also confirmed it will release a sequel to this year's Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa by 2012.

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Variety on the Problems of 3-D Animation for Oscars in 2009

Watch TV on PC - 12,000 TV Channels and Movies Variety has examined some of the problems that may result from the many animated movies being released in 2009 which will have 3-D versions. Specifically, the limited ability to watch 3-D movies nationwide might mean that members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will not be able to see an animated movie in 3-D. Alternately, there is also no guarantee that the filmmakers would want members of the Academy to see the movie in 3-D vs. 2-D. The article quotes Bruce Davis, executive director of the Academy, and John Lasseter, chief creative officer of Disney and avowed 3-D buff.

The article also lists the 3-D movies coming out from major studios in 2009: Up (Pixar), Monsters vs. Aliens (DreamWorks Animation), Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs (Sony Pictures Animation), Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (Fox/Blue Sky), and Coraline (Laika).

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Thursday, January 1, 2009

Top Hollywood exec says 3-D is the industry's next big thing

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DALLAS — Don’t count on seeing representatives of filmmakers and exhibitors in front of Congress asking for money.

"It’s been great," said Alan Stock, Cinemark CEO, discussing his chain’s business. "October was the best October in history."

Jeffrey Katzenberg, the CEO of DreamWorks Animation SKG, also has happy news, saying receipts will be up for his company in 2008. But he’s so committed to making sure the good box office continues that he’s on a 12-city tour to tout the company’s March 2009 release, Monsters vs. Aliens.

It’s an unusual tactic for moguls, but Katzenberg, 57, is convinced that the company’s proprietary "InTru 3D" technology is going to help make Monsters vs. Aliens the future of filmmaking, not just another fun family film starring lovable animated superheroes.

"I think the movie industry is entering the third era of revolutionary change," said Katzenberg, addressing a group of news media representatives, exhibitors, and Texas A&M’s Visualization Lab faculty and graduate students at a North Dallas screening Wednesday, where clips from the animated film were shown. "The third one is about bringing the audience into the movie experience. I’m not talking about my father’s 3-D."

The two previous film breakthroughs, he said, were the advent of sound in the 1920s and color in the 1930s. But the film business is still pretty much where recorded music was until digital sound superseded vinyl in some important respects, Katzenberg said.

"I think 3-D is an opportunity to re-energize in a very big way what it means to go to the cinema" and in a way that home systems can’t yet duplicate, Katzenberg said. "All of our films now are being created from the very beginning for the 3-D process."

His studio is not alone. The concert film Hannah Montana, as well as Meet the Robinsons, Chicken Little and The Nightmare Before Christmas, have come from Walt Disney Studios’ Motion Pictures Group, and the studio will make more than 15 3-D movies between now and 2011, according to published reports.

"What we need is stuff like this," Stock said after the Monsters vs. Aliens clips. "We need quality product."

Stock also likes the fact that 3-D releases typically deliver two to three times the gross per screen that 2-D films do. Katzenberg said his studio plans to release 2-D and 3-D versions of Monsters vs. Aliens simultaneously and charge 3-D viewers $5 extra. And there’s another advantage: no piracy.

"Ninety percent of piracy is done by people in the theater. A crook sits in the theater with a camcorder," Katzenberg said, adding that 3-D won’t show up accurately on a camcorder. "Good luck camcording that."

The clips gave viewers a deep view into the picture in a way that 2-D never has. But those who wore conventional glasses had to put the new hard-plastic 3-D specs — now with black lenses instead of the old blue and red lenses — on over the other pair.

That’s not the only bad rap. Katzenberg’s pronouncements about the $165 million picture and his claims for the technology prompted one Los Angeles Times headline to suggest that he might be "The Jerry Falwell of 3-D."

Katzenberg fired back in Variety. "Initially, as with color, the economic bar for 3-D is high, so for the foreseeable future many films will continue to be produced in 2-D," Katzenberg wrote. "But, eventually, I believe that all films will be shot in this remarkable medium."

Andy Anderson, a filmmaker and University of Texas at Arlington film and video professor, has a wait-and-see attitude. He’s been around long enough to see lots of gee-whiz technology fail to deliver on the hype.

"This happens about once every five years," Anderson wrote in an e-mail. "And where are our flying cars? They promised them to us back in the ’50s.

"I’ve seen it all promised, and it’s all fallen apart. Weren’t we all going to be wearing headsets by now?"

Katzenberg promises this isn’t just more back-to-the-future of film.

"People actually would throw up" when they saw early-era, poorly synchronized 3-D pictures. "I don’t think it’s a good business to be in to make your customers throw up."

Bart Weiss, co-founder of the Dallas Video Festival and the Video Association of Dallas, is a little less dubious.

"It’s really kind of fascinating," said Weiss, who also teaches at UT-Arlington. "The Batman movie was sold out pretty much every day. The 3-D version looked great. The bugaboo is that you still have to wear glasses. I don’t think we’ll ever be able to get beyond that."

Katzenberg predicts we’ll have 3-D, or stereophonic film without glasses, in 10 to 20 years.

Holographic movies will take longer. In the meantime, get ready for eyeglass maker Luxottica to produce a pair of glasses that serve as sunglasses outside and transform into 3-D "movie glasses" in the theater.

"You have stuff: You have a tennis racket; you have stuff to go do things," Katzenberg said. "You will have your movie glasses. You can have clip-on glasses or a prescription."

Weiss says 3-D was born as a reaction to TV and has always been a bit of a novelty act. But now, with the likes of Titanic director James Cameron getting into the act with his forthcoming Avatar and the DreamWorks animated films, it could become a format that’s taken seriously by critics and audiences, not a curiosity.

"It wasn’t fully integrated to storytelling," Weiss said. "When James Cameron is using something, you know it’ll be tastefully done."

Still, Weiss said, "The Citizen Kane of 3-D has not been made yet. When it’s made, it’ll be a different discussion."


Jeffrey Katzenberg: Q&A Q: So when will we be seeing 3-D NFL games?

Katzenberg: Last week there was an NFL game they broadcast in 3-D. It was sensational.

Q: And when do we see real 3-D at home?

Katzenberg: There’s no technological challenge. You can do it in the home. It will not compete with what you see in the theater. Any light source diminishes how strong the 3-D is. It’s like going to the Dallas Cowboys live versus seeing them at home. The home experience will be driven first by gaming and second by sports.

Q: Where does your company’s animation take place?

Katzenberg: Glendale and Redwood City [in California]. At some point down the road, India would be a third leg.

Q: Do you fear that if Cameron’s Avatar doesn’t do well, it’ll hurt 3-D?

Katzenberg: No. I think he’s doing something that will redefine the moviemaking experience.

Q: Will you remake films that were originally shot in 2-D?

Katzenberg: [Disney is] going to bring Toy Story 1 and Toy Story 2 back in 3-D. We have chosen not to do that.

Q: Does 3-D affect the stories that you pick?

Katzenberg: No. It has not affected one scintilla, the story. But the visual experience is thought about through the experience of 3-D. It impacts everything. Everybody is working in 3-D. It’s like going from French to Russian.

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