forster_wright

It’s nothing like the merry-go-round of screenwriters but it does sometimes seem that pretty much all studio pictures go through a few directors on their way to the screen. Very often a director will board a project, wrestle with it for months, if not years, then depart. Other times, a whole list of directors will have passed pretty much as soon as they close the script and a project can find some time to find somebody willing to commit.

The last we told you, Marc Forster was going to direct zombie epic World War Z from a script by Matthew Carnahan. Some rumours bubbled up in the summer that he was off the project, but died down pretty quickly, and now word is definitely that he’s very much still in the driving seat. On the other hand, our last report on Joe Wright told you that he would be directing Keira Knightley in a new version of My Fair Lady and that, it has now become clear, isn’t the case at all.

World War Z is an adaptation of a novel by Max Brooks. The Washington Post today conducted an online chat with him and so, from that, here’s his word on the movie:

I can tell you that Marc Forster has signed on to direct the project. I just had lunch with him a few weeks ago and he is either the world’s best liar or he really wants to make this movie. Right now we’re waiting for a new draft of the script. That should determine the next step in the ‘development’ process.

Sounds to me like Carnahan’s draft is still pending, then. I know his fans will be pleased to hear Forster is still forging ahead here.

Over in the rather more gentile, less flesh-eaty realm of My Fair Lady, there’s bad news for fans of Joe Wright, and straight from the horse’s mouth. Screenrush tagged him on the red carpet last night, as he was off to see Nowhere Boy, and asked for some Lady details. Here’s what he told them:

It’s not happening. No. It’s all a lie. I kind of thought about for a couple of minutes and then decided not to do it and suddenly it got into the press that I was doing it.

His reason for not taking the gig? “No reason really”.

No Danny Boyle, then no Joe Wright. Who will be next British director to not sign on for My Fair Lady? Every day this film circles closer and closer to Oliver Parker…

  • I'm pretty psyched about World War Z. I'm not sure Marc Forster is the right man for the job, even though I liked the action in Quantum of Solace. Either way, the book was great so hopefully the movie will be good.

    I could honestly care less about My Fair Lady.
  • TheMarquis
    I love WWZ, but Marc Forster really needs to step down.
  • rpk
    I concur with the World War Z love. Was a terrific book and it be a dam shame if they fuck it up.

    BaD
  • Tetsuo_Man
    I agree. WWZ could make blockbuster style cash and they shouldn't waste the big budget on such a poor director and the QoS actions scenes were naseauting at best... Not only were they Bourne shakey cam but they were over-edited so much (I'm mostly talking about the first scenes with the car) that I rarely even knew what was going on with each car until the edit would stop for a few seconds to show off a fancy explosion.

    Also, their ideas on WWZ seemed pretty bad hearing them a while back... I can't remember exactly but wasn't the idea that it would take place from the eyes of just one family or something (which is the exact opposite idea of the book). But really, they could just film the blind old guy kicking zombie ass in Japan and I'd still pay to go see that.
  • existenz
    I haven't read the book, but I really liked the Michael J. Straczynski version of the script. It was a dead-serious script with lots of great moments. Not sure why they decided to dump it, hopefully they aren't planning on adding more zombie humor or unnecessary blow-up-everything action scenes.
  • Scott
    Off-topic but Marc Forster can really wear a bald head.
  • simalex2000
    Joe Wright's "no reason really" comment strikes me as odd. Film directors, it seems to me, don't decide *not* to do a project for no reason at all.

    i really don't care about My Fair Lady one way or the other, it's just that one quote caught my attention.
  • BrendonConnelly
    I agree that it's the most interesting part of the story. I guess he simply preferred something else...?
  • luke_a
    With WWZ, I'd love to see them do it as a mockumentary. The book itself is structured as a non-fiction factual account of the zombie epidemic. And I'd like to see that structure duplicated on screen as a documentary type movie with talking heads, found footage and dramatic re-enactments (done cheaply as they would be in a post-zombie world). It always bugged me with DISTRICT 9 that the first half hour or so is in a documentary form and then they ditch that framing device for a normal narrative. I'd like to see WWZ avoid that trap.
  • jrice73
    Basically, a WWZ film should maintain the framework that the book sets down--interviews with the survivors who tell their stories while narration gives a larger, overall exposition that reveals what went down. As each story is told with the narration, everything is revealed. That shouldn't be that hard if they just stick with a mockumentary approach, ala what District 9 did in its beginning and in its end. Of course this is going to be the biggest faux doc ever made. Brooks himself revealed on Coast to Coast AM at the beginning of the month that Foster was still on board and Carnahan was still working on the script. For fans of the book though, search the torrents or go to the Coast website because what made Brooks' appearance that night so special, is that the first hour and a half of the interview that was done, was done like it was ACTUALLY set in the post WWZ world. Brooks came on as his WWZ self, a writer and survivor who just turned his research for the UN into a best selling non fiction book. I hope that once the film is done and the DVD comes out, that we get this special treat on the DVD. It was two hours of the best and most engrossing radio I've ever heard. Hats off to Ian Punnett who hosted and Max Brooks himself for putting together a truly enjoyable, if bit disturbing broadcast.
  • existenz
    That approach would be good, as long as it isn't too jokey or silly. It only works if you think this is real.
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