Modérateur: Alegas
Attention à vous: si vous ne désirez pas gâcher votre potentiel plaisir cinéphile, votre foi en Hollywood et votre amour pour Ridley Scott, ne lisez pas ce qui suit. Ce qui suit serait (rien n'a été officialisé) le synopsis de Prometheus, ce film très attendu qui se passe dans le même univers que la série Alien et promet toujours "une pétoche d'enfer" à ceux qui iront le voir. Sauf qu'à la lecture du résumé, cela ne donne vraiment pas envie, d'y aller!!! Clichés, rebondissements à la con, incohérences, idées piquées à l'Odyssée de l'Espace et à Star Trek, ambiance Lost avec une improbable romance au milieu du chaos, héroïsme craignosse, paradoxes temporels de blague Carambar... On semble très loin du concentré de stress, de paranoïa, de claustrophobie, de désespoir et de réalisme qui faisait la force du Huitième Passager, il y aura 33 ans de cela au moment de la sortie de ce reboot/remake/prequel/spinoff jusqu'ici aussi fantasque que putassier. A moins que le document ne soit un faux, destiné à tromper les geeks et les chroniqueurs trop curieux? Sir Ridley, please, don't become another George Lucas!
Heatmann a écrit:y eu des infos sur le script et le cast la dessus ?? j ai louper un wagon ?
Is it exciting for you to be a part of a big 3D summer blockbuster with Prometheus?
RAPACE: It’s kind of crazy. I was doing ADR two weeks ago, in London, and it looks fantastic. I remember when I came into some of the sets, it just blew me away. It took my breath away, with the way they created it. We didn’t have green screen. I think we had it twice. They built everything. It felt like magic. It’s stunning. What’s so fantastic, with Ridley [Scott], is that he’s such an artist and he creates really big, amazing shots, but it’s still brutally beautiful, at the same time. I can’t wait to see it!
PROMETHEUS-Ridley-Scott-Noomi-RapaceI feel like my character is the heart in the movie. You follow her, and she changes. In the beginning, she’s a believer. She believes in God and she has a very strong faith. She is a scientist and an archaeologist. She’s on this mission, and she’s full of hope. In the middle of the movie, things happen and she changes into more of a warrior. And in the end, she’s such a survivor. It was really a quite intense and dramatic journey for me to go through, and to do with Ridley and the other actors. But, when we were finished and we wrapped in Iceland, I remember that it was almost like I came back to Earth because I’d been on this spaceship and I’d been out on this weird planet. It’s always quite fascinating, when I look back at things and I realize how deep into it I actually was. It’s almost like I’m occupied by something.
What’s it like to be part of films that are so secretive, while there’s so much interest in them? Is it difficult to make sure things don’t get out about the roles that you’re playing?
RAPACE: Yeah, sometimes. Sometimes you just want to go out and tell everybody everything because you’re just so full of happiness. It’s almost like you’re high on it and you just want to tell everybody about your experience, but you’re not allowed to say anything. You need to hold it back and force yourself to be quiet because you can’t share it with anyone. At the same time, I’m quite used to it. When I was doing the Millennium movies, I was hiding because they didn’t want anyone to see what I looked like. In the books, what she looks like is not really so specifically described, so I created the look of her and I was hiding for a year. Every time I went to something where I expected photographers or journalists, I wore hats and I was disguised, in a way. So, it was not only that I couldn’t say things, but I was hiding and staying away, as well.
On the lack of a "direct link" between Prometheus and the "Alien" films:
I mean, you could actually say, and there's a quote I did, a pretty good quote: By the end of the third act you start to realize there's a DNA of the very first Alien, but none of the subsequent Aliens. To tell you what that is is a pity, and I'm not going to tell you, because it's actually pretty good, pretty organic to the process and to the original. But we go back, we don't go forward.
On pulling in the Space Jockey:
Yeah, so there you have that. I was always amazed that, I mean, I've only done two science-fictions, but I was always amazed that no one asked who the hell the Space Jockey was. He wasn't even called the Space Jockey. During the film they started to call it the Space Jockey. I don't know who started that one off. I always thought it was amazing that no one ever asked who he was, and why was he there? What was all that about? I sat thinking about this for a while and thought, well, there's a story! And the other four [films] missed it! So, here it is.
On H.R. Giger's involvement:
I brought him in, I showed him what we were doing, showed him the story and he liked it a lot. So he's doing a little bit of work for me. He's been doing some murals, big murals, which we'll see in almost one of the first chambers we encounter when we land where we're gonna go.
On whether or not the original "xenomorph" will be seen in Prometheus:
No. Absolutely not. They squeezed it dry. He (the xenomorph) did very well. (He laughs) He survived, he's now in Disneyland in Orlando, and no way am I going back there. How did he end up in Disneyland? I saw him in Disneyland, Jesus Christ!
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