Tag: wolfgang-peterson

  • 20th Century Studios Plans ‘Enemy Mine’ Remake

    Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in 'Enemy Mine'.
    (L to R) Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in ‘Enemy Mine’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    Preview:

    • ‘Star Trek: Picard’ showrunner Terry Matalas will write an ‘Enemy Mine’ remake.
    • It’ll adapt the 1985 cult sci-fi movie.
    • No director is attached yet.

    Such was the impact of his work on ‘Star Trek: Picard’ (where he joined as a writer in Season 2 and then took Season 3, the last hurrah for the show, to new heights as showrunner) that Terry Matalas is a man very much in demand.

    Just last month, we learned that Matalas had been hired to oversee the new Marvel series spun off from ‘WandaVision’, which will follow the continuing adventures of Paul Bettany’s android character.

    And that’s not all. Now, via The Hollywood Reporter, we know that he’ll also be working for another arm of Disney –– 20th Century Studios, which has put a remake of ‘Enemy Mine’ into development, with Matalas on script duty.

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    What’s the story of ‘Enemy Mine’?

    Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in 'Enemy Mine'.
    (L to R) Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in ‘Enemy Mine’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    With mankind locked in desperate combat against a reptilian alien species, ‘Enemy Mine’ sees Dennis Quaid’s human pilot Davidge and Louis Gossett Jr.’s opposite number Drac crash landing on a desolate planet.

    Both have deep-seated hatred for one another but are forced to overcome their prejudices to survive. Things are taken up a notch when the human pilot must take care of the alien’s baby when the reptilian is no longer able.

    The original movie was based on a novella by the sci-fi author Barry B. Longyear. The novella was originally published in Isaac Asimov’s ‘Science Fiction’ magazine in 1979, winning the Nebula Award that year for best novella. It was followed by two sequels and eventually published as a trilogy titled ‘The Enemy Papers’.

    So if the new take on ‘Enemy Mine’ does well, you can expect Disney, never a company to let a franchise opportunity to go unexplored, to order at least one sequel.

    Related Article: Dennis Quaid Talks ‘The Long Game’ and Working with Jay Hernandez

    Who made the original ‘Enemy Mine’?

    Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in 'Enemy Mine'.
    (L to R) Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in ‘Enemy Mine’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    Working from a script by Ed Khmara, German filmmaker Wolfgang Petersen made his English-language debut with the movie, taking it over after 20th Century Fox fired original director Richard Loncraine during production.

    The clash, which necessitated reshooting the film, ballooned the budget, with more woe coming when the movie crash landed at the box office.

    Since then, however, it has been re-evaluated as a cult movie, which goes some way to explain why it has been targeted for a remake. With any luck, the new film will have less of a chaotic production process.

    Who is making the new ‘Enemy Mine’?

    Jonathan Frakes as Riker and Patrick Stewart as Picard on the Paramount+ original series 'Star Trek: Picard.'
    (L to R) Jonathan Frakes as Riker and Patrick Stewart as Picard on the Paramount+ original series ‘Star Trek: Picard.’ Photo: Trae Paatton/Paramount+ © 2022 CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    So far, Matalas is the only person on the creative side hired to work on the movie, no director or producer is so far attached. 20th Century Studios boss Steve Asbell is overseeing development.

    Since it is at a very early stage in the process, the new ‘Enemy Mine’ does not yet have a release date.

    Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in 'Enemy Mine'. Photo: 20th Century Fox.
    (L to R) Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. in ‘Enemy Mine’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

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  • ‘The NeverEnding Story’ Reboot in the Works

    1984's 'The NeverEnding Story.'
    1984’s ‘The NeverEnding Story.’ Photo: Warner Bros.

    Preview:

    • ‘The NeverEnding Story’ will return to screens in a new adaptation.
    • The 1984 original is a cult classic that many grew up with.
    • See-Saw Films, which made ‘The King’s Speech’ among others, is developing it.

    Most famous for being a key part of eighties’ kids childhood (who among us can forget the heart-rending image of a horse drowning in a swamp as part of a movie designed to entertain children?), ‘The NeverEnding Story’ might also be famous for the joke about someone threatening legal action because it, you know, ended.

    But now, because every piece of pop culture somehow comes spinning back around on the giant wheel of remakes (and because there was added renewed interest thanks to the use of its music in ‘Stranger Things’), the rights to adapt Michael Ende’s original novel are now in the clutches of See-Saw Films, the team behind ‘The King’s Speech’ on the big screen and ‘Slow Horses’ on the small, and they have big plans going forward.

    Related Article: Gary Oldman and Jack Lowden Talk Apple TV+’s ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3

    What’s the plot of ‘The Neverending Story’?

    1984's 'The NeverEnding Story.'
    1984’s ‘The NeverEnding Story.’ Photo: Warner Bros.

    Michael Ende’s 1979 kid-friendly fantasy novel became a bestseller in Germany and ended up translated into 45 languages, selling millions of copies worldwide.

    We’re introduced to shy but imaginative child Bastian Balthasar Bux who, while escaping from bullies, discovers the mysterious, titular tome about the heroic Atréyu and his mission to save the magical realm of Fantastica — a world of dragons, giants and deadly swamps — and its ruler, the Childlike Empress, from being destroyed by force known as “The Nothing.”

    Yet the more he reads, the more Bastian realizes he’s not simply an uninvolved spectator and he soon finds himself transported into Fantastica himself, flying atop the luckdragon Falkor.

    The movie version (directed by Wolfgang Petersen) was not to Ende’s taste, though his disapproval didn’t stop production of two sequels and a couple of short-lived TV adaptations.

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    Who is working on the new ‘The Neverending Story’?

    1984's 'The NeverEnding Story.'
    1984’s ‘The NeverEnding Story.’ Photo: Warner Bros.

    Right now, all the film has is rights holders and producers; the process of finding filmmakers and cast to bring it to life, and a distribution home, is only now starting.

    Iain Canning and Emile Sherman of See-Saw are working with Roman Hocke and Ralph Gassmann, who run Michael Ende Productions, the estate of the author.

    Here’s what Canning told Variety about the appeal:

    “The story is both timely and timeless, and really has an opportunity to be told in a fresh way. And part of the specialness of the book is that you can go back to it at different ages in your life and find different levels of meaning. So how wonderful that we have this opportunity to do a fresh perspective that will have new layers and meanings. We just believe that every generation deserves their own journey into Fantastica.”

    When will the new ‘Neverending Story’ be on screens?

    There is no release date for the movie yet.

    1984's 'The NeverEnding Story.'
    1984’s ‘The NeverEnding Story.’ Photo: Warner Bros.

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  • Director Wolfgang Petersen Has Died

    Director Wolfgang Peterson's 'The Neverending Story.'
    Director Wolfgang Peterson’s ‘The Neverending Story.’

    Wolfgang Petersen, the filmmaker who started his career in Germany and went to make some huge movies in Hollywood, has died. He was 81.

    Petersen was born in Emden, Germany in March 1941. Growing up in post-war Germany, he was acutely aware of the lingering Nazi presence in his homeland, and movie characters became his moral role models.

    Though he took one less-than-successful shot at emulating his big screen heroes by making a Western with some neighborhood kids in his youth, Petersen first started directing in theatre, working at the Ernst Deutsch Theater in Hamburg.

    That, in turn, led to an apprenticeship with Berlin Film and Television, where he cut his teeth making TV movies and episodes of shows. Fatefully, one job was on popular series ‘Tatort’ (‘Crime Scene’) where he met and worked with actor Jürgen Prochnow.

    They would go on to be regular creative partners in his early days as a filmmaker, the actor starring in Petersen’s first movie, ‘Einer von uns beide’ (‘One or the Other’), which won the German National Film Award for Best New Director.

    A new career path forged, Petersen began working regularly, gaining even more attention for 1981’s stunning, claustrophobic ‘Das Boot,’ which starred Prochnow as the captain of a U-boat whose doomed sailors face death constantly during desperate missions as World War II winds down. It spoke to Petersen’s past and to his feelings on the human cost of combat.

    “It’s a film about human beings in the war, about kids going out on a patrol and they come back as old men,” Petersen said in a 1982 interview. “What does that mean, what happened between that, what was the reality inside the submarine?”

    While the movie was a huge challenge, the result was six Oscar nominations, including for Directing and Adapted Screenplay.

    Though audiences also know his fantasy film ‘The NeverEnding Story’, it is his Hollywood action thrillers for which he may best be remembered.

    Clint Eastwood in Wolfgang Peterson's 'In the Line of Fire.'
    Clint Eastwood in Wolfgang Peterson’s ‘In the Line of Fire.’

    After making mystery ‘Shattered,’ he really put his name on the international map with ‘In The Line of Fire’, a political thriller starring Clint Eastwood as a Secret Service agent caught up in a conspiracy.

    He followed that up with ‘Air Force One,’ in which Harrison Ford was the President, fending off Gary Oldman’s Russian terrorists when they take over his plane.

    Outbreak’ saw Dustin Hoffman as a scientist racing to track down the source of a virulent new virus that spreads from Africa to America (and became one of the touchstone movies people watched during the early days of the Coronavirus pandemic).

    In 2000 he released ‘The Perfect Storm’, a based-on-truth tale of ill-fated sailors starring George Clooney and Mark Wahlberg and 2004 brought the epic Greek tale ‘Troy’, which had Brad Pitt playing Achilles.

    2006’s ‘Poseidon’, a remake of the classic disaster movie ‘The Poseidon Adventure’ sadly became something of a disaster itself at the box office, and Petersen returned to making movies in Europe. “I shouldn’t have done the film, but I was on such a roll at the time, I’d done five films and each was more successful than the one before,” he said at the time. “The studios were saying: ‘Wolfgang can do anything. Just give him the money, we’ll be fine.’ But it just doesn’t work like that. At some point you fail.”

    He is survived by his second wife, Maria, to whom Petersen had been married for 50 years, and son Daniel by his first wife, Ursula. His passion and enthusiasm for moviemaking will be sorely missed.

    Cuba Gooding Jr., Kevin Spacey, and Dustin Hoffman in Wolfgang Peterson's 'Outbreak.'
    (L to R) Cuba Gooding Jr., Kevin Spacey, and Dustin Hoffman in Wolfgang Peterson’s ‘Outbreak.’