Category: Movie News

  • Ender’s Game Movie Review (by EnderWiggin.net Staffer Dee)

    Ender’s Game Movie Review (by EnderWiggin.net Staffer Dee)

    Hey guys,

    in case you didn’t know: I saw Ender’s Game last night! Finally! And since it’s still a few days until November 1st and some of you may still ponder the question whether  or not to go see it …. kidding, of course you’re gonna see it, but you may wanna know what to expect, so here is my spoiler-free review! (And with spoiler-free I mean that I’m not gonna tell you any details about the movie. The plot and everything that’s known through trailers and clips already is fair game.)

    BTW, if you don’t want to read it all, there is a bottom line at the end!

     
    Eyes
     

    1. Book v. Movie

    Let’s start off with the most pressing questions: How does the movie compare to the book?

    I thought it did pretty well in that respect. This is a movie made with book fans in mind, but it’s not a 1:1 translation. It couldn’t be, and this movie makes this very clear, because while it is packed with references to the book, it still leaves you wanting more. There are so many little scenes, so many memorable quotes that they could not fit into this 2 hour movie. Gavin Hood really tried – he even rushed stuff a bit to fit more stuff in – but there are still so many scenes missing that I am now convinced that this book has to be made into a 20-episode-series to do it justice.

    But for what it is it does remarkably well. Many things are streamlined, some are simplified, others re-interpreted, still others completely changed to make for a coherent movie that still tells Ender’s story. As I pointed out elsewhere, we will probably not all agree on what that story is. This movie is not trying to incorporate all possible interpretations – it can’t. It is ONE interpretation of the book, Gavin Hood’s, and instead of trying to satisfy everyone he is trying to stay true to what he believes is the essence of Ender’s Game. That is the narrative line he his following systematically, even if it means that he has to leave some most beloved scenes and quotes out.

    Characterwise, the focus lies mostly on Ender and, to a lesser degree, Graff. Minor character stories are often even more reduced to make more room for the major characters who tell the major story: Ender’s story – his morality and immorality, his strength and his vulnerability, and ultimately his guilt.

    2. Directing and Composition

    So how does Gavin Hood do as a screenwriter and director?

    As I said, this is a movie for fans, and Gavin Hood tried to put as much of the story in as he could. This is mostly well done, but I have to admit that if I have any beef with this movie, this is where it lies. Because, let’s face it, this movie is rushed and a little too episodic to really achieve smoothness. There were two moments where I thought: “what? how did we get here? shouldn’t X have happened before this?” Ender’s Game could have used at least half an hour more time to establish certain plot points, because the way it is now it sometimes feels like you just blacked out and missed a bit. This gets better towards the end, and while Hood has by no means enough time to completely tell the entire Eros story, he does put in enough of the strenuousness and urgency to make the ending what it is supposed to be.

    As a director, he doesn’t take any risks. It’s solidly directed and shot pretty traditionally. Gavin Hood’s great strength lies not in innovative angles or compelling camera movements  but in how he directs his actors. Their interactions are uniformally smooth, engaged, and believable, and that is not just the actors’ achivement, but also that of a director who manages to convey to his actors exactly the mood they are supposed to be in, and exactly the things they feel towards the other. This is one of the great strengths of the movie.

    3. Visuals

    The other is the visuals. We already knew they were stunning, and they don’t disappoint on the big screen. There is not a single scene that isn’t absolutely beautiful. The landscapes and space scenery are sublime, everything in space and even on the desks looks 3D without being 3D, and nevertheless completely convincingly real. You literally don’t see the CGI unless you are supposed to see it (like in the mind game). My friend, who is a fan of 1980s and 1990s SciFi movies said it reminded her a lot of the good old times before CGI. She said while it looked totally up to date, it also looked as if all of these things were actual sets, not animated backgrounds.

    As for the mind game – I loved it. I understand that that is a matter of taste, but I thought it was pretty damn cool. I wanna play it.

    4. Acting

    The acting is this movie’s finest feature. Asa Butterfield is solid to excellent – he has very few iffy/unconvincing moments, very many convincing ones (if you don’t notice the acting, it’s good), and some absolutely brilliant ones. His Ender is lovable but prone to violence, more confident than I imagined him (but he is older, plus a drastic character change would not have been believable over this short period of time), but also vulnerable; he has darkness, and yet a fundamentally clear understanding of what is right and wrong. Butterfield portrays him with all those facets – what an actor at 14-15!

    Harrison Ford is stellar – engaged, passionate, subtle and complex, even more complex really than Graff in the book. I’d nominate him for an award, but I doubt it will come to pass.

    In comparision to these two, the other actors have rather little to do. And yet, everyone without exception excels at their role. And I’m not just saying that because they are all so nice. I was looking for flaws in the acting, and I found very little.  I was surprised how even the very small roles (like Enders parens, who each have 2 lines) were totally and utterly believable and natural. Let me mention three major “minor” characters in particular:

    • Val/Abigail Breslin: I totally believe that her Val is a genius who nearly made it to battle school.
    • Bean/Aramis Knight: Absolutely natural, exceptionally subtle for a kid. He’s going places.
    • Bonzo/Moises Arias: People (including me) were/are really afraid that because of his height he can’t be a convincing Bonzo. But while he needs a few scenes to find himself, he does become a convincing antagonist. That kid is seriously vicious!

    5. Score/Soundtrack

    Do I really have to mention the score/soundtrack? I love those big, orchestral, slightly bombastic pieces, and here they fit super well. I’m particularly in love with the theme that we hear in Ender’s War and other pieces. I call it Ender’s theme, and I’ve been  humming it all day. Daaaaaaaaaaah, daaa deeee daaaa …

     
    BOTTOM LINE : 4 out of 5

    I loved this movie. I loved it because it focuses on those parts of the story that I happen to find most important. I loved it because the actors are simply wonderful, and that is usually the most important thing for me. And I loved it because it is the most beautiful movie I’ve seen in a long while (and that includes The Hobbit and Avatar). But I won’t deny that, objectively, there are quite a few things you could complain about, especially if you are the nitpicking kind. I tend not to be a purist. As long as the essence is there, I accept that details change in transition, and that a lot of the more complex elements need to fall by the wayside. The changes that Hood made – and when you think about it, most of them make sense – will probably anger book purist and lead a lot of people to give this movie less credit than it deserves. But if you accept that this is one version, one vision, one interpretation, then you should be fine. People absolutely should give this movie a chance, because despite its shortcomings it has done very many things very right.

     
    Let me know what you think. I’ll gladly answer any and all questions and comments. I’m dying to talk about this movie!

     

    Note: This review is based on the German dubbed version of Ender’s Game, as seen in a regular movie theater.

  • VIDEO: Ender’s Game Behind-the-Scenes with Audi

    VIDEO: Ender’s Game Behind-the-Scenes with Audi

    Summit has posted a behind the scenes video detailing how Digital Domain and Audi collaborated to create the Fleet Quattro car in the movie. You can see Abigail Breslin in the car, presumably when Graff brings her to the lake.

  • Time Posts Ender’s Game Timeline

    Time Posts Ender’s Game Timeline

    Time has posted an exclusive infographic timeline of Ender’s Game. Although it uses movie imagery, it appears to be an infographic outlining the book timeline since Ender spends three years in Battle School before getting Dragon. We know that the movie condenses Ender’s story to about 1 year’s time. Still, it’s a pretty wicked infographic!

    Infographic

  • Listen to ‘If They Move, Shoot Em’ by The Flaming Lips

    Listen to ‘If They Move, Shoot Em’ by The Flaming Lips

    Peace-Sword

    NPR has just debuted the song If They Move, Shoot Em by the Flaming Lips. The song is one of six tracks on an album Peace Sword inspired by Ender’s Game and is the only one of the six that will actually appear in the film.

    Listen to the track here.

  • Moviefone Streaming Entire ‘Ender’s Game’ Soundtrack for 24 Hours

    Moviefone Streaming Entire ‘Ender’s Game’ Soundtrack for 24 Hours

    soundtrack-front

    Thanks to Moviefone, Launchies can now listen to the entire Ender’s Game soundtrack steaming online for the next 24 hours!

  • VIDEO: Hailee Steinfeld Presents New ‘Ender’s Game’ Clip on Jimmy Fallon

    VIDEO: Hailee Steinfeld Presents New ‘Ender’s Game’ Clip on Jimmy Fallon

    Last night, Hailee Steinfeld (Petra) was a guest on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon and after talking to Jimmy about learning how to drive in LA and her Halloween costume, presented a new clip of Petra offering to teach Ender some moves in the Battle Room.

    Thanks to Hannah for the tip. Watch it on Hulu HERE.

    Source: NBC

  • Orson Scott Card Says ‘Ender’s Game’ “Rockets Along at a Breakneck Pace”

    Orson Scott Card Says ‘Ender’s Game’ “Rockets Along at a Breakneck Pace”

    Orson-Scott-Card

    Orson Scott Card, author of Ender’s Game, did an in-depth interview with New Zealand weekly magazine The Listener and in it talked about his writing methods for Ender’s Game and it’s sequels and also gave a brief opinion on the movie.

    I wrote a script that showed great promise in achieving that.

    However, I have no evidence it was ever read by anyone beyond a small circle of friends and producers whom I had worked with for years. Certainly, there is no trace of any of my scripts in the Gavin Hood script that was filmed. Hood gave the executives what they were looking for: a script that used elements of the original story within a format that followed the film-school rules that, although they don’t actually work, give executives in Hollywood a warm sense of recognition. Within those paradigms, the film Ender’s Game has been shaped into a tight, fast, hard-hitting film that rockets along at a breakneck pace — the adventure version of Ender’s Game. It is an excellent film of that type; it is, in fact, about as good a job of filming Ender’s Game as anyone could have expected Hollywood to achieve.

    Readers who are disappointed at elements of the book that are not in the movie should keep in mind: my own scripts also cut sharply, because filming the entire novel would have taken about six hours. Huge swaths of material had to be omitted, and the movie actually includes elements from the book that I removed!

    Read the complete interview at The Listener.

  • Variety Reports ‘Ender’s Game’ Tracking for a $27m Debut

    Variety Reports ‘Ender’s Game’ Tracking for a $27m Debut

    Ender-Mazer-Petra

    Variety is reporting that Ender’s Game is currently on track for a $27 million dollar debut in the United States, which is disappointing to say the least when it comes to a film that had a $110M budget excluding marketing costs.

    However, the article does go on to say that all might not be lost.

    But word of mouth on the Gavin Hood-directed film has been decent (“It’s surprisingly solid,” one source says), while an overseas boost for the sci-fi movie could keep the “Ender’s Game” franchise alive for further installments. There are 12 novels in the “Ender’s Game” series as well as short stories and comics.

    It’s tough to say at this point what will happen. November does kick off the holiday movie season, but Ender’s Game is definitely hurt by strong releases later in November including Thor: The Dark World and The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. With Gravity still pulling in great numbers, audiences could potentially turn to Ender’s Game to continue their fixation with space and zero-gravity.

    What do you think, Launchies? Will audiences give Ender Wiggin a shot or will the box office numbers be down, just like the enemy’s gate?

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ Soundtrack by Steve Jablonsky Out Today

    ‘Ender’s Game’ Soundtrack by Steve Jablonsky Out Today

    soundtrack-front

    The Ender’s Game soundtrack, which was composed by Steve Jablonsky and is being released by Varese Sarabande, is available today, October 22, 2013. Fans on Twitter reported yesterday that the soundtrack had shipped. The score features 21 tracks of music composed for the film, out in theaters in just 10 days!

    Order the soundtrack from Amazon here.

  • Viola Davis: Harrison Ford Tells a Lot of Dirty Jokes

    Viola Davis: Harrison Ford Tells a Lot of Dirty Jokes

    Entertainment Tonight spoke with Harrison Ford, Asa Butterfield, Viola Davis, and Hailee Steinfeld at the Ender’s Game press junket on Saturday. Although they talk a lot about the underlying themes of the film, the gem is definitely when Viola Davis continues her Harrison Ford fangirling and reveals that he’s got a really dirty mind and tells a lot of dirty jokes.

  • New Stills and Behind-the-Scenes Images from ‘Ender’s Game’

    New Stills and Behind-the-Scenes Images from ‘Ender’s Game’

    ENDER'S GAME

    Thanks to Cosmic Book News (via Ender News), we’ve got a great first look at Bonzo and Ender facing off. We’ve all noted and discussed the noticeable height difference between Moises Arias (Bonzo) and Asa Butterfield (Ender) in the past, and this still gives us some insight into why despite that difference, Gavin Hood chose Arias to be Ender’s nemesis in Battle School. Petra standing there seems a bit odd, though.

    ENDER'S GAME

    New photo of Viola Davis as Major Gwen Anderson. Is she smiling at something Ender’s said to Graff, perhaps?

    ENDER'S GAME

    This one is particularly interesting, as you can see looks of sadness on Bean and Petra and Graff happily explains something to a troubled Ender. Is this the reveal in the end?

    ENDER'S GAME

    Ender and Mazer at his simulator, with his team standing by below.

    ENDER'S GAME

    Ender stares at Graff as they prepare to travel to Eros.

    ENDER'S GAME

    Ender with Valentine on Earth. This is a larger version of the image we saw in the calendar.

    ENDER'S GAME

    Gavin Hood directing. He’s outdoors during the day, so this is presumably while filming the lake scene.

    ENDER'S GAME

    Gavin Hood talks to Harrison Ford on the Eros set.

  • Wireless Magazine Talks to the Cast of ‘Ender’s Game’

    Wireless Magazine Talks to the Cast of ‘Ender’s Game’

    london_photocall

    Wireless Magazine recently spoke to the cast and crew of Ender’s Game while they were in the UK and there are some interesting tidbits in the various conversations they had.

    Gavin Hood: [T]his is really about a young boy trying to find his own moral centre in a world that is encouraging his more aggressive nature. From a technical point of view there’s all the great fun stuff we have with the battle room and with the simulations. In the book they are slightly different, I’d like to hope fans will feel we’ve made them more visual for the purpose of cinema.

    Asa Butterfield: I think that relationship is quite important in the film. When Ender’s first taken away from his home, from everyone he loves, everyone he trusts and put into this completely alien world where almost immediately he’s alienated from his peers there’s no one that he can talk to about what’s going on so he doesn’t really know what he’s supposed to be doing. When he meets Petra as their relationship develops they start to realise they can trust each other. She almost fills the gap that his sister has left so it’s definitely not a love relationship in any sense I don’t think, I just think they’re really close friends. They don’t know anything about boyfriends or girlfriends, they’re just someone they can lean on, to help.

    Ben Kingsley: Well, the ending is that one wonders whether or not, without giving too much away, the audience will be curious, intrigued and troubled to know, is this child’s soul going to be distorted forever? Or will he get back to his original self? That in spite of or because of that very taxing journey, adolescence to young adulthood, have they distorted him? I think the answer is in the film and I find it very uplifting.

    Hailee Steinfeld: I think there are many, there’s everything from leadership, compassion, all these different things that are so relevant to today. I don’t know that there is a main message I think there are plenty and it will be interesting to see what the audience takes away from it because there is so much in there.

    Check out full interviews here.

  • Moviefone Exclusively Unveils 10 Stunning Pieces of ‘Ender’s Game’ Concept Art

    Moviefone Exclusively Unveils 10 Stunning Pieces of ‘Ender’s Game’ Concept Art

    Concept7

    Moviefone has the exclusive reveal of 10 stunning pieces of concept art from ‘Ender’s Game’, which are featured in the official companion book Ender’s Game: Inside the World of an Epic Adventure.

    Check them all out below and be sure to tell us which is your favorite!

    Source: Moviefone