Tag: Asa Butterfield

  • Asa Butterfield Accepts Breakthrough Award at Young Hollywood Awards

    Asa Butterfield Accepts Breakthrough Award at Young Hollywood Awards

    Asa Butterfield, who is currently in Los Angeles finishing up Ender’s Game, attended the Young Hollywood Awards last night where he was awarded the Breakthrough Award of 2012. Congratulations!

    Fellow Ender’s Game castmates Moises Arias and Hailee Steinfeld also attended the event.

    Since Asa has so recently been filming, you can get a nice, high res look at how his hair will probably be in the movie (non-Instagram!)

    Here’s a gallery of images of the cast at the event, via Zimbio.

  • Bean, Dink, Alai, Petra Wrap ‘Ender’s Game’

    Bean, Dink, Alai, Petra Wrap ‘Ender’s Game’

    Four key characters wrapped production on Ender’s Game this week including Hailee Steinfeld (Petra, wrapped last week), Aramis Knight (Bean), Suraj Partha (Alai), and Khy Rhambo (Dink). The cast attended a wrap party last week Saturday and today began tweeting about their filming coming to a conclusion.

    Update: Conor Carroll (Bernard) wrapped today as well.

    Aramis

    Suraj

    Khy

    Asa Butterfield tweeted his goodbye to the three young men and Hailee Steinfeld sent a congratulatory tweet their way.

    Asa

    Hailee

    Production is winding down, but doesn’t appear to be over just yet, as actor Jimmy Pinchak (Peter Wiggin) is back in New Orleans for filming and Asa hasn’t tweeted that he’s wrapped on filming himself. Filming was originally scheduled to end on June 8.

  • Orson Scott Card Recounts ‘Ender’s Game’ Set Visit

    Orson Scott CardLast week, Ender’s Game author Orson Scott Card visited the set of the Ender’s Game movie currently being filmed in New Orleans, Louisiana.

    He gave a fairly detailed account of his six hour visit in his Greensboro newspaper column ‘Uncle Orson Reviews Everything‘ and it sounds like the production has his stamp of approval. Card was on hand to watch filming and to record a voiceover line, playing a pilot making an announcement to the passengers on his flight, which included Col. Graff (Harrison Ford) and Ender (Asa Butterfield).

    Perhaps the line is to Ender and the other launchies on their way to Battle School. Or perhaps Ender’s shuttle back to Earth or his trip to Command. Graff travels with Ender during all three of these trips, so fans of the book could speculate it to be one of these scenes.

    Those fans, however, would be wrong.

    The scene does not come from the book – very few of the scenes in this movie do – so it was amusing when others asked me how it felt to have my book brought to life. My book was already alive in the mind of every reader. This is writer-director Gavin Hood’s movie, so they were his words, and it was his scene.

    And the less they did, the better the scene became. What mattered was the timing – when Ford put his hand on Butterfield’s shoulder, how long it took Butterfield to glance at the hand, how long before he looked away and when the hand was withdrawn.

    When it comes time to edit the movie, the actors will have given the editor a vast menu of choices to get just the right effect.

    On the set, however, it was wonderful to see how Ford and Butterfield responded to each other’s timing. It was such a delicate dance – and they worked perfectly together.

    Twice, I saw Ford give a tiny suggestion to Butterfield. The suggestion in both cases was excellent; and in both cases, Butterfield understood completely and executed perfectly.

    The scene may or may not work as planned; for all I know, it might not end up in the movie. But if it’s there, the audience will experience it as reality – we won’t stop and think of all the many different ways it could have played.

    But the actors thought of it, and almost every one of the different ways they played it worked well.

    Card goes on to praise Butterfield, describing him as a smart actor that listens to advice and changes as the scene requires him to and said that he is “convincing” as Ender Wiggin.

    When his work was done, Card went on to explore the sets designed by Sean Haworth and Ben Proctor, giving his stamp of approval by saying that the movie was going to look great.

    But what was probably most interesting about his column were his descriptions of the way they filmed the Battle Room and the difficulties presented by motion capture, full cgi, or traditional wire work.

    [S]tunt coordinator Garrett Warren took what he learned from the weightless work he did on Avatar built on it.

    There is a mechanism used for training gymnasts – a wheel they wear around their waists that allows them to rotate in space while suspended from wires. Warren used this on Avatar, which allows a great deal of apparent freedom of movement in space – once the computer artists have erased the wheel rig, you can’t tell that there’s any way a wire could have been attached.

    But this is only the beginning. The illusion of freefall depends on the actors’ moving correctly. Where gravity naturally draws their limbs downward, in zero-gravity the arms and legs and heads continue in the direction of the last movement, until something stops them.

    For the most difficult stunts, Warren brought in dancers from Cirque de Soleil. Being gymnasts by training, they tend to be small – they can bring off the illusion of children’s bodies.

    The young cast, however, still needed to do wire work and so Card marveled at the tireless effort these kids are going through to make this movie.

    [F]ilming the battle room did the same job for the cast that the battle room itself was intended to do for the young students in the fictional Battle School – form them into cohesive teams.

    These kids can take such pride in what they learned and what they accomplished. Everything that they were called on to do, they did – with style.

    He closes his column with an overall report of a happy set and after all these years, it seems like a good sign that he’s so pleased with what he saw going on with the production. I know a common reaction of long-time fans is to automatically assume the movie will suck because the kids are older, but others (like my parents who are in their late 50s) are simply happy to hear that it’s being made.

    Hopefully a happy Uncle Orson is what naysayers need to feel better about the adaptation in general!

    Source: Rhino Times

  • Can Teenager Asa Butterfield Play a Young Ender?

    Can Teenager Asa Butterfield Play a Young Ender?

    It’s already been made clear by early casting calls for the film adaptation of Ender’s Game that Ender has been aged up from 5 to 10.

    Obviously, finding the right five year-old actor to portray the child genius Andrew could have kept the movie in limbo for yet another 20 years no matter how strong the script, so aging him up is an understandable change to a science fiction classic that has been a favorite of readers for decades.

    Asa ButterfieldStill, when it was announced that Asa Butterfield had been offered the key role, I have to admit I had reservations. Sure, he looked the part of an older Ender, but could he play the younger Ender as well?

    Pictured right, Butterfield looks like a teenager. It’s moderately difficult to see how this young man could pull off being so young. Past pivotal young male roles were cast pretty close to their character’s ages. Haley Joel Osment was 10 when he filmed The Sixth Sense and his character was 9 years old. Macaulay Culkin was 9 when he played 8 year-old Kevin McCallister. Butterfield looked very young in Hugo, but his character was twelve years old.

    Fourteen years old when he was cast and just recently turned fifteen this April, could Asa Butterfield be made to look like he is a young 10 year-old boy? Photos posted to Twitter today seem to support that the answer to that is a convincing yes.

    Asa Butterfield and Aramis Knight

    This photo was posted by Asa Butterfield (left) and Aramis Knight (Bean, right) today and Asa does look a lot younger with his military hairstyle, though it could be the angle and camera filter playing tricks on the eyes. It could just be the expression on his face.

    What do you think, folks? Does he look like he can pull off 10 years old? After seeing the photos posted today, my reservations have definitely begun to fade away.

    Hopefully we’ll get a real photo of Ender soon. Everyone cross your fingers for next week!

    View more photos below:

  • ‘Ender’s Game’ Production Blog Posts Space Camp Photo

    ‘Ender’s Game’ Production Blog Posts Space Camp Photo

    Space Camp

    The production blog for Ender’s Game, which seems to be operating on a weekly Wednesday posting, put up a new photo of the cast in a simulator while attending Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama.

    “Houston, we have a problem.  We don’t know how to land the Shuttle.” Good thing it’s just a simulator safely on the ground at SPACE CAMP in Huntsville, Alabama.  Aramis, Moises, Asa & Suraj (pictured above from a monitor in the MISSION CONTROL ROOM ) and the rest of our cast agreed that to do Ender’s Game right, they had to train as though they were really headed into ZERO G.  And this wasn’t just an afternoon spent taking a vanity tour. From the Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU), which simulates extra-vehicular shuttle missions in Earth’s orbit, to the microgravity training chair that prepared astronauts for moonwalks during the Apollo program, the week at Space Camp was genuine prep for the feeling of reality that this movie deserves. And after all, the army that trains together stays together.

    From left to right seated in the photo: Aramis Knight (Bean), Moises Arias (Bonzo), Asa Butterfield (Ender), and Suraj Parthasurathy (Alai).

  • Happy Birthday Asa Butterfield!

    Happy Birthday Asa Butterfield!

    Asa Butterfield

    Happy Birthday to our Ender Wiggin, Asa Butterfield, who turned 15 today! We share a birthday, so happy birthday to us!

  • Battle School Scenes in Production

    Battle School Scenes in Production

    From the sound of tweets from the actors currently on set of Ender’s Game, production is likely working on Battle School scenes.

    Star Asa Butterfield tweeted that he was on his second day on set with his toon leaders Bean (Aramis Knight), Petra (Hailee Steinfeld), Fly Molo (Brandon Soo Hoo), and Alai (Suraj Parthasurathy) along with his friend Dink (Khylin Rhambo) and stern commander Bonzo Madrid (Moises Arias).

    What do you think they’re working on? Battle Room? Mess hall? Can you picture them all watching him play Giant’s Drink?

    So far there’s been no further updates to the production blog that launched a week ago on Tumblr.

  • ‘Hugo’ Starring Asa Butterfield and Ben Kingsley Out on DVD

    ‘Hugo’ Starring Asa Butterfield and Ben Kingsley Out on DVD

    Five time Academy Award winning film Hugo, starring Ender’s Game stars Asa Butterfield (Ender) and Ben Kingsley (Mazer Rackham) is out today on Blu-ray and DVD.

    If you haven’t had a chance to see Asa in anything yet, this would be a great movie to do it with since it’s his most recent work before Ender’s Game and is so highly acclaimed. The film also stars Chloe Moretz, Jude Law, and Sacha Baron Cohen.

    Hugo is also available on Amazon Instant Video for $3.99 or at your local Redbox kiosk.

    About Hugo:

    Set in 1930s Paris, an orphan who lives in the walls of a train station is wrapped up in a mystery involving his late father and an automaton.

  • Asa Butterfield Talks ‘Ender’s Game’ with BBC America

    Asa Butterfield Talks ‘Ender’s Game’ with BBC America

    In this quick chat with Ender’s Game star Asa Butterfield, BBC America asked him to explain a bit about the movie’s premise and about working again with Sir Ben Kingsley, who will play war hero and mentor Mazer Rackham. “The script has been amazingly adapted to the book.” says Butterfield. “It’ll be amazing.”

    When asked how he’s able to maintain a normal life while being a child actor, Butterfield said, “It’s difficult because I am doing something barely no one else my age does, but I do try to keep my acting life and my normal life separate, so whenever I’m at school I just do whatever a normal 14 year-old kid does, I play computer games, hang out with mates, read.”

    Butterfield says he’d love to work with Tim Burton on a future project.

    Ender’s Game begins filming in New Orleans next month. Production is currently casting extras for the Battle School.

    Source: BBC America via Ender’s Ansible

  • Asa Butterfield at the Critic’s Choice Awards

    Asa Butterfield at the Critic’s Choice Awards

    Asa Critic's ChoiceAsa Butterfield, the 14 year-old who will be playing Ender Wiggin in the production for Ender’s Games set to start next month in New Orleans, attended the Critic’s Choice Movie Awards sporting hair newly dyed black.

    Preparation for his role, perhaps?

    Although the color of Ender’s hair is never specifically mentioned in the books, Butterfield normally walks around with a set of brown locks, so the change so soon before filming begins could be an indication that they’re going to have their film version of Ender with black hair.

    Hair color aside, who knew a boy could look so thin in a suit?

    Source: Glamour UK

  • Asa Butterfield Confirms Casting for ‘Ender’s Game’ Movie

    Asa Butterfield Confirms Casting for ‘Ender’s Game’ Movie

    Just over a week ago, it was reported that Asa Butterfield, the young star of Martin Scorscese’s Hugo had been offered the part of Andrew “Ender” Wiggin for the film adaptation of Ender’s Game.

    Today, Butterfield confirmed that he has accepted the role via Twitter.

    Asa ButterfieldThe film, which is set to begin filming early next year, will be released in March 2013. Fans of the novel have been waiting decades for this film to be made and this casting is definitely a sure sign of it finally happening.

  • Asa Butterfield Offered Role of Ender Wiggin

    Asa Butterfield Offered Role of Ender Wiggin

    There’s big news to report today in regards to the film adaptation of Ender’s Game, with Deadline reporting that 14 year old Asa Butterfield, who stars in Martin Scorcese’s Hugo opening next week for the Thanksgiving holidays, has been offered the science fiction role of a lifetime: Ender Wiggin.

    It’s already been reported that the book’s main characters have all been aged up significantly, but the young actor doesn’t necessarily look like he’s 14, which is a good thing because the younger Ender can look, the better it will fit with the overall theme of the book.

    A professional actor since the age of 8, Butterfield has a decently sized film resume to back him up. It’ll be interesting to see who will be cast next. Will it be precious Valentine Wiggin or sociopath Peter Wiggin? Are they going to be able to find a kid smaller, younger, and spunkier than the commanding Ender for the role of Bean?

    Ender’s Game is set to be released on March 15, 2013.

    Source: Deadline