All Things:Science Fiction/Fantasy

Alex Garland to Write and Direct Enviro-Horror Thriller ANNIHILATION
Read more at http://collider.com/annihilation-movie-alex-garland/#m6jB3gsIbBThFm1e.99

Just yesterday, the trailer debuted for 28 Days Later, Dredd, and Sunshine writer Alex Garland’s directorial debut, the fantastic-looking sci-fi thriller Ex Machina, and now Garland is lining up another incredibly promising directorial project. Variety reports that he has been tapped by Paramount to write and direct an adaptation of the first book in Jeff VanderMeer’s excellent Southern Reach trilogy, Annihilation. The books are at once terrifying and incredibly compelling, with each novel written from a different perspective and with a unique authorial voice.

The first book, Annihilation, follows the expedition of four women who are sent into the mysterious “Area X”, a portion of land in the United States that has been secretly quarantined due to abnormal activity. They are the twelfth expedition sent into Area X. The second ended in mass suicide, the third in a hail of gunfire as the members turned on one another, and the eleventh expedition returned as shells of their former selves, all dying of cancer shortly after coming back. More after the jump.

annihilation-book-coverVanderMeer’s book series was written all at once and all three novels were released this year, with Annihilation hitting shelves in March, Authority in May, and Acceptance in September. Per Variety, Garland will write and direct Annihilation for Paramount and producer Scott Rudin (The Social Network, No Country for Old Men). As a fan of the book series (which you should seriously pick up; it’s unlike anything you’ve read before), I’m intrigued by the notion of seeing it adapted to film. It won’t be an easy task, as all three books rely heavily on balancing tension with the mystery behind the origin and nature of Area X, but Annihilation is very much a first-person thriller so I think Garland is a swell choice to spearhead the adaptation. It also has one hell of an ending.

While we haven’t yet seen Garland’s directorial skills in full, the Ex Machina trailer was a very promising first look, and he’s proven very adept at handling tension and horror with his previous screenplays. Fingers crossed this one comes to fruition.

Read the synopsis for Annihilation below.

Area X has been cut off from the rest of the continent for decades. Nature has reclaimed the last vestiges of human civilization. The first expedition returned with reports of a pristine, Edenic landscape; the second expedition ended in mass suicide, the third expedition in a hail of gunfire as its members turned on one another. The members of the eleventh expedition returned as shadows of their former selves, and within weeks, all had died of cancer. In Annihilation, the first volume of Jeff VanderMeer’s Southern Reach trilogy, we join the twelfth expedition.
The group is made up of four women: an anthropologist; a surveyor; a psychologist, the de facto leader; and our narrator, a biologist. Their mission is to map the terrain, record all observations of their surroundings and of one anotioner, and, above all, avoid being contaminated by Area X itself.
They arrive expecting the unexpected, and Area X delivers—they discover a massive topographic anomaly and life forms that surpass understanding—but it’s the surprises that came across the border with them and the secrets the expedition members are keeping from one another that change everything


Read more at http://collider.com/annihilation-movie-alex-garland/#m6jB3gsIbBThFm1e.99
 
I've read Annihilation and it was pretty good. You know there are some loose similarities with The Beach, and I think Alex Garland wrote that, but my memory is shot.
 
I've read Annihilation and it was pretty good. You know there are some loose similarities with The Beach, and I think Alex Garland wrote that, but my memory is shot.

Yeah Garland wrote that. Never seen. Should I (The Beach). I hate Leo but it sounds good.
 
Yeah Garland wrote that. Never seen. Should I (The Beach). I hate Leo but it sounds good.

I looked it up, and Alex Garland did write the novel, which I read and enjoyed. I didn't watch the film since I didn't want to be subjected to Leo's silliness, but I do like Danny Boyle so maybe it's not that bad. Who knows?

The Beach novel reminds me of Annihilation since both novels deal with characters going into places of remote vegetation, which are both inviting and creepy, and of course bad things happen. ;)

I read the second book in The Southern Reach trilogy, which was good, but not as good as the first one and still haven't read the third one. I am actually surprised these books are being made into films or at least one film since they came out not too long ago.
 
I've read Annihilation and it was pretty good. You know there are some loose similarities with The Beach, and I think Alex Garland wrote that, but my memory is shot.

Yeah Garland wrote that. Never seen. Should I (The Beach). I hate Leo but it sounds good.

I remember enjoying it. Not groundbreaking or anything, but not terrible.

Lord of the flies meets the mosquito coast but not as good.
 
Right thread?

Saw Interstellar today in IMAX up here. Thought it was fantastic! Will avoid spoilers until it opens Friday.
 
Lots of complaints about audio being too loud and drowning out dialog, but my showing was OK. Well except for the logos and first 30secs which were on mute, LOL. Apparently the 70mm film places are used to digital projection, so a lot of places had issues.
 
James Cameron Explains How It's Possible For Aging T-800 Arnold Schwarzenegger To Appear In 'Terminator: Genisys'

“I pointed out that the outer covering [of the Terminator] was actually not synthetic, that it was organic and therefore could age," he told the audience LA’s Egyptian Theatre following a recent screening of "The Terminator" (via Deadline). "You could theoretically have a Terminator that was sent back in time, missed his target, and ended up just kind of living on in society. Because he is a learning computer and has a brain as a central processor he could actually become more human as he went along without getting discovered.”
 
Sitges 2014 Review: MONSTERS: DARK CONTINENT, An Intense Yet Alienating Ordeal

One can only hope that a third Monsters film returns its focus to the increasingly indigenous alien lifeforms that roam and evolve among us. Where Edwards' micro-budgeted approach kept his protagonists away from the action and creatures, piquing audience interest and fuelling our imagination in the process, Green just seems disinterested. Monsters: Dark Continent is a gruelling and frustrating experience that replaces the subtlety and ingenuity of the first film with a relentless tirade of male posturing, loud noises and gunfire. The startling contrast proves as perplexing as it is undeniably disappointing.
 
Keanu Reeves in Talks to Star in Tarsem Singh’s THE PANOPTICON
Read more at http://collider.com/keanu-reeves-the-panopticon/#tDU4GbGlx5UfQbf1.99

Visually ambitious filmmaker Tarsem Singh may have found a swell lead actor for his sci-fi thriller The Panopticon. The Wrap reports that Keanu Reeves is in talks to star in the film for Good Universe, which revolves around “a seemingly ordinary man who receives a mysterious package containing a pre-recorded message from himself, warning that the world is about to end and only he can save it.” He must work to piece together the puzzle before time runs out for mankind. Singh broke out in a big way with his visually arresting 2000 film The Cell, which he followed up with another aesthetically grand feature called The Fall in 2006. He made his first foray into the world of studio actioners to less-than-stellar results with 2011’s Immortals, and then helmed a take on the Snow White story with 2012’s Mirror Mirror.
Read more at http://collider.com/keanu-reeves-the-panopticon/#tDU4GbGlx5UfQbf1.99
 
Back
Top