The Telectroscope

May 22, 2008

Hardly anyone knows that a secret tunnel runs deep beneath the Atlantic Ocean. In May 2008, more than a century after it was begun, the tunnel will finally be completed. Immediately afterwards, an extraordinary optical device called a Telectroscope will be installed at both ends which will miraculously allow people to see right through the Earth from London to New York and vice versa.

The Telectroscope is more than a giant telescope—looking through its lens in NYC, you can see all the way to London—and vice versa. These steampunk creations were unveiled today in the two cities to celebrate the 125th anniversary of the Brooklyn Bridge. Artist Paul St George’s Victorian-style gold and wood trim make the behemoth-size scopes impressive to look at, but the most amazing part is how he claims they work.

St George says in the 19th century his great-grandfather, Alexander Stanhope St George, built a trans-Atlantic tunnel from London to New York which was forgotten by time. The artist discovered his great-grandfather’s plans recently and using the diagrams installed parabolic mirrors at both locations that reflect what’s happening 3500 miles across the pond.

Now, I can’t say for sure since I haven’t seen the Telectroscope in person, but a picture in the gallery suggests a more logical explanation that involves built-in webcams and broadband internet sending live video in both directions.

The Telectroscopes are on display 24/7 until June 15. New Yorkers can check out the Brits by heading to Fulton Ferry Landing in Brooklyn; Londoners will need to head to Tower Bridge if they want their fix of spying on the Yanks.


In Case Your Tivo Skipped The Last Few Minutes Of The Season 7 American Idol Finale

May 22, 2008


J.J. Abrams’ ‘Fringe’

May 22, 2008

Nearly 15 years after “The X-Files” launched, Fox is looking to scare a new generation of viewers with “Fringe,” a spooky skein from the mind of J.J. Abrams.

Fox has made a series commitment to the Warner Bros.-Bad Robot production, which will start off with a two-hour pilot budgeted at more than $10 million. Abrams, Kurtzman and Orci — the brain trust behind Par’s new “Star Trek” feature — wrote the project on spec and shopped it to nets this week.

“Fringe” mixes elements of “The X-Files” and Paddy Chayefsky’s “Altered States” with what Abrams calls “a slight ‘Twilight Zone’ vibe.” It will focus on brilliant but possibly crazy research scientist Walter Bishop, his estranged son and a female FBI agent who brings them together.

Episodes will explore self-contained mysteries of the paranormal, as well as the relationships between the three leads.

“So much of the story is relatable people in extraordinary situations,” Abrams said. “The show is definitely a nod to ‘Altered States’ and ‘Scanners’ and that whole Michael Crichton/Robin Cook world of medicine and science.”

There’ll also be an overriding mythology that will come into play from time to time, as well as a healthy dose of humor.

“It does the stuff my favorite TV shows and movies do, which is to combine genres that shouldn’t fit together,” Abrams said. “It’s definitely meant to scare the hell out of you, but it’s also meant to make you laugh… It pushes all the buttons of things we loved from our childhood.”

Driving the show will be the Walter Bishop character, a larger-than-life figure who bears some resemblance to the titular character in Fox’s “House.” In the pilot, he’s in a mental hospital.

“Imagine that your father is Frankenstein mixed with Albert Einstein,” Orci said. “He’s someone who has the mental ability to solve so many problems but is so different that communicating with them is almost impossible.”

Reprinted from Variety

 


FX Rescues ‘Rescue Me’ For Summer

May 22, 2008

Forced to skip the show’s 2008 season due to the writers’ strike, FX will air a series of “Rescue Me” “minisodes” this summer as a bridge. The run of 10 five-minute shorts will air weekly starting in June.

The gripping drama’s fifth season was scheduled for this summer. But with the strike postponing production, the network opted to hold all 22 episodes it had ordered until next year, when they will air straight through.

The humorous minisodes will each be stand-alone and will not serve as a content link between last season and the next. Instead, FX is hoping they will act as a promotional vehicle and help keep the show top-of-mind, since it will be off the air for a considerable period of time. (DVRs set to record “Rescue Me” will capture them.)

The minisodes are expected to air at 10 p.m. on Tuesdays commercial-free, perhaps with ads on the front and back end. They are expected to receive further distribution on the Web, via an exclusive deal with a video site.

The new minisodes will be co-written by series executive producers Peter Tolan and Denis Leary.


Drew Struzan’s Brush With Blockbusters

May 22, 2008

 

What do Indiana Jones, Luke Skywalker, Harry Potter and the Muppets have in common? A creator of iconic images.

 

At its best, the art of movie poster illustration conveys a tangible sense of adventure. There are few sharper contemporary examples than the imagery crafted by veteran artist Drew Struzan for “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” back in the summer of 1989. Arresting, iconic likenesses of Harrison Ford and Sean Connery anchored a montage that also featured Indy on horseback, charging determinedly ahead, pistol pointed like he was about to blast out the fourth wall. Calculatedly random paint spatter represented sand kicked up by his wild ride, while just over his shoulder, pursuing Nazi forces trailed off into the textured swirl of a cruel desert sun. The poster alone was enough to make us wish it wasn’t Indy’s last crusade, as it very much seemed at the time.

With the release, finally, of “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” Struzan’s painting is again proving to be a key ingredient to a vintage recipe. His posters for the new movie are as much a throwback as is Ford’s again donning that famous fedora, or George Lucas and Steven Spielberg getting their geek on for more Saturday matinee fare of yesteryear.

Long a favorite of Spielberg and Lucas, Struzan has employed his transporting brand of heightened realism to create memorable posters for a whole gallery of blockbusters and cult classics going back decades. A shortlist includes multiple “Star Wars” episodes, the “Back to the Future” trilogy, “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” the various Muppet movies, “Hook,” Rambo’s debut in “First Blood” and John Carpenter’s “The Thing.”

 

But Struzan’s association with Indy has been particularly close. He created a post-release poster for “Temple of Doom” that became the marketing campaign’s dominant image, replacing the original one-sheet in theaters. He followed that with all the promotional art for “The Last Crusade,” video box covers for “Young Indiana Jones” and illustrations for numerous other spinoffs and tie-ins.

So calling on Struzan to help sell “Crystal Skull” was a no-brainer for Indy’s handlers. And no, the soft-spoken artist insists, he didn’t cheat Ford’s age, never mind his gift for portraiture with an immortal glow. Look closely and you will see the wrinkles, the weathering, the tiniest hint of sagginess around that khaki-outfitted midsection.

“I painted him the way he looks,” says Struzan, 61, speaking from his cozy home studio in Pasadena. “In fact, I kind of like the lines in his face. I looked at thousands of pictures of him, as I do with all movies. And you know, some pictures, he didn’t look good, but others, he looked fantastic. So I didn’t try to young him up at all. Didn’t have to. I just honored what he’s done and what he is today.”

Guillermo del Toro is among the filmmakers who rave about Struzan’s ability to expand the world of a movie through his pictures — images that, while printed, hardly seem static. “What Drew does isn’t really distilling the elements of a movie,” says Del Toro, who has enlisted Struzan to do posters for “Hellboy” and its upcoming sequel, as well as a limited-edition piece for “Pan’s Labyrinth.” “It’s almost alchemy. He takes images and makes them quintessentially cinematic. His style has been copied so many times in a bad way, people don’t realize until they revisit his posters just how powerful the pure Struzan style is, how purely filmic it is.”

Frank Darabont is such a fan, he not only has tapped Struzan for pieces for “The Shawshank Redemption” and “The Green Mile,” he has also made him a basis for Thomas Jane’s lead character in last year’s “The Mist.” (Several of Struzan’s originals were featured on-screen as set dressing.) “Most of what passes for movie poster art these days are just Photoshopped pictures of actors striking saucy poses and staring at us like a troop of lobotomy victims,” Darabont says. “Drew’s work speaks to me on a much deeper level. The images he renders become part of that film’s iconography and history, just as important in some respects as the film itself, and sometimes better.

“He crafts a piece of art that honors your film instead of just merely trying to sell it,” he adds. “Seriously, for a filmmaker who really appreciates what poster art means, Drew doing your poster is like getting an award.”

Such endorsements don’t necessarily translate to a torrent of work for Struzan these days, however. Computer-driven design effectively ended the Neoclassic illustration wave of the ’70s and ’80s,and it seems that aficionados have spoken wistfully ever since about painted posters being a dying art. (In a certain sense, they mean it literally: Prolific artist John Alvin died of a heart attack earlier this year, and acclaimed painter Richard Amsel, whose “Raiders of the Lost Ark” posters were the franchise’s earliest signature images, died more than two decades ago.) It hasn’t helped to have the Internet continuously diminishing the importance of seeing the posters as a first-look marketing tool in theaters.

Still, Struzan continues to pop up in multiplex lobbies — and elsewhere. “Although the studios really have gone to computers,” he says, “what I’m getting now are young directors that grew up on my work and said, ‘When I do my first movie, I’m going to have Drew do the poster.’ So it’s the next generation calling now.” Over the last several years, he’s also been commissioned by the U.S. Postal Service to illustrate stamps featuring Jimmy Stewart, composer Dimitri Tiomkin and Yoda among others. And he collaborated on the official poster for this year’s Academy Awards with his son, Christian, a graphic designer with numerous one-sheet credits of his own.

Recently, Struzan has gotten back to doing some music industry gigs, rewinding to early career days when he did album covers for acts as far afield as Alice Cooper and Liberace. When Blink-182 vet Tom DeLonge was looking for a distinctive image for the latest CD by his new band, Angels & Airwaves, he too reached out to the guy whose posters had been such a backdrop of his youth. “We said only that it needed a ‘heroic’ vibe, with ’70s attributes and a bit of a sci-fi ingredient,” DeLonge says. “We saw the finished product, and we never looked so good. It’s the best thing our band ever did for branding our music.”

Spielberg and Lucas have offered similar praise for Struzan’s contributions to defining Indiana Jones. Still, Struzan admits, it’s the great irony of his career that he’s never actually met Harrison Ford. “I’ve drawn Harrison more than any other person on the face of the Earth, but I’ve never been a part of Hollywood,” he says, sounding characteristically Zen about his tangential industry involvement. With a laugh, he notes that he’s inching closer, though. Thanks to his Oscar poster assignment, he got to go to this year’s ceremony, where Ford was a presenter. “So I finally saw him in person — from the fourth balcony, about 200 yards away.”

 

Reprinted from the Los Angeles Times

 


Did You Catch The Captain America Reference In The Iron Man Movie?

May 22, 2008

 

Kevin Feige, president of Marvel Studios, confirmed that the upcoming The First Avenger: Captain America will be a World War II period piece, like the comic book on which it is based, and he shot down a rumor that Matthew McConaughey was in line to play the hero.Feige, speaking to online journalists at Universal Studios on May 21, added that Captain America would help set up the eventual Avengers movie, which follows six weeks later. (Feige also confirmed what many fans have speculated: That the star-shaped object in Tony Stark’s workshop in Iron Man is indeed part of Cap’s famous shield.)  You can see it in the photo below in the lower left hand corner.