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Equilibrium™



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Ville : Libria

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lundi, janvier 14, 2008 

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CD 1:

01. GRAMMATON CLERICS
02. ENCOUNTER
03. CLERIC PRESTON
04. BURNED
05. EVIDENCE
06. ALWAYS KNEW
07. REMEMBER ME
08. PREDICT
09. A NEW MORNING
10. DON'T FEEL
11. LIBRIA
12. SUPPRESSION
13. EQUILIBRIUM
14. BREATH IS JUST A CLOCK
15. GUN-KATAS
16. FAMILY
17. AWAKENING EMOTIONS
18. PROZIUM
19. MASSACRE
20. SIGNS OF REMORSE
21. DOUBTING FATHER
22. CONFISCATED EVIDENCE
23. A TRIP TO THE NETHER
24. BIG MISTAKE
25. HIDDEN SOULS
26. PRACTICE
27. NETHER
28. TRYING TO ESCAPE

CD 2:

01. MASTER GUN-KATA FIGHT
02. EXECUTION
03. FAITH
04. QUESTIONS FOR MARY
05. JURGEN
06. YOU KNOW WHY
07. UNDERGROUND
08. HIDING THE PROZIUM
09. WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO?
10. INCINERATION
11. GUILTY
12. BETRAYED
13. I HAVE NOTHING TO HIDE
14. CAPTURE OF THE RESISTANCE
15. ESCAPE
16. HALL OF MIRRORS
17. SORROUNDED
18. PRESTON VS BRANDT
19. FATHER'S DEATH
20. A NEW BEGINNING
21. END CREDITS
22. EQUILIBRIUM SUITE (BONUS TRACK)

vendredi, août 17, 2007 

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- Android signature watch featured in movie Equilibrium
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mardi, juillet 24, 2007 
 

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 P


In the nation of Libria, there is always peace among men. The rules of the Librian system are simple. If you are happy, you will be arrested. If you cry, the law will hunt you down. If you read a contraband book or so much as look at a smuggled painting, you've committed a criminal sin. And skip your medicine and your life will be over.

This is the shocking futuristic world of EQUILIBRIUM, a razor-sharp action-thriller set in a future where emotion has been banned as the very root of crime and war. To keep the peace, citizens must take their daily dose of Prozium, a powerful designer drug that stops feelings dead and keeps everyone on an even keel. Refuse to take the drug, and special police, trained like Samurai in unique forms of deadly combat, go on the hunt.

Up until now, top-ranking government official John Preston (Christian Bale) has believed in this system, has upheld the system as a highly-trained "Cleric" who seeks out and destroys those who don't t take their pills. But then he

skips his own dose of Prozium - and discovers an incredible new world of sensation that gives him the passion to fight for freedom.

Writer/ director Kurt Wimmer ("The Thomas Crown Affair'') blends the brisk intelligence of a "what-if?" sci-fi scenario with the inventive action of a martial arts thriller in EQUILIBRIUM. In doing so, he creates a mind-boggling alternate reality that challenges not only what audiences think but what they feel as a man awakens to happiness, awe, love and fury for the first time, and rises up as a rebel warrior to overthrow the dictator who has outlawed it all.

EQUILIBRIUM features a dynamic young cast that includes Christian Pale, Taye Diggs and Emily Watson.

What would it take to stop human hatred? For some, the answer lies in the brain. Stop the turmoil within the mind -deaden all desire, passion, anger, fear, confusion and hope - and you can stop the turmoil in society. But what would it be like to never know the heart-stopping beauty of a painting, to never ache with longing for a lover, to be without the motivating spark of fierce anger?

In the tradition of sci-fi works that imagine a perfected future gone alarmingly wrong - Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 151, " George Orwell's "1984;' Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World," Phillip K. Dick's "Minority Report" -EQUILIBRIUM presents a vision of a world at peace, with a tremendous human cost. This is a world where war is a distant memory, yet where there is no music, no art, no poetry, where anyone who partakes in such banned activities is guilty of a "Sense Offense," a crime that carries a death sentence. It is a world where the age-old question "How do you feel?" can never be answered because all feelings have been shut out.

Into this world writer/ director Kurt Wimmer places a man who is about to have his mind blown wide open when he begins to experience the sensational highs and lows of emotional life. Now it is up to John Preston to hide his brand new feelings from a totalitarian police society so that he can join with underground rebels to stage an unexpected uprising.

"At its core, EQUILIBRIUM is about a man learning to feel something for the first time," says Wimmer. "The entire futuristic world of Libria is really a convention we created to tell a powerful human story. Obviously, the film takes a certain amount of inspiration from Huxley, Orwell and Bradbury, who also used the paradigm of a future society, but this film has its own story to tell, the story of a man rediscovering what makes him human."

Wimmer was inspired to write EQUILIBRIUM after his own reawakening into the world of expression. Turned off to the pretentiousness of the art world after finishing art school, Wimmer recalls shutting off not only his love of painting but any deep emotional reaction at all. It wasn't t until he got married and had children that he began to understand the great loss of living in a world devoted only to ideas and never to feelings.

" I suddenly went through a process of peeling away layers," he recalls. " It was a very moving time in my life and I wanted to write about it - about a man taking this sort of journey. It was then that the idea of Libria, of a world where people are medicated into remoteness, came to mind."

As he continued to probe the idea, Wimmer found himself creating an original futuristic world from scratch. His Libria is a stark, black-and-white (color, after all, evokes feelings) metropolis, which is run by a mysterious dictator named the Father who wields power through a group of Ninja-like "clerics" who enforce his vision of peace through the chemical control of all emotion. Elements from classic sci-fi movies as well as from German Nazism and Japanese Samurai culture blend with Wimmer's emotionally sedated world to form something eerily familiar yet entirely new.

" In writing the script I was influenced by many different cultures that have advocated the suppression of emotion, from religious orders to the Samurai who followed a strict, selfless code," says Wimmer. "That's how I developed the idea of a society ruled by a group of Warrior Monks who have honed themselves into rocks, physically and emotionally. But it's not ever that far from our own world. The trend towards controlling what people feel is rampant in our contemporary society."

To keep the story's impact close to home, Wimmer also decided to set his story in an indeterminate future. " I wanted to create more of an alternate reality than get caught up in the gadgetry of science fiction," he explains. " In fact, there's no technology in EQUILIBRIUM that doesn't t already exist. It's more like a parallel universe, the perfect setting for a parable."

The world of Libria is, of course, a fairy tale creation. Yet almost every one who read the script for EQUILIBRIUM saw many parallels with trends in today's society - whether in regimes that legislate against freedom of expression, in censorship of movies, art and literature, or in the increasing use of pharmaceuticals and recreational drugs to dull the full impact of life's problems.

Says producer Lucas Foster: "EQUILIBRIUM deals with a society that favors emotional oblivion, which is something we all have encountered in some form. It's also the story of one maxi s breakthrough when he decides to experience reality fully and first-hand. Behind the action and thrills, it is the story of a man's s inner transformation."

After falling in love with the script, Foster also decided there was no doubt that it was time for Kurt Wimmer to make his directorial debut. He says: "Kurt's writing was so specific and personal, and his imagination so huge and deliberate, I felt he was the only person who could do justice to the themes of this enthralling story."

Wimmer also turned out to have a uniquely dynamic sensibility for innovative, balletic action -breaking the mold of ubiquitous slo-mo digital effects in

favor of a more immediate and visceral style. "Mostly I did whatever I could to create kick-ass action on a low budget," says the writer/ director. "Almost all of the fight scenes were shot in one take, because we didn't t have the time or resources to reset all the squibs and physical effects! Put this only seemed to make it more forceful and direct."

The film also presents an entirely original fighting art: the Gun-Kata, a fast and furious combination of Western fire-power with Eastern discipline of the body. Says Wimmer: "Hong Kong action movies brought out the idea that if a man has two hands, he can shoot two guns but that's as far as they took it. I wondered: Have we really hit the envelope for gun-play or is there somewhere new it could go? To me, combining the gun with martial arts was a natural. No one has ever used a gun before in a Kata form but it becomes the perfect extension of the body and can be used in ways not usually seen."

In EQUILIBRIUM, versatile young star Christian Pale takes on one of his most challenging roles to date as John Preston, a government official of the future whose brutal, emotionless world is shattered to pieces when he begins to feel the primal surges of anger, sadness, fear and love for the first time ever. With his old reality turned upside down, Preston must figure out how to both handle, and hide, his emotions while carrying out the most important mission of his life: overthrowing Libria's s dictator, The Father.

Kurt Wimmer spent months searching for the right actor to play Preston, but kept coming back, time after time, to Pale. "It was in 'American Psycho' that I saw what I wanted," he notes. " In that film, Christian plays a heinous individual and yet you can't t help but like him. This was a quality I knew Preston would require because he starts out as someone who does some pretty awful things but you slowly become aware his motivations are noble. I think this

part gave Christian a chance to put part of himself on display no one's seen before."

Pale was drawn to his character's intense journey, which is equal parts physical and spiritual. "Preston goes from bad guy to good guy in just five unforgettable days," he notes. " He goes from feeling nothing to feeling everything and then having to suppress his new emotions in order to not get caught. It's a pretty remarkable range to go through."

Immediately, Pale realized the performance was fraught with risks, demanding a very careful approach. "Having to show Preston's inner turmoil to the audience without him revealing any glimmer of emotion to his associates was quite a challenge. Talk about balancing on a delicate knife edge," he says. " I had endless discussions with Kurt over how much I could reveal to satisfy both extremes in the story. We both wanted to avoid the nudge-nudge, wink-wink approach so we shaded Preston's s character with nuances I hope the audience will respond to. I think one scene that encompasses everything I tried to achieve with Preston is when he listens to Beethoven s 9th symphony for the first time. It's then, in a wave of emotion and realization, that he decides no one has the right to outlaw beauty."

Another big draw for Pale was the chance to reunite with Emily Watson, with whom he previously starred in " Metroland" in a very different kind of romantic relationship. "I thought exploring the heated relationship between John and Mary would be a unique adventure for us both, with the added bonus of each being able to try out new things," he says.

Once Pale took the role, he also went into physical training. John Preston is one of Libria's s most skilled martial artists - a master of Kendo and of Libria's s special "Gun-Kata," Wimmer's innovative fighting form that merges Western style gunplay with an Eastern Karate sensibility. Pale worked closely with stunt coordinator Jim Vickers to get a crash-course in the Japanese fighting arts as well as the Zen of handling multiple guns simultaneously.

"There are some really amazing choreographed action sequences in the film," Pale points out, "and I wanted to be ready. Although I studied martial arts for 'American Psycho; I needed more training for the kind of big-scale Kendo fights in EQUILIBRIUM. I took an eight-week course in Judo, and I so enjoyed it, that I look forward to doing more action roles."

Adds Wimmer: "We were immensely lucky to discover that Christian is a gifted athlete. He has the ability of a trained dancer to remember choreography instantly and I honestly believe that he made the action scenes in this film work as no one else could have."

Playing John Preston's s new partner, the intuitive but hardcore government man Brandt, is rising star Taye Diggs. Ironically, Kurt Wimmer wanted to cast Diggs for a quality considered controversial in Libria: his smile. " I knew I wanted him immediately because he has that one million mega-watt smile that to me says this guy has to be evil. It's a story about people who don't feel but with this one expression Taye speaks volumes."


Diggs was hooked by the script from the first page. He says: "I liked the combo of high octane action in a solid story with serious underpinnings. What really got me is that the core of the piece is the dynamics of human emotion, the idea that you have to let the human spirit thrive." To prepare further for the role, and to immerse himself in the most frightening Pig Brother scenarios, Diggs read such classic sci-fi works as 1984 and Brave New World. "These books were inspiring but also helped me to develop a new angle on it all," says Diggs.

Diggs sees Brandt as the very antithesis of John Preston, a man determined at all costs to keep the system working. "Brandt's like a coiled spring with the constant rumblings of certain emotions like pride and over-zealousness that he must keep in legal check. Put if killing is on the agenda, he'll be the best killer there is," he says. "It's easy to play an emotionless character, but not one with so much going on behind his calm expressions like Brandt."

Also joining the cast is two-time Academy Award nominee Emily Watson, making her first departure into action, starring as the "Sense Offender'' Mary O'Brien, who challenges John Preston to enter the underground world of the feeling. It may seem like surprising casting but the filmmakers always wanted Watson for the role. Recalls producer Foster: "Kurt and I became passionate about Emily and went after her with a vengeance. I find her a most mesmerizing and compelling actress and we needed those qualities for audiences to truly believe that John Preston would go against all his rigid training to fall in love with her."

Adds Wimmer: "I think what impressed me most about Emily is her unique combination of beauty and feistiness. She is an actor par excellence and she raised the level of everyone around her."

Watson admits she is actually a long-time fan of sci-fi and cool action films, but she was also drawn to the role's dramatic complexity. "The role of Mary has some real acting muscle I could sink my teeth into," she says. "She' s not that different from the intense, emotional and sacrificial women I've played in the past, but this time I also learned about the rigorous nature of special effects and action."

Watson particularly enjoyed Kurt Wimmer's approach to her character. " His main word of advice to me was 'Passion,"' she explains. " Mary is very much an illusion to Preston - a person who embodies every one of his awakening ideals. I tried to give their brief meetings a resonance beyond the romantic without compromising the ultimate aim of Kurt's vision. We discussed the idea that emotion is the one feeling that sets us apart from other animals. It's a great human quality but it's also desperate and difficult. That's why Mary focuses her hatred and loathing of the Libria system on Preston and why he becomes obsessed with her. Love and hate are similar emotions, after all."

The cast is rounded out by Angus MacFadyen in the role of DuPont, the sinister controller of Libria who serves as the mysterious Father's mouthpiece.

Says MacFadyen: "The role is an interesting one because DuPont is a manipulator and an expert politician and you might be convinced by everything he's saying because he's so charming. Kurt told me that the audience should be seduced by his line of reasoning before suddenly thinking, 'Hang on a minute, what am I getting sucked into? The man s mad!"'

MacFadyen continues, " Like the rest of the cast, a lot of my energy was taken up with internalizing emotions. DuPont has a hidden agenda like other characters and I think the key point of the story comes when Preston is finally pushed to kill him. I mean, what will Preston have to suppress in his newfound humanity, which has just blossomed, in order to do that? It's these sophisticated sub-texts in Kurt's script that I found really intriguing and provocative."

Sums up Kurt Wimmer of the challenge that faced the entire cast: "It's quite a conundrum to ask actors to portray characters who don't t have any feelings. But everyone worked incredibly hard to bring subtle shades and distinct glimmers of personality to each character in order to make Libria a disquieting but engaging world."

EQUILIBRIUM is a movie that provokes ideas, but it was also written as a blistering action-thriller. To create the hypnotic look and feel of the film, Kurt Wimmer was inspired by such diverse sources as Asian Samurai films, classic sci-fi movies and Futurist drawings of European cities.

The film was shot in Berlin, Germany, home to some of the world's most diverse architecture - from the ultra-modern to the eerily austere. It turned out to be the perfect stand-in for Libria. Lucas Foster recalls: "We looked at Brasilia, the City of the Future, the new Rome, modern Paris slums, the Lloyds building in the City of London and read numerous books on designers like Corbusier, Albert Speer and Frank Lloyd Wright. But Berlin was the only city that seemed to have it all."

For Wimmer, Berlin offered at least one thing no other city could: the stark, obsolete architecture of Hitler's Fascist era. "That spare architecture does convey a sense of power and a sense of the whole being more important than the individual," he says. " But it also is an architecture that pretty much disappeared after World War II. You don't t see it in the rest of the world so it feels uniquely frozen in time, which is precisely the feeling I wanted for Libria."

Among locations used in Berlin were the Palace of Justice, the Reichstadt, the Brandenburg Gate, the subway system and the Deutschlandhalle. The entire arena of the latter location, the site of Berlin's s Olympic Stadium, was used as a sound stage in which Wolf Kroeger created the lavish sets that brought the Librian future to life.

For the cast, the location only heightened the intense ambience of the film. "It's strange to think we're making this film a stone's throw from where the old Berlin Wall used to stand," remarks Emily Watson. "The resonance has been inescapable and added immeasurably to our performances. Berlin is an exciting mix of classic architecture - pompous and grand in the old manner - with beautifully engineered new constructions using huge domes and weird spirals. It couldn't t be a more perfect backdrop for the story we're telling".

Visual effects supervisor Tim McGovern worked alongside Kurt Wimmer and Wolf Kroeger to formulate the look of the walled Librian metropolis. McGovern, who won an Oscar for "Total Recall," started with a theme of grandiosity. He explains: "The whole idea of fascist architecture is to make the individual feel small and insignificant so the government seems more powerful and I continued that design ethic in the visual effects. For example, Libria is surrounded by a seventy-five feet high wall with massive gates bearing the granite etched inscription 'Librium est Libertas.' Like the Hoover Dam, the walls just keep going on and on and use vertical and horizontal lines in a Mondriantype way."

Special effects supervisor and coordinator Uli Nefzer created EQUILIBRIUM'S wild barrage of physical effects ranging from flamethrowers, exploding pillars and breakaway walls to trapdoor mechanics, catapults and gun flashes. Perhaps the most unusual effect Netzer created is displayed in the climactic showdown between Preston and DuPont, He explains. "When they start fighting in Father's Boudoir, they can both anticipate each other's every move, so the bullets they fire collide in mid-air, shatter and spray out in a disc of fragments. While the colliding is a visual effect, the discs of shrapnel are physical realizations and took a lot of working out. It looks amazing and for me, is one of EQUILIBRIUM's visual highlights."

Despite meticulous attention to the visual design of EQUILIBRIUM, Wimmer's focus always came back to the characters. Concludes Taye Diggs: "EQUILIBRIUM is a futuristic action film but one that isn't t afraid of raising serious issues. It would have been easy for Kurt Wimmer to avoid the more controversial aspects of the story, but if that had been the case I wouldn't t have considered appearing in it. And, while there are many fantastic images in the film and the action is second-to-none, it's Kurt's screenplay that's really the best special effect of all."

ABOUT THE CAST

CHRISTIAN BALE (John Preston)

Christian Bale's career has garnered praise for a number of memorable performances including Gillian Armstrong's "Little Women,' Christopher Hampton's "The Secret Agent," Jane Campion' s "The Portrait of a Lady," Philip Saville's "Metroland," Jeremy Thomas' "All the Little Animals;' Todd Hayne's "Shaft" and John Madden' s "Captain Corellí's Mandolin."

Most recently, he was seen in Rob Bowman's "Reign of Fire," and Lisa Cholodenko's " Laurel Canyon'' is due out next year.

TAYE DIGGS (Brandt)

Rising star Taye Diggs made his feature film debut starring opposite Angela Bassett in 20th Century Fox's box-office hit "How Stella Got Her Groove Back" and since then has turned heads in every role he has chosen.

Diggs recently completed production on "The Untitled Jamie Kennedy" project with Jamie Kennedy, Blair Underwood, Ryan ONeal, and Bo Derek. The film will be released next year.

This fall, Diggs was recently seen starring opposite Sanna Lathan, Queen Latifah, and Mos Def in Fox Searchlight's romantic comedy "Brown Sugar." The film reunited him with his "The Wood" director, Rick Famuyiwa.

Diggs can also be seen this fall in Paramount classics "Just a Kiss." The dark ensemble comedy co-stars Marisa Tomei, Ron Eldard, Marley Shelton and Kyra Sedgewick and also marks the feature film directorial debut of Fisher Stevens.

Diggs will then return to his musical theater roots in Miramax's highly anticipated screen adaptation of "Chicago." He will be seen along side Renee Zellweger, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Richard Gere, John C. Reilly, and Mya. The film was directed by Rob Marshall will be released on Christmas day. Ironically, Diggs also recently starred in the show on Broadway.

Next year, Diggs will star in John McTiernan's " Basic," playing a soldier in Samuel L. Jackson's ranks. The Intermedia/ Phoenix Pictures film, which also stars John Travolta, Giovanni Ribisi and Connie Nielsen, will be released in February 2003 and promises to be a captivating action/ drama.

Diggs was last seen guest starring on David E. Kelly's hit "Ally McBeal" which aired during last year's February sweeps.

Diggs was also seen in the Artisan thriller "The Way of the Gun," directed and written by Chris McQuarrie ("The Usual Suspects") and produced by Kenneth Kokin.

Diggs received much acclaim for his lead role in the romantic comedy, "The Best Man," co-starring Nia Long, Morris Chestnut and Harold Perrineau Jr. "The Best Man" received rave reviews and has since gone on to become one of the top ten highest grossing African American films in history. He also starred in the blockbuster thriller "The House on Haunted Hill," the inaugural feature production for Joel Silver and Robert Zemeckis' Dark Castle Entertainment. The film also starred Geoffrey Rush, Famke Janssen and Chris Kattan.

In the spring of 2000, Diggs made his return to the stage in the Manhattan Theater Club's "The Wild Party," winner of the Outer Critics Circle Award for "Best Off-Broadway Musical." Diggs also garnered a nomination from the Outer Critics Circle for " Best Actor in a Musical" for the performance.

Previously, Diggs starred with Omar Epps and Richard T. Jones in Rick Famuyiwa's "The Wood," for MTV Productions/ Paramount Pictures. Diggs also starred in Doug Liman's critically acclaimed "Go" opposite Sarah Polley, Scott Wolf, Jay Mohr and Katie Holmes.

Digg's talent was first recognized in Broadway's critically acclaimed Pulitzer Prize winning play "Rent," with his role as Benny the landlord. His first job out of college, in 1994, was a coveted role in the ensemble cast of the five-time Tony Award winning play "Carousel," in which he also worked as an understudy.

On television, Diggs has appeared on "New York Undercover," "Law and Order" and "Guiding Light," on which he co-starred.

Born in New Jersey, he grew up in Rochester, New York attending High School of the Arts. He received his BFA degree from Syracuse University, where he studied theater, and was discovered by an agent while performing in a showcase during his senior year in college.

Diggs resides in New York.

EMILY WATSON (Mary)

Over the course of the last several years, Emily Watson has quickly become one of the entertainment industry's most acclaimed actresses. She first caught the world's attention for her memorable performance as "Bess" in Lars Von Trier's "Breaking The Waves," her first feature film. For her heartbreaking performance, she received Oscar and Golden Globe Award nominations and won the New York Film Critics Circle Award and the Felix Award for Best Actress, and the London Film Critics Circle Award for British Newcomer of the Year in 1997.

SHE Jackie.?

Currently, Ms. Watson stars along with Edward Norton, Ralph Fiennes and Sir Anthony Hopkins in " Red Dragon," the prequel to " Silence of the Lambs," from director Brett Ratner. She can also currently be seen in " PunchDrunk Love,' an off-beat romantic comedy by filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson, co-starring Adam Sandler.

Also this Fall, Ms. Watson returns to the London stage, where she will star at the Donmar Warehouse Theatre in two productions - "Uncle Vanyá' (Sonya) and "Twelfth Night" (Viola), both directed by Academy-Award winning director Sam Mendes ("American Beauty," "The Road to Perditioxí' ). Both plays will be

performed in repertoire, and are scheduled to be performed at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York City in early 2003.

Over the past several years, Ms. Watson has starred in a number of prestigious films including: Robert Altman's "Gosford Park,' Tim Robbin's "Cradle Will Rock," as the title character in Alan Parker's "Angela's Ashes" an adaptation of Frank McCourt's Pulitzer Prize-winning memoir for Paramount Pictures, Alan Rudolph's "Trixie," for Sony Pictures Classics, in which she starred with Nick Nolte. She also starred with John Turturro in "The Luzhin Defense," directed by Marleen Gorris, based on the Nobokov novel, Jim Sheridan's "The Boxes'' in which she co-starred with Daniel Day-Lewis, and "Metroland" which is based on the Julian Barnes novel, in which she starred opposite Christian Bale.

On television, Ms. Watson starred as Maggie Tulliver in the acclaimed BBC Masterpiece Theatre production of George Eliot's "The Mill on the Floss."

A veteran of the London stage, Ms. Watson's theatre credits include "Three Sisters" and "The Children's Hour'' at the Royal National Theatre and "The Lady From The Sea."

She has worked extensively with the Royal Shakespeare Company in such productions as "Jovial Crew," "The Taming of the Shrew," "All's Well That Ends Well" and" The Changeling."

WILLIAM FICHTNER (Jurgen)

William Fichtner was last seen in Ridley Scott's "Black Hawk Down" and can currently be seen as 'Kellermari in ABC's new series, MD'S. Fichtner recently completed production Agnieszka Holland's "Julie Walking Home."

Other credits include MGM's "What's the Worst Thing That Could Happen," "A Perfect Storm," Jersey Films' "Drowning Mona," Paramount Classic's "Passion of Mind," Columbia/ TriStar's "Go," the box office hit "Armageddon," "The Underneath" directed by Steven Soderburgh, Michael

Mann's "Heat," and "Strange Days" directed by Kathryn Bigelow. Fichtner also played the blind astronomer in "Contact, " opposite Jodie Foster and starred in Kevin Spacey's directorial debut, "Albino Alligator."

Television audiences are most familiar with Fichtner from his portrayal of Petrochemist Ryan Sparks in "Grace Under Fire" during the show's premiere season. He also recently starred alongside John C. Reilly in HBO's "The Settlement."

As a member of the Circle Repertory Theatre, Fichtner received critical acclaim for his performance in "The Fiery Furnace," directed by Norman Rene. Other theatre work includes: "Raft of the Medusa" at the Minetta Lane Theatre, "The Years," at the Manhattan Theatre Club, "Clothes for a Summer Hotel," for the Williamstown Theatre Festival and "Machinal," at Joseph Papp's Public Theatre.

ANGUS MACFADYEN (DuPont)

Scottish-born actor Angus Macfadyen has been seen in a range of characters through his career, from the famed director 'Orson Welles' in the Tim Robbins ' "Cradle Will Rock," to 'Peter Lawford' in HBO's critically acclaimed "The Rat Pack."

In January, he can be seen on the ABC drama " Miracles" starring opposite Skeet Ulrich.

He was most recently seen in Warner Brothers "The Divine Secrets of the Ya Ya Sisterhood," starring opposite Sandra Bullock and Ellen Burstyn.

Macfadyen is perhaps best known for his role in Mel Gibson's Academy Award winning " Braveheart" as 'Robert the Bruce.' His other feature film credits include "Thus," "Lanai-Loa;' "Snide & Prejudice;' "Nevada," "Still Breathing," "Warrior of Virtue' and "The Brylcream Boys."

For television, Macfadyen portrayed 'Zeus' in the NBC mini-series "Jason and the Argonauts," and 'Richard Burton' in "Destiny - the Elizabeth Taylor

Story" for NBC. He also was seen in the British television movies "Takin' Over the Asylum" for BBC Scotland, and "The Lost Language of Cranes" for the BBC.

Educated in France, Macfadyen attended the University of Edinburgh and the Central School of Speech and Drama. He began his acting career on the stage at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival where he was part of such plays as "The Tempest," "Cloud Nine" and "The Immortal." Macfadyen has also written several plays, including "1905," which received the 1991 Questors Theatre Student Playwriting Award.

ABOUT THE DIRECTOR

KURT WIMMER (Writer/ Director)

Kurt Wimmer makes his directorial debut with EQUILIBRIUM, based on his own original vision of a sci-fi world. Wimmer graduated from the University of South Florida in the fall of 1987 with a BFA degree in Art History. From there, he traveled to Los Angeles where he has worked for the last 12 years as a screenwriter. He has worked for nearly every major studio on a number of films including " The Thomas Crown Affair," " Sphere" and " The Recruit."
vendredi, juillet 20, 2007 

Humeur actuelle :Energetic

 

Firearms

All the Grammaton Clerics use fully automatic Beretta 92FS pistols with longer barrels and styled barrel weights. There also some little touches to them like the 'T' of the Tetragrammaton being engraved on the front of the barrel weight and the trigger guard has been straitened out to make them look cooler. The Tetragrammaton muzzle flash is not possible to do in real life. In real life Beretta 92's are chambered for 9mm, but I don't think they were meant to be portrayed as Beretta's in the film, but more as "fantasy guns".

The resistance fighters have 7.62mm AK47 rifles, 9mm Uzi SMG's and a couple of 7.65mm Skorpion vz.61 SMG's.

The resistance leader "Seamus" has a 12g Remington 870 shotgun with no stock, and topped with what is either an Aimpoint red dot sight or a tactical light. The fighter that gets wasted coming out of the doors also has a Remington like Seamus' but with no scope/light.

Some sort of full sized Glock is the sidearm for the SWAT police, this is the pistol that Marry pulls on Preston, but is stopped by the officer that she took it from.

Most of the Sweepers use Beretta AR70 5.56mm assault rifles, there on the streets, in the puppy shootout and in the pistol wiping sequence and various other places in the film.

All the police at the start have Heckler and Koch G36 5.56mm assault rifles. Brant also uses one in raid in the nether and all the Sweepers in the "hall of mirrors" at the end use them as well. The shorter variant of the rifle, the G36K also makes an appearance with some Sweepers when we first see DuPont and is also seen with two of the Sweepers in the puppy shootout.

The most widely used sub machine gun for all the police is the Walter MPL 9mm, there seen just about everywhere in the second and third raids in the nether, the Sweeper Captain has one as well. Though there are some other police that are using Heckler and Koch MP5 9mm SMG's as well, one of the Sweepers doing a drive by uses the shorter MP5K variant.

The gun that is used to kill the dogs is a Walter WA2000 Sniper rifle with no scope.

The Sweepers in the white suits have FN P90 5.7mm SMG's.

I don't know what kind of revolver the resistance leader uses to try to kill Preston with, my guess is that it's some sort of compact .38.

 

 

jeudi, juillet 19, 2007 

Director/Writer .... Kurt Wimmer

Main Cast

Christian Bale .... John Preston
Emily Watson .... Mary
Taye Diggs .... Brandt
Angus MacFadyen .... DuPont
Sean Bean .... Partridge
Matthew Harbour .... Robbie Preston
William Fichtner .... Jurgen
Dominic Purcell .... Seamus
Maria Pia Calzone .... Preston's Wife
Emily Siewert .... Lisa Preston
Alexa Summer .... Viviana Preston
Sean Pertwee .... Father
Christian Kahrmann .... Officer in Charge

 

..> ..> ..>..>
Produced by
Sue Baden-Powell .... co-producer
Jan de Bont .... producer
Lucas Foster .... producer
Andrew Rona .... executive producer
Ninon Tantet .... associate producer
Bob Weinstein .... executive producer
Harvey Weinstein .... executive producer
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Original Music by
Klaus Badelt  
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Cinematography by
Dion Beebe  
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Film Editing by
Tom Rolf  
William Yeh  
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Casting by
Juel Bestrop  
Jeanne McCarthy  
Lucinda Syson  
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Production Design by
Wolf Kroeger  
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Art Direction by
Justin Warburton-Brown  
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Set Decoration by
Anne Kuljian   </FONT>
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Costume Design by
Joseph A. Porro   (as Joseph Porro)
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Makeup Department
Tanja Drewitz .... makeup artist
Almut Gramer .... assistant makeup artist
Paula Leupold .... assistant makeup artist
Björn Rehbein .... hair stylist
Björn Rehbein .... makeup artist
Luigi Rocchetti .... makeup artist: Italy
Valeska Schitthelm .... makeup artist: second unit
Carolin Spill .... makeup artist
Saskia Sudau .... assistant makeup artist
Mauro Tamagnini .... hair stylist: Italy
Hasso von Hugo .... key hair stylist
Hasso von Hugo .... key makeup artist
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Production Management
Vito Colazzo .... production manager: Italy
James Glander .... executive in charge of production (as Jim Glander)
Kevin Hyman .... executive in charge of production
Enzo Sisti .... production supervisor: Italy
Steven Squillante .... executive in charge of production
Dieter Stempnierwsky .... production supervisor
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Ian Cameron .... first assistant director: second unit
Inti Carboni .... second assistant director: Italy
Brian W. Cook .... first assistant director
Paul Goldsmith .... third assistant director
Harvey Harrison .... second unit director
Luca Lachin .... first assistant director: Italy
Andrew M. Robinson .... key second assistant director (as Andrew Robinson)
Tonja Schürmann .... second second assistant director
Mark Taylor .... third assistant director
Ruben Garcia .... first assistant director: second unit (uncredited)
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Art Department
Markus Bendler .... assistant property coordinator
Ute Bergk .... assistant set decorator
Mark Lambert Bristol .... storyboard artist (as Mark Bristol)
Keith Charles .... supervising plasterer
Barbara Cicero .... assistant set decorator: Italian reshoots
Joseph Conenna .... leadman
Michael Fechner .... property coordinator
Antonio Fraulo .... stand-by props: Italy (as Tony Fraulo)
Carlo Gervasi .... set decorator: Italy
Stephan O. Gessler .... draughtsperson (as Stephan Gessler)
Mario Grech .... swing gang
Brian Groves .... supervising painter
Paul J. Hayes .... construction coordinator (as Paul Hayes)
Frank Herzog .... set decoration pa
Robert Hill .... paint department head
Björn Holzhausen .... on-set dresser: second unit
Björn Holzhausen .... on-set props: second unit
Sarah Horton .... draughtsperson
Margaret Hungerford .... buyer: U.S.
John Kirsop .... construction department head
Roxy Konrad .... art department coordinator
Greg Lennox .... carpenter
Alexander Liebenthron .... set decorations
Michael Lindsay .... on-set props
Jana List .... construction secretary
Francis Livingston .... carpenter
Ginger McCarthy .... hod rigger
Sebastiano Murer .... swing gang
Bernadino Nardoni .... construction coordinator: Italy (as Dino Nardoni)
Erik Olson .... supervising art director
Stefano Maria Ortolani .... production designer: Italy (as Stefano Ortolani)
Giuliano Pannuti .... assistant production designer: Italy
Jan Rott .... key set dresser
Alexander Stolle .... assistant props
Rob Sutton .... supervising carpenter
Paul Taggart .... plaster department head (as Paul Taggert)
Steve Werblun .... storyboard artist (as Stephen Werblun)
Greg Waddle .... swing gang (uncredited)
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Sound Department
Charlie Ajar Jr. .... sound recordist (as Charles Ajar)
Maurizio Argentieri .... sound mixer: Italy
Michael J. Benavente .... supervising dialogue editor (as Michael Benavente)
Dean Beville .... adr editor
Peter Brown .... supervising sound editor
Lane Burch .... foley recordist
David V. Butler .... sound editor
Matthew Dettmann .... foley artist (as Matt Duttman)
Donald Flick .... sound effects editor
Stephen Hunter Flick .... supervising sound editor
Erich Gann .... assistant music editor
Peter Gleaves .... adr mixer
Dana Gustafson .... sound effects editor
Jamie Hardt .... first assistant sound editor
Gary A. Hecker .... foley artist (as Gary Hecker)
Vicki Hiatt .... music editor
Dirk Homann .... cable person
William Jacobs .... sound effects editor
Fred Judkins .... dialogue editor
Ryan Juggler .... assistant sound editor
Shawn Kennelly .... foley recordist (as Shawn Kenelly)
Frank Kruse .... sound mixer
Samuel Lehmer .... sound re-recording mixer
Matt L. Lockhart .... assistant: Klaus Badelt
Martin Lopez .... sound effects editor
Stephanie Lowry .... <FONT face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" color=003399 size=2>music editor
Jon Mete .... sound effects editor (as Jon I. Mete)
Byron Miller .... sound designer
Byron Miller .... sound effects editor
Harry B. Miller III .... dialogue editor (as Harry B. Miller)
Stewart Nelson .... sound editor (as Stewart Nelsen)
Richie Nieto .... music editor
Jeffrey Perkins .... sound re-recording mixer
Gerard Roche .... adr mixer
Bruno Roussel .... music editor: temp
Brian Ruberg .... foley recordist
Alexander Schwartz .... foley artist
Cameron Steenhagen .... dialogue editor
Edward M. Steidele .... foley artist (as Edward Steidele)
Greg ten Bosch .... sound effects editor
Bernd von Bassewitz .... boom operator (as Bernd V. Bassewitz)
Erin B. Lillis .... sound intern (uncredited)
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Special Effects by
Renato Agostini .... special effects foreman: Italy
Karl-Heinz Bochnig .... special effects foreman: second unit (as Karl Heinz Bochnig)
Danilo Bollettini .... senior special effects technician: Italy
Gerd Feuchter .... special effects
Rolf Hanke .... special effects production manager
Till Hertrich .... senior special effects technician
Torsten Knapp .... special effects assistant: second unit
Stefan Knauer .... additional special effects construction
Uwe Lehmann .... first assistant amourer
Sylvio Lienert .... special effects assistant
Volker Lorig .... special effects technician
Armin Moritz .... special effects technician
Uli Nefzer .... special effects supervisor
Daniel Olberg .... special effects assistant: second unit
Peter Orthmaier .... special effects technician: second unit (as Peter Ortmaier)
Franco Ragusa .... special effects technician: Italy
Bernd Rautenberg .... armourer
Jean-Pierre Roy .... visual effects artist: Digital Firepower
Jens Schmiedel .... senior special effects technician
Christoph von Lengerke .... senior special effects technician: second unit
Roland Weder .... special effects technician
Olaf Will .... special effects technician (as Olaf Wills)
Michael Apling .... special effects technician (uncredited)
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Visual Effects by
Romulo Adriano Jr. .... visual effects coordinator: Pacific Title & Art Studio
Jamie Baxter .... visual effects lead artist: Digital Firepower
Bryce Brecheisen .... visual effects coordinator: Digital Firepower
Melissa Brockman .... digital effects producer: R!OT Pictures
Kelly Bumbarger .... digital compositor: R!OT Pictures
Bill Coffin .... lead Inferno artist: Post Logic Studios
Ken Dackermann .... digital compositor
Charles Darby .... digital matte artist: Digital Firepower
Charles Darby .... digital matte supervisor: Digital Firepower
Melissa Darby .... executive producer: Digital Firepower
Michael Degtjarewsky .... digital compositor: R!OT Pictures
Chris Flynn .... digital compositor
Mark Freund .... digital supervisor: Pacific Title & Art Studio
Joe Gareri .... visual effects producer: R!OT Pictures (as Joe Gerari)
Rocco Gioffre .... senior matte painter: R!OT Pictures
Jamison Scott Goei .... digital compositor
Brian Hanable .... senior Inferno compositor: R!OT Pictures
Anthony Harris .... digital color timer
Max Harris .... Inferno compositor: Post Logic Studios
Robert Hoffmeister .... senior digital compositor
Shaina Holmes .... digital compositor
Heather Hoyland .... digital compositor
Katrin Klaiber .... senior digital compositor
Ken Lam .... digital compositor: R!OT Pictures
Kim Lavery .... in house visual effects producer
Jennifer Law-Stump .... digital effects artist: pacific title digital
Matt Linder .... 3D effects animator
Erin May .... visual effects producer: Post Logic Studios
Matt McFarland .... visual effects color timer
Tim McGovern .... visual effects supervisor
Scott McLain .... Inferno artist
Mike Minkow .... opticals
Rodney Montague .... visual effects producer: Pacific Title & Art Studio
Maureen O'Connor .... visual effects producer: Post Logic Studios
Patrick Phillips .... senior Inferno compositor: R!OT Pictures
Jacqueline Rosado .... digital effects coordinator
Adam Rote .... digital artist
Rasha Shalaby .... matte painter
Johanna Silverthorne .... digital artist
David Sosalla .... visual effects supervisor: R!OT Pictures
Lou Talamo .... digital artist
Lou Talamo .... matte painter
Mike Uguccioni .... compositor: Digital Firepower (as Michael Uguccioni)
Jeff Wells .... digital compositor: Pacific Title Digital
Bob Wiatr .... digital compositor
Kristian Coleman .... CG artist (uncredited)
Edward Helmers .... digital artist (uncredited)
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Stunts
David Ambrosi .... stunts
Joachim Paul Assböck .... stunts
Joseph Beddelem .... stunts
Alessandro Borgese .... stunt performer
Brad Bovee .... assistant stunt coordinator
Byron Briscoe .... stunt performer
Stefano Maria Mioni .... assistant stunt coordinator: Italy (as Stefano Mioni)
Emiliano Novelli .... stunts
Armin Sauer .... stunts: Germany
Mike Smith .... assistant stunt coordinator
Mike Smith .... stunt double
Sylvesta Stuart .... stunt sweeper
Ralf Tillmann .... stunt double
Massimiliano Ubaldi .... stunts
Damian Vickers .... stunts
Jim Vickers .... stunt coordinator
Vladimir Vilanow .... stunt performer
Lucas Wolf .... stunt double (reshoots)
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Camera and Electrical Department
Mik Allen .... first assistant camera: "a" camera, second unit (as Mik Allan)
Isabelle Arnold .... assistant camera
Armin Bach .... electrician
Dieter Bähr .... key grip
Richard Blanshard .... still photographer
Simon Blasi .... video operator: second unit
Chris Britton .... assistant camera
Jan Brun .... grip
Matteo Carlesimo .... first assistant camera: "b" camera, Italy
Paul Cave .... first assistant camera: "b" camera and steadicam
Maurizio Cremisini .... first assistant camera: "a" camera, Italy
Birgit Dierken .... camera operator: second unit
Alessandro Di Meo .... camera loader: "a" camera, Italy
Sally Eccleston .... first assistant camera: "a" camera
Paolo Frasson .... dolly grip
Stefan Grandinetti .... second assistant camera: "b" camera, second unit
Volker Haase .... electrician: second unit
Harvey Harrison .... director of photography: Italy
Jochen Hermann .... video operator
Holger Joos .... second assistant camera: "a" camera
Glenn König .... best boy grip
Peter Kosel .... gaffer: second unit
Ralph Kulike .... electrician: second unit
Massimiliano Kuveiller .... camera loader: "b" camera, Italy
Timm Lange .... second assistant camera: "a" camera, second unit (as Tim Lange)
Dennis Locasso .... electrician (as Denis Locasso)
Dennis Locasso .... generator operator (as Denis Locasso)
Hartmut Lowak .... electrician
Gianmaria Majorana .... camera operator: "b" camera, Italy (as Gian Maria Majorana)
Colin Manning .... key grip: second unit
Stefano Marino .... gaffer: Italy
Daniele Massaccesi .... camera operator: "a" camera, Italy
Giuseppe Meloni .... best boy: Italy
Sebastian Meuschel .... camera operator: "b" camera
Sebastian Meuschel .... steadicam operator
Nic Milner .... camera operator: "a" camera
Glenn Parker .... still photographer
Alessandra Sangermano .... assistant video assist operator
Alessandra Sangermano .... second video assist operator: Rome
Christian Scheibe .... grip
Karsten Schüle .... second assistant camera: "b" camera and steadicam
Ronald Schwarz .... gaffer (as Ronnie Schwarz)
Marco Sticchi .... electrician
Peter Taylor .... camera operator: "a" camera, second unit
Marco Teuchert .... best boy electric (as Marko Teuchert)
Karsten Tietz .... electrician
Doriano Torriero .... key grip: Italy
Guenther Uttendorfer .... assistant camera
Michael J. Walsh .... electrician: second unit (as Michael Walsh)
Markus Zucker .... clapper loader
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Casting Department
Annette Borgmann .... casting: Germany
Iris Müller .... extras casting
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Costume and Wardrobe Department
Barbara Jäger .... costume supervisor
Najad Kirchberger .... key costumer: second unit
Kara Owens .... costumer
Jean Rosone .... costume supervisor
Maurizio Torti .... assistant costume designer: Italy
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Editorial Department
Brian Addie .... apprentice editor (as Brian G. Addie)
Brian Day .... assistant editor
Mike Hatzer .... color timer (as Michael Hatzer)
Simone Hofmann .... assistant editor
Douglas Kunin .... first assistant editor
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Transportation Department
Gabriella Di Santo .... transportation captain: Italy
Susen Jarmuske .... driver
Enrico Latella .... transportation captain
Daniel Mattig .... transportation coordinator
Norbert Mentrop .... driver
Joe Müller-Koepke .... driver
Sebastian Neitsch .... transportation captain
Fabian Pöhlmann .... driver
 
..> ..> ..>..>
Other crew
Pamela Alch .... script supervisor (as Pamela M. Alch)
Andrea Alunni .... location manager
Cecilia Alvarenga .... production coordinator: Italy
Howard Baral .... post-production accountant
Neil Butler .... assistant: Mr. Foster
Sabrina Canale .... personal assistant: Mr. Kurt Wimmer, re-shoots
Giorgio Catalano .... production accountant: Italy
Shelly Clippard .... assistant: Mr. De Bont
Toby E. Cook .... production assistant
Gabriel Diggs .... assistant: Taye Diggs
Ramin Djawadi .... composer: additional music
Stella D'Onofrio .... script supervisor: Italy
Matthias Fehrenbach .... caterer (as Mathias Fehrenbach)
Alessandro Fiorito .... assistant accountant: Italy
Marco Giacalone .... location manager: Italy
Christian Giuliani .... production secretary: Italy
Jack W. Haddox .... production auditor (as Jack Haddox)
Victor A. Haddox .... first assistant accountant
Christine Haouas .... unit nurse
Sandy Hastings .... assistant: Kurt Wimmer
Christian Klempert .... assistant location manager (as Christian A. Klempert)
Lance Lanfear .... set production assistant: second unit
Tess Malone .... script supervisor: second unit
Nicole Martens .... set production assistant
Mark Martin .... key production assistant
Sonja Mecke .... second assistant accountant
Paolo Merosi .... set production assistant: re-shoots
Raffi Paloulian .... script researcher
Joe Rangel .... music coordinator
Sabine Renger .... file clerk
Silvia Riolo .... production assistant
Corrie Safris .... set production assistant
Howard Samuelsohn .... dialect coach
Marco Schenke .... crowd marshall
Anna Schmigalla .... payroll accountant
Lena Schmigalla .... file clerk
Manuel Schröder .... location assistant
Cristiano Sebastianelli .... payroll clerk
Roman Seeck .... location assistant
Imke Sommerkamp .... production coordinator
Randy Spendlove .... executive in charge of music
Wolfgang Stegemann .... martial arts choreographer
Mark Stehli .... location manager
Jasmin Steigler .... assistant: Ms. Baden-Powell
Altay Ünsal .... set production assistant
Jim Vickers .... fight choreographer
Friederike von Rauch .... location scout
Jann Wimmer .... assistant: Mr. Wimmer
Geoff Zanelli .... composer: additional music
Claudia Ziesche .... assistant production coordinator
Martin Zillger .... production secretary
Harrison Cheung .... assistant: Christian Bale (uncredited)
Michael Morehouse .... technician: Unilux (uncredited)
Patrick Peach .... producer: second unit (uncredited)
 

mercredi, juillet 18, 2007 

Gun Kata


The film also presents an entirely original fighting art: the Gun-Kata, a fast and furious combination of Western fire-power with Eastern discipline of the body. Says Wimmer: "Hong Kong action movies brought out the idea that if a man has two hands, he can shoot two guns but that's as far as they took it. I wondered: Have we really hit the envelope for gun-play or is there somewhere new it could go? To me, combining the gun with martial arts was a natural. No one has ever used a gun before in a Kata form but it becomes the perfect extension of the body and can be used in ways not usually seen."

 

 

Cleric Preston.