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Postby Brian » Wed Sep 19, 2007 6:45 pm

Monsters vs. Aliens Moved Up Two Months
Source: DreamWorks Animation September 19, 2007


DreamWorks Animation SKG, Inc., together with Paramount Pictures Corporation, a unit of Viacom Inc., announced today that Monsters vs. Aliens, DreamWorks Animation's first-ever film produced in stereoscopic 3-D technology, will be released into theatres on March 27, 2009. The film had been previously slated for its domestic release on May 15, 2009.

"I believe that next generation 3-D will make our CG films even more special and unique," said Jeffrey Katzenberg, Chief Executive Officer of DreamWorks Animation. "We are thrilled to have 'Monster vs. Aliens' as the first opportunity for audiences to enjoy this exciting new movie experience. Moving to a March release date, which has proven to be a great slot for family films, allows us to roll out our first 3-D project on the maximum amount of screens as the year's first big event film to hit the market in this new format."

"We are really excited to be distributing 'Monsters vs. Aliens,' the marriage of a new technology with the classic family entertainment audiences have come to expect and love from DreamWorks Animation," added Rob Moore, President of Worldwide Marketing and Distribution for Paramount Pictures. "This new immersive 3-D experience will fully exploit the latest in exhibition technology-and with the March 27 release date, we'll be able to take full advantage by showing it in as many theaters with this advanced 3-D capability as possible."

Monsters vs. Aliens, which reinvents the classic '50s monster movie into an irreverent modern day action comedy, is being directed by Conrad Vernon (Shrek 2) and Rob Letterman (Shark Tale), produced by Lisa Stewart (I Think I Love My Wife) and co-produced by Jill Hopper and Latifa Ouaou.
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Postby Brian » Mon Sep 24, 2007 7:06 pm

Exclusive Interview: Rogue's Greg McLean
Source: Ryan RottenSeptember 24, 2007


Since Steven Spielberg's great white shark reared its nightmarish set of chompers and tried to take a bite out of Roy Scheider's ass in "Jaws," the nature-run-amok genre has arguably not so much evolved over the last thirty-two years as it has devolved. A tip 'o the hat and a big thanks to the Sci-Fi Channel, purveyors of fetid small screen CGI-dependent Mother Nature mash-ups that don't ask you to check your brain at the door but request you to blow it through the back of your skull with a 12-gauge. Hollywood, however, has flirted with plenty of freaks of nature, particularly killer crocodiles - Tobe Hooper's Crocodile, Steve Miner's Lake Placid, it's direct-to-TV follow-up, Lake Placid 2 (thank youuuu Sci-Fi!) and the ill-advertised Primeval being four recent examples.

It's time to make some room for Rogue from writer-director Greg McLean. This Australian celluloid renegade wielded an edge as sharp as his North American counterparts in 2005 with the Outback thriller Wolf Creek. Given a bigger budget ($25 million versus Wolf Creek's $1.38 million), McLean's threat has exponentially grown, too, as Rogue's focus falls on a giant saltwater crocodile that has taken a liking to a tourist boat operated by the lovely Kate (Radha Mitchell) and carrying an American journalist (Michael Vartan). McLean shot much of the film in Australia's Northern Territory, relishing its "epic, ancient landscape," for fifteen weeks.

Harvey and Bob Weinstein of Dimension Films greenlit the project based on their satisfaction with Wolf Creek and have plans to release the film in a domestic limited release soon (it opens in Australia on November 8th). ShockTillYouDrop.com met with McLean by the poolside patio of the Standard Hotel in Hollywood at the tail-end of a Tinseltown trip to meet with a variety of development execs about a possible project.

ShockTillYouDrop.com: "Rogue" is a script you penned before "Wolf Creek," why did you decide to the revisit the property? Obviously the success of "Wolf Creek" helped propel it into production easier, no?
Greg McLean: "Rogue" was written twelve years ago, it was one of the first scripts that I wrote and it was always designed to be a classical, old-fashioned monster movie. I really wanted to blend the really realistic FX, genuine suspense and real characters. Not popcorn, cheesy horror film characters, but something that was closer to the mold of "Alien" and "Jaws." I tried to set it up back then, years ago, and it got set up by this company and they kicked me off the film. It was a huge disaster, but it was a rite of passage for me in getting it made. "Wolf Creek" came along and it allowed me to go back to "Rogue" and make the film I wanted to make. I changed the script a bit and got it ready to make.

Shock: How did the script evolve during that time?
McLean: A lot of the sequences and situations remained the same. The main thing was characterization and trying to keep the characters, on the one hand, kind've keep them movie characters in that they have to have journeys and back stories, but also keep it mundane. The thing I learned on "Wolf Creek" was the value of the "everyday" in horror movies in particular because you have to have that sense of the normalcy of the day. There's too many clichés in movie characters and we have to learn how to avoid them, so what I learned was to not be scared to let things be simple.

Shock: You had mentioned "Alien" and "Jaws" as inspirations, but what about Lewis Teague's "Alligator" or perhaps even your fellow countryman, Russell Mulcahy's "Razorback"? How did you try to transcend the typical nature-run-amok genre?
McLean: Most movies end up being poor versions of "Jaws" to some degree, whether it's stalking the creature or the animal has gone wild. "Anacondas" - I really hate that film...a lot. And when people say, Oh, "Rogue" is like "Anacondas" except with a crocodile, I want to f**kin' kill 'em. I kinda enjoy them all, the really bad ones and the really good ones, but what you hope is that they don't relate your film to "Anacondas."

Shock: You're talking about the sequel, the hunt for the blood orchid whatever...
McLean: Terrible!

Shock: Being a newcomer to the genre, what was your mindset after the release of "Wolf Creek" - were you surprised by the reaction?
McLean: I was incredibly excited that people liked it. The risky ideas that I tried, in terms of the structure of the film, and the intensity paid off. Because it could've gone the other way. It could've been rejected and people could've said it was a piece of shit. But it was an amazing thing. Since we got the go to make the film and we got the budget, we were just focused for two years solid making the best film we could and using the little money that we had. And really just trying to make the film work. This sounds weird, but it was such a passion project, it could have been the only chance I had to make a film and if I failed I was f**ked. So I knew it had to work and make sure every aspect of it was perfect.

Shock: I'm sure it bolstered your confidence to tackle the demands "Rogue" posed.
McLean: Even though the scale was twenty times the size. It was good to go in and do a bigger film that I knew so well because I had this film in pre-production years ago. It was literally easy to direct because I had written so many drafts of it. I walked in knowing every possible permutation of how this could turn out which is good going in.

Shock: Can you talk about some of your casting decisions?
McLean: We were getting really close to shooting and we didn't have anyone for the role Michael Vartan is in. We had all of these lists and my agent said I should check out Michael. I hadn't seen much of his work before. I saw "Alias," I didn't watch the show and I thought he was a really good actor. I was looking for someone who looked very American. Michael has that classical, American look. And he's a really good subtle actor as well. So, they screened "Wolf Creek" for him and he was like, This is really f**ked up, I love it. He wanted to do something different and he loved the way we let the actors move around on set and while we found them with the camera. TV's just close-up, close-up, close-up. He wanted to do something that was a bit more free. I didn't have time to listen to anyone complain about the shoot, so I told him outright, This is gonna be f**kin' hard work. You're gonna be in the bush. There's gonna be snakes and crocodiles, are you cool with that? The more I told him he shouldn't do it because he was gonna die, the more he was open to it. People always talk shit while making movies because they're f**kin' assholes, but he was a real trooper and it was a really hard shoot. He couldn't easily said, You f**ckin Aussie wankers, get me my agent?

Shock: You also reunited with John Jarratt who we lost saw as the malicious Mick Taylor in "Wolf Creek."
McLean: I didn't have John in mind for the role he's in at all...and he was quite pissed off about it. It just didn't click with me and he said, Oh, let me try it, I'll send you something. So, he took a photograph of himself with the hat and glasses and I looked it over. I thought he looked so great. He's so identifiable as Mick Taylor and to see him like this is great.

Shock: And who does he play?
McLean: He's a taxi cab driver named Russell, this old guy who has died and has gone on this trip to get away from that. It's really good. The theatrical cut of this film has very precise storytelling and a very fine narrative and for the unrated DVD we put together, there are all of these really great scenes with him that are great dramatic moments but actually slow the film down a bit, we put them all back and they're some of John's best scenes.

Shock: And you've got Radha Mitchell who's sort of a pro at this point in the genre.
McLean: She's just a really good actress. I think she's smart enough to know that genre films, when done well, can be great. I think overall we've got a great cast 'cause we also got Sam Worthington who was just cast in James Cameron's "Avatar." I got my dream cast.

Shock: A bigger cast for you, too.
McLean: It was like directing theater because, at certain times, you did have to stage all of these actors.

Shock: How was it moving from one film where the scares could arise organically out of a situation on the shooting day if need be versus adhering to a plan because of the CGI crocodile and the scene preparation that comes with that? Were you able to improvise at all if the frights just weren't working on the set or were you locked in?
McLean: It's different, but it's still flexible. On the stage for the big crocodile fight, we had planned for maybe four month. And then we basically had the virtual cameras placed around the space so we knew what we were gonna get, and that was fun. So we kind've knew what it was, but it change and evolve in the sense that over time we'd look at a part and think, That's not working, and be able to clip and take a piece out. It is organic. But in terms of the shots you're achieving, it is very much what's on the board is what you have to get. It was plate gathering, like, we'd have to get 400 plates, it does tend to be pretty f**kin' crazy. And it makes me admire people like Peter Jackson who go off and get these 5,000 FX plates.

Shock: And how many CGI FX shots do you have?
McLean: About 500 and that's including matte paintings. We started with like 300 and I just kept adding and developing them as we went?

Shock: Were the FX the biggest challenge for you on this venture?
McLean: No, the challenge was how to make a... Well, once our characters get to this island in the film, they're basically stuck there. When we first got to pre-production and I was storyboarding everything with the storyboard artist, I said, Holy f**k, we've got fifty minutes of people on this island doing f**kin' shit. This is going to be the most boring film in history. I really had to design incredible ways to make it interesting. The challenge was to keep something very simple very cinematic and not make it look like some stupid TV show.

Shock: You had mentioned that you wanted to utilize the FX for a realistic-looking crocodile, but were you judicious in your approach or is this creature out in the open?
McLean: Less is more, of course. My approach is the creature is always worse than the one you can show, however, I do understand that if you don't pay it off the audience will f**kin' kill you. So, you half see it so you get a sense of what it is, then you go, Okay, let's go balls-to-the-wall and get right in there with it. Because if you don't blow it out. And if you blow it out, it has to be amazing. We have a ten minute sequence of Michael with the crocodile sharing the same space.

Shock: Who's responsible for creating the croc?
McLean: The FX are incredible - Fuel, this visual FX in Sydney did all the CG and stuff. Then we had John Cox who was responsible for all of the maquettes and robotic crocodile stuff. We said to them, Past movie crocodiles are shit usually because people always try to characterize them. Try to make them look like an evil thing. Just take the f**kin' animal and make it really big. Don't try to make it a bad guy, it's just an animal. So they spent months researching crocodiles and getting down the muscle movements and stuff. During a test screening we did, we actually had people put on their score cards, Gee, how did you train and get such a big crocodile. Well, shit, that's a compliment?

Shock: And how about yourself? Been to many croc farms for research?
McLean: Oh yeah. After I wrote the script I went out camping for a week by myself and went to every crocodile farm, went on all of the cruises. The tour in the film is the same one I went on.

Shock: Did you get a chance to see "Primeval" at all?
McLean: I did! F**kin hell, man. What were they thinking? 'Cause I knew about it, someone sent me the script last year. And it's a good movie, it was a good read. But it was no competition 'cause it wasn't a horror movie, it was a drama and it wasn't about the crocodile. They must've freaked out, because they pushed it out. The FX didn't even seem finished because what crocodile moves like that? It was like an insect. Small crocodiles can actually run, they can gallop and I think they said, Let's make a nine meter croc do that. It was bizarre. It was like "Cry Freedom" meets...I dunno.

Shock: You're approach seems to distill a lot of ideas and extracts their most primal elements. You had mentioned before, simplicity. Is this something you want to continue to do?
McLean: I do think sometimes the basics don't change and they never will. The fundamentals of any storytelling genre are really, really basic. I'm drawn to working out what are the primary structures and what things are really about? And to do that in fresh way so that new audiences, people who are 15 today, can experience that stuff that's really raw. Look at that simple genre stuff. There's something that I'm working on now that's another horror film - it's at a mixed stage. What I did love doing was working on a film with FX and mixing up that sorta stuff. I'm curious to take that further. I should know in the next couple of months what I'm doing next.
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Postby Brian » Mon Sep 24, 2007 7:07 pm

NBC Gives Fear Itself the Green Light
Source: Variety September 25, 2007


NBC has given a 13-episode commitment to the horror anthology series "Fear Itself," which the network plans to air sometime next summer, reports Variety.

The project is a reworked version of the Emmy-winning "Masters of Horror" and comes directly from the Showtime series' producers, Lionsgate and Industry Entertainment.

"Masters of Horror" executive producers Keith Addis, Andrew Deane and Mick Garris are all on board to executive produce the NBC project as well.

Production will begin early next year; the producers are looking to woo top-name horror writers and helmers for "Fear Itself," just as they did with "Masters of Horror."

To meet broadcast standards, NBC will have to stay away from too much blood and gore. More graphic footage will be saved for the DVD (and other backend) market.
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Postby Brian » Tue Sep 25, 2007 6:56 pm

AnnaSophia Robb Joins Witch Mountain
Source: MTV September 25, 2007


MTV reports that AnnaSophia Robb (Bridge to Terabithia, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) will star opposite Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson in director Andy Fickman's Witch Mountain redo at Disney. Here's a clip from their interview with Fickman:

According to Fickman, the biggest difference may be one of tone. "The original book is a very cool dark thriller. We're pulling elements from that," he revealed. "It's a much darker movie than in the 70s when they did 'Escape to Witch Mountain.'"

Visit the link above for more quotes from the director on the film.
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Postby Brian » Wed Sep 26, 2007 7:24 pm

McG and Eisner Team for Invisible
Source: The Hollywood Reporter September 27, 2007


McG has teamed with writer Ari Eisner for "Invisible," a drama project, which landed at Fox with a script commitment.

The project, from Warner Bros. TV and McG's Wonderland Sound & Vision, tells the story of a criminal at rock bottom who is given a second chance at life when a chemical compound makes him invisible.

Eisner is known for his popular spoof trailers "10 Things I Hate About Commandments and "Must Love Jews" on YouTube.
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Postby Brian » Thu Sep 27, 2007 7:56 pm

Great, they cancel SG1, Farscape, and can't buy Firefly from Fox, but they can do this:

SCI FI Orders More Eureka and Truth
Source: SCI FI Channel September 27, 2007


SCI FI Channel has greenlit production on a third season of its most-watched original series "Eureka," ordering 13 new hours of the dramedy. SCI FI is also renewing its investigative reality hit "Destination Truth" for a second season, it was announced today by Mark Stern, SCI FI Channel's Executive Vice President of Original Programming.

"Eureka" will begin production on a third season in Vancouver early next year for a summer 2008 premiere. The second season of "Destination Truth" is also slated to premiere in 2008 with six exciting new episodes.

"'Eureka' rose to an even higher creative level in its sophomore season, combining entertaining, compelling stories with deeper character development and great cast chemistry. And clearly the audience noticed, bringing millions of new viewers to the Channel," said Mark Stern. "'Destination Truth' with Josh Gates proved to be a great addition to our Wednesday night lineup and the perfect companion piece for Ghost Hunters."

Eureka seems like any other cozy Pacific Northwest town, but is actually a secret community of geniuses assembled by the government to conduct top-secret research. The result is a place where anything imaginable can happen and does. Returning for a third season are stars Colin Ferguson, Salli Richardson, Joe Morton, Jordan Hinson and Ed Quinn and executive producers Jaime Paglia and Charlie Craig. "Eureka" is a SCI FI Channel presentation and is produced and distributed by Universal Media Studios.

In the second season of "Destination Truth," adventurer and truth-seeker Josh Gates will once again take viewers off the map in his search for answers to some the world's most notorious unexplained mysteries. The show will feature even more exotic locales, stunning finds and fascinating eyewitness accounts as Josh brings his humor to brand new investigations. This season "Destination Truth" will be Executive Produced by Brad Kuhlman ("1000 Places to See Before You Die," "Daisy Does America," "FM Nation").
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Postby Brian » Thu Sep 27, 2007 7:57 pm

David Goyer to Direct Vampire
Source: Variety September 28, 2007


New Regency has acquired screen rights to "Baltimore, or The Steadfast Tin Soldier and the Vampire," an illustrated novel by Mike Mignola and Christopher Golden. The authors will write the screenplay, and David Goyer will direct.

John Baldecchi (Ultraviolet) and Stacy Maes (Jumper) will produce.

Just-published by Bantam, the graphic novel tells the story of the awakening of supreme evil on Earth. Lord Henry Baltimore is bitten by a demonic vampire bat on a WWI battlefield. The plague destroys his family, and Baltimore creates a team to hunt and fight the Red King, the embodiment of all evil.

Mignola created the comic book character and series "Hellboy" and was a conceptual artist on Bram Stoker's Dracula and Blade 2. Golden has written novels including "The Myth Hunters" and "Wildwood Road," and three of his titles are being developed into movies by studios.

Goyer, who wrote the "Blade" films and directed Blade 2, next directs the Sheldon Turner-scripted "X-Men" origin film Magneto for Fox. He also wrote Batman Begins with Christopher Nolan and just worked with Regency and Maes on the upcoming Doug Liman-directed Jumper
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Postby Brian » Mon Oct 01, 2007 7:14 pm

Spyglass Remaking Cronenberg's Brood
Source: Variety October 2, 2007


Spyglass Entertainment has acquired the rights to remake David Cronenberg's 1979 horror classic The Brood. Cory Goodman will pen the screenplay.

Based on a pitch by Goodman, the psychological/supernatural thriller centers on a woman who undergoes medical treatment that causes her inner rage to physically manifest itself.

Clark Peterson will produce alongside Spyglass' Roger Birnbaum, Gary Barber and Jonathan Glickman.
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Postby Brian » Tue Oct 02, 2007 9:46 pm

Dominique Swain Commits to Slaughter
Source: The Hollywood Reporter October 3, 2007


Dominique Swain will star in Slaughter, the first film to be made from a Slamdance Film Festival Horror Screenplay Competition winner, says The Hollywood Reporter.

Maverick Films genre arm Maverick Red and Angel Baby Entertainment will finance and co-produce Nathan Brookes and Bobby Lee Darby's winning script, with Victor Garcia attached to direct.

Swain will play a young actress who travels to a remote desert location to shoot a film called Slaughter, only to discover she and her co-stars have been cast in a snuff film and must fight to survive.

Principal photography will begin this month in Los Angeles.
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Postby Brian » Tue Oct 02, 2007 9:48 pm

This is Madness! It's Guillermo del Toro's Next
Source: Latino Review October 3, 2007


Director Guillermo del Toro will follow Hellboy 2 with his longtime passion project, At the Mountains of Madness, reports Latino Review.

The film is an adaptation of the H.P. Lovecraft novel, which features a chilling recollection of an Antarctic expedition's uncanny discoveries–and their encounter with untold menace in the ruins of a lost civilization.

Universal Pictures will distribute and AngryFilms' Susan Montford and Don Murphy will produce.

The site adds that Del Toro is still doing Tarzan for Warner Bros., but that script isn't ready yet.
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Postby Brian » Wed Oct 03, 2007 6:28 pm

Rodriguez Helming Zombie Pic Fragile
Source: Variety October 4, 2007


Eduardo Rodriguez has signed on to direct zombie film Fragile for Rogue Pictures.

Based on the graphic novel by Stephano Raffaele, the story kicks off after an airborne virus has reduced much of the Earth's population to feral zombies. A recently undead soldier then teams with a female zombie and a human teenager, racing against time to find a cure before being hunted down by the soldier's former military unit.

Jeff Dixon adapted the screenplay of the Humanoids-published graphic novel.

John Baldecchi, Justin Connolly, Pierre Spengler and Fabrice Giger are producing. Keith Dinielli is co-producer.
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Postby Brian » Fri Oct 05, 2007 5:56 pm

The Halo Movie is "Dead"
Source: Creativity Online October 5, 2007


Creativity Online has posted a new interview with Neill Blomkamp who was set to the big screen Halo movie until everything went downhill last year. Here's a quote on the movie:

The film is entirely dead. In the configuration it was in. Whatever happens with that movie, assuming that movie gets made, will be a totally different configuration. It's not so much me as the entire vessel sank. Basically, it was a combination of; there were two studios involved that weren't getting along in the process of making it, Universal and Fox. That kind of stuff happens, it's a fragile industry. So the film collapsed at the end of last year, and it's been dead, ever since then. I'll be curious to see what happens.

You can read the full interview ,a href="http://creativity-online.com/?action=news:article&newsId=120925" target=_blank>here!
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Postby Brian » Sun Oct 07, 2007 9:39 pm

Vega and King Join The Spirit
Source: Variety October 7, 2007


Paz Vega and Jamie King have joined the cast of Will Eisner's The Spirit, co-produced by Lionsgate and Odd Lot Entertainment.

"The Spirit" is directed by Frank Miller (writer/co-director of Sin City and author of the graphic novel "300") based on his own adaptation. The action-adventure centers on a man who fakes his own death and fights crime from the shadows of Central City.

Vega will play the knife-wielding Plaster of Paris, and King will portray Lorelei, a phantom siren.

The duo joins Scarlett Johansson, Eva Mendes, Samuel L. Jackson, Gabriel Macht, Sarah Paulson, Dan Lauria, Stana Katic, Johnny Simmons and Louis Lombardi. Principal photography begins Monday in New Mexico.

Will Eisner's The Spirit is targeting a January 16, 2009 release date.
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Postby Brian » Tue Oct 09, 2007 7:59 pm

Pine Up for Star Trek & White Jazz
Source: The Hollywood Reporter October 9, 2007


The Hollywood Reporter says Chris Pine is in discussions to star as Captain Kirk in Paramount's Star Trek and in negotiations to star opposite George Clooney in Joe Carnahan's adaptation of the James Ellroy crime novel White Jazz.

Pine's biggest gig to date has been the male lead in the 2006 Lindsay Lohan movie Just My Luck. He played a neo-Nazi assassin in Smokin' Aces, also directed by Carnahan.

The biggest stumbling block to getting both roles at this point might be scheduling, adds the trade. J.J. Abrams' "Trek" will reportedly shoot from November through March, while "Jazz" has a mid-January start. Although both sides are trying to sort out the date puzzle, it is possible that Pine and his camp could be forced to choose which role to take.

Paramount is not sitting idle while negotiations are underway - the studio is looking for backup actors to have on deck.

For "Jazz," being produced by Cherry Road Films and Clooney's Smoke House, Pine would play Junior Stemmons, Clooney's partner in the film noir tale
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Postby Darya » Sun Nov 04, 2007 3:26 am

Spielberg to Receive VES Lifetime Achievement Award
Source: Visual Effects Society November 2, 2007


Steven Spielberg has been chosen to receive the VES Lifetime Achievement Award at the 6th Annual VES Awards on Feb. 10, 2008 at the Kodak Theatre Grand Ballroom in Hollywood. The VES Board of Directors selected Spielberg for its highest honor in recognition of the contribution that his vast body of work, as both a director and producer, has made to the art and science of visual effects.

"Steven Spielberg is the first director that to comes to mind when you think of amazing visual effects due to his enormous body of creative groundbreaking work," states Jeff Okun, Chair of the Visual Effects Society. "This award also recognizes what kind of magic can be made when a filmmaker knows how best to mine and collaborate with the talent, experience and knowledge of his VFX team."

Previous recipients of the VES Lifetime Achievement Award include George Lucas, Robert Zemeckis and Dennis Muren.

"Steven Spielberg's resume reads like a timeline of visual effects milestones," says Eric Roth, Executive Director of the Visual Effects Society (VES). "As a director and a producer, he is constantly pushing the boundaries of the industry and rethinking the function of visual effects in film, TV, video games and animation to find new and innovative methods of storytelling. There are very few artists who have done more to move the VFX industry forward."

The annual VES Awards show honors the most outstanding visual effects in film, television, commercials and video games. Last year's event attracted more than eight hundred celebrities, visual effects and animation artists, dozens of nominees and members of the film, television and games industries. Winners from 2007 included Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (John Knoll, Jill Brooks, Hal Hickel, Charlie Gibson) for Outstanding Visual Effects in a Visual Effects Driven Motion Picture and "Battlestar Galactica" - Episode 303b "Exodus" (Gary Hutzel, Michael Gibson, Alec McClymont, Brenda Campbell) for Outstanding Visual Effects in a Broadcast Series. Submissions for the next awards are open through December 1st at VESAwards.com.
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