Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Trek Smashes Atom

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Trek Smashes Atom

    TREK SMASHES ATOM
    By Duane Dudek

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
    http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/entertainment/44584 637.html
    May 8 2009

    The Canadian Armenian director Atom Egoyan has the coolest name in
    show business. His list of esoteric films include "Exotica," "Ararat"
    and the still stunning Oscar nominee "The Sweet Hereafter."

    All three of those films also starred fellow Canadian Bruce Greenwood,
    who happens to also play Capt. Christopher Pike in the new "Star Trek"
    film. Coincidentally "Star Trek" opens in some larger markets opposite
    Egoyan's new film "Adoration."

    "I told him we would crush him," said Greenwood during a recent
    phone conversation.

    (See my review of 'Star Trek' here, and my story on the history of
    the show.)

    Greenwood said he and Egoyan found themselves doing publicity for
    their films on the same day in Los Angeles and managed to hook up.

    "We literally managed to meet on a street corner in Santa Monica and
    talk for a half an hour. I drove over to the street he was standing
    on and we stood in front of a bar and talked for a half an hour,"
    Greenwood said.

    Greenwood is certainly less familiar for his roles in offbeat
    indepdent films like "'I'm Not There," "Being Julia" and "Capote,"
    than he is for roles in blockbusters like "I, Robot" and "National
    Treasure 2." He said he is most recognized as the husband who framed
    wife Ashley Judd for murder in "Double Jeopardy."

    But regardless of the size of the film the work, he said, is the same.

    "I don't make a large distinction between working on a large movie
    and a small movie. Though if you do a big movie and it's successful,
    it enables those people who are trying to get small movies off the
    ground to use you more easily. Because if your name has a certain
    value its easier to get financing."

    Big film or small film "I deal with playing human beings who are
    experiencing human emotions. So independent of the environment at the
    end of the day its just how you're feeling and what you're characters
    are reacting to. Whether you're on the bridge of a spaceship or in
    a pickup truck in the middle of nowhere, you're still a human being
    trying to figure out what the hell is going on."

    Films don't come much larger than "Star Trek," directed by "Lost"
    creator J.J. Abrams, which shows how the original characters met and
    features a new cast of young actors. Greenwood said he hesitated
    to call it an action movie "although there are tremendous action
    sequences in it, and it feels huge."

    "The sound design and art direction is spectacular. But even though
    the environment is huge at its core, there are these characters whose
    problems and trials are particularly human," he said.

    Greenwood's character looms large in "Trek' mythology, and in the
    film gives command of the USS Enterprise to Capt. Kirk, played by
    Chris Pine. He said the cast members did "tons of homework" on the
    show and watched all the original episodes.

    In order to make sure the film made no gaffes in mythology, continuity
    or "protocol issues." they had a "Trek" wrangler on set "who arguably
    knew everything. And if he didn't it would take him 20 minutes to
    find out."

    Greenwood said he believes that "Trek" played a role in the progressive
    cultural evolution of its time because it portrayed "this multi-ethnic,
    multicultural cast with women in authority. Today we take that sort
    of thing for granted."

    And he said the new film is rooted in the traditions of the original
    show.

    "For people who have this long relationship with 'Star Trek' there are
    all kinds of things that will resonate for them. All sorts of inside
    jokes and tips of the hat. But at the same time this movie exists on
    its own merits. And people who don't know anything about 'Star Trek'
    will be able to sit down and be captured by the characters and shot
    into this incredibly fast moving and involving situation."
Working...
X