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CHROME
FEBRUARY 19th Release
Susan Goforth
Producer, Pendragon Pictures ----------- PENDRAGON PICTURES WAR OF
THE WORLDS, CHROME – PRODUCTION UPDATES February 17, 2002

Two More Images at Bottom of Press Release
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE :
The principals of
Pendragon Pictures announce March 18, 2002 as the official start
date of live action photography of CHROME, their new sci-fi action
thriller, starring Katie Tomlinson. “It was a difficult
transition from the WAR OF THE WORLDS project,” says CHROME
director, Timothy Hines. “When the tragedy of September 11th
occurred, we had little time to rebound. I felt from the beginning
that we were going into CHROME spread too thin. And I didn’t
want to do a picture like that. So twice we extended the
pre-production time by several weeks until I was satisfied that we
were doing this picture right.”
Producer Susan
Goforth concurs, “Timothy has made the right choices in
extending pre-production. Moviegoers will flip out when they see
the array of amazing robots in CHROME, which are a combination of
live actors, animatronics and CGI. Timothy has been very adamant
that the mechanics work and that the robot characters are
plausible. You don’t have to be with Timothy very long to know
that he’s the real thing. He has a gift of totally focusing on
the details, while never losing the bigger picture. His focus is
one hundred percent on making a great movie, and on telling a
great story.”
“I’m disturbed
by the shift at the root of storytelling in the movies,” adds
Hines, “For thousands of years, storytelling was about revealing
the truth behind things that were confusing to us. The poets and
the philosophers were all about showing us another way of looking
at our problems so that our course would be smoother. The modern
method of polling people to find out what they want a movie to be,
is absurd. That’s how they wound up with the EDSEL, a failed car
that was designed through polling people as to what they wanted.
But those polled generally only imagined design elements that they
had seen on other cars. What they wanted, however, was something
new. Something they couldn’t imagine. Polling is a ridiculous
way of approaching storytelling.
“That’s why so
many movies wind up with flash and action, but beneath it all,
have no sense of meaning or content,” bristles Hines. “Movies
and characters, generally, should not wind up where they started
like as in sit-coms, which, for the most part, are just designed
to keep you coming back each week. The best stories don’t always
give the viewer what they want every moment, but allow true
tensions to develop so that the resolution is meaningful. The best
resolution is one that reveals things the audience has been
looking for, that sheds light on the truth we already know inside,
but has become confusing to us. With CHROME, we are giving the
audience plenty of action and amazing fantasy elements, but one
will come away with a new way of looking at things.”
Special visual
effects supervisor, Karl Cottle, who mentored under legendary
make-up effects man Dick Smith, agrees, “When I read Tim’s
script, CHROME, I was blown away by the scope and also by the
ingenuity of the story. I kept thinking, ‘I’ve never seen this
on a movie screen before.’ Timothy has a fresh way of looking at
things. And he’s very intuitive. When I came to the end, I
realized I had never been ahead of the script, never outguessed
the story and I immediately wanted to read it again. CHROME is so
much more than just an action picture.”
Special effects
house, Foundation Imaging (STAR TREK VOYAGER, DEEP SPACE 9,
ROUGHNECKS: STARSHIP TROOPERS CHRONICLES) is on board to handle
CGI elements. Foundation Imaging executive producer Michele
Jeffers is excited to be involved in CHROME. “CHROME is right up
our alley,” expounds Jeffers. “We have much experience with
robotic CGI, such as our Borg work in STAR TREK.”
CHROME will shoot
live action for nine weeks then move into several weeks of
miniature, pyrotechnic and effects photography to meet a release
date of Summer 2003. Pendragon Pictures is considering offers for
distribution. “We are being very careful about who we get into
bed with. Lots of people have looked at CHROME and wanted to make
it,” says Timothy Hines. “Matt Wall was very interested in
CHROME when he was in charge of development at Universal Pictures.
John Bertolli, at Destination wanted to make it. I’m glad we
were ultimately able to mount CHROME free of committee
influence.”
“We have
communicated with Artisan pictures, among others,” says Susan
Goforth, “but we are focused on talks with Amanda Klein at USA.
I think they get that we are doing something special with CHROME,
that we don’t want it to be the flavor of the moment and
disappear. Tim has two sequels already in development. CHROME is a
trilogy and the entire story won’t unfold until all three movies
have played out.”
Concept artist Bryan
Randall, (TARKISS, THE DESTROYER OF SOULS), is hard at work on the
comic book version of CHROME, which will be ready for publication
at the time of the CHROME movie release.
On the WAR OF THE
WORLDS front, Pendragon Pictures is at work planning the retooled
production of WAR OF THE WORLDS, placed in its original setting
and time. “September 11th destroyed any possibility of an
updated version of WAR OF THE WORLDS,” says director Timothy
Hines. “At first, I felt we shouldn’t do it at all. Then I
realized that would be giving in, letting the terrorists win. So
we went back to the source. I’m very happy that we are going in
this direction with WAR OF THE WORLDS and we have nothing but
support from the world.”
Charles R. Keller
II, Director of The H. G. Wells Society, wrote to his worldwide
members, “I have since learned from the Pendragon website that
they will continue with the project. The release will be delayed
as they abandon their ‘updated’ version and re-write the
script and re-tool the entire production to its proper
late-Victorian setting. I applaud Pendragon Pictures for their
decision. Perhaps H.G. will finally have his most famous novel put
to film in a way not seen before. The potential for this project
is enormous and I hope you will join me in supporting Pendragon
Pictures in this.”
Ann Robinson, the
female star of the original 1953 George Pal classic version wrote
Pendragon Pictures, “I am so pleased that you are creating the
film around the original time frame that H.G.Wells depicted in his
book. When we filmed the George Pal version, it was right after
WW2 and George Pal wanted to show that technology is not the
answer to all human problems. Faith in oneself and a higher order
is necessary to meet the challenges of everyday life. Heroes rise
to the challenge. They have been educated and have the experiences
to know that their sacrifice matters. Mr. Pal was a master at
communicating his message.”
“We’ve been
contacted by Jeff Wayne’s people about a cross-promotion with
his planned tour of his musical rock opera version of WAR OF THE
WORLDS, originally performed by Justin Hayward of the MOODY BLUES
with narration by Richard Burton, currently released through
SONY,” reveals Susan Goforth, “I don’t know if something
will work with them, but its more confirmation that we are on the
right course.”
WAR OF THE WORLDS
will be released Summer of 2005. CHROME will be released Summer
2003.
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Permission is hereby
granted to webzines, newspapers, magazines and other periodicals
to reproduce the photographs attached to this document for
publicity or advertising except for the endorsement of products.
These photos must not be sold or leased. Photos attached to this
e-mail press release are Copyright © 2002 Pendragon Pictures. All
rights reserved.

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