Posts Tagged ‘Frank Marshall’
Producer Frank Marshall talks Night, Airbender
Monday, August 9th, 2010 by Specter
Producer Frank Marshall has worked on a few of Night’s films over the years, and has many great movies on his resume. He’s a great producer with a lot of insight into films that no many can see. Thirty years, 50-plus movies, and almost $5billion at the box office later, the man known as one of Hollywood’s “super producers” is here with the tale. Before we get to spaghetti, Indiana Jones, Bourne, or Marshall’s new project, a screen version of Michael Morpurgo’s War Horse, there’s The Last Airbender, out next week.
With an estimated production budget of $150 million, a lot is riding on M Night Shyamalan’s fantasy adventure, adapted from the TV series, about a young hero striving to unite a magical world. Starring Dev Patel in his first major role since Slumdog Millionaire, it is also Shyamalan’s latest attempt to regain the career high of The Sixth Sense after the lows of Lady in the Water and The Happening.
Marshall worked with Shyamalan on The Sixth Sense and Signs. “They like to put you up on pedestals so they can knock you down quickly,” he says of the critical reaction to Shyamalan’s recent movies. “I’ve seen that a lot, particularly when you don’t do the kind of projects they think you should do. This is not in his usual genre of horror and twists and scary movies. This is a family film that has a lot of heart and warmth.”
-via Herald Scotland
Shyamalan Addresses ‘Last Airbender’ Race-bending Controversy
Sunday, June 27th, 2010 by SpecterIf you’ve been reading about The Last Airbender over the last year, you know what this is about. Shyamalan has come forward and addressed the entire controversial issue with something very simple, yet very true:
He states, “The whole point of the movie is that there isn’t any bad or good. The irony is that I’m playing on the exact prejudices that the people who are claiming I’m racist are doing,” and goes on to further defend The Last Airbender as “the most culturally diverse movie series of all time.”
What this is attempting to be is very beautiful, and what he said is no different than what producer Frank Marshall stated over a year ago. (Last Airbender Producer Frank Marshall Comments on Cast Diversity)
The main actors (the film stars Noah Ringer, Dev Patel, Nicola Peltz and Jackson Rathbone) were simply the best fit for each of their roles, and the other representatives of each of the four ‘nations’ (representing the elements of Air, Water, Earth, and Fire) were then chosen based on the race or appearance of those principle characters, with M. Night making a conscious effort to include all races and ethnicities.
I know that when you start a cause you feel strongly about, you should see it through, but I also know that when that cause can be turned toward the positive and not the negative, you’ll see greater results. The protest of a film that is so ethnically diverse because a few of the primary actors in this part of the story are cast different than you thought you saw them in the cartoon is not something I would ever take part in. Here’s the thing: if you’ve seen the entire series, you know that there is still another major cast member to come, that of Toph Bei Fong. You also know the paths that the current cast members take. You can’t tell me that the argument of who is hero and who is villain really stands up. The argument just falls apart as the storyline progresses. And as the movie series continues, it’s not going to progress in that way because of anything this ‘movement’ has done. It’s going to progress in that way because that’s how the cartoon went.
Remember: the cartoon is set of a fictional world. There are fictional creatures like Turtle-Ducks. It is based on many cultures. Aang appeared as a young white boy to me. Sokka and Katara? They looked tanned, perhaps a little Mediterranean. Zuko, perhaps Asian, perhaps not. I’ve known many people who haven’t looked their ethnicity over the years.
Isn’t it time we stopped looking at race? Just look at Pat Morita in The Karate Kid (1984), as well as the sequel, The Karate Kid: Part II. He was nominated for an Academy Award for his role as Mr. Miyagi. He was responsible for a new respect for the Martial Arts, which I can guarantee inspired the creation of the character of Uncle Iroh, even if I hadn’t heard it from the mouths of the creators of the show directly.
Miyagi was and is an inspiration to me. And a world that is color-blind, that celebrates culture over appearance, is a world that I’d like to live in.
-via Hollywood News
(I once said that I would no longer report on the ethics of the film cast. As the movie is less than a week away, I thought one more was in order.)
The Last Airbender pushed up one day to July 1
Wednesday, June 16th, 2010 by SpecterProducer Frank Marshall has announced via his Twitter account that we can all expect to see The Last Airbender one day earlier than we had anticipated: July 1!
He wrote: LAST AIRBENDER release date moves up to July 1st…
“Airbender” Trilogy could take Six Years to Complete
Monday, July 6th, 2009 by SpecterStarlog, a well-regarded Science Fiction magazine, has quotes from Noah Ringer, Dev Patel, director M. Night Shyamalan and producer Frank Marshall regarding The Last Airbender trilogy. They speak about the first film in the trilogy as well as a loose outline for the filming of the trilogy.
Appa in the Last Airbender, CG or Puppet?
Monday, April 27th, 2009 by SpecterI’ve been curious about how they are going to create Appa for The Last Airbender. Growing up on The NeverEnding Story, I imagined him as a Falcor type giant puppet. Perhaps he would be created by the Jim Henson Creature Shop?
Airbender Casting is Complete, says Marshall
Tuesday, April 7th, 2009 by Specter
The Last Airbender’s producer Frank Marshall has posted on his twitter again, agreeing with what I’ve been saying all along. While there are the three primary characters from Book 1 that are considered by many to be the heroes of the story… they are not the only ones. Not by a long shot. They didn’t claim the victory alone… they weren’t the only heroes to fight in the epic battles. Toph still has yet to join the cast for part 2, and there are the others that are fighting along side them.
Calling Aang, Katara and Sokka the only heroes of the story is like saying Frodo and Sam claimed victory for Middle-earth alone.
Anyway, here’s the new statement from Frank Marshall:
There are more than 3 heroes. The casting on this movie is finished, so let’s all take a deep breath and wait to see it.
Last Airbender Producer Frank Marshall Comments on Cast Diversity
Saturday, April 4th, 2009 by Specter
In a couple of recent twitter updates, producer Frank Marshall has commented on the state of the cast of The Last Airbender:
Our vision for the movie is of ONE world, made up of four Nations, influenced and inspired by the Asian undertones of the series.
This world will have an ethnically diverse cast that represents many different heritages and cultures from all corners of the globe.
And in response to a comment about the way that fans of the show are reacting, (gosh, these complainers are beginning to sound a bit maniacal…I’m sorry for you) he comments:
It’s ok, doesn’t bother me. The movie is actually more diverse than the TV show.
Bravo, Frank Marshall! Bravo indeed!
-via Twitter
Kennedy and Marshall re-team with Shyamalan for The Last Airbender
Thursday, April 17th, 2008 by Dr Malcolm CroweKathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall, who worked with Shyamalan on his blockbusters The Sixth Sense and Signs, will join M. Night Shyamalan, Sam Mercer and Scott Aversano as producers for The Last Airbender.
Kennedy and Marshall have had successful careers as producers, having produced blockbusters like the Indiana Jones and Jurassic Park film franchises. Also joining the team as Executive Producers will be Michael DiMartino & Bryan Konietzko, the creators of the popular TV series of which the film based.

