Xixax Film Forum

The Director's Chair => The Director's Chair => Topic started by: MacGuffin on May 23, 2006, 02:26:37 PM

Title: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on May 23, 2006, 02:26:37 PM
Lee's future will include 'Lust,' WWII
Source: Hollywood Reporter

CANNES -- Oscar winner Ang Lee is reuniting with longtime collaborator James Schamus and Focus Features to direct his follow-up to "Brokeback Mountain," the espionage thriller "Lust, Caution." Set in World War II-era Shanghai, the Chinese-language film is expected to begin production this fall. The film will be exec produced by Focus CEO Schamus. The screenplay will be adapted from Eileen Chang's short story by Lee's "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" screenwriter Wang Hui-Ling. Bill Koning, who produced "Crouching Tiger" is reteaming with Lee to produce, and Schamus will serve as exec producer. "Ang is going to be making a very exciting film that's unlike anything he's done before," said Schamus, who's collaborated with Lee on nine features." 'Lust, Caution' is a uniquely Asian story which, in Ang's hands, will surprise and attract audiences around the world." Focus has worldwide rights to the film, excluding Asia. Focus Features International is handling overseas sales and distribution.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on June 19, 2006, 10:43:34 AM
Lee Eyes Tony Leung Chiu-Wai for Movie

Oscar winner Ang Lee has approached Hong Kong's Tony Leung Chiu-wai about appearing in his upcoming spy thriller, "Lust, Caution," Lee's assistant said Sunday.

"It hasn't been confirmed yet. We have approached him, but we won't finalize all the characters until we choose a female lead," the director's assistant, David Lee, told The Associated Press in a phone interview.

"We haven't decided on a female lead," David Lee said.

"Lust, Caution," based on a novel by Eileen Chang, marks Ang Lee's return to Chinese-language film after several English-language productions including "The Hulk" and most recently, the gay romance "Brokeback Mountain," for which he won best director Oscar this year.

Observers are closely watching Ang Lee's casting choices to see if he will produce another female star. Lee's box office hit "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," helped propel Zhang Ziyi to stardom. Zhang went on to star in Hollywood movies like "Rush Hour 2" and "Memoirs of a Geisha."

Lee has reportedly said he wants to cast a Taiwanese actress to boost the island's struggling film industry.

David Lee said filming for "Lust, Caution" will begin in the fall in Shanghai and Hong Kong.

Tony Leung Chui-wai won best actor at Cannes in 2000 for his role in Wong Kar-wai's romance "In the Mood for Love." Leung also appeared in Wong's gay love story "Happy Together" and the crime thriller "Infernal Affairs," which has been remade by Martin Scorsese as "The Departed."
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: Pwaybloe on June 19, 2006, 03:54:15 PM
No "Hulk 2," huh?  Son of a BITCH!
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: pete on June 20, 2006, 09:31:11 PM
Eileen Chang has always been like a prose writer.  I was never aware that she wrote espinoge thrillers!
yeah, get someone from Taiwan.  I'll be there in a few days.  maybe I should put on a wig.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on July 17, 2006, 09:05:20 PM
Ang Lee finds stars for World War II thriller
Source: Hollywood Reporter

Director Ang Lee has found the two stars for his follow-up to "Brokeback Mountain."

Tony Leung and film newcomer Tang Wei have landed lead roles in the World War II espionage thriller "Lust, Caution," which is set up at Focus Features.

Leung stars as a powerful Shanghai politician who becomes entangled with a young woman (Tang). Chinese pop idol and actor Wang Lee Hom also has been cast, as a student involved with the woman. In the short story written by the late Chinese author Eileen Chang, a main character tries to seduce and assassinate a Chinese spy working for the Japanese government.

Leung has gained international stardom in such films as Wong Kar-wai's "In the Mood for Love" and Zhang Yimou's "Hero." Wei has appeared in stage and screen performances.

"It's exciting for me to be making a movie in China again and to finally be working with Tony Leung on a project," Lee said. "Tang Wei has already shown such versatility in her early work."
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: pete on July 18, 2006, 09:15:35 AM
wong lee hom?  he's big over here in Taiwan, and he's from Boston!  represent.
it took me like three years after everybody to come up with the Ang Lee/ Hulk joke to come up with it on my own: "don't make me anglee, you wouldn't like me when I'm anglee".  I was pretty proud of this one until all the people I've told it to have heard it or made it already.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: hedwig on July 20, 2006, 08:05:01 AM
Quote from: pete on July 18, 2006, 09:15:35 AM
wong lee hom?  he's big over here in Taiwan, and he's from Boston!  represent.
it took me like three years after everybody to come up with the Ang Lee/ Hulk joke to come up with it on my own: "don't make me anglee, you wouldn't like me when I'm anglee".  I was pretty proud of this one until all the people I've told it to have heard it or made it already.
dude, i can't believe it took you that long, that was comPETE-LEE obvious. (https://xixax.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fmessenger.msn.com%2FMMM2006-04-19_17.00%2FResource%2Femoticons%2Fconfused_smile.gif&hash=58954476bd4ba38b979c4ac5c82e2215eaf4998d)
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: Gold Trumpet on July 23, 2006, 12:51:12 AM
Ang Lee is growing on me all the time. I use to compare him to Steven Soderbergh with the way both filmmakers marry many styles and genres to their own identity, but Ang Lee is winning the creativity war. The unifying element in all of Soderbergh's work is his preference for hand held camera work. The unifying element for Ang Lee is his quiet patience that gets the best out of every story. I believe Soderbergh is at the mercy of the source or genre he is experimenting with. He added very little to Solaris beyond what we already could have expected. His refusal to do so was probably his respect for the original film but it also meant a discredit to his own film. Soberbergh finds complacency and acceptability in every genre and thus aligns his filmmaking to pay respect to every genre he touches. Then the fact that the unifying element in all his films is a technical device makes it even more clear. His filmmmaking is the work of an impresario. Ang Lee's interest in story and quiet refusal to pay respects to every genre he touches is the work of an artist.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: pete on July 23, 2006, 01:25:33 AM
I think it's even simpler than that.  Ang Lee is just not very sophisticated.  he's a very traditional guy, as you must have come to realize, all of his films deal with one's duty to his family and society vs. one's own will...etc. etc.  He's not going to do crazy film developing processes or use filmic language too innovative, because he's not savvy like that.  That simplicity has served Lee well, as he abandons pizzazz for why he thinks people go to see movies in the first place, to be moved and to resonate.  He's a very traditional director in that sense.  His pairing with James Schamus is just brilliant, since Schamus will bring Lee all sorts of real savvy and crazy materials for Lee to chew through and digest.  Then they come up with a script together, with Schamus taking care of the savvy stuff, making sure that Lee doesn't get too cornball or too traditional.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on February 02, 2007, 12:15:47 AM
Focus' Schamus brings back 'Game'
Lee attached to direct project
Source: Variety

Focus Features co-chair James Schamus has revived "A Little Game" -- months after the project imploded -- and brought in frequent collaborator Ang Lee to direct.

Project is expected to be Lee's next project after "Lust, Caution," his World War II-era pic set in Shanghai. "Game" will mark his third straight pic for Focus after "Brokeback Mountain" and "Lust, Caution."

Schamus is rewriting the romantic comedy, an adaptation of a French play called "A Little Game of Consequence." It centers on a happily engaged Brooklyn couple who decide to play an experiment on their friends; when a rumor goes around that they have broken up, they play along to find out what their pals really think of their coupling.

WAM Films is producing the pic, with Alain Chabot and Stephanie Danan as producers and Bruno Pesery as exec producer. Jean Dell and Gerald Sibleyras penned the French play.

Jim Carrey and Cameron Diaz had been set to play the leads, but they abruptly exited the project weeks before it was set to begin lensing in early October amid concerns about the quality of the script.

Focus dismissed helmer Gabriele Muccino ("The Pursuit of Happyness"), but Schamus remained committed to getting the project off the ground.

Project reps the 11th collaboration between Lee and Schamus. Besides "Brokeback" and "Lust, Caution," they worked on "The Ice Storm," "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and "Hulk."
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: pete on February 02, 2007, 12:51:30 PM
Quote"Game" will mark his third straight pic for Focus after "Brokeback Mountain" and "Lust, Caution."

?
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: picolas on April 13, 2008, 09:58:37 PM
i may get to ask ang lee 1 question in a week. if you guys can think of a better one than me i may ask it.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: picolas on April 19, 2008, 06:31:32 PM
Xaxclusive

he seemed to have no doubt his next film would be "A Little Game" though he only referred to it as a "60s comedy", and he has a vague idea of maybe shooting digitally so he can cover the action from multiple angles even though he once had a fantasy about being "the last man standing" in the film vs. digital war.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on April 22, 2008, 05:30:19 PM
Ang Lee, Focus trek to 'Woodstock'
Source: Hollywood Reporter

NEW YORK -- Ang Lee is again teaming with Focus Features CEO James Schamus to direct the gay-themed Woodstock memoir "Taking Woodstock."

Focus will produce and Schamus will adapt Elliot Tiber's 2007 book, "Taking Woodstock: A True Story of a Riot, a Concert, and a Life." It centers on the colorful life of a Greenwich Village-based interior designer and part-time Catskills hotel manager who headed the Bethel, N.Y., Chamber of Commerce. He issued the permit for the legendary 1969 concert on his neighbor Max Yasgur's farm.

Lee and Schamus' most recent collaboration was Focus' Chinese-language drama "Lust, Caution," which earned $66 million worldwide. The writing-directing pair had their breakthrough indie hit with the gay-themed comedy "The Wedding Banquet" in 1993, and Lee directed Focus' biggest hit, the gay Western "Brokeback Mountain," in 2005.

There have been several Woodstock docus but few narrative films touching on the music festival, one of the few being Tony Goldwyn's "A Walk on the Moon."

Tiber wrote his Square One Publishers memoir with Tom Monte.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on May 02, 2008, 01:08:45 AM
Demetri Martin heads to 'Woodstock'
Comedian takes lead role in Ang Lee film
Source: Variety

Comedian Demetri Martin is in negotiations for the starring role in Ang Lee's next project, "Taking Woodstock," for Focus Features.

Martin is best known for his "Trendspotting" segment on "The Daily Show With Jon Stewart."

Film is based on Elliot Tiber's memoir, which is being adapted by Focus topper James Schamus. Tiber wrote the book -- which was published last year -- with Tom Monte.

Martin will star as Tiber, an in-the-closet gay man working at his parents' motel in the Catskills, who inadvertently sets in motion the generation-defining concert in the summer of 1969. Focus is eyeing a late August start date.

Martin's upcoming films include Fox Atomic's "The Rocker" and Universal's "Kids in America." He also wrote and is attached to star in DreamWorks' "Will," which Jon Stewart is exec producing.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on August 06, 2008, 12:10:35 AM
'Taking Woodstock' set to start
Emile Hirsch, Demetri Martin to star in Ang Lee pic
Source: Variety

Focus Features will begin production late this month on "Taking Woodstock," scripted by James Schamus and to be directed by Ang Lee.

Lee's ensemble cast includes Emile Hirsch, Imelda Staunton and Liev Schreiber.

Pic is an adaptation of the memoir of Elliot Tiber, who played a role in helping the historic 1969 music fest unfold on his neighbor's farm.

Less than a month ago, Focus had been thinking about postponing the start of production over concerns that a possible Screen Actors Guild strike could force a shutdown later this year. But numerous studios have begun to move forward on feature starts, and it's understood that Focus has worked out contingency plans in the event of a work stoppage.

Demetri Martin ("The Daily Show With Jon Stewart") had already been set to play Tiber, an aspiring interior designer in Greenwich Village obliged to run the family business, a Catskills motel. In summer 1969, he found himself at the center of a generation-defining experience when he volunteered the motel to be the home base for Woodstock concert organizers after his neighbor, Max Yasgur, made his farm available for the event.

Staunton and Henry Goodman will play Tiber's parents, and Jonathan Groff (currently starring in the Shakespeare in the Park production of "Hair" in Gotham) will play Woodstock organizer Michael Lang; Hirsch will play a recently returned Vietnam vet, Eugene Levy will play Yasgur, and Schreiber is in talks to play a transvestite named Vilma.

Jeffrey Dean Morgan is set as a closeted married man having an affair with Tiber, while Paul Dano and Zoe Kazan play a hippie couple attending the concert. Dan Fogler will play a local theater troupe head, and Mamie Gummer will play Lang's assistant.

Focus Features CEO Schamus will produce with Lee. Celia Costas ("Angels in America") is executive producer.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: Convael on August 06, 2008, 01:52:13 AM
Good, I got pretty nervous for Emile Hirsch after Speed Racer totally fucking bombed.  Hope he gets some good roles in the next year(s).
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: matt35mm on August 06, 2008, 03:06:44 AM
That.  Is a very interesting cast.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on October 02, 2008, 01:06:54 AM
Ang Lee is filming comedy on 1969 Woodstock concert

Taiwan-born film director Ang Lee, known for such box office hits as "Lust, Caution" and "Brokeback Mountain," is filming a comedy on Woodstock ahead of the landmark countercultural event's 40th anniversary, his spokesman said.

The film "Taking Woodstock," based on a book by a man who allowed the hippie-dominated music festival to take place in 1969 before half a million fans, will be the director's first comedy and his third look at homosexuality.

Oscar-winning Lee is shooting the film with Focus Features near the Woodstock location in New York state with an eye toward releasing it next year, spokesman David Lee said.

He declined to elaborate on the plot, the budget or the director's reasons for getting involved. "I'm not in a position to discuss details of the film," he said.

The film follows the book "Taking Woodstock, a True Story of a Riot, a Concert, and a Life," by Elliot Tiber, who was instrumental in bringing the controversial concert of unprecedented scale to his region.

Lee found the movie theme when Tiber met him randomly in a San Francisco green room before a televised book promotion, said Dan Bloom, a Taiwan-based writer who has interviewed sources close to the film.

"A lot of people are going to wonder how a guy born in Taiwan can do this," Bloom said. "Ang Lee doesn't choose his movies. His movies choose him."

Broadly speaking, Bloom said, "Taking Woodstock" is about sizing up one's own life and controlling one's own destiny.

Lee, 53, lives in the United States and has explored other symbols of Americana, such as cowboys in "Brokeback Mountain" and the comic book character Hulk in a movie of the same name.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: modage on January 12, 2009, 03:07:55 PM
Taking Woodstock, the new film from Academy Award-winning director Ang Lee, is a 1969-set true story about a man, Elliot Tiber (Demetri Martin), who inadvertently played a pivotal role in making the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival into the famed happening it was. Mr. Tiber found himself swept up in a generation-defining experience that would change his life, and American culture, forever. Based on the book by Mr. Tiber with Tom Monte, the screenplay adaptation is by Mr. Schamus. The cast also includes Emile Hirsch, Imelda Staunton, Henry Goodman, Jonathan Groff, Mamie Gummer, Eugene Levy, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, and Liev Schreiber. Taking Woodstock opens in select cities on August 14th.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on February 17, 2009, 11:29:41 PM
Ang Lee circles 'Life of Pi' film
Director in talks with Fox 2000 to adapt novel
Source: Variety

Ang Lee is in talks to direct "Life of Pi," the Fox 2000 adaptation of Yann Martel's coming-of-age survival tale.

Novel revolves around a youth who is the lone survivor of a sunken freighter and winds up sharing a lifeboat with a hyena, an injured zebra, an orangutan and a hungry Bengal tiger.

The novel, which won the Man Booker Prize, was a global publishing phenomenon when Fox 2000's Elizabeth Gabler acquired rights to the tome.

Gil Netter is producing.

The project has been through several incarnations, first with scribe Dean Georgaris, then M. Night Shyamalan. Lee will supervise a new script. Studio will hire a writer shortly.

Project was most recently developed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet, who wrote a script with his "Amelie" collaborator Guillaume Laurent.

Lee, who last directed "Lust, Caution" and "Brokeback Mountain," most recently completed "Taking Woodstock," an adaptation of the Tom Monte book. Focus Features releases the film in August.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: SiliasRuby on February 26, 2009, 02:21:42 PM
I'm very excited about 'taking woodstock' since I know 60's and 70's music and counterculture like the back of my hand. This 'life of pi', some people might go because they think its the sequel to darren aronofsky's debut film.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: pete on March 17, 2009, 01:34:36 AM
I just came back from a talk with him and james schamus.  he showed a 4-minute clip of taking woodstock.  it was a pretty funny scene, in the classic billy wilder sense.  he even said so himself.  dimitri martin was great.  he said he just wanted to have fun with this shoot, so they picked the most enjoyable people to work with and had a blast.  he said it was hard cutting the film together though, same problem he ran into working on the ice storm.  they're done cutting now though.

he said he's still developing a script for life of pi, but nothing's set in stone, and he's still trying to figure out how to approach it and adapt it.  he said if it was something that already could be a movie, then he wouldn't've done it, life's too short.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on January 21, 2010, 11:17:25 AM
James Schamus and Ang Lee noodling with a new project
By Jay A. Fernandez; Hollywood Reporter

THR's Matthew Belloni and Stephen Galloway sat down with Focus Features CEO James Schamus in advance of his receiving the Hollywood Reporter's Indie Icon of the Year award up at the Sundance Film Festival Friday.

They covered a lot of ground, but among the moments that stand out of the interview is mention of a new project Schamus has just begun writing for his frequent collaborator Ang Lee ("Hulk," "Lust, Caution," "Taking Woodstock"). Schamus jauntily describes the unnamed material as "going back to the good old, tragic, suicidally depressing Ang!"

Schamus also strenuously defends Focus as a solid indie space in the face of multiple closures in the last few years. He claims that the resources he's being given to create a continuing slate mean that Focus isn't going anywhere.

Which bodes well for the presence of another solid potential buyer up at Sundance, which launches tomorrow.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on April 28, 2010, 05:49:18 PM
Ang Lee Explores 'The Life of Pi' in 3D
by Alison Nastasi; Cinematical

Fox 2000 acquired the rights to Yann Martel's Booker Prize winner, The Life of Pi, seven years ago. In the intervening years, the book has languished in development hell. Directors like M. Night Shyamalan, Jean-Pierre Jeunet, and Alfonso Cuaron have all been involved with the attempt to bring Martel's story to the big screen -- and each has bowed out. The latest name to take on the project is none other than Ang Lee. Indiewire's In Production blog is reporting that the director is now onboard and the title is waiting for a greenlight from Fox in order to begin shooting later this summer.

The international bestseller is about a teenage boy who survives a shipwreck by climbing aboard a lifeboat with a tiger, a hyena and a zebra. The producers are looking to procure a budget in the $70 million range, partially to cover the film's elaborate CG costs and to make it a 3D feature. Obviously, the animals will be computer-generated, since having a tiger and other assorted beasts on a lifeboat sounds like a recipe for disaster.

Producer Elizabeth Gabler had this to say about what they hope to accomplish with the project: "It has elements of Castaway, when the kid is alone in the boat. You don't need language to convey what's on the screen. We need to make the movie for the whole world." It's a lofty ambition, but is Ang Lee the one to realize it? Lee's had an up-and-down career over the past few years -- earning praise and success for films like Brokeback Mountain and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, but seeing disappointing returns for his version of The Hulk and Taking Woodstock. Will Pi get him back on track? Gabler hopes The Life of Pi will lens this August and be released 2012.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: Pubrick on April 28, 2010, 06:11:43 PM
well the good thing is it's already more interesting than Snoozing Woodstock.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on May 28, 2010, 12:33:48 AM
'Life of Pi' suffers another blow
Source: Los Angeles Times

EXCLUSIVE: Speaking of difficult books and the development challenges that accompany them, here comes another example, and it's a high-profile one.

"Life of Pi," Yann Martel's bestselling Booker Prize winner that has had more development go-rounds than a male Bengal tiger has mates, may  be on its way back to the development cage. Eclectic director Ang Lee had been set to shoot the movie, possibly even  in 3-D, but budget concerns appear to be putting the project on hold.

Lee and producer Gil Netter have returned to Fox 2000 with a budget that sources say is too high for the studio division. (A recent Indiewire piece  put it in the $70 million range.)

The filmmakers can still reconfigure the budget, but until they do, the film isn't moving forward. (Netter didn't immediately return a call for comment.)

That the project remains active at all is at least partly thanks to the devotion of  Gabler, who has been hugely keen on a "Pi" film.

Gabler has a fair amount of clout within Fox, and Fox 2000 has been highly profitable for the studio with other mid-budget book-based movies, such as "Marley & Me" and "The Devil Wears Prada." But those films, of course, had commercial hooks. This one, about a boy named Pi who finds himself trapped on a boat with a tiger after a shipwreck that sees many other animals meet their end, could be difficult to market (and, it should be noted, difficult to film).

If the Lee version doesn't work out, it wouldn't be the first time a name-brand director took on, then wound up separating from, a "Pi" adaptation.

Genre notables like M. Night Shyamalan and Alfonso Cuaron, along with French auteur Jean-Pierre Jeunet, have all been on board to direct a version of the film at some point. Fox is generally cost-conscious, and the fact that this movie, despite its bestseller status, can be a tricky shoot has them especially concerned -- particularly given the high number of CG creatures, as well as the water-bound location, which tends to drive up budgets in general.  On top of all that, "Pi" is exactly the kind of specialized, non-tentpole movie that nearly all studios are staying away from these days.

The title character in "Life of Pi" survived a difficult 227 days on a raft floating through dangerous waters. The film project may have to endure even more.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on October 26, 2010, 02:33:44 PM
Indian teen newcomer gets 'Life of Pi' lead
Ang Lee to start lensing early next year
Source: Variety

Fox 2000's bigscreen adaptation of Yann Martel's tome "Life of Pi" is at last rowing off to sea, with Ang Lee set to start lensing the fantasy adventure early next year.

After a monthslong search during which 3,000 young men auditioned, Lee has cast 17-year-old newcomer Suraj Sharma in the title role. Sharma is a student who lives with his mathematician parents in Delhi, India. Fox will release the pic on Dec. 14, 2012.

"Life of Pi" will be Lee's first 3D pic and utilize state-of-the-art technology in rendering the adventure tale.

Lee will direct from a script by David Magee ("Finding Neverland"). Lee begins principal photography in January in Taiwan and India.

Gill Netter is producing "Life of Pi," which will be a large-scale, all-audience film.

"Pi" tells the story of a boy lost at sea for 227 days in a lifeboat with four unusual and increasingly hungry companions -- a Bengal tiger named Richard Parker, a hyena, a zebra and an orangutan -- after the ship carrying his family and its zoo animals sinks.

The novel, winner of the Man Booker Prize, was a global publishing phenom when Fox 2000's Elizabeth Gabler acquired rights. At that point, M. Night Shyamalan was attached to direct "Life of Pi," but he exited early on because of scheduling conflicts.

Lee boarded "Life of Pi" last year. Since then, Lee and the studio have been working on his vision for the film.

Lee was last in theaters with "Taking Woodstock" from Focus Features. Fox Filmed Entertainment co-chair Tom Rothman has worked with Lee three times before, on "The Wedding Banquet" and "Eat Drink Man Woman' at Samuel Goldwyn, and on "Ice Storm" at Fox Searchlight.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: Gold Trumpet on October 26, 2010, 02:52:46 PM
Awesome news. What I like with Ang Lee and this project, is that I feel no need to second guess or wonder about the project. I just want it to happen with Lee. Feel a little like a fan boy.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: MacGuffin on March 14, 2013, 10:55:58 PM
Steven Spielberg Drops Moses Biopic GODS AND KINGS; Warner Bros. Eyes Ang Lee as Replacement
Source: Collider

We have tracked the entire life cycle of Steven Spielberg's relationship with Gods and Kings, a Moses biopic written by Michael Green (Green Lantern) and Stuart Hazeldine (Exam).  Warner Bros. asked Spielberg in September 2011.  The director entered negotiations in November 2011.  He was reportedly near a deal in January 2012.  And now, according to Deadline, Spielberg has decided to drop the project.  This is sad news for Warner Bros., but now they are free to move on—after all, time is an issue, because ideally the studio would like to beat Ridley Scott's competing Moses biopic (now titled Exodus) in the race to the multiplex.  WB has reached out to Ang Lee to direct, now that he's caught up to Spielberg's two Best Director Oscars with his Life of Pi win.  Lee is said to be interested, but hasn't taken a formal meeting yet.

This is sure to be a high profile project once it gets the engine running, so we'll keep you posted.
Title: Re: Ang Lee
Post by: Pubrick on August 09, 2013, 12:29:25 PM
Ang Lee To Next Helm 3D Film With Classic Boxing Battles Including Ali-Frazier

By MIKE FLEMING JR | Thursday August 8, 2013 @ 10:16am PDT
source: Deadline (http://www.deadline.com/2013/08/ang-lee-to-next-helm-3d-film-with-classic-boxing-battles-including-ali-frazier/)


EXCLUSIVE: Ang Lee, who won the Oscar for directing Life Of Pi, will next take his 3D camera technology in a new intriguing direction. I've learned that Lee has set up his next project at Universal Pictures, and it's described to me as an epic look at the boxing world of the 1960s and 1970s, as seen through the prism of its biggest rivalries and greatest fights. That will include the showdown between Joe Frazier and Muhammad Ali that was called the Thrilla In Manila. Peter Morgan will write the script.

The movie will have a narrative that connects the 3D depiction of some of boxing's great fights, and Lee will produce the film with his longtime producing partner James Schamus. Schamus, who is CEO of Universal-based Focus Features, has collaborated in a writing/producing capacity with Lee on films that range from Eat Drink Man Woman to Sense And Sensibility, The Ice Storm, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Hulk and Brokeback Mountain. No one was commenting, so it was difficult to discern the narrative structure behind the movie, but as a guy who grew up in this era, I think there is thrilling potential in watching Lee get his 3D cameras in the boxing ring, focused on the sport's great fights from a heyday when everybody knew who was champ, when Ali, Frazer, George Foreman, Marvin Hagler, Tommy Hearns, Robert Duran, Sugar Ray Leonard and others were household names, and when there was no MMA around to steal boxing's thunder. The idea is to take the exploration of 3D technology and cutting-edge visual effects further, as James Cameron is doing on his Avatar sequels.