Xixax Film Forum

The Director's Chair => The Director's Chair => Topic started by: filmcritic on June 18, 2003, 01:21:12 PM

Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: filmcritic on June 18, 2003, 01:21:12 PM
Alfonso Cuaron is a really interesting director. His best film was "Y Tu Mama Tambien" but it looks like he'll be directing the new "Harry Potter" film coming out next year. What a departure that will be for him! :shock:

(//)
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: bonanzataz on June 18, 2003, 01:55:01 PM
this isn't a departure at all. "y tu mama" was the departure. his american movies were "a little princess" and "great expectations. i hope the previews for the new harry potter movie go something like "from the director of Y Tu Mama Tambien" comes the years most talked about erotic drama.

if the movie doesn't end with ron and harry swordfighting in hermione's mouth, i'm going to be very disappointed.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on June 18, 2003, 02:09:09 PM
Quote from: bonanzatazif the movie doesn't end with ron and harry swordfighting in hermione's mouth, i'm going to be very disappointed.

:shock:  Is that what the premise for "Harry Potter & The Goblet of Fire" is?
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: chainsmoking insomniac on June 19, 2003, 09:12:36 AM
:lol:
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: The Silver Bullet on June 19, 2003, 09:22:47 AM
Harry is going to have to have sex sometime in the next two books. He is like sixteen or something. And he is famous. And a wizard.

Dammit! I know I'd have sex with him!






Fuck.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on March 25, 2004, 10:13:00 PM
According to Variety, Alfonso Cuarón who directed and co-wrote the hit road movie "Y tu mama tambien," starring Diego Luna and Gael Garcia Bernal, will direct his next Spanish-language pic in Mexico. He'll take a bit of a break first after having wrapped directing the third Harry Potter installment, "The Prisoner of Azkaban," slated for a worldwide June release.

His next project will take on a more serious topic, the bloody student revolt of 1968 in Mexico, according to producer Jorge Vergara. "The Crime of Father Amaro" screenwriter Vicente Lenero is penning the script to "Mexico '68."
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: ElPandaRoyal on March 26, 2004, 04:31:50 AM
Quote from: MacGuffinAccording to Variety, Alfonso Cuarón who directed and co-wrote the hit road movie "Y tu mama tambien," starring Diego Luna and Gael Garcia Bernal, will direct his next Spanish-language pic in Mexico. He'll take a bit of a break first after having wrapped directing the third Harry Potter installment, "The Prisoner of Azkaban," slated for a worldwide June release.

His next project will take on a more serious topic, the bloody student revolt of 1968 in Mexico, according to producer Jorge Vergara. "The Crime of Father Amaro" screenwriter Vicente Lenero is penning the script to "Mexico '68."

This should be very interesting.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: godardian on March 28, 2004, 11:19:49 PM
Quote from: RoyalTenenbaum
Quote from: MacGuffinAccording to Variety, Alfonso Cuarón who directed and co-wrote the hit road movie "Y tu mama tambien," starring Diego Luna and Gael Garcia Bernal, will direct his next Spanish-language pic in Mexico. He'll take a bit of a break first after having wrapped directing the third Harry Potter installment, "The Prisoner of Azkaban," slated for a worldwide June release.

His next project will take on a more serious topic, the bloody student revolt of 1968 in Mexico, according to producer Jorge Vergara. "The Crime of Father Amaro" screenwriter Vicente Lenero is penning the script to "Mexico '68."

This should be very interesting.

Absolutely. A Mexican Dreamers...???
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: Pubrick on March 29, 2004, 07:53:40 AM
Quote from: godardianAbsolutely. A Mexican Dreamers...???
hahah, the ironing is delicious.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on May 27, 2004, 05:42:20 PM
Cuaron Mulls SF Film

Mexican-born director Alfonso Cuaron (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban) told SCI FI Wire that his next film might very well be a science fiction movie, Children of Men. "That's a big possibility," Cuaron said in an interview. "I need to see what happens at the end of this [Azkaban] process. I would love to do that."

Cuaron added that he would also write Children of Men. "It's not really science-fiction," he said. "It's the world 30 years from now, [a time] in which for 18 years no human child has been born, for unknown reasons. Civilizations are falling apart. England is the last remaining civilization as we know it, because it's an island that's insulated itself from Europe, which is in civil wars and complete pandemonium. So the story takes place in that context. It's a story about hope and faith."
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on November 24, 2004, 12:41:29 PM
Cuaron Inks Warner Bros. Deal
Under his new three-year, first-look deal, Alfonso Cuaron will develop both mainstream and Spanish-language films.

Mexican director Alfonso Cuaron (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban) has signed a three-year, first-look production deal with Warner Bros. under which he will be able to develop both mainstream films and smaller, Spanish-language movies in Mexico.

The deal is unique in that the smaller, Spanish-language films will be developed through Cuaron's offices in Mexico and will be produced by Warner's local-language production division. Juan Tovar will head the Mexico office, where Cuaron's brother, Carlos Cuaron, will serve as a consultant.

Cuaron will also have an office in New York, run by Frida Torresblanco. Cuaron's own production company, Anhelo, will continue to exist independently of the WB deal.

In addition to Prisoner of Azkaban, Cuaron teamed with Warner on the English-language film A Little Princess. He just finished serving as a producer on ThinkFilm's The Assassination of Richard Nixon, starring Sean Penn.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on January 28, 2005, 11:11:22 AM
Cuaron Up & RUNNING
With one Harry Potter film under his belt for Warner Bros., Alfonso Cuaron will now develop a big screen adaptation of Ron McLarty's The Memory of Running. Source: FilmStew.com

Through his new, three-year deal with Warner Bros., Alfonso Cuaron will develop a big screen adaptation of the Ron McLarty novel The Memory of Running, which Cuaron may also direct. Cuaron will produce through his new, unnamed, studio-based shingle with Frida Torresblanco serving as a co-producer.

McLarty adapted his novel for the big screen. The story centers on a overweight Vietnam vet who has been utterly depressed about the death of his parents. When he finds out his sister has passed away, he starts on a cross-country bicycle journey in an effort to reclaim her body.

Warner Bros. picked up the rights to the project back in 2003 for an estimated $1 million. The studio also recently acquired the rights to the Nicolas Krass novel The History of Love as a directing vehicle for Cuaron, who will develop mainstream and smaller Spanish-language films through his new Warner shingle.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: Finn on March 16, 2005, 04:14:43 PM
I think he's a brilliant director who seems to reinvent his style with every movie. His best film is easily Great Expectations, but Y Tu Mama Tambien and A Little Princess were terrific too. The only thing that connects those movies is some of his artsy camera tricks and the color green, but that's about it. His characters and stories are completly different with every movie. I liked what he did with the new Harry Potter movie as well. I hope he keeps it up and I'm looking forward to Mexico '66.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: modage on April 01, 2005, 09:17:05 AM
Alfonso Cuaron in Talks for Life of Pi
Source: Variety April 1, 2005

Only a few days after M. Night Shyamalan decided to make Lady in the Water as his next film at Warner Brothers, Fox 2000 Pictures has begun talks with director Alfonso Cuaron ("Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban") to helm their adaptation of Yann Martel's bestselling novel "Life of Pi".

Dean Georgaris (Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life, Paycheck) has written a draft of the screenplay.

Cuaron's agent contacted Fox 2000 to offer the director's services when Shyamalan turned his back on the project to which his name has been attached since October 2003.

Cuaron is currently casting "Children of Men" at Universal, and a deal needs to be worked out with Warner Brothers, where Cuaron is based. He's also attached to a film adaptation of Nicole Krauss' forthcoming novel The History of Love for Warner Bros. Cuaron would reteam with Potter producer David Heyman on that film.

Life of Pi is an adventure tale that centers on Pi Patel, the brassy son of a zookeeper from Pondicherry, India. When the family hitches a ride on a freighter, in the process of moving to Canada, there is a shipwreck and Pi is later found adrift in the Pacific on a 26-foot lifeboat with a zebra, a hyena, an orangutan and a Bengal tiger.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: matt35mm on April 01, 2005, 01:35:53 PM
Oh crap, I told a friend that Shymalan was directing Life of Pi.  Now he's gonna think I lied.

What's a Mexican doing being in talks to direct this?  Psh.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on April 27, 2005, 11:04:54 PM
Actor Owen to Labor for 'Children'

Clive Owen, whose supporting performance in "Closer" earned him an Oscar nomination, has signed on to topline "Children of Men" for Strike Entertainment and Universal Pictures.

Alfonso Cuaron ("Y tu mama tambien," "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban") is directing the feature film adaptation of the book by mystery writer by P.D. James.

"Children of Men" takes place in the near future, when mankind has lost the ability to procreate and the world is rocked by the news that the youngest person on Earth -- who is 18 years old -- has died. As chaos erupts, a former radical (Owen) becomes protector of the most sought-after person on the planet -- the first pregnant woman in almost 20 years.

The project initially was scripted by Paul Chart and then rewritten by Mark Fergus and Hawk Otsby. Cuaron had rewritten it with his writing partner Timothy Sexton and David Arata.
Title: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: Pubrick on April 27, 2005, 11:10:39 PM
so much for the History of Love, Life of Pi, the Memory of Running, and Mexico '68.

he's like the mexican shekhar kapur. even tho i said kapur was like the indian Iñárritu.  :shock:
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: matt35mm on November 22, 2005, 09:35:52 PM
Quote from: matt35mm on April 01, 2005, 01:35:53 PM
Oh crap, I told a friend that Shymalan was directing Life of Pi.  Now he's gonna think I lied.

What's a Mexican doing being in talks to direct this?  Psh.
I take my words back.  I would like to see anything this Mexican directs.

I just saw A Little Princess and I think it might possibly be the best movie ever made.

I wholeheartedly look forward to "Children of Men."
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: Pozer on November 23, 2005, 01:35:46 PM
He's definitely a MexiCAN and not a MexiCAN'T.
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on March 09, 2006, 10:41:06 AM
Fame goes to film director Cuaron's heart not head

Fame has not gone to Mexican film director Alfonso Cuaron's head but to his heart.

Oscar nominee Cuaron, whose movies include critical hit "Y Tu Mama Tambien" and box office smash "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban," is using his new prestige to support younger filmmakers by acting as a producer of their movies.

He says its keeps him close to cutting-edge talent making fresh and relevant movies, and for the filmmakers, putting his name and his company, Esperanto Films, above a title gives it a world-class seal of approval which lures fans to theaters.

Cuaron's latest show of support is for fellow Mexican director Fernando Eimbcke's comedy "Duck Season," which opens on Friday in U.S. theaters. The film covers one afternoon in the lives of two Mexican teen-agers spending the day at home.

"I'm reaching an age," begins the 44-year-old Cuaron, "and I've been following and trying to emulate the old masters for all my life. And there's a moment in which you need to push the energy of a new generation, and the questioning of a new generation and the times that a new generation is absorbing."

Cuaron is backing up-and-coming talents like Eimbcke, who has yet to make a name for himself on the world stage as Cuaron did. "Duck Season" is 35-year-old Eimbcke's first feature-length film. It has won numerous awards including 11 Ariels, Mexico's top movie honors given by the Academia Mexicana de Artes y Ciencias Cinematograficas. The movie is planned for release in some 30 countries eventually.

CINEMATIC VISION

What sets "Duck Season" apart is Eimbcke's vision. In many movies, the director's vision becomes secondary to the movie's plot, characters and dialogue, but in "Duck Season," those elements are married together in service of Eimbcke's idea of what the movie should be, Cuaron said.

"The narrative is hostage to the cinematic vision, and when that happens, poetry springs out," Cuaron said.

Like most boys at home on a day away from school, Flama and Moko, both 14, spend time playing video games, but when the electricity goes off in their apartment, they are forced to find other ways to occupy their day.

The pair time a pizza delivery, and when it comes 11 seconds beyond the promised 30 minutes, Flama demands a free meal. A neighbor Rita, 16, comes over to bake a cake, and sexual tension develops between her and Moko.

It all seems harmless, but what audiences learn is the kids are largely ignored by their parents, causing them to be resentful and angry. The pizza delivery man, who stays through the day, feels as if his life has been a failure.

Much of what is revealed comes not through plot or dialogue, but in the characters' actions as when the boys fire pellets at decorations Flama's mother has put on shelves.

Eimbcke filmed the movie in black-and-white to give it a simple and natural look that offsets the complex emotions of the characters.

'DUCK SEASON' AROUND THE WORLD

Cuaron said there are lessons to be learned for all world cultures -- not just Mexico -- in the day's adventures for Flama, Moko, Rita and the pizza delivery man.

"It's proof that human behavior is the same no matter the language, no matter the culture," he said.

And he is looking even further down the road at younger filmmakers, saying that people in their late teens and early 20s possess a "fearless" attitude about filmmaking because computers and technology have evolved to a point where they can easily make short movies.

"For them, cinema is something that is already in their blood, and they don't ask for permission to do things, they just pick up a little camera and go and do stuff," he said.

While Cuaron has taken an active role in promoting other filmmakers, he continues to work on his own projects.

He has co-written and directed a film, "The Children of Men," about a former social activist who aids a pregnant woman whose child may help scientists save mankind.

It is due in theaters in September.

After that, he said, "it's time for a big siesta."
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on April 14, 2006, 02:48:17 AM
Children of Men
Serenity's Ejiofor comments on the Cuaron Film.

You may not be able to pronounce it yet, but the name Chiwetel Ejiofor is starting to gain recognition in Hollywood. Serenity fans will likely recognize the actor as The Operative in the feature film. A few of his other credits include the recent Spike Lee hit, The Inside Man as well as Melinda and Melinda, Four Brothers and Love Actually.

At a recent interview for the new film Kinky Boots by director Julian Jarrold, IGN FilmForce had the chance to ask the actor about his work on Alfonso Cuaron's (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban) upcoming film, Children of Men.

Ejiofor explains the plot: "It's sort of set a short time in the future with general sort of political societal collapses as well as these issues of fertility that have created a very enraged and complex society, and it's based on the Peter James novel. Alfonso, I think, has adapted and written a terrific script, and a really good cast of people have come together to shoot the film. And I think he's an amazing director. And I think the work that we were doing on the film is just exceptional. It's one of those things that I don't think anybody's ever really seen before…in terms of a visual sense, and the nature of the way he's pulled out characterizations and so on, I think, is very unique, so it would be an intriguing time… I think it's really going to be quite interesting to see when it comes out."

"I play, along with Julianne Moore, the heads of an anti-government group that is sort of existing on the fringes of society, and we sort of try to get the allegiance of Clive Owens' character."
 
Serenity and Children both have futuristic themes, but Ejiofor says the similarities end there. "I mean, Serenity was different in the sense that it was a very kind of broad, operatic science fiction with all the great stuff that that has. And this is much more...it almost feels like a drama that just has a scientific, or a sci-fi touch because it's set in the future, but could easily be set in the present. So they were very distinct in that sense, and there's not that kind of idea of loads of green screen and massive wires. You know, there's not that kind of operatic science fiction feel to it...to Children of Men."
Title: Love in the Time of Hysteria
Post by: MacGuffin on September 06, 2006, 12:11:18 PM
Cuarón Fans Prepare to Travel Back in TIME
Director Alfonso Cuarón has made quite a name for himself in both English and Spanish language cinema, but American audiences have yet to see his first film, until now.
By FilmStew.com

A movie by Mexican director Alfonso Cuarón will make its US debut at a tribute to the filmmaker at the Lincoln Center in New York City this month, but it's not a new picture. Daily Variety reports US audiences will get their first look at Love in the Time of Hysteria, his 1991 debut film which was never released in the US. The film will also be released on DVD by the Criterion Collection the same day. 

Cuarón's films include the critically acclaimed retelling of the children's book A Little Princess, as well as an updated Great Expectations, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and the hit Spanish language comedy Y Tu Mama Tambien. His latest film, Children of Men screened over the weekend in competition at the Venice Film Festival. Love in a Time of Hysteria is a comedy about a nurse getting her revenge on a yuppie lothario by tampering with his medical records.

Cuarón says he's unsure what film he'll do next - probably a project in Mexico.
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on March 13, 2007, 10:58:52 PM
(https://xixax.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.hollywoodreporter.com%2Fhr%2Fphotos%2Fstylus%2F3283.jpg&hash=899893f2ffe6c6895df25459bc5bc9127fe39e40)

Dialogue: Alfonso Cuaron
The filmmaker of "Children of Men" discusses the increasingly global movie business.
Source: Hollywood Reporter

It has been a remarkable year for Mexican filmmakers and especially for Alfonso Cuaron, who had two films in contention at this year's Oscars -- "Children of Men," which he co-wrote and directed, and "Pan's Labyrinth," which he produced. On the eve of receiving ShoWest's International Achievement in Filmmaking Award, he spoke with The Hollywood Reporter's Stephen Galloway about the increasingly global movie business.

The Hollywood Reporter: You have made films in Spanish and English; you have lived in New York, and now you live in London. Do you think of yourself as a Mexican filmmaker?
Alfonso Cuaron: My nation is cinema, and my language is film. I make films in film language, and where they are made and the flag are just a circumstance. That comes from (the fact that) human beings are human beings first, and after (that), they give them a passport. But actually, this is very symptomatic of the times we are living in. The world is getting muddled in the interacting of different languages, cultures, countries. It is getting more blurred all the time, the line between what is independent and mainstream and what is considered foreign and domestic.

THR: Is that a good or bad thing?
Cuaron: I think it is great. The diversity just triggers new ideas and new schemes and new formulas.

THR: But isn't there the danger that national distinctions and artistic distinctions will disappear and film will become more homogenized?
Cuaron: Probably, but at this point, it is a beautiful breath of fresh air and breaking the homogenous aspect of cinema. It is bringing to the mainstream table different tendencies -- and you can see this with (the mix of Oscar nominees): "Babel" and "Pan's Labyrinth" were interacting with "The Departed." So, at this point, it is very good. But this is not defending globalization; those are two different issues. In the arts, it is a positive expression of this phenomenon; and at this point, it is the opposite of homogeneity.

THR: How does working in Hollywood fit into that?
Cuaron: The danger is to consider Hollywood a goal and destination. Hollywood can be part of the journey, but it would be terrible to think of Mexican filmmakers thinking how to make it in Hollywood. The amazing lesson this year from British cinema, for instance, is that they had their greatest success by not doing things the Hollywood way. They had been sleeping so close to Hollywood, trying to attract the Hollywood mainstream audience by formulating movies that they believe are going to be American-friendly, then this year the films that are honestly British are the ones that have been nominated for Academy Awards, like "The Queen" and "The Last King of Scotland." They are not trying to play into the "let's see what is American-friendly" game. They are doing what is honest.

THR: Do you and your fellow Mexican filmmakers see yourselves resisting Hollywood like the French New Wave filmmakers?
Cuaron: It is not like a French wave in that there is not a manifesto; there is not a Cold War in the way that the Nouvelle Vague (New Wave) was against the "academy-ness" of French cinema. And there is much more diversity among (the current Mexican filmmakers). There are no more diverse filmmakers than Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu and Guillermo del Toro.

THR: But the New Wave has clearly been an influence on you.
Cuaron: Oh, no, it has been one totally. But by the same token, (director Claude) Chabrol used to say, "There are no waves; there is only the ocean." Personally, I love the French New Wave, and it has been very influential on my life, but so has the German cinema of the '70s or the German silent cinema or Ernst Lubitsch or American cinema in the '50s.
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THR: The New Wave created the idea of the director as auteur. How does your work as a producer fit into that?
Cuaron: Sometimes you get the opportunity through your career to facilitate work for other people. But I like to produce the way I would love to be produced -- trying to create a space for the director. I believe the director is the one who calls the shots. I don't want to have a creative influence as a producer. I want to learn. And most of the movies I produced in the past are by first-time directors, to facilitate the path for new generations -- and for a more selfish reason: After all these years of trying to emulate and learn from the old masters, there is a point where if you keep doing that, you become very stiff, and you have to connect with the new masters and the new tendencies and the new ways of narrative. What is going to be the new cinema? I don't want to belong to the past; I want to belong to the future.
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on September 11, 2007, 12:59:25 AM
GET SHOCKED BY ALFONSO CUARON
Source: CHUD

Naomi Klein's book No Logo is required reading for anyone who wants to understand the corporate driven world in which we live (and serve as serfs). Her new book looks promising and disturbing; Shock Doctrine explores how Milton Friedman's concepts of economic shock therapy – using natural and manmade catastrophes and society's stunned response to them as a way to push through policies that benefit the rich – has been recreating our world since 9/11, and how it has been used over the last fifty years.

Klein sent a copy of the book Alfonso Cuaron, hoping to get a blurb for the cover (she thought Children of Men explored issues similar to the book). Instead she ended up getting a short film, which is now playing at the Toronto Film Festival. Like most of you, I couldn't be there this week, but Klein has put the film online so that everyone can see it. It's a fantastic six minutes and change, put together by Cuaron and his son Jonas, which will remind you that film can be gripping and educating and cause outrage in equal measures. Why is agitprop a bad word anyway?


http://www.naomiklein.org/shock-doctrine/short-film
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: squints on September 11, 2007, 06:34:35 PM
that's awesome.
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: Kal on September 12, 2007, 12:06:26 AM
that is a cool short... now... i read naomi klein books before and as well-written and interesting as they are, they dont necessarily show the truth. im not going to start a political discussion here, but some of the comparisons there are completely ridiculous. plus, both her and cuaron are making a lot of money with their work and other than this type of propaganda, i dont see them doing anything else to help the planet.



Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on February 12, 2009, 12:55:03 AM
Alfonso Cuaron Nixes 'Children Of Men' Sequel/Prequel And 'Umbrella Academy'
Source: MTV

"Children of Men" told a haunting apocalyptic tale of a world in which all women are infertile and mankind is slowly dying off. Clive Owen and Julianne Moore gave admirably restrained performances. Beautifully shot, combining the best elements of the sci-fi and thriller genres, "Children" was one of the finest films of 2006—and no one went to see it (the US gross didn't even cover half its $76 million budget).

Yet rumors of another "Children" installment have persisted, so writer/director Alfonso Cuarón spoke with MTV News to shoot down those rumors (as well as rumors he'll be directing an adaptation of emo comic series, "The Umbrella Academy"). Or rather, he spoke with us to mock the very idea of picking up the "Children" story where he left it, with both Owen and Moore's characters dead and the first baby born in years stowed away on a secret humanity-saving ship.

"'Children of Men 2,'" he cried. "The baby is back and he's mad!"

Okay, maybe not. But come on—there's really been talk of a prequel or sequel. "Yes," Cuarón said. "Will Ferrell is going to play the baby."

Well played, sir.

Nonetheless, David Eick, a writer/producer on "Battlestar Galactica," announced last March that he's adapting a version of "Children" for TV. Might that be happening on your watch, Mr. Cuarón?

"No, no, no," he insisted, adding with a laugh, "Maybe Guillermo [Del Toro] has an idea for a remake."

Okay, we're bummed, even as we (a) can't stop laughing and (b) respect his commitment not to muck up a brilliant movie with unnecessary or implausible new chapters. But Cuarón didn't stop bumming us out there. He also told MTV News he won't — as had been rumored — be directing an adaptation of the comic book series, "The Umbrella Academy," by My Chemical Romance frontman Gerard Way.

"No," Cuarón informed us. "I like 'The Umbrella Academy' but I'm not associated with it."

Next up for the director is "A Boy and his Shoe," a road movie set in England, Scotland and France, which is currently casting, with filming set to begin in the spring.
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: Stefen on February 12, 2009, 09:19:32 AM
Reading these MTV news stories is brutal. They make my head explode.

A Boy and his Shoe sounds interesting. Like an England, Scotland and France version of Y Tu Mama Tambien.
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on September 22, 2012, 08:09:10 AM
Alfonso Cuarón/J.J. Abrams Drama Lands At NBC With Pilot Production Commitment
BY NELLIE ANDREEVA | Deadline

EXCLUSIVE: In his foray into American television, Oscar-nominated filmmaker Alfonso Cuarón has teamed with J.J. Abrams for a high-concept  drama, which just landed at NBC with a pilot production commitment. Cuarón is set to direct the pilot, which he will co-write with Mark Friedman (Home Of the Brave). It is about a girl in possession of a great gift/powers — which will come into their own in seven years — and the man who is sprung from prison to protect her from those trying to hunt her down .

Warner Bros. TV and Abrams' studio-based Bad Robot are producing the untitled project, with Abrams, Cuarón, Friedman and Bryan Burk executive producing and Kathy Lingg co-executive producing. The project reunites Friedman with Warner Bros. TV where he created the ABC drama series The Forgotten, co-produced by another top WBTV pod, Jerry Bruckheimer TV. Mexican-born Cuarón received Oscar nominations for writing Y Tu Mamá También and Children of Men, both of which he also directed. He also helmed Harry Potter and the Prisoner Of Azkaban.

This marks the second sale and second pilot production commitment for Bad Robot this season, on the heels of the company re-upping with WBTV for three more years. At Fox, Bad Robot has a robot-cop drama written by Fringe showrunner J.H. Wyman. The company has three series on the air, departing critical darling Fringe, hot sophomore Person of Interest, and new NBC drama Revolution, which premiered to big ratings on Monday. Cuarón and Friedman are with UTA, Abrams recently signed with CAA.
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on May 21, 2013, 04:17:31 PM
'Believe' TV Trailer: J.J. Abrams and Alfonso Cuarón Team for NBC

Both J.J. Abrams and Alfonso Cuarón are using the big screen this year to explore the expansive blackness of outer space — Abrams with last week's Star Trek Into Darkness, Cuarón with this fall's Gravity. For their first collaboration with each other, though, they'll be keeping things a bit more grounded.

The pair have teamed up for NBC's Believe, a hourlong sci-fi drama about a young superpowered girl (Johnny Sequoyah) and the death row inmate (Jake McLaughlin) broken out of jail to protect her.

Cuarón wrote and directed the pilot, and will serve as executive producer alongside Abrams. The first trailer isn't as stunning as we might hope from the combination of those two, honestly. The premise feels rather familiar, and the dialogue sounds clunky. It doesn't help that the video quality isn't great, either. But I have faith the actual series will at least be worth checking out.

The show will debut sometime during the 2013-2014 season.


Levitation, telekinesis, the ability to control nature, even predict the future... since she was two years old, Bo has had gifts she could neither fully understand nor control. Raised by a small group known as the "True Believers," the orphaned girl has been safeguarded from harmful outsiders who would use her forces for personal gain. But now that she is 10, her powers have become stronger, and the threat has grown more dangerous.

With her life and future now in jeopardy, the "Believers" turn to the only person they see fit to be her full-time protector. That is, once they break him out of jail. Tate, a wrongfully imprisoned death row inmate who's lost his will, is initially reluctant – until he witnesses one of her extraordinary abilities. Bo sees people for who they truly are... and who they may become.

Tate and Bo begin their journey, one in which trust must be earned. Traveling from city to city, every place they stop and everyone they meet will be changed forever. But they'll have to keep going to stay one step ahead of the sinister forces after Bo's power... because it will take a miracle to keep them safe forever.

The powers of a young girl may hold the fate of our world in "Believe," from executive producer J.J. Abrams ("Revolution," "Star Trek: Into Darkness") and executive producer/writer/director Alfonso Cuarón ("Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban," "Children of Men"). One-hour drama.




Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on September 27, 2013, 04:20:58 PM
Cuaron: most 3D films are "crap"
Gravity director talks 3D, Sandra Bullock's "astounding discipline" and why he may not be able to afford to make his dream movie.
Source: Total Film

Gravity director Alfonso Cuaron has branded most 3D movies as "crap".

Speaking at a press conference at the Zurich Film Festival, where Gravity screens tonight as a 'Green Carpet Gala', the Mexican director said: "The problem with 3D is that it's been completely misused.

"The problem now is that they make all these films that are not designed for 3D and then convert them as a commercially afterthought – and they are crap. They don't follow the rules of 3D of what does and doesn't work.

"There are a handful of films that have used 3D in a proper way so it can be an amazing tool."

Gravity was designed to be seen in 3D and the 2D version is just "30% of the experience", the director told Screen International editor Wendy Mitchell, who moderated the press conference.

Bullock: disciplined

The film stars Sandra Bullock as an astronaut who goes spiralling into space following an accident.

Cuaron praised Bullock, who stars alongside George Clooney, for her "astounding discipline" when making the film.

"Sandra started rehearsing and training five months before the shoot just to get fit because of the rigs she was going to use," he recalled.

"She worked with stunts, special effects, her personal trainer and the puppeteers to see which parts of her body she needed to train specifically for the rigs.

"We started working together on hundreds of cues and timings because everything was pre-programming and she could not change timings. It was like dance choreography – more like we were doing a ballet.

"Her capacity of abstraction, because she was performing against nothing, was amazing. She was doing it with such precision that it looked like second nature and we could instead talk about performance and emotions."

Dream movie

The director, who has previously made films including Y tu Mama Tambien, Children of Men and Harry Potter and the Prison of Azkaban, was also asked how he chose projects.

"I don't think about it, I do whatever feels right," he replied.

"There are many other kinds of films I would like to do. Sometimes it's down to money, not only getting the finance together but also if I can afford it.

"I have a dream movie I'd like to make but it's tiny and not commercial. I couldn't be paid but I have a family and a life."

The film, which Cuaron thought would be a quick job, took more than four years. "I improvise a lot in my other films so this was completely different," he said. "I enjoyed every part of the process but would never do it again."

Drawing laughter from the assembled press, Cuaron added: "I now want to work on films in which people walk. I feel very strongly about this. If they walk, lay down, sit in wheelchairs or even swim, that would be fantastic."
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: MacGuffin on May 23, 2014, 07:20:51 AM
Rumour: Alfonso Cuarón to direct prequel to The Shining?
Warner reportedly keen to tie him to The Overlook Hotel
Source: Total Film

There have long been rumours surrounding the possibility of a new, big-screen version of The Shining, and now it seems as though Warner has its eye on the man it wants to make that proposal a reality...

According to Schmoes Know, Warner is planning a prequel to Stanley Kubrick's film, and has the Oscar-winning Alfonso Cuarón earmarked for the director's chair.

The rumour represents the second major project Cuarón has been linked with this week, with the director also thought to be Warner's first pick to helm the forthcoming Harry Potter spinoff, Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them.

As to the project itself, former Walking Dead showrunner Glen Mazzara is thought to have penned a script for the film, which is operating under the working title The Overlook Hotel.

Whether or not Cuarón decides to take the plunge remains to be seen, but it sounds as though the project is beginning to make some moves either way...
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: wilder on July 28, 2022, 06:15:04 PM
Charlize Theron, Alfonso Cuarón Team for Philip K. Dick Family Drama 'Jane' (Exclusive)
The Hollywood Reporter

The Oscar winners will produce — and are being eyed to star in and direct — the Amazon project from Dick's daughter Isa Hackett.

Oscar winners Charlize Theron and Alfonso Cuarón are partnering for Jane, an Amazon feature project based on the personal life of beloved science fiction author Philip K. Dick from his daughter Isa Hackett.

The genre-bending project is based on the relationship between Dick and his twin sister, Jane, who died six weeks after birth. The death affected Dick personally, and also influenced his creative work.

Theron, Cuarón and Hackett will produce the project, which is being developed with an eye for Cuarón to direct and Theron to star.

Jane, according to the project's description, is "a moving, suspenseful and darkly humorous story about a woman's unique relationship with her brilliant, but troubled twin, who also happens to be the celebrated novelist Philip K. Dick. While attempting to rescue her brother from predicaments both real and imagined, Jane plunges deeper and deeper into a fascinating world of his creation."

Dick's work inspired many Hollywood projects, including Blade Runner, Total Recall and the Amazon series The Man in the High Castle, which counts Hackett as a producer.

"The story of Jane has been with me for as long as I can remember," said Hackett. "Jane, my father's twin sister who died a few weeks after birth, was at the center of his universe. Befitting a man of his unique imagination, this film will defy the conventions of a biopic and embrace the alternate reality Philip K. Dick so desperately desired—one in which his beloved sister survived beyond six weeks of age. It is her story we will tell, her lens through which we will see him and his imagination. There is no better way to honor him than to grant him his wish, if only for the screen."

Electric Shepherd Productions, Denver and Delilah Productions and Esperanto Filmoj will produce the film. Gabriela Rodriguez, Beth Kono, AJ Dix, Sarah Scougal and Kalen Egan will produce alongside Theron, Cuarón and Hackett. Lila Rawlings of Esperanto Filmoj will executive produce.

Theron and her Denver and Delilah banner, repped by WME and Hansen Jacobson, are currently working on the sequel to Netflix hit The Old Guard, The Old Guard: Force Multiplied.

Cuarón and his Esperanto Filmoj banner are currently in production on Disclaimer for Apple TV+, starring Cate Blanchett and Kevin Kline. He is repped by WME and Johnson Shapiro.

Hackett and the Estate of Philip K. Dick are repped by Tricarico Chavez.
Title: Re: Alfonso Cuaron
Post by: WorldForgot on July 28, 2022, 06:37:18 PM
Holy shit that's very exciting.