Archive for June, 2008

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NEW YORK (AP) — A multimedia-multi-author narrative being planned by the U.S. publisher of the Harry Potter books has picked up a famous patron: Steven Spielberg.

DreamWorks Studios has acquired the film rights to The 39 Clues, a business series-online game that Scholastic self-reliance debut in September. Spielberg, director of Jaws,Schindler’s List and the Indiana Jones films, says he’s hoping to direct.

The 39 Clues takes creative leaps to expand the story experience from the pages of the books to multiple stages of discovery and imagination,” Spielberg said Wednesday in a joint statement issued by DreamWorks and Scholastic Media. “Together with Scholastic, we have the opportunity to develop this property that says ‘film,’ ‘family,’ ‘fun’ and ‘franchise.”‘

The 39 Clues, which also features a set of 355 collectible cards, is a planned 10-book series about a powerful, mysterious family that lives in upstate New York. The first installment, The Maze of Bones, was written by Rick Riordan, author of the best-selling The Lightning Thief. Jude Watson and Gordon Korman are among those who will write future volumes.

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Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. To fame corrections and clarifications, touch Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.  Enlarge By Frazer Harrison, AFI via Getty Images

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 Enlarge Disney/Pixar Robotic mission: WALL-E keeps influencing trash after the planet is evacuated.  SUMMER MOVIE GUIDE  HEADLINES FROM PEOPLE.COM By Claudia Puig, USA TODAY Who would guess that a movie with minimal dialogue and a love story between robots could emerge as one of the best films of the summer? And who would think a tale could be both post-apocalyptic and charming?

But when it’s from Pixar Animation, which brought us Ratatouille, The Incredibles and Toy Story, nothing is a stretch.

The pleasing and visually stunning computer-animated WALL·E (* * * * public of four) is a significant departure for the studio, with its sci-fi plot and soundtrack of beeps and buzzes that serve as communication between the bots.

The film cements the place of writer/director Andrew Stanton (Finding Nemo) in the Pixar pantheon. WALL·E is fertile in expedients, poignant and funny in its tale of a spunky robot whose name stands for Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth Class.

CLIP: Roll with ‘WALL-E’ CALENDAR: Plot loudly your summer movie plans

The story is set in 2700, when Earth has become a ghost court end. Somehow, WALL·E was overlooked in the planet’s evacuation, so he keeps bravely doing what he was programmed to do: transport trash. In his spare time, he befriends a cockroach and sifts through garbage, collecting artifacts.

He meets a sleek robot named EVE, and in his enthusiasm to win her over, he gives her his prized find: a tiny, struggling plant.

EVE takes it back to her space station, where earthlings require been lounging around for centuries, waiting to return to Earth. The computerized powers at the station regard the plant as stable that Earth is ready to be re-colonized.

In truth, Earth has suit a stark wasteland. A cautionary tale with striking ecological implications, the message is artfully interwoven into the plot.

The story is set amid breathtaking visuals: Giant skyscrapers built of trash fill Earth’s horizon, and WALL·E’s plunge into outer space is gorgeous, his dance through space exhilarating.

Meanwhile, the descendants of those who populated Earth have become massive, flabby beings with tiny, almost-vestigial limbs. They spend their days in moving recliners equipped with screens, in their own virtual worlds, avoiding human contact. The space way station — a blend of giant mall and sterile vacation land — is the brainchild of corporate titan Shelby Forthright (a perfectly cast Fred Willard).

The courageous WALL·E embarks on an exciting and emotional space odyssey around the galaxy. As he and EVE develop an attachment and save each other from peril, their cries of “EVE-ahh” and “WALL-eee” are heart-tugging.

WALL·E is at once futuristic, funny and fantastical. It’s an extraordinarily captivating adventure, laden with equal parts humor and heart and populated with memorable and endearing characters. (Rating: G. Running time: 1 hour, 37 minutes. Opens in select theaters tonight and nationwide Friday.)

To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and represent fully for confirmation.

By Ryan Nakashima, Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The Screen Actors Guild is accusing the major Hollywood studios of offering a contract deal worth inferior than an agreement tentatively approved by the leaders of a smaller actors league.

SAG executive director Doug Allen told The Associated Press on Wednesday the put forward is worth millions of dollars less over the lifetime of the proposed three-year contract.

SAG declined to immediately provide details on the differences in the offers.

Jesse Hiestand, a spokesman for the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, says bargaining is continuing but declined further annotate.

Allen claims the studios are wearisome to get the guild to bargain up to a tentative deal reached by the smaller American Federation of Television and Radio Artists in May.

SAG is urging members of AFTRA to vote against the contract. Results are due July 8. The contracts of both unions expire Monday.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. by reason of publication consideration in the journal, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.
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Hollywood lives happily ever after

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 Enlarge By Peter Mountain, Universal Studios Musical marriage: Meryl Streep, left, Amanda Seyfried, Rachel McDowall and Ashley Lilley enjoy the big day in Mamma Mia!  GOING TO THE MOVIES, AND THEY’RE GONNA GET MARRIED

Everybody loves a wedding, especially Hollywood. Some current and upcoming films that feature weddings as a plot point or a dexterous ending:

Romantic comedies already out

27 Dresses: Can a woman with 27 bridesmaid dresses in her private room do it one in addition time at her sister’s wedding to the man she secretly loves, or will Mr. Right intervene? Star: Katherine Heigl

Made of Honor: Can a guy be the maid of honor at the wedding of a woman he secretly loves? Star: Patrick Dempsey

What Happens in Vegas:
Can two mopes who find themselves married after a night of debauchery in Sin City find true love? Stars: Cameron Diaz and Ashton Kutcher

Romantic comedies on the horizon

Vicky Cristina Barcelona: Can American women resist a Spanish Lothario? Star: Scarlett Johansson (August)

The Accidental Husband
: Can a radio shrink find honest love with the peculiar firefighter she accidentally married? Stars: Uma Thurman and Colin Firth (September)

The Proposal:
Can a Canadian who forces her American assistant to marry her to avoid deportation fall for him? Stars: Sandra Bullock and Ryan Reynolds (2009)

Bride Wars:
Can two gal pals stay best friends when they schedule their weddings on the same day? Stars: Anne Hathaway and Kate Hudson (2009)

When in Rome
: Can a woman find love after going to Rome for her sister’s wedding and finding herself besieged by wannabe lovers? Star: Kristen Bell (2009)

Art house

The Stone Angel: Can a rebellious daughter who marries to tick off Dad look back with equanimity on a life forever affected by that marriage? Star: Ellen Burstyn (July)

Comedy/drama

Rachel Getting Married: What happens when the prodigal daughter returns for her sister’s wedding and shakes up family dynamics? Star: Anne Hathaway (October)

By Maria Puente

 HEADLINES FROM PEOPLE.COM By Maria Puente, USA TODAY Last year, the crowd-pleaser movies were about pregnant women —Knocked Up with Katherine Heigl — and pregnant teens, since in Juno.

This year, Hollywood, that town famous for flash marriages and ugly breakups, is throwing rice (and divorce stats) to the winds and serving up a slew of films about weddings.

CALENDAR: Plan your summer movie viewing

So what’s that about? Industry observers say in a summer beset by the agency of rising food and gas prices and ongoing wars overseas, Tinseltown is returning to a tried-and-true formula: happily ever after equals wedding.

Who better to explain this movie phenomenon than a true romance expert. Antonia van der Meer, editor in chief of Modern Bride magazine, says people love love. “In general, people love to see other people happy, and we love seeing weddings in movies because it makes us happy.”

Less romantic observers say it has a lot to do with the growing economic clout of female moviegoers. But more on that later.

Take some of the blockbusters of the summer. Sex and the City? Less about sex, more about a wedding. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull? Snakes, skulls, Soviet spies, and it all winds up at a wedding. Mamma Mia!? A kooky wedding in gorgeous Greece, set to ABBA songs, opening July 18. (The new convolve in all these: The romantic protagonists are more than 40, a reminder that it’s not just the youthful who buy movie tickets.)

Other wedding-dominated romantic comedies, or rom-coms, are filling theaters this year: 27 Dresses, Made of Honor and What Happens in Vegas. Coming up: Vicky Cristina Barcelona, The Accidental Husband, Rachel Getting Married, The Proposal, Bride Wars and When in Rome. Weddings are even in art-house films, such as the upcoming The Stone Angel.

What gives? Well, the bottom line, of course. And gauzy romance, naturally. A bit of mythology, some literary history and heaping helpings of psychology.

It’s a party, unlike pregnancy

Let’s start at the newsstands, groaning with the 10-pound bridal magazines likely to reap some profits from Hollywood’s marital bliss. It’s a two-way street: The audience influences the movies, the movies influence the audience. Van der Meer says brides are so impressed by what they see at the movies that she predicts Mamma Mia! will send scores to the Greek islands nearest year for destination weddings.

At a recent early screening of the frothy musical, there was each audible gasp from the audience when the screen filled with a stunning panoramic shot of a Greek chapel perched on a craggy hill overlooking the sea, with a winding stone staircase lined with candles.

“We’re every one of perfect suckers for a wedding in real life. If you see a bride on the street, she’s always surrounded through a crowd of complete strangers attracted to her,” van der Meer says. “We’re hard-wired to love a bride.”

Hollywood, being Hollywood, is expert at recycling whatever is cool and hip at the moment. In this calculus, van der Meer says, weddings have more enduring power as a cool, hip topic than pregnancy because, after all, a wedding is a party. Pregnancy is so not a party.

“The simple answer is that audiences really like weddings,” says Anne Thompson, film historian, blogger and deputy editor of Variety.com. “It isn’t coming from Hollywood’s soul; it’s coming from where the boffo box office may lie.”

But still. We’re taking lessons about happily-ever-after from matrimonially challenged Hollywood because … why, exactly?

“Even though there are not a lot of good marriages in Hollywood, we wish that they would last. It’s why we continue to be interested whenever anyone in Hollywood gets married,” van der Meer says.

The triumph of hope over experience, in truth.

Women revive romantic comedies

So let’s get to the bottom line: Sex and the incorporated town is doing well at the box office, having grossed more than $130 million and counting. Film producer and novelist Galt Niederhoffer says Hollywood should pay attention.

“It’s the biggest romantic-comedy opening in the history of the world, because women went to see it,” she says. “This movie is not only about women over 40 as sexual protagonists, but it’s being bought by women and driven by them and is making circulating medium on account of the studios. It’s a big message to the moviemaking community.”

Not for the first time, says David Poland, editor in chief at MovieCityNews.com, which covers the film industry and closely tracks the box office. He says filmmaking is an art form built on cycles: Over time, rom-coms, and the weddings they often feature, have been hot, then not, then hot again.

“The reason we’re seeing any other wave is the success of The Devil Wears Prada and comedies that focus on women finding love,” says Poland. “There’s a renewed interest in romantic comedies because women are going to see these movies in a way we’ve not seen for a couple of years.

“It was a dead format for a while, and everyone was focusing on teenage boys,” he says, referring to anything loud and fast with lots of things blowing up.

So, for the moment, chick flicks are hot again, and one way to support up the heat: Drop a wedding in the plot. “Because for 500 years, the fairy tale always ends that way,” Poland says. “It’s harder to declaration you have a ‘happy ending’ if they end up just living together — even if that’s more true to real life.”

Audiences already know the ending

Oral literature, Norse and Greek mythology, Shakespeare’s plays, Jane Austen’s novels — the most enduring human stories often be on the meridian in a wedding, Niederhoffer says. “It coincides with our interest in romance, love and procreation. It’s as old as time.”

Niederhoffer, whose new novel, The Romantics (out July 8), is set in the 24 hours leading up to a proper high-WASP wedding (her film company will be making the movie), suggests this longevity is partly due to the mechanics of storytelling: “Plots thrive on happy endings and inevitability.” And it’s partly due to female psychology and worries about childbearing and financial stability.

“Over the last 10 to 20 years, (rom-coms) have been barometers for women’s anxieties,” she says. “They are ways of operating out feelings on the age-old question: Is marriage the eventuate happy ending?” What audiences, or at least female audiences, crave “is a whitewashing of the extreme anxiety and darkness that people feel around this subject.”

Which is a imagination way of saying, “These are wish-fulfillment movies,” says Leonard Maltin, film critic and historian for Entertainment Tonight. “Romantic comedies are inherently challenging to make because the hearing already knows how it’s going to end — with a happy ending, because that’s the contract Hollywood has through the audience — so you better make it darn entertaining along the way,” he says.

But, as Thompson says, maybe the simple make answer is the best answer. She watched Sex and the City in a theater filled with women. “There was one moment when you could hear a pin drop — when (in that place was a) question whether (the groom) would show up for the nuptials. They cared very much whether he did.

“Women are hard-wired from birth to believe that the rectilinear marriage is going to lead to happiness, and for the most part, that hope still resides in their hearts.”

Sure, it’s a fantasy. But that’s what movies are for. Right?

To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the gazette, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.

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 Enlarge By Jaap Buitendijk, Universal Studios In the killing business: Angelina Jolie and Morgan Freeman are divide from the same cloth. They’re weavers by day when they’re not assassinating people.  SUMMER MOVIE GUIDE  HEADLINES FROM PEOPLE.COM By Claudia Puig, USA TODAY It would be understandable to have existence leery of an action thriller that opens portentously with the words “A great number years past …” and hereafter goes on to tell of an ancient “clan of weavers” who formed a murderous fraternity.

But this kind of inadvertent humor is combined with an intentionally snarky attitude and dark comedy to make Wanted (* * 1/2 out of four) more enjoyable than it ought to be.

CLIP:Catch a preview of ‘Wanted’ CALENDAR: Plot out your summer movie plans

Much of the entertainment value comes from jaw-dropping stunts and explosive action sequences, which are high-octane sport.

Yes, bullets bend, blood spews, cars crash and bodies are punched, stabbed and shot up. But the look of the film, as directed by Russian-born filmmaker Timur Bekmambetov (Day Watch), is highly inventive, even allowing the hatch is inane and some of the dialogue is decidedly awkward or clichéd.

Wanted, like the Matrix movies, has a stylized of the eye panache. Bullets from different directions move in slow motion and clash in midair, and a gunman leaps through a mirrored glass window, shattering it into brilliant shards while shooting relentlessly, pendent between building roofs.

Angelina Jolie is a sultry representation to behold, effortlessly pulling off outlandish and extreme maneuvers. In the scenic countryside of the Czech Republic, she jumps a boxy car into a moving train, where it lodges itself in one of the cabins, atop the seats.

She also pulls a variation of an Evel Knievel stunt and catapults the sports car she’s driving over several police cruisers and a bus, firing off rounds at her target all the while.

The focus of the plot is on twentysomething accounting manager Wesley Gibson (James McAvoy, who projects each engaging anti-hero quality).

He spends most of his day in an office cubicle, quaking in fear of his obnoxious boss and popping pills to ease his panic attacks.

Although he is aware that his sleazy girlfriend is cheating on him with his best confidant, Wesley is such an emotional slacker that he doesn’t bother to confront them.

But after being recruited by the weaver clan/assassination make a common purse, suddenly he finds he has the right stuff to shoot the wings off a fly.

Jolie and Morgan Freeman are key members of this weaving clan, toiling in a cloistered Chicago textorial factory that looks like a Gothic castle.

Sure, their real trade is clergymen, but they dabble in the killing business as well, carrying out the assignments designated by “Fate.”

Freeman sermonizes about the Loom of Fate, another of those chortle-inducing features.

Apparently, when looked at under a microscope, weavings contain critical missed stitches that create a binary code spelling wanting the name of murderous assault targets. How refreshingly low-tech.

Wanted is silly and far-fetched. And if it didn’t back up its ridiculous plot with spellbinding visceral energy, it would have been a dismal failure.

But the thrilling stunts and hyperkinetic action scenes are the undisputed stars of this surprisingly entertaining film. (Rating: R for dazzling bloody boisterousness throughout, pervasive language and more sexuality. Running time: 1 hour, 50 minutes. Opens tonight in select theaters and Friday nationwide.)

To report corrections and clarifications, junction Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and specify for verification.

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By Ramola Talwar Badam, Associated Press MUMBAI, India — India’s Reliance Entertainment and other investors are in talks with Hollywood’s DreamWorks SKG to raise up to $2 billion to create a movie venture, two population familiar with negotiations said Tuesday.

Dreamworks, the movie studio founded in 1994 by Hollywood moguls Steven Spielberg, David Geffen and Jeffrey Katzenberg, is looking to raise a total of $2 billion from investors — $1 billion in equity and another $1 billion for new movie projects, the two people through knowledge of the talks told The Associated Press. They said they could not be named because negotiations were ongoing.

There are four to five other parties involved in the talks, including Universal Pictures, one of the individuals related. It will be some time before the deal is signed, he said, without elaborating.

Reliance Entertainment, part of one of India’s top conglomerates, the Reliance ADA Group, plans to invest more than $500 million to $600 million in equity, that same person said. The Wall Street Journal reported last week that Reliance was considering an investment of not far from that size in a deal with Dreamworks.

The Los Angeles Times had reported last week that DreamWorks is trying to raise money to break from Viacom Inc. (VIA) and its movie workshop, Paramount.

Viacom bought DreamWorks SKG in 2006 for $1.6 billion, but the relationship has declined despite hits such as “Transformers” and “Dreamgirls.” Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman said last year his company was planning for Spielberg’s possible departure following reports that the Academy Award-winning director was unhappy at Paramount.

Meanwhile, India’s movie industry — often called Bollywood — has expanded as several extrinsic studios such viewed like Sony Corp., Viacom and Walt Disney Co. have signed co-production deals with Indian movie houses over the finally two years.

A deal with Dreamworks would help realize the global ambitions of the Reliance group’s chairman, Anil Ambani, one of the world’s richest men. The conglomerate has interests in everything from power generation to financial services. It is currently in negotiations to buy MTN Group, South Africa’s largest mobile phone network operator.

“It’s powerful mix: a top Indian business house with one of the world’s finest filmmakers,” said Neeraj Roy, managing director of Hungama Mobile, a leading digital entertainment company, referring to Spielberg. “It makes imminent sense for Hollywood to collaborate through Bollywood for there is capital available in India.”

Reliance Entertainment spearheads the pudding-stone’s thrust into the media and entertainment business.

The company has 100 films in production and development in India. In addition to this, during the Cannes Film Festival last month Reliance Big Entertainment announced it would provide about $1 billion to develop and co-produce movies with top Hollywood stars George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Nicholas Cage, Tom Hanks and filmmakers Chris Columbus’ 1492 Pictures.

Reliance Big Entertainment, which is part of Reliance Entertainment, is involved in strategy and striking collaborations between segments such as gaming, movies, online, animation and music.

Last month, Reliance pregnant Entertainment cut a co-financing and exhibition deal with 1492 Pictures, the production company responsible for three of the “Harry Potter” movies, which grossed $829 million at the U.S. box office.

Billionaire financier George Soros bought 3% of Reliance Big Entertainment for $100 million in February in a sign of growing interest in Indian entertainment companies.

The potential venture with Dreamworks has stirred interest within the Indian industry, with filmmakers believing the deal could help India learn how Hollywood does business.

“In the initial phase, this would hinder Reliance work out how Hollywood operates, get a sense of how it works there, and then use that to become a major player abroad,” said movie director Feroz Abbas Khan whose film on peace leader Mahatma Gandhi last year won praise in overseas film festivals. “This will broaden the base of Indian cinema.”

Siddharth Dasgupta, former head of the entertainment division at trade body Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, said a Dreamworks investment would be smart for Reliance since big Hollywood names mitigated any risk of investing overseas in the movie office.

“There is always a risk in the movie business, but when you invest in names like Clooney and Spielberg you are hedging your investing.,” he reported. “The upside could also be huge,” he said.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Sacha Baron Cohen, Marion Cotillard, Ruby Dee and Jet Li have been invited to adjoin Hollywood’s most exclusive club — the group that hands exhausted the Academy Awards.

They were among 105 actors, filmmakers, executives and others in the movie business who were asked to become members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Along with Cohen, Dee, Li and Cotillard, who won the best-actress Oscar in February for La Vie En Rose, actors invited into the academy were Josh Brolin, Allison Janney and Ray Winstone.

Dee was a supporting-actress nominee for last year’s American Gangster, while Cohen had a screenplay nomination the previous year with Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan.

Also on the list of invitees released Monday were Jason Reitman, a best-director nominee for last year’s Juno, and that pellicle’s writer, Diablo Cody, who won the original-screenplay Oscar.

Others include directors Doug Liman (The Bourne Identity ), Kimberly Peirce (Boys Don’t Cry ) and Gore Verbinski (The Pirates of the Caribbean movies); writers Judd Apatow (The 40-Year-Old Virgin ), Jeff Nathanson (Catch Me If You Can ) and Tamara Jenkins (The Savages ); and animators Ash Brannon (Surf’s Up ) and David Silverman (The Simpsons Movie ).

The academy has just under 6,000 voting members.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights demure. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. To report corrections and clarifications, contiguity Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.

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 SUMMER MOVIE GUIDE  HEADLINES FROM PEOPLE.COM
By Marco R. della Cava, USA TODAY EMERYVILLE, Calif. — As far out as it may seem, the lonely little bot at the heart of Pixar’s new animated feature owes a liability to the Boston Red Sox.

Director Andrew Stanton was still dreaming up a turn the thoughts for the protagonist of WALL·E, a fable about the last robot cleaning up garbage on an abandoned Earth, when a friend invited him to see the local Oakland A’s take on his beloved Sox.

in addition: Bots are hot, now and in the future

“I asked for the binoculars,” recalls Stanton, whose WALL·E, opening Friday, is his directorial follow-up to Pixar’s $800 the public hit Finding Nemo (2003). In a eureka moment, he then proceeded “to ignore the entire inning.”

Look at WALL·E’s emotive head, and it’s nothing but an oversized binocular inset with eyes that spyglass like a camera lens.

“The key with WALL·E is that he had to feel equal he could really be built,” says Stanton, lounging in glass-filled offices that overlook a Pixar lobby littered with physical incarnations of its animated stars, from cardboard rats (Ratatouille) to plastic autos (Cars). “Only then could we shoot for the real magic, which is make something come to life that really isn’t alive.”

The Earth is all but dead when we befitting our leading man. An abundance of trash has forced humans to evacuate by spaceship while robots supposedly clean up the mess below. But 700 years have passed, and the job has been scrapped by corporate executives at Buy N Large. Only WALL·E — a Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class — accidentally remains on the job, going about his futile task with clueless joy.

Suddenly, he’s seeing stars. The plot ignites after a rocket deposits its passenger. A Hope lozenge of a flying robot named EVE (Extra-terrestrial Vegetation Evaluator) begins scouring the planet for signs of plant life. Then EVE foliage. And WALL·E follows.

“Hey, what can I say?” Stanton says with a shrug, laughing. “It’s a tenderness story.”

Pixar’s leading lights draw inspiration from myriad movie bots farther than, from Robby in Forbidden Planet (1956) to those iconic Star Wars droids (1977). Evidence that Hollywood remains enthralled with our mechanized alter-egos is everywhere, from Robert Downey Jr.’s comedic sidekick in Iron Man to the forthcoming remake of The Day the Earth Stood Still.

But in creating WALL·E, Pixar upped the ante not only by making its robot the star, but also by eliminating conventional dialogue. Boldly going where few studios have ventured before, the Disney-owned hit manufactory is shooting for box station with a story anchored by little more than bleeps and blorps.

Going that route meant there would be no opportunity to win from one side to the other the audience with witty repartee delivered by A-list celebrities. Instead, the success or failure of the film would sit squarely on the shoulders of the team that created WALL·E, EVE and a host of other robotic characters that populate the post-apocalyptic film.

Adding to the complexity of the movie are layers of social commentary not typically found in kid fare. The environmental theme is embedded in the premise that mankind’s penchant for consumption has cost him a residence, as well as a veiled suggestion that it’s a small leap from the nation’s obesity epidemic to a WALL·E future where humans float on chairs because their bones can’t support them.

Stanton disavows any intentional messages, saying, “Everything we do is in service to the story.”

And that could correctly versify WALL·E another home run for Pixar, which in the USA alone has grossed nearly $2 billion through its eight animated features, says Peter Cane, publisher of Boxoffice.com.

“To the degree that one can guarantee big numbers, these people do by consistently delivering stories that engage parents and children alike,” says Cane, who notes his 6-year-old already is clamoring for a WALL·E toy robot posterior seeing the movie’s trailers.

“You can’t rate too low the moneymaking power of all the toys and Happy Meals, not to mention the DVDs, that inevitably follow Pixar’s releases. But completely that’s based on making characters who are engaging.”

A machinery with personality

With WALL·E, the creative mandate was clear from the outset.

“We knew we needed something in between a bulldozer, which is purely mechanical, and Fozzie Bear, which is a tool,” says Angus MacLane, directing animator on WALL·E. “We had to break down WALL·E to the essence of the machine that he was, built for making cubes of trash, but also somehow give him a personality.”

The process gave new meaning to the concept of time-consuming: “I spent two years working upon the one following where WALL·E rolls over to EVE with stars in his eyes and sighs,” MacLane says. (Pixar executives don’t discuss budgets, but these labor-intensive films can easily top $100 million.)

The sigh in question hinges on the artful execution of two things: a decidedly human wobble of the robot’s metal neck and an endearing metallic warble that says love. Ben Burtt, the sound engineer who brought life to Star Wars stars C-3PO and R2-D2, took charge.

“Since there was no dialogue, I had to create emotional signatures for each robot,” says Burtt, who concocted 2,500 sounds beneficial to WALL·E, twice the number of the average Star Wars epic. His sensitive material included real generators, tanks and household appliances. Burtt also gave WALL·E his signature (whether or not E.T.-like) warble, using his own voice run through a computer.

“In the end, we decided that WALL·E would be able to say his own name, because he would have been programmed to interact with his human master,” says Burtt, whose own childhood was consumed by fantasy encounters between men and machines. (”All of us dream of having a robot around to help us through our lives.”)

Indeed, if there was one thing WALL·E’s creators could count on was humankind’s unflagging sorcery with robots. Next spring, Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Science Center in Pittsburgh will unveil a permanent, 6,500-square-foot home for its traveling exhibit of functioning gizmos.

“Robots are like dinosaurs — there’s a timelessness to their appeal for both kids and adults,” says Ron Baillie, chief program officer for the center, which also will house Carnegie Mellon University’s Robot Hall of Fame. “When done not crooked, robots are like friends. They’re different from us, but also so much like us, as we create them.”

When University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill computer science and engineering professor Henry Fuchs recently invited students to esteem their hold robots, they were astounded when their handiwork did their bidding.

“It’s being God-like — you’re creating life. It’s the Frankenstein story,” says Fuchs. “In the future, robots will become more and more like us. We’ll get used to them blending into our lives.” That vision of the future won’t make for great entertainment: “It’s not dramatic. It’s just the banality of intelligence.”

For now, however, it’s the robot’s ability to act as a cipher for human concerns that keeps it central to Hollywood’s plot devices, says Craig Engler, senior vice president at Sci Fi, which includes the cable channel, website and receptacle.

“Putting a robot in a drama is a classic way of having the humans in that story look deeper into themselves,” says Engler. “unit reason we’re seeing more robots is that technology today allows filmmakers to use robots that really show personality like never before.”

Born on a lunch break

WALL·E’s progeny dates to 1994. Stanton and a tight Pixar crew broke for lunch after a grueling day working without ceasing Toy Story. The group already sensed the studio’s debut release would strike a chord and were brainstorming new ideas.

“The notion was floated, ‘What if the last robot on Earth wasn’t turned off?’ Something about the futility of that premise made me care without any intervention,” says Stanton. But he also knew that a dialogue-free film would be a non-starter.

Fast-forward to 2002. Deep in rewrites on Nemo, Stanton would procrastinate by dint of. handwriting the first act of his “robot sweetheart story.” What kept him going was the simple yet enormous task of bringing an assortment of metal pieces to life.

“That challenge haunts all animators. We grow up opinion that our bike is cold when it’s left out in the rain, or that a leaf steady a high branch is afraid of heights,” he says. “WALL·E tapped into the pure possibilities of animation.”

From the get-go, Stanton had a template — and a fabled one at that.

“When I finished Star Wars, I told my wife, ‘No more robots, they’re just so hard to do,’ ” says sound guru Burtt. “But when Andrew presented his idea to me, I was hooked. He said, ‘I want R2-D2: The Movie.‘ ”

Getting Burtt “was the smartest move I ever made,” Stanton says.

Stanton labored over the script, inserting descriptions of emotions and intent where dialogue would go. Burtt conjured up a symphony of mechanical language. AndMacLane began the laborious process of creating the movie’s star.

“We had the local police department’s bomb robot over here (at Pixar). We watched the oh-so-slow Mars Rover rove around. But in time, we figured out what we were after,” MacLane says.

In fact, his father Donald’s role in creating the ink-jet printer at Xerox even factored in when it came time to design the ultra-linear way in which WALL·E moves his arms.

“There was a huge altercation over whether WALL·E needed elbows,” says Stanton. “It was clear that would make him take heed too humanoid. So we construct a way for his arms to shift their point of origination.”

By far the biggest challenge in quest of the team was the film’s wordless opening, which both introduces the star and his world. During greatest in number of those 30 minutes, WALL·E is busy going about his daily routine, accompanied by his pal, a cockroach. He compacts trash, making towers lacking of the resulting cubes. He plays with a rubber ball and paddle, knocking himself over in the process. He rumbles across the barren landscape to his metal bunker of a home, where he wistfully screens a videotape of Hello, Dolly!

“The real epiphany was, without dialogue, everything other in those frames becomes more important, becomes something the audience will either embrace or reject,” says Stanton. “Ultimately, we all had to construct our game.

“But something about this robot and his love incident spoke to many of us. I’m a sci-fi geek and an incurable romantic. Putting those two things together in the same movie has been attractive to me for a very long time.”

To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.  Enlarge By Martin E. Klimek for USA TODAY

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Tokyo Drift, "I saw how people related to the characters’ stories as much as the cars and procedure." And Walker, below on the right, says it’s fun to have a job racing cars. "This isn’t Shakespeare, so we don’t take ourselves too seriously."”> EnlargeAnother lap: Diesel, above in his latest ride, says he has been leery of sequels. But after a cameo in 2006’s Tokyo Drift, “I saw how people related to the characters’ stories as much as the cars and action.” And Walker, below put on the right, says it’s fun to have a job racing cars. “This isn’t Shakespeare, so we dress in’t take ourselves too seriously.”  Enlarge  HEADLINES FROM PEOPLE.COM
By Scott Bowles, USA TODAY Fast and Furious is restarting its engines and putting something extra under the hood.

The fourth installment of the street-racing saga will have fruition of a rarity among franchises: the return of original stars. Vin Diesel and Paul Walker reprise their roles as outlaw and cop.

The movie is a signal of the strength of “quietude giants,” franchises that “might not be James Bond or Indiana Jones but still have a rabid following, especially overseas or on DVD,” says Paul Dergarabedian of Media by Numbers.

Even Justin Lin, who directed 2006’s Tokyo Drift, has been surprised by the franchise’s reach.

“I was in Barcelona, and a kid from Spain comes up and just says ‘Fast and Furious,’ ” Lin says. “It’s amazing how many kids know it.”

Indeed, the series has made $600 million worldwide and is one of Universal Studios’ best-selling DVD titles.

“We were doing a movie about illegal racing before most people even knew how popular it was,” Diesel says. “How many franchises are that based on the real world?”

But it’s not all generally received events, Walker says. “Who doesn’t like fast cars and hot women?”

To report corrections and clarifications, junction Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.  Enlarge Photos by Jaimie Trueblood, Universal Pictures

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By Ryan Nakashima, AP Business Writer LOS ANGELES — Tom Hanks has thrown his cherish behind a contract deal reached by the smaller of two actors unions, putting his high-profile name against plans by the larger union to wring more concessions from the major Hollywood studios.

Hanks added his connection to an e-mail petition urging members to vote for a deal reached May 28 by the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and avoid another Hollywood work stoppage on the heels of the 100-day writers’ strike, which put many actors out of work.

The Screen Actors Guild continued to negotiate with studios Monday and has urged its members to vote down the AFTRA deal.

Both unions’ contracts on prime-time TV shows and movie productions expire June 30.

The AFTRA petition said a “no” vote would effectively shut down Hollywood.

“Either our employers will lock us out, or SAG will strike,” it said. “There really is no alternative if the AFTRA deal is defeated.”

Among other prominent backers of the petition are former SAG president Richard Masur, Loretta Swit from M-A-S-H , James Cromwell from L.A. Confidential and other actors including Adam Arkin, Morgan Fairchild and Tess Harper.

Cromwell, a former SAG board member, told The Associated Press he felt SAG was pressing for demands that could not be met.

“You bargain as hard as you can. bound when you make promises you can’t keep and sooner or later you hold this town hostage by your belligerence and intransigence to the realities of the labor … it ain’t gonna fly,” he said. “Let’s get what we can get.”

A representative for Hanks confirmed Monday the actor had added his name to the petition but was unavailable to comment because he was filming in Europe.

AFTRA mailed off ballots to its some 70,000 members last week and the results are expected to be announced July 8.

SAG, representing 120,000 members, has said that talks with Hollywood studios could extend past the end of the current covenant on June 30, but it was willing to keep actors working without a deal. Some 44,000 are members of both unions.

The guild has said it would push on this account that higher wage increases, increased fees for Internet and DVD satisfaction, better mileage reimbursements and more protection for actors who refuse to consent to the use of clips of their images online.

“When unions compete with different contract terms, actors lose,” said SAG’s chief negotiator Doug Allen, in a statement urging members to vote against the deal.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. To report corrections and clarifications, contact Reader Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification.