Eagle Eye

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He's 22...and already has been on 4 or 5 blockbuster movies...and will be in a 4 or 5 upcoming ones too. I don't think he'll go away anytime soon. Unless he becomes a coke lover.

I wonder if he'll ever play a superhero one day...lol. He kinda looks like Peter Parker..lol
 
He's 22...and already has been on 4 or 5 blockbuster movies...and will be in a 4 or 5 upcoming ones too. I don't think he'll go away anytime soon. Unless he becomes a coke lover.

I wonder if he'll ever play a superhero one day...lol. He kinda looks like Peter Parker..lol


He would be an awesome Peter Parker I think.
 
http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=41099

LaBeouf and Monaghan Talk Eagle Eye
Source: Heather Newgen
January 21, 2008


eagleeyeset1.jpg
Director D.J. Caruso and Shia LaBeouf, who together made the hit thriller Disturbia (pictured left), have reunited on a new thriller, Paramount's Eagle Eye. In the DreamWorks film, LaBeouf plays a young slacker whose overachieving twin brother has died mysteriously. When the young man returns home, both he and a single mother find they have been framed as terrorists. Forced to become members of a cell that has plans to carry out a political assassination, they must work together to extricate themselves. Michellle Monaghan, Rosario Dawson, Billy Bob Thornton, Michael Chiklis, Anthony Azizi, Anthony Mackie and Lynn Cohen co-star.

ComingSoon.net visited the set of the film last week and got a chance to talk to LaBeouf and Monaghan:

ComingSoon.net: What's going on in the scene you guys are shooting today?
Michelle Monaghan: A lot of bruising. We're actually getting chased by Billy Bob Thornton's character Morgan and we've got a case that we don't know exactly where it needs to go to for all intensive purposes. We've got to deliver it somewhere and he's in hot pursuit.

CS: Do you know what's in the case?
Monaghan: No.

CS: Have you tried opening the case?
Monaghan: Spoiler over here.
Shia LaBeouf: It's on a time lock.
Monaghan: We can't get into it. We don't know what's inside it.

CS: You guys are shooting a scene inside a crane together. What was that experience like?
LaBeouf: It was fantastic.
Monaghan: It was awesome.
LaBeouf: We lit the scene ourselves with a cell phone.
Monaghan: It was funny because he was mostly lit. We watched the playback and I was like, "you can't even see me." Dude help me out here.
LaBeouf: I just lit myself.

CS: Can you talk about your relationship in the film and how your characters meet?
LaBeouf: We're strangers. I don't know who she is and she doesn't know who I am. We're being led to each other and on this journey together by a voice named Aria who is basically commanding us to do various things.

CS: Such as?
LaBeouf: Such a jump into this tour bus, rob that Brinks truck…
Monaghan: Go to the airport.
LaBeouf: Grab this case. Jump in this car.
Monaghan: It's almost like a scavenger hunt in a way. We don't know what we're doing.
LaBeouf: You have 15 seconds to leave this building or you'll die. Stuff like that. There's no explanation. There's no conservation.
Monaghan: It's life or death.

eagleeyeset2.jpg
CS: What makes you take the voice seriously?
LaBeouf: We both have situations where we both come very close to death. But very strategic planned close to death. It's enough for us to realize it, but this voice knows we're safe.

CS: What's the one thing you two did to put yourselves on the FBI's radar and make them suspicious of you?
LaBeouf: We've been framed as criminals. We're target criminals.

CS: What specifically have you been framed for?
LaBeouf: I show up at my apartment and there's boxes of ammunition, there's bag of fertilizer, there's weaponry, there's maps, there's directions on bomb making. There's a lot of things that would point to me being a terror suspect. He decides to leave the apartment and the journey begins.

CS: From the physical aspect, is it hard to maintain the emotional energy level?
Monaghan: I think it's probably easier. This is the most physically-demanding role I know I've done, but it really just heightens everything that you've got to lose. It really does feel like that. We're just running and gunning a lot. That momentum is there. I think that helps us tell the story.

CS: Michelle, I was watching your facial expressions during this scene and every take you seriously look frightened. Is that partly from being on a conveyor belt while it's moving and you're having to do these action stunts?
Monaghan: Sure, yeah. That's why I love it too. It's so exciting. It's like Shoots and Ladders for adults basically. There are a lot of things to be aware of and being careful. We're definitely getting bruised and battered. I am because he's much more clever about doing stunts. I just throw my body around…
LaBeouf: No, she's bad ass. Don't let her fool you. She's bad ass.
Monaghan: But it's fun. So yeah, I am really scared, but also the character has to be scared. I'm not that good at playing it cool.

CS: Shia, this is the third or fourth movie in a row now that you've had to do very physical work. Are you comfortable with that aspect of the job now?
LaBeouf: I'm pretty comfortable. I mean no, it's not comfortable. I'm more knowledgeable on how not to get hurt. When they say pad up, you pad up. There's no more bravado anymore. That's out the window. You get hit a couple of times and you realize over the course films that the bravado s**t is kind of pointless. At this point I just have more knowledge about it.

CS: This is the second time working with director D.J. Caruso. Can you compare what it is like working for him on this film verses "Disturbia"?
LaBeouf: Well the last movie we were in a room for three months. This, we haven't been in the same room for two days. It's very different. There's an "Easy Rider" element to this where we're never in the same spot too long. It's a journey film whereas "Disturbia" was sort of this very different movie. D.J. is an ace. It's awesome to watch him grow and me grow and we're doing it together. Our cast this time is crazy. We both can feel it. To have Michelle here and Billy Bob here. Having [Michael] Chiklis. Our cast is really strong. [Anthony] Mackie and Rosario [Dawson]. We didn't have this amount on the last. It was a lot of just me and him and the camera. This time it's bigger. It's fun to watch him sprouting. It's wild. I love D.J., I love working with him.

CS: Can you talk about the humorous aspects of the film?
LaBeouf: Yeah there's some humor in it. Less for me. There's humor in it. Billy Bob is really funny.
Monaghan: Billy Bob is so funny. Yeah, he's really funny. He has a really unique way of playing the character and he's pretty deadpan. He's good.

CS: Off the clock funny as well?
LaBeouf: Yeah, he's absolutely funny. I mean he's serious. You wouldn't f**k around with him.
Monaghan: I probably wouldn't tell him he's funny.

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CS: Can you go back to talking about how your characters first meet?
LaBeouf: She's just lost her child.
Monaghan: I'm a single mom whose son has been put into some dire straights. I'm basically forced by Aria to make some pretty split decisions. Essentially how far would you go to save someone's life. We first meet in a car. He bails into a car because he's been told to come into the car and I think he's basically responsible for the kidnapping of my son.
LaBeouf: I think she's the voice on the other end. We're figuring each out on the run. It's not like we're instant friends. I don't know who she is. There's still that air of mystery.
Monaghan: And mistrust. That mistrust kind of carries us throughout the film.

CS: Do you know what's going to happen next or are you kept in the dark for your character's sake?
LaBeouf: No, we know what's going to happen.

CS: Any sort of romance between you two?
LaBeouf: You would think so right? They didn't.
Monaghan: [Laughing] You would imagine tiger. [She playfully runs her hand through his hair and tosses his head back]
LaBeouf: We're surviving. I don't know how much room there is for any kissy kissy bulls**t when you're about to die.

CS: It almost has that classic buddy movie feel to it. Two people who don't trust each other…
Monaghan: Yeah.
LaBeouf: Only I don't know how much buddy there really is. We don't have a choice.
Monaghan: We can't leave each other at all. We basically have to get through all of these situations and trust each.
LaBeouf: We're forced into all of these decisions. It's not like I choose to hang out with her. I choose to be around her.
Monaghan: Alright, let's not get carried away here.
LaBeouf: I think that's one of the cool elements of the film that I haven't really seen before.

CS: Michelle, how would you compare this to "Mission: Impossible 3?"
Monaghan: I think the character is "Mission: Impossible" is kind of the heart of the story whereas all of this action is going on around her. But here, it's really smack dab in the middle of it.

CS: Shia, do your two brothers meet in the film?
LaBeouf: The twins. Do you see them on screen at any point? No. One of them is dead at the offset of the film. There's flashbacks, but there's not a lot of interaction between the two.

Eagle Eye hits theaters on August 8
 
Latino Reviews thoughts on the set visit.

Eagle Eye set visit!


Date: January 21, 2008

By: George 'El Guapo' Roush
Source:

Last Friday, I along with a few other nerdy journalists, got to visit the set of sexy dream hunk Shia LeBeouf’s upcoming thriller called Eagle Eye.


Eagle Eye is the story of two Americans caught in a conspiracy assassination plot. It’s a race against time thriller that also stars Michelle Monaghan, Rosario Dawson, Anthony Mackie, Billy Bob Thorton and just signed last week to play the Secretary of Defense, Michael Chiklis. Shia and Michelle are two suspects being chased by FBI’s Billy Bob Thorton. Shia and Michelle receive phone calls from a mysterious woman who propels them further into the mystery. They also run into other strangers who keep telling them what to do and where to go if they want to live. I hope that’s what’s going on because it sounds like I stole plot devices from a random season of 24.


Paramount asked us to drive out to Riverside, Ca. For those of you not familiar with Southern California, Riverside is a cross between the barren wasteland of Utah and a Gorilla’s armpit. Shooting was taking place inside of a DHL shipping facility that was freezing cold inside. The previous days scenes that were shot were of Shia and Michelle tumbling down conveyor belts and slides trying to get away from Billy Bob Thorton. The scene we saw being shot the day of our visit was above us on a large conveyor belt and we weren’t allowed topside or Director D.J. Caruso would have us killed. So we had to watch the scene being shot on monitors below.


Michelle’s character was holding a silver briefcase, and was crawling on her hands and knees along with Shia on a large conveyor belt filed with boxes. Out of nowhere, Billy Bob’s stunt double jumps down on the conveyor belt and tries to grab Michelle. She swings the briefcase around and smacks him in the face with it. I found that part to be amusing because if they don’t know what’s in the briefcase and they’re carrying materials that could be dangerous, smacking people in the face with said case might not be the smartest thing to do. Once Billy Bob’s character is stunned, Shia crawls over him to reach Michelle and Billy’s stunt double grabs his ankle and the scene ends. They shot that about six more times, changing camera angles, etc. They also shot another scene that was up close of Shia and Billy’s stunt double grappling on the conveyor belt. It actually looked tiring and at one point I saw Shia wack his back on one of the railings. But I’m sure he was padded up pretty good and his strong sexy muscularly tanned back absorbed most of the blow.


These scenes are to lead up to Shia and Michelle running to the cargo area of a C-17A U.S. Air Force plane. A plane so ****ing big, it actually was used to transport a killer whale. It takes three pilots to fly the thing and it can stay in the air indefinitely as long as it keeps getting refueled. Which is a weird fact because I would think most planes could stay flying if they always had fuel. In the back there were jeep transport vehicles and about three large box crates. Apparently Shia and Michelle get inside one of the crates to hide and have a scene together using only a cell phone as light. That was going to be shot later so we didn’t get to see that part. Here's how big one of these planes is for reference.


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In a Q&A with Shia and Michelle they reveal more details about their characters. They don’t know what’s in the case because it has a time lock on it. There doesn’t appear to be any romantic involvement between the two (much to Shia’s disappointment). They’re being led by a woman on the phone named Aria commanding them to do various things. They’re framed as criminals so that’s why the FBI is chasing them. Sorry guys, no big info on Transformers 2 (There’s no script, so no update on the sequel) or Indiana Jones (He does a lot of physical work in that movie as well but doesn’t say anything else about the movie).


One more thing about Shia’s character, he has a twin shown at the beginning of the film but you soon learn he’s dead. When Shia shows up at his apartment he finds boxes of ammunition, weapons, maps and directions on bomb making so he’s suspected of being a terrorist which must be the trigger to this whole thing. He runs into Michelle later on in the film and she’s doing things against her will by the same woman so they team up together to try and figure out what’s going on.


Sounds like it could be a cool movie. I like flicks where people are running for their lives and you don’t know why. Hopefully it doesn’t cop out and the twin is really alive at the end and it’s all a set up because the twin is a terrorist or something lame. We’ll see. The film opens August 8, 2008. Thanks to the cool guys at Paramount for the set visit!
 
http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/847/847218p1.html

IGN Eyes Eagle Eye: Part Two
Talking to Billy Bob Thornton about LaBeouf, Britney and more.


by Todd Gilchrist



US, January 24, 2008 - In recent years Billy Bob Thornton has cultivated a reputation for being a comedic rather than dramatic actor. His last few films, including Mr. Woodcock, The Bad News Bears and certainly Bad Santa established him as a foul-mouthed force to be reckoned with, and no doubt earned him some nice paychecks as a purveyor of yuks. Before then, however, Thornton was chiefly known for his searing dramatic performances, most notably in A Simple Plan and Sling Blade; and with Eagle Eye, Thornton ventures back into that territory, albeit in a decidedly more action-oriented role.

In the film, Thornton plays a FBI agent who pursues Shia LaBeouf, and by extension Michelle Monaghan, as they undertake a series of odd and in many cases illegal tasks. During a visit to the film's Riverside, Calif. set, Thornton spoke to IGN about his role in the film, the challenges of keeping himself interested in acting, and the side projects that sustain his creativity when movie projects peter out.



IGN Movies: Did you cut your hand during shooting?

Billy Bob Thornton:
I don't remember exactly when it was.

IGN: Talk a little bit about your role in the movie.

Thornton:
Uh, I play Thomas Morgan, head of the anti-terrorism task force for the FBI. It's one of those movies where I basically run around the airport and factories and houses with a gun chasing Shia [LaBeouf].

IGN: We saw your stunt double earlier squaring off against Shia.

Thornton:
Yeah, my turn was later. You kind of overlap the stuff – the stunt double will do it and then you come do part of that or sometimes all of it, sometimes part of it depending on how much they need to see your face. I've always done a lot of my own stunts; my double, Mickey, he's a really good double – I mean they can shoot a lot with him, and you know, the older you get the happier you are with that [laughs].

IGN: How long have you been working with him?

Thornton:
We've done several movies together. I can't remember what the first one was, but it might have been Bad Santa. I've probably done five with him, and I had another guy before him for years – but he got hurt all of the time [laughs].

IGN: Do you ever find yourself getting carried away with fight scenes?

Thornton:
No, I mean you try to be as realistic as possible without hurting anybody or getting hurt yourself. Although I've been hurt on movies a lot of times, and people always ask me if I did my own stunts and I always say, "Not on purpose." But I guess the worst one was at least 15 years ago – I got six broken ribs and a broken collar bone, a cracked pelvis and a concussion, all kinds of stuff on a movie a long time ago. I probably shouldn't have been doing that thing that I was doing, and I did it anyway. But yeah, fight scenes, you just learn ways to do it that look very real and some of it is, some of it's not. And a lot of young actors will feel that bravado and they'll say, "Oh, no. Go ahead and hit me, man. It's OK." And I'm like, "Alright, but you may not like it." Because I used to do that too, and I did a TV show back in the '80s and one time there was this girl who was supposed to slap me. She was supposed to slap me, and I said, "It's OK, slap me as hard as you can." She was doing it kind of weak and I said, "Well, it's not going to look real." I said, "Seriously, I can take it. Don't worry." Finally she just knocked the piss out of me and my face swelled up and it was all red and the make-up people had to keep putting stuff on it. So that's what you get for acting like that. So you just learn ways to do it that are close to real, as close as you can possibly get without hurting anybody. Most of the time when you're doing movies with legitimate film companies and everything, they have really good stunt coordinators and everything, and they're usually pretty good about keeping everybody safe.

eagle-eye-20080123061257502.jpg
- Warner Bros.
Thornton in The Astronaut Farmer.

IGN: Based on your comments you seem aware you're playing a character type more than a character. Did you pick someone to emulate or imitate for this character or did you do a lot of research?

Thornton:
Well, it depends on the role. I mean, there are roles you don't need research for. I mean, I tend to only take roles that I'm right for. I think it's one of the most important things for an actor. A lot of actors will just play anything and they end up with a damn British accent and they have no business doing it, or an Irish guy has a hillbilly accent and has no business doing it. The FBI guys, a lot of them are from Texas and Mississippi, so it's not like I had to learn to be from the Bronx or anything like that. And then all of the technical stuff, the dialogue is written [but] the thing that's important for me when you're saying stuff, like when I'm talking about – when I'm doing a lot of technical-speak, I like to learn what it means as opposed to just saying it because when you're just saying it, it sounds like a list of stuff. And if you know what it means as you say it then it actually sounds like you know what you're talking about. Like for Pushing Tin, this movie I did with [John] Cusack years ago about air traffic controllers, he and I went to actual air traffic control school, and I'm glad they sent us through that, one up in Toronto, because that was a monster to learn that stuff. Because when you're looking at a scope you're looking at the actual planes that were coming in so you really had to know which ones were there and their number and what headings they were on because you could see it on the screen. You also... you don't have to do this because the main moviegoing public doesn't know what that stuff means, but there will be air traffic controllers watching the movie, and there will be FBI agents watching the movie, so just personally I like to make sure that none of them see me over at Safeway one day and say, "Hey, I really liked your movie, but that's bull****" or whatever. So you try to get it right.

IGN: Have you ever had that experience?

Thornton:
I don't think so. I mean, I don't do a lot of movies where I need that kind of stuff, you know. I guess this one and Armageddon and Pushing Tin. I mean nobody knew what Davy Crockett said to anybody [laughs].

IGN: Is there something specific you did have to learn for this film?

Thornton:
Yeah, quite a bit. I mean, [for] a lot of that dialogue I did have to learn quite a bit. The guy that we have as a technical advisor on this movie actually did my job, I mean that was his actual job. So he knows all about that. Tom, he's a great guy and he's on set a lot and he'll tell me little things sometimes that I wouldn't have thought about. Even chasing after [Shia] with a gun, he'll say something. I've used guns a lot and shot them a lot in movies, but just little things like where I would have the gun while I was standing by the corner for specific reasons or whatever. That stuff's always great to know, and like I said, usually in an action movie, the people that go see action movies are like the larger part of the public. Like if you watch most [action movies] this one's pretty realistic here. But there are some that you watch and you have to forget all of that stuff because it's all just horse**** [laughs]. Those movies are not usually very good, but at the same time, its' the guy eating Cheetos and drinking beer going, "Ha! Look, he killed him!" So they don't really care, but this guy's great and he pays a lot of attention to detail, so you usually have a lot of help.

IGN: Do you have a lot of interaction with Shia and Michelle Monaghan in the film?

Thornton:
Hardly any with Michelle, but I have quite a bit with Shia because you see at the beginning of the movie, we actually have him in custody and I question him and there's a big interrogation scene between Shia and myself. It's one of the bigger dialogue scenes in the movie, actually. So he and I have quite a bit of stuff and then at the end he and I are together, but once I discover that it's not just about him. And you know, in a lot of ways it's like The Fugitive with Tommy Lee Jones and Harrison Ford, like after a while it's like, "Wait a minute. I smell a rat here." It's kind of odd in a movie like this because in a lot of ways, even though you're the FBI you start out as the bad guy because the hero of the movie, you're chasing and trying to get him. And even though people shouldn't think that way because the guy is doing his job, at the same time, at the beginning it's like you don't want me to get him because it's not him or whatever. But then it ends up that, yeah, I was doing my job, and he knows that and I know that and everything works OK. But with Michelle, the closest I get to her is running after her. She pops me in the face with a briefcase at one point, but other than that not really.

IGN: Is it just your character who is involved with chasing Shia?

Thornton:
The whole FBI and other agencies too, but you know as it oftentimes happens in movies, they want the movie star guys to be on screen most of the time. So yeah there's a lot of just me chasing him [laughs].

IGN: Do you work with Michael Chiklis?

Thornton:
I might have [a scene] with the Secretary of Defense. Maybe I do have a little scene.
 
IGN: What do you have coming up after the movie?

Thornton:
I have a lot of stuff coming up after this, and it's funny because I was off movies for a couple of years, and people say, "God, you're working all of the time." But it's just because of the way movies come out. You guys know, you're always interviewing someone and saying, "Did you do this one after that one?" And I'm like, "Well, I didn't. I did that two years ago," or whatever. I guess Astronaut Farmer was the last movie I did before this one; no, I did The Informers, which is this movie based on a Bret Easton Ellis book that we just did. I finished it just before this one and it's one of those movies kind of like – I don't know if any of you ever saw Love Actually, where I played the President of the United States, so it's like a cameo but in a way it's not because it's like everybody has a cameo. It's like a bunch of different stories that all sort of have a thread through them and they're all linked in some way. The Informers is one of those, so each one of us has their part in the movie and Kim Basinger is in it, and Winona Ryder, and a bunch of young actors that I can't remember who they are but they're supposed to be really well-known. I know Brad Renfro, God rest his soul, was in it, but I didn't have any scenes with him. But I knew Brad very well from way back. He read for me for All the Pretty Horses and at one point I was supposed to direct Cinderella Man and ended up not wanting to do that at the time, but I met with him about that. I think it was that one, but one way or another I knew him over the years but only found out after he passed away the other day that he was in The Informers. I didn't know because it was such a compartmentalized movie; you just had your own bit and then other people had theirs. I really worked predominantly with Kim Basinger and Winona Ryder. But in the last two years I did a record and a half, I had one that finished and came out, we toured with the band in July, August and September of last year. I also play music – I have my whole life – and I sort of exist in the Americana music world which is a little more underground, so now it's sort of coming to the forefront more and we just became the face of Dell Lounge. That's like Dell's version of iTunes, but it's more than that – it will be documentary footage and all kinds of nice things you can get on there. But they have the Boxmasters as the cover artist for that deal so that's becoming a little more (inaudible).

IGN: Have you heard anything about a Warren Zevon movie? I know you were friends with him.

Thornton:
I've certainly been talked to about it. That's the idea – I think they want to make that book into a movie. I've been approached about it just in terms of helping them get it going, not to play Warren or anything like that. Frankly, I don't think anybody can play Warren, because it ain't an easy job. But he was a close friend of mine – I'm in the book a few times [laughs]. But he was an amazing guy, Warren.

IGN: Is there any chance of you getting back together with Tom Epperson and Carl Franklin any time soon?

Thornton:
Yeah, you know, Tom... one of the movies that I'm going to direct – I haven't directed since All The Pretty Horses so it's been seven years or whatever – more, I guess. But one of them is based on a true story and I actually had Tom write the screenplay, the first draft of the screenplay. So he and I still talk, and we may write something together again, but I've been so busy with records and touring and movies that I haven't written anything in a while but songs. I've written about a hundred songs in the last two years but I haven't written anything on a screenplay. But Carl Franklin was actually going to do a movie with me and Halle Berry last year, but she got pregnant and a lot of things like that [happened]. I think that one might have been really good, too.

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- New Line Cinema
Thornton in Mr. Woodcock.

IGN: Any chance of a third film with the Coen Bothers?

Thornton:
Yeah, I hope so. They talked to me about doing their film that was just out recently, and I wasn't able to do it at the time, to play one of the parts in No Country for Old Men. They know exactly who they want and what they want for – like, for instance, when they did O Brother, Where Art Thou?. You would think that I would have been in that movie, you know what I mean, and that Clooney might have been in The Man Who Wasn't There. But that's what they do – they put him in that and let him play a hillbilly, and put me in this thing in California in the '40s in a Humphrey Bogart suit. So they'll know when it's time, and we talk about stuff all of the time. At one point they talked to me about – well, we all came up with the idea years ago, I've known the brothers for years and years before I ever worked with them, and we always talked about possibly doing a version of Tarzan with me [laughs], which would be pretty hysterical. Right? I think so. I remind them of it all of the time. I was talking to Ethan not too long ago and I said, "Ethan, what about Tarzan?" He said "Yeah, we've got to do that." So I'm sure I will do one with the Coen Brothers. I love working with them, I love working with the Coens, Sam Raimi; I loved working with Barry Levinson on Bandits. That was a real fun movie to make. Things like that, I love doing that stuff. I did a few comedies in a row so my next stuff coming up is all more dramatic stuff. After this I'm doing a movie called Duplicity with Clive Owen and Julia Roberts and Tom Wilkinson, which is great because I knew Tom for sometime [during] the Academy Awards circuit, when you kind of run into people you don't really know but you're always in a room with them for some kind of interview or whatever. I remember what a great guy he was and I always thought he was a great actor, so the opportunity to work with him is really appealing to me. That's what I do next, and then I've got two movies I'm going to direct, and a lot of it depends on the strikes and – hey, you can't write that we're on strike! [laughs] A lot of it kind of depends on that kind of thing, as well as I've got another tour in July and August and finishing up this Boxmasters record. See, I do solo records, but this new record is under my band's name, sort of my Traveling Wilburys bunch [laughs]. I mean, it's the same guys, it's just me and the guys in my band. But it's kind of punk hillbilly music, you might say it's electric hillbilly music with a '60s vibe. It's pretty great – I think if you guys like music you'll dig this. Some of it's very irreverent, even though it's hillbilly music, some of the songs are very dark. There's one about the prospect of marriage that's called "I'll Give You A Ring When You Give Me Back My Balls." But if you guys ever liked that kind of thing, I think you'll dig that music. It's real slammin' but it's also kind of old-fashioned at the same time, so we're pretty happy with what's going on there. We have some interesting covers, too.

IGN: Do you think that music will overtake your passion for acting?

Thornton:
Not my passion for acting, but my passion for making movies [laughs]. I mean, I grew up as a starving musician and a starving roadie. I was a roadie for a lot of famous bands when I was a teenager and in my 20s. I kind of grew up in the music world and really came to L.A. to do that, or be an actor or whatever else that didn't involve shoveling asphalt for the Arkansas highway department. So I just went with what happened first, really, and I love acting. I stress that, acting – making movies, not as much. I love making movies; I love making small movies… I'll tell you what I love: Monster's Ball, The Man Who Wasn't There, A Simple Plan, Sling Blade, Bad Santa, I actually loved making Bandits, The Astronaut Farmer – those movies. And I enjoy making this movie because the crew and the people I'm working with are so great. They're really a professional crew and they're wonderful, I think it's going to be a great movie, and it's just not usually the genre that I connect with.

[The unit publicist asks if we have any last questions. We don't.]

Thornton:
No questions about Britney Spears or Lindsay Lohan? That's why I told [the unit publicist] that the interviews I want to do for this are with these guys because I just stopped doing interviews with people that have those gossip shows.

IGN: Do a lot of people ask you about that? You don't seem like you would know about that kind of stuff.

Thornton:
I wouldn't know anything about any of that stuff. You ought to see it, when you're at a press junket and all the TV folks come in right after the other. It's astounding how little they ask you about the actual thing you're doing.

IGN: Do you have any plans to cover any of her songs, maybe?

Thornton:
[laughs] Well, I was actually thinking about doing a whole tribute record [laughs], just like hillbilly versions of all of that stuff. And the thing is I would have to come down a notch with my dancing skills because I'm like Fred Astaire. You've never seen anything like it. But you can probably just tell that by watching my movies, that I'm a natural-born dancer.

IGN: You and Christopher Walken have dance-offs?

Thornton:
Chris and I go way back, to like before there was a Broadway.
 
http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=42184

Eagle Eye Pushed Back to September
Source: ComingSoon.net
February 20, 2008


DreamWorks/Paramount has pushed back director D.J. Caruso's Eagle Eye from August 8 to September 26. The thriller will now face Universal's Death Race and Disney's South of the Border on that date.

Shia LaBeouf plays a young slacker whose overachieving twin brother has died mysteriously. When the young man returns home, both he and a single mother find they have been framed as terrorists. Forced to become members of a cell that has plans to carry out a political assassination, they must work together to extricate themselves.

Michellle Monaghan, Rosario Dawson, Billy Bob Thornton, Michael Chiklis, Anthony Azizi, Anthony Mackie and Lynn Cohen co-star.

LaBeouf previously starred in Caruso's Disturbia.
 
http://www.aintitcool.com/node/36125


Quint vibrates on the set of DJ Caruso's EAGLE EYE starring LaBeouf, Monaghan, Chiklis & Dawson! Plus Y: THE LAST MAN tid-bits!



Ahoy, squirts! Quint here with a little rundown of my time on the set of DJ Caruso’s DISTURBIA follow-up called EAGLE EYE. The flick is an actioneer starring everybody’s favorite Shia “The Beef” LaBeouf. (PS Keep an eye out for Y: THE LAST MAN details direct from DJ Caruso and LaBeouf!)

The story is very Hitchcockian where we follow an average youngster who receives a phone call out of the blue that propels him into a race to clear his name as the government, thinking he’s a terrorist, closes in. In this film he’s coupled with a single mother, played by the lovely Michelle Monaghan, whose son has been taken.

Leading the hunt for the two is Michael Chiklis and an FBI agent played by Rosario Dawson.

That’s only a little more than I knew going in. Since one of my two days visiting the project happened to be when they were shooting the end of the film, I’ll have to be a little delicate so I don’t ruin anything.

I saw many different sets on my visit, most of them built in the Howard Hughes Spruce Goose Hanger in Playa Vista, where Oliver Stone had his Ground Zero built for WORLD TRADE CENTER and Jon Favreau had the caves where Tony Stark builds the Mark One armor. These are giant stages.

On these stages I saw the main villain’s lair (yes, lair), I saw an exact replica of a floor of the Pentagon and I saw a secured room, I’m guessing somewhere within the Pentagon, where the biggest scene of the day was located.

But that’s getting a little ahead of myself. My first day of visiting was a location near Dodger’s Stadium in LA. I got there a little ahead of the always radiant Tamar from Paramount, so I hung out in base camp (in a supermarket parking lot) for a few minutes.

Within 120 seconds I was approached by Deb Wuliger, Spielberg’s Unit Publicist. I’ve talked to Deb a few times, the first on the set of WAR OF THE WORLDS (click here to read that report) and then last October when I had that weird stop at Amblin while they were filming INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE CRYSTAL SKULL (click here to read that one). I suppose since Spielberg is producing EAGLE EYE (he also originated the story) that explains why she was the Publicist on this one.

As we caught up, LaBeouf walked by, saw us and came over. Last year I bumped into LaBeouf a lot, from the TRANSFORMERS set (right here for that one) to DISTURBIA’s screening in Austin and then immediately after at ShoWest.

He briefly said hello and then ran off to set. Deb and I talked INDIANA JONES and she thought people will be surprised by LaBeouf's character in the movie. I told her that there’s excitement for the film, but people are a little worried because there have been a series of remakes, reimaginings, prequels, sequels and spin-offs of the stuff my generation and the one directly before mine grew up with… and most of those have been disappointing. There’s a worry that INDY 4 will be another one for that pile.

She said, with all respect to Mr. Lucas and his contributions to the new Indiana Jones movie, it is Spielberg’s film and not Mr. Lucas’.

Tamar arrived and we headed up to the set.

I can’t say much about this part, but I will say it’s a quiet moment between Michelle Monaghan and Shia LaBeouf.

They were about to get a shot off when I arrived, but I got a chance to head over to DJ Caruso and say hi. I first met DJ back when he did SALTON SEA and brought it to Austin. He’s a genuinely good guy and we talked after that about me coming by to watch him work. A few years back I dropped in to visit him on the set of THE SHIELD when he was guest directing, but other than that brief encounter this is my first time to see him actually work.

One person I hadn’t met before this particular day was Michelle Monaghan. Good God, y’all. There are some genuinely cute people in this world. I don’t just mean good looking, but inside as well and Monaghan struck me as one of those people, always free with a laugh and a smile to anybody, not just her co-star, her director or some weirdo reporter sitting off to the side. Anybody on the crew, from a gaffer to the boom guy to a PA… everybody got the same treatment.

We had a little time to talk after they got a few takes off the ground and I brought up KISS KISS BANG BANG. I loved that flick and so did she, appreciative that it’s gathering quite a following. She had good things to say about Robert Downey Jr. and Val Kilmer, especially Kilmer. I told her how I loved seeing him go back to comedy in that role. He was so damn good at it… REAL GENIUS, TOP SECRET and then he kind of lost himself in more serious parts, but his real talent, I think, is comedy. That’s what I loved about KKBB. She geeked out about TOP SECRET a little before having to return to work.

In another moment of quiet in-between set-ups I found myself flanked by LaBeouf on my right and Caruso on my left, so I picked this time to bring up Y: THE LAST MAN, a series I’m quite fond of. I thanked Caruso for inviting me onto this set, but that if he gets Y going, he won’t be able to keep me from living on that set.

He laughed and pretty much said bring it on. Let’s see if that’s still the case when he begins shooting… Anyway, I asked him about an early draft of the script that circulated. It was written by series creator Brian K. Vaughan and even though it had great moments, it really crammed everything into one two hour movie. That meant we lost Hero, Yorrick’s sister, and we lost all the side-characters that give the story it’s identity.

Caruso agreed with me 100% and said that once the writer’s strike was over (this was before the end) they’re going to completely rework the script, keeping as much as the book as they can. In fact, he’s going to structure it as a trilogy, with the first movie encompassing issues 1-12, not trying to get the whole 50-something issues into one movie.

I said that was great, but he had to promise me something. “Please, for the love of God… use a real monkey for Ampersand.” He laughed and said, “What fun would it be if we didn’t use a real monkey?” He said there is no way he’s going to have a CG Ampersand.

LaBeouf piped up saying that he looks forward to the monkey scratching his face off and ****ting on him, which seems to confirm that he’s the number one choice for Yorrick. I know he’s getting a bit over-exposed now, but I think LaBeouf is actually a good pick for the character.

Anyway, I had to get my Y: THE LAST MAN geek conversation out of the way before I could focus on what was going on around me.

I also got to chat a little with DoP Dariusz Wolski. Strangely enough I had just read a story in AMERICAN CINEMATOGRAPHER about his work on SWEENEY TODD the week before. He also shot all three PIRATES films, DARK CITY, CRIMSON TIDE and THE CROW. His eye is fantastic and the footage I saw looked up to his standard.

Let’s talk about that footage a bit. I was shown a “sizzle reel” that the poduction had cut. I think they said I was seeing it before the studio. I don’t know how the studio reacted to it, but I hope they use the 3 or so minute piece as a basis for the trailer.

The footage opens with LaBeouf getting a call in an office-looking area. It’s a woman he doesn’t know telling him he has something like 7 seconds to get down. Understandably, he hesitates, not knowing what’s going on and suddenly the windows blow inward and he’s on the run.

The mysterious woman on the phone tells him to get to a car in a certain place. He gets there and Michelle Monaghan is there, freaked out. She was also brought to this spot by the mysterious woman after her son disappeared. She thinks LaBeouf is responsible. The rest is action. Car chases (real metal on metal crunches that look great), running, guns, etc.

It really does give you the impression that this is a huge movie. The action is major. I was also shown one of these action sequences by Caruso’s incredibly crush-worthy assistant, Emily. It was on a laptop, but even on the smaller screen the scale was impressive.

It was a car chase through a construction site, with those giant claw cranes hanging about. Billy Bob Thornton and Rosario Dawson are the pursuers. It starts as a hardcore chase and suddenly the cranes enter into it, dropping **** on cars as they speed through, picking up and dumping some of the unmarked FBI cars and finally grabbing hold of the car Shia and Michelle are in. They hang out as the car is swung over the ocean and dropped… them with it.

The look was a little TRANSFORMERS, but not as stylized with the bleach-bypass process. Looked really sharp, actually. Kind of a middle ground between the look of the PIRATES movies and a big Baystravaganza.

It was around this time that I grabbed some hot chocolate at craft service and bumped right into yet another familiar face. If you read my set reports for THE MIST closely, you might remember a guy by the name of Ralph Nelson, a set photographer. He did all the onset photos for RETURN OF THE JEDI and the rest of the prequels. He and C3PO had a bit of a love/hate relationship. They love ****ing with each other and hate it when the other gets the last laugh. Read more about it here. You’re going to have to scroll down.

Anyway, there he was on the set. We caught up and he said that someone had pointed Anthony Daniels to that story and he commented upon it on his website, but I never saw that post. I wonder if it is out there. I didn’t get to see any of Nelson’s work on EAGLE EYE (although I tried to get an exclusive pic for this article… guess it just wasn’t meant to be), but I’m sure it’s top quality like the rest of his stuff.

The scene that I can’t talk about is a quiet scene, like I mentioned and a serious one… there are children in the immediate vicinity and after one of the takes Michelle and Shia break out in laughter, breaking the sweet tone, and Michelle laughingly drops an F-bomb. A split second later she slaps her hands across her mouth and mumbles “Oh, no!” through her fingers.

“What?” asked Shia. “I said it in front of the kids!” Those with headphones busted out laughing and Shia called out, “Quint, that’s going all over the internet, right?” Yes, it is now. Michelle Monaghan drops f-bombs in front of children. Fact.

Let’s move on to the Spruce Goose hanger and my second day. This was later in the week and it was a scene between Rosario Dawson and Michael Chiklis.

Now we get to what the headline was referring to. I was an official vibrator on the set. Unfortunately my talents weren’t utilized by either Ms. Dawson or Ms. Monaghan, but I still contributed, without pay. It was exhausting, time consuming work, let me tell ya’.

The scene takes place in a sound-proof room and the very first shot I was there for required my impressive skills.

The first shot was on video, looking into the room through a giant window. It’s the POV of the security camera. In the scene, the main villain is trying to eavesdrop on the conversation between Chiklis and Dawson. She has a vital piece of evidence, a recording that might prove LaBeouf and Monaghan’s innocence.

The baddie uses the Pentagon’s own system to eavesdrop, looking in via a security camera. Apparently, Dawson is aware that their security might be compromised and ensures the room is secure, going so far as to unplug the phone line.

The recording is played via a cell phone on a table. Also on this table is Chiklis’ coffee cup. This is where I come in.

When I checked out this set up, standing on a grated floor just behind the video camera, Caruso came up and handed me what appeared to be a remote control for a toy race car, then held up a portable flat screen monitor which had the video from the camera displayed.

They were trying different zooms, some faster, some slower, all going past Dawson and onto the surface of the coffee in the cup. Caruso asked them to stay on the cup and told me to pull the trigger. When I did the liquid’s surface rippled, like the water when the T-Rex was attacking those poor little bastards in the jeeps in JURASSIC PARK.

If I pressed down all the way, the ripples went crazy. If I fluctuated between all the way and barely held down, the ripples changed as well. Neat.

Caruso called for a take and I handed the remote back. He refused and told me he’d give me signals. We both looked at the same monitor and he’d time it as the camera zooms in. “Faster… slower… slower… in and out…” Yeah, it sounded dirty, but that’s why they put me in charge.

A couple minutes of this and they had what they needed and I retired as “On Set Vibrator.” I only consult now.

The idea is that the villain will be able to translate the audio vibrations and know that the cover is blown. If that sounds crazy sci-fi to you, this type of technology is being used by the military right now. They have computers that can do this in the here and now.

In fact, I talked with producers Alex Kurtzman and Peter Chiarelli at length about that very aspect. They were very adamant that every piece of technology deployed in this movie could exist or does in fact exist in the world today.

While I was there, they set up for real film camera coverage of this very scene within the sound-proof booth. There’s a lot of exposition in this scene and it took Dawson a few takes to make it sound natural, but she did in the end. Lines like “All the threats we’ve been tracking, all the chatter… it might be fake…” look good on paper, but it takes some crafting and charisma to make it sound natural.

Everybody seemed to be having fun and when the cameras were rolling Chiklis and Dawson put on their serious faces, demeanors completely changing. One bit I remember pretty clearly was Dawson giving Chiklis a little **** about missing his mark a little on an earlier take and Chiklis feigning shock, then following it up with “I’m a mark-hittin’ mother****er!”

Before I left, Deb wanted me to briefly chat with Michael Chiklis and Rosario Dawson. Chiklis came up first and first thing we talked about was THE SHIELD. I’m a new convert. A couple months back I was at Costco and I saw they had the first 4 seasons for $16.99 each, so, having heard much good word about the series, I picked them all up and mainlined ‘em.

Big fan. He chided me for not being any further along than the 4th Season, though. “You haven’t gotten to Forrest (Whittaker)’s stuff, then. It’s great.” He talked about the series’ final season and said that it isn’t going to end “like the ****in’ Sopranos.” He didn’t seem pleased with the Sopranos ending…

Chiklis then went on to say that even though he had known Caruso from his directing efforts on THE SHIELD, the reason he got the gig on EAGLE EYE was because of Caruso’s son. “Ah, because of FANTASTIC FOUR?” Chiklis was quick to shoot that down. Almost in a “Oh, God no” tone.

Apparently Caruso and his family were at a basketball game and his kid got a hold of DJ’s cell and randomly selected someone from his dad’s contact list and dialed. That someone was Chiklis. When Caruso apologized for the late call, they began catching up and finding out what the other was up to. Of course, that lead to a “You know, what? You’d be perfect for…” and Chiklis got the gig. He told this story like a kid who was given a scratch-off lotto ticket and won $50. He was definitely passionate about the story, telling me how kick-ass the movie is going to be.

We talked a long time… so long in fact that when we finished and Rosario was up, they were both called back to set. I did get a wave and short shouted conversation over about 15 feet as she walked to the set. “I haven’t met you before, right?” “Nope,” I said. “First time.” “I talked to an Ain’t It Cool guy at Comic-Con, I think.” “Yeah, we’re everywhere.” Then she did a “Bum-bum-buuuuummmmm” followed by a little bouncy dance and a laugh.

Before I left, Kurtzman showed me around to the rest of the sets, including the Pentagon, which, with permission, was recreated exactly. At least one floor was exactly the same, down to the portraits, soda machines and office decorations. It certainly felt weird stepping from a large, dusty space into a compact and immaculate floor of the Pentagon. My butt-hole tightened a bit, I’m not afraid to admit. I felt like a schoolboy going to the principal’s office.

Anyway, there’s an aspect to this flick that people have no clue about yet. It’s either going to make it a million times more interesting to you or turn you off. I bet it’s the former. At least it was for me. This one isn’t so much the straight up Wrong Man action suspense flick.

It’s hard to make any definitive statements, of course, but from what I saw this one has a chance of being a lot of fun. It’s on a scale much bigger than anybody anticipated, it has a quite a fun cast and everything I saw looked great. The real trick will be seeing it in context as a finished film, but for now I’m optimistic.

With that done, I only have three more big visit stories to catch up on. Sheesh… Look for two of them (a trip to the Narnia edit bay, which didn’t involve going through a wardrobe, strangely enough, and my tour through one of the all time geekiest places known to man) to hit this week.

Til then, this is Quint signing off.
 
I'll be sadly honest...i'm seeing this because Shia is in it and I think he's a great actor with a massive future.
 
Nothing Exciting:
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ShiaPoints.jpg

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There's a new pic in EW but I don't have a scanner :mad:
 
Better than nothing Donnie. :up: It amazes me how much more mature Shia looks in this, he's found the stubbly beards = older looking recipe from Leo. :woot:
 
He definately did :cwink:...Theres a few others ill post in a bit :up:
 
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