Enders World
![]()
If you think regular school is tough, try it in a rotating space station. And by the way, do you have a hall pass for hall number 0058? Because if you dont, you could end up scrubbing the showers. When you first arrive at Battle School, all you perceive is its utility, its functionality that is until you enter the BATTLE ROOM, where there is no up, no down, and ZERO Gs. Movie making can become overly reliant on digital worlds, and nothing can replace a well-built set that you can see and touch and stand in the middle of, fooling you into thinking you are really there. Enjoy this small taste of Enders big world. Well see a lot more in the weeks to come.
Producer Roberto Orci Talks ENDERS GAME, Plus a New Photo from the Set
by Dave Trumbore Posted:April 3rd, 2012 at 6:48 pm
At the newly up-and-running production blog for Enders Game, the producers have teased a glimpse of Enders world at the Battle School and have promised us more to come in the weeks ahead. If thats not enough to whet your appetite, producer Roberto Orci also dropped a few comments in response to fans fears about how the filmmakers were treating the source material and questions about potential sequels as well as author Orson Scott Cards involvement in the project. Enders Game, based on the award-winning novel by Card, follows a young student training in military school who may be the last hope for humanity in a futuristic war against a hostile alien race. The movie, directed by Gavin Hood, stars Asa Butterfield, Abigail Breslin, Harrison Ford, Ben Kingsley, Viola Davis and Hailee Steinfeld. Fans will definitely want to hit the jump to check out the new photo and to see what Orci had to say.![]()
The folks over at Enders Ansible have put together a collection of some of Orcis comments during a recent talkback session. The responses are a bit out of context but Orci addresses the filmmakers cooperation with Card here:We have been in meaningful contact with Mr. Card. He is as smart as his book indicates. He has been a great resource for us in every way.Orci also addresses the possibility of sequels:
Sequels are tricky. For one, we never like to count on sequels until they hatch. On the other hand, Card has written so much awesome material in this universe that there is much to figure out. Hope we get the chance.And answers the question of faithfulness to the original material:
When adapting something so beloved You gotta make sure you keep the soul of it intact while doing what is necessary to translate to live action. I know thats not much of an answer, but i can tell you that we are treating the book preciously.Fans of Cards entire series will be interested in the following Q&A as well:
QUESTION: What are your feelings on the Shadow books and the Speaker books? Do you feel its possible to adapt both to the screen, or do you think the latter series would be too difficult, disconnected and abstract for audiences? Im not asking what Summits plans for the franchise are I just think it would be interesting to know what you think.
ROBERTO ORCI: Certain elements may lend themselves well to adaptation.
Good decision.
Enders Days
![]()
Houston, we have a problem. We dont know how to land the Shuttle. Good thing its just a simulator safely on the ground at SPACE CAMP in Huntsville, Alabama. Aramis, Moises, Asa & Suraj (pictured above from a monitor in the MISSION CONTROL ROOM ) and the rest of our cast agreed that to do Enders Game right, they had to train as though they were really headed into ZERO G. And this wasnt just an afternoon spent taking a vanity tour. From the Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU), which simulates extra-vehicular shuttle *missions in Earths orbit, to the microgravity training chair that prepared astronauts for moonwalks during the Apollo program, the week at Space Camp was genuine prep for the feeling of reality that this movie deserves. And after all, the army that trains together stays together.
http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=89000Now in production, the Gavin Hood-directed adaptation of Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game is slated to hit theaters a little bit later than originally planned. Summit Entertainment announced today that the sci-fi adventure will hit theaters on November 1, 2013 instead of the originally announced date of March 15, 2013.
The ensemble cast includes, among many others, Asa Butterfield, Ben Kingsley, Harrison Ford, Hailee Steinfeld, Abigail Breslin and Viola Davis and tells the story of a young boy raised in a Utopian future who is drafted by the International Fleet to destroy the alien Formic race.
Though Enders world is one worth saving, it sometimes comes with a price. The novel was amazingly prescient about a great many things: remote controlled drone wars, the internet, the influence of blogging, hand held computing tablets like the I-Pad, and of course, electronic surveillance implants. Implanted tracking and monitoring chips are no longer a science fiction concept. They exist now. And one day, they may be as advanced as the monitor implanted into Ender, which allows Colonel Graff to see through his eyes and know: HES THE ONE.
Enders World
![]()
The more futuristic the world, the more invisible its technology. So why shouldnt Enders room look just like any normal kids room? And not every future is a dark dystopia. The world that Ender lives in is a world worth saving. Thats why he is willing to leave his family to go into an orbiting Battle School and risk not seeing his sister, Valentine, again until they are both adults. That doesnt mean this world doesnt have rules. Enders parents had to get permission from the state to have a third child, and if Ender ever had any doubt if he was unwanted, his mother and fathers shock at having their son recruited to be a future leader and transferred to space makes it clear to him that theyve always loved him. They know that when Ender leaves the safety of his home, they will not be able to protect him any longer. We will keep your room for you just as you left it, Ender
Read Ender's Game for the first time a year or two ago. I loved it. Fantastic book.It's not something I typically do...but after reading The Hobbit finally, it's got me more excited for the movie. So, I think that's going to be my thing from now on...read the novel first. Looking forward to seeing what this Ender's Game thing is about
26 Apr
![]()
Lets just hang the kids from bungee chords, roll camera for ten hours and see what we get! That was plan A. Which is why we are not directing the movie and instead Gavin Hood is. We never thought we would find a bigger fan of the novel than all of us until Gavin walked in the room. Going back to his roots, Gavin decided to take on the challenge of adapting the novel himself, which gives him a huge advantage when it comes to directing it because he knows his script better than any of us. And given the time limitations inherent in working with young actors, this movie would be impossible to complete without Gavins preparation and passion. Here you see him crossing off a completed shot of his detailed story boards in the zero g battle room where our young actors, in their zero g training suits, are showing off the high flying skills theyve learned from our veteran stunt coordinator Garrett Warren.
ENDERS GAME Updates from Producer Roberto Orci; Talks About Kubrick Influence, Favorite Scene, Zero G Battles and More
by Dave Trumbore Posted:May 17th, 2012 at 8:38 pm
Harrison Ford reportedly called Enders Game, one of the most emotional science fiction movies he has ever seen. If youre a fan of Orson Scott Cards award-winning novel, this article should let you breathe a little easier about the upcoming Gavin Hood adaptation. While I was a bit leery about Hoods attachment to my beloved property (see X-Men Origins: Wolverine), the Enders Game production blog has been shedding some interesting light on the filmmakers approach. Hood and producer Roberto Orci (Star Trek) really seem to get the gist of the novel; that should elicit a sigh of relief followed quickly by a jolt of excitement from fans. Orci recently participated in a Q&A on the blog in which he commented on the tone of the picture, the relationship between Colonel Hyrum Graff (Harrison Ford) and Ender (Asa Butterfield), as well as his favorite scenes.![]()
Enders Game tells the story of Andrew Ender Wiggin, a young boy sent away to Battle School to hone his military skills and, hopefully, save the world from an impending alien invasion. Also starring Abigail Breslin, Sir Ben Kingsley, Hailee Steinfeld, Nonso Anozie and Viola Davis, the picture opens November 1st, 2013. Weve also got some images from the production, so hit the jump to check it out!
Its hard to believe that the film wont open until November of 2013, but Im definitely getting the feeling that the production is on the right track. Hood and Orci each appear to be as big a fan of the source material as I am. Along with Orcis Q&A below, weve got some photos from the production blog, including Hood meticulously going over a Battle Room scene, the young actors of Dragon Army training in hand-to-hand combat and some geek-worthy nameplates from two of the main characters. Check it out! [Some mild SPOILERS follow, so for anyone who hasn't read the book yet(first of all, do that!), you may want to skip this bit.]
Valentine asks:
As fans of the book, what is your favorite scene from the book? Do you have a different favorite scene from the movie?
I always loved the scenes within the Mind Game that Ender believes he plays for recreation in the orbiting battle school. Part video game, part psychological test, and if you know the book, part something extraordinary that shouldnt be given away for those who have not read the book. As for my favorite scene from the movie, we are still filming it so I havent seen it yet!
Reuben asks:
Question to Mr. Orci How has this production differed from past (and other current) projects? Im especially interested to know how you feel about the casts interactions and your feelings about the script, now that you see it in action.
Lets see. Well first, though I have had some experience with bringing beloved stories to the screen that had intelligent and rabid fan bases like MISSION IMPOSSIBLE 3, TRANSFORMERS, and STAR TREK, this is the first movie with a pre-existing fan base I have worked on that I didnt write. This means I that got the chance to evaluate the material merely as a fan. Gavins script made me jealous, but it was also a relief that he had satisfied what I would want as a fan from a difficult adaptation. Also, I have never worked with so many talented young actors who became friends so fast under such amazing circumstances. Seeing Asa, who plays Ender, and Hailee, who plays Petra, floating high above the set and getting the giggles was amazing and frightening all at once. They laughed for like twenty minutes, which as a producer on a clock eager to finish your shooting day can give you a heart attack. But soon we all had the giggles, and the joy of it overcame the panic.
Chris Neumann asks:
What are the visual influences for the movie? Syd Mead or Star Trek? 2001 or Armageddon? Jon Berkey or Michael Bay?
Visual influences? One thing I can tell you is that Gavin Hood is a gigantic Stanley Kubrick fan, and it shows. And yet, in some of the Zero G battles, things are going on that Kubrick never had a chance to tackle. The technology and advancements in film making available to us allowed us to realize a vision that is totally unique and modern while also being, as Harrison Ford calls it, one of the most emotional science fiction movies he has ever seen.
William Harley asks:
How much time is going to be spent on developing Graffs relationship with Ender? To me, those insights into the command level of the school really brought out the meaning of leadership and how to tackle the challenges that come up.
The relationship between Colonel Graff (Harrison Ford) and Ender (Asa Butterfield) is key to the movies success. Graff would love nothing more than to be Enders friend, yet Graff cant always show it because he has to make it clear to Ender that in the event of another alien invasion, there will be no one available to help him. Their relationship is simultaneously heartbreaking and fun.
Paul2012 asks:
Is it a movie for adults, about kids, or a kids movie? I hope for the former.
Like the book, the movie Enders Game is about young protagonists dealing with one of the most adult situations known to man: WAR. We dont soft peddle it, yet we dont shy away from the fun of being in space and learning amazing new skills that we would all want to learn at any age.
Orson Scott Card Describes Zero Gravity Scenes From Set Of ‘Ender’s Game;’ Reveals Cameo
Posted on Monday, May 21st, 2012 by Germain Lussier
![]()
When writers visit film sets, they’re generally embargoed from discussing what they’ve seen. It’s just impossible to judge a film while it’s still in production, far from its final look and studios would ideally like impressions to come out closer to a film’s release date. Apparently that embargo doesn’t hold true if you are the person who created the property being put to film.
Orson Scott Card, the author of Ender’s Game, recently visited the set of the in-production film, written and directed by Gavin Hood, and took to the Internet to give his thoughts and reveal some new information. He talked about the chemistry between stars Harrison Ford and Asa Butterfield as well as answered one of the biggest questions surrounding the movie: How is Hood going to handle the massive battles that take place in a zero gravity room? He also reveals he has a cameo in the 2013 release. Read his quotes and more after the jump.
All of the below quotes come from Card’s blog post at Rhino Times. These are just selections, head there for much more.
First up, Card said the following about his cameo:Speaking of movies, I was on the set of Ender’s Game last week to record my one line in the movie – a voiceover of a pilot making an announcement to his passengers.He then talks in detail about his thoughts concerning a scene with Harrison Ford, as General Graff, and Asa Butterfield, as Ender Wiggin himself:
The scene does not come from the book – very few of the scenes in this movie do – so it was amusing when others asked me how it felt to have my book brought to life. My book was already alive in the mind of every reader. This is writer-director Gavin Hood’s movie, so they were his words, and it was his scene.He expand on that, discusses some of the sets, then talks about how traditional wires such as in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon rely too much on gravity to be used for his zero gravity battle school. That’s when he discusses how the filmmakers plan on pulling this off:
Stunt coordinator Garrett Warren took what he learned from the weightless work he did on Avatar built on it.There’s more on the blog, but Card says the following about Warren’s work on the film:
There is a mechanism used for training gymnasts – a wheel they wear around their waists that allows them to rotate in space while suspended from wires. Warren used this on Avatar, which allows a great deal of apparent freedom of movement in space – once the computer artists have erased the wheel rig, you can’t tell that there’s any way a wire could have been attached.
But this is only the beginning. The illusion of freefall depends on the actors’ moving correctly. Where gravity naturally draws their limbs downward, in zero-gravity the arms and legs and heads continue in the direction of the last movement, until something stops them.
For the most difficult stunts, Warren brought in dancers from Cirque de Soleil. Being gymnasts by training, they tend to be small – they can bring off the illusion of children’s bodies.
And they have the strength and training to do constant movements and poses that defy gravity, without ever looking as if they’re working hard.
But all the children playing these roles had to do wire work themselves. Fitted with the wheel rigs, they were being moved through space like puppets – and at every moment, they had to make sure their “nonvolitional” movements followed the rules of inertia-driven rather than gravity-driven motion.
It was agonizing. Human muscles aren’t meant to work like that. And Warren was watching everything, playing it back again and again, catching any false movements.
If Garrett Warren doesn’t get a special technical Oscar for his achievement on this film, then there truly ain’t no justice. I’ve seen enough of the result to know that he has brought off the miracle of filming zero-gravity while still on planet Earth.We’ll have much (much) more on Ender’s Game, and specifically the zero gravity battles, in the months leading up to its November 1, 2013 release. What do you think about Card’s revelations?
And almost everything you’ll see in that battle room, real people did. The computers didn’t animate it – they merely made the wires and rigs invisible.
ENDERS GAME to be Released in IMAX, Plus New Production Updates
by Dave Trumbore Posted: August 10th, 2012 at 2:53 pm
![]()
For a project that has the epic scope of Enders Game,its only fitting that the film be released in IMAX. Fans can look forward to seeing the adaptation of the beloved Orson Scott Card novel in IMAX format when it debuts in theaters November 1st, 2013. The sci-fi film from director Gavin Hood (X-Men Origins: Wolverine) follows Andrew Ender Wiggin (Asa Butterfield), a boy trained at a military battle school in the hopes that hell develop a strategy to defeat the alien menace known as the Formics. This will make two big features for Lionsgate being released in the same month (The Hunger Games: Catching Fire releases November 22nd), two properties the studio hopes will continue to bear box-office fruit. But before Catching Fire can sweep Enders Game aside, the sci-fi film will have three weeks to build up a big payday and, hopefully, a bigger following. Hit the jump for more updates on Enders Game from the films production blog.
Thanks to The Wrap for a heads up on Enders Game coming to IMAX screens next fall. The site didnt have much else to offer, but the fact that its being released in IMAX strongly suggests the presence of at least a few scenes in the 70mm format. Im personally hoping for some scenes in the Battle Room, maybe some epic space combat and perhaps even some shots of Enders home world.
I dont often geek out over film properties. Even this years crop of comic book movies only got my blood pumping ever so slightly more than usual. But Enders Game is my top favorite book of all time, so it goes without saying that Im beyond excited for this films release. Thankfully, the production team is keeping us up to date with the films progress (which wrapped principal photography a couple months ago). The posts give me more assurance that the powers that be are fans of the source material and will hopefully translate that appreciation onto the screen for fans. Here are some of the choice cuts from the latest production blog entries. Some spoilers may follow for the uninitiated:
When asked about the translation of the books internal dialogue:We have a muppet of the Colonel who narrates the whole thing from the future. Oh, no wait, different movie. I joke because that is a great question and I think Gavin would tell you that it was the biggest challenge he faced in composing his script. It was also the most challenging aspect of the casting process. So here we have two things that really make it happen. First, we got such an unbelievable group of actors who can convey so much with their faces and body language frankly, with their performances, which is something a book is denied using to convey inner emotion or thought.For fans of the character, Bean:
And secondly, of course, Gavin elegantly translated some of the inner thought into action or character decisions in his script drama and that allowed him to find natural places for the characters to speak about what they are going through.
Bean who? Oh, Bean! You should know how much Orson Scott Card advocated for as much Bean as we could muster, and really encouraged ways to make him pivotal. Youll decide if we succeeded! I think we did. And were even more excited for you all to experience Aramis Knights fantastic portrayal of Bean.
Are you curious about the futuristic design of the costumes, especially the flash suits?With science fiction, theres a danger in creating a look that seems so foreign it becomes alienating. For ENDERS GAME, we wanted to make a future that looked both functional and logical. We wanted it to be a future where you can picture yourself in their shoes.Production designers Ben Procter and Sean Haworth talk about the task of creating sets with a futuristic look made by human hands versus that of an alien design:
But of course, it is the future. For the uniforms, all synthetic materials were used, meaning no loud silk florals. And for the flash suits well, we actually had to create them out of thin air.
Christine built the flash suits from virtually non-existent fabrics designed by our incredible production team. The idea was to take cues from extreme sports to inspire our design, using real world practicality as opposed to the heightened reality of superhero spandex and a cape.
As Ben described it, the most fun was creating the two contrasting cultures of Human and Formic technology and architecture.Starring Butterfield, Abigail Breslin, Harrison Ford, Sir Ben Kingsley, Viola Davis, Hailee Steinfeld, Nonso Anozie, Aramis Knight, Han Soto and Moises Arias, Enders Game will be released (in IMAX!) on November 1st, 2013.
We tried to imbue the spaces and vehicles with a gritty, engineered realism that would help sell the seriousness of the training our hero kids are going through. The visual style of the Formics, on the other hand, needed to be both exotic and beautiful to represent a society not deserving of extinction.
Ask them to describe the Formic world and youll get excited tales, imagining a Formic method of manufacture that was distinctly inhuman a kind of biological 3D printer, with the drones building living spaces and spacecraft layer by layer.