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Exclusive: The Writers of Wanted!

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http://www.superherohype.com/news/wantednews.php?id=6219

Source: Edward Douglas
August 17, 2007


wantedwriters.jpg
Anyone who has read Mark Millar and J.G. Jones' comic book Wanted will immediately realize that it's not your father's beloved collection of Silver Age Superman comics or something particularly kid-friendly. It's an edgy, aggressive and violent look at the world of super-villains through the eyes of Wesley Gibson, a loser who learns that his late father was one of the world's greatest assassins when he's recruited to follow in his footsteps.

Considering how much violence, sex and naughty language is let loose in every issue of the comic book, we've been somewhat worried here at Superhero Hype! that the Universal movie being made by Russian filmmaker Timur Bekmambetov (Night Watch, Day Watch) might tone things down too much. A quick glance at the script dissuaded our worries, and when we had a chance to talk to screenwriters Michael Brandt and Derek Haas, who also wrote the upcoming James Mangold remake of 3:10 to Yuma, we got to ask them a few questions about their adaptation.

Haas told us that the plan was always to maintain the in-your-face mood of Millar's writing. "Universal when they bought it--Jeff Kirschenbaum, the exec there and a huge comic fan, he's the one who found the book—they and we from the get-go said, 'Let's make a hard-R action movie' which is what the comic book was. Again, you don't get to write those very often, and you certainly don't get a studio saying that very often. That freed us up to say, 'Let's throw the kitchen sink at it.' We went tonally and character-wise and plot-wise, we kind of just went, 'Good. Ultimate freedom, let's go.'"

"We honestly kept waiting for the other shoe to drop where the studio's going to say, 'Alright, guys. This budget is so big and we've got these big expensive stars. We have to pull this back to a PG-13.' And nobody ever considered it," Michael Brandt added. "From Donna Langley on down, everybody said, 'This was an R-rated movie. We have to remain faithful..."

"To what the comic fans are going to expect," Haas continued. "You're writing for the fans tonally and all of that, but for the movie, you have to hit such a bigger audience."

Surprisingly, they were writing the movie at the same time that Millar was writing the original comic series, which ended up taking nearly a year to be released by Top Cow. "When we were hired for the job, there had only been one issue of the comic book that had come out," Brandt told us, "so we were flying blind a little bit as far as what the tone of the movie might be as compared to the comic book. What we were kind of forced to do because of that was to come up with our own version of it. We knew there were more comics coming but we didn't have time to wait for them, so we just took it and ran with it. As the comics got bigger and more over-the-top—and I mean that in a good comic book way—we grounded our movie more and more. Ultimately, the end movie ended up being something that takes place in the real world today with some bending of physics and things like that, but for the most part, it's a movie that we wanted to set in the world today, where the comic book ends up in some wacky places."

"It was funny, because we were writing it and new issues kept coming out, so it kind of became a game to see what Mark Millar and those guys were going to do and what we were going to do," Haas agreed, admitting that they didn't really have any contact with Millar during the process. "He's been nothing but supportive, and I think he wanted to keep (the movie) at arm's length to not influence what he was doing."

We also asked them how it was working with Bekmambetov, an amazing action director who's wowed anyone who saw the Russian blockbusters Day Watch and Night Watch. "He is a mad scientist," Michael told us, "but he is a very gentle, big, huggable Russian bear in the nicest sense of the word. He is just full of ideas. It really became a matter of Timur coming up with wacky ideas, and Derek and I trying to manage and fit those ideas into the story."

Wanted is scheduled to open on March 28, 2008, and you can read more with Brandt and Haas on ComingSoon.net before the opening of 3:10 to Yuma on September 7.
 
when will studios learn....really..

When they learn to stop looking down on the material and treat it the same way the creators do...no a fully blown film version of Wanted probably wouldn't be a huge commercial success, but then the material isn't intended to be. It's an artistic statement and the approach to the film should be the same.

Sigh.
 
So...the comic went in one direction, and the movie intentionally went in the opposite direction. No attempt was made to bring it any closer to the comic, and, seeing as how Millar was paid a ****load of cash before he even finished the comic, he kind of said "to hell with it".

Yeah....now I'm definitely not going to pay for this movie....probably won't even see it for free.
 
Who the hell begins writing an adaptation to a story that is barely one-tenth done? That makes absolutely no sense.

Certainly explains why this film isn't that close to the comic. My only hope is that while straying from the source material, it stands on it's own as a great action flick.
 
Who the hell begins writing an adaptation to a story that is barely one-tenth done? That makes absolutely no sense.

Certainly explains why this film isn't that close to the comic. My only hope is that while straying from the source material, it stands on it's own as a great action flick.

I agree. That was really a dumb idea writing a script before they had even seen more than one issue of the comic.
 
you know...the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen movie was written the same way...there wasnt even a single issue of it out, just Moore's pitch for the comic, that they got ahold of...and look how it turned out.
 
you know...the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen movie was written the same way...there wasnt even a single issue of it out, just Moore's pitch for the comic, that they got ahold of...and look how it turned out.

Careful....a guy in another thread dubbed me "Nazi" for hating how the movie isn't close to the source material...!

I think this just goes to show how bankrupt for ideas Hollywood is nowadays. Remakes...adaptations of EVERYTHING...it really feels as though the creativity has been siphoned out of movies over the last decade. They opt a comic that hasn't even been published, or isn't even completed? Ugh.
 
Careful....a guy in another thread dubbed me "Nazi" for hating how the movie isn't close to the source material...!

I think this just goes to show how bankrupt for ideas Hollywood is nowadays. Remakes...adaptations of EVERYTHING...it really feels as though the creativity has been siphoned out of movies over the last decade. They opt a comic that hasn't even been published, or isn't even completed? Ugh.

Why not just not call it Wanted? That's what I dont get. It's so far off of what Wanted is, that if they didnt call it that, no one would ever confuse the two...
 
Why not just not call it Wanted? That's what I dont get. It's so far off of what Wanted is, that if they didnt call it that, no one would ever confuse the two...

That would require them to actually get creative for ten seconds and come up with another title. The thing is, this movie looks so freakin' generic that it'll be one of those movies that (AT BEST) lands at number one on opening weekend, ten sinks like a stone...then there will be sequel talk, and then that will die as well.

Personally, I'm hoping the film tanks worse than Ultraviolet and CINO.
 
Ultraviolet had potential though...from what I hear the studio got heavily involved with it and made them tone it down, which I'm inclined to believe as Equilibrium was awesome...and despite it's dumbed down plot, it at least managed to have a couple cool action scenes...

This on the other hand looks to be on about the same level as CINO...also, WINO=fun to say :o
 
Ultraviolet had potential though...from what I hear the studio got heavily involved with it and made them tone it down, which I'm inclined to believe as Equilibrium was awesome...and despite it's dumbed down plot, it at least managed to have a couple cool action scenes...

This on the other hand looks to be on about the same level as CINO...also, WINO=fun to say :o

Yeah, what I saw of UV looked really fun....but it seemed like it fell flat. Also, Milla Jovovich...

Ahem.

Yeah, this film shall be known henceforth as WINO...damn...that is fun to say, man!
 
Quite frankly they, the writers, have got the whole movie back ass wards. The movie is going to be nothing like the graphic novel. Sure in the movie they are all going to be assassins part of some big fraternity that runs stuff behind the scenes, other than that nothing is like the universe presented in the graphic novel. I am furious over the whole thing, Wesley isn't even going to have a costume as a matter of fact nobody is going to have a costume. They should have just made it a different title like someone mention above. The other thing that "really grinds my gears" (peter griffin reference to the episode where he had his own talk show) is that Mark Millar the creator of Wanted didn't give a crap what they did to his creation. I would think he would have "wanted" them to stay true to the source material and not make it into something totally different. Evidently he doesn't cherish his work, that says a lot about his character.
 
Millar stopped caring the instant they drove a dump truck full of money to his house and emptied it into his freshly dug empty swimming pool shaped like a dollar sign.
 

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