Jake Cassidy
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I actually don't really care about this movie anymore. I'm just bored.
I doubt she cares if JL gets off the ground or not, there are other things she can move on to
Justice League screenplay being revised to tie in with The Dark Knight, says Megan Gale
By David Bentley on Oct 9, 08 04:04 PM in Film gossip
AUSTRALIAN actress and supermodel Megan Gale says the Justice League movie project is being rewritten to make it consistent with events in The Dark Knight.
Gale, 33, who's of British and Polynesian descent, was cast as Wonder Woman in the Justice League Mortal film project to have been directed by Happy Feet helmer George Miller.
Also cast in the movie were Armie Hammer as Batman, D.J. Cotrona as Superman, rapper Common as Green Lantern, Adam Brody as The Flash, Santiago Cabrera as Aquaman and Hugh Keays-Byrne as Martian Manhunter.
The film, penned by American husband and wife team Kieran and Michele Mulroney, was put on hold after a string of production problems including the refusal of vital tax concessions by the Australian government.
Gale (pictured on right in image at top, and on left in my quick image makeover as the Amazon superheroine) says she is now giving up modelling and will move to Los Angeles next month to develop her career as an actress.
She told Aussie news site Couriermail that Justice League was still being considered and claimed it was slated for a 2011 release.
She said: "We didn't get permission to shoot (in Australia) so they've been going back to the drawing board and changing the script a little bit to reflect what's happened in Batman."
This is an interesting comment. Justice League already included a different actor as Batman, so it was assumed to be set in a different reality.
How might the storyline of The Dark Knight affect the storyline of Justice League Mortal? The main villain in JLM was said to be Maxwell Lord but did it also include Harvey Dent/Two Face (who died) and Joker (who's unlikely to reappear because Heath Ledger is dead)? Could a Justice League form as a result of events in the next Batman movie?
I disagree. This film is the kind of once-in-a-lifetime opportunity most aspiring actors dream of. Of course Gale wants it to happen.
And no, there doesn't appear to be anything comparable to move on to at this time, hence the second self-promotional visit to Hollywood next month.
Little feet bring film industry back to life
Garry Maddox Film Writer
October 10, 2008
For a city that has struggled to attract film production, there is good news from the Oscar-winning director George Miller. Work has started in Sydney on sequels to two of the country's most loved films, Happy Feet and Babe.
After losing the battle to shoot the comic book movie Justice League Mortal this year, Miller has returned to two earlier hits. Happy Feet, about a penguin with a talent for dancing, was expected to spawn a sequel after it grossed $US379 million around the world and won the best animated feature Oscar last year.
The hiring of the digital film-making crew for Happy Feet 2 is under way.
But a second sequel to Babe, the 1995 film about a cute piglet who behaved like a sheepdog, is a surprise after disappointing returns for Miller's Babe: Pig In The City a decade ago. The original Babe, directed by Chris Noonan, grossed $US249 million and was nominated for seven Oscars including best picture, winning for visual effects.
Whether Babe 3 will be closer in tone to the sweet-natured first movie or the darker sequel is not yet clear. "We're still at the scripting stage so we'll wait and see," Miller said. "But that won't be the next film we're doing.
"There's another script I've got for a digital film which I want to run off the back of [the] Happy Feet [sequel]."
Miller still hopes to make Justice League, which was knocked back in March for the Federal Government's new film production incentive, though where it would be shot remains unclear.
The $US200 million movie sparked heated debate in the film industry over its eligibility for the 40 per cent tax offset.
At the time, Miller said the industry needed movie franchises, even if they were not identifiably Australian, to boost production, improve skills and draw talent back from overseas. The Happy Feet and Babe sequels are part of a long-term plan for more digital production in Sydney.
"You've got to have enough films lined up to be able to entice people to come back for five to 10 years," Miller said. "They need to know that they're not going to come here for a short term then have to go again. So we have to line up quite a few digital projects."
Miller said executives at the Hollywood studio Warner Bros remained enthusiastic about making Justice League, especially given the phenomenal box office success of the comic book movie The Dark Knight.
"Warners is strategising on that at the moment," he said. "With [the success of] the Batman franchise, they're paying a lot of attention to it."
BlackLantern, it appears our definition of an "aspiring actor" differs from each other.
Yeah, in comics not on film, different media.
Everything's easier said than done. I've not seen one concrete, realistic example of why Chris Nolan's Batman wouldn't work with other superheroes.