Desk said:You know, it occurs to me that Smallville has been shot on high-grade film stock, and in widescreen...
Wouldn't it be possible for a SV film to use footage from the TV series, perhaps as a sort of "montage" recapping key events from the show?
Imagine that... a Superman film where you actually see the lead character visibly age from teenager to adult, and unlike the use of Jeff East and Chris Reeve it's actually the same actor all the way through.

$139M? Holy sheeeitt!Zing79 said:Doesn't matter when everyone else is coming out. I keep saying it but I actually am dead serious when those words are typed onto the page. Give SV a Spider-Man 1 like budget (139 mil), and the EXACT same group that has seen SR regardless of how much they may hate the film would come out to see it as well. The tracking data for SR is showing that it's playing heavily to Superman fans.
An SV film that makes SR money would be VERY profitable for WB.
Zing79 said:Even if they went that route I'm sure they'd do everything humanly possible to stretch out SV to 7 seasons without having the ratings slide. They'd need buffer time between SR and an SV feature -- Summer 2009 anyone?

You and me both, babe!TKodami said:![]()
When I see this picture, I see Superman.![]()

karea07 said:what is this about Welling got fat?

TKodami said:At this point, I'd rather have them scrap SV 7th season and give us an SV mini-series bridging the SV and metropolis years. Why--best of all worlds. A mini-series could run only 4-6 episodes but with an insanely high budget comparatively. Explosions, great production values, FLIGHT! The FOTW factor would be scaled down since a mini-series only focuses on the core, core mythos stuff.
I do love movies...but I love television even more. And I've never met a 2-hour or even 3-hour movie that's given me enough. I think "Commencement" is exemplary of this kind of movie-like production values combined with the strengths of television. My SV dream project would be Commencement x 6.up:
![]()
When I see this picture, I see Superman.![]()
I can understand that feeling, though I don't quite share it. To me, there is no one definitive Superman cast, because I love both. And I'm greedy. I want to have both. Hehe.Bruce_Wayne29 said:I saw Vessel after I saw the movie and now more than ever not only Tom IS Superman to me but also SV's cast is now the definitive to me.


(yeah, I know, not a particularly new idea, but still...
)Heheheh... well, I'd argue those are some of the things Bay is actually known for. The way he uses natural lighting, particularly the "sweet hour," to elicit a very sunny, Americana-type mood, is practically the epitome of Superman. He knows how to make you care for the characters, and he's an expert at visual spectacle. He keeps the camera moving to maintain pace during slower scenes, and his frenetic, no-holds-barred editing style has defined the look of today's action-oriented films. Only "down" side is the fact that Bay works *very* quick, so he has no time to coddle inexperienced actors. Luckily, the SV cast know their characters inside and out, and they're used to pounding out scenes under pressure.RakuMon said:I don't think Michael Bay would be an ideal choice for a Smallville movie. His style's too distinct. I think someone who could adapt to what makes the show work -- but also has a cinematic vision -- would be the most ideal.
I mean Greg Beeman's done movies in the past. (They weren't particularly good onesbut at least he knows how to direct and light the actors!)
Kaboom said:o gee i don't know, maybe a lil guy i like to call Gore Verbinski?
I think you meant style over substance.The Incredible Hulk said:Bay is too substance over style and is usually never cheap. I'd rather get like a Robert Rodriguez type guy that can do a lot with a smaller budgeted film.
Kaboom said:o gee i don't know, maybe a lil guy i like to call Gore Verbinski?
TKodami said:However, for an SV movie, what's wrong with using the current production / direction team? I'd take Beeman or Marshall over any of these other directors because they have familiarity with the actors.
For a TV movie (90 minutes plus commercials), sure! In fact, I'd WANT Marshall or Beeman to do that. But for a major motion picture, with a $100M dollar budget? Gosh! Break out the big guns and do it "right." Having a well known director on a feature that size also brings with it more clout among audiences, not to mention studio reassurance. Not that Marshall or Beeman are incapable, but Beeman's ONLY experience has been in television, and Marshall's last stint on a film set was as a second assistant director twelve years ago.TKodami said:I <3 Luc Besson.
However, for an SV movie, what's wrong with using the current production / direction team? I'd take Beeman or Marshall over any of these other directors because they have familiarity with the actors.
Not entirely true. Like I stated in an earlier post, Beeman's done some forgettable movies in the past (mainly 80s comedies like the Haim/Feldman...er... vehicle License to Drive).AgentPat said:For a TV movie (90 minutes plus commercials), sure! In fact, I'd WANT Marshall or Beeman to do that. But for a major motion picture, with a $100M dollar budget? Gosh! Break out the big guns and do it "right." Having a well known director on a feature that size also brings with it more clout among audiences, not to mention studio reassurance. Not that Marshall or Beeman are incapable, but Beeman's ONLY experience has been in television, and Marshall's last stint on a film set was as a second assistant director twelve years ago.
A nice compromise would be to bring either or both on as second units or assistant directors. That would work in everybody's favor.
AgentPat said:For a TV movie (90 minutes plus commercials), sure! In fact, I'd WANT Marshall or Beeman to do that. But for a major motion picture, with a $100M dollar budget? Gosh! Break out the big guns and do it right. Having a well known director on a feature that size also brings with it more clout among audiences, not to mention studio reassurance. Not that Marshall or Beeman are incapable, but Beeman's ONLY experience has been in television, and Marshall's last stint on a film set was as a second assistant director twelve years ago.

A nice compromise would be to bring either or both on as second units or assistant directors. That would work in everybody's favor.