Valkyrie

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A couple pics of the additional shooting for Valkyrie which finally got under way over a week ago.


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June 28, 2008...1:54 am

Tom C. Ruz

During high school I was completely and totally head-over-heels for Tom Cruise. Let me clarify that I now think the man is an absolute loon, but back in the day I thought Tom Cruise was the bees knees. :) Each week in my high school Spanish class we were assigned three 5 minute conversations, to be conducted outside of class entirely in Spanish. We were required to keep detailed logs of when, where and with whom these conversations took place. My girlfriends and I would always sign at least one conversation each week with the code name “Tom C. Ruz” in honor of our movie star crush. Looking back, I am pretty sure our teacher knew exactly what we were up to, but we thought we were hilarious.

So when I found out, while browsing the Internet this week, that the Tom Cruise movie Valkyrie - under the code name “Rubicon” - was being filming at a church in Pasadena on Thursday, my inner-high-school-girl forced me to do some stalking. I was also really hoping to spot Katie Holmes, who has really been growing on me ever since she cut her hair. :) So, at around lunch time on Thursday, I headed to the Valkyrie set. Between the hours of 12 and 1PM is usually the best time to stalk a film set, as the actors usually break for lunch around that time and you have a good chance of spotting them walking from the set to their trailers.

I am very sad to report that even though I spent a good 4 hours on the set!!!!!!, I did not get to see Tom OR Katie (who was there WITH Suri). :( Apparently, Tom never comes outside during film shoots. One of the crew members told me that he wouldn’t be surprised if Mr. Ruz had an underground tunnel built from the church to his trailer so that he wouldn’t have to set foot outside! LOL All was not lost, though, as I did get to see Bill Nighy, who walked right past me on his way to lunch. Bill played musician Billy Mack in the movie Love Actually, one of my favorite romantic films of all time. Bill was very friendly and even said hi and saluted as he walked by (he was in military costume at the time).

Even though there was no TomKat sighting, it was still super exciting to be on the set. And let me tell you, it was quite a production! There was even an on-set barista, making mocha’s and frappaccino’s for the crew all day long. :) Most of the crew was extremely nice and friendly and I even got to snap some pictures of the filming, which is usually a big no-no on movie sets. I was surprised at how laid-back the set actually was, being that the biggest movie star in the world was there.

Until next time, Happy Stalking!
Source:http://iamnotastalker.wordpress.com/2008/06/28/tom-c-ruz/


There's also another article here on the North Africa battle they're filming in California.
http://www.vvdailypress.com/news/valley_7162___article.html/victor_apple.html
 
Bryan Singer - "I'm incredibly fiscally responsible... I always know how to spend my money..."

this man is starting to slowly become a hack...
 
this man is starting to slowly become a hack...

I think Bryan Singer is pretty much brilliant -- he's reteaming on Valkyrie with Christopher Macquarrie. They did Usual Suspects together, and that's still one of my favorite movies. Valkyrie's on the top favorite scripts list of the year, so I'm still looking forward to it. A looot. I think the trailer looks fantastic.
 
Some word on what the score will be like from Ottman.

Frustrated music lovers have a score to settle
Thu Jul 31, 2008 5:59am EDT

By Kevin Cassidy

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - If you're a fan of film music, you've probably suffered through this experience: You're watching a lavish Hollywood action film filled with the usual wall-to-wall pyrotechnics and visual wizardry, but with every ear-ringing explosion or gunshot, the orchestral score you've been enjoying in the film's quieter moments is being drowned out by a muddy sound mix that favors mayhem over melody.

Effects-heavy sound mixes can be extremely frustrating. All too often, a talented composer's muscular score is buried so deep in a cacophony of noise that it begs the question: Why is there music at all in this sequence? Often the decision to include constant underscore appears to be tied to a misguided fear that today's moviegoers need a constant barrage of stimuli or they'll run for the exits.

But it's not just the film geeks who are dissatisfied with Hollywood's kitchen sink approach to score and sound.

"It's the most frustrating thing in the world," says veteran composer John Ottman, who should know because he often does double duty as both composer and editor on big-budget, effects-heavy releases, including "Superman Returns" and "X2: X-Men United."

"Either have the music there or just don't have it there," he says. "If the music is there, it should be there for a reason. It's not just there to be under the layer of the sound effects. Sometimes you sit there and watch a sequence and think, 'Why did I agonize over that scene for a week and why did we spend five hours recording that cue when, by the time you hear it in the movie, it's just a drone?'"

As an editor, Ottman often finds himself in the position of determining just how much music is needed for a given scene. But despite his knack for full-bodied orchestral scores, he prefers to err on the side of caution when it comes to music.

"I always say if there's a way to do it without a score, that's the way you should do it," he says. "When I edit a movie, I edit the film for months without temping it (adding a temporary score). In fact, I get my entire edit together, and there's not a note of music in it because I want to see how much the film can withstand with no music. I only want to score where it's necessary, because why gild the lily?"

That said, Ottman notes that the amount of music he writes depends on the project, and that despite his initial instinct to compose a minimalist score for the upcoming Tom Cruise World War II drama "Valkyrie," that approach changed because the film called for it.

"There's a ton of music," he says. "I thought it was only going to need like 15-20 minutes of score because it's a dialogue-heavy film. But it's also a thriller. It's very much like 'Usual Suspects' -- in order to keep the tension going in a scene where there's really a lot of dialogue, we had to rely on a lot of score.

"But the score is done in a very sort of pulsating, subliminal way. It's not an expository score, it's more like a running pulse going through the movie, and we found it had an amazing impact."

Sound designer Craig Berkey agrees that less can often be more, and his brilliant work on last year's virtually music-free Oscar winner "No Country for Old Men" makes a convincing case for that all-too-rare approach. Berkey's meticulously crafted sonic effects in "No Country" are so key to the film's sparse, elegiac tone that the ingenious interplay of seemingly mundane sounds -- a soft desert wind, boots on gravel, a shriveled candy wrapper crackling with dread as it slowly expands -- take on a musical effect all their own. It's an approach that stands in stark contrast to the tedious bombast of most Hollywood movies these days, and one that Berkey and Ottman find refreshing.

"I think that a lot of people use music as a tool because they don't know what other tools to use, soundwise," Berkey says. "So it does happen by default where a scene isn't working and needs energy, so they just put a music cue in. It's a backup default that works, but there are other tools that you use."

Says Ottman: "I loved 'No Country for Old Men.' In fact, I was actually bracing myself for cues to come in and ruin a scene."

So, does "No Country's" success mean we'll be hearing less competition between the gunshots and glockenspiel?

"I hope so," Berkey says. "I think people in the sound community have been talking about this for a while."

While that might be true, the film music geek has to wonder: Is Hollywood listening?

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
Source Link:http://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idUSN3039794720080731
 
AICN reports a Valkyrie screening.

Didgeridoo thinks Bryan Singer's VALKYRIE is pretty incredible!!!

Hey folks, Harry here - about a week ago a fella called me up, industry type - not directly related to the film - told me, "I'm gonna burn in hell. I just saw VALKYRIE, I'm a Jew and I cried for a nazi, I'm going to burn in Hell!" The fella went on and on about the film - about Ottman's great score - about how it was incredibly thrilling - and he got me excited. It sounded like they were getting ready for a test screening, so I've been expecting some feedback - and this fella seems very enthused about the film. Drawing comparisons to SAVING PRIVATE RYAN. Based on the script and the cast and the talent involved - expect this movie to kick a lot of ass. Here ya go...

Hiya Harry and gang-​

I haven't sent in a review in a while (the last review I sent into you guys was Spiderman 3), because I moved and other reasons. I'm living in Henderson, NV these days, and got into a test screening tonight, without knowing what movie it was until we were sitting in our seats. That surprise element was cool, because the movie itself was something I didn't expect. The screening was at the Green Valley 10, where I've seen TDK three times now, and me and my friends tried to guess what we would be seeing, but none of us guessed right. Then the NRG guy told us we’d be seeing… VALKYRIE!​

Yeah, I've read a lot of bad **** about this movie, delays and whatnot, and we figured we were in for a trainwreck. The verdict? The truth is it’s pretty great. At over two hours, it's a little on the long side, but compelling and serious as ****. I don't know if I've ever seen a movie about a 'righteous coup' like this- if I could compare it to anything it would be Saving Private Ryan- about a small group of people trying to something impossible.​

Other than the length, it's got some problems. Here are the negatives right off the bat- I was confused in the beginning about who was who and how they'd play into the plot- but it comes together pretty quickly. It was also confusing if they were Nazis or not, but at some point in the movie, you find out they're in the German Army Reserves, which is not the same as Hitler's SS army but still had to swear an oath to the Fuhrer. Once I realized that, it made a lot more sense. Another part that’s questionable is the first scene where you meet Tom Cruise's character in North Africa, which almost seems a little out of place. Also, I read somewhere that they didn’t try for German accents, and I actually think it worked out better that way. If you’re gonna be purist about it, they’d be speaking German, not with German accents so why bother.​

So, onto the review, there are spoilers aplenty since the events are true and right there on Wiki. But I stopped short of the final act.​

Valkyrie is about a group of Germans who are secretly trying to overthrow Hitler and the Third Reich. The movie starts with Kenneth Branagh and Bill Nighy, whose attempt to blow up Hitler’s plane fails and almost gets them caught. You then find out they're part of a group that hate what Hitler's doing to their country. Their problem is they're plans aren't bold or organized enough, and Hitler's grip on Germany is absolute.​

Then it's off to North Africa, where we meet Stauffenberg, Tom Cruise's character, who has doubts about the war- a dangerous thing to have under Hitler. He’s almost killed when his unit is strafed by Allied planes, and loses a hand (CGI'd out for the rest of the movie), two fingers on his other hand, and an eye (hence the eye-patch) in the attack. He gets a glass eye that he only wears sometimes, but carries around with him like a talisman. Finally coming home, and seeing his kids playing war-games to Flight of the Valkyries (a nice touch), he realizes that the disease of Hitler's propaganda has even infected his children and this is the final straw that makes him decide to join the resistance.​

At their secret meeting, we meet a Terence Stamp as a German general who resigned in protest to Hitler. Stauffenberg is more strategic and aggressive than the rest of them. He wants to assassinate Hitler at his bunker, the Wolf's Lair, and take over Berlin immediately and declare martial law as a pretext for arresting all the Nazis. He brings an explosives expert onto the team to show them how to rig plastique explosives that will fill the entire bunker with fire. It's a bold operation, but these guys are just making it up as they go. None of them know if they have any chance- they're on edge the whole time, but pretending everything’s cool. Tom Cruise and Bill Nighy especially show the mixed emotions of fear and determination of these guys.​

Stauffenberg's plan is to change Hitler's Operation Valkyrie- the order that keeps the Nazi government in place in the event of an Allied invasion. In Stauffenberg's version, once Hitler is dead, the German Reserves take control of Berlin district by district. But to change the Valkyrie order, he has to get Hitler’s signature, and to get to Hitler, he has to go through Tom Wilkinson, a slightly slimy general who will join whatever side is winning. He doesn't join the conspiracy but doesn't blow the whistle either. He's hedging his bets in case the coup happens. Meanwhile, Kenneth Branagh gets transferred to the front, and Stauffenberg gets promoted, giving him his chance to get into Hitler's inner circle. Now he's pretty much the leader of resistance.​

I think one of the best scenes in the movie is when Stauffenberg goes to meet the Fuhrer at his mansion in the mountains. This is an inside look from a different view- there's something so grotesque about the casual afternoon among Himmler, Goering, and the other Nazi elite. The stakes are real, and everyone will die if their plan is found out. Even though Hitler is a cameo in the movie, his presence hangs over these characters and this film like a shroud.​

Everything about this section is first rate (the location was like Castle Wolfenstein but real), and the actor playing Hitler is just madness incarnate. Tom Cruise is subtle and very real in these scenes, bringing a lot of complexity. Hitler sees Stauffenberg as a war hero, willing to sacrifice himself for the Reich, and signs the new Operation Valkyrie order without reading it.​

Then, when Hitler calls a meeting that Stauffenberg is to attend, the plot is in motion. The Wolf’s Lair is heavily fortified, in the middle of a dense forest, with checkpoints and Nazis in trenches all along the way. Stauffenberg gets into the room with the other Reich officers, places the loaded briefcase under the table- but misses his chance because the others back in Berlin wouldn’t give the order since Himmler wasn’t there. Stauffenberg is, needless to say, pissed.​

Meanwhile, Bill Nighy has done his part and mustered the Reserves as if Berlin is being attacked. When it’s called off, all the commanding officers are disgusted that it was just a drill. These scenes are very well done, with little scenes about some of the figures, down to the telegraph operators, who just transmit commands at first, but at some point will have to pick a side.​

Stauffenberg finally gets another chance at Hitler when another meeting is called, and is determined that no one **** it up this time. But when he gets to the Wolf’s Lair, he finds out that the meeting has been moved out of the bunker to another building with open windows- which will prevent the vacuum effect that would wipe out everyone in the room. Everything else goes like clockwork. He gets the briefcase in place right under Hitlers nose, gets called out of the room, and is out of there. As he looks back and sees the explosion, he believes he has done it. There’s no turning back- this is the beginning of the end.​

Back in Berlin, Stauffenberg sends a message to Germany that Hitler is dead and martial law is in effect, then orders the Reserves to start rounding up SS officers. It's a huge, dangerous, epic operation- the fight for Berlin. The final act of the movie is ****ing intense, but I’m leaving out the very end.​

It’s a pretty incredible story, and even though the concentration camps aren't a part of the movie, you think about it in almost every scene- the knowledge of what these monsters did.​

That's Valkyrie. Everyone clapped, and we were all pretty floored. I think Bryan Singer did a bang-up job making an intense, well-written and acted flick. One other thing I wanted to mention was the accurate use of German Luftwaffe aircraft of the period, which was very cool. I'll probably see it again once it comes out, and hopefully it will be trimmed down a little, but it’s worth seeing.​

If you can use this, call me Didgeridoo.​
http://www.aintitcool.com/node/37849
 
Why does anyone even post reviews at AICN? The talkback section is terrible.
 
I read the reviews and dont even bother looking at the talkback
 
Excellent news! hopefully we'll get a new trailer soon. :up:
 
Excellent news! hopefully we'll get a new trailer soon. :up:

I like the fact that it's testing strong. I wish I was handed a pass to see it early. I only have one for today and it's for a Dustin Hoffman film.
 
I like the fact that it's testing strong. I wish I was handed a pass to see it early. I only have one for today and it's for a Dustin Hoffman film.

For that animated film?
 
Finally, a little good news. Here's hoping it does well and people give Cruise a chance if it's good.
 
I'm no Cruise fan, but don't hate him either. I'm just a big Singer fan. I believe in his talent.
 
I'm no Cruise fan, but don't hate him either. I'm just a big Singer fan. I believe in his talent.

Ive noticed. ;) Other way around for me, I am a big Cruise fan and hope this does well for him, I think Singer is a solid director though.
 
Hehe, well, to me Cruise is a solid actor, but I think he plays himself a lot. I just don't find him very interesting as an actor. However, I'm very interested to see what Singer does with him in this film. I think that the film where I liked Cruise the most was Far and Away.
 
Ive never seen Far and Away, i heard his Irish accent was terrible though lol. Hopefully this will be big for both of them. :yay:
 
It's been a long time since I saw the movie (Far and Away), but I liked it, as well as Cruise and Kidman's performance. And yeah, good luck for both Singer and Cruise.
 
I don't like Tom Cruise much myself,but I'm really into WW2/Third Reich/Hitler and I'm definetly seeing this. I would expect a good WW2 drama,but nothing near as good as Downfall or Patton.
 
I'm glad this got moved up. Definitely plan on checking it out. Tom Cruise (ACTING ONLY) is one of my favorite actors. :up:
 

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