Tomorrowland (Post-release)

re: Tomorrowland

I don't know... with Lost, since they had no plan whatsoever as they went along, even a very very good team of writers might not have been able to save it. For what they had to work with, they did a decent job. It's how they ended up with what they had to work with I cannot buy.



If you prefer fantasy- or magical reality- if you don't mind that a writer doesn't make an effort to follow their own rules, let alone any we might recognize outside the story- (And I know people who really do- and that's fine) then yeah, I don't have a problem with him in that case.
 
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re: Tomorrowland

I'll reserve judgement on this until I hear more about plot and see a trailer or some other preview (and actually see it). At this point, I'm just intrigued...
 
re: Tomorrowland





devincf : Filled with an immense sense of my own mortality while watching the long TOMORROWLAND presentation pretending they found a mystery box.

EricVespe: Tomorrowland stuff has begun. That 1952 box was found in the Morgue and contained a bunch of great stuff, which inspired the movie

eruditechick: TOMORROWLAND intro reel intensely interesting. Live action mystery-adventure, yes please. #D23Expo

EricVespe: Still not sure if it's a put-on or this box really existed and serves as inspiration for Lindeloff and Brad Bird.

EricVespe: Lindelof described by Bailey as "writer, producer and keeper of secrets"

EricVespe: Bird and Lindelof on stage with the 1952 box. They're going to open it up on stage.

devincf: Brad Bird & Damon Lindelof taking stage with that 1952 'mystery box.' This is a viral campaign in search of a movie.


EricVespe: There's an April 1945 photograph of Walt with Amelia Earhart. Hoax photo, with Walt's head on Cary Grant's body from an earlier photo

devincf: I'll let the other web guys feed you the marketing items in this mystery box that feed the viral campaign that is TOMORROWLAND.

devincf: They're pulling things out of the box like a couple of QVC hosts.

EricVespe: Yeah, it's all part of the game. No way this box is real, but it's fun. They're showing us pieces of Disneyana that are part of the movie

EricVespe: Tomorrowland mystery box has a blueprint of the park that reveals a secret structure underneath It's A Small World when under blacklight


devincf: Fake Orson Wells narrates fake mysterious 60s animation. TOMORROWLAND is DISNEY'S BIOSHOCK.

eruditechick: Tommorowland animation reel looks phenomenal, great sense of authenticity, but... straight up rapture, y'all.

EricVespe: Tomorrowland - They showed a "lost" animation pulled from a flawed metal disc. Old school Disney style giving hints at the movie

devincf: This phony viral **** for TOMORROWLAND is rubbing me the wrong way. May tap out of this film until actual release.

empiremagazine: #D23Expo Tomorrowland is wowing with unseen animation and more mystery... And it only just started shooting.

EricVespe: A group of scientists are brought together, including Tesla, to bring the next evolution of human advancement.
 
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Re: Tomorrowland

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Re: Tomorrowland

I feel like it is turning into a docu-drama about the building of Disneyland with the help of aliens.
 
Re: Tomorrowland

If Lindeloff is involved I get the feeling that there are going to be a lot disappointed movie goers here given his past track record. I know that while I'll probably end up seeing this movie I'm possibly going to walk away disappointed although I did enjoy Prometheus & the 2 Treks.
 
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Re: Tomorrowland

I thought it was about this festival.


Turns out I was wrong. Oops.
 
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Re: Tomorrowland

http://insidemovies.ew.com/2014/10/...is-a-man-out-of-time-in-disneys-tomorrowland/
I was looking forward to Tomorrowland based on Brad Bird directing it. But now knowing the premise, I am much more excited about this film.

First TOMORROWLAND Images Unveiled; Brad Bird and Damon Lindelof Reveal Story Details for Unique Sci-Fi Film
Collider has a good rundown on the movie's premise.

Full EW article:

“We begin our movie asking what did [the future] used to be?” Bird says. “What’s good about the future and what’s scary about it? And we wrestle with those things in a slightly mythical way.”

A Florida girl who dreams of the future while watching the launchpads of Cape Canaveral being disassembled goes exploring one day and, after landing in a bit of trouble, finds herself in possession of a mysterious pin. Touching it reveals a vision of a place that may not be a different world but simply a better one. (You can see the concept art) Then it’s gone—out, out, brief candle!—and the quest to discover the real Tomorrowland begins.

This is the setup for Disney’s new sci-fi/fantasy film (out May 22) from Bird (the maker of The Incredibles, The Iron Giant, and Mission: Impossible—Ghost Protocol) and screenwriter Damon Lindelof (Prometheus, HBO’s The Leftovers). It takes its title from Disneyland’s “futurist attraction,” but suggests old Walt may have stolen it first when he caught sight of this otherworldly place.

“What Hogwarts is to magic, Tomorrowland is to science: They are both easy to find if you are a wizard and very difficult to find if you’re a Muggle,” says Lindelof. “Walt Disney is not a character in our movie, but he is referenced as having some involvement in this mysterious place called Tomorrowland, as a huge futurist and aficionado of space travel, rocketry, cities of the future, and space travel.”

Lindelof, the co-creator of Lost, came up with this tale in collaboration with EW TV critic Jeff “Doc” Jensen, who co-wrote the story and serves as an executive producer.

The hero is Casey Newton (Under the Dome’s Britt Robertson), a teenager in the here and now, where it’s very hard to be an optimist. “You would think the younger you are the easier it is to be an optimist, but you are being fed a steady diet of dystopia,” Lindelof says. As mentioned already, she has seen NASA withering from her own backyard as the shuttle program is mothballed, exploration ceases, and the launchpads are taken apart. “It’s closed for business. There are no launches anymore. But she still holds a candle, she still believes in this amazing future, that things can be better,” Lindelof says.

That’s when the pin mysteriously turns up in her possession. “There is a piece of technology in this pin, it’s the kind of old-school pin you would wear on your lapel, and when you make physical contact with it, you have the illusion of being physically transported to another world, and that’s how Casey gets her first glimpse of Tomorrowland,” Lindelof says. “She is a Muggle who accidentally wanders across Platform 9 ¾ and sees something she probably shouldn’t have.”

As Bird puts it: “At first when she experiences this thing, she’s not sure if it’s real or not. It’s kind of like being hit by a dream and not sure whether the dream was a dream or real.”

Her discovery of the pin, and the vision of this futuristic land it reveals, leads her to Frank Walker (George Clooney), a hermit and failed inventor who knows more about Tomorrowland than he wants to tell.

“He’s at this farmhouse, and it’s probably the house he’s grown up in,” Bird says, noting that the old homestead is falling back into the past. “He hasn’t done anything to it. He’s done tech stuff inside it, but it’s not a super cool bachelor pad. It’s more like a guy who is retreating when something didn’t go well.”

Once a boy genius, he has aged into a bitter and jaded man, and part of the journey to find Tomorrowland requires Casey to uncover the part of him that’s still optimistic. “There’s something about George,” Bird says. “You can see the wheels turning in his eyes, and he reads as somebody who is very principled. He seems like a very pragmatic guy who also dreams, but he’s not flighty. There’s an integrity to him that you feel.”

Although there is a heavy-duty dose of nostalgia in Tomorrowland, that sentiment is aimed mainly at the sense of hope and yearning for exploration that seems to have faded from modern life. The design will strive for true modernism, rather than the kind of retro-futurism some may be expecting. “I’m a huge fan of Bradbury, Heinlein, Sagan and the great genre writers,” Lindelof said. “I do think that The Martian Chronicles are part of a bygone age, but the best sci-fi is also evergreen and just as potent today as it was when it was written.”

Lindelof said he and Jensen, who got to know each other when the EW writer was covering (and obsessively trying to solve the riddles of) Lost, drew upon a much more recent sci-fi tale—if 1977 counts as recent.

“Another big influence for Jeff Jensen and I when we first started talking about this story was Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” Lindelof says. “Somehow it was able to do what no modern movies are able to do, which is tell a story that doesn’t have a bad guy who is trying to blow up the planet, or giant robots fighting, or lots of karate—though who doesn’t love karate? It was so not plot driven. It was just a pure discovery movie. It was pure what-if. Just that idea of what’s going on here? What does this mean? That was a real jumping off place for a movie like this.”

There’s more to tell, but Rome wasn’t built in a day, and Tomorrowland won’t be revealed in just one either.

Keep your eyes on the future … "


And Collider writer Adam Chitwood makes a nice closing statement in his article about the movie.

"As someone who’s extremely tired of world-ending plot points and massive third act battles full of explosions and sky fighting, it’s a relief to hear that Bird and Lindelof are digging for something wholly different with Tomorrowland."

Concept art by Syd Mead.



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Re: Tomorrowland

cashleelee: "It is not lost on me that I'm spending my honeymoon at Comic Con." George Clooney making a surprise #NYCC appearance

loquaciousmuse: "I think since my batman, I've been disinvited from comic con for 20 years" - Clooney on this being his first comic con #nycc #Tomorrowland

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Tomorrowland pins given out at the NYCC panel. I need to get one of these.

These were also given at Disney's D23 event during the scavenger hunt last year and were going on ebay for over $100.

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Re: Tomorrowland

Looks interesting, maybe a bit too Wizard of Ozish. (poppy field swapped out for wheat field with a what looks like the Emerald City in the distance.)

I wonder when We'll get Main Street USA: The Movie or Dole Whip Stand: The Movie?
 
Re: Tomorrowland

Looks interesting, maybe a bit too Wizard of Ozish. (poppy field swapped out for wheat field with a what looks like the Emerald City in the distance.)

I wonder when We'll get Main Street USA: The Movie or Dole Whip Stand: The Movie?

You mean they found a way to rip the old Wizard of Oz- maybe just making use of the OZ sets?

Dole Whip Stand! Now that's a movie! O wait they already made Lilo and Stitch.
 
Re: Tomorrowland

You mean they found a way to rip the old Wizard of Oz- maybe just making use of the OZ sets?

Dole Whip Stand! Now that's a movie! O wait they already made Lilo and Stitch.

Other Disneyland movie ideas...
Club 33: The Movie!
Walt's Apartment: The Movie!
PUSH The Garbage Can: The Movie!
;)
 
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