What would you consider the number one priority in the making of Atlas Shrugged Part III?
We want to hear from you. What would you consider the number one priority in the making of Atlas Shrugged Part III?
A. Casting
B. Getting the message of Atlas Shrugged right
C. Cinematography
D. Special Effects
E. Hiring the right Director
F. Other
Leave your answer in the comments below.
A. Casting
B. Getting the message of Atlas Shrugged right
C. Cinematography
D. Special Effects
E. Hiring the right Director
F. Other
Leave your answer in the comments below.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 15.
Take some literary license and make it relevant to the present.
The Hank Rearden in Part Two is so shallow it took away my respect for this role. Very disappointing! Bring back the Hank Rearden player of Part One!
Dagny and others in Part Two are OK. Make sure the John Gault player in Part III is an extremely charismatic/effecting person otherwise it's hard to explain the change of heart of Dagny from Rearden to Gault.
Read more at http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/4d...
I am surprised at all the comments and how the vast majority have apparently missed the fact the story itself is more of a love story than anything. Rand herself said the very thing. The ideology and political stance she wrote into the story is not lost but the shear focal point is the love story aspect.
I understand the Producers of the project have made this into more of a political laced film and less of a love story and I don't hold it against them in anyway, however a political film comes with a certain cloud that many will have varying opinions on.
My recommendation to the Producers is to focus on the overall structure and flow of the story for film 3. I realize the difficult nature as a writer myself what deadlines can do in rushing a story to completion.
As an aspiring filmmaker myself, my team and I have often discovered a well flowing story can help to sell it when a low budget prevents big time actors, locations, and FX whether old school or computer animated.
That is my 2 cents for what it'd be worth.
The book has many messages. If there is one overall message, *the* message, it is the whole of Rand’s philosophy. But in telling a story in the book, the film will convey *a* message from it and get that message right. (If it’s not conveyed correctly, *that* story isn’t in the book.) So, first in planning Part III, the producers need to be very clear as to *exactly* the message they want to convey by the end of it, presumably drawing together all three parts.
Casting:
If Galt is going to talk philosophy, the actor who plays him *must* be able to speak philosophy conversationally, unlike the wooden delivery of Galt’s lines in the first two parts. Stiff delivery makes the lines sound laughable. Hire a voice-over actor if necessary.
I agree that Miss Schilling and Mr. Bowler were more attractive leads, although they are both too young. At the height of the story, the main characters are 35 (Dagny Taggert) to 45 (Rearden), experienced in the world and no longer wunderkinds, a significant detail.
Other:
Galt needs to make a speech but the burden of it can be conveyed painlessly in the scene where Dagny Taggert meets the people in the valley. Each can say something out of the speech in explaining why he quit. This would also show the ideas at work in different lives, different circumstances and from different perspectives (as could have been done with the story of the 20th Century Motor Company). And if the scene comes early enough in the movie, it might be used to recapitulate key parts of Parts I and II, which I think the viewer *must* have if he is going to string together all three films released over such a long period. (Part II would have benefited from explicit recapitulation of Part I.)
I suggest that in addition to a "Cast of Characters" that each character, as he comes on the screen, have his name printed under his figure for several seconds.
Also, for that same movie goer, there would be a brief statement if what the movie was all about, and a brief summary of what happened in Parts. I and II.
Even I, who has read the book several times, found it difficult to know just who is who.
JimWright
Load more comments...