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View Full Version : (UK)Don't worry, Tony, it's only a film (for now)



Geezah
03-09-2006, 03:20 PM
It is several of Tony Blair's nightmares rolled into one.
Parliament is ablaze and the face of Big Ben is about to explode. The corrupt and authoritarian government is getting its comeuppance from an exasperated public.

To borrow a phrase from Oscar Wilde, you'd need a heart of stone not to laugh. But don't worry, Prime Minister, it's only a movie.

The dramatic scenes feature in V For Vendetta, released next week with a cast including Natalie Portman, John Hurt and Stephen Fry.

Parallels

Set in 2020, it portrays a Britain with some curiously familiar parallels to the one being created by a certain New Labour government.

What, for example, if the police were to be given extraordinary powers of arrest, the right to enforce curfews, monitor everyone through CCTV and lock people up for speaking out of turn?

What if a totalitarian government were to control and censor the media, drive out freedom of speech where it didn't accord with state policy and send in security boneheads when someone dared to criticise the head of state at, say, a Party Conference?

What if there were a Ministry for Propaganda, tasked with spreading the government message through carefully-managed, presidential-style addresses and cynical disinformation briefings?

What if the government came to power on a platform of lies, broken promises and weasel words?

Of course, it couldn't possibly happen here.

In a remarkable coincidence, one of those who helped on the film was Tony Blair's teenage son Euan, then doing work experience.

Tanks and soldiers in Whitehall

Perhaps surprisingly, the producers won permission from the 14 relevant authorities to close off parts of Whitehall for around four hours one spring morning while they shot scenes involving tanks and 1,000 actors dressed as soldiers.

V for Vendetta was to have come out in November, to coincide with the 400th anniversary of Guy Fawkes's attempts to bring down the government of his day. It was postponed because the 7/7 atrocities were thought to be too fresh in the mind.

In the film, the uprising is spearheaded by a masked and caped anti-hero named V. Apart from Parliament ablaze, scenes include the scales of justice over the Old Bailey exploding into a million pieces.

Rather than using computer graphics, the special effects team assembled scale models in plaster of the buildings at Shepperton Studios, including a 20ft high Old Bailey and the Houses of Parliament measuring 42ft wide by 30ft high.

Director James McTeigue said: "It shows what can happen when a society is ruled by government, rather that the government being a voice of the people.

"It's not such a great leap to think that this can happen when the government stops listening to the people."

Stephen Fry, who plays a talk show host, said of the film: "We don't know what's going to happen in 20 years but it's certainly possible that the liberty of the individual will be compromised.

"If not by the state, by a combination of the state and billions of bits of data floating around us which anyone can access whether it's organised crime, corporate global organisations or whether it's individual states.

"There's no question that things will be up in the air in a way that we probably can't even imagine."

Link (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=379319&in_page_id=1770&in_a_source=)

...........

ElHombre
03-09-2006, 03:34 PM
Perhaps surprisingly, the producers won permission from the 14 relevant authorities to close off parts of Whitehall for around four hours one spring morning while they shot scenes involving tanks and 1,000 actors dressed as soldiers.

i wonder if there isn't a certain conversation happening in certain offices.

'you mean to tell me none of you bothered to ask what this movie was about?!?'

Mr Gently Benevolent
03-09-2006, 05:44 PM
Oh well another worst case scenario film, usually a studio tax loss project but some in the past have been really good such as the TV drama “ A Very British Coup”. I will trundle along to the Odeon on a wet Sunday for this one if nothing else is worth watching.

soprano
03-10-2006, 12:55 AM
I wont watch it!!!!!!!! dont really like sci-fi

ogukuo72
03-10-2006, 03:07 AM
It's based on a graphic novel - a rather dark and depressing one at that. Should be quite interesting to see how it translates to the screen (the last movie to do this was Sin City, and I didn't think the producers did it very well.)

Pindeho
03-10-2006, 04:25 AM
this will be sweet!

joshfox0
03-10-2006, 07:18 AM
lol you realise the creator of the graphic novel all but called the movie a pice of shyte. rofl Still i'll go along to watch it scale model explosions are always good to watch.

Geezah
03-10-2006, 09:57 AM
I'm looking forward to it, it's got a decent cast, so I thinkl it will be fun.