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| Kidman y Craig confirmados para La Daga y El Catalejo Lacado |
| Publicado por Nas | 24 Aug 2007 |
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Entertainment Weekly, una de las revistas sobre cine más importantes en lengua inglesa, publicó un artículo en su último número sobre La Brújula Dorada. En él, además de hablar sobre el sentido antirreligioso de la película y la trilogía de Philip Pullman, se asegura que los actores Daniel Craig y Nicole Kidman, que juegan dos de los roles principales de la película están ya confirmados para las dos próximas entregas, The subtle knife y The amber spyglass (La Daga y El Catalejo Lacado en España). |
Algunos de los extractos del artículo rezan lo siguiente:
“Si pensabas que Harry Potter era blasfemos, espera a echar un vistazo a la trilogía de La Materia Oscura.” “Era muy católica.-dice Kidman- La Iglesia católica es parte de mi esencia. No hubiera podido hacer esta película si hubiera creído que era anti-católica en todo”. No hubiera podido hacer ninguna posible secuela tampoco, pero Kidman y Craig han firmado para las dos películas."
Aquí está el artículo completo en inglés:
Clergymen who kidnap children. Witches who aren't wicked. Even a pair of sexually ambiguous angels. If you thought Harry Potter was blasphemous, wait till you get a look at the His Dark Materials trilogy. New Line's $150 million adaptation of the first in Philip Pullman's series of theologically trippy novels, The Golden Compass follows 12-year-old Lyra Belacqua (Richards) as she sets off on an epic odyssey through a fantastical parallel universe inhabited by armor-wearing polar bears and shape-shifting daemons. Translating the book's complex metaphysical multiverse to the screen would make even the most CGI-savvy filmmaker jittery, let alone one whose biggest previous accomplishment was a comedy about a kid who has sex with a pastry. “To be honest, I didn't think I'd survive it,” Weitz (American Pie) confesses. “It seemed like the kind of thing that could break a person's mind. I mean, this movie is a megillah.” Indeed, after a trip to New Zealand to observe Peter Jackson on the set of a certain megillah called The Lord of the Rings, Weitz got cold feet and left the picture; he only returned to the job after his replacement Anand Tucker (Shopgirl), ran into creative difficulties with the studio. “I'm both the first and the third director on the film,” he says. “But I did a lot of growing in the interim.” He's also the movie's screenwriter, which means he'll get the hate mail if Pullman's fans decides it veers too far from the book. “It follows the novel as closely as it can,” promises Craig, who grew an un-Bondlike beard to play Lord Asriel, Lyra's explorer uncle, “but there's still a lot missing. That's always the case when you adapt a movie. You have to focus more on the storytelling.” Conspicuously absent, for instance, is any reference to Catholicism; instead, the malevolent organisation that snatches children to surgically remove their souls is referred to in the movie only as the Magisterium. “It has been watered down a little,” admits Kidman, who stars as the icily evil Mrs. Coulter. Not that she's complaining. Quite the contrary. “I was raised Catholic,” she says. “The Catholic Church is part of my essence. I wouldn't be able to do this film if I thought it were at all anti-Catholic.” She wouldn't be able to do any possible sequels, either, but Kidman and Craig have both signed on for two.
Gracias a HisDarkMaterials.org
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| Génesis :: 26 Aug 2007 05:41 pm | Oie, y lo puedes traducir , porfa? :s bueh.,.. si no.. no hay problem |
| drkrses :: 29 Aug 2007 09:20 am | traducidlo porfavoor, que hace mucho que no practico mi inglés.  |
| __J__ :: 17 Sep 2007 12:07 pm | cualkiera lo entiende traducirlo!!! |
| Keyon :: 02 Feb 2012 03:31 am | | Thanky Thanky for all this good informaiton! |
| tylererin :: 05 Feb 2012 01:57 am | I was a pretty advanced (and constant) reader as a kid, but I know there were definitely some books I read way too early and completely failed to comprehend. To Kill and Mockingbird and 1984 spring immediately to mind. Just because a child is physically capable of reading something doesn't make them the intended or ideal audience for it. <a href="http://www.insurplanscheck.com/">new jersey car insurance</a> |
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