Frank Darabont (ya no) adapta THE WALKING DEAD

Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

¿los zombis de Kirkman son de los que corren o de los lentorros? :juas desconozco totalmente la obra...

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“Los zombies de '28 semanas después' no son zombies, son infectados"

:juas
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

DIOOOSSSSSSS

¿¿¿¿Tenemos que esperar hasta octubre?????

Por cierto, por si no teníamos bastantes buenas noticias... en la CC han dicho que Bear McCreary pone música a la serie. :hail
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

DIOOOSSSSSSS

¿¿¿¿Tenemos que esperar hasta octubre?????

Por cierto, por si no teníamos bastantes buenas noticias... en la CC han dicho que Bear McCreary pone música a la serie. :hail

Y se cae de "Juego de Tronos"???? :|

Ansío ver de Walking Dead muy mucho, pero quería ver a Bear en Canción de Hielo y Fuego...
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

Puede trabajar perfectamente en dos series al mismo tiempo. De hecho, entre 2009 y 2010 ha compuesto música para seis series: Galactica, Las crónicas de Sarah Connor, Human target, Trauma, Eureka y Caprica... además de pelis, videojuegos y cortometrajes.
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

Pero es que Bear no esta en Juego de tronos, dijo que era un fan y le encantaria estar, todavia no han dicho quien hara la musica.
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

Dispatches From the Set - Cinematographer David Boyd

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The cinematographer for Friday Night Lights and Firefly explains how you make daylight terrifying, compares The Walking Dead with Westerns and describes how Walkers are more dangerous than Reavers.

Q: How did you get involved with The Walking Dead?

A: Gosh, I don't even know. I've never worked with Frank Darabont before; I think they just looked at a bunch of reels and resumes and called me up. That was it.

Q: Had you ever had a desire to shoot a zombie series?

A: No, but you know I came up through the camera department in horror movies -- I crewed on Re-Animator, From Beyond, all those Empire Pictures movies. So I'm used to things like that.

Q: Horror movies usually take place at night. This series takes place mostly during the
day. What are the challenges to that?

A: I think the challenges are to just get the idea that there's something to be afraid of around every corner. Because it's daylight you're not normally scared -- we're scared at night. But the levels of this are brilliantly laid out by Frank: The rooftop is a little safer than street level, street level is really terrifying, and below street level gets safer. So the scary places start to be the safe places, and the safe places start to be the scary places.

Q: What kind of visual tricks do you use to enhance this feeling of danger?

A: Just to play it as normal as possible, and prey on the fact that everyone knows that it's scary [Laughs]. We do tricks like we make it a little cooler -- like the warmth has disappeared from the world. And we use film so that the blues come out a little stronger, but I'm trying hard to keep it purely on a psychological level. Also, it's normal policy to make a camera perfectly level with the horizon, but not here. We don't do the obvious tilt left or right, but all things are a little bit off. My aim is to make it off-kilter enough to where there's just something subconsciously wrong with every image -- it starts to become a world where nothing's right.

Q: You're responsible for the show's lighting and color, but your source material is a black and white comic. What inspiration can you draw from it?

A: Oh all kinds. Everything comes from the comic book. And then Frank's taken it to its own place where it needs to be for us. Photographically all I've done is take most of the color out -- I've desaturated things and I'll bleed the color out. It's still a color image, it's still acceptable for television (because you can't put a black and white show on television any more) --

Q: You'd like to try, I take it?

A: I would love to try. I think we should just do it! Any convention out there I think we should put our foot through it. That said, we have to do it with color, so we'll just take the color out a bit, and bring it back within the realm of what was originally intended by Kirkman.

Q: Is that a situation where the decision to shoot on 16mm film is useful?

A: 16mm is the perfect choice. Regardless if we did it in HD or 35mm film, we'd add grain in the end to make it have this look. It calls up the language of what we're used to seeing in a horror film. George Romero's stuff was all grainy. It's like looking at a documentary, and you instantly get into the 16mm documentary world. And if you take those same cameras and put them into The Walking Dead, it begins to be a believable, real experience. We were looking at a day exterior the other day, and it actually becomes scary -- the moment when you realize it's possible to do something this frightful in broad daylight.

Q: You're used to shooting Westerns, having shot a few episodes of Deadwood and all of Firefly. Do you see any Western themes in The Walking Dead?

A: [Laughs] Yeah, I think that's encapsulated in Rick Grimes, right? I actually find myself thinking about Firefly from time to time on set. In both we made the choice not to embellish an image -- in my lexicon it would be not adding backlight, which is a product of working on a soundstage. In a practical location like where we are, we choose not to make it pretty, and to instead have it be a bunch of people on the edge of life.

Q: Speaking of Firefly, which is scarier: Reavers or Walkers?

A: You know those Reavers were awful scary, but these Walkers don't have a purpose other than to eat things. So they're slower, but they're more inexorable. They're just not going to stop, no matter what, so I'd go for the Walkers. The Walkers occupy my thoughts at night a lot more than the Reavers. The Reavers I could kind of laugh off. [Laughs]

[url]http://blogs.amctv.com/the-walking-dead/2010/08/david-boyd-interview.php[/URL]
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

A partir del 3:24, cuando se levanta el caballo y sale corriendo, parece que los zombies salen corriendo detrás. Ese detalle no me mola nada... lo de la niña ya lo había pillado, porque seguro que llevaba poco tiempo muerta y funcionaba todavía bien...
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

A partir del minuto ese la imagen está ralentizada... se ve a los zombies ir a por su presa pero yo no diría que corren.

Además, si corrieran nos hubiéramos enterado... si hasta en los primeros videos que salieron de extras aprendiendo a ser zombies se entrenaban con los de "Night of the living dead"...

Algunos serán más rápidos que otros (yo también pensé lo mismo que tú sobre la niña) y ya está. Pero vamos, seguro que los zombies no serán de los rápidos, rollo Snyder, sería un cambio demasiado "importante" como para que lo colaran ahora, así como así...

(Qué conversación más freak :cuniao )
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

Es que un muerto viviente NO PUEDE (o podría :garrulo) correr jamás, porque después de alcanzar el rigor mortis, y tras el estado de livor mortis, los músculos no podrían responder para mantener una carrera a por una presa. Como mucho podrían tambalearse como lo hacen normalmente, poro eso de salir corriendo hacia la presa es de vulgares infectados de rabia o de algo así. (Si, esto es una conversación gafapasta total...)
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

Yo partiendo de que un muerto NO PUEDE resucitar jamás, pues... mientras no vuelen :cuniao

Pero sí, yo también prefiero los Romerianos lentorros clásicos.
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

(me encanta esta foto del reparto)

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Entrevista mitómana con Darabont y Nicotero para SFX:

How are your zombies different from other people’s presentation of them?

Nicotero: Our zombies don’t eat brains! That’s a fallacy.


Darabont: That’s a big myth from Return Of The Living Dead. Dan O’Bannon and those folks have completely skewed our perception of what zombies do. We enjoy old school Night Of The Living Dead zombie stuff. I’m not that keen on revisionism as a rule. We’re thrown back to the good old days. The keenest cleverest revisionist thing is 28 Days Later and isn’t really a zombie thing. We’re in a drooling, lumbering George Romero mindset on this thing.


Nicotero: George really set up the rules. We have no idea if shooting a zombie in the head stops them. We just assume, “Oh yeah, shoot them in the head!” but that’s because George made those rules up. We could be in big trouble if it ever actually happens!


Speaking of Romero’s lumbering zombies, should zombies walk or run?

Darabont: As far as zombie speed is concerned of course they can run! But we’ll limit it to when they are in a frenzy. Many times they are not. They are fundamentally mindless and do a lot of standing around. But they are predatory. And like any animal, when they’re riled to that state by hunger or aggression, they move faster. You can’t just have zombies shuffling along like the mummy. You know what they say: if you can’t out run the mummy you deserve to die!


Do the zombies in The Walking Dead represent anything? Are there any Romero-style social metaphors going on here?

Darabont: To me they’re just dead people walking around! To me, those zombie metaphors have been covered by other filmmakers. They’ve laid those metaphors out through the decades, particularly George Romero. I don’t know if I can bring anything new to the zombie metaphor, so my focus is the human part of the story. We’ll find metaphors as we go! We don’t have a set agenda of metaphorical touch points. Stuff like that can come naturally. It’s more interesting to find out what the audience and fans bring to it.



Y además...

Robert Kirkman sobre lo que escenas del comic que le gustaría ver en el show (habla de Michonne, Hersel, cosas de la prisión...); lo pongo en enlace porque obviamente son spoilers para los que no hayan leído el tebeo: http://www.ugo.com/tv/robert-kirkmans-the-walking-dead-wish-list

Bear McCreary sobre la música del show:

"I’m doing a new series, ‘The Walking Dead’ with Frank Darabont. I’ve been working on that today. It’s a lot of fun.I’ve seen the first three episodes. It’s outstanding. It’s everything you’d expect from Frank Darabont and Gale Anne Hurd and Robert Kirkman and I’m going to writes some kick-ass music.I’m a huge fan of the comic, so I already have these melodies in my mind. When you’re working with Frank Darabont and a director like John Chu these are visionary directors and it’s so easy to come up with music when the material they’re providing you is so beautiful and well shot and well thought-out. It’s a wonderful experience as a composer to be able to work with filmmakers on this level."
 
Respuesta: Frank Darabont adapta THE WALKING DEAD

¿podrian haber sido más original con lo del tio saliendo del hospital no? :mosqueo o es que 28 días lo copia de aquí??
 
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