Behind the Scenes of "War of the Worlds" 2
Audiences have come to demand a lot from this type of movie. How do you make it new, fresh, and different from what we've come to expect?
Doug Chiang - I think one of the smartest things about what the story is this time is we all know it's this big, epic battle, but it's being told through a very personal point of view. I think that's what differentiates it. It is a story about a father and his quest to save his family. I think setting that within the backdrop of this big, epic thing is going to sort differentiate it. Because it is an intimate tale. It is a common tale because it's a tale of survival.
It could be a World War II film because it's about refugees and these aliens could be an invading other force. In some ways, that's why I think what's unique about this story, or “War of the Worlds” in general, is it's not really a science fiction story. It's really a story about survival and it could be any kind of menace. Just because we have this alien menace in here doesn't put it into that context. And so in that respect, I just like it because it really kind of delves into the personal psyche of how would you survive. How would any of us survive in that? It really explores that and really kind of figures out what people would do. It sort of reveals the human flaws and the human greatness.
The book has a 9/11 vibe to it. Are you going to embrace that?
Rick Carter - I think that's what informs this particular interpretation, is that fear in our society. But I think that when this is all said and done, it may go to another level that is beyond what you think it's going to be. Meaning that's the beginning, that's what we've experienced. This is really the parallel plane. Out on the floor there with all of those people is a parallel plane to our own reality and it sometimes describes our world in a way that we can't even get at, in terms of being direct, because we don't even know. We can't see it.
Sometimes some artist comes along and does some fantastic thing and you go, “Well, that really reflected that era.” The 50s is easy to see that way. The Red Menace and the atomic bomb and all that. My sense is that this is just tapping into something as a beginning point that relates to the aftermath of 9/11 and the fear factor that we all have, but that it goes further and it evolves. It's actually not always just about the aliens. It's what happens when you're - as Doug was saying - battling that fear and what does it do to people. How do they respond? And so it's not just sociological.
I think what will differentiate it from “Independence Day” is that… I loved “Independence Day” and it came out at exactly the right time and for exactly that way. But no one is going to turn around in this movie and have a quick one-liner about a good hair day. That's not to make it better or worse, it just reflects our times.
Will we see places other than the United States being invaded?
Doug Chiang - No. No, I think it's alluded to. We are following our main hero and so we know all this stuff is going on and probably taking place everywhere else, but we don't see it.
Rick Carter - I think it's like how do you experience 9/11 if you weren't there? What I'm trying to get at is you kind of know where you were. You kind of know who you talked to. And you know maybe, if you had kids, how you presented it to them. It almost just evolves from that point. I think you have a sense that this is within the whole world, but that's part of any movie, isn't it? How the intimate and the broader intermingle. I think that's the part that I would say is, I hope, going to be the strongest part of the movie, [and] ultimately that it would be a really good movie. The science fiction elements are what get the whole thing going and keep it going, but it isn't just the be all and end all of the hardware.
You can't describe the aliens, but what can you say about the aliens that says something about their culture or their goals in invading Earth?
Doug Chiang - Rick and I, when we do designs like this, we always try to research as much as we can. In some ways I think that Rick hit it right on the nail in that we're trying to create fear or an image of fear. Whatever that is to each individual person is always different. There's always shadow images and stuff. So in some ways we're trying to create these creatures, or these machines or whatever, as sort of manifestations of what terrifies me or what terrifies Rick. It may not terrify everybody else, but I think we're trying to capture that essence. Playing it so that it's not really the literal [interpretation], but more sort of capturing that spirit, is the approach that we were taking. In some ways it's better that way, because it can be interpreted many different ways. I mean, ultimately, when you guys see the design you might think that it's not scary or whatever. Personally, I really think it's terrifying and I think it's very fresh. I know we're talking all around in shadows and alluding to stuff, but it's really trying to describe fear.
Did any earthly cultures or images influence your designs?
Rick Carter - I can just say the thing that's interesting about it is that it's not so much that there's a culture that represents them, or that we've figured out their whole world. It's more like… We're sitting around this table, if somebody was watching from up there and suddenly you became aware that you're being watched… And that has a point of view to it. How are they perceiving us? It constantly mirrors back onto us. So what I'm trying to get at is, at its source, what I think becomes the most threatening is the way that they seem to regard us and our planet, and what they seek.
It's both sociological and broad but it's also in a few instances, very personal. That's that thing that Spielberg is very good at doing, is taking something that may seem broad and suddenly making it very personal. Let me just say, it would be the opposite of the little fingers going and getting candy [in “ET”]. It would be the opposite of touching a flower [that's] dying and making it come alive.
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