A lot of this seems to be confirmed by a report today on Fanderson"The story revolves around a young Alan Tracy, his friend Fermat (the son of Brains - I don't really know how he came about, Brains doesn't have a wife or girlfriend in the script) and the young Tintin.
"The kids are left stranded on the island when Jeff and the older boys Scott, Virgil and Gordon (main characters in the TV show, who seem to have about 15 minutes screentime in the whole movie!) fly up into space in Thunderbird 3 in a panic after an explosion on TB5, (leaving the island somewhat stupidly deserted), and are then are stranded, floating about on the station in outer space for pretty much the whole movie...
"Of course, it's all a trap by a ridiculously camp bad guy - 'super criminal' Aristotle Spode and his stupid henchmen who wants to steal the Thunderbirds machines to commit super crimes."
Other alleged details include some snatches of dialogue which read as if they've been made up on the spot so there's every possibility that the posted 'review' is nothing more than a hoax. But you never can tell...
Fanderson also have an excerpt from the alledged script http://www.fanderson.org.uk/moviescript.html . Please don't grind your teeth too hard!Unfortunately, recent revelations about the plot and focus of the film (generally dispensing with the format elements that made the television series so popular in favour of much more juvenile characters in an attempt to follow in the footsteps of the Spy Kids and Harry Potter films) have been generally greeted with derision by both hardcore fans and ordinary members of the public alike. This reaction has not been encouraged by reports from studio insiders that the project has turkey written all over it before a frame of film has even been shot, placing it firmly in the same camp of ill-advised TV-series-to-movie reworkings as The Avengers (1998), The Saint (1997), Lost In Space (1997) and Holiday On The Buses (1973). Clearly Frakes and the producers have an uphill battle on their hands to persuade movie-goers that such speculation is unfounded.
Originally posted by ray gower
There is only five years seperating the five brothers, so if we accept that Alan Tracy is only 12, then Scott is 17 and hasn't had his famous Air Force career yet and Gordon Tracy is at best 13. Surely Social Services would be interested in why his 14 year old brother, John, is left alone aboard a space station for 3 month periods?
from AICN: Cool News 20/03/03
Hey Harry [Knowles],
I was sat on a train from London to Birmingham today opposite from a couple of suits from one of the London studios, and couldn't help but overhear some of their conversation.
They were discussing the new Thunderbirds movie ("directed by the guy who was number 2 in Star Trek") [Number One ie. William Riker aka Jonathan Frakes] and about the locations that were being booked and scouted at the moment.
Apparently, there will be car chases and a helicopter chase filmed by the South Bank of London, possibly involving Grand Prix cars (for which they are attempting to get professional drivers to do cameos). This is to be done to scale as a sort of go-cart race - I don't know whether this is to be a nod to the origins of the series or not.
Also, Lady Penelope's pink car is being redesigned for the film by Ford as a concept car.
Hope you can use some of that.
Ta ta.
Simon
from scifi wire
Bill Paxton, who will portray patriarch Jeff Tracy in the live-action adaptation of Thunderbirds, told SCI FI Wire that the film will be more of an action movie than an homage to the 1960s marionette series. "They've retooled it as a live-action action-adventure, with some comedy for the Harry Potter crowd," Paxton said in an interview. "Most of the story revolves around the youngest son of my character. He wants to be a Thunderbird."
Paxton said that he begins filming in one month and has already adopted some of Tracy's characteristics. "I'm already starting to evolve into him," he said. "The haircut's getting shorter. I don't know if I'm up for the big eyebrows."
Paxton added that his only worry is that critics will make puns comparing his acting to the marionette animation of the original series. "I think they're going to say they haven't seen a performance this wooden since the original," he joked. Thunderbirds also stars Ben Kingsley as the Hood and Anthony Edwards as Brains. Jonathan Frakes directs, with an anticipated July 2004 release.
Although Thunderbirds creator Gerry Anderson has previously had no involvement in the feature film project, as he reveals in the latest issue of FAB magazine, Anderson has recently had a number of meetings at Pinewood with the film's director Jonathan Frakes and the two have become firm friends. Anderson told FAB magazine, "I heard some of his ideas and, of course, it will be a different picture from the series we made in 1965 because, like any major movie that is made, when you do a sequel, you almost always have a different director with new ideas and that's what's happening here. But I'm getting the feeling that it's going to be a very, very nice picture.
"Because of my friendship with Jonathan Frakes and discussions with Universal, I'm becoming more and more involved with the picture, although I have to make it clear that it is Jonathan Frakes's picture and I wouldn't dream of poking my nose in or making suggestions that might throw him. But certainly if he wants to talk about anything, I will help him out if I can. It's a very nice situtation to be in, and I'm certainly looking forward to seeing the finished picture. I am currently in discussion with Universal about what my role on the movie will actually be, but everything seems very positive at the moment."
The original Thunderbirds Supermarionation series was scheduled to begin a new British network screening run on BBC2 at 1.25pm on Saturday, April 5th, with the series' opening episode Trapped In The Sky. However, the programme was cancelled in favour of further coverage of the war in Iraq.
So Dave gets his wish. TB1 to 3 are more or less like they ought to be. Whilst TB4 and 5 are now totally different!The film's marketing department recently invited a number of members of the press and prospective merchandise licensees to visit the sets and meet the members of the cast during filming at Pinewood Studios. Many of these visitors appear to have been impressed by the scale of the production and the quality of the sets and full-size vehicles constructed for the film. They also report that the film's versions of Thunderbirds 1, 2 and 3 remain relatively faithful to their original television appearance while Thunderbirds 4 and 5 are almost completely different.
So it looks as if Gerry is trying to wash his hands of it too!At the recent 'An Evening with Gerry Anderson' event at The Barbican Centre in London, Gerry Anderson updated fans on his involvement with the film. Anderson confirmed that the film's producers had offered him "a fantastic amount of money" to endorse the project by being photographed on the set and speaking positively about the movie in interviews. However, on sight of the vehicle created to be the film's version of Lady Penelope's FAB 1, he felt that he was unable to accept the producers' offer as this would compromise his integrity.
"It was this wacky kids show back in the sixties"
Originally posted by ray gower
TB, however, faces the big cut off. It has a new crew, with no experience of the original show and professes no understanding of it either.
from SCIFI WIRE
The big-screen version of the '60s British TV series is much more than a live-action makeover. "I think this is ultimately going to become this kind of great, quintessential British import to the world," Paxton said at a press conference during a break in filming at Pinewood Studios near London. "It's going to celebrate the style, the charm, of England in the '60s - but it's not your parents' Thunderbirds."
Although updated for today's audiences, the film still carries a 1960s influence, Paxton said. "I think it would be a complete fiasco if you try to go out for an Austin Powers kind of thing," he said. "It's more than that. When I grew up in the '60s, it was about vocation. It wasn't about making money. It was about doing things for other people, finding something you wanted to do. There's a message of integrity and ethics all through this thing. It celebrates technology as benefiting mankind, using these machines to try to actually help people, instead of decimating them. I feel that's what's going to make it great: It goes beyond this campy '60s puppet show." The Working Title film, directed by Jonathan Frakes, is slated for a summer 2004 release.
from SciFi Wire
Jonathan Frakes, the former Star Trek helmer who is now directing a live-action Thunderbirds movie, told the Empire Online Web site that the film will try to please both diehard fans and newcomers to the franchise. "It is part of the blessing and part of the curse," Frakes told the site about adapting the beloved 1960s marionette TV series. "It's the same thing with Star Trek: There is an audience of [fans] who are passionate about the show who would be offended if it was different from the original, and yet there's a huge audience of people who know nothing about Thunderbirds."
But Frakes promised that the film will have some familiar elements. "You have the palm trees folding down, and Thunderbird 2 taking off, and the swimming pool sliding back, so all the good bits are in," he said. He added: "It's big ships and loud music. It's going to be a big movie. It's a prequel. The kids are about 10 years younger than when the show takes place [as] shown in the '60s. So our little heroes are 12, 13, 14 years old."
Frakes, who played Cmdr. Ryker [sic] in Star Trek: The Next Generation, also said that he'll appear in Thunderbirds in a cameo role. "If you watch closely, you might [see me]," he said. "That's all I can tell you."
And of Vehiclesfrom fanderson
Speaking about Thunderbirds at a recent press conference at Pinewood Studios, actor Sir Ben Kingsley who plays the evil Hood in the film (as seen right), told reporters, "We're making a film of quality. I think we're dealing very much with the rite of passage of a 14-year-old boy who is damned and blessed with heroic parents, one of whom is dead and one of whom is a world hero. It's pure, mythological, rich stuff."
And the bedroom scene- Well bathroom actually(Dominic) Lavery's designs for Thunderbirds 1, 2, 3 and 5 remain reasonably faithful to Derek Meddings's original vehicles, although all are considerably smaller than their television counterparts and Thunderbird 3 now includes a small detachable shuttle vehicle nestling against the hull. The Thunderbird 5 space satellite has become an enormously impressive doughnut-shaped space station mounted by a glittering array of solar panels.
Similarly, the film's various pod vehicles - designed by original television series designer Mike Trim and movie art director Ray Chan - retain the essence of the originals and include the Mole, Firefly and a new Thunderbird 2 pod vehicle, the Thunderiser (similar in function to the television series' Booster Mortar vehicle from Edge Of Impact). However, Thunderbird 4 - designed by Mark Holmes - bears only superficial similarities to the original craft, having become a yellow bathyscaphe vehicle with front-mounted grabs, similar in style to the mini-subs seen in James Cameron's The Abyss (1993). Holmes has also designed the entirely new look of the Tracy Island villa exteriors.
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