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Exclusive: Milton's Paradise Lost Movie in 3D?
Director Scott Derrickson says Avatar is giving him ideas.
by Joe Utichi | December 12, 2008
Discuss Article
Could Scott Derrickson's upcoming adaptation of Milton's Paradise Lost be shot in 3D? Perhaps so, the director told Rotten Tomatoes recently. "I'm already a believer in the 3D technology after seeing U2-3D; I was blown away by it," Derrickson told us. "I was really struck by the cinematic possibilities of it for storytelling. It's a change of the basic nature of the experience of cinema because the best way to see it is to view it large screen, IMAX, where there is no frame. It's not something you watch, it's something you're in, and that fundamental difference, and the impact it can have on storytelling, it's unfathomable. The story of Paradise Lost really lends itself to that experience."

The epic poem, published in 1667, describes the temptation of Adam and Eve by Lucifer and their expulsion from Eden. Its imagery has inspired artists like Dali and writers like William Blake, C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien and Mary Shelley. Quotations have been featured in movies like Se7en and The Crow and the character of Satan in the poem has been said to have influenced the character of Darth Vader in Star Wars.

Paradise Lost


"Milton's great literary legacy was that he created the first antihero in Lucifer and he's not the villain in Paradise Lost," he explained. "He's really the one that you're tracking the story with and his initial discontent is very understandable and sympathetic. He makes choices and continues to make choices and I'm really interested in a movie that's a real Litmus test as far as at what point you jump off supporting him. I think everyone will be on his side at the beginning, because he was an absolutely devoted servant of God to begin with, but at one point you stop being on his side is fascinating to me."

The film is being produced in association with Warner Brothers and Legendary Pictures who recently brought to screen 300, The Dark Knight and Superman Returns, and so know all about projects of epic visual scope.

But, Derrickson says, he'll be starting from scratch when it comes to the film's visual style, preferring to craft his own vision of the poem's settings and characters and not rely on generations of art that's been inspired by the poem. "I think it's a story that needs an originality of vision to work as a modern movie," he said, "and there are just so many interesting ideas and it's so visual; fighting and fallen angels."

Paradise Lost


Derrickson said that his interest in 3D for the film had been stoked recently by his time on the set of Avatar with James Cameron. "I went to the set and visited Cameron there and he was really generous with his time with me. It's James Cameron and he's making Avatar, I was just privileged to walk through the door, but he really took time to talk to me about The Day the Earth Stood Still and took time to walk me through the technology and I really saw how it works in production.

"Now that I'm doing Paradise Lost I emailed his producer, Jon Landau, and asked if I could see a few minutes, so I'm going to see a few minutes of finished film. I'm really looking forward to seeing how it turns out."

For Derrickson, it was Cameron's reasons for using the technology that convinced him about Avatar's ambition. "When I met Cameron on set I asked, 'Why have you spent so much time creating and perfecting the technology?' He pointed to a script and he said, 'The story.' It was the perfect answer, and it was clearly what he believed. He had a story he didn't think could be told any other way."

Paradise Lost is in pre-production now and should be on screens in a couple of years. We'll bring you more news as and when we get it. Derrickson's latest film, The Day the Earth Stood Still, is out today -- check out his visual companion to the movie here.

Related Items
Movie: Avatar
The Crow
The Day the Earth Stood Still
Seven
U2 3D
The Dark Knight
300
Superman Returns
Celeb: J.R.R. Tolkien
Scott Derrickson
William Blake
Jon Landau
Mary Shelley
C.S. Lewis
James Cameron
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Comments (1-14 of 14 posts) | Reply
ZiGyStRdUsT
ZiGyStRdUsT writes:
on Dec 12 2008 09:52 AM

how this will translate to film I don't know. It's going to have to be HEAVILY adapted.

(Reply to this)
Merlin235
Merlin235 writes:
on Dec 12 2008 10:04 AM

Yeah, I'm not sure how it'll be done either. Pretty ambitious.

(Reply to this)
ThePowerHouse
ThePowerHouse writes:
on Dec 12 2008 10:39 AM


"Milton's great literary legacy was that he created the first antihero in Lucifer and he's not the villain in Paradise Lost,"

Ummm...no...Lucifer is the villain in "Paradise Lost." Milton intentionally makes him charismatic and attractive in order to make evil more exciting. He makes God a bore, and, through contrasting God and Lucifer, he illustrates through the reader's own perceptions how evil is often more appealing than good. Adam and Eve are clearly the hero's of the epic. Meh...that was my literary rant for the day. I still look forward to seeing the film...


(Reply to this)
The Truth About Jack Hair
The Truth About Jack Hair writes:
on Dec 12 2008 10:39 AM

PANDEMONIUM

(Reply to this)
ThePowerHouse
ThePowerHouse writes:
on Dec 12 2008 10:42 AM


"Milton's great literary legacy was that he created the first antihero in Lucifer and he's not the villain in Paradise Lost,"

Ummm...no...Lucifer is the villain in "Paradise Lost." Milton intentionally makes him charismatic and attractive in order to make evil more exciting. He makes God a bore, and, through contrasting God and Lucifer, he illustrates through the reader's own perceptions how evil is often more appealing than good. Adam and Eve are clearly the hero's of the epic. Meh...that was my literary rant for the day. I still look forward to seeing the film...


(Reply to this)
Mitchie-Boy
Mitchie-Boy writes:
on Dec 12 2008 08:55 PM

Yeah, take a complex piece of literature and try to make it into a popcorn movie.

Great idea.

What's next, Faust with action sequences?


(Reply to this)
Dan M.
Dan M. writes:
on Dec 13 2008 07:59 AM

I have waited for this film my entire adult life, having read Milton's epic twice in my 20's. This book is arguably the most graphic portrayal of stunning beauty, destructive pride, painful choice, aching loss, regret, and the hope of eventual forgiveness and restoration ever written. Opening with the literal falling through space into hell of Satan's army, on fire, I wonder if even CGI will be able to capture the intensity of the scene. The horrible realization of paradise lost forever to most of the most prominent former angels must create an image to match the phrase "cry like a fallen angel". Depicting Hell as a real place, intensely dark yet completely ablaze, torturing its superhuman victims even as they recover the pride that put them there, and then building Pandamonium? -Wow!. Satan's first glimpse of earth, so dazzling in its beauty that even the focus of evil in the universe is momentarily softened and reconsidering its destruction will be amazing. Adam's pain at seeing the only other person in creation - his wife and soulmate, contorted and dying by inches from her sin - and then choosing to join her in a long life of pain and death rather than lose her dwarf's the momentary pain of Romeo & Juliet's double suicide. This could be the "Gone with the Wind" of the 21st century

(Reply to this)
Oblivioncry
Oblivioncry writes:
on Dec 13 2008 11:50 AM

In reply to this comment (#2181195)
it COULD BE.....only a director with a very artistic approach, a mind blowing vision can do this. just as said in the article, it takes a clear but artistic mind to convert all the scenery you described to celleloid.

as of now i really cant think of any director who could do the words of the book justice.


(Reply to this)
Oblivioncry
Oblivioncry writes:
on Dec 13 2008 11:50 AM

In reply to this comment (#2181195)
and whoever tries to film faust should be beaten.....

(Reply to this)
Rah-ry Drater
Rah-ry Drater writes:
on Dec 14 2008 08:19 AM

I'm not soooo sure about this, but i can't say that I'm not totally freakin excited.....

(Reply to this)
Jason H.
Jason H. writes:
on Dec 14 2008 12:22 PM

this may not be a good thing. most movies based on books and remakes dont turn out good and usually dont do the original any justice.
if i were to choose a director i would pick Darren Aronofsky because of his movie The Fountain.
im not too sure about this, but it will be interesting and i hope they do this with an artistic mind.


(Reply to this)
Fant S.
Fant S. writes:
on Dec 16 2008 12:58 PM

hooray, Derrickson, now he can ruin the epic poem the same way he did for the day the earth stood still. maybe he can use Keanu for God, we know he can play boring. I cannot fathom condensing this 12,000 line poem into 2 hours without losing too much. this is probably the same reason no good movie has EVER been made of the Illiad or the Odyssey. Whats next Uwe Bol directs the Divine Comedia. I was looking forward to this film, i'll just reread it again and look at dore, I'm tired of hollywoods anti-midas touch. In this instance the imagination of the reader is far superior to anything on film.

(Reply to this)
kristen g.
kristen g. writes:
on Dec 18 2008 01:33 PM

awesome.
nothing would be lost (pun?) on making this film-- even if they fail miserably, it won't take away from the actual poem.
MY ONLY HOPE is that they find someone really hot to play satan. Silly? perhaps. Fangirlish? guilty. Heretic? possibly.
But the poem is brought to life by satan's depressing little story. when he first sees eden and is happy, and wonders if he can repent, and realizes he can't, is so sad. And he really appears to have feelings for Eve. I think I'd like to make my own sappy romantic movie of this poem... I mean, if the director's psyched about the angel-battles and the prospect of 3D, then I'm a little worried (since the beauty of the poem is in the characterizations, not just in the over-the-top battles between the angels and fallen.)


(Reply to this)
Steve H.
Steve H. writes:
on Jan 06 2009 06:54 PM

I think the fact that Director missed a HUGE part of what the story is about(as stated in the above ThePowerHouse comment) is kind of scary. Also did anyone here see "The Day the Earth Stood Still". What crap, now this guy is going to tackle one of the most epic poems ever written? I think maybe Peter Jackson is probably the only guy that could pull it off. On a side note if anyone here is interested in depictions of Paradise Lost google image search John Martin. He was a 18th century artist that did a series of mezzotints illuminating Paradise Lost.

(Reply to this)
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