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Post Info TOPIC: Wicker Man


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RE: Wicker Man


If you want to see it that much why don't you go alone?!


Yep...I reckon he's on to you! Lol. You've been rumbled but why hide the fact you're a Nic fan?


Everyone I know knows I'm into Nic and I don't give a toss wether they like it or not!


As for your local video rental store...yes, strange...they only have ONE copy of Con Air?!



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 Well, Here we are again.. My roomates/ Landlord won't take me to see Wickerman.


 I think he is on to me. He knows that I am obsessed with Cage. He even said" Can we watch


a movie that does'nt have Nicholas Cage in it ?"  I said " No" .


When I went to Hollywood video after work  Friday to get " Con- Air" , which was already rented. ****ers...Like there is only one copy in the whole store .....



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 I want to see this movie this weekend.. I wanted  to see it last weekend and the weekend before that.. . So, Here we are and I still have yet  to see it. My roomates refuse to take me to see 9/11 .I guess it is too much for them.right now.... So, I  am trying to convince them to take me ( at the very least) to see Wickerman this weekend ...... And agree to allow me to see my dogs later ... I don't think that is too much to ask ......What the Fu**ck...


 



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SEPT 4 AT VENICE FILM FESTIVAL
Nicolas Cage brings classic horror movie 'The Wicker Man' back

09/02/2006


Cage is a long-time fan of the original movie and was keen to be involved in an updated version.

Nicolas Cage takes the lead in the remake of classic British horror movie 'The Wicker Man'.


In the 1973 original Edward Woodward starred as a Christian policeman sent to a remote Scottish island to investigate a child's disappearance, where he inadvertently gets mixed up in pagan rituals. This time round, the story has moved from Britain to America with Cage as Sheriff Edward Malus looking into the young girl's disappearance on the remote island of Summersisle.


Whilst there he discovers there's a larger mystery to solve among the island's secretive, neo-pagan community, and each step he takes closer to the lost child brings him closer to the Wicker Man.


Cage is a long-time fan of the original movie and was keen to be involved in an updated version: ''It was so unlike any other movie I'd seen, so I kept thinking how we could recreate it and make it relevant to today, to contemporise it. So that's really what it is, it's a reintroduction with a new storytelling process to make you aware of the 'Wicker Man,' a lot of people don't know about the original."


Australian actress Kate Beahan stars as the mother of the missing child. She also recognises the huge appeal of the original movie: ''People are extremely passionate about it and there are so many elements that are extremely interesting to the film, and I think the story is what is so significant to people because it is haunting."


Directed by 'The Shape Of Things' Neil LaBute, 'The Wicker Man' is out in the US and the UK on the 1st September.


It will then premiere in Italy on the 4th September at the Venice Film Festival.



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The original version of The Wicker man was shown on British tv last week.


I watched it as I haven't seen it since it first came out and as I was only young at the time I'd forgotten much about it and how weird it was/is!


 



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 I want and plan on sseeing this movie this weekend. So, until that happens, I am going to remain on edge .I know I will love it . Quite frankly, It sounds a little scary- Like Horror scary.Like it sounds like a cult/horror film. Such is life......



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Wicker Man Article from Jason


Director to sue over Hollywood's new 'Wicker Man'


 


By Anthony Barnes, Arts and Media Correspondent


A Hollywood remake of the British cinema classic The Wicker Man is causing a furore among the team that created the original movie. One of its stars has branded it "a crime", while the first film's director, Robin Hardy, has called in lawyers in an attempt to distance himself from the new production.


 


The original film, recently voted the greatest cult movie of all time, is the latest in a growing list of US revamps for well-loved British movies. Alfie, The Italian Job and Get Carter have also been given an overhaul. The £20m remake will be released later this year with action hero Nicolas Cage in its leading role and set not on a remote Hebridean community, like the original, but on an island off the US mainland.


 


Mr Hardy called in legal help when he found his name was being trailed as one of the screenwriters for the new production, fearing it would jeopardise his own future production. He is preparing a new film, Cowboys for Christ, which will reunite some of the team from his film. Ingrid Pitt, one of the original stars, said: "I think it is terrible. I can't stand the idea of a new version it. I won't be seeing it. I think it's a crime."


Originally released in 1973, The Wicker Man was hated by the studio that backed it and was lucky to get a release. It eventually emerged as a B-movie supporting Nicolas Roeg's thriller Don't Look Now, but word-of-mouth interest made it a sleeper hit.


 


Vast swaths of footage were cast on the cutting room floor to bring it in at a manageable length, giving the film even greater cult status among devotees who became intrigued by the lost scenes. Neil LaBute, director and writer of the new version, has defended his decision to rejig the story, saying: "I always loved the movie and I loved the script in particular, but I never thought that it was completed so well that it couldn't be touched again." But Mr Hardy said: "This is a very strange one to remake. I wouldn't have wanted to do it. The script is so difficult to adapt."


 


Jake Wright, Mr Hardy's assistant director, said: "I feel rather sorry they are doing it. The original was just so, well, original... I just don't think it will be very good. I can't imagine what they could do with it really. Edward Woodward was just so right in the lead role."


 


In the remake, Christopher Lee's character, Lord Summerisle, is replaced by the head of a matriarchal society, played by Ellen Burstyn, and the action is set off the coast of Maine.


Steve Phillips, who runs a website devoted to The Wicker Man, said: "It will be intriguing to see how they have tackled this, because so much of it is rooted in British folklore."


 



-- Edited by Cagefactor at 15:24, 2006-02-05

-- Edited by Cagefactor at 15:24, 2006-02-05


-- Edited by Cagefactor at 15:24, 2006-02-05

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RE: Wicker Man NEW


Pic and article and be seen here > http://cagefactor.com/photos/totalfilm.html


 


New Pic



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RE: Wicker Man


That looks very interesting, I am excited to see how Nic portrays the role. Suzanne

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New poster for The Wicker Man


http://cagefactor.com/photos/wickerman.html


 



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RE: Cage to rekindle Wicker Man remake


CAGE SIGNS ON FOR WICKER MAN REMAKE



NICOLAS CAGE has signed on to star in a remake of cult 1973 thriller THE WICKER MAN.

The new film, rewritten and directed by NEIL LaBUTE, will transfer the original story from the Scottish Highlands to a remote island off the coast of Maine.

In the original film, EDWARD WOODWARD played a detective investigating the disappearance of a young girl. His findings bring him into contact with a group of neo-pagans and he starts to believe the missing girl has become a human sacrifice to the wicker god.

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Cage Burns For Wicker

Nicolas Cage's next film will be director Neil LaBute's remake of the 1973 thriller The Wicker Man, with Millennium Films, Equity Pictures and Emmett/Furla Films producing, Variety reported. LaBute adapted the screenplay, in which a sheriff investigates the disappearance of a young girl on a remote island off the coast of Maine. His hopes of unraveling the girl's disappearance become increasingly uncertain when he discovers evidence of pagan rituals, the trade paper reported.

The movie will begin production July 15 in Vancouver, B.C.. Millennium acquired the remake rights from Canal Plus.


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Wicker Man


Cage to rekindle Wicker Man remake


Staff and agencies


Friday March 4, 2005            


Don't keep the Wicker Man waiting ... the 1973 original


The on-again-off-again career of The Wicker Man remake took a positive turn this week with news that Nicolas Cage and director Neil LaBute will indeed revisit the 1973 cult horror classic


Rumours of the project have been circling Hollywood for several years, and today Variety reports Cage has finally committed to reprising the role of the ill-fated policeman originally played by Edward Woodward.


The 1973 version, written by Anthony Shaffer and directed by Robin Hardy, sees Woodward's copper come a cropper when he stumbles upon a mysterious pagan island community while investigating the whereabouts of a missing girl.


LaBute, known for Nurse Betty and caustic psychodramas Your Friends & Neighbours and In The Company of Men, has written the screenplay and transferred the action from Scotland to a matriarchal society descended from the Pilgrims in America.


Both Hardy and Christopher Lee, who played Lord Summerisle, have previously expressed doubts over a new version of the pagan horror, questioning efforts to update the classic. "Remakes can be successful, such as the Thomas Crown Affair remake," said Hardy in 2002. "But the Wicker Man is timeless in the first place, so how do you update it?"


http://film.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,12589,1430598,00.html?gusrc=rss



-- Edited by Cagefactor at 13:40, 2005-03-04

-- Edited by Cagefactor at 23:45, 2005-04-25

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