FEBRUARY 22, 2009.- GIBSON WAS THE ONLY ACTOR HE HAD IN HIS MIND
Source: Independent.uk
Graham King has completed "Edge of Darkness"
|
|
King has completed the political thriller Edge of Darkness, a big-screen adaptation of the 1985 BBC mini-series, with Mel Gibson as the lead. “To get Mel to come back into acting in movies for the first time in six, seven years, the script has to be really good.” Gibson was the “only actor” he had in mind, for bluntly prosaic |reasons: “How many guys are there who could realistically be on screen with a 23-year-old daughter and who can carry a big movie?” When he says things like that, all King needs to complete the mogul-producer image is a huge cigar.
The new version of Edge of Darkness has been scripted by William Monahan, who also wrote The Departed. King’s “first-look” deal with Monahan has also given rise to GK Films’ London Boulevard, a crime drama that shoots in London this summer starring Keira Knightley and Colin Farrell, which Monahan is directing from his own screenplay.
Full Interview here
APRIL 23, 2009.- SECOND PICTURE OF GIBSON IN "EDGE OF DARKNESS"
Source: First Showing
The second picture of Mel Gibson in Edge of Darkness is online.
Gibson hasn't been seen in front of the camera since The Singing Detective in 2003 and Signs in 2002 before that (and no, The Colonel doesn't count). He's back acting again, this time as a homicide cop who witnesses the death of his activist daughter right in front of his own eyes. He then sets out to catch the killers, uncovering a larger conspiracy in the process. Knowing how the story plays out, our guess is that this photo is from an early scene of the film.
"He's a seasoned old detective," Gibson says about his character Thomas Craven. "A bit hangdog. And he's in a state of shock for most of the film, because he's had tremendous trauma right at the beginning of it."
With the talent involved behind the camera on this one, it seems like Edge of Darkness might even be a big Oscar contender. This is the very first photo so it's hard to tell, but I'm looking forward to seeing a lot more!
As a detective investigates the death of his activist daughter, he uncovers not only her secret life, but a corporate cover-up and government collusion that attracts an agent tasked with cleaning up the evidence.
Edge of Darkness is directed by Martin Campbell, of GoldenEye, The Mask of Zorro, Vertical Limit, Casino Royale, and the upcoming Green Lantern movie. The screenplay was co-written by Oscar winner William Monahan (Kingdom of Heaven, The Departed, Body of Lies) and Andrew Bovell (The Book of Revelation, Blessed). The film was shot in and around Boston through early 2008. Warner Brothers will be bringing Edge of Darkness to theaters sometime in late 2009, although an official release date hasn't been set yet.
Mel Gibson during the movie shot of "EoD" last year
|
MAY 2, 2009.- FIRST REVIEW "EDGE OF DARKNESS"
Source: aintitcool.com
EDGE OF DARKNESS is the script that lured Mel out of semi-retirement, and it's a remake of Troy Kennedy-Martin's critically-acclaimed BBC miniseries from the 1980s. Directed by Martin Campbell, and adapted by William Monahan (Oscar winner for THE DEPARTED) and Andrew Bovell (LANTANA), it'll be interesting to see how well the series' hook of nuclear paranoia works today. Obviously, if you've seen the Kennedy-Martin original, you know that EDGE OF DARKNESS is about much more than that - which raises another question. Have Monahan and Bovell incorporated some of the show's less conventional elements?
I'm also interested to see how Ray Winstone fares in the role originally intended for Robert De Niro - who abruptly left the production last year due to "creative differences".
Let's see what Max California had to say. There are some mild spoilers below.
Hi Harry, just got back from a test screening down in Thousand Oaks of Martin Campbell's new thriller 'Edge of Darkness', starring Mel Gibson. We were told it was a work in progress and all the usual stuff, though except for credits and a score it looked pretty much finished as far as I could tell. I know the film is a remake of Campbell's original British mini-series, but I haven't seen it so can't offer any comparisons. Martin Campbell was there in person, I did not see The Gib himself. Anyway, modest whats-it-about spoilers (no biggies) to follow :
Mel plays a Boston cop, with a decent understated accent (i.e. no Baaaahston-talk), devoted to his daughter, who has arrived in town for a visit. Almost immediately she starts vomiting uncontrollably and bleeds from the nose. As they leave his house to take her to the hospital, a car pulls up, someone in a ski mask gets out and unloads a shotgun on her, and speeds off. This is one of those SURPRISE MASSIVE JOLT killings that just comes out of nowhere, and the shotgun blast is ear-splittingly shocking (and if you like those, you'll love, or hate, this movie, as this kind of thing happens several times).
So we get Mel grieving for his daughter, wondering if he, a cop, was the real target and they missed, basically getting nowhere in the investigation, when he starts going through his daughters personal belongings and comes across...a geiger counter, that just so happens to start crackling when he runs it over a lock of her hair. So he investigates her work, which he knew little about - she was an employee at a nuclear plant. From there, we get into a conspiracy/coverup kind of thing as Mel follows the corruption, which goes All The Way To The Top (TM). Ray Winstone a.k.a. not Robert Deniro shows up as a shady middleman who may or may not be helping Mel get to the bottom of everything, and Danny Huston is the daughter's boss, another suspicious character (well, pretty much everyone is).
So, any good? Yes! This is a well constructed thriller, for adults. Very plot heavy with plenty of twists and turns, so if you tune out for a few minutes you might miss something vital. I actually overheard someone say they were bored (expecting Lethal Weapon V?). It is mostly low-key, and is not an action movie, though there is action, and when it happens, it's short, brutal, and R-rated. Gibson does great work in one of his best dramatic performances in years (well, yeah I know its his ONLY performance in years, but seriously he brings the goods here), and has some fun/intense scenes with Winstone, who manages to be friendly and menacing at the same time (and he is indeed seen hitting a golf ball out of a sand trap).
No real complaints about this one, a couple of scenes here and there dragged, but nothing major, the film was about 2 hours 15 minutes.There's a device where Mel keeps seeing his dead daughter in child and adult form, and he talks to her. I don't know if this added anything, its there and its OK, but the film would have worked fine as is without it. All in all, very watchable stuff, a good solid suspense thriller, with his Gibness on top form.
-Max California
|
Thanks to Alfonso Alpeche for the info
|
|
|