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Spartacus
MemberOvomorphJul-01-2012 1:24 PM[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v234/LT.HIGHTIMES/1a1savage4.png[/img]
From "NatahanWubs" at Youtube.
[quote]Two guys turn down an offer, the cartel take their girl, and the guys have to get her back. It is a drug-related, violence-heavy, twisted love story of a drug crime threesome going up against an even worse drug cartel who wants to cut into their profit, and would not take NO for an answer. It is also psychological warfare. Now, go take an aspirin if I have added to your confusion. LOL![/quote]
[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v234/LT.HIGHTIMES/1a1savage1.jpg[/img]
[url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBHbYtgmzSQ]SavagesTrailer[/url]
From Universal: Entrepreneurs Ben, a peaceful and charitable marijuana producer, and friend Chon, a former Navy SEAL, run a lucrative, homegrown industry - raising some of the best weed ever developed. They also share a one-of-a-kind love with Ophelia. Life is idyllic in their Southern California town... until the Mexican Baja Cartel decides to move in and demands that the trio partners with them. When the merciless head of the BC, Elena and her enforcer, Lado, underestimate the unbreakable bond of the three friends, Ben and Chon - with the reluctant assistance of a dirty DEA agent - wage a seemingly unwinnable war against the cartel. And so begins a series of increasingly vicious ploys and maneuvers in a high stakes, savage battle of wills.
[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v234/LT.HIGHTIMES/1a1savage2.jpg[/img]
[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v234/LT.HIGHTIMES/1a1savage6.jpg[/img]
[b]From Toonari Post - by: Claudia Sondergaard[/b]
{http://www.toonaripost.com/2012/06/entertainment/savages-is-oliver-stone-in-his-element/}
Don Winslow’s Savages, laced with the politics and trade of marijuana, areas that have long been of interest to the writer/director, riveted Oliver Stone when he read it in galley form. Shane Salerno & Don Winslow & Oliver Stone adapted the novel into a screenplay, and in less than a year, Universal Pictures secured the worldwide distribution rights. Soon after, principal photography began. Of his interest in crafting a film out of the groundbreaking novel, Stone relays: “I thought the book was well done. It’s about power, betrayal, money and questioning current values.”
Savages features multiple themes that recur in Stone’s movies: layered power struggles, shifting loyalties, examinations of the best and worst of human nature, explorations of complex family relationships and a compelling look at damaged people, some of whom find their own kind of heroism.
Stone reflects that this project called to mind ‘Any Given Sunday’ and “the corporation coming into football.” About the economy of scale, he says: “Above all, it is a power move by the Mexican Cartel into the United States to cut in on the independent distributors and producers. In the movie, the Baja Cartel is more interested in volume than the boutique-sized operations. But wherever you have volume versus independent growers, you’re going to have a clash. Walmart doesn’t want to have competitors.”
[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v234/LT.HIGHTIMES/1a1savages7.jpg[/img]
Frequent Stone collaborator, producer Moritz Borman offers that there is a natural inclination to search for parallels in ‘Savages’ with Stone’s earlier films, but that the director isn’t interested in retreads. Borman says: “Obviously, people will try to compare ‘Savages’ to some of Oliver’s other movies, but the style and message are different, and it’s a different story. But it certainly has some of the intensity of his other pictures. He has always had something to say, and therefore has turned out these films that have survived.”
His fellow producer, Eric Kopeloff, notes that the director is as interested in characters as he is in a geopolitical backdrop: “That’s what excites him about making movies—finding a story where you can go on a ride with the characters. Oliver’s someone who never stops trying, never stops doing different things to stretch the medium.”
The translation of a lauded novel into an engaging movie is often an arduous one. For example, the film’s explosive ending, which Stone likens to a Spaghetti Western, captures the tenor of the book but doesn’t follow it to the letter. That divergence, Kopeloff notes, is part of the process of moving from one medium to another. He says: “There’s a liberty when you adapt a book into a screenplay, from a story perspective, from a time perspective. If we shot every scene in the book ‘Savages’ we would be easily sitting for five hours. We held true to the book in a lot of ways, but we also took cinematic liberties to heighten the story in certain places and give the audience a visual and character ride.”
[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v234/LT.HIGHTIMES/1a1savages9.jpg[/img]
Winslow expands upon the differences in penning a novel versus a screenplay: “Primarily, as a novelist, you have to become aware that, at the end of the day, these are two different media with a lot of different needs, and that can take a little getting used to. For instance, a chapter in a book can accomplish just one thing, whereas a scene in a film has to accomplish two or three things simultaneously. Screenwriting is an extremely demanding artistic form that has to take so many factors into account at once.”
In the story, the Baja Cartel admires Ben and Chon’s product and process and wants to acquire their business. However, they disdain their lifestyle, especially their unorthodox relationship with O. On the flip side, Ben, Chon and O are as equally repulsed by the Cartel and their methods. At various points, as the contest between the Cartel and Ben, Chon and O becomes increasingly ruthless and violent; just who is the savage becomes blurry and subjective at best. Stone sums: “It’s ironic that both sides identify the other as savages.”
[img]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v234/LT.HIGHTIMES/1a1savages3.jpg[/img]
4 Replies

Sky
MemberOvomorphJul-01-2012 1:31 PMJohn trav, after long time, haven't seen his movie for say last 2 years.
Uncertainty is the only certainty there is, and knowing how to live with insecurity is the only security.

NCC 1701
Veteran MemberMemberOvomorphJul-01-2012 1:31 PMi saw this pre view last night night during the Argo game ,,,,,,
always like Johnny boy playing a bad dude

Spartacus
MemberOvomorphJul-01-2012 1:40 PMya it looks good man ! Oliver Stone seems like he Is in fact in his "element" here again.

FREEZE!
Co-AdminMemberOvomorphJul-01-2012 3:33 PMlooks like a winner, will for certain go see this
[url=http://www.madmax4-movie.com/]Visit the Mad Max: Fury Road Forums today![/url]
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