Zitat:
Zitat von Filmfreak2008
Es wird defenitiv eine Fortsetzung geben !!!
Es kommen noch 2 Teile zu einem ,, Das Magische Messer " Das
Bernstein Teleskop" sind die Fortsetzung nach gerüchten zufolge
sollen Nicole Kidman und Daniel Graig wieder dabei sein. Eine
Ankündigung gibt es noch nicht ich vermute 2010 ist
Realisitisch
Woher weißt du das?
News von Ende Juli:
Author Philip Pullman spoke to
Oxford Mail about the
chances of The Subtle Knife appearing on screen. He said that he
had spoken to The Golden Compass producers – no specific names
mentioned – and denied recent rumours that a sequel was definitely
off the schedule. “It is quite possible that a sequel will happen”,
he told the local newspaper. “They are getting a script together
and they have plans to get things going - in time all things are
possible and I feel quite positive about it.”
High hopes for Pullman film sequel
Oxford author Philip Pullman is positive a sequel will be made to
the controversial movie The Golden Compass.
He spoke out after film industry sources cast doubt on a movie
version of The Subtle Knife being given the go-ahead.
The Golden Compass was the sixth most successful film at the UK box
office last year, grossing £26m, but it took only $70m (£35.05m) in
the United States, due to a boycott by some Christians.
Internationally, however, the film version of Northern Lights, the
first instalment of Mr Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy, took
$300m (£150.2m) and Mr Pullman says the sequel could still go
ahead.
He told the Oxford Mail: "It is quite possible that a sequel will
happen but, as everyone knows, the film did not do well in the box
office in America and that has a large effect on people's plans. I
spoke to the producers last week and they told me about the latest
developments.
"They are getting a script together and they have plans to get
things going - in time all things are possible and I feel quite
positive about it."
Mr Pullman said he hoped there would not be too long a delay before
work started on the sequel because Dakota Blue Richards, the
12-year-old star of The Golden Compass, was growing up quite
quickly. He added that making a film was a very different, and far
more expensive, process to writing a book and having it
published.
"Making a film costs millions of dollars and the people involved
have to hesitate and think hard about the best way of doing
things," Mr Pullman added.
Some scenes for The Golden Compass were shot in Oxford and the film
picked up an Oscar for the best visual effects.
Former Bartholomew School pupil Ben Morris, 37, and his company
Frame- store, worked on the film and he collected the award for the
digital effects used in the film, including giant polar bear Iorek
Byrnison.
When The Golden Compass was released last year, New Line Cinema had
high hopes for the trilogy as the new The Lord of the Rings, and
the sequel was due to be released by the end of 2009.
Michael Gubbins, editor of Screen International, said it was
unlikely the sequel would be brought out by next year in a tough
box office environment featuring 'trilogy congestion'.
Prince Caspian, the second instalment of CS Lewis's Narnia tales,
came out in May and the film took $56m in the United States in its
first weekend. Pre-production for The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
has started, with the film due out in 2010.
Since the release of The Golden Compass, New Line has merged with
Warner Brothers. No-one from Entertainment, the UK distributor, was
available for comment.
Oliver Odell, of Oxford city centre management company OX1, said:
"We would like to see a sequel - it raises Oxford's profile."
Earlier this year, hundreds of Pullman fans turned up at Oxford
town hall to hear him read from his new book, Once Upon A Time in
the North, which features characters from His Dark Materials.
http://www.hisdarkmaterials.org/news/the-golden-compass/high-hopes-for-the-golden-compass-sequel