Tag: Steven Spielberg

  • Steven Spielberg ‘West Side Story’ debuts weakly with USD 10.5 million

    By Associated Press

    NEW YORK: Despite critical acclaim and two years worth of anticipation, Steven Spielberg’s lavish “West Side Story” revival made little noise at the box office, debuting with $10.5 million in ticket sales, according to studio estimates Sunday — a worrisome result for a movie industry struggling to recapture its finger-snapping rhythm.

    A dazzling widescreen adaptation and Spielberg’s first musical, “West Side Story” was one of the year’s most eagerly awaited titles. With a script by Tony Kushner and Rita Moreno returning to her breakthrough film 60 years later, the $100-million “West Side Story” epitomizes a grand-scale prestige film that Hollywood infrequently produces anymore. It hit theaters on a wave of glowing reviews and expectations that it could play a starring role in March’s Academy Awards.

    But “West Side Story” faced a challenging marketplace for both adult-driven releases and musicals. Audiences have steadily returned to multiplexes in the second year of the pandemic, but older moviegoers, who made up the bulk of ticket-buyers for Spielberg’s latest, have been among the slowest to return.

    Musicals, too, have struggled to catch on in theaters. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “In the Heights” launched with $11 million in June but the Warner Bros. release simultaneously streamed on HBO Max. The critically panned “Dear Evan Hansen,” from Universal, debuted with $7.4 million in September.

    But this was Spielberg. If anyone could reignite moviegoing, the thinking went, it was him. Surely, one of the movies’ dazzling craftsmen, a director synonymous with box office, could spark a fuller revival in theaters. “West Side Story,” too, is among the most beloved musicals. The 1961 film, directed by Jerome Robbins and Robert Wise, made $43.7 million (or about $400 million adjusted for inflation) and won 10 Oscars, including best picture.

    “West Side Story” can still be expected to play well through the lucrative holiday corridor, during which younger-skewing films like “Spider-Man: No Way Home” (expected to next weekend become the first pandemic release to open with $100 million or more domestically) and “Sing 2” will likely be the top draws. Film executives are hoping the spreading omicron variant of COVID-19 doesn’t set the box office back just as Hollywood is nearing its most profitable period.

    But the muted reception for “West Side Story” will concern the industry. Hopes had long been pinned on Spielberg, with his song-and-dance spectacular, to bring back some of the movies’ mojo. Instead, little right now outside of Marvel releases is finding big audiences. Many moviegoers simply haven’t returned yet.

    “To draw moviegoers to adult dramas in huge numbers right now seems like a pretty heavy lift,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for data firm Comscore. “That will wane over time, but it is concerning for filmmakers and studios.”

    “But I don’t think this is the final act for ‘West Side Story,’” added Dergarabedian. “A lot of people counted out ‘The Greatest Showman.’”

    That 2017 release launched with a modest $8.8 million opening weekend before enjoying a rare, lengthy run that made it, with $435 million worldwide, one of the highest grossing live-action musicals ever. During the pandemic, though, movies have faded quickly at the multiplex, and often been steered more quickly to streaming or home release.

    Starring newcomer Rachel Zegler and Ansel Elgort as Maria and Tony, “West Side Story” took in $4.4 million in 37 overseas territories. Because the film includes a transgender character, it was banned in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman and Kuwait.

    David A. Gross, who runs the movie consultancy Franchise Entertainment, called the opening “soft.”

    “If ‘West Side Story’ is going to be profitable, it will need to connect internationally as well domestically,” Gross said in an email. “So far, the first European openings have been good, but this is going to be a challenge with moviegoing conditions as difficult as they are.”

    Spielberg’s film was a long time coming. Its release was delayed a year by the pandemic. It was developed at 20th Century Fox, which was acquired by the Walt Disney Co. shortly before production began. Days before its Lincoln Center premiere, the musical’s revered lyricist, Stephen Sondheim, died at the age of 91.

    Second place for the weekend went to Disney’s animated “Encanto,” which held strongly in its third week, dropping only 27% from the previous weekend. It grossed $9.6 from Friday to Sunday, bringing its cumulative total to $71.3 million domestically and $80.5 million internationally.

    The weekend’s only other new wide release — STX Films’ college football drama “National Champions” — went largely unnoticed, pulling in $300,000 in 1,197 theaters.

    Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

    1. “West Side Story,” $10.5 million.

    2. “Encanto,” $9.4 million.

    3. “Ghostbusters: Afterlife,” $7.1 million.

    4. “House of Gucci,” $4.1 million.

    5. “Eternals,” $3.1 million.

    6. “Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City,” $1.7 million.

    7. “Clifford the Big Red Dog,” $1.3 million.

    8. “Christmas With the Chosen,” $1.3 million.

    9. “Dune,” $857,000.

    10. “Venom: Let There Be Carnage,” $850,000.

  • ‘My West Side Story is a reimagined version’: Steven Spielberg

    By Express News Service

    20th Century Fox India has released an 11-minute conversation between Shoojit Sircar and Steven Spielberg ahead of the global release of West Side Story, Spielberg’s adaptation of the renowned 1957 broadway musical. 

    In the chat, Shoojit quizzes Spielberg about summoning the courage to make a musical (the director, in fifty years, has never attempted the genre). Spielberg says he grew up with the original broadway album, and it’s the only musical he would ever have made.

    Shoojit also praises the filmmaker on his decision to cast Latinx actors in an age of ‘xenophobia and racism’.  “It was important to me that this film represents the Latinx community,” Spielberg says. “There is not a single Puerto Rican character that is not played by a Latinx performing artist.” 

    Spielberg explains he viewed the film not as a remake but as a contemporary ‘reimagining’ of the original classic. West Side Story, originally a stage musical by Leonard Bernstein with lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, was adapted into a 1961 film by Robert Wise. The story follows two rival gangs, the Jets and the Sharks, on the Upper West Side in 50s New York. 

    “This musical has been performed thousands of times in community theatre, high schools, colleges, and revivals all over the world,” Spielberg says. “And because it is so liberally reproduced, again and again, every new cast brings a different interpretation. (So) I didn’t feel like I was violating the great classic that the original West Side Story film was by telling this 2021 version.”

  • Comparisons with Natalie Wood inevitable: Rachel Zegler on ‘West Side Story’

    By PTI

    MUMBAI: Actor Rachel Zegler, who steps into the shoes of legendary star Natalie Wood to play Maria in Steven Speilberg’s adaptation of “West Side Story”, said her intention is not to overshadow the legacy of the late actor.

    The musical romantic drama brings back the classic tale of forbidden love between Tony (Ansel Elgort) and Maria (Zegler) in 1950s New York City despite having affiliations with rival street gangs — the Jets and Sharks.

    The film is an adaptation of the famed 1957 Broadway musical of the same title, which was earlier turned into a 1961 film, featuring Wood as Maria.

    Zegler said she is aware that there are going to be comparisons between her and Wood but she has focused on adding a fresh take to the character.

    “I think any film is a challenge, if it’s easy, you don’t care. And I care a lot about the story. The story informed me as a kid what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. I knew comparison was inevitable when it came to myself and the late great Natalie Wood.

    “I think that the original film stands on its own, as this iconic piece of film history, that everybody’s going to refer to for the rest of time. And that was very present in my mind,” the 20-year-old actor, who is making her debut with ‘West Side Story’, said during the virtual global press conference of the film, also attended by PTI.

    Zegler also shared that she didn’t revisit the original film because she thought it might add unnecessary pressure on her.

    “I didn’t revisit the material as I didn’t want to compare in my own mind. I think that adds unnecessary pressure. I just wanted to do a good job. And that’s really all we wanted to accomplish. It wasn’t like, ‘Am I going to overshadow the legacy of a late great actress?’ That was never the intention.

    It was about what I can bring from my own life experience that wasn’t there before,” Zegler said.

    In addition to Zegler, Spielberg’s version of ‘West Side Story’ stars Ansel Elgort as Tony, Ariana DeBose as Anita and David Alvarez as Bernardo.

    Veteran actor Rita Moreno, who won the best supporting actress Oscar for her role of Anita in the original, will be seen as Valentina, a new character.

    Zegler and her co-star David Alvarez also talked about the importance of Latino representation in the film.

    “I am the first Latina to play Maria on screen and that’s a huge thing. It’s a part of a legacy of a very important musical to so many people that’s not lost on me. We all come in different shades, different walks of life,” Zegler said.

    Alvarez said the film is “a huge step forward”.

    “What Steven Spielberg has done and what this whole production has done is what the past generations had failed to do. I think it’s changing everything. And this is kind of like leading by example, and I think it’s just opening so many doors for the future. So, this is incredible for us to be leading this and it’s thanks to Steven’s vision,” he added.

    DeBose said, “We don’t want to validate all of these lived experiences and showing that and celebrating a diaspora. I think our film does a really good job of that and I’m really proud.”

    “West Side Story” is set to bow out theatrically on December 10. 

  • Most delightful family affair I’ve had since ‘ET’: Steven Spielberg on directing ‘West Side Story’

    By PTI

    MUMBAI: Filmmaker Steven Spielberg says working on the adaptation of “West Side Story” was a “delightful family affair” and as enjoyable as the making of his beloved 1982 sci-fi children’s classic “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial”.

    An adaptation of the famed 1957 Broadway musical of the same title, the movie has premiered to praise for Spielberg’s nuanced take on the period story and its depiction of the love story between Rachel Zegler and Ansel Elgort’s Maria and Tony, whose ill-fated romance fans the bitter rivalry between local New York street gangs the Sharks and the Jets.

    The remake has been written by Tony Kushner (‘Angels in America’) and marks Spielberg’s first feature-length musical.

    Recalling the experience of working on the film, the 74-year-old director said though he had “three left feet”, he would jump out of his chair during rehearsals.

    “I did jump out of my chair and I did singing and danced for the cast, singing off-key and dancing like I had three left feet during rehearsals,” Spielberg said during a global press conference, also attended by PTI.

    “We did four-and-a-half months of intensive rehearsals, both in the city at Lincoln Center and in Brooklyn in a place called Dumbo there and that’s when I was really able to jump out of my seat. Rita (Moreno) was there too and was dancing with the cast. We were so influenced or compelled to get up on our feet. It was such a life in the air, song and dance,” the director recalled.

    Spielberg said while the rehearsals saw everyone dancing and singing, during the filmmaking process, he was just attentive to the actors.

    “And I didn’t even tap my foot. I was just too focused on the monitor, on what we were getting…..what images we were capturing. But this was the most delightful family affair I’ve had since ‘E.T.’.

    ‘E.T.’ had felt like I was a dad to all those kids. And certainly, I was not a dad in my real life…..my first child was born three years after I directed ‘E.T.”

    And this was the next time I had that kind of feeling that I was part of a very diverse family.

    :I was not in the center of the family, I was simply a part of the family,” the director said.

    Spielberg had in the past said that he had thoroughly enjoyed making his 1982 science fiction “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial”, popularly known as “E.T”, about the bond between a group of children and an extraterrestrial.

    “West Side Story” is a beloved classic both as a Broadway production and a 1961 film adaptation.

    The 1961 film won ten Academy Awards, including best picture.

    Rita Moreno, who is also in the new film, became the first Latin actress to win an Oscar for her role as Anita.

    The new musical is a childhood dream come true for Spielberg, who has directed some of the most successful and iconic films in his career be it “Jaws”, “Indiana Jones”, “Jurassic Park”, ” “Schindler’s List”, “Saving Private Ryan” and “Lincoln”.

    Talking about recreating and capturing the vision of New York City from 70 years ago for the newer version, Spielberg said the team stayed authentic even in terms of the look of the film.

    He said one can find the city of New York of the 1950s alive and well in certain parts, which is where the team also shot for the movie.

    “The only other thing we did was we took out air conditioning units, took out satellite dishes and took out safety bars on windows.

    Because today, New York has safety bars above the second floor and we had to remove some of those.

    Everything else is authentic to the period because New York still is in character with that period.

    For his film, Spielberg said he has consciously made an attempt to make his actors talk in Spanish without giving subtitles.

    “The whole story starts with (when) Lieutenant Schrank, clearly a racist, says don’t use Spanish. That language had to exist in equal proportions alongside the English,” he said.

    Tony Kushner, who has written the story, said the use of the Spanish language was nothing but an important part of the narrative.

    “It felt like there were certain subjects and feelings involved with the subjects where it would be very natural for somebody who’s born speaking Spanish to go into Spanish and not to say it in English.”

    Spielberg said he would want Spanish and English-speaking to sit in the theatre together and enjoy the movie.

    The director also fondly remembered the late songwriter Stephen Sondheim, regarded as someone who reshaped the American musical theatre in the second half of the 20th century.

    Sondheim, who had been associated with Spielberg’s version of “West Side Story”, died last week at the age of 91.

    Recalling his first meeting with the legend, the director said he met him during the premiere of his film “Sweeney Todd” adaptation with Johnny Depp and later they both bumped into each other at the White House when the two received the presidential medal of freedom.

    The director also shared that Sondheim was the first person he met when he sought the rights to make his version of “West Side Story.”

    Speaking of Sondheim’s association with the film, the director added, “He was very involved, he had ideas and Tony had an open dialogue with him during the process of going from one draft to the next. He did all the pre-recorded with all the vocal artists. He was there sitting right next to me at the recording studio.”

    The cast of “West Side Story” also includes Ariana DeBose as Anita, David Alvarez as Bernardo and Mike Faist as Riff.

    Rita Moreno appears in the remake in a new role and served as an executive producer.

    The film will debut in Indian theatres on December 10.

  • Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ to release in India in December

    By PTI

    MUMBAI: Hollywood filmmaker Steven Spielberg’s latest feature film “West Side Story” will debut in Indian theatres on December 10.

    An adaptation of the famed 1957 Broadway musical of the same title, “West Side Story” stars Ansel Elgort, Rachel Zegler, Ariana DeBose and David Alvarez among others.

    “From 20th Century Studios, Disney India will release ‘West Side Story’ in cinemas on December 10, 2021,” a statement from the makers read.

    “West Side Story” tells the classic story of forbidden love between Tony (Elgort) and Maria (Zegler) and the hatred the rival Jets and Sharks gangs have for one another.

    The musical also features Mike Faist, Josh Andrés Rivera, Ana Isabelle, Corey Stoll and Brian d’Arcy James.

    Veteran actor Rita Moreno, who had bagged an Academy Award for her portrayal of Anita in the 1961 feature adaptation of the Broadway play, will appear in a new role in Spielberg’s film.

    Tony Kushner penned the screenplay for the film, produced by Spielberg, Kristie Macosko Krieger and Kevin McCollum.

  • Steven Spielberg’s semi-autobiographical film adds Judd Hirsch, Jeannie Berlin to cast

    By PTI
    LOS ANGELES: Oscar nominees Judd Hirsch, Jeannie Berlin, and veteran stage and screen actors Robin Bartlett and Jonathan Hadary have been roped in to star in master filmmaker Steven Spielberg’s film based on his childhood.

    The movie, which is loosely based on Spielberg’s experiences as a child in Arizona, now has the working title of “The Fabelmans”.

    The quartet represents the older relatives in the fictional family of a young, aspiring filmmaker (played by Gabriel LaBelle) at the centre of the film, reported Variety.

    They join a star-studded cast led by Michelle Williams and Paul Dano, who are playing versions of Spielberg’s late parents, with Seth Rogen essaying a character based on the veteran director’s favourite uncle.

    Julia Butters is attached to play Spielberg’s sister.

    Sam Rechner, Oakes Fegley, Chloe East and Isabelle Kusman are cast in the role of his high school classmates.

    Spielberg has co-written the script with Tony Kushner, his regular collaborator on films like “Lincoln” and the upcoming “West Side Story”.

    They are also attached as producers on the film along with Kristie Macosko Krieger, backed by Amblin Partners.

    Production is currently underway, with a release planned for next year.

  • Chloe East, Oakes Fegley join Steven Spielberg’s next film

    By PTI
    LOS ANGELES: Chloe East, Oakes Fegley and Isabelle Kusman are set to star in Hollywood veteran Steven Spielberg’s next film, based loosely on his childhood.

    According to Deadline, the young trio will play high school classmates of the young aspiring filmmaker at the centre of the story.

    Previously announced cast members include Michelle Williams, Seth Rogen, Paul Dano, Gabriel LaBelle, Julia Butters, and Sam Rechner.

    Spielberg has co-written the script with Tony Kushner.

    They are also attached as producers on the film along with Kristie Macosko Krieger.

    While East is known for the HBO Max series “Generation”, Fegley has starred in “The War with Grandpa” opposite Robert De Niro.

    Kusman is set to make a feature film debut with Paul Thomas Anderson’s untitled film.

    The film will be Spielberg’s follow-up to his upcoming remake of “West Side Story”.

  • Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Partners inks film production deal with Netflix 

    By PTI
    LOS ANGELES: Celebrated filmmaker Steven Spielberg’s production outfit Amblin Partners has signed a partnership with streaming giant Netflix.

    According to Deadline, under the deal the company will produce multiple films for the streamer per year.

    The partnership is an addition to the banner’s long-standing output pact with Universal, which is theatrical in nature and was renewed in December.

    “At Amblin, storytelling will forever be at the center of everything we do, and from the minute Ted (Sarandos, Netflix’s co-CEO and chief content officer) and I started discussing a partnership, it was abundantly clear that we had an amazing opportunity to tell new stories together and reach audiences in new ways,” Spielberg in a statement.

    “This new avenue for our films, alongside the stories we continue to tell with our longtime family at Universal and our other partners, will be incredibly fulfilling for me personally since we get to embark on it together with Ted, and I can’t wait to get started with him, Scott, and the entire Netflix team,” he added.

    Sarandos said working with a “creative visionary” like Spielberg was a huge honour for Netflix.

    The deal comes four years after several reports claimed that Spielberg had said once “you commit to a television format, you’re a TV movie” and argued that if it’s good, it deserves an Emmy and not Oscars.

    He had also taken a potshot at the streaming services by urging directors to make movies for the “big dark theatres”.

  • Sam Rechner joins Steven Spielberg’s ‘The Fabelmans’

    By Express News Service
    Australian actor Sam Rechner has just been cast as a classmate of a young Steven Spielberg in the director’s autobiographical film. The film, which will be Spielberg’s follow-up to this year’s West Side Story, was titled The Fabelmans last month.

    Sam RechnerRechner joins a star-studded cast that includes Michelle Williams, Seth Rogen, Paul Dano, Julia Butters, and Gabriel Labelle. The Fabelmans is loosely based on the upbringing of Spielberg in Arizona.

    The Fabelmans will be Rechner’s second film. His first was in the upcoming Australian drama, Ruby’s Choice, starring Jane Seymour.

    Rechner also has theatre credits, including starring in productions of Animal Farm and 12 Angry Men.

    Williams and Dano are set to play the mother and father of Spielberg, while Rogen will play one of the director’s favourite uncles growing up.

    Gabriel LaBelle was cast to play young Spielberg last month.

    Spielberg co-wrote the script with Tony Kushner of Lincoln and Munich fame.  

    Filming on The Fabelmans is set to begin this July around the Los Angeles area, and no release date has been announced yet for the autobiographical film. 

  • Julia Butters to star in Steven Spielberg’s next

    By Express News Service
    Julia Butters, whose breakout role came in the form of her character Trudi Fraser in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, has been reportedly roped in for Steven Spielberg’s upcoming film. The film, loosely based on Speilberg’s childhood, will feature Butters in a character inspired by the filmmaker’s sister.

    Gabriel LaBelle, who has appeared in films like Dead Shack, The Predator, and iZombie will be playing the central character. It has also been reported that Seth Rogen will be essaying the role inspired by Spielberg’s favorite uncle, with Paul Dano stepping into the shoes of a character inspired by Spielberg’s father.

    In addition to directing, Spielberg is co-writing the script with Tony Kushner, who has earlier written screenplays for the filmmaker’s Munich (2005) and Lincoln (2012).Butters will also be seen in the Russo Brothers’ Netflix actioner, The Gray Man alongside Ryan Gosling, Chris Evans, Ana de Armas, Dhanush, and Jessica Henwick. Meanwhile, Steven Speilberg’s upcoming musical drama, West Side Story, is set to release on December 10 this year.