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Updated Friday, September 25, 2009 9:29 am TWN, By John Horn, Los Angeles Times Surrogates 獵殺代理人Greer is increasingly melancholy over the disconnect, as is the Prophet (Ving Rhames), who has established robot-free reservations. “We're not meant to experience the world through a machine,” the Prophet implores his followers. “The graphic novel touched on this idea of pursuit of physical perfection — the lengths that people will go to achieve some idealized version of their physical appearance — coupled with this idea of technology and how it is swallowing us up. It posed this question: Can you live your life without leaving your home?” Mostow says. “There have been thousands of movies about robots, but they've always been sentient. Here the robots are just tools.” The story also appealed to Mostow's filmic fascination with heavy metal. “Breakdown,” the movie that put the director on the map, focused on what happened to a couple when their SUV conked out and they were menaced by a big-rig driver, and “U-571” looked at the Allied takeover of a German sub in World War II. Then came “Terminator 3.” “I made a robot movie about machines the last time,” Mostow says, “and I believe this is a robot movie about people — and that it will be perceived that way.” Mostow, who has four children, has tried to balance work with family, which he says is partly responsible for his long hiatus from the multiplex. He came close to directing “Hancock,” but many other projects he's been linked to — “Swiss Family Robinson,” “Sub-Mariner,” “Real Steal” and “Confessions of a Little League Coach” — never amounted to much more than a headline in Hollywood's trade newspapers. “People might look at my resume and think that I don't work all that frequently,” he says, “but I made a conscious decision to make a movie every three years. I get so involved from the get-go I can't work faster. Moving forward, I am going to speed up.” Despite what the Disney executives contend, Mostow said his relationship with Willis was fine. “Bruce is a professional, and he gave a strong performance. I admire Bruce as an actor.” A spokesman for Willis said: “Bruce has no problems with Jonathan Mostow at all. And he also thinks (Willis) did a very good job in the movie.” If there's one thing Mostow says he'll take away from “Surrogates” — in addition to making sure he and his family don't spend more time online than they do speaking to one another — it's that he's ready to make a movie that doesn't involve servos and solenoids. “I don't want to be the guy where the studio executive shouts to his assistant,'Get me the guy who does robot movies!'” |
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