A.I.
Artificial
Intelligence
Production
Information
It is a time
when natural resources are limited and technology is advancing
at an astronomical pace. Where you live is monitored; what
you eat is engineered; and the person serving you is not
a person at all. Its artificial. Gardening, housekeeping,
companionship -- there is a robot for every need. Except
love.
Emotion is the
last, controversial frontier in robot evolution. Robots
are seen as sophisticated appliances; theyre not supposed
to have feelings. But with so many parents not yet approved
to have children, the possibilities abound.
And Cybertronics
Manufacturing has created the solution.
His name is David
(HALEY JOEL OSMENT).
A robotic boy,
the first programmed to love, David is adopted as a test
case by a Cybertronics employee (SAM ROBARDS) and his wife
(FRANCES OCONNOR), whose own terminally ill child
has been cryogenically frozen until a cure can be found.
Though he gradually becomes their child, with all the love
and stewardship that entails, a series of unexpected circumstances
make this life impossible for David.
Without final
acceptance by humans or machines, and armed only with Teddy,
his supertoy teddy bear and protector, David embarks on
a journey to discover where he truly belongs, uncovering
a world in which the line between robot and machine is both
terrifyingly vast and profoundly thin.
Warner Bros.
Pictures and DreamWorks present an Amblin/Stanley Kubrick
production of a Steven Spielberg film, "A.I."
starring Haley Joel Osment ("The Sixth Sense"),
Jude Law ("The Talented Mr. Ripley"), Frances
OConnor ("Mansfield Park," the upcoming
"Windtalkers"), Sam Robards ("American Beauty"),
Brendan Gleeson ("Mission: Impossible II") and
William Hurt ("One True Thing"). Directed by Steven
Spielberg, "A.I." is produced by Kathleen Kennedy,
Steven Spielberg, and Bonnie Curtis. The screenplay, written
by Spielberg, is based on a screen story by Ian Watson and
the short story by acclaimed science fiction writer Brian
Aldiss. Jan Harlan, Stanley Kubricks longtime executive
producer, and Walter F. Parkes are the executive producers.
The distinguished
behind-the-scenes team is led by the highly respected, Oscar-winning
cinematographer Janusz Kaminski ("Schindlers
List"), three-time Oscar-winning editor Michael Kahn
("Saving Private Ryan"), Oscar-nominated production
designer Rick Carter ("Cast Away") and Oscar-nominated
costume designer Bob Ringwood ("Empire of the Sun").
Multiple Oscar winner John Williams ("Star Wars: Episode
1 The Phantom Menace") composed the score.
Joining with
Spielberg in creating the futuristic worlds of "A.I."
are some of the most celebrated effects artists working
today. The creature/makeup effects were created by Stan
Winston, whose filmography includes some of the most ambitious
and complex effects films of all time. Visual effects visionary
Dennis Muren and Scott Farrar of Industrial Light &
Magic supervised the films groundbreaking visual effects.
Michael Lantieri coordinated the practical effects. And
Christopher Baker provided conceptual art.
The film will
be released worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, an AOL Time
Warner Company.
An obsession
of the late filmmaking auteur Stanley Kubrick, "A.I."
focuses on a character that represents the future of thinking
technology. "In the 1980s, Stanley Kubrick took me
into his creative confidence to tell me an absolutely beautiful
story that was impossible to forget," says Steven Spielberg,
the Oscar-winning writer/director and longtime friend of
Kubricks, who ultimately wrote and directed "A.I."
"I think it was the careful blend of science and humanity
that made me anxious for Stanley to tell it, and after he
was gone, led me to want to tell it for him."
"Steven
wanted to embrace and pay homage to Stanley," says
"A.I." producer and Spielbergs longtime
associate Kathleen Kennedy. "So he took Stanleys
contribution and added that to his own. Theres no
question that this is a movie that has Steven Spielbergs
sensibilities all over it. But the subtext is all Kubrick."
"A.I.,"
says Jan Harlan, the films executive producer and
Stanley Kubricks longtime colleague, "shows a
new romanticism that hasnt been seen on the screen
so far: the idea of an artificial being feeling genuine
love and a human truly loving an artificial being is quite
new territory.
The film takes
place in a future when starting a family is subject to strict
governmental restrictions. Says Harlan, "Circumstances
have changed; technology has increased to an extent that
most normal work is performed by robots and we are confronted
with the idea of programming a child robot so that he is
able to love."
Haley Joel Osment
stars as David, the prototype "feeling" robot,
who is adopted by Henry and Monica Swinton (SAM ROBARDS
and FRANCES OCONNOR), a Cybertronics employee and
his wife, whose own son (JAKE THOMAS) is so ill that he
has been cryogenically frozen until a cure can be found.
"David is
the top of the line in mechanical development," says
Frances OConnor, who plays Monica, Davids mother.
"Unlike the earlier models, he can actually absorb
information and images, and collate it in a way that is
very human. He also connects these ideas to his emotions.
And he starts to think about his own realness."
Jude Law, who
has starred in such films as "Enemy at the Gates"
and "The Talented Mr. Ripley," stars as Gigolo
Joe, a "love mecha" (for "mechanicals")
that becomes Davids "scoutmaster," as Spielberg
calls the character. Together with Joe, David lights out
into the strange, new world to find their true place in
the society that created them.
"In the
world of A.I., mankind has started to rely a
lot more on mechanical devices mechas
to take over very simple jobs," Law says. "Over
the years this has developed into more sophisticated jobs,
whether its just a robot to make you laugh in the
same way that normally a TV entertainer would, or someone
might have a masseur robot in their house. And it goes even
as far as robots for pleasure-seeking. Joe is there to entertain
and to fulfill the needs of his customers. He is the male
version of the sex mecha."
"Jude Laws
robot is five or ten years old," Osment explains. "Robots
like Joe are built with a specific purpose. But David meets
up with him by chance. David becomes very attached to Joe.
And Joe also undergoes a change. As David becomes more human,
Joe does in a way as well."
But David and
Gigolo Joe also find that the robots gradual assimilation
into humanity is met with resistance from humanity itself.
"The more human the robots become, the less comfortable
with them the humans that employ them are,"
Kennedy says. "And even more so with David, who has
been built to feel. There are, in fact, sections of humanity
that take that hostility to extremes."
"In a way,
for me, the message of this piece is that we humans must
be very careful about what we make," says Law. "Because
it will probably outlive us, organically. And therefore,
what we make should be full of love. Because otherwise,
what we leave, our legacy, will be anything but that."
"A.I.
is a story of a robot boy who has been programmed to love,"
says producer Bonnie Curtis, who has worked with Spielberg
since serving as his assistant and later co-producer of
"Saving Private Ryan" and "Amistad."
"But at the end of the movie, we arent aware
that hes a robot. What is so wonderful is that the
line between human and robot is so thin. Its artificial
intelligence. Its our future."
DEVELOPING "A.I."
Artificial intelligence
is at once a thriving technological reality in the present
and fertile literary ground for futurists and visionaries.
Though intelligent machines make coffee, direct traffic,
conduct web searches and perform various other mundane tasks,
the sophisticated artificial humans of "A.I."
have become deeply enmeshed in the fabric of everyday human
life.
Noted science
fiction author Brian Aldiss wrote his short story, "Super-Toys
Last All Summer Long," over 30 years ago. Published
in Harpers Bazaar in 1969 and later anthologized,
it concerned a near future in which a robot child struggles
to make a connection with his human mother.
After more than
a decade, director Stanley Kubrick purchased the rights
to Aldisss tale and set out on what would become a
twenty-year odyssey to convert it into "A.I."
Throughout this period, Kubrick consulted often with Steven
Spielberg, who had commenced a friendship with the expatriate
filmmaker in 1979 while Spielberg was on location in England
shooting "Raiders of the Lost Ark." Their nearly
20-year friendship involved few face-to-face meetings, but
thrived on marathon transatlantic phone calls.
"A lot of
our phone calls through the years were just to make contact
with each other, to see what was happening on both sides
of the ocean," Spielberg recalls. "I saw him maybe
12 times over two decades. But one day in the middle of
a conversation, he said You know, you really ought
to direct A.I. and I should produce it for you.
I remember him actually giving me a title card on the whole
proposal: a Stanley Kubrick production of a Steven Spielberg
film."
Taken aback,
Spielberg asked why Kubrick would consider passing the reins
of a long favored project to him. "I was shocked. I
said, Why would you want to do that, Stanley?
He just said Well, you know, I think this movie is
closer to your sensibility than mine."
Executive producer
Jan Harlan had worked with his brother-in-law Stanley Kubrick
for thirty years, shepherding many projects with him since
"Barry Lyndon," including "Super-Toys Last
All Summer Long." "Stanley always wanted to go
to new territory," says Harlan. "Always probing.
He wanted to bring the art of moviemaking into areas and
topics that hadnt been explored. 2001
is a great example. So is Eyes Wide Shut - it
tackled a very internal topic: Jealousy. Every single
member of the audience is bound to be an expert, Stanley
once said. He had planned to do A.I. before
Eyes Wide Shut, but many factors delayed this."
Leaving his Long
Island summer house, Spielberg immediately took a plane
to England. Soon after his arrival, Kubrick showed Spielberg
thousands of storyboards done by renowned comic book illustrator
Chris Baker (known professionally as Fangorn) and the two
discussed bringing the project to the screen. Kubrick elicited
an oath of secrecy "under penalty of excommunication
from [his] life" from Spielberg and asked him to install
a secure fax line in his home so they could communicate
directly.
Though this version
of "A.I." ultimately never came to be, Kubrick
continued to develop the project. "Stanley thought
Steven might be the right person to direct this for several
reasons," Harlan continues. "Using a real child
actor is possible for Steven who would shoot this film in
twenty weeks while Stanley knew he would take a year and
the child might change too much. Another was that Stanley
appreciated Stevens talent very much he saw
in Steven one of the all time great filmmakers of the next
generation. The two directors are very different in character
and the common denominator is sheer talent. Because of the
established co-operation on this film, Spielberg was the
only director who had the moral authority to make this film
into his own."
To utilize a
child actor, Kubrick have had to face strict time limitations
that could not be accommodated on an ambitious project like
"A.I." Also, visual effects had still not reached
the proficiency Kubrick required to realize his vision for
"A.I." The filmmaker, whose CGI-free 2001
stands as one of the greatest visual effects achievements
ever committed to film, had envisioned vast and complex
processes.
Then everything
changed in 1993 with "Jurassic Park."
Elated by the
breakthrough visual effects in Spielbergs landmark
film, Kubrick inundated colleagues like "Jurassic Park"
effects creator Dennis Muren of Industrial Light and Magic
with questions about the scope of the emerging computer-generated
technology so masterfully displayed within that film.
Muren, long recognized
as one of the most accomplished innovators of modern visual
film effects, soon found himself on a London-bound jet as
well. "In 1993, when we finished Jurassic Park,
Stanley called and invited me to England to discuss a new
project that became A.I.," says Muren,
who has earned Academy Awards for his special effects work
in such films as "Terminator 2: Judgment Day,"
"E.T. The Extraterrestrial" and "The Empire
Strikes Back," among others. "He had called me
for years before that to discuss technical questions. But
this time he wanted to have us take a close look at something.
It was over Thanksgiving, so he had a wonderful turkey dinner
set for me. It was a great five hours Ill never forget."
Although intrigued
that technology had solved some long running effects problems,
Kubrick opted to delay production on "A.I.," choosing
to go ahead with "Eyes Wide Shut" instead. It
was to be his last film.
After his death,
Harlan and Kubricks wife, Christiane, approached Terry
Semel, then the chairman of Warner Bros., with the idea
of reviving "A.I." with Spielberg at the helm.
"It simply would have disappeared into the archives
if Steven Spielberg had not taken it," says Harlan.
Though he had
not written a script since 1977s "Close Encounters
of the Third Kind," Spielberg resolved to write "A.I."
himself.
"I remember
at the moment Steven told me the story of A.I.
it was clear there probably wasnt anyone else who
could write it," says producer Kathleen Kennedy, who
began her association with Spielberg in the late 1970s as
his assistant but soon became his producer and, ultimately,
his partner in Amblin Entertainment. Together, they created
some of the worlds most successful and acclaimed motion
pictures, beginning with "E.T. The Extraterrestrial,"
through the "Indiana Jones" series, "Empire
of the Sun," "The Color Purple" and "Jurassic
Park," among others. "Steven understood, on so
many levels, what this movie meant to an audience, what
it meant to him personally, and what it had meant to Stanley.
And I dont think he could have sat down with any other
writer and expect them to interpret what was in his head."
"It was
like getting my wisdom teeth pulled all over again,"
says Spielberg of the writing process, "because Stanley
was sitting on the seat back behind me saying, No,
dont do that! I felt like I was being coached
by a ghost. I finally just had to kind of be disrespectful
to the extent that I needed to be able to write this, not
from Stanleys experience, but from mine. Still, I
was like an archeologist, picking up the pieces of a civilization,
putting Stanleys picture back together again."
Harlan gathered volumes of special materials pertaining
to the project, including conceptual artist Chris Bakers
futuristic drawings from which the look of the "A.I."
future would later emerge.
"After reading
through the treatment for A.I. several times,
I was pretty much given free reign to start generating ideas,"
Baker explains. "Stanley had nothing really concrete
envisioned at this stage - basically I was there to develop
ideas that Stanley could be inspired by, then guide toward
a direction he was happy with. All of this was done by fax
and phone after our initial meetings. It was a relationship
that worked pretty well, I think."
Illustrations
that would form the eventual look of the films Rouge
City, Flesh Fair and the Swinton home, for example, were
created in this manner over several years. Steven Spielberg
retained Bakers vision when he took on directing and
writing chores.
Producer Bonnie
Curtis, who also began her association with Spielberg as
his assistant, was privy to Spielbergs and Kubricks
communication about "A.I" for the many years prior
to its production. "For the six years I was Stevens
assistant, all correspondence went through me except his
faxes from Stanley," Curtis recalls. "Steven had
a fax machine installed in his closet at home, and he and
Stanley faxed each other directly. No copies were made,
nothing was seen by anyone else but those two. Steven and
Stanley acted as their own assistants for this project."
After Kubricks
death, Spielberg focused intently upon making "A.I.
Artificial Intelligence," after spending the two years
following making "Saving Private Ryan" without
committing to a new project. He wrote the screenplay in
a mere two months and readied himself for a memorable shooting
experience that would reunite him with several talented
co-workers.
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
Producers Kathleen
Kennedy and Bonnie Curtis, who had not yet worked together
as producers despite their extensive experience with Spielberg,
assembled a top notch crew that would thrive amid the frenzied
production schedule filled with complex special effects
and processes (some of which were destined to be groundbreaking
in their fields) as well as the heightened secrecy factor.
Editor Michael
Kahn, composer John Williams, special effects creators Stan
Winston and Michael Lantieri and cinematographer Janusz
Kaminski have all won Academy Awards for their work with
Spielberg. Production designer Rick Carter created sets
for "Jurassic Park" and "Amistad," among
other films. Wardrobe designer Bob Ringwood had worked with
the filmmaker on "Empire of the Sun," while ILM
senior visual effects supervisor Dennis Murens experience
with Spielberg dates back to "Close Encounters of the
Third Kind."
Advances in "virtual
set design" would allow whole cities to be built in
a blue screen environment. Robotics innovations would bring
a teddy bear to life and give him a voice. But the most
critical hurdle still lay before them: casting.
"The reason
we could all take this bizarre journey, in my opinion, rested
on the shoulders of Haley Joel Osment," Curtis observes.
"His performance makes it all possible. He has such
a style at such an early age. His transformation within
the film is so complete."
At 12-years-old
during filming, Haley Joel Osment had already made his mark
in a performance that earned the young actor an Oscar nomination
in M. Night Shyamalans box-office phenomenon "The
Sixth Sense." In "A.I.," he plays another
kind of remarkable boy this one built from silicon
and synthetics. "I talked with Steven about to what
extent I would make David robotic," Osment says. "We
decided that, as we progressed and I learned more as a robot
about the world, my experiences would make me more and more
human and less mechanical. As David learns, many of the
physical characteristics fade, but some of the subtler ones
never go away."
Haleys
father, Eugene Osment, is also an actor, as is Haleys
younger sister, Emily.
The elder Osment
accompanied his son to set every day, preparing him for
the days work and communicating what the days
technical demands would be.
"I think
Haley is the most extraordinary child actor to come along
in a long, long time," Kennedy says. "And I hesitate
to use the word child, as Haley is every bit
the consummate professional trained actor that any adult
would be. Hes quite amazing."
Jude Law, an
Academy Award nominee for his work in "The Talented
Mr. Ripley," was cast to play the difficult role of
Gigolo Joe, a "love mecha," or "mechanical."
Heavy, intricate makeup was utilized in realizing Gigolo
Joe, and Law studied mime and peacock movements to prepare
to play a character who sings, dances and transforms himself
physically at the drop of a hat. "Joe is a gigolo,"
says Law. "He has various clients, some he just talks
to, some he massages. Some he presumably takes a bit further.
He is able to change the way in which he seduces."
Australian actress
Frances OConnor ("Mansfield Park") and American
actor Sam Robards ("American Beauty") were chosen
for the roles of Monica and Henry Swinton, while young actor
Jake Thomas (TVs "Lizzie McGuire") won the
role of their flesh and blood son, Martin. Veteran actor
Brendan Gleeson ("The General") portrays robot
hunter Lord Johnson-Johnson, and Academy Award winner William
Hurt plays the role of Professor Hobby. Veteran announcer,
voiceover artist and actor Jack Angel was selected as the
mature, assuring and worldly wise voice of Teddy, Davids
supertoy teddy bear, protector and companion.
With the cast
in place, the filmmakers focus turned to the creation
of groundbreaking special effects and technical wizardry
inherent in a design of a future that, in many ways, had
never been attempted before in a motion picture.
With such a tight
production schedule, each proposed day of shooting "A.I."
would be a challenge of technology meeting artistry
with intricate makeups, elaborate mechanical special effects,
and a cutting-edge "virtual set." Actors would
need to focus on creating something rarely attempted in
their craft: embodying or reacting to synthetic life forms.
Though the production
was limited in prep and production time, the fact that Spielberg
penned the script helped streamline the technical demands.
"Steven was enormously helpful in articulating what
he needed," says Kennedy. "He spent from four
to six hours a day with the art department going over storyboards
and working with models. Everything, in a sense, had to
be designed, fabricated and invented by Steven. Then, communicating
that to all departments is really what the challenge of
producing is all about."
Spielberg first
gathered with key personnel such as visual effects supervisors
Dennis Muren and Scott Farrar from ILM, and production designer
Rick Carter. Hours were spent meticulously pouring over
Chris Bakers early storyboards, structuring the look
of a newly devised future.
"Steven
showed me over a thousand pieces of art that Stanley had
been working with since he began his work on the project,"
Dennis Muren remembers. "Steven had the same sensibility
as Stanley visually and he wanted to carry through with
his view of the future. Steven felt he should be true to
that, because Stanley was so right on in his concept of
the future. It became a wonderful marriage of ideas."
Soon, ILM was
constructing over 100 practical models as well as another
100 computer models to synchronize and bring the worlds
of "A.I. Artificial Intelligence" to life. Conceptual
artist Baker relocated to the United States and spent several
weeks at ILMs facilities in northern California collaborating
on the realization of his designs.
In Los Angeles,
production designer Rick Carter broke the film down into
three segments in order to create a smooth technical flow.
"I thought of this film as a sort of evolution of movies,"
Carter explains. "It starts as a straight ahead domestic
drama, switches to a sort of road picture that incorporates
both real and digital images, then expands into an almost
entirely digital world. But they are all part of one journey
that forms the basis of Davids experience in this
movie."
As real sets
were being planned and constructed, robotic and creature
effects creator Stan Winston, Dennis Muren and Scott Farrar
and their ILM team, along with special effects master Michael
Lantieri huddled with Spielberg to brainstorm and create
an all-new world of robots. Winston and Lantieri also collaborated
this way on another groundbreaking film: "Jurassic
Park." With "Jurassic Park," they had created
a realm of dinosaurs that used an expert fusion of practical
and computerized effects that had never been seen before.
Audiences were stunned by the realism achieved in that film.
"A.I. was
probably the most confidential, under wraps project of my
career," says Winston, who kept the "Jurassic
Park" creatures under top secret protection during
production of that film. "We were designing the world
of robots, and I knew very little about the script at the
beginning. But I dont need to know any more from Steven
Spielberg than that he wants me involved. Im there
with him."
"One great
thing about working with Steven," echoes Michael Lantieri,
"is that I always feel like all my efforts go on to
the screen. In A.I., there is not one effect
that isnt cutting edge. It takes someone brave enough
like Steven who believes he can make it all work."
One immediate
hurdle would be the creation of Teddy, Davids supertoy
bear who acts as his voice of reason and guide through the
many perilous adventures the robot boy faces on his quest.
A major character in the film, Teddys complex combination
of puppetry and digitizing presented its own set of problems
for the design crew. Accommodating Teddy meant designing
practical sets that could house several operating technicians
who required moveable flooring and special lighting. In
instances where practical operation was impossible, such
as seeing Teddy run or jump, ILMs computer division
had to find a way to match the real Teddy exactly.
"The combination
of the amount of screen time, the range of performance needed,
his importance to the story and the time crunch we were
under made Teddy one of the most difficult challenges weve
ever faced," Winston says. "We wanted to do as
much as we could on stage to lessen the CGI burden while
attaining a seamless blend of live action and computer imaging."
Teddy is portrayed
by, in essence, a group of Teddies. The hero,
or main practical bear used in close-ups and with actors,
played the principal role. The hero bear houses 50 servo
motors in his small body. 24 are located in the head alone,
many controlling his intricate facial movements. After all,
this is a teddy that talks. "He is a wise old bear,"
says veteran actor Jack Angel ("Toy Story 2,"
"A Bugs Life," "The Iron Giant"),
who was chosen by Spielberg to voice Teddy. "He tries
to keep David straight in this mean cruel world hes
tossed into. Hes a very sophisticated robot and he
reacts like a human does. I had a great time watching other
people react to him."
"Teddy is
not only animatronic; he can think," explains producer
Bonnie Curtis. "Hes your protector, the ultimate
plaything. Hes totally loyal, hes not going
to fight with you. For a kid, hes the best kind of
sidekick. Hes sarcastic, hes funny and hes
smart."
For actors such
as Frances OConnor, working with such a high tech
teddy bear demanded a whole new dimension of performance,
especially for an actress who was used to working in period
dramas such as "Mansfield Park" and "Madame
Bovary." "Ive never done anything like acting
with him before," says OConnor. "I mean,
he reacts like a live performer. It was surreal. And, it
was somewhat difficult to incorporate him into scenes at
times because of the physical problems involved, such as
sitting around the dinner table. Because wherever Teddy
went, several technicians were present as well to operate
him."
The Stan Winston
Studios created six versions of Teddy, some with specialized
functions. One was created to be lifted and carried by members
of the cast. There was a "stealth Teddy," a "stunt
Teddy," as well as some half-Teddies. Several of the
Teddy faces were designed to create a singular expression,
such as a smile or frown.
One of Haley
Joel Osments challenges was carrying the heavy bear
in many scenes. Teddy weighs over thirty pounds, much of
it attributed to the radio-controlled servo motors housed
in his body. "He really was a supertoy," says
Osment. "Because he had so much machinery inside, he
could do so many things. He could curl up, wiggle his nose
and ears, even grab things. I just completely forgot he
wasnt real."
For the staff
at ILM, creating a seamless Teddy presented unique challenges.
For one thing, the bear used for computer modeling was pristine,
while the hero bear used on stage was beginning to show
a bit of wear and tear. The practical and computer-generated
Teddys had to match completely, hair for hair, so ILM was
constantly refining their Teddy technique.
"One of
my key CG supervisors, Barry Armour, was assigned to match
the actual look of the Stan Winston bear," explains
visual effects supervisor Scott Farrar. "Another, Tom
Martinek, supervised the lighting and rendering. But matching
the hair is always a challenge. The giant ape in Mighty
Joe Young only had an average of 700,000 hairs, and
they were a foot long. This little pipsqueak teddy bear
has a million and a half little hairs, and each of those
has eight curve segments to it. Thats 12 million manipulations
to worry about!"
But Teddy is
just one robot in a film populated with many versions of
them. From the vision of a near future that integrates robots
into our daily lives came endless possibilities from which
to create fantastic new robotic forms. This again necessitated
several departments working in tandem. Some robots were
rendered by human actors with minimal make-up or prosthetics,
like the characters played by Haley Joel Osment and Jude
Law. Others were portrayed by physically-challenged actors
operating limb attachments and other mechanisms. Finally,
a few robots were entirely mechanical.
Many of the innovations
came from using blue field masking of some parts of the
robots that were later enhanced by computer imagery. With
this technique, the audience will experience the sensation
of looking inside a living, working being and seeing the
whirring mechanisms below the synthetic flesh.
"One of
the advantages of this style of working together was being
able to create these shocking images," says Dennis
Muren. "You see what looks like a perfect face, but
as it turns you see its hollow and full of machinery.
Some are translucent, with some form of life force within
them. We used our computer imagery to augment the fine work
the Stan Winston crew had designed with Steven."
Many of the robots
were created to perform specific functions: as nannies,
gardeners, road workers, welders, butlers, security guards,
etc. Like automobiles, many fall into disrepair and are
junked. But the films designers decided that in the
world of "A.I.," each would come with a survival
drive built in. Therefore, discarded robots would forever
be searching for a new arm to replace a damaged one, much
like people pick over a junkyard for old parts for their
machines today.
To bring this
illusion to life, several actors with missing limbs were
employed to play "damaged" robots. They were fitted
with special prosthetic limbs and armatures, giving them
the ability to fully embody their roles.
"It was
such a pleasure to work with these actors with special abilities,"
says Stan Winston. "What some saw as disadvantages
physically became advantages for the roles they played.
One amputee, Dave Smith, is a friend of mine. He played
the Welder Robot, where one of his arms can actually become
a welding tool. These were some of the most inspiring actors
on the set and it was a joy to work with them."
Make-up designer
Ve Neill collaborated with Winston on the makeup design
for these "damaged" robots. Once wardrobe and
prosthetics were in place, the robot actors would sit in
the chairs of Neills "Robot World" makeup
area for several hours as makeup technicians added intricate
touches to each.
"My relationship
with Stan Winston is really great," says Neill. "Weve
done several films together and hes always so much
fun. He hires the best people, who are always incredible
technicians. This makes my job easier, to say the least.
When we filmed the scenes with all the robots working, we
would have as many as 30 makeup technicians working at once
to prepare them and keep them touched up. Some of the robots
took as long as three hours to make up."
Spielberg, Winston
and Neill wanted much subtler makeup designs for Gigolo
Joe and David. "We did several tests on Gigolo Joe,
some with full-face prosthetic devices," Neill explains.
"But it looked too surrealistic. It didnt reflect
Judes warmth and friendliness, which Steven felt was
very important to the role. We came up with a simple prosthetic
jaw piece and a plasticized facial makeup flexible enough
so that it wouldnt crack or melt during filming."
For production
designer Rick Carter, the films three distinct segments
offered different complexities in the set building process.
The first third of the film takes place in the subtly futuristic,
circular Swinton home. The second phase involves David and
Gigolo Joes odyssey that brings them through dark
forests and shantytowns to the brutal carnival atmosphere
of Flesh Fair and finally to the decadent brilliance of
Rouge City. In the films final third, many digital
enhancements were employed to create the underwater and
ice sequences in a world drowning in sea water thanks to
melted ice caps due to global warming.
Among the many
challenges faced by Carter and his crew, Rouge City proved
to be one of the most complex sets to design and build.
Some of the Citys buildings were built to scale. Others
were created digitally and filmed on a special virtual blue
screen stage. The main set was constructed to hide a pulley
system that Michael Lantieris special mechanical effects
crew utilized to create the chaos of an "amphibicopter"
gone amok in one crucial scene.
"Originally,
we had a bigger stage," Carter reveals. "We were
going to spend a million dollars more to create Rouge City.
But it became clear that this money would be better used
by ILM to digitally create a more expansive city than we
could ever build. We would re-dress the set often, so that
you really never knew where you would be in it. ILM came
up with a virtual digital space on a blue screen stage to
further the illusion of a vast city, which was quite groundbreaking
technically."
The blue screen
set was unique in that it was designed as a virtual digital
environment in which actors could walk through a set and
be seen 360 degrees on a monitor which housed all the surrounding
scenery in sync. This was achieved by mounting a series
of hundreds of unique bar-coded targets on the ceiling of
the soundstage that acted as monitors of points in space.
When a camera moved about the set, the monitor showed the
entire "dressed" set on special software that
integrated the actors with their programmed environment.
"We had
about 800 targets on the ceiling," says Muren. "Each
one had its own separate identity. A video camera scanned
them while its software identified them. This way, we could
generate the buildings around the actors digitally, giving
Steven more choices for shooting. Its really never
been done this way. The technology was there, but we just
needed a reason to use it."
Rouge City was
constructed on a large soundstage under the direction of
Carter and set designer Jim Teegarden, using many of Chris
Bakers more erotic and outlandish designs for buildings.
A few sly references to Stanley Kubricks films were
woven into the set as well, including a milk bar like the
one found in "A Clockwork Orange." Also located
in Rouge City is Dr. Knows information boutique, a
unique futuristic store in which a hologram resembling Albert
Einstein appears to customers to distribute snippets of
knowledge for the right price.
"The character
of Dr. Know I always saw as the information
equivalent of Ronald McDonald and you would
find the franchise almost anywhere instead of fast
food, you could get fast information and be entertained
at the same time."
The Gondola and
Flesh Fair sequences were housed in the enormous Spruce
Goose Dome facility in Long Beach, California. Since the
Dome is 600 feet in diameter and 100 feet high, it provided
the ultimate atmosphere for elaborate night sequences. There,
Michael Lantieris crew built the Moon Gondola as well
as the myriad robot torture devices found at Flesh Fair.
"The gondola weighed 19,000 pounds and was held and
moved by a 300-ton crane," says Lantieri. "It
had people in it and people below it when it flew over.
It used nets and magnets to capture the robots in the film,
so we had to make that all look functional. It was dangerous
to operate, so we took every precaution."
Even more dangerous
was mounting the elaborate robot torture devices found in
the Flesh Fair arena. With 800 screaming extras looking
on, Lantieri had to find a way to shred, burn and rip apart
robots in a way that wouldnt jeopardize cast or crew.
"Steven came up with an idea that we would use a cannon
to shoot robots through this coliseum," Lantieri says.
"All this inside a ring with hundreds of people and
a band playing on stage. So we took extra safety precautions
and it all worked quite well."
The industrial
metal band Ministry was chosen to play in the sequence,
as much for their legendarily dark sensibilities as their
pulsing, hypnotic music. "They were suggested by my
assistant, Lee Clay, who knew the type of music we wanted,"
says Bonnie Curtis. "They were perfect. It turns out
all of these current musicians such as Limp Bizkit and Orgy
were profoundly influenced by Ministry. It all started with
them. And they were happy to take part, especially when
they saw the clothes."
Pioneers of "goth"
music, Ministry created an image using black leather and
was therefore delighted to see the cut of wardrobe designer
Bob Ringwoods costumes for them. "I did some
research on the band and found out what they do," says
Ringwood, who also designed the costumes for such films
as "Batman" and "Alien: Resurrection."
"I felt if you are going to use a rock band that exists,
you gotta go with their look. I dressed the lead guitarist
in a skeleton outfit and he nearly died with pleasure. We
had taken his look and pushed it as far as we could go.
He couldnt believe his luck."
Ringwood collaborated
with Stan Winston to create the look of the snarling Biker
Hounds, who are employed by Lord Johnson-Johnson (Brendan
Gleeson) to round up stray robots from atop monstrous motorcycles.
To create the Hounds stark armor, Ringwood commissioned
armourer Terry English ("Excalibur") to design
their helmets.
More subtle costuming
was needed to create the looks of the films major
characters. For Davids first appearance in the Swinton
household, a loose-fitting white track suit became the robots
first clothes. "Steven had originally conceived of
David being more robotic," says Ringwood. "But
we pulled further away from that and we got more realistic
with his clothes. We also used muted, comfortable clothes
for Monica, with them becoming a bit brighter as her mood
becomes more positive in the story. But it was Gigolo Joes
outfit that became our biggest challenge, along with outfitting
the street people of Rouge City."
Gigolo Joe, as
played by Jude Law, required a versatile wardrobe in which
he could dance and sing if need be. Several designs were
submitted and discarded, all in the quest of finding a functional
look that would be just as striking. After all, Gigolo Joe
was designed as a love mecha, a robot programmed
to attract and satisfy his human "clients." "Steven
actually had me look at romantic figures, even Dracula,
from past films," Ringwood recalls. "We wanted
to instill the vision of a classic romantic, sexy hero infused
with a futuristic look. I found, quite by accident, a material
made of fishing line woven as a satin that looked almost
like liquid metal when worn as a frock coat. We then gave
him a plastic shirt as well. In the end, hes sort
of a Victorian romantic hero crossed with a futuristic Elvis
Presley. I had worked with Ve Neill on the Batman
films, so we had a shorthand in integrating the makeup and
wardrobe."
For sequences
taking place at a waterbound amusement park in a submerged
Manhattan, real ice was shipped in to create the right atmosphere,
with the production using eight tons a day to complete the
illusion under hot lights. Cinematographer Janusz Kaminski
collaborated closely with Spielberg, Carter and Winston
to light these effects expertly, giving no technical secrets
away while creating some illusions of his own. "The
movie has three distinct looks," Kaminski explains.
"In terms of lighting, the first act is sterile and
a bit clinical. The second act is a bit of an action adventure,
and the third act is extremely emotional and innovative
in terms of drama. I believe in following the screenplay
closely, figuring out what the writer is saying so I can
reflect that in my lighting and photography. Rick Carter
tells the story in a very similar way. His sets are so magnificent
and so meaningful that it is easy for Steven and I to come
in and light them and create in them. Steven works from
instinct, and so do I. And we do it at a very fast pace."
Indeed, the 68-day
shooting schedule was very tight for a film of this magnitude,
according to producer Kathleen Kennedy. "Steven moves
at an extraordinary pace," Kennedy says of Spielbergs
directing style. "He requires that people pay close
attention to the pre-production process, so that when we
arrive at the shooting phase the things he asked for are
there. He knows exactly what he wants."
Assembling a
top cast of talented performers was a big part of the productions
ability to move so fast, according to Bonnie Curtis. "Jude
Law, for example, was one of the most conscientious people
Ive ever worked with, calling me to check in about
his character even before he started working," Curtis
enthuses. "Frances OConnor was diligent and naturally
intense before the camera. She photographed beautifully
and she made for a comforting mom on set, like everyones
idea of a fantasy mom. Sam Robards is a wonderful actor
and brings a lot of heart to his role."
Robards was surprised
by his role, which looked, on the surface, to be a reality
touchstone for the audience. He got to drive a futuristic
car through the Oregon foothills during one of the films
rare exterior location scenes, and he was fascinated by
the futuristic yet comfortable look of the Swinton home.
"I even asked if I could spend one night in the bedroom
on set," said Robards. "But unfortunately I never
got the chance. I was fascinated by that house, with all
of its slightly futuristic furniture and gadgets."
Set decorator
Nancy Haigh worked with Rick Carter in filling the Swinton
house with books, kitchen gadgets, toys and furniture that
seem very close to present day reality, but perhaps a bit
futuristic. Carefully chosen books, artwork and playthings
populate each room, designed to blend comfortably with the
characters and their environment. Haley Joel Osment and
co-star Jake Thomas spent many of their lunch periods playing
with the many toys in Martins bedroom. "It was
a fun environment to be in," Osment remembers. "I
had lots of fun making the film. I learned to scuba dive
for the underwater scenes. I met lots of great people. Most
of all, I enjoyed watching Steven direct. Id like
to do that someday too."
Jude Law also
enjoyed his character Gigolo Joe, through whom he got to
do some unexpected dancing. "I had never done much
dancing professionally, just classes and the like,"
says Law. "But Steven decided that Gigolo Joe should
move more elegantly than humans since he is designed to
attract them, so he should also be able to dance as well."
Choreographer
Francesca Jaynes worked with Jude Law for three months,
perfecting and creating his dancing style. "It started
out a bit more Fred Astaire, then became a little more Gene
Kelly," Law says. "He should be able to move instantly,
with elegance and grace. After all, he needs to catch the
eye of prospective clients. This is what he is programmed
to do. Luckily, through David, Gigolo Joe learns to care
about someone other than himself along their journey together."
One constant
presence throughout filming was the artistic vision of Stanley
Kubrick, whom Steven Spielberg kept at the forefront of
each days work.
"Steven
really tried to do this film with Stanley as a guide,"
says Bonnie Curtis. "Steven would constantly say on
set Stanley would have liked that. Or I
feel him, I feel him here. His presence was very prevalent
through the whole production, and very wanted as well."
"Steven
embraces the audience," Kennedy notes, "because
he respects them. He tells intelligent adult fairy tales
and doesnt talk down to anyone. Hes a fantastic
storyteller who takes the essence of what interests him
in a story and executes that with respect, excitement and
energy. Hes lucky, because what he thinks about and
cares about in his stories are the same things his audience
identifies with. Stanley Kubrick obviously had his own great
strengths as a filmmaker and they certainly work well with
Stevens. Part of Kubricks vision was to create
a futuristic character in David that traveled from the intellect
to the heart. And I think Steven Spielberg works from the
heart and goes to the intellect. Its quite a beautiful
combination."
ABOUT THE CAST
HALEY JOEL OSMENT
(David) had just turned twelve-years-old when he agreed
to star as David in "A.I. Artificial Intelligence."
Osment received numerous film critic awards plus nominations
for the Academy, Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild awards
for his performance in the record-breaking, internationally
acclaimed thriller "The Sixth Sense."
On television,
Osment starred opposite Ed Asner in the television series
"Thunder Alley." He went on to regular roles on
"The Jeff Foxworthy Show" and "Murphy Brown,"
and guest-starred in a number of popular series, including
"The Pretender," "Chicago Hope," "Touched
By an Angel," "Walker, Texas Ranger" and
"Ally McBeal."
His starring
roles in television films include the Hallmark Hall of Fame
presentation of "The Ransom of Red Chief" and
NBCs science fiction thriller "The Lake,"
in which he played two parts: one good, one evil. He received
Young Star Awards for his performances in TNTs "Last
Stand at Saber River," opposite Tom Selleck, and Hallmarks
"Cab to Canada," with Maureen OHara.
Osment made his
feature film debut in the critically acclaimed and Oscar-winning
"Forrest Gump," which earned him a Youth in Film
Award. Other notable film credits include Nora Ephrons
"Mixed Nuts"; Jason Alexanders "For
Better or Worse"; and Norman Jewisons fantasy
"Bogus." He has also lent his voice to the Disney
animated features "Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted
Christmas," and "The Hunchback of Notre Dame II."
In addition to
starring in the feature films "Pay It Forward"
and "Edges of the Lord," Osment has most recently
added his voice to such animated productions as "Discover
Spot," "Edwurd Fubwupper Fibbed Big" and
is currently voicing Mowgli in Disneys "Jungle
Book II." Next, Osment will provide the voice for Beary
in Disneys "The Bears."
Although he has
a busy career, he has many outside interests, including
school, sports and writing.
JUDE LAW (Gigolo
Joe) has become a producer as well as a popular leading
man in feature films. He is partners with actress/wife Sadie
Frost, Jonny Lee Miller, Sean Pertwee and Ewan McGregor
in Natural Nylon, a production company that is currently
planning several major films.
One of the brightest
acting talents to emerge in recent years, Law played the
role of playboy Dickie Greenleaf in "The Talented Mr.
Ripley," which gained the actor both an Academy Award
nomination and the BAFTA award for Best Supporting Actor
opposite Gwyneth Paltrow and Matt Damon.
British-born
Law was also seen starring in "eXistenZ," opposite
Jennifer Jason Leigh and Willem Dafoe. He also won several
awards, including the London Film Critics Circle Award and
Evening Standard Award, for his performance as the title
character in "Wilde," opposite Stephen Fry and
Vanessa Redgrave.
Law burst upon
the American screen with two wildly different films released
in 1997. His American film debut was in the futuristic "Gattaca,"
opposite Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke. He was then seen in
Clint Eastwoods "Midnight in the Garden of Good
and Evil," in which he starred opposite Kevin Spacey
and John Cusack. His most recent films include "The
Wisdom of Crocodiles," "Love, Honour and Obey"
and "Enemy At the Gates."
Law starred opposite
Kathleen Turner and Eileen Atkins in the hit Broadway play
"Indiscretions," which won him the Theatre World
Award as well as a Tony nomination for Outstanding Supporting
Actor. He also starred in the same play in London, for which
he received the Ian Charleson Award for Outstanding Newcomer.
As a youth, he
worked with the National Youth Music Theatre and has appeared
in several productions in the West End and at the Royal
National Theatre.
Law lives in
London with his wife, actress Sadie Frost, and their three
children.
FRANCES OCONNOR
(Monica Swinton) made her film debut in Emma-Kate Croghans
"Love and Other Catastrophes." Her performance
earned her an AFI "Best Actress" Award nomination.
OConnor made a major impression with audiences and
critics alike in Bill Bennetts blackly comic road
movie "Kiss or Kill." Her performance garnered
her the Best Actress Award at the Montreal Film Festival,
as well as the Australian Critics Award.
OConnors
television credits include the telefilm "Halifax: The
Feeding," the BBC adaptation of Flauberts classic
novel "Madame Bovary," a performance which garnered
her a Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance by an
Actress in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture made for television.
OConnor
recently wrapped production on John Woos "Windtalkers,"
starring alongside Nicholas Cage, Christian Slater and Adam
Beach. Her other film credits include "Bedazzled,"
with Brendan Fraser, "About Adam," with Kate Hudson
and Stuart Townsend, Patricia Rozemas critically acclaimed
film "Mansfield Park," "Cherie Nowlans
"Thank God He Met Lizzie," with Cate Blanchett,
and Peter Duncans "A Little Bit of Soul,"
with Geoffrey Rush.
On stage, OConnor
most recently starred in Peter Whelens "The Herbal
Bed" with the Melbourne Theater Company, and will begin
rehearsals later this year in London for the role of Maggie
in a West End production of Tennessee Williams "Cat
on a Hot Tin Roof," directed by Tony Award winner Anthony
Page and co-starring Brendan Fraser.
SAM ROBARDS (Henry
Swinton) has balanced careers in major films, television
and on stage. He recently appeared as part of the esteemed
ensemble in the Academy Award winning "American Beauty."
Robards was born
into a stellar acting family that includes his father, Jason
Robards and his mother, Lauren Bacall. Robards made his
film debut in 1982 in Paul Mazurskys adaptation of
"The Tempest" and worked in both television and
films while alternating with a string of off-Broadway productions
such as "Album," in which he made his stage debut.
He most recently starred in Nicky Silvers "The
Altruists" at the Vineyard Theater.
Several notable
film roles followed, including "Fandango," "Not
Quite Paradise," "Bright Lights, Big City,"
"Bird," "Casualties of War," "Mrs.
Parker and the Vicious Circle," "Pret-a-Porter,"
"Beautiful Girls," and "Bounce." He
next co-stars in the Irwin Winkler-directed "Life As
a House."
Among his many
television appearances are roles in the series, "Get
a Life," and "Maximum Bob," and episodic
appearances in "Spin City," and "Sex and
the City." His television films include "The Man
Who Captured Eichmann and, most recently, the live
performance of "On Golden Pond" for CBS.
JAKE THOMAS (Martin
Swinton) currently stars in the Disney Channels #1
rated series "Lizzie McGuire." Only ten years
old while shooting "A.I. Artificial Intelligence,"
the young performer brought a varied background in commercials,
television, theatre and film to the difficult role of Martin.
Born in Tennessee, he started acting with his father (a
radio personality) and his mother (a television host) by
appearing on their respective shows and starring in local
commercials with them. His parents moved to Los Angeles
in 196 to pursue acting full time and Jake decided he wanted
to give it a try, too.
He has gone on
to appear in such television series as "Touched By
an Angel" and "3rd Rock From the Sun" as
well as the film "The Cell" with Jennifer Lopez.
Dublin-born actor
BRENDAN GLEESON (Lord Johnson-Johnson) entered the field
of acting after a stint as a teacher. He made his debut
playing a quarryman in Jim Sheridans 1990 film "The
Field." Several roles followed in such Ireland-based
films as "Far and Away," "Into the West"
and as Michael Collins in "The Treaty."
His breakthrough
came in Mel Gibsons 1995 feature, "Braveheart."
He has since
appeared in the hilarious Irish feature "I Went Down,"
"Mission: Impossible II" and was acclaimed in
John Boormans 1998 production "The General,"
based on the life of Irish criminal Martin Cahill, for which
he won the Boston Film Critics and The London Film Critics
Awards.
Gleeson recently
completed co-starring in a film entitled "Harrisons
Flowers," to be released by Universal in October; starring
in "Wild About Harry," produced in Ireland; and
following his role in A.I., he has completed a major role
in Martin Scorceses film "The Gangs of New York."
WILLIAM HURT
(Professor Hobby) trained at Tufts University and New Yorks
Juilliard School of Music and Drama. He spent the early
years of his career on stage; between schooling, summer
stock, regional repertory and Off Broadway, he appeared
in more than 50 productions including "Henry V,"
"5th of July," "Hamlet," "Richard
II," "Hurlyburly" (for which he was nominated
for a Tony Award), "My Life" (for which he won
an Obie Award for Best Actor), "A Midsummers
Night Dream" and "Good."
In 1980, Hurt
appeared in his first film, "Altered States."
He was nominated by the American Academy for Best Actor
for "Broadcast News" and "Children of a Lesser
God." For "Kiss of the Spider Woman," he
was honored with an Academy Award and Best Actor Awards
from the British Academy and the Cannes Film Festival. Among
his other films are "Body Heat," "The Big
Chill," "Eyewitness," "Gorky Park,"
"Alice," "I Love You To Death," "The
Accidental Tourist," "The Doctor," "One
True Thing," "The Plague," "Trial by
Jury," "Second Best," "Smoke,"
"Jane Eyre," "Michael," "Dark City"
and "The Proposition." He was most recently seen
in Showtimes "Varians War," starring
opposite Julia Ormond. His other recent credits include
Istvan Szabos epic, "Sunshine," which received
three Genie Awards, including one for Best Motion Picture,
as well as "The Flamingo Rising" for CBS, Linda
Yellens "The Simian Line," Anthony Hickoxs
"The Contaminated Man," and the television mini-series
"Dune." He recently completed production on "Tuck
Everlasting" for Disney.
JACK ANGEL (voice
of Teddy) has given his voice to countless animated characters,
commercials, trailers and feature film characters in a career
that spans several decades.
His first work
in entertainment was as a popular radio personality and
disc jockey in several American markets, including a top
rated stint in Los Angeles. While on the West Coast, he
explored other areas of the voiceover business and found
success as an announcer, character voice and actor.
He has been a
regular voice on such animated series as "Spider-man,
" "Darkwing Duck," "G.I. Joe,"
"Superfriends," "Transformers," "Voltron"
and "Tailspin." He has worked in the films "Hook,"
"Beetlejuice," "The Fifth Element,"
"Funny Lady" and "The Fly" as well as
in the animated features "Toy Story II," "A
Bugs Life," "Tarzan" and "The
Iron Giant," among many others.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
STEVEN SPIELBERG
(Director/Producer/Writer) is one of the most influential,
successful and respected filmmakers of his generation. Spielberg
is a two-time winner of the Academy Award for Best Director,
for his work on "Saving Private Ryan" and "Schindlers
List," for which he also won the Oscar for Best Picture
as the films producer. His production companies, Amblin
Entertainment and DreamWorks SKG, have enjoyed monumental
success in the entertainment industry.
Born in Cincinnati
and raised in the suburbs of New Jersey and Arizona, Spielberg
developed a love for photography and filmmaking at an early
age. He had made several amateur films by the time he finished
high school and began studies at California State University,
Long Beach. His short film "Amblin" was screened
at the Atlanta Film Festival in 1969, and opened the door
for him to begin directing at Universal Studios.
Spielbergs
first television film, "Duel," was soon followed
by his feature directing debut, "The Sugarland Express,"
in 1974. Two of his early films, "Jaws" and "Close
Encounters of the Third Kind," were record-breaking
box office successes. Spielberg went on to produce and/or
direct eight of the twenty highest-grossing films in history,
including "Jurassic Park," "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial"
and "Raiders of the Lost Ark." In addition to
the aforementioned films, he has directed "1941,"
"Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom," "Always,"
"Empire of the Sun," "The Color Purple,"
"Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade," "Hook,"
"The Lost World: Jurassic Park" and "Amistad."
He has also served as producer or executive producer on
many highly successful films including "Men in Black,"
"Back to the Future," "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?,"
"Twister" and "The Mask of Zorro" among
many others.
Most recently,
Spielberg executive produced along with Tom Hanks on the
HBO series "Band of Brothers," which chronicled
the plight of American servicemen in action during World
War II. He began production on the film "Minority Report"
soon after finishing work on "A.I. Artificial Intelligence."
Spielberg has
been honored with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences Irving G. Thalberg Award, and has also received
the Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Film Institute.
In the fall of 2000, Spielberg became the first recipient
of the Stanley Kubrick Britannia Award for Excellence in
Filmmaking by the British Academy of Film and Television
Arts Los Angeles.
KATHLEEN KENNEDY
(Producer) has compiled an extraordinary list of filmmaking
achievements, serving as producer of some of the most popular
motion pictures in recent history. Kennedys enduring
association with director Steven Spielberg began on the
film "1941." She then worked in varying capacities
on "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and "Poltergeist,"
eventually becoming a producer on "E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial"
and "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom," with
George Lucas and Frank Marshall. Kennedy became a founding
partner of Amblin Entertainment with Steven Spielberg and
Frank Marshall in 1982.
At Amblin, Kennedy
produced or co-produced such popular films as "Gremlins,"
"Always," "Dad," "*batteries not
included," "An American Tail," "Innerspace,"
"Joe Versus the Volcano," "The Goonies,"
"Young Sherlock Holmes," "The Land Before
Time," "Hook," "Noises Off," "The
Money Pit," "The Flintstones," "Cape
Fear," the "Back to the Future" series, "Who
Framed Roger Rabbit? ," "Empire of the Sun,"
"The Color Purple" and "Arachnophobia."
In 1992, she
established The Kennedy/Marshall Company with her husband,
Frank Marshall. Some of the films created under their company
banner are "Congo," "Indian in the Cupboard,"
"A Map of the World," "Snow Falling on Cedars,"
"Alive," the IMAX feature "Olympic Glory"
and the box office blockbuster "The Sixth Sense,"
starring Haley Joel Osment.
Kennedy also
executive produced "Schindlers List," which
won the Oscar for Best Picture in 1993, served as a producer
on "Twister" and "The Bridges of Madison
County," and produced the phenomenally successful "Jurassic
Park" adventure series.
BONNIE CURTIS
(Producer) co-produced the epic blockbuster "Saving
Private Ryan," continuing a long business relationship
with Steven Spielberg that began when she was hired as his
assistant in 1990.
Born in Texas
and educated at Abilene Christian University, Curtis moved
to Los Angeles and found production work on the films "Dead
Poets Society" and "Arachnophobia"
before working with Steven Spielberg on "Hook"
and "Jurassic Park."
Curtis became
a production associate on the celebrated "Schindlers
List" and served as associate producer on "The
Lost World: Jurassic Park" and "Amistad,"
and is currently producing Spielbergs science-fiction
adventure "Minority Report."
WALTER F. PARKES
(Executive Producer) co-heads DreamWorks Pictures, the motion
picture arm of DreamWorks SKG, along with Laurie MacDonald.
During his tenure, he has overseen such projects as the
Academy Award and Golden Globe-winning "Saving Private
Ryan"; "American Beauty," which won three
Golden Globe Awards, and was also nominated for eight Oscars,
including Best Picture; and "Gladiator," on which
he served as executive producer, which won a Best Picture
Oscar and a BAFTA award for the films director, Ridley
Scott.
A three-time
Academy Award nominee, Parkes earned his first nomination
as the director/producer of the 1978 documentary "California
Reich," which exposed neo-Nazi activities in California.
His garnered his second Oscar nomination for writing (with
Lawrence Lasker) the original screenplay for "WarGames,"
and his third nod for his work as a producer on the Best
Picture nominee "Awakenings."
Parkes more recently
executive produced the action adventure hit "The Mask
of Zorro," the blockbuster "Deep Impact,"
Steven Spielbergs "Amistad," "Small
Soldiers" and "Twister." He also produced
the science fiction comedy smash "Men in Black,"
the highest-grossing film in the history of Columbia Pictures,
as well as "The Peacemaker." His additional credits
as an executive producer or producer include "How to
Make An American Quilt," "The Trigger Effect,"
"Sneakers," which he also co-wrote, "Volunteers,"
"Project X" and "True Believer."
JAN HARLAN (Executive
Producer) knew Stanley Kubrick for many years even before
they began working together, since Kubrick was Harlans
brother-in-law Kubrick had married Harlans sister
Christiane in 1958.
Harlan joined
Kubrick in 1970 on a film project about the life of Napoleon,
which had to be abandoned. He then worked as Kubricks
producing assistant on "A Clockwork Orange" in
1971.
Since 1975 he
served as the legendary directors executive producer
on "Barry Lyndon," "The Shining," "Full
Metal Jacket" and "Eyes Wide Shut." and has
since completed a comprehensive documentary "Stanley
Kubrick A Life In Pictures."
MICHAEL KAHN
(Editor) has won three Academy Awards as the editor of Steven
Spielbergs films "Raiders of the Lost Ark,"
"Schindlers List" and "Saving Private
Ryan." He has also earned Oscar nominations for Spielbergs
"Close Encounters of the Third Kind" and "Empire
of the Sun," as well as Adrian Lynes "Fatal
Attraction." He has also received two B.A.F.T.A. Awards,
for "Fatal Attraction" and "Schindlers
List."
He began his
editing career on television films such as "Hogans
Heroes" and "Eleanor and Franklin," for which
he won an Emmy Award. Among the many films he has edited
are "The Return of a Man Called Horse," "The
Eyes of Laura Mars," "Ice Castles," "1941,"
"Used Cars," "Poltergeist," "Indiana
Jones and the Temple of Doom," "The Goonies,"
"The Color Purple," "Indiana Jones and the
Last Crusade," "Always," "Arachnophobia,"
"Toy Soldiers," "Hook," "Alive,"
"Jurassic Park," "Casper," "Twister,"
"The Lost World: Jurassic Park II" and "Amistad."
He most recently worked with Steven Spielberg on "Minority
Report."
JANUSZ KAMINSKI
(Cinematographer) made his feature directorial debut with
the thriller "Lost Souls" after a decade as an
acclaimed director of photography. His long association
with director Steven Spielberg led to his work on "Saving
Private Ryan," for which he received the Academy Award.
Kaminski also won an Academy Award, as well as a BAFTA Award,
for his black-and-white cinematography for "Schindlers
List,: as well as honors from the New York and Los Angeles
Film Critics. He earned his second Oscar nomination for
Spielbergs "Amistad" and collaborated with
the director on "The Lost World: Jurassic Park."
Other film credits include "Jerry Maguire," "How
to Make an American Quilt," "Trouble Bound,"
"Tall Tale" and "The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn."
A native of Poland,
Kaminski came to the United States in 1981. He studied cinematography
at Columbia College in Chicago, receiving his B.A. in l987.
Relocating to Los Angeles, he became a cinematography fellow
at the American Film Institute, and began his professional
career on the feature "Fallen Angel." He also
lensed two television projects: the Amblin production "Class
of 61" and the acclaimed cable movie "Wildflower,"
directed by Diane Keaton.
His most recent
film project as cinematographer is "Minority Report,"
once again working with Steven Spielberg.
JOHN WILLIAMS
(Composer) began his career in the film industry working
with such composers as Bernard Herrmann, Alfred Newman,
and Franz Waxman. He went on to write music for many television
programs in the 1960s, winning two Emmy Awards for his work.
Mr. Williams
has composed the music and served as a music director for
nearly eighty films, including "The Patriot,"
"Angelas Ashes," "Star Wars Episode
1: The Phantom Menace," "Stepmom," "Saving
Private Ryan," "Amistad," "Seven Years
in Tibet," "The Lost World," "Rosewood,"
"Sleepers," "Nixon," "Sabrina,"
"Schindlers List," "Jurassic Park,"
"Home Alone," "Home Alone 2," "Far
and Away," "JFK," "Hook," "Presumed
Innocent," "Born on the Fourth of July,"
the "Indiana Jones" trilogy, "The Accidental
Tourist," "Empire of the Sun," "The
Witches of Eastwick," "E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial,"
"Superman," "Close Encounters of the Third
Kind," the "Star Wars" trilogy, "Jaws"
and "Goodbye, Mr. Chips." He has received thirty-nine
Academy Award nominations, most recently for "The Patriot,"
starring Mel Gibson and directed by Roland Emmerich. He
has also been awarded five Oscars, one British Academy Award,
seventeen Grammys, three Golden Globes, and several gold
and platinum records. His score for the film "Schindlers
List" earned him both an Oscar and a Grammy.
Williams
upcoming projects include the highly anticipated films "Harry
Potter and the Sorcerers Stone," directed by
Chris Columbus, starring Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and
Alan Rickman, out November 16th, and "Star Wars: Episode
II" with Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Hayden Christensen
and Samuel L. Jackson, out May 22, 2002.
In January 1980,
Mr. Williams was named nineteenth Conductor of the Boston
Pops Orchestra since its founding in 1885. He assumed the
title of Boston Pops Laureate Conductor, following his retirement
in December 1993, and currently holds the title of Artist-in-Residence
at Tanglewood. On June 23, 2000, he became the first inductee
into the Hollywood Bowl Hall of Fame.
RICK CARTER (Production
Designer) served as production designer for the Steven Spielberg
blockbuster "Jurassic Park," its hit sequel "The
Lost World: Jurassic Park," and on Spielbergs
historical drama "Amistad." Carter first worked
with the famed director when he designed 42 episodes of
the television anthology series "Amazing Stories,"
which was produced by Spielbergs Amblin Entertainment.
On the series, Carter worked with such notable directors
as Martin Scorsese, Peter Hyams and Clint Eastwood, among
others.
He has also worked
on six films with Robert Zemeckis, most recently on "Cast
Away." The other five are "What Lies Beneath,"
"Forrest Gump," for which Carter received an Academy
Award nomination, "Death Becomes Her," and the
second and third installments of the "Back to the Future"
trilogy.
Born and raised
in Los Angeles, Carter began his career working as an assistant
art director on "Bound for Glory" and "The
China Syndrome." He went on to become an art director
on "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai: Across the 8th
Dimension" and "Goonies."
BOB RINGWOOD
(Costume Design) first worked with director Steven Spielberg
on "Empire of the Sun," for which Ringwood earned
an Academy Award nomination in 1987.
Working first
in his native England, he became a costume designer on John
Boormans "Excalibur" in 1981, working next
with David Lynch on "Dune." He followed with "Santa
Claus: The Movie," "Solarbabies," "Prick
Up Your Ears," "Batman," "Chicago Joe
and the Showgirl," "American Friends," "From
Time to Time," "Alien 3," "Batman Returns,"
"Demolition Man," "The Shadow," "Batman
Forever," "Alien: Resurrection" and "Supernova."
Ringwood designed
the four hero costumes for "X-Men" and is currently
designing the costumes for the DreamWorks remake of "The
Time Machine."
STAN WINSTON
(Special Robotic Effects) creates a memorable new group
of mechanical beings in "A.I. Artificial Intelligence,"
following in the excellent tradition of his groundbreaking
special dinosaur effects in Steven Spielbergs "Jurassic
Park" and "The Lost World: Jurassic Park"
in addition to his many other landmark motion picture effects
contributions.
Founder of Stan
Winston Studio, he has devised innovative prototypes in
animatronics, creature effects, make-up design and digital
imagery, the latter explored through the company Digital
Domain (which he founded with director James Cameron and
Scott Ross of Industrial Light and Magic.) He has won four
Academy Awards for his work in the blockbusters "Aliens,"
"Jurassic Park" and "Terminator 2: Judgment
Day" (for which he won two awards in both Best Makeup
and Best Visual Effects categories).
Although he first
came to Hollywood as an actor in 1969, he quickly became
interested in make-up design and was hired as a make-up
apprentice by Walt Disney Studios. Soon he had earned his
first Emmy Award for the television film "Gargoyles"
as well as five more Emmy nominations on such productions
as "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman," "Pinocchio"
and "Roots," among others.
He moved strongly
into film work on motion pictures such as "W.C. Fields
and Me" and "The Wiz" before earning his
first Oscar nomination for designing the robots in the comedy
"Heartbeeps" in 1981. He then designed for the
films "Dead and Buried," "The Entity,"
"Something Wicked This Way Comes," "Starman,"
"The Terminator," "Invaders From Mars,"
"Predator" (for which he earned an Oscar nomination),
"Monster Squad," "Alien Nation," "Pumpkinhead"
(on which he made his debut as a director as well), "Leviathan,"
"Predator II," "Edward Scissorshands"
(another Oscar nomination), "The Adventures of a Gnome
Named Gnorm" (which he also directed), "Batman
Returns" (an additional Oscar nomination), "Interview
with the Vampire," "Congo," "The Relic,"
"Mouse Hunt," "Small Soldiers," "Instinct,"
"Lake Placid," "Austin Powers: The Spy Who
Shagged Me," "Inspector Gadget," "The
Sixth Sense," "End of Days," "Galaxy
Quest," "What Lies Beneath" and "Lost
Souls," among many others.
Stan has also
developed effects for theme park attractions, including
T2 3-D: The Ride at Universal Studios, Florida. He has also
worked on many music videos and commercials, creating among
other characters the Budweiser frogs and the AFLAC duck.
His most recent
film work includes special make-up effects for director
Michael Bays "Pearl Harbor" and more terrifying
dinosaurs in this summers "Jurassic Park 3."
MICHAEL LANTIERI
(Special Effects Supervisor) has created some of the most
baffling and ingenious mechanical special effects in modern
films, including the flying sequences in Steven Spielbergs
"Hook," the dinosaurs in "Jurassic Park"
(for which he won an Academy Award) and the time travel
shenanigans in "Back to the Future II" and its
sequel.
A Los Angeles-born
craftsman who attended the nearby Art Center College of
Design in Pasadena, he first looked to film as an opportunity
to direct. He became interested in behind-the-scenes magic
after joining the Universal Studios special effects shop
in 1974, where he worked on such television series as "The
Bionic Woman," "Battlestar Galactica" and
"The Six Million Dollar Man."
He began his
film work with a small job on "Heartbeeps," where
he first worked with Stan Winston. He did effects for "Flashdance,"
"Thief of Hearts," "The Last Starfighter"
and "Fright Night" before he met Steven Spielberg
while making "Poltergeist II: The Other Side."
He went on to work on the films "Back to School,"
"The Witches of Eastwick," "Twins,"
"Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade," "Death
Becomes Her," "Dracula," "The Flintstones,"
"Casper," "Congo," "The Indian
in the Cupboard," "Mars Attacks!," "Mouse
Hunt," "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?," "Deep
Impact," "The Wild, Wild West," "The
Astronauts Wife," "The 6th Day" and
"Jurassic Park III."
He also realized
his dream to direct by guiding his first feature film, "Komodo,"
in 1999. His most recent work will be seen in Steven Spielbergs
"Minority Report."
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