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Prince of Persia Movie

Prince of Persia: Sands of Time – The Movie

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Gyllenhaal rides in preparation for role July 4th, 2008

Just Jared have snapped shots of Jake Gyllenhaal, sword in hand, preparing for his next role as Prince Dastan in the Prince of Persia movie, in England. He’s also letting his hair grow long:

Thanks hobo123!

Alfred Molina as Sheik Amar, Ben Kingsley to be Nazim June 6th, 2008

Variety have confirmed that both Alfred Molina (Doc Ock in Spider-man 2) and oscar winning Ben Kingsley shall be a part of the Prince of Persia movie:

Molina will play Sheik Amar, who becomes a mentor to the prince.
Shooting is slated to begin in July in the U.K. and Morocco.

Variety later confirmed that Kingsley shall be playing the villain Nizam,

In the fantasy actioner, Kingsley portrays Nizam, who plots to kill his brother King Shahrman and blame it on Prince Dastan so he can take the throne.

Alfred Molina to play Sheik Amar

Ben Kingsley to play Nazim

Thanks hobo123

Jake Gyllenhaal cast as Prince, Arterton as Tamina May 20th, 2008

The Hollywood Reporter have today confirmed the actors to play the two main roles in the Prince of Persia Movie. Jake Gyllenhaal (Donnie Darko) has been officially cast as Dastan, the young prince – a choice I fear many fans will not be happy about. Whilst Gemma Arterton (Quantum of Solace) has been cast as the princess Tamina.

In the fantasy adventure, Gyllenhaal will play Dastan, a young prince in sixth century Persia who must join forces with Tamina (Arterton), a feisty and exotic princess, to prevent a villainous nobleman from possessing the Sands of Time, a gift from the gods that can reverse time and allow its possessor to rule the world.

Doug Miro & Carlo Bernard, Jordan Mechner and Boaz Yakin wrote the script, which is based on the many games created by Jordan Mechner.

Bruckheimer is producing, while Mike Stenson, Chad Oman and Patrick McCormick are exec producing.

Production is set to start in July.

Gemma Arterton as Tamina in Prince of Persia Movie

Gemma Arterton

(Pics thanks to Gemma-Arterton.net)

Jake Gyllenhaal as Dastan in Prince of Persia Movie

Prince of Persia Movie Poster? May 14th, 2008

Cinema Notizie has posted an exclusive Prince of Persia movie poster. Whether this is genuine is debatable, and given the distinct lack of any official promotional material being released, I would guess that this is fake. Although it’s still an interesting and atmospheric poster:

Potential Prince of Persia Movie Poster

Jake Gyllenhaal offered Prince role April 27th, 2008

Just a quick one to fill you in. In our post about the false Orlando Bloom rumors, some commenters have pointed out that Disney have recently offered the role to Brokeback Mountain star, Jake Gyllenhaal. According to Latino Review and their anonymous sources, they believe this could happen, we’re doubtful for now.

Orlando Bloom NOT the Prince April 8th, 2008

Rumors have started circulating the net that Orlando Bloom had landed a $40m deal to star as the Prince in the Persia trilogy. These have spread like wildfire across our digital lands amidst uproar at the pay package and the choice of actor.

Coming Soon, wise as ever, did the clever thing of contacting Disney. Their response? These rumors are plainly false – and Orlando Bloom shall not be featuring in the trilogy.

Prince of Persia Shooting in Morocco and England March 10th, 2008

Variety have some important and significant news for us about the Prince of Persia movie adaptation. It seems that director Mike Newell has been scouting locations in Morocco, with studio work taking place at Pinewood, England. With shooting set to start in mid-June.

Choice of Morocco as a shooting location will be a boost for the North African country’s film biz.

[...]

“Producers are always looking for cheap places to shoot and Morocco is one of them,” said Dune Films’ Jimmy Abounouom, who is repping the Moroccan shoot for Disney.

Dune execs previously handled the Moroccan shoots of Tom Hanks starrer “Charlie Wilson’s War” and Kimberly Peirce’s “Stop-Loss.”

“Prince of Persia” will also lens in Blighty’s Pinewood Shepperton studios. Project is in pre-production. Abounouom told Variety he expects the Moroccan section of the shoot to start in mid-June, labor wrangles notwithstanding.

Thanks to Nettle (Caitie)

Jordan Mechner discusses Prince of Persia Movie January 5th, 2008

Gamasutra recently had a sit down talk with Prince of Persia creator, Jordan Mechner. I’ve posted the majority of the interview here because it provides a huge amount of insight into the development of the movie adaptation, and who am I to paraphrase Mr Mechner.

There’s been buzz about the Prince of Persia movie. Who’s producing? Who’s directing?

Jerry Bruckheimer is producing for Walt Disney Pictures. Mike Newell [ Donnie Brasco, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire] is the director.

What’s it like working with Jerry Bruckheimer?

I’ve only seen the tip of the iceberg, but he is extremely focused, detail-oriented and completely unflappable. Things that most people might consider a crisis — hurricanes, strikes, whatever — he handles very calmly and somehow it all works out. I can see why the studios feel confident entrusting him with hundreds of millions of dollars. If he’s making the movie, everything’s gonna be OK.

Is Ubisoft involved or does your license agreement allow you to do this separately?

They’re separate deals. Ubisoft has the videogame rights to Prince of Persia and Disney has the film rights.

How long has the script been in development?

I wrote the first draft and several revisions over a period of about a year and a half. Two more years of development followed, in which additional revisions were done by (in this order): Jeff Nachmanoff, Boaz Yakin, Doug Miro and Carlo Bernard.

That sounds like a crazy number of writers, but the original screenplay structure, plot and characters have survived the whole process pretty much intact.

It’s still very much the same movie John August and I pitched to Disney and Bruckheimer back in 2004 — it’s been streamlined in certain ways, souped up in others. It’s a good, solid story and I think it’ll be very satisfying on screen.

What are the differences between writing for a video game and writing for a film? How closely does the movie storyline correspond to the games?

If you summarize the movie in one sentence, it sounds identical to the first Sands of Time videogame, but scene by scene it’s actually completely different. It has to be, because games and film are such different mediums.

On the surface they’re deceptively similar — you can watch five minutes of an action-adventure videogame and think “this could be a movie,” or vice-versa — but structurally the requirements are totally different.

Here’s one example: The game kicks off with a cataclysm that basically destroys the world and turns all living creatures except for the three main characters into raging, murderous sand monsters. That was a great setup for the gameplay we had, which was “acrobatic Persian survival horror.”

But if you put that setup in a film, it would be a “B” movie, and that’s not the kind of movie Prince of Persia should be. Our model is classic epic, swashbuckling action-adventure movies like Raiders of the Lost Ark, Zorro, and Thief of Baghdad, with humor and romance and full of memorable characters. You can’t get there if you turn everybody into sand monsters on page fifteen.

I hope Sands of Time game fans will see the movie with an open mind and judge it based on the experience it creates for them, not by the standard of how closely it matches the 2003 video game. The game still exists and you can still have the experience of playing it. We’re not destroying it by making the movie. We’re creating something new that has to stand on its own, just as the game did.

Will there be a game title that goes along with the movie? Are there any new games in the works separate from the movie?

Sorry, but I can’t answer that question!

How close is the movie to starting filming and how does the strike affect it?

The movie is in pre-production. At this moment there’s no way to know how long the writers’ strike will last, or if the directors’ and actors’ guilds will strike as well. It’s a very insecure time for the whole industry.

A lot of big movies that were set to go, now aren’t. I was really hoping that Mike Newell would be the one to direct this movie and I was ecstatic when he agreed, but it was bittersweet because I only had about 24 hours to rejoice before the writers’ strike began.

I support my guild and the writers’ cause, so until the strike is resolved I can’t meet with Newell and the Bruckheimer execs or contribute further to the development of the movie. It’s frustrating because I’ve been dreaming of a Prince of Persia movie, basically, for 20 years, and now at this key moment when the project has finally found the right director and he’s brimming with enthusiasm and excitement, I can’t even meet with him.

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