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‘Cowboys & Aliens’: Jon Favreau Talks Creating Creatures

Steven Spielberg and Guillermo del Toro advised director, who aimed to ‘maintain some mystery and surprises.’ By Eric Ditzian Daniel Craig in “Cowboys & Aliens” Photo: Universal Pictures How do you surprise someone who’s seen it all — aliens who snatch bodies and aliens with dreadlocks and aliens who bloodily birth themselves from your stomach and aliens who phone home and aliens who eat cat food and great big blue aliens with tails they use for sex? Forget about the decades of classic extraterrestrial flicks that stream daily on TV, tablets and desktops. This year alone, movies like “Battle: Los Angeles,” “Super 8,” “Green Lantern” and “Transformers: Dark of the Moon” have hit the big screen, each trying to deliver not only eye-popping visuals but the post-credits comment between friends, “Damn, dude, have you ever seen something like that?” The answer, all too often and quite understandably, is, “Yes, yes, I have.” That’s the challenge “Cowboys & Aliens” director Jon Favreau faced as he sought to bring alien baddies to the Old West for a genre mash-up that hit theaters Friday (July 29). Favreau, though, counts himself lucky that he was able to lean on some of the most-established sci-fi players in Hollywood for help. The cinematic result is a race of aliens that land in a down-on-its-luck mining town, start to kidnap residents and eventually reveal themselves as extraterrestrial superfreaks on par with anything we’ve seen at the theater in recent years. Earlier this month in Montana, Favreau talked with MTV News about what makes a great big-screen alien , the special-effects decisions that helped his filmmaking process and the advice Steven Spielberg and Guillermo del Toro gave him along the way. (Beware of spoilers below.) “When you set out to make a movie like ‘Cowboys & Aliens,’ if you just play it as one joke for the whole movie, you’re in trouble,” Favreau explained. “You run out of gas after about the length of an ‘SNL’ sketch. So we really wanted to find an approach that could bear out a whole story. Part of it was identifying what kind of alien movie to make and what kind of cowboy movie to make.” The answer to the alien question was to reach back to classics of the ’70s and ’80s, before CG glam overtook practical effects as the preferred method of creating otherworldly creatures. “The alien movies I like the most are the ones I grew up with,” he said. “It was the pre-CG, almost verging on horror versions of alien films, like ‘Alien,’ ‘Aliens,’ ‘Predator’ and all the Spielberg stuff, and I include ‘Jaws’ in that, too. They were all the same kind of movie. “It was before you had computer effects, so you had to, through lighting and mystery and music, slowly reveal the creature. That technique has some somewhat been lost now, thanks to CGI. Even though we have CGI creatures eventually, we do use animatronics and we do use lighting and all the old techniques to reveal them.” The aliens in “Cowboys” have landed in an Arizona town to mine for gold — a metal as precious to humans as it is to these space travelers. What’s truly cool about them is their transformative quality: Their faces move and shift to expose layers below, and their bodies open up to unleash hidden, gooey hands. Gross and fascinating and scary, all at once. That’s exactly what Favreau was hoping to accomplish. ” ‘Predator’ and ‘Alien’: What was fun about those films is, as you saw the creatures, more and more layers were revealed, whether it was armor coming off with ‘Predator’ [and] weaponry, or in the case of ‘Alien,’ with the second set of teeth or the metamorphosis that it did from its egg state to the face-hugger to whatever that larval phase was when it busts out of your chest and finally into the big [creature],” he said. “It’s the shape-shifting quality of the aliens that I thought was really cool. We wanted to maintain some mystery and surprises with our creature.” To create those surprises, Favreau not only depended on his team of artists and effects masters, but on Spielberg and del Toro. “[Spielberg] was very involved with certain aspects of it preproduction, and one of those aspects was the alien design, because he’s been involved with so many,” he said. “And now seeing ‘Falling Skies’ and seeing ‘Super 8,’ I see that he was not just involved with his own films, but other films and projects he’s been producing and overseeing. He had a lot of specific insight into what things were important. “And Guillermo del Toro, I also know him, and he’s masterful,” Favreau added. “He always said you’ve got to get the silhouette right first and then you got to get the color right and then you got to get the detail right, in that order. He’s actually somebody who helped out and came in the editing room. I was showing him our animatronic work, because he’s very picky about that stuff, and when I knew it passed his muster, I felt very good.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Cowboys & Aliens.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Cowboys and Aliens’ Related Photos ‘Cowboys & Aliens’

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‘Cowboys & Aliens’: Jon Favreau Talks Creating Creatures

Justin Bieber’s fans banned from school after tribute T-shirts are branded ‘gang related’

By AMY WEBBER Hopelessly devoted: Justin Bieber fans’ prove they are of the die-hard variety [file picture] They had spent painstaking hours making tribute T-shirts to teen idol Justin Bieber. But a group of young girls were sent home from school this week after their outfits were branded ‘gang related’. The four teenagers had worn them to school on Friday before heading to the theatre to see Bieber’s new film, Justin Bieber: Never Say Never. When the girls showed up at school in their black T-shirts painted with ‘Bieber Crew’ security guards on duty and school officials judged the shirts to be ‘gang related’. They were given the option of either taking the shirts off or turning them inside out. The students of Roosevelt High School in Yonkers, New York, revealed to the website TMZ that they ‘were threatened with suspension.’ The homemade T-shirts were not viewed as a Bieber fanwear by the school and the principal called a meeting with the girls, their parents and the security guards. One of the girl’s parents said the principal informed the group that: ‘The T-shirts were inappropriate for school because they were gang related.’ The principal went on to say that if any of the girls were seen wearing their Bieber tees at school again the offence would result in suspension. Golden Boy: Justin Bieber’s new film, Justin Bieber: Never Say Never, is poised to take the number one spot at the U.S. box office this weekend The parent’s seem to be none too happy with the school’s ‘over the top reaction’ to their daughter’s choice in clothing with one parent fuming: ‘It’s ridiculous. They are good kids who love Justin Bieber.’ Roosevelt High School is defending their stance with a representative for the school stating: ‘The students were not banned from wearing shirts displaying the image of Justin Bieber.’ The representative for the high school also says the girls are exaggerating the harshness with which they were disciplined insisting: ‘Nor were they accused of being in a gang.’ Bieber’s new film, Justin Bieber: Never Say Never, arrived in theatres just in time for Valentine’s Day opening Friday across the U.S. and has already earned more than $12 million dollars. The documentary-style film tells the story of Justin Bieber, 16, from a young boy with a musical inclination through his metamorphosis to becoming the biggest teen heart throb in the world. JustinBieber Surprising us at the Rader Theatre with usher and jaden! 2/12/11 Justin Bieber MONSTERKILL ! source: dailymail

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Justin Bieber’s fans banned from school after tribute T-shirts are branded ‘gang related’