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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All the same, Mostow's “Surrogates” has something to prove and, the director hopes, something to say about our addiction to technology. Opening today, the futuristic Bruce Willis thriller about human robots arrives at a thorny time. It is the first Walt Disney Co. release following the company's Sept. 15 sacking of studio chief Dick Cook, and “Surrogates” is one of the very few adult-oriented dramas the family-focused studio makes in any year. The production itself was not always easy. Two senior Disney executives, speaking on condition that they not be named because they were criticizing their own movie, said that star Bruce Willis — who hasn't been in a major studio production for two years and whose recent box-office performance outside “Die Hard” movies has been uninspiring — did not get along well with Mostow and that the results were visible on-screen. “Everybody wants their movie to be successful enough so that they can work again. But this movie wasn't that expensive a movie,” the 47-year-old filmmaker says of his US$80 million production. “In a world where they are making US$200 million movies, I can't imagine that this is a make-or-break thing. I've made movies for US$1 million, and I've done movies for a lot more,” says Mostow, whose previous action films include 1997's “Breakdown” and 2000's “U-571.” Audience tracking surveys suggest “Surrogates” could open in first place at the box office, with projected weekend ticket sales of about US$20 million. It would be among the better openings for Willis outside of a “Die Hard” movie, about double the premieres for the actor's “Perfect Stranger” in 2007 (US$11.2 million), 2006's “16 Blocks” (US$11.9 million) and 2005's “Hostage” (US$10.2 million). The other new films in wide release are “Fame” and “Pandorum,” neither of which are expected to do that well. Mostow said the “Surrogates” story — a future where people never have to leave their homes because they can live, work and party vicariously through cosmetically flawless, robotic surrogates — could prove especially timely in an era when people are so tethered to technology they scarcely can go a minute without checking their iPhones. “It is addressing in some sense this generalized anxiety we have about technology,” Mostow says. “It's easy and fun to use, but what is it costing us?” |
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