RSS
 
  January 09, 2009 
 
Sendhil Ramamurthy Exclusive Video Interview
One of the stars of HEROES talks about what they’re currently shooting and how the Fugitives volume is going.
Michael Clarke Duncan Exclusive Video Interview
He talks about making The Slammin’ Salmon, playing Balrog in Street Fighter, and what’s up with Sin City 2
Carla Gallo Exclusive Video Interview
The former star of Undeclared talks Californication and Funny People
Critics Choice Awards Split Over Best Actress
Meryl Streep for DOUBT and Anne Hathaway for BRIDE WARS – just kidding!
David Goyer Exclusive Video Interview THE UNBORN
David talks Unborn, Flash Forward, Dark Knight, Magneto, Invisible Man, Comic Books, his writing process, and a lot more!
CHE Movie Review
Brian says Steven Soderbergh's CHE is an awesome accomplishment
Review: BRIDE WARS
Matt tolerates this chick flick
Review: REVOLUTIONARY ROAD
Matt wonders if it's too late to change his Worst of 2008 list
Review: LAST CHANCE HARVEY
Matt says it's a low-risk proposition betting on actors like Hoffman and Thompson
Are You Ready for Some Advertising?
What movies are getting sweet, expensive airtime during this year's Super Bowl?
8 Movie Clips from NOTORIOUS
Notorious charts the rise of Christopher ‘The Notorious B.I.G.’ Wallace
AMC Assures Us That MAD MEN Will Be Back This Summer
No deal yet with creator Mathew Weiner, but he's not really important is he?
The New Poster For TRANSFORMERS: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN
Oh yes, Revenge IS Coming
Colin Farrell Will Help Peter Weir Find THE WAY BACK
Ed Harris and Saoirse Ronan are also in talks to go to join the film
Trailer: THE LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT
Soak in the Dillahunt
Odette Yustman Roundtable Interview THE UNBORN
The beautiful star of Unborn talks about the challenges of making The Unborn and all her other work
 
ENTERTAINMENT INTERVIEWS
Jon Favreau Talks IRON MAN 2
6/5/2008
Posted by
ColliderStaff
     
<<< Page 1


Question:  I know that Samuel L. Jackson talked about expanding Nick Fury’s role for a second film.

 

Favreau:  Oh, good.

 

Question:  So, it’s news to you? 

 

Favreau:  I’m not in the loop on that unfortunately.  I think that Marvel has their hands full right now.  They have another big movie coming out right now, with ‘The Incredible Hulk’, and that’s coming out in a couple of weeks.  I know from when I was in that position on ‘Iron Man’ a lot of the heavy lifting for the studio comes in at this stage in the game.  They are partnering up with Universal trying to figure out how to roll out the marketing campaign for that, so a lot is riding on that film.  I know that they are done creatively working on it, but that is only half the game, so I think right now it’s a small studio.  There are not a lot of people and I’m sure they have their hands full on that one.  Hopefully when the dust settles everybody will be ready to get their head in the game and try to make some more movies.

 

Question:  It’s obvious that in the Hulk there is the super soldier serum and Captain America’s shield in your film.  So, is there a story there already with Captain America that you guys will put in?

 

Favreau:  Yeah, truth be told it’s more like instinctively we are gravitating towards combining certain properties, but you don’t really discover how that happens until you roll your sleeves up and get into the story telling.  You do casting.  There are a lot of ideas floating around.  We will have conversations as we all gather and paw the ground in the parking lots.  We’ll kick rocks around and start having conversations where we let our imaginations go wild.  It’s not like we’ve sat down with a dry erase board and wrote through the whole line of stories.  For me I’m pretty confident about who Iron Man is, what that character is, and what the rules of that world are.  Maybe Marvel knows, but I have no idea how you relate that reality to the reality of Thor, which seems like a very different set of rules to that universe.  Captain America I get, I understand how that would relate, or The Hulk.  Especially if you are working towards the idea of doing ‘The Avengers’  how do you make those worlds all feel consistent with one another in the look of the film, the casting of the film, and then the look of the visual effects.

 

Question:  I guess you will just have to direct all of them. 

 

Favreau: [laughs]  I would love to.  Clearly I have stated that ‘The Avengers’ would be fun.  But I look at their release schedule and they have announced ‘Iron Man 2’ for 2010 and then ‘Avengers’ for 2011.  I know from experience there is no way I could.  I don’t know what they have in mind, but there is no way that ‘The Avengers’ could be done in a year.  Either they are thinking about somebody else doing it or they have something up their sleeve that I don’t know.  I know these movies take time to get right.  I know that you have to have a good script.  You have to understand where you are headed when you go into it, otherwise you are relying on blind luck and hard work.  It’s good to have a game plan, especially at this stage in the game, it’s important to understand where all of this is going.  All of these properties are working together and I know Kevin has been very diligent about trying to keep a consistency.  I will look forward to having these conversations with the guys at Marvel, to laying out all the puzzle pieces and seeing how they fit together.

 

Question:  2010 is pretty soon if you think about it.  Is it just an understanding with Robert, you, and everyone just knows it will be a five year thing and you launch into it?

 

Favreau:  I don’t know how that works.  I’ve never worked in that world before.  I have never done a sequel to a film, nor have I in the past worked on anything where a sequel felt organic.  I think it’s the nature of ‘Iron Man’ because it comes from a serialized piece of source material, that it does lend itself to having sequels.  It’s all new ground for me, it’s new ground for Marvel, although they have been partnered up and done sequels with other studios.  There are a lot of different approaches you could take.  Hopefully we end up going for a sequel that is going to be bigger and better than the first one.  That’s not always the case with sequels.  Sometimes you end up trying to do just rush, and hit a release date.  Hopefully this sequel will be driven by the material and driven by good ideas.  I think that is what got Marvel the success that they have had as an independent studio.  I have no doubt that they are going to continue with that philosophy of letting the source material, and the quality of the story, dictate all the other decisions.  They are not shackled down by what a normal studio, with a release schedule, has to contend with.

 

Question:  But the team is pretty much the same?

 

Favreau:  I know that all the actors are definitely in active negotiations.  All of that has been agreed to, which is really encouraging, because I think the cast was a big part of the success of that as much if not more than ‘Iron Man’ the character.  I think that as long as you got all those people together, and you have a solid take on the material, then I expect great things.

 

Question:  ‘Demon in a Bottle’?

 

Favreau:  Yeah, I mean that one is definitely brought up a lot.  How do you handle ‘Demon in a Bottle’ and when does it come in?  I think it happened in the 80’s, which was 20 years after the first ‘Tales of Suspense’ so when do you play that card?  When do you play the ‘Demon in a Bottle’ card?  We sort of tip our hat to it, and certainly there is a lot to be mined there, but it’s all a puzzle.  How does it fit in?  ‘Demon in a Bottle’ also relates to ‘War Machine’ and James Rhodes’s arc.  What villains are you dealing with and how much effort do you put into revealing a whole set of characters.  We really spent most of the time dealing with Tony in this one, explaining who he is, and why he is the way that he is so that now ‘Iron Man’ comes to life.  You then have to reveal, I think, some heavy duty, heavy weight bad guys that you could then counter balance this incredibly powerful super hero.

 

Question:  You introduce ‘The Ten Rings’...

 

Favreau:  We have ‘The Ten Rings’ in there, but the Mandarin is still there.  I’m glad that we didn’t try to attack the Mandarin the first time around.  There is a lot that is very relevant about that character, in the pool of the landscape that we find ourselves in, but there is something off putting and distasteful about the way that the Mandarin had been presented back in the 60’s.  I don’t think that is relevant anymore.  How do you maintain the core spirit of what makes that villain so formidable without having something that either seemed out of our reality, as far as what his abilities are, or the way he is depicted. 

 

Question:  In ‘Demon in a Bottle’ there weren’t really a lot of villains.  It was when Tony realized he wants to be Iron Man again James was like ‘I don’t think so.’

 

Favreau:  So you have to create.  I also want to see what other movies are doing.  It seems that ‘Hancock’ is dealing with a lot of those issues too.  The comic book fans might see ‘Demon in a Bottle’ as a fresh story line but I haven’t seen ‘Hancock’ yet.  From what I’ve seen it seems there is a lot of imagery that seems to be shared.  Him flying through billboards and things.  The idea of the hero whose biggest enemy is himself, and him fighting through his demons, you want to come at the audience with something fresh.  You don’t want to feel like you are echoing something that somebody else is doing.  I think you have to look at the comics, look at what else Marvel is doing, but then you have to look at the landscape of super hero films.  There are so many out there.  I think that part of the reason that ‘Iron Man’ was so successful was that we really chose to break new ground in a new area tonally, cast wise, the way we depict the hero, what his abilities are.  It felt fresh in a genre that is beginning to feel stale if it’s not done with the proper amount of inspiration and a strong voice or tone.  I think as the summer roles out, and I’m really curious about ‘The Dark Knight’ to be honest with you.  That was this looming presence that we knew was going to be a great film.  I have no doubt that it’s going to be phenomenal.  I think our big saving grace was the fact that we had a couple of months between that film and us and there was room for both of us.  We weren’t fighting for shelf space.  Even though we weren’t going head to head, it was very clear that we could not take this character that on paper could seem very similar to Batman, and I have no doubt that just the inception of ‘Iron Man’ was a reaction to the DC.  It was definitely borrowed a lot from DC because here you have the billionaire bachelor guy, who was struggling with inner conflict, and he has no super powers.  He invents his own suit and his abilities come from himself.  He’s a self-made hero.  We had to really steer clear of everything that ‘The Dark Knight’ was doing.  I have tremendous respect for their cast, for [Christopher] Nolan, and so I want to see what they do.  I definitely don’t want to fight for the same territory as them.  There is plenty of room to tell these stories.  As a fan I’m really looking forward to it and I have a lot of respect for the way they approach the material too.  He has no second unit on his films.  He does all the directing himself.  If they are going to do some IMAX work then they shoot it in IMAX.  He put together a cast in a way that broke ground for me to be able to use the cast that I did.  They made sure the script was perfect before they started shooting it and that’s not typical for all super hero films.  A lot of times they just throw them together and try to do them as inexpensively as they can.  They try to chase the poster and chase the date.  They put a lot of care into that film.  I’m looking forward to see how it pays off.  From everything I’ve seen so far my hat is off to them.  I look forward to checking that film out. 

 

Question:  Coming down to Comic Con?

 

Favreau:  If I have something to talk about, that’s pretty kick ass.

 

 


<<< Page 1



 
     
More Collider Entertainment Stories >>>
Sendhil Ramamurthy Exclusive Video Interview

Michael Clarke Duncan Exclusive Video Interview

Carla Gallo Exclusive Video Interview

Critics Choice Awards Split Over Best Actress

David Goyer Exclusive Video Interview THE UNBORN

CHE Movie Review

Review: BRIDE WARS

Review: REVOLUTIONARY ROAD

Review: LAST CHANCE HARVEY

A Machine that Kills Bad People

Are You Ready for Some Advertising?

8 Movie Clips from NOTORIOUS