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Showing posts with label Harrison Ford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harrison Ford. Show all posts

Friday, August 16, 2013

Press Junket Potluck: Harrison Ford & the Paranoia cast & crew

Film Flam Flummox


While specifically telling the story of a young, upstart technology whiz (Liam Hemsworth) who finds himself a pawn in a corporate espionage scheme between two tech titan archrivals (Gary Oldman and Harrison Ford), much like the film's rather general title, beyond the nuts and bolts of the plot, Paranoia addresses a lot of larger, universal issues about the ever-speeding advances in technology and its consequences on privacy and even morality. At a press conference at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills on Thursday, August 1, stars Ford, Hemsworth, Amber Heard, Lucas Till, and director Robert Luketic discussed those concerns of more wide, real world-reaching relevance touched on by the film.

The Real World Relationship with Technology and Privacy (or Lack Therof)

"I've been an early adopter of technology since I was a kid. It's always been a part of my life, and this movie really spoke to me; it was sort of something I've been thinking about since Twitter and Facebook and all this data gathering and data farming. When I read the script, it was like 'Oh my God, this is so timely.' We didn't realize how timely it was, given what's happening with [Edward] Snowden and all this information [being made public]. I realize now how powerful [technology] is."
--Robert Luketic

"I don't think we've caught up with regards to mechanisms to protect information at the same rate as our ability to gather that information. I think it could not be more relevant to what's going on today with Snowden and [Julian] Assange and the whole idea of personal privacy and liberty and how that conflicts or can conflict with a more omnipotent system of gathering. That's exactly what's so scary about it. Our personal liberties are always going to be in some conflict with our necessity to be protected and those two can serve as enemies to one another."
--Amber Heard

"One of the things the film talks about which I think is to me the most interesting--because I'd always presumed there was no such thing as privacy--is that if you offer people something or create a perceived need or value in a service that you offer, people want that newest wrinkle in technology and will give up freedoms and personal privacy in order to have it. That's the nature of marketing for this kind of device or devices."
--Harrison Ford

"What I think is interesting too is one of the biggest threats these days is cyber-warfare, and how dangerous that is. They talk about terrorist groups now hacking into power plants and all these things that are now run by computers. We're all so connected by the Internet; we don't have these things in place to protect . We've advanced our technology so quickly that we haven't thought about all the other repercussions with it."
--Liam Hemsworth

The Changing Value of Hard Work in Relation to Success

"For me, there very much is a generation that, as we say in the opening of the movie, was promised a lot of things--'if you went to college, you're going to get a great job.' As we've seen with the economic downturn and the greed of certain sectors of the corporate world, it's not so. So we have sort of, you can call them, 'lost generation.' There is a youth movement, I think, that wants to very much offer hope and promise, and I think the moral in our movie is not to go to the dark side because that sort of cutthroat ruthlessness is ultimately not going to service you on a spiritual level."
--Robert Luketic

"I think you would like to hope that when you work hard at something you get somewhere, but I guess it's not always the case, but I think sticking to good values and good morals would be the key [to success]." --Liam Hemsworth

Balancing Ambition with a Moral Compass

"I think it's tough. I believe that I've approached my work and what I do as a good person. I like people that are good and have good intentions. I believe you can be successful without having to sacrifice that position, and that's the sort of character that I was attracted to in this piece. [Liam Hemsworth's Alex] betrays who he is essentially gives up everything that has anchored him in the world, supported him in the world, for this fantasy, this illusion of what life on the other side of the river would be like. I found it was an interesting dichotomy between those things."
--Robert Luketic

"I don't think that ambition and morality are mutually exclusive, and I think it would be pedantic to assume that we had to choose between them, even in movies."
--Amber Heard

"Competition Breeds Innovation"?

"[My] character's perceptions about competition creating innovation are I think are appropriate to the story that we're telling and world that he lives in. It doesn't apply [to me and my career]. Acting's not about competing; acting's about cooperating. Acting's about collaboration. It's about utility and usefulness, your capacity to add to the work that has already been done and will be done, and you're just part of a team, so I never feel competitive about acting."
--Harrison Ford

The Final Word

"I don't want to be a slave to electronic devices. I don't want to be 'connected' to my friends. I don't want to send snapshots of my dog and cute pictures of my family life to my friends. I don't want to be 'liked' by pushing a button. I use all of this technology to basically replace devices that I had in the past which work just fine. I don't really use it. I like books. I don't like to read things on the Internet. I don't have much of a connection [to technology]."
--Harrison Ford

Paranoia opens in cinemas today, Friday, August 16, from Relativity Media.

Buy the Paranoia DVD here.
Buy the Paranoia Blu-ray here.
Buy the Paranoia soundtrack here.
Buy Joseph Finder's Paranoia novel here.
Buy Joseph Finder's Paranoia audiobook here.


(Special thanks to Robert Luketic, Mammoth Advertising, and Relativity Media; photo courtesy Robert Luketic)

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Monday, March 11, 2013

F3PR: Harrison Ford to receive CinemaCon Lifetime Achievement Award

Film Flam Flummox

PRESS RELEASE


HARRISON FORD TO RECEIVE
CINEMACON LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD”

SUMMIT ENTERTAINMENT TO RELEASE
ENDER’S GAME STARRING FORD
ON NOVEMBER 1, 2013

WASHINGTON D.C. (March 11, 2013) – Legendary actor Harrison Ford will receive the “CinemaCon Lifetime Achievement Award” at this year’s CinemaCon, it was announced today by the convention’s Managing Director Mitch Neuhauser. CinemaCon, the largest and most important convention for the motion picture theatre industry, will be held from April 15-18, 2013 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas at which time more than 5,000 industry members will be gathering. Ford will be presented with this special honor at the “CinemaCon Big Screen Achievement Awards” ceremony to take place on Thursday evening, April 18, in The Colosseum at Caesars Palace. The Coca-Cola Company, the official presenting sponsor of CinemaCon, will host the final night gala awards program.

“With a career spanning five decades, Harrison Ford has brought some of the most memorable characters of our time alive on the big screen,” noted Neuhauser. “From Han Solo to Indiana Jones, he has showcased his innate ability to embrace and mold these remarkable roles into characters that will forever be remembered by movie lovers around the world for decades to come. We could not be more honored to present this years ‘CinemaCon Lifetime Achievement Award’ to such a remarkable actor, Harrison Ford.”

Ford can be seen later this year in Ender’s Game, which is set to be released by Summit Entertainment, a LIONSGATE company, on November 1, 2013. The epic adventure film based on the best-selling, award-winning novel stars Ford as Colonel Hyrum Graff who, along with the International Military, is training the best young minds for an epic battle that will determine the future of Earth and save the human race. Ender’s Game also stars Ben Kingsley, Asa Butterfield, Hailee Steinfeld and Viola Davis with Abigail Breslin. In April, Ford will be seen in Legendary Entertainment’s 42 as Branch Rickey, the Major League Baseball executive who helped shatter baseball's color barrier by making Jackie Robinson the first African-American player in the MLB. And in the fall of 2013, Ford will star in the Robert Luketic thriller Paranoia.

Harrison Ford’s Hollywood career was launched following his portrayal of hot rod demon Bob Falfa in George Lucas’ 1973 Oscar®-nominated hit, American Graffiti. Four years later, he reunited with Lucas when he landed the now-legendary role of Han Solo in Star Wars: Episode IV--A New Hope. In 1981, Ford brought Indiana Jones to life on the big screen for Steven Spielberg in the Best Picture-nominated Raiders of the Lost Ark, reprising the heroic character in three sequels: Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. He earned an Academy Award® nomination in 1986 for his compelling role as detective John Book in Witness. In 2000, the American Film Institute honored him with their Lifetime Achievement Award. And, in addition to receiving four nominations from the Hollywood Foreign Press for his roles in Sabrina, The Fugitive, The Mosquito Coast and Witness, Ford was revered by the organization with the 2002 Cecil B. DeMille Award at the annual Golden Globes ceremony. His many other credits include Francis Coppola’s Oscar®-nominated epic Apocalypse Now, The Conversation, Lucas’ Star Wars: Episode V--The Empire Strikes Back and Star Wars: Episode VI--Return of the Jedi, Ridley Scott’s iconic sci-fi classic Blade Runner, Mike Nichols’ Oscar®-nominated romantic comedy Working Girl and his 1991 drama Regarding Henry, Patriot Games, Clear and Present Danger, Presumed Innocent, Air Force One, What Lies Beneath, K-19: The Widowmaker, Extraordinary Measures, Morning Glory and Cowboys & Aliens. Several of these movies represent some of the highest-grossing films in their respective release years.

About CinemaCon

CinemaCon will attract upwards of 5,000 motion picture professionals from all facets of the industry -- from exhibition and distribution, to the equipment and concession areas -- all on hand to celebrate the moviegoing experience and the cinema industry. From exclusive Hollywood product presentations highlighting a slate of upcoming films, to must-see premiere feature screenings, to the biggest stars, producers and directors, CinemaCon will help jumpstart the excitement and buzz that surrounds the summer season at the box office.

CinemaCon is delighted to have both the International Cinema Technology Association (ICTA) and National Association of Concessionaires (NAC) as its tradeshow partners. CinemaCon is also delighted to have as its official presenting sponsor, The Coca-Cola Company, one of the industry’s greatest and highly regarded and respected partners in the world of the movies. Additional information on CinemaCon, the Official Convention of NATO, can be found at www.cinemacon.com.

About NATO

The National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) is the largest exhibition trade organization in the world, representing more than 30,000 movie screens in all 50 states, and additional cinemas in 57 countries worldwide. NATO’s membership includes the largest cinema chains in the world and hundreds of independent theatre owners, too.


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