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'Where The Wild Things Are' might be entirely reshot

The unfortunate rumor spreading around the web is that Warner Bros is incredibly unhappy with Spike Jonze's adaptation of Where The Wild Things Are. So unhappy, in fact,  that they want the entire film reshot. Do you think it's a good idea to trash the script and rewrite a whole new movie at this point?

So let's go over what we do know about this film:


Spike Jonze and Dave Eggers wrote the script and the film itself has been kept secret, in terms of plot, costuming, effects, and....well, everything. The image above is one of two that was released by Jonze to promote the film. (Even though it doesn't come out until next year.)

If you recall, last Friday, one of our users uploaded a test clip from the film. As the clip spread around the net, Warner Bros pulled it off of nearly every site. I personally loved the clip: the somber tone, the choice to go with live action (as opposed to animation), and the preliminary ideas for the Wild Things. Listening to the audio, it was clear this wasn't an actual finished product. The sound had clearly not been mastered. Spike Jonze quickly responded and said it was just an FX test shot.

But I adored it. The original book was a bit creepy and dealt with loneliness. That's why it was so awesome and why I clung to it so tightly. Everything I've read about the script Dave Eggers wrote expanded up on the idea that Max created the world of the Wild Things in rebellion against his mother.

Ok, so maybe I'm reading way too far into this. But get this:
  • Yet I'm hearing that just such a massive reshoot is what is on the table right now. And it's not because of technical issues, unless you want to consider the lead kid actor and the script technical issues. Sources tell me that the suits at Legendary and Warner Bros are not happy with Max Records, the actor playing Max, the mischievous boy who is crowned King of the Wild Things. Worse than that, they don't like the film's tone and want to go back to the script drawing board, possibly losing the Spike Jonze/Dave Eggers script when they do it. Apparently the film is too weird and 'too scary,' and the character of Max is being seen as not likable (check out some of the test screening responses that Slashfilm is running).

    Where The Wild Things Are screened for a test audience in Pasadena late last year; my friend BC, who watches a horror movie a day, caught the screening and liked what he saw, but I've also been told that the movie is 'subversive,' which is just the sort of thing that drives studio suits up the wall. The film, I keep hearing, is pretty great at this early stage of post-production, but it could very possibly not be a commercial movie. You can imagine the panic at Warner Bros when they realized they'd made a reportedly 75 million dollar kiddie art house film.
NO NO NO NO. TERRIBLE IDEA. Do you realize this means we may lose all the individuality, the creativity, and intelligent turns this movie probably has? This kind of reaction comes from people whose main concern is box office receipts, not creative integrity. UGHHHHH.

I don't know what more Warner Bros wants. You hired Spike Jonze. And Dave Eggers. And Maurice Sendak was a consultant! What did you expect? A literal adaptation? When I hear that the movie is "subversive," I want to throw money at the studio just to prove I want to see it.

Sigh. Cinematical is running this story and asking the question, "Is Spike Jonze's adaptation doomed?" At first, I wrote it off as melodramatics, but it looks like they're spot on. A good, credible, and intelligent adaptation of this movie seems doomed.

Posted on 02/21/2008 1:47 PM Visits: 379
My name is Horace.: 02/21/2008 3:07 PM
I think re-shooting is a terrible idea. I didn't get a chance to see the clip, but everyone I know that did has said they liked what they saw.
This late in the game it sounds like an awful plan.
rockinponda: 02/21/2008 3:24 PM
"Apparently the film is too weird and 'too scary,' and the character of Max is being seen as not likable" - And? I didn't like Max in the book, either, he's a brat. That didn't take a way from the book as a whole, or the story....
"The film, I keep hearing, is pretty great at this early stage of post-production, but it could very possibly not be a commercial movie."
"I don't know what more Warner Bros wants. You hired Spike Jonze. And Dave Eggers. And Maurice Sendak was a consultant! What did you expect?" - Exactly! If they wanted something commercial for kids or whatever it is they thought they were looking for, maybe they should have hired Chris Columbus or even Brad Bird (even though then it would be animated)! And how much money would they waste outright starting from scratch on a film that's in post-production?!

Gee whiz, how can these suits who make so much money be so incredibly stupid?
Gahh, I had a feeling this was going to happen. I was wondering why Warner Bro's would put so much money intp something that [unfortunately] most people would find boring...[basing my whole opinion on the movie on that little clip that wasn't even in the movie]....I mean, when it comes to childrens movies...no one [with money..] is interested in paying for something that will make their kids think...they want to distract they're children, not make them ask more questions....

I hate that.
Chopstixfour11: 02/21/2008 4:45 PM
"Apparently the film is too weird and 'too scary,' and the character of Max is being seen as not likable"

Am I the only one who (despite loving the book dearly) was creeped out by the story? Max always came off as being a jerk to me, so if they managed to make him unlikable in the movie, well then they hit the nail on the head as far as I'm concerned. I want so bad for this movie not to be a typical and commercialized kids movie.
gloomsday: 02/22/2008 11:17 AM
Without the reshoot, this movie has the potential to go down as a cult piece like a Nightmare Before Christmas. They should really be looking into dvd sales and potential hype brought about by the fact that it's not a thoughtless kids' waste of media.
emberwolf18: 02/24/2008 3:42 PM
Oh reshooting would be a horrible horrible idea... I mean I always found the book to be delightfully odd and creepy and totally agree with everyone else on the whole max being unlikeable in the book. The whole start to the book is the fact that Max is a brat and his mom sends him to his room... Oh that is the thing I will be most excited to see... see how they do the whole room changing thing like in the books... I stared at those pics for hours wishing my room would do that. XD
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