So we have to resort to this....
- Dino_Slayer
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Nada.
Last edited by Dino_Slayer on 19 May 2005, 07:14, edited 1 time in total.
"With all the respect, JPIV, could you please start rolling?"- Dino_Slayer
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- Garfielosaurus_rex
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Ok, so I went to http://filmforce.ign.com/jp3/
And I found some pretty "interesting" stuff...
You guys should have a look!
Unfortunatly... I don't know if all of it is a hoax or facts....
*nissin*
And I found some pretty "interesting" stuff...
You guys should have a look!
Unfortunatly... I don't know if all of it is a hoax or facts....
*nissin*
- Deepu_ravi
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i think it will only come out in 2006. /sad.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":(" border="0" alt="sad.gif" /> /sad.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid=":(" border="0" alt="sad.gif" />
[The lawyer seeks shelter from the T.Rex in a bathroom]
Dr. Alan Grant: Well where does he think he's going?
Dr. Ian Malcolm: When you gotta go, you gotta go
- Jurassic Park
Dr. Alan Grant: Well where does he think he's going?
Dr. Ian Malcolm: When you gotta go, you gotta go
- Jurassic Park
Wel, According to EOnline (the latest on Entertainment News...), They say:
Breeding a Bigger Monster: Apparently unhappy with the way Jurassic Park III turned out (even though it was a hit of T-rex proportions, with some $180 million in domestic box office), Universal and Jurassic Park's original director, Steven Spielberg, want to enlist Park author Michael Crichton for at least the story to guide the fourth installment, spies close to the project tell me. Impatience, it seems, got the best of the studio on number three, when Universal refused to wait for Crichton to come up with a storyline. Instead, they hired a series of writers and a near-disaster ensued--with director Joe Johnston arriving to begin work without a finished script. They pulled it off, but clearly, that's not the best way to make a movie.
I hear plans, so far, are to pull a Dallas number ("It was all a dream..."), pretend Jurassic Park III never happened and end the series, once and for all, with IV. Which means there'd be no place for William H. Macy and Téa Leoni, who both have options to return. For now, only Jeff Goldblum and Richard Attenborough are on the drawing board. Johnston's moving on, and Universal's considering a host of brand-name directors--including at least one Oscar winner. Even Spielberg may want to direct, but that, of course, means the film may never get made. (See Memoirs of a Geisha.) In either case, I suspect Spielberg's planning a more hands-on producing approach this time.
Breeding a Bigger Monster: Apparently unhappy with the way Jurassic Park III turned out (even though it was a hit of T-rex proportions, with some $180 million in domestic box office), Universal and Jurassic Park's original director, Steven Spielberg, want to enlist Park author Michael Crichton for at least the story to guide the fourth installment, spies close to the project tell me. Impatience, it seems, got the best of the studio on number three, when Universal refused to wait for Crichton to come up with a storyline. Instead, they hired a series of writers and a near-disaster ensued--with director Joe Johnston arriving to begin work without a finished script. They pulled it off, but clearly, that's not the best way to make a movie.
I hear plans, so far, are to pull a Dallas number ("It was all a dream..."), pretend Jurassic Park III never happened and end the series, once and for all, with IV. Which means there'd be no place for William H. Macy and Téa Leoni, who both have options to return. For now, only Jeff Goldblum and Richard Attenborough are on the drawing board. Johnston's moving on, and Universal's considering a host of brand-name directors--including at least one Oscar winner. Even Spielberg may want to direct, but that, of course, means the film may never get made. (See Memoirs of a Geisha.) In either case, I suspect Spielberg's planning a more hands-on producing approach this time.