Showing posts with label TMNT2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TMNT2. Show all posts

An Interview with #TMNT2 Star Stephen Amell


Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows
Director: Dave Green
Writers: Josh Appelbaum, André Nemec
Starring: Megan Fox, Stephen Amell, Will Arnett, Tyler Perry
MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for sci-fi action violence
Official Socials: Site | FacebookTwitter | Instagram |  IMDb
Release Date: June 3, 2016
Hashtag#TMNT2
The Turtles return to save the city from a dangerous threat.




In an unmarked room on the 18th floor inside a squawky Miami Beach hotel, we got to sit down with Stephen Amell as he talked to us about his new role as Casey Jones in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of The Shadows out June 3, 2016. We spoke about the audition process to acting alongside some pretty big cast members (nope, we aren’t talking Megan Fox. I’ll give you a clue; they are 6-feet-tall, green and a pack of brothers.)

Q:Casey Jones is a very iconic character, were you a fan of the Turtles growing up?

Stephen: “Yeah! I started watching the cartoons and I can’t remember Casey Jones so much as a cartoon because I was young when I was watching the animated series but then obviously the movies came along and Casey was a big part of that. When I was thinking as a kid watching the Turtles, someone asked me with person did you want to play and I think it might’ve been Casey Jones subconsciously in my very young brain cause he was like a hockey player and he wasn’t a Turtle and I couldn’t totally conceptualize myself being one of those. I’m been a big fan for a while [of Casey Jones”.]

Q: I was actually in New York when you guys were filming so I got to see a couple of shots you were doing, so how does it feel like a year later that the film is finally coming out?

Stephen:“I’ll tell you, the whole thing is actually a little surreal because what I’m used to is not instant gratification but I’ve seen the season finale of Arrow. I watched it a week ago, it’s not the finished cut but it’s very close. It’s weird because I know we filmed a lot of stuff, I know it’s not all in the movie, I know we did some additional photography so it’s not like I really know how it all pieces together. It’s totally surreal. Not only that but the biggest factor is you are filming these scenes either with guys in platforms wearing CGI suits where you are talking to ping-pong balls that are above their heads or once you get those scenes on their feet you’re filming with nobody there. So the idea that I’m going to see a scene where I’m standing in the same space as a 9 foot tall Turtle is mind-blowing.

Q: What are you bringing to this rendition of Casey Jones?

Stephen: “I think i’m bringing some enthusiasm and some fun. I’m brining also an origin story that’s unique to any rendition of Casey Jones which is also allows me a little bit of freedom and a little bit of creative license. I think it’s important when you are doing any type of character that has been represented before. Obviously there has been so many Batman’s right? Of course Batman has this iconic moment of his parents dying and it shaping this legacy for him. Concurrently they’ve always done something with each character that is his own. For me, with Casey Jones is him being a corrections officer and wanting to do the right thing and wanting to play by the rules and the fact that I keep running up against authority figures don’t see things the way I want them to see them leads me down to a different path.”

Q: So your character uses sport’s equipment to fight. If you had to fight someone evil in real life, what piece of sport’s equipment do you think you will use?

Stephen: “I feel like a baseball bat. It’ll probably have to be a baseball bat. I mean, maybe a golf club but I don’t know about that. A baseball bat is the way to go probably. It worked in Inglorious Bastards - we will go with that.

Q: What was your favorite scene to film in the movie?

Stephen: “That’s tough. Well there is the scene I was my most favorite to film and that was actually when Casey meets the Turtles for the first time. There’s actually three answers here. There is the scene where I meet the Turtles for the first time because that actually was the first big dialogue scene I shot and that was an incredibly important moment in filming for me because Casey see’s the Turtles and he see’s what they are and what they look like - he think’s they are aliens. He thinks they might eat him so he had to react in a crazy, out-there, oh my god manner and it’s important I can bring that element of the character in. One of the producers [Andrew Form] after we shot that scene, we were at lunch which is actually dinner because we  were filming nights and he was like ‘Amell, feels like we got a Casey Jones. Feel’s like we’ve got a Turtles movie! This is cool!’ and that just instilled, he was just making an off-the-cut remark I assume, me with the confidence that I was on the right path and it gave me confidence in all the other scenes we shot. The scene that i’m most proud of actually is a scene I have with Laura Linney in the movie and I’m a huge admirer of her work. This was a very out-sized scene and it was very early not necessarily in the filming but in the performance in terms of chronologically in the movie and afterwards she tapped me on the shoulder and gave me a wink and was like, “That was pretty good.”

Q: What would you like the viewers to take away from the movie?

Stephen: “I think we made a fun superhero movie. I think it's a movie that has real stakes, has real fill-ins, but has relatable characters and because of that has stakes that you care about. There are a lot of moving pieces in the movie, there is Shredder’s whole operation, there’s Bebop and Rocksteady, there’s Casey and his story, April and her story, Vern and his story and then the Turtles. I know the main focus of our director, Dave Green, was to really focus on the relationship between the brothers and I think personally that’s what made Turtles a universal property and property that has stood the test of time is that ultimately even thought this is an incredibly unique set of circumstances with four teenage mutant ninja turtles. It is in fact a story about four brothers and everyone can relate to that.


Q: For all your fans who know your previous work on Arrow, they might be thinking “okay, he is playing a vigilante there, and a vigilante here. How are you trying to bring some freshness to Casey Jones that’s different from Arrow?

Stephen: “If you don’t go see the movie you’re going to think ‘that’s the vigilante guy playing a vigilante guy’ then I can’t do anything for you. If you form your opinion based on the trailer, still can’t do anything for you. If you come out of the first couple of scenes, if by the time Casey meets the Turtles you’re not like, ‘ah, this guy is different!’ then you don’t want it to be different - cause it really is. Oliver is closer to the Turtles you know what I mean? Oliver is closer to being a ninja, Oliver thinks - he is analytical. Casey Jones has more guts than brains and I think he is actually pretty funny.

Q: What was the audition process like? What made you interested in playing Casey Jones?

Stephen: “The fact that it was Casey Jones, the fact that it was Paramount which is a studio I have a lot of respect for based on the products they have put forward and some of the actors they have a long-time relationship with. As for the actual audition process I had a meeting with Brad [Fuller] and Andrew [Form] at Platinum Dunes who were introduced to me by by my managers as ‘the Michael Bay guys’ which I thought was cool. We had a meeting, it wasn’t really about Casey Jones because we didn’t think there was any chance at all with my schedule at Arrow that i’ll be able to shoot a movie like this because it wasn’t being built for me. It’s not ‘Casey Jones: Out of The Shadows’ - you’ve got to line up everyone’s schedule and my schedule (which was last) so when we found out that I was actually going to be able to do it, we knew it was starting to float around and we knew they were getting close to hiring somebody and when we got the go-ahead from Warner Brothers actually talking about dates, like finished date and start day for Arrow and they are willing to let us lock both of those in - I did a tape that afternoon. I want to say that was a Tuesday and on Friday afternoon I was testing with Megan in LA and Monday morning I get a phone call from my agents and manger, which is always a good call to get, and they said ‘you are to be expecting Michael Bay’s phone call.’

Q: What was the dynamic like on set?

Stephen: “It was fun, Will Arnett is a funny guy - he really, really is. Megan has a really cool relationship with the boys that play the Turtles. The boys that play the Turtles have to spend a lot of time together from coming in the morning and getting the dots put on their face, wearing outfits that quite frankly make them look ridiculous, to all of the plate work they have to do which is having experience just a bit of it. When I film on The Flash it is not fun. It is monotonous, like repetitious busy work. All of that to say, they bust on each other all the time. They are always making fun of one another and when they started making fun of me, by like hour four of the first time I filmed with them, I was like ‘wow, good. I’m being accepted here.’ They were super quiet and stand-offish I would’ve been worried.


Q: What was something new you learned or did for the first time while making this film? 

Stephen: “There is obviously the CGI elements that i’m not particularly used to and then it really amounts to how specific everyone gets. This was much more collaborative because they just have more time. One of the scenes you see, one of the publicity stills that was released of Megan and I - i’m standing looking at something, it doesn’t matter what i’m looking at, the point is this was something they realized right in the middle of filming that I was in a spot and I needed to see something that I would clearly recognize so they wrote a scene, we filmed it and it is totally in the movie and it’s actually a bit of a crucial part. I learned that these things can kinda grow and evolve and as a result it informed my performance a little bit because I always try and be easy-going in terms of my choices. I don’t want to do anything halfway but I don’t walk into a scene with an idea of how it’s going to be before we put it on its feet. To see how collaborative this process was, to see how much of a process it was eye-opening for me.

Q: You have a long history of doing acting jobs on TV through now you are moving on to TMNT which is a movie - what’s it like making that switch from TV to movie?

Stephen: “The nuts and the bolts of it, they are the same. It really is the same thing, it’s a camera and lens. Time affords you the opportunity to make a much more personal vision, right? There are certain television shows that are technically television shows but I mean is Game of Thrones really a television show or is it a 9-hour movie that comes out every year with the amount of time they have to film? It allows them to film long steady cam shots and we are required on TV to keep our schedule and we are producing at our maximum rate so when we are building up a scene of course they storyboard it but it’s like, what does it look like? Well it could just be a guy on a steady cam doing it and that was very different. The scale was bigger, I was expecting it actually to be a little bit more stilted and in fact it was the exact opposite. Feature film making allows you to make a incredibly personalized vision because if you don’t make your day, you just come back the next day. We usually shoot 14 1/2 hours on Turtles if we have a busy day and when we were out filming shooting nights we would start filming when the sun went down and as the sun was coming up there wouldn't’ be any rush they would just be like ‘sun’s coming up, let’s just come back tomorrow.’ When we were shooting on stages, we shot the most luxurious days it’s like start at 8:00 AM finish at 6:30 PM, go to dinner - it was quite the experience.

Q: Do you feel this sequel sets up for a third movie after? 

Stephen: “Absolutely. The title is sort-of indicative of hopefully where we are going to leave everybody. The movie is a lot about what is everyone’s role. What is Casey’s role? Is he suppose to be a corrections officer or is he supposed to be a vigilante? What are the Turtles role? Are they suppose to be the face-less protectors of the city or are they suppose to step out and represent something to New York City which is a place they obviously love very much. Everyone eventually comes to a conclusion the end of the movie and I had so much fun filming it. I certainly hope they release another movie because it was a blast.”


Q: In this day-of-age, everyone has a Twitter account. Playing iconic characters, not everyone is going to be happy. How do you handle the nay-sayers at the end of the day? 

Stephen: “First of all, it feels incredibly rare if I get horrible messages. There has been a very, very loud factional people that seem to think Arrow was one show for a while and now it’s becoming another show - this is simply a problem you run into because we just finished our 92nd episode, you know what I mean? Some of the best shows on television have been their best shows since season six, season seven and season eight. So I learned early on, it’s actually when we were shooting the pilot of Arrow that the opposite of love is not hate - it is apathy. If nobody cared then nobody would write anything. When I moved to LA in 2010 I could’ve walked out in the middle of Hollywood Boulevard in boxers shouting some obscene message and nobody would’ve cared. Now, not so much. You just have to learn to roll with it and the other important thing is, especially with Twitter, if it’s not something people are willing to attach their name to why would I take it seriously.

Q: You post a lot of photos of your adorable daughter, what does she think about her dad being buddies with the Turtles? I remember you posted something along the lines that she saw the trailer. What does she think?

Stephen: “She did, she totally doesn’t understand it yet. She doesn’t like movie theaters either, she’ll get used to it but she walked in and was like ‘what is this?’ and the lights went down and she was like ‘oh my goood.’ Eventually we will sit down and watch some curated scenes from the movie and see how she does but she knows she’s going to the premiere and she knows i’m buddies with the Turtles.

Q: Do you have any upcoming projects?

Stephen: “My cousin and I [Robbie Amell] crowdsourced financed a film called Code 8 that we are going to try and shoot during my next hiatus. I go back to shoot season 5 of Arrow in July. This press tour haven’t really allowed me to do anything during my hiatus which is probably for the best because I really haven’t had a break since June of 2014 - I’ve been going pretty straight-through. Next hiatus will depend a lot on how the movie does. If the movie does well and they want me to be in it, they are going to have to work on a pretty specific timeline and I would be back as Casey Jones.

Make sure you guys go out and watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows starring Stephen Amell in a theater near you starting June 3rd!

An Interview With #TMNT2 Producer Brad Fuller


Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows
Director: Dave Green
Writers: Josh Appelbaum, André Nemec
Starring: Megan Fox, Stephen Amell, Will Arnett, Tyler Perry
MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for sci-fi action violence
Official Socials: Site | FacebookTwitter | Instagram |  IMDb
Release Date: June 3, 2016
Hashtag#TMNT2
The Turtles return to save the city from a dangerous threat.




We were thrilled to be given the chance to sit down with Brad Fuller, a producer on Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of The Shadows out June 3, 2016. Fuller worked on the first TMNT film back in 2014 and has returned for the sequel. Read below to find out why he and his partner, Andrew Form, set out to produce the TMNT movies, the difference between the first and second film and his thoughts on Stephen Amell. Make sure to also read our interview with Stephen here.

Q: What made you want to produce the TMNT films?

Brad: “I’ve been producing a lot of horror movies and I say ‘I’ but myself, Michael Bay and my partner Andrew Form. I think we were all tired of just working with people who were screaming and who were dying and we started thinking about if we were going to broaden our company, what should we do. The natural extension, I guess, was because Michael is so well-known for action was for us to try and make that jump and around the time we signed our deal at Paramount in 2009 or 2010 they had the rights to this [TMNT movie rights]. My kids ended up saying to me, ‘please do a superhero movie and to me the turtles are superhero so we went for it.”

Q: You’re a producer but a lot of people don’t know what that means exactly, can you describe what your role was in the creation of the movies?

Brad: “It’s different from the first movie to the second movie, there is things to do. The way I look at my job as a producer is more like a traffic cop and just keeping the traffic moving. I guess to get specific, we are responsible for developing the script, hiring the director, finalizing the budget, dealing with the studio and we are very involved in the marketing campaigns of the movies as well.

Q: I saw a couple of scenes of the film and saw the turtles visit Brazil. What made you guys want to have them travel to a different country?

Brad: “The first movie took place entirely in New York and the movie did very well internationally so we wanted to go to a different locale that people don’t see everyday and those falls were an amazing location. It just felt right for a great action sequence. I am very proud of that action sequence, we’ve been working on that for about two years. When we started the movie that was the first thing we did.

Q: Were you worried about taking on the turtles as it has such a big cult following, especially from people who were raised in the 90’s?

Brad: “Very. Very worried, but we are used to it because when you go to Freddy Krueger and you re-make Freddy Krueger, a lot of people don’t like that. It kind of feels like no matter what we do, they are going to come after us. So we kind of be true to ourselves and what we think is the fun story to tell and the right tone. No matter what we do there are a lot of haters. I wouldn’t say we are immune to it because we pay attention and think there is a lot of things to be learned from the internet and what people have to say, but you can’t let that be your sole source of information coming in.”


Q: Are there any more superhero movies we could be expecting soon?

Brad: “This is all I have time for really. We have this and then the Purge and the Ouija [movie].”

Q: What is it like to produce a superhero movie, what is the budget like and such compared to that of a horror movie?

Brad: “We don’t talk about the budget specifically, but I would say this to you, we made the Purge for $2.5 million dollars - and I think that would cover one day shooting on this movie [laughs]. I don’t know what the number is but it’s just totally different but, there is a lot of similarities also. It’s different because if we have a problem in the turtle movie, we have money in the budget where we can fix the problem. On the Purge there is no margin of error. We shoot for 32 days and if you don’t have it for that 32 days, then you don’t have it. Unless the studio gives you more money to go back and do reshoots. But the other part of these movies that is a huge plus and a huge minus is that our seven leads are all computer generated. Which allows us the liberty to change what they say, not so much what they do, but what they say up to we were changing dialogue coming out of the turtles mouth as recently as last Friday (six days prior to this interview). Now, if that were an actor I couldn’t do that with the movie coming out in two weeks. Working with the turtles is very expensive, they are as expensive as any movie star there is and there are four of them so you can do the math. It is very expensive to do that but that doesn’t affect me in the film making process, it’s more of a post issue.

Q: What do you think sets the TMNT franchise a part from other superhero franchises?

Brad: “We talk about that in our offices a lot. I think most of the superhero movies that I’m seeing now there is a lot of darkness and brooding, and we wanted to make the happiest and most fun superhero movie so that we can be different from everything else that’s was out there. Also I think our movie plays younger, it’s more of a family film as opposed to something. I have two kids who are 19 and 23 - it’s not their movie if I weren’t their dad. They would be more interested in seeing Captain America than they would this. But we are trying to stake out the area of the market where families can go with their kids and have a lot of fun but have big movie action like with that scene you saw (referring to Question #3) I think is incomparable to anything I’ve seen this year. The turtles are making jokes as they are going through the whole thing, so that’s the difference in tone.

Q: You have produced different genres of movies, which is your favorite?

Brad: “I guess my favorite to make, we made a movie last year that bombed called Project Almanac. That was a great experience because I felt like in that movie we worked with a guy who’s never directed a movie before and I’ve worked with a lot of first-time directors and the difference between Dean Israelite, who is now making [the new] Power Rangers [movie], and everyone else was Dean was as talented as a director I’ve ever seen first time out. So as a producer it is a great joy to watch someone who comes on set, has no experience, and naturally knows how to do it. I’ve known Michael Bay for 35 years and we grew up together, and I kind of saw the same thing in Bay when he was a kid so from a personal standpoint working with Dean as a director was really kind of gratifying. The other side of it is the ego side of it. You want to make a movie that people see or when people come up to me, producers aren’t very high-profile  and it doesn't happen very often but, if my kids tell people what I do they’ll know the Turtles movie and that is very fun too.

Q: How is this film different from the previous?

Brad: “I think if you’re going to make a second movie, you have to give the people a reason to go out and see it and I think that in our first movie we were a little bit too dark at times. I don’t think parents could take a 7 year old to that movie there is some gun play shooting and bombs on a wall by people’s heads and I would hear from people that they didn’t take their kids to see the movie. What we tried to do this time was make the movie totally family-friendly on one level but then still up the anti on the action. What you saw (referring to Question #3) was arguably the biggest action sequence in the movie. But there are two other sequences that are equally as big so I guess you have to up the anti on the action and character wise you have to refine the characters so that people keep coming back and wanting to see what’s happening with the brothers and in this particular movie we tried to make them as funny as we possible could, more so than the first movie.

Q: You’re adding Bebop and Rocksteady and Stephen Amell is playing Casey Jones, what has been the internet’s response in adding these really famous characters?

Brad: “The adding Amell I have not seen any downside from it. Usually the internet will say we bad a bad casting choice but there has been nothing negative about that and likewise with Tyler Perry, there has been nothing negative about that. Bebop and Rocksteady, those are characters that we originally had in the first movie and we couldn’t figure out how to make them fit into the story so we put them in the second movie and again, everything people have seen they like but there is more trepidations about those characters for whatever reason. I think those characters are so beloved that there is concern ‘did we do them justice?’ and I believe we did.



Q: What advice would you give up-and-coming producers or someone who is interested in becoming a producer?

Brad: “I think the most important thing and it was for us [Andrew Form] so I can only say it based on that is that we chose a lane early on and before I was partnered with Michael and Drew, I produced a couple of other movie and I didn’t really choose a lane so what I ended up being was a guy who trying to get movies made. I think the important thing is to pick what movies you want to make and be if not the best, one of the best in that area. We did that with horror. We had a game plan, we were going to just make horror movies but we were going to make them look better than all the other movies out there because that were the resources that were available to me. I could say to Michael, ‘we want to make this movie can you get me your camera operator, your gaffer and whatever other crew people so we made Texas Chainsaw Massacre for $9 million dollars but if we would’ve paid people their rates it would’ve been a much more expensive movie so my resource was using Michael’s people to make it better. As an overall goal we wanted our movies to look better and that made them feel richer and I believe thats part of how we started our company to build a brand because that’s what people knew they could come to us for.

Q: What was the decision to cast Stephen Amell as Casey Jones? Was that a first-choice or was there a process with that?

Brad: “No, there was no process. It was him. It was always him. When you’re talking about a great looking guy who Megan Fox can realistically have feelings for, she’s the most beautiful woman on the planet or one of them so you gotta get a really good looking guy who is a great actor who can do the physical nature of what it is and you don’t want to take a guy who has never worked before because if you do that, you’re really running a risk and I didn’t think that would be good for the morale of the crew because you have Laura Linney, Tyler Perry, Will Arnett and all these people and you put a kid in there who doesn’t have the experience that’s not going to work. When you start checking the boxes, Stephen Amell is the only person you can check every box and we were very lucky our shooting schedule corresponded with his hiatus on Arrow and he was the right choice. He was really fun in the movie.

Q: Which one of the turtles do you identify with the most?

Brad: “Did you know yesterday I was asked that in every single interview and I’m telling you on every interview, I chose a different turtle and gave a reason why. I will tell you my favorite turtle is Mikey. I just think that’s the guy.

Q: Do you have any upcoming projects you're exicted about?

Brad: “I do. Were would you like me to start [laughs]. We have Purge: Election Year that comes out a month later which is much better than the first one. This third one is very good also. Last year we made a movie that did very well at the box office called Ouija and I had no expectation that movie would do what it did and we brought in a guy to do the sequel to it and he killed it. Then we have season three of The Last Ship coming out in June and a new show called Jack Ryan for Amazon.

Q: How much inspiration did you take from the live-action TMNT movies such as Secret of The Ooze?

Brad: “The hard thing about this franchise, every franchise has it’s own issues, the issue here is that you have cartoons, you have comic books and you have movies and not everyone knows all three of those source materials but everyone comes to the movie hoping to see something they recognize from their source of materials. The issue for us is how do you take pieces from all of those where fans are hoping to see something they recognize and giving it to them and at the same time telling a story that isn't so far in one of those arenas where you alienate the other two. Luckily that's not my job, that’s the writers job and that’s what they focus on and they executed that in a really good way.

Make sure you guys go out and watch Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows starting June 3rd!

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