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Category Archive: Current Projects

Updates – October 4

Man, Oh Man!

Those muscles! That brooding glare! Gerard Butler is best known for bringing hunky back to Hollywood. This fall the great Scot flexes brawn and brain as producer and murderous star of Law Abiding Citizen

As I climb the subway stairs up to the street, Gerard Butler is suddenly and unexpectedly glaring at me from a full block away: dead-eyed, ominous, threatening. In the poster for Gamer, his futuristic mayhem-fest, Butler’s stare grimly dares all passersby to enter his menacing space. So it’s something of a relief that the man I meet a few minutes later in a downtown Manhattan hotel restaurant turns out to be a comfortably disheveled, jeans-and sneakered guy with a three-day growth who immediately welcomes you into his world, happily spinning fanciful stories of bygone days.

Butler tells stories as naturally as the rest of us breathe. And most of them seem to belong to nothing so much as, well, a Gerard Butler movie.

You did what?! You ran into the middle of a pub scrum to break up six guys who were stomping a guy on the floor? You rushed over to break up a broken-bottle bar fight between a couple of strangers? You saw a van with its tires on fire, grabbed an extinguisher from a nearby bus, dove under the car and put out the fire?

Read full article

See full-size images in the PGN gallery.

Also, pictures of Gerry at Villa Blanca Restaurant in Beverly Hills, California, Oct. See all of them in the PGN gallery.

An interview with Gerry about filming Law Abiding citizen. Other new clips from Law Abiding Citizen have been added to our LAC videos thread.

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How To Train Your Dragon – teaser trailer

The teaser trailer for How To Train Your Dragon is now online. In this animated film, Gerry plays the part of a Viking named Stoick, a tribal chief and the father of Hiccup. How To Train Your Dragon is currently scheduled to be released in the U.S. on March 26, 2010.

Synopsis from IMDB:
From the studio that brought you “Shrek,” “Madagascar” and “Kung Fu Panda” comes “How to Train Your Dragon” – a comedy adventure set in the mythical world of burly Vikings and wild dragons, based on the book by Cressida Cowell. The story centers around a Viking teenager named Hiccup, who lives on the island of Berk, where fighting dragons is a way of life. The teen’s smarts and offbeat sense of humor don’t sit too well with his tribe or its chief… who just happens to be Hiccup’s father. However, when Hiccup is included in Dragon Training with the other Viking teens, he sees his chance to prove he has what it takes to be a fighter. But when he encounters (and ultimately befriends) an injured dragon, his world is flipped upside down, and what started out as Hiccup’s one shot to prove himself turns into an opportunity to set a new course for the future of the entire tribe.

NOTE: Unfortunately the teaser trailer has been removed due to copyright issues. If it reappears officially, we will be sure to post it again.

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Video: Law Abiding Citizen Promo on Extra

From Extra, September 24.

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Gerry video on the Red Carpet at Urbanworld

Gerry gave an interview to E! News when on the Red Carpet last night at Urbanworld. You can see the video here.

If it pops up on Youtube we’ll post it.

The article posted with the video:

Gerard Butler is just like us…he loves his carbs and hates dieting.

At the premiere of Law Abiding Citizen, his new movie featuring many shirtless scenes, the hot Scot told us what he gives up to get his body camera-ready.

“I wanna eat my potatoes and French fries and sponge cakes,” he moaned to E! News. “When I play a role like this, I can’t have my carbs and it makes me crazy.”

We hear you, girlfriend!

You know who else is a healthy eater? His Bounty costar Jennifer Aniston, who he insists is just a BFF.

“I love her to death,” he told E! News. “She’s the coolest and she’s become a great friend, but there’s nothing going on. And if there was, I’d be happy to say it!”

Jen wasn’t the only famous female he talked about last night…

Gerry also gave parenting props to his Ugly Truth costar Katherine Heigl, who just adopted a baby.

“She will be an amazing mom,” he told People at the premiere. “She’s incredibly responsible, smart and loving. This is a huge deal for her, and she’s going to take to it like a duck to water.”

Quack, quack. Naleigh is already one cute duckling!

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Gerard Butler: Law Abiding Citizen

Something I just found. It’s a real nice article, Gerry talks about his role as a producer for Law Abiding Citizen.

Movie Maker Magazine: Spring Issue

Gerard Butler: Law Abiding Citizen
by Ryan Stewart | Published April 30, 2009

Arriving on the Philadelphia set of Law Abiding Citizen, I’m ushered into a small, out-of-the-way room where a Catholic priest in full canonical dress is waiting. Luckily, I’m not in need of last rites; this priest is actually producer Alan Siegel, in costume for his cameo as a clergyman who attends the execution of a prisoner in today’s scene. Siegel is the longtime manager of actor Gerard Butler (300, P.S. I Love You) and the film is the first under their new production banner, Evil Twin. They’re working alongside The Film Department’s Mark Gill and Neil Sacker.

As Siegel walks me around the set to talk, no less than a dozen crew members pop out and do a variation on the same joke: “Bless me father, it has been 30 years since my last confession. Is that bad?” Siegel takes it in stride, making the sign of the cross for everyone as we walk and he fills me in on the film’s long production history.

Law Abiding Citizen began eight years ago with another pair of collaborators, veteran producer Lucas Foster and writer-director Kurt Wimmer. A side project they tinkered with for years while developing other films together, like Equilibrium and Ultraviolet, it was in danger of being shelved until a fortuitous meeting broke the logjam.

As Wimmer’s ultra-hot script, Salt, was making the Hollywood rounds, he met with Butler about the plum role, but ended up turning him on to Law Abiding Citizen, the story of an ambitious district attorney who allows some vicious murderers to plea down their cases, and in the process earns the wrath of one of their victims, a tech wizard named Clyde (played by Butler).

With Butler on board, the team began courting top-tier talent, including Oscar-winner Jamie Foxx and two-time nominee Frank Darabont. Pre-production commenced, but many kinks remained and Darabont began doing rewrites intended to draw the script closer to the somber prison dramas he knows so well. In doing so, he clashed with the producers, who were set on a white-knuckled thriller. Darabont eventually walked away, making way for F. Gary Gray, helmer of crime thrillers The Negotiator and The Italian Job.

On the day MovieMaker visited the set, all elements seemed to be clicking and an atmosphere of grim concentration was evident as I watched Butler perform dozens of takes of a crucial prison cell confrontation between himself and Foxx. When the scene finally wrapped, late into the night, Butler and I found an out-of-the-way corner to talk about his first outing as a feature producer.

Ryan Stewart (MM): I was impressed by your concentration through all those takes. What do you think about after take 50 to keep your mind sharp? Women?

Gerard Butler (GB): (laughs) I was there! It’s very funny, because people watch movies and they can’t appreciate the conversations that go on between scenes, which often have nothing to do with the movie. It might be about women or music. For me, when it’s a particularly heavy scene, one of my ways of keeping focus is to relax, to laugh and joke. It’s not about focusing your mind for 18 hours at a time, because then you’d just exhaust yourself.

MM: And it’s understood that Jamie will stand there for you through every take, to help your reaction?

GB: I think it’s understood. I would never in a million years abandon my fellow actor; I’ll always be there for them, even in the tiniest of shots. Jamie is the same way. When we started and were filming at City Hall, my character had nothing to say to him—he was far away and I just had to look at him. It was so cold, but I felt that I needed him and he was more than happy to stand out there in the cold. That was actually kind of nice, seeing as my character is not too happy with him in this movie. It was nice to see him suffer. (laughs)

MM: Why the decision to put on a producer’s hat this time? Does it mean more control? More responsibility? More confidence?

GB: All of those things—it’s definitely a double-edged sword. It’s been amazing to be so involved in the creative process. I’ve found that with the movies before now, you could only be creative up to a point and then you’d lack a certain amount of control. I have a lot of confidence in other areas. On this film I’ve been allowed to put all of that in; into the development of the script, in casting and even in choosing the director, and that’s been amazing. It’s also a big responsibility—it’s your movie. There’s more on your shoulders and if you’re going to fuck up, you’re not just fucking up as an actor, you’re fucking up as a producer.

I have found the whole thing stressful, but also exciting. When you sit back and look around and you see all these sets and the people working, you think, ‘Wow, if at any point we had dropped this project, all of this wouldn’t be happening. All these people wouldn’t be working.’ Every day I look at the dailies and it’s even more exciting than normal, because you know you’re so responsible for all of that coming through. Ultimately, it’s… what do they say? More pain, more gain?

MM: No pain, no gain.

GB: Right, no pain, no gain. But I like more pain, more gain!

MM: Which part of producing has been the most fun?

GB: Developing scripts. I think I’m very competent at that, if I do say so myself. Going into a script, ripping it apart, developing the scenes, developing characters, taking out characters, all of that—making things more interesting, giving it more edge, whatever it is—I love doing that. I’m seeing a million things happen in this movie and I go, ‘Oh, that was my idea!’ Or ‘This has changed,’ or ‘That line has changed.’ I’m heavily involved in all of that.

MM: Would you say this movie is typical of what Evil Twin wants to make going forward?

GB: Just like me as an actor, I don’t think any movie would be indicative of anything for me. That’s what I find exciting… I don’t think people have seen me in a role like this before but, likewise, I just did a romantic comedy and then an action movie, so I would hope that our production company goes along the same lines. We’ll do the stuff that interests us, and hopefully other people, in any genre.

MM: Are you still pushing to do more as an actor?

GB: I’m pushing to do less! My big fight at the moment is to not take on too much and it’s very hard. I have a couple of friends whose careers are taking off right now and they are booked for the next year. As much as I’m excited for them, I also tell them, ‘Just remember, if it’s going great for you, then maybe you want to keep it to two projects instead of three, because you want to have a life as well.’

I do know one of the reasons I’m here is because I worked so hard, but at the same time I sometimes wish I’d gone at it 90 percent instead of 100 percent. I wish I’d forced myself to take more time off. At the moment, I have so many projects coming out that I could work every day of this year. So I’m pushing to reduce things.

It’s hard because I love acting, and I get so excited about projects and find it difficult to say ‘no.’ My agent said to me, “You’re at a stage where you could get a lot of the projects that you love, but you’ll also have to say ‘no’ to things you love.” In days gone by, I’d sometimes say ‘yes’ to things I didn’t even like that much, because I didn’t have much of a choice. Now, things I think are amazing, I still say ‘no.’ There aren’t enough hours in the day.

Another new clip from Law Abiding Citizen

Another great new clip from Law Abiding Citizen. You can see it here at Collider.com

It looks great, but on a personal note – as a genealogist I must protest what Clyde does here. I’m sure they used a ’set’ for this scene – or at least I hope so!

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The Ugly Truth DVD release

MovieWeb

The Ugly Truth Gets Romantic on DVD and Blu-ray on November 10th

The Ugly Truth

You can watch Katherine Heigl and Gerard Butler engage in romantic warfare on DVD and Blu-ray this November. The Ugly Truth will be released on DVD and Blu-ray on November 10th. The standard DVD will be priced at $28.96 SRP while the BD will be priced at $39.95 SRP. We don’t have the cover art for this title yet, but we’ll update you as soon as we have the images. The film stars Katherine Heighl, Gerard Butler, John Michael Higgins and Cheryl Hines.

Katherine Heigl and Gerard Butler star in this wildly funny battle of the sexes. Abby (Heigl), a successful morning show producer, is looking for a lot in a man. Mike (Butler), her obnoxious TV star, knows men only want one thing. Determined to prove that she’s not romantically challenged, Abby takes Mike’s advice during a promising new romance, but the unexpected results will stun everyone.

Special Features:

- Select Scenes Filmmaker Commentary
- Deleted and Extended Scenes
- Alternate Endings
- Gag Reel
- The Truth Is Ugly: Capturing the Male & Female Point of View
- The Art of Laughter: A Making of Hilarious Proportions
- movieIQ (Blu-ray only)

Watch for it soon in our Amazon Store!

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Brutal truth

Winnipeg Free Press

Brutal truth
In Gamer, Gerard Butler inhabits a sci-fi world that’s frightening close to our own future

By: Alison Mayes
3/09/2009 1:00 AM

NEW YORK — In the online “virtual world” called Second Life, users create avatars — 3-D alter egos — who socialize, shop and have sex with other avatars.

In the new action thriller Gamer — set in the near future — there’s a similar, fetish-filled world called Society. But instead of controlling imaginary avatars, users vicariously manipulate live human beings whose brains have been altered to receive signals.

Extend the same idea to ultraviolent, multi-player online games like Call of Duty, and you have the central sci-fi concept for Gamer, which blasts into theatres Friday.

In the movie’s super-bloody shooter game, Slayers, players control actual death-row inmates who carry machine guns and battle to the death.

Gerard Butler, the rugged Scottish actor who played the Spartan King Leonidas in 300, stars as Kable, a kick-ass inmate-gladiator who is the avatar of a teenage boy.

Desperate to reunite with his wife (Amber Valletta), who is trapped in the scary realm of Society, Kable must try to escape the game and destroy the megalomaniac who created it (Michael C. Hall from TV’s Dexter).

Butler, 39, is Hollywood’s most wanted guy’s guy. After co-starring this summer as a macho lout in the rom-com The Ugly Truth, he’ll soon be seen as a vigilante in Law Abiding Citizen, his first project as a producer.

In New York recently, the dark-stubbled, easygoing actor took time out from shooting The Bounty with his rumoured girlfriend, Jennifer Aniston, to promote Gamer, which has been in the can since 2007.

“The film is really a bunch of testosterone fuel-injected brutality,” Butler tells reporters in his Scots burr, his unserious tone suggesting he’s well aware that Gamer’s key audience will be thrill-seeking males.

Butler says he trained hard for the role, but didn’t want to look as bulked up as in 300.

Between movies, he says, “I try and find this balance of not getting too skinny and not staying too big…. I wouldn’t be able to pull off a P.S. I Love You or an Ugly Truth if I was that guy (in 300).

“As an actor, if you try to keep the variety of work that I try to, and swap genres, then you have an ever-morphing body.”

The tall, athletic actor says he has been injured on every action movie he’s done. In this one he was hit by flying debris and sliced his back on a wrecked vehicle. His character spends most of the picture in combat, but he says the most challenging scene was one in which he finds his wife.

“Everything about Kable is so contained, and so strong and so silent. Finally, when he lets out his emotion it’s like a flood.”

The Glasgow-born Butler, whose look one journalist described as “beat-up beefcake,” has played warriors from Attila the Hun to Beowulf, but he’s no empty-headed hunk. He’s a law school graduate who was fired for his partying ways just before qualifying as a lawyer in his early 20s. One of his dream projects is to star as Scottish poet Robbie Burns in a planned biopic.

Butler says the frightening future of Gamer is based on today’s scientific reality. He recommends a book called Radical Evolution by Joel Garreau, which describes experiments in which tiny chips linked to computers have been implanted in animal brains.

Writer-directors Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor, who say they’re too busy to be avid gamers, suggest that if the games Society and Slayers were available now, people — including themselves — would play them.

“It’s true, technology will take us over at some point,” says Neveldine. “So it’s kind of fun to go there in a movie and see this dark world…. But we had to make it fun and exciting. That’s why we need the sex and violence in there…. (Audiences) just want to sit back, eat popcorn and get their ass kicked.”

“The whole point of it is that it’s narcotic,” adds Taylor. “It’s just so fun, it’s inevitable that people are going to want to press that button.”

Gamer purports to be a cautionary tale about the dehumanizing direction in which technology and entertainment are headed. But by repeatedly plunging movie-goers into the disturbing games it depicts — full of gut-wrenching first-person violence and sexual titillation — is it participating in that which it critiques?

“It is,” Butler acknowledges. “There’s a fascination with watching this kind of thing…. But there is a genuine warning in there, as well.

“(The film) is saying that in that world (of gaming), there’s a coldness. People have cut themselves off. They see these characters as not human….

“I don’t think the film is so far from the truth.”

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