Technology
Director of ‘The Meg’ set out to make the most fun movie of the summer
Warner
Bros.
-
“The Meg” director Jon Turteltaub explains how he made
sure not to do a remake of “Jaws” while making his
shark movie. -
“The Meg,” starring Jason Statham, is based on a novel
about a massive shark known as a megalodon thought to be
extinct since prehistoric times.
“You can win an Oscar if you do a shark movie where the shark
represents some grand flaw in mankind’s soul,” director Jon
Turteltaub told Business Insider over the phone in a moment of
contemplation. “But in this case, I wanted to do a movie where
the shark represents a big f–king shark!”
Turteltaub went into making Warner Bros.’ late-summer,
$130-million-plus blockbuster “The Meg” (in theaters Friday) with
one goal in mind: let the audience have fun. His favorite movie
of all time is “Jaws,” and he said fun was the one thing he
leaned on when deciding to take this project.
Steven Spielberg’s three-time Oscar winning classic isn’t just
the greatest shark movie ever, but also launched the Hollywood
summer blockbuster season. Turteltaub knew in his gut he could
make “The Meg.” But the challenge he faced was to figure out how
to make a summer shark movie that audiences wouldn’t feel was
just a rip-off of “Jaws.”
Bantam
Books
“The Meg” is based on the 1997 Steve Alten book, “Meg: A Novel of
Deep Terror,” which follows the adventures of Navy deep-sea diver
Jonas Taylor as he combats the thought-to-be-extinct massive
shark known as a megalodon, which ruled the deep oceans in
prehistoric times. (The gory sci-fi book launched a series of
novels with titles like “MEG: Hell’s Aquarium” and “MEG:
Generations.”)
It was the kind of story Hollywood had to get a piece of. The
rights to the book were quickly acquired by Disney, then moved
over to New Line where directors like Jan de Bont and Guillermo
Del Toro were attached, and finally landed at Warner Bros., where
Turteltaub took the reins.
“It was really quick, I think I signed on in March [of 2016] and
we were shooting in September,” Turteltaub said. “Because of the
novels, because of the many lives the project had before I
joined, the ball was already rolling and some really smart work
had already been done.”
Thanks to Chinese financier Gravity Pictures coming on board to
help with the costs, “The Meg” got the blockbuster treatment,
with a majority of the production shot in New Zealand (doubling
for Singapore) and lots and lots of work put in for CGI and 3D.
Though Turteltaub had practically seen it all in Hollywood —
having directed everything from “Cool Runnings” to the “National
Treasure” films — he was shocked by how much work had to be done
in post production for the movie.
“When you have this much CG you know it’s going to take at least
a year to finish the movie,” he said. “But you also leave a
shocking amount of time to do all the 3D work. I couldn’t believe
how much time and effort and expertise goes into that. We really
needed five months just for that.”
Another big change in today’s moviemaking compared to years past
was that America no longer dictates when a movie is released.
“It used to be America picked the best date and then the world
followed,” Turteltaub said. “Now it’s the best worldwide date and
America follows.”
That’s especially true when China is behind your movie’s
financing.
Turteltaub said “The Meg” was completed in the beginning of the
year but because Chinese New Year is in February, the thought was
it wasn’t a good time to open the movie there. So it got pushed,
with August eventually being the right date.
Turteltaub wasn’t too worried when the movie opened because test
audiences had given him the only feedback he needed.
“I was thrilled how the word ‘fun’ was the first word out of
everyone’s mouth regardless of what country we showed it in,” he
said. “When someone says your movie is fun, that’s usually the
word they say when they don’t have something nice to say — but in
this case I was going for that response. Not primarily
interesting or political or emotional, primarily fun.”
In the movie, action star Jason Statham plays the Jonas Taylor
character, who has sworn off the water after previously battling
a megalodon (though no one will believe that was what he actually
saw). But when he gets word that his ex-wife along with the crew
of an underwater research facility are in danger, and that they
may have discovered the meg, Jonas has no choice but to throw
back on the wetsuit and save the day.
The movie is a mix of outlandish gory action, dark comedy, and a
central theme of family, which Turteltaub believes will play well
to a global audience. And in staying away from “Jaws,” he
intentionally flipped the structure so the part of the movie when
beachgoers are rudely visited by the meg, which suddenly appears
from beneath them, comes at the end instead of the first hour of
the movie.
“It just gets bigger and more fun,” Turteltaub said of the movie.
“Ultimately, I thought of this less as a shark movie and more
like a monster movie.”
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