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goldenboy
12-12-2007, 08:57 AM
CARL ELLSWORTH ON THE ‘Y: THE LAST MAN’ MOVIE

The ‘Disturbia’ screenwriter re-teams with director D.J. Caruso—and possibly Shia LaBeouf—on the adaptation of the Vertigo book

By Rickey Purdin

Posted December 6, 2007 11:35 AM

WIZARD: How did you get involved with “Y: The Last Man?”
ELLSWORTH: I was having breakfast with D.J. Caruso, the director of “Disturbia.” He had also been sent the material and had really responded to it and I told him I had really liked it. He and I took a couple weeks and developed a take on what a potential movie could be.

Were you a fan of the comic beforehand?
ELLSWORTH: I had heard of it a couple of years ago, but it’s funny—I don’t even consider myself a fan of comic books per se. I grew up on “Star Wars” and watching movies, but the comic book thing kind of passed me by. That being said, I was pitched the premise and it sounded great. Once I started reading the comic books I couldn’t put them down.

How do you deal with fan anticipation of a comic book movie?
ELLSWORTH: This is a comic book that people care about. So D.J. and I had some nervous laughter over it where it’s like, “Oh, man, what have we gotten ourselves into?” It has been a challenge trying not to be too intimidated. That just gets me all in an uproar and I don’t end up writing anything. I had read stories about when David Goyer, one of the producers on “Y: The Last Man,” started writing “Batman Begins” and the reaction that it got. So, it’s like, “What have we done here?”

Are you breaking the comic series into installments?
ELLSWORTH: There is such an abundance of material in the comics that it’s logical to conclude that there’s way too much for a single movie.

The last issue of the comic hasn’t come out yet. Has comic creator Brian K. Vaughan told you the ending?
ELLSWORTH: We didn’t get a script for the final issue, but we had a very good conversation with Brian and told him about some of the things that we were thinking, and actually I think that D.J. and I were surprised that we were on the same page. So if that brings any comfort to the fans we’re proceeding forward with Brian’s blessing. [Laughs]

How do you handle the end of the world in the film?
ELLSWORTH: In the comic book, we’re presented with an end-of-the-world scenario pretty darn quickly. It then becomes the adventures of Yorick and 355, but I would say that a movie version must have more of a sense of urgency and jeopardy. It’s not going to be a “Mad Max” film. Where we want to start is what simply would the world be like if this “absurd” thing were to happen. I don’t think you’re going to see “Mad Max” or even cars burning in the streets. It’s actually going to have more of a haunting feel to it as Yorick our main character is attempting to get his bearings and what the immediate aftermath of the plague means.

Would you still keep basic comic elements, including Yorick as a magician?
ELLSWORTH: We haven’t gone out of the way to reinvent a lot of the comic because it works so well. What we’re actually trying to do is give more of a foundation to the characters and what makes them tick. I wouldn’t so much call this an origin-type movie, but the villains in the comic spring up quickly. For example, the Daughters of the Amazon—we’re interested in exploring how that group doesn’t just spring up overnight.

Will “Disturbia” star Shia LaBeouf be in the film?
ELLSWORTH: Right now that’s just a rumor to me. Shia is great and I think it would definitely be a fitting role for him so we’ll just have to wait and see.

If you were the last man on Earth, what’s the first thing you would do?
ELLSWORTH: That is a good question. Gosh, I’m always thinking about food. [Laughs] What does Yorick do anyway? He goes and tries to find his mom. So I would do what Yorick does. I would run to mommy.

What can you tell us about any other characters showing up? Please tell me there’s a monkey.
ELLSWORTH: Where would we be without Ampersand?

Have you ever tried to write a script with a monkey?
ELLSWORTH: No, I haven’t. I’ve done a fair amount of research on Capuchin monkeys. I’ll defer to D.J. on that and how he wants to have this monkey clinging against Yorick’s shoulder.

Are there any post-apocalyptic worlds in film that you love?
ELLSWORTH: I love, and I don’t know if it’s post-apocalyptic or not, but I really like “Children of Men” and in terms of an overall future, dark setting I love “Blade Runner.” There’s “Mad Max,” and then this might send shivers up people’s spines, but a very good post-apocalyptic movie, as far as the feel of the world goes, is Kevin Costner’s “The Postman.”

When do you expect filming to begin?
ELLSWORTH: It’s a ways off. D.J. is going to direct Shia in “Eagle Eye” and so best-case scenario would be next year. That’s if the screenplay gods smile on me and they don’t show me the door.
Carl Ellsworth on 'Y: The Last Man' - Story @ Comics2Film.com (http://www.comics2film.com/index.php?a=story&b=30386)


I think the last thing I read said that they're covering material mostly from the first 12 issues or so. I don't know if they're gonna come up with a completely new resolution/ending? At that pace, they could turn this series into 5 films. A trilogy, at least.

N4H
12-12-2007, 04:00 PM
I wanna see this even if it stinks. I'm a fan of post-apopalyptica.

I don't know why he's apologizing for liking The Postman. That's one of my favorite post-apopalyptic movies too.

goldenboy
01-29-2008, 08:41 AM
Fans: Why, oh 'Y,' must 'Last Man' end?

Farewell: Last issue of Y: The Last Man goes on sale Wednesday.
By Whitney Matheson, USA TODAY

It began with one man, his monkey and a mystery. On Wednesday, the saga comes to a close. Readers will be racing to pick up the 60th and final issue of Y: The Last Man (Vertigo), a comic written by Lost writer Brian K. Vaughan.

The series, a cult favorite since its debut in 2002 and one of two best-selling titles for Vertigo, follows the adventures of Yorick, a young man who finds himself the lone survivor of a plague that wipes out every male on Earth. (His pet monkey, Ampersand, hangs on for the ride.)

"We're so spoiled by comics with Spider-Man and Superman and the X-Men, that sort of illusion of the third act, it goes on forever," says Vaughan, 31, who says there will be no spinoffs or sequels. "I think finales are what give stories their meaning."

Rocketship in Brooklyn, N.Y., will be stocked with twice its usual volume of issues. "All of my customers, they come in with these weepy faces, 'Is it true? Is it really the end?' " says co-owner Mary Gibbons. "It's the book I always give to readers when they're just trying to get into comics. "

A film version is in development with Disturbia screenwriter Carl Ellsworth and director D.J. Caruso attached. Caruso says he has had "preliminary discussions" with Shia LaBeouf to play Yorick.

"For me, thematically, the most important thing and the reason I want to do this is … I don't want to say it's the end of the innocence, but it's actually a man-child who has to become a real man now," Caruso says. "I think it's a really simple, beautiful theme, but at the same time, the movie's really pop-culture entertainment."

While the original plan was to squeeze the entire series into one movie, Caruso says the film will cover the first 14 issues of the comics. He adds that this opens the door for a trilogy.

Tom Spurgeon, editor of ComicsReporter.com, says the comic's widespread appeal is a combination of talent and timing. "You can't overlook that it's really well-executed, and it's a really great idea. It's almost that basic," he says. "It hit really at a time where I think people were looking for that kind of charge of the new."

The work of co-creator and illustrator Pia Guerra has been instrumental to the series' success. Guerra's artwork "is kind of a throwback to the kind of classic, mid-20th-century comics," Spurgeon says. "It's sort of like sitting down and watching a really well-shot film. There's a visual sumptuousness about it that's really understated."

Last season, Vaughan joined Lost's writing staff. Along with his TV work, Vaughan will continue his other comic series, Ex Machina (Wildstorm), and he hopes to write more stand-alone graphic novels, similar to 2006's Pride of Baghdad (Vertigo).
Fans: Why, oh 'Y,' must 'Last Man' end? - USATODAY.com (http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2008-01-28-last-man-comic_N.htm)

I'm actually waiting until June, when the final TPB comes out—to read the ending. Gah. Hope I don't get spoiled before then.

goldenboy
07-23-2008, 04:56 PM
Director D.J. Caruso on Y: The Last Man

Source: ComingSoon.net
July 23, 2008

ComingSoon.net talked to director D.J. Caruso about his upcoming thriller with Shia LaBeouf, Eagle Eye, and the conversation turned to his adaptation of Y: The Last Man, which LaBeouf is also eyeing to star in. You can learn more about "Y" here (http://www.comingsoon.net/films.php?id=22605) and what follows are Caruso's quotes:

Q: Is "Y: The Last Man" going to happen?

Caruso: It's probably going to be happening, yeah. With New Line now part of Warner Brothers, Warners is now very high on the project. And Carl Ellsworth and I are probably going to deliver the script to WB/New Line by next week.

Q: Can you elaborate on what you mean when you say that you've cracked "Y: The Last Man"?

Caruso: What I mean by that is that there's so much to choose from. Just trying to narrow down the story, and in all the drafts written over the years there's a lot of great stuff in there, but what I think "Y" was missing in screenplay form was a ticking clock. So we did something where we separated Yorick from [pet monkey] Ampersand for a brief period of time where Yorick gets very sick, which kind of opened up the movie in the middle of the act. And also the Agent 355 / Yorick relationship to me has always been sort of a De Niro / Grodin thing. And so I was working on that and not quite getting it right, believe it or not. Because Yorick to me is so solid, it's really like 355 and her journey with Yorick that's been…and also Act 3, where do you end the first movie and how can you go from there? But I think we licked it.

Q: So is this a trilogy?

Caruso: I see it as a trilogy. I definitely see it as a trilogy. I see the first movie ending anywhere basically when you pick up after the incident you're picking up about six weeks later, meeting Yorick six weeks later after the incident and progressing down, I think it's about… only a five or six week journey from that point to the end of the first movie. It's been hard, in a good way, just because there's so much good stuff to choose from, and every time you start throwing certain scenes in the screenplay you'll see that it sort of dislodges and starts to head a different way.

Q: When do you think this might happen?

Caruso: In a perfect world, and I was talking to Shia about this yesterday because he really wants to do it as well, I would like to prep this movie in October and shoot by January.

Q: So you're thinking summer 2010?

Caruso: 2010. That's what I've been hearing. Warner Brothers is saying "we need movies for 2010!" And I say "we're the movie!" I've got a movie star, I've got a great comic book, whatever.

Q: And Shia has reached the point where with him and you together…

Caruso: He has, yeah. He definitely has. But you want to get it right. You don't want to make the movie just for that reason.

Q: So he would do it?

Caruso: He wants to do it, I want to do it. The thing we have to worry about is him being exhausted. So I said if I prep in the fall and we start in January, that's a nice big break.

Q: Would you film in Australia?

Caruso: Eh….maybe. I don't know. That's where she goes, but we're not going to follow that throughline too much in the first film, god willing. We've been working on it, showing Vaughan all the things, he's really happy with this and I just want to fine-tune it before giving it to the studio because I always think that first impression… you know. Because to them, it's Warner Brothers now, you're re-educating a new crew.

Q: In going to Warner Brothers, could you end up with a bigger budget?

Caruso: Honestly I'm still trying to figure out the landscape because I know New Line is going to exist the way Castle Rock existed years ago. So they still have autonomy but now I think if it gets over a certain budget level that's when Warners and New Line pair up. I think that we'll probably fit in that budget level. I'm still going to give it to Toby Emmerich, then I don't know if he has to go to Alan Horn, all I know is my agents keep saying "Warner Brothers wants this!"
Director D.J. Caruso on Y: The Last Man - Superhero Hype! (http://www.superherohype.com/news/topnews.php?id=7526)

DarklyDreamingDrusilla
07-23-2008, 06:33 PM
Yay! I am excited they are making this into a movie! It is a great comic.