Steven Spielberg Options 'Chocky' -- Kind Of.
Filed under: Classics, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Thrillers, Deals, Paramount, Celebrities and Controversy, Newsstand, Dreamworks, Steven Spielberg
Steven Spielberg has yet another project that he's keen to make his next directorial gig -- according to The Hollywood Reporter, he's just snagged the rights to Chocky, John Wyndham's famous sci-fi novel. Chocky is more famous in the United Kingdom than here in the States, as it was the basis for a television show in 1984. It centers on a young boy who has a rather tumultuous relationship with his imaginary friend. His father grows concerned that his son has not yet abandoned his imaginary friend for real ones -- and slowly, he begins to realize that the invisible friend is actually an alien consciousness that is residing in the boy's mind. It's old territory for Spielberg, right down to the government forces who are far too interested in the boy and his alien. Surely, Chocky is some reader's favorite book or childhood television memory, and I'm keen to hear your opinion of its big screen potential.
Nevertheless, don't get too excited, Chocky fans. Given Spielberg's break with Paramount, it's uncertain where the project will end up -- DreamWorks has optioned it, but all of its properties automatically end up with Paramount, which would require Spielberg to actually buy it back for his own development. And this is just one of a slew of projects Spielberg has acquired lately. He still has Tintin, The Trial of the Chicago 7, that long-delayed Lincoln biopic, Cowboys and Aliens, and The 39 Clues. All are technically owned by Paramount, all are "the next picture Spielberg wants to direct," and all need to be re-purchased if he wants to develop them at DreamWorks. So by 2009 or 2010, you might see Tintin, you might see Chocky, or you might see another project altogether. Spielberg is covering all his bases.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-30-2008 @ 5:05AM
James Richardson said...
If anyone can do 'Chocky' right, it's Spielberg - I loved both the book and the televised version when I was younger, both of which achieved what very few modern sci-fi films manage, despite enormous special effects budgets: an atmosphere of menace, even though Chocky herself is totally benign. At bottom it centres around what Wyndham does best, a picture of an ordinary family trying to stay that way in the face of events with terrifying implications. Spielberg's no stranger to that himself, but I hope he avoids making the mistake that slightly marred the TV series: Chocky is never seen, or heard; what she looks and sounds like the book never reveals. Anyone who's seen "The Blair Witch Project" will know that's much, much more unsettling than any CGI alien effects.
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10-09-2008 @ 6:54AM
george said...
make a tekken 5 movie
it will be awesome. before you say no, think about it
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