Disney brings Mary Poppins, Luke Skywalker, the Avengers and Oprah to D23 in display of big-screen might
The Walt Disney Co. put the prowess of its big-screen brands on full display Saturday at its D23 fan expo, offering early glimpses of highly anticipated projects such as âA Wrinkle in Time,â âMary Poppins Returnsâ and a live-action version of âThe Lion Kingâ in addition to upcoming juggernauts in the universes of Marvel superheroes and Star Wars.
Taking the stage at the Anaheim Convention Center, Walt Disney Studios Chairman Alan Horn reminded the crowd of 8,000 attendees of the studioâs recent successes, noting that the top five films of 2016 â" âFinding Dory,â âThe Jungle Book,â âStar Wars: Rogue One,â âZootopiaâ and âCaptain America: Civil Warâ â" were all released by Disney, and that the top money-maker of the year so far is the live-action version of âBeauty and the Beast.â
Hoping to keep that box office momentum going, the studio, along with an arsenal of A-listers including Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon and Robert Downey Jr., unveiled an impressive slate of future live-action projects in the two-hour panel, reinforcing its current dominant position at the top of the Hollywood-studio heap.
Here were some highlights:
âA Wrinkle in Timeâ
Disney debuted the first trailer for its adaptation of Madeleine LâEngleâs classic sci-fi novel, promising a blend of coming-of-age story and cosmic spectacle â" or as director Ava DuVernay described it, âa family story wrapped in an epic adventure where you see worlds youâve never seen before.â
Joining the director were the filmâs stars, including Reese Witherspoo n, Mindy Kaling, Chris Pine and Winfrey, who got the crowd riled up in signature Oprah fashion by promising everyone posters for the film: âYou get a poster! You get a poster! You get a poster!â
Winfrey, who plays the wise, mysterious Mrs. Which, said she had never read the book before being approached by DuVernay about the role. âBut when Ava mentioned it to me and told me it was a character who is one of the wisest women in the universe and is an angelic celestial being who is going to get to wear amazing costumes and get to work with Reese and Mindy as part of the Mrs. team â" who wouldnât say yes to that?â
âMary Poppins Returnsâ
Tinkering with a hallowed classic can be treacherous business, but Disney, emboldened by its success mining its catalog, is developing a sequel to 1964âs âMary Poppinsâ for release in December 2018.
Director Rob Marshall (âChicagoâ) said the musical will draw from other Poppins books written by P.L. Travers and will be set 25 years after the original film in Depression-era London, with the Banks children now adults.
Emily Blunt, who will play the practically-perfect-in-every-way nanny, acknowledged that stepping into the shoes of Julie Andrews, who won an Oscar for her portrayal, is daunting, but suggested that her interpretation of Poppins wonât be all spoonfuls of sugar.
âNo one is ever going to out-Julie Julie Andrews, so I just had to do my version of her,â said the actress, who shares the screen with a star-studded cast including Lin-Manuel Miranda, Colin Firth and Meryl Streep. âI think we were very loyal to the books. I think she is a little more acerbic and odd and vain and weird in the books. So we went that direction a little more.â
âAladdinâ
Coming on the heels of successful live-action adaptations of animated classics âCinderellaâ and âBeauty and the Beast,â Disney is set to retrofit its 1992 hit âAladdinâ in similar fashion, with âSherlock Holmesâ director Guy Ritchie at the helm.
The project â" which will combine plot points from the animated version with elements from the One Thousand and One Arabian Nights folk tales â" was recently dogged by reports of a drawn-out search for an actor to play Aladdin. But studio pro duction chief Sean Bailey announced that Mena Massoud had been cast in the title role, with Naomi Scott playing Princess Jasmine and Will Smith taking on the Genie.
âDumboâ
Disney confirmed that a long-discussed take on âDumboâ is in the works from director Tim Burton, who directed the studioâs 2010 mega-hit âAlice in Wonderland.â With the film slated to fly into theaters in 2019, production is underway in London with a cast that includes Colin Farrell, Eva Green, Danny DeVito and Michael Keaton. Dumbo himself will be CG-animated, but Bailey brought out a model of the big-eared, big-hearted pachyderm, which he deemed âimpossibly adorable.â
âThe Lion Kingâ
At the last D23 in 2015, director Jon Favreau debuted footage from his live-action version of âThe Jungle Book.â This year he was back to do the same with âThe Lion King,â wowing the crowd with a clip that showed photo-realistic animals on the African savanna gathering at Pride Rock to see the baby lion Simba, set to the strains of âThe Circle of Life.â The film will hit theaters July 19.
âStar Wars: The Last Jediâ
The âStar Warsâ universe experienced some unexpected turbulence with the recent news that directors Chris Miller and Phil Lord had been dropped from a standalone young-Han Solo film due to âcreative differences.â But Horn tried to assure the crowd that all was well with the project, which is now under the direction of Ron Howard. âWeâre very, very excited about the film,â he said. âThe cast is wonderful.â
But not surprisingly, it was the next installment in the main Skywalker saga, âStar Wars: The Last Jediâ â" which open in December â" that received the lionâs share of attention at the panel. Writer-director Rian Johnson brought out many of the filmâs stars, including Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Gwendoline Christie, Laura Dern, Benicio Del Toro and Luke Skywalker himself, Mark Hamill. Not surprisingly, the proceedings stayed far away from even the faintest whiff of a plot spoiler but Johnson offered fans a behind-the-scenes video to whet their appetites for the film, much as director J.J. Abrams had with âStar Wars: The Force Awakens.â
âAvengers: Infinity Warâ
With Comic-Con less than a week away, Disney clearly wanted to reserve some of its Marvel Studios firepower â" like the upcoming âBlack Pantherâ and âCaptain Marvelâ films â" for its major panel there. But Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige still went big, bringing out many of the stars of next summerâs massive âAvengers: Infinity Warâ â" including Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo, Josh Brolin, Tom Holland, Chadwick Boseman and Downey â" and debuting some footage from the film, which opens May 4, 2018.
Preceded by an intro of greatest hits from the Marvel films of the past decade, all centered on the ongoing Infinity Stones storyline, the reel promised a Marvel mash-up on an unprecedented scale, stuffed (if not overstuffed) with superheroes. The footage opened with Thor slamming into the windshield of the Guardians of the Galaxyâs ship. âWho the hell are you guys?â asks the Norse deity, who looks like he's been badly roughed up.
Moving to Earth, the footage showed a number of the other Avengers bracing for an impending attack from Brolinâs supervillain Thanos.
âWe have one advantage â " heâs coming to us,â says Tony Stark, aka Iron Man. Thanos emerges out of some kind of black hole, looking suitably fearsome, and a quick-cut montage of action scenes ensues featuring Spider-Man, Black Widow, Captain America and others.
Asked by Feige what his experience was like working on the film, Brolin had just one word: âPowerful.â
Twitter: @joshrottenberg
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