New Director Found for Universal's 'Bioshock'

'28 Weeks Later' helmer finds a potential blockbuster

Universal has found a replacement for Gore Verbinski for the big budget adaptation of the Take-Two Interactive videogame Bioshock in the form of 28 Weeks Later helmer Juan Carlos Fresnadillo. John Logan (The Last Samurai, The Aviator) wrote the script.

The Bioshock film was put on temporary hold back in April when the studio and Verbinski set out to find a way to knock a few million off the inflating budget, which was said to have ballooned to about $160 million. Shortly thereafter Verbisnki dropped off as director and remained the film's producer through his Universal-based Blind Wink production house. Following the budgetary break, Verbinski's schedule soon became tight due to his upcoming work on the animated feature Rango for Paramount Pictures with Johnny Depp voicing the lead character. Fresnadillo comes as a result of these circumstances.

Of course, Fresnadillo's assumed involvement may still be premature as Take-Two still maintains director approval. If movie bloggers have their say it appears Peter Sciretta at Slash Film and Alex Billington at First Showing would suggest a different name. Sciretta writes, "With a pool of talented name brand filmmakers hoping to helm such a project (Guillermo del Toro has been outspoken), its amazing that Universal went with Fresnadillo in the end," while Billington adds, "There is one and only one reason for this – money." Both see it as a cost-cutting measure, which it probably is, and I would say that the film now appears to have a much smaller scope in mind after having Verbinski attached following his grand success with the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise. This obviously doesn't sit well with a pair of fans of the game and I wonder what Take-Two will think of the new direction.

Of all the upcoming videogame adaptations it seemed the approach to this one was to remain eternally faithful to the game, which may be reason for the high price tag. The game takes place in an underwater city based on the free market principles of Ayn Rand, but things have gone disastrously wrong. Players control a pilot who crash-lands at a secret entrance to the city, called Rapture, and is drawn into a power struggle during which he discovers that his will is not as free as he'd thought.

Early discussions proved they were going for an R-rating with Verbinski (when he was still attached to direct) saying, "We're prepared to make it an R-rated movie. I don't intuitively see it as PG-13. The content and the graphic nature of the story itself is smarter than that. It's not for young kids.

"The utopian references and the way the characters and world are drawn in that delightfully inspired Jules Verne and Ayn Rand style places the film in a more elevated realm. It's the realm of a graphic novel. It has to have that edge."

The strangest thing about all the negativity I am reading is the lack of attention paid to the much loved release of District 9 compared to the big budget features from this summer. People see this as a cost-saving move, but I fail to see the problem with that. District 9 was made on shoestring budget and turned out a worthwhile watch. It is obvious, though, a film based on "Bioshock" (at least based on the images and video I have seen) will cost more, but production budgets are sky-rocketing, and perhaps District 9 was part of the reason Universal went with a lesser-known director in an attempt to use his imagination and work ethic to turn out a film with a smaller budget, as well as a satisfying story.

As I have said in the past, I have never played the game and have no idea what to expect. I have seen 28 Weeks Later and didn't like it one bit. Obviously, that has nothing to do with Bioshock, so we'll have to wait and see.


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Post #1
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I for one thought 28 weeks later was much better paced and developed overall than the first one. So I'm looking forward to this project.

And I agree, no need to blow up budgets and give us a crap fest like Transformers 2.

- adu
( August 24th, 2009 | 2:01 am )
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Post #2
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Well, I'm happy for Fresnadillo. I disliked 28 weeks later, but that was because I thought the writing was terrible. I thought that Fresnadillo more than held his own in the director's chair, particularly for the first scene. I'd really like to see what he can do with a big budget for Bioshock, even though I'm otherwise disinterested in the movie.

- Dan Tralder
( August 24th, 2009 | 7:26 am )
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Post #3
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Does this mean that Gore could possibly return to the POTC franchise and direct the 4th installment?

- BR
( August 24th, 2009 | 9:10 am )
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Post #4
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Having played the game, the story within it is pretty great. I just wish they had more talented directors taking up the main seat.

- T
( August 24th, 2009 | 10:34 am )
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Post #5
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The game is problaby my all-time favorite video game and I find it to be a really deep story and since the moment I bought it, I though that a movie should be made. If it is made right, with the same dark and cold tone and with all blood it takes it could be a hell of a movie and not just in the sense of entertaiment but also being a good movie with great themes. The ending is one of the greatest ending ever made but this movie have to have al least a 110-130 illion budget because I don't know if you have seen Rapture, but this my friend, is a whole new world underwater destroyed by an evil kind. This could even be better than Pandora. :P

For the director, I loved 28 Weeks Later. It is one of my all-time favorite movie becasue is the best zombie movie ever made, of course, after Shaun of the Dead.

- Sebastian
( August 24th, 2009 | 1:18 pm )
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Post #6
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28 Weeks Later had its problems, but none of them were in its direction. In fact, its direction was fantastic. The opening sequence was one of THE best I've ever seen in any movie, let alone a horror film. Fresnadillo would be a fine director for Bioshock.

- JM
( August 24th, 2009 | 2:14 pm )
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Post #7
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Hm. Not so sure about this one. I loved the game, and I'm all for it being rated R, but I just didn't like '28 Weeks Later'.

- Nina
( August 24th, 2009 | 2:35 pm )
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