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Spielberg's alien tale is 'Taken' to cable
cleveland.com ^ | 12/02/02 | Clint O'Connor

Posted on 12/02/2002 11:04:08 PM PST by vikingchick

If you were assigned to make a fantastical 20-hour, 10-part series about alien encounters, you'd think you'd concoct the freakiest, funkiest extraterrestrials ever conceived.

Not so.

Not if you're making "Taken," the alien-abduction saga that premieres at 9 tonight on cable's Sci Fi Channel.

"Steven said we had to respect the lore," says Jim Lima, the project's visual-effects supervisor. "We had to be faithful to what was said the most by people who had encounters."

Steven is Steven Spielberg. He is not only one of the most powerful people in entertainment, but also the man who gave the world "E.T." and "Close Encounters of the Third Kind." The man who can green-light so many projects gave birth to this one four years ago. It's on cable because no network could commit such a massive chunk of its prime-time schedule.

Because of Spielberg's decree, the aliens in "Taken" are rather standard issue: gray, about 4 feet tall, long fingers, skinny bodies, oversized heads with huge black, almond-shaped eyes. Spielberg scored with the acclaimed World War II miniseries "Band of Brothers" on HBO, and now he's out to see if an audience will stay with 10 two-hour, movielike episodes over two weeks.

The series follows three American families - the Clarkes, Keys and Crawfords - over four generations, from 1945 to the present day and slightly beyond.

It pays homage to major alien encounters reported in America's postwar history, including the most pivotal event: the supposed crash of a spaceship near Roswell, N.M., in July 1947.

"It's the coolest thing that I've ever seen," says Tobe Hooper of the series. Hooper directed the pivotal first episode (each episode has its own director). Hooper knows about "cool," not to mention strange, having directed "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre" and "Poltergeist" (co-written by Spielberg).

Although it was up to Hooper to integrate "the grays" into the story, it was the Earth-bound humans who received most of his attention. The director said he was hooked because the story was so character-driven.

"I liked that it wasn't sci-fi-y," he says on the phone from his home in Southern California. "It was like the real thing."

The real thing begins in the skies over Germany during World War II. Capt. Russell Keys (Steve Burton) is leading an Allied bombing mission. His bomber gets hit and is headed down in flames but is saved by some mysterious blasts of blue light. He and his crew are mysteriously healed and wake up in a field in France. But who really saved them and what was done to them after they were "taken"?

Keys returns home to a sepia-toned America to reunite with his parents and his best girl, something out of "The Best Years of Our Lives."

"I tried to give the characters that subtext, to give it that Norman Rockwell feel," says Hooper.

Hooper said no expense was spared.

"We had 60 locations and more than 60 actors. I had every lens, every cinematic toy," he says. And he had Lima.

The visual-effects guru, who had worked previously with Spielberg in television on "SeaQuest DSV" and "The Others," also had created outer dimensions for films such as "Space Jam" (he also designed the Green Goblin for "Spider-Man.")

"It was like doing 10 movies," says Lima on the phone from his home in Pacific Palisades, Calif. "We had 16 months of production. In my earliest discussions with Steven, he explained that science fiction is 'Minority Report.' Science mythology is UFO sightings, close encounters of the first kind." (Close encounters of the second kind are defined as physical evidence; close encounters of the third kind are alien sightings.)

Lima used a cavalcade of computer-generated digital tricks; there are no puppets or animatronics. But there is a human element. He took a digital photograph of his wife's eye, enlarged it, stretched it out, colored it and used that for the aliens' eyes.

"The iris is still in there," says Lima. "I wanted to show thought, to have these digital characters show emotion."

The grays also can take human form and read minds.

If "Taken" is groundbreaking for its length and visual effects, it also must set some sort of record for script-writing. Les Bohem wrote the entire 20 hours. A former member of the band Sparks, Bohem ("Dante's Peak") emphasizes the human relationships and family interplay.

The ensemble cast includes Catherine Dent, Joel Gretsch, Eric Close, Ryan Hurst, Matt Frewer and Michael Moriarty as the stern colonel who covers up the initial Roswell crash in tonight's episode. Some characters span several nights. Eight-year-old Dakota Fanning (the daughter in "I Am Sam") narrates all 10 episodes and appears in the final four.

Her voice is at once innocent and filled with wisdom.

"It's very much 'To Kill A Mockingbird,' " says Hooper. "It has that sensitivity, that kind of elegance."

As for the phenomenon itself - the long lists of people who claim to have been abducted, poked and prodded by aliens and returned to Earth - Hooper says he has studied it more than half his life. He finds it valid.

"I'm definitely a believer," says Hooper. "There's something out there."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

coconnor@plaind.com, 216-999-4456


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: abduction; alien; boring; spielberg; taken; ufo
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To: js1138
I assume there might be more than one race of aliens.

Interesting. Maybe there are the 'good' aliens and the 'bad' ones. The good ones want to help us, and the bad ones want to probe our bodies and put implants in our heads.

101 posted on 12/05/2002 5:21:36 PM PST by vikingchick
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To: Hillarys Gate Cult
Thank you.
102 posted on 12/05/2002 5:23:09 PM PST by vikingchick
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To: vikingchick
TAKEN is the most anti military movie that spielberg has ever created, and spielberg is not known for his love of our Arm forces. In TAKEN, he portrays an Air Force Colonel as a cold blooded killer, and a liar of clintonesque proportion. It is a difficult series to watch, if not down right disgusting. It is an anti American propaganda, at it's worst. Any patriotic American will have his blood boiling with anger after the 1st episode. Spielberg also has an innocent little girl's voice spewing hollywood's liberal PC mantra all through out his show. If you must watch this series, don't do it with a full stomach.
103 posted on 12/05/2002 5:27:43 PM PST by desertcry
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To: desertcry
Those are good points. Crawford is an evil character, and I certainly hope they introduce an example of a good military person of power, perhaps a higher-up that stops him?, to balance him out.
104 posted on 12/05/2002 5:36:39 PM PST by vikingchick
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To: vikingchick
introduce an example of a good military person...... With spielberg, it is very unlikely( a snow flake in hell?). The hero will be most likely a GREENIE, of al gore proportion. Spielberg's agenda is too strong to allow anything else.
105 posted on 12/05/2002 5:47:15 PM PST by desertcry
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To: desertcry
There was an interesting interlude in last night's episode where the son saves two medical students (who were black) from being shot by a bigoted white. Inserting that bit may have been designed to define the timeframe, but I suspect there is an ulterior motive. Also, the AF head of the program to collect blus book data makes a racist slur regarding Betty and Barney Hill. As a writer, I didn't actually find the bits offensive since they had a valid reason for being used. It wasn't gratuitous, in other words.

The series is fictional handling of recorded factual information of a fantastic nature, but it's being handled in a turgid manner.

106 posted on 12/05/2002 5:51:47 PM PST by MHGinTN
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To: MHGinTN
I found the 1st episode to be slow and boring, and the leftist propaganda was already quite evident and getting to be painful to watch. The propaganda just got worst in the 2nd episode, and became totally unbearble in the 3rd. I stopped watching when I could no longer hold the wonderful dinner my wife prepared for me last night. So, I have liberated myself from being TAKEN any further. 20 episodes,
what masochist can suffer through that?
107 posted on 12/05/2002 6:17:32 PM PST by desertcry
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To: MHGinTN
I'm not familiar with the other case, at least by name. I find it hard to believe in abductions, the multitude of Art Bell guests notwithstanding.

Unless you believe in a massive world-wide conspiracy of government coverups, I do not see any evidence of "tagging", as if the ALFs are practicing "catch & release".

Unless the ALFs are doing it for environmental monitoring, I would suspect that they can clone previous "samples", obviating the need for continually revisiting this planet.

And speaking of Art Bell, he has Steven Greer on tonight.

Still, there is that nagging serendipity of the timing of that "Fire in the Sky" abduction.

108 posted on 12/05/2002 8:21:39 PM PST by Calvin Locke
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To: vikingchick
In relation to known facts, it is factual, except for when the german scientist dies. The real one lived...
109 posted on 12/05/2002 8:24:23 PM PST by FormerLurker
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To: Momaw Nadon
Interesting picture...
110 posted on 12/05/2002 8:27:59 PM PST by FormerLurker
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To: Calvin Locke
I don't believe in the catch-tag-release scenario either. On the rare occasion that I go fishing these days, I always release what gets hooked. What with the pollutants in our area waters, I wouldn't want to take them home. There is proven disinformation on the part of our gov't and other governments (the Soviets had a well healed group traveling all over their holdings for such stuff). That sort of campaign raises the hairs on the back of my neck. I've actually seen a UFO ... and it remains just that, unidentified. But I do know enough about the physical laws we teach our kids to realize that object was not obeying what I'd been told was the limit of those laws.
111 posted on 12/05/2002 9:05:26 PM PST by MHGinTN
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To: Calvin Locke
It would be interesting, from a scientific point of view, if the visitors actually turned out to be bipedal, have two eyes, swing two arms, etc. Is there some imperative for this evolutionary outcome? Know what I mean?
112 posted on 12/05/2002 9:08:17 PM PST by MHGinTN
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To: MHGinTN
Probably. Opposable thumbs. Depth Perception. Four limbs frees the brain for *other* things, like thinking, logic.

Not to mention symmetry. Handy for clothing (shelter), and tool development.

113 posted on 12/05/2002 9:53:18 PM PST by Calvin Locke
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To: Calvin Locke
Is this why cetaceans aren't kicking our butts out of the oceans?
114 posted on 12/05/2002 10:13:58 PM PST by MHGinTN
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To: spectre
He even plagerized a line from "willow"?

There are only so many good pickup lines...

;^)

115 posted on 12/06/2002 5:01:48 AM PST by js1138
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To: js1138
LOL! Well, I was wrong about Crawford being taken over by Aliens, which might have been better, considering he turned out to be nothing more than a ruthless, power hungry man, who died while his son looked on and taunted him.

Speilburg must have paid off the critics to keep their mouths shut. This show is really BAD.

sw

116 posted on 12/06/2002 5:35:44 AM PST by spectre
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To: vikingchick
Come on you guys! I've been captured by aliens hundreds of times and it's swell. You have these female aliens (vavavavavoom!) who take your clothes off (hell, I can't get my wife to do that!), and then they probe every orifice of your body (vavavavoom!) with strange instruments.

Then, you get to procreate with the hottest alien babes they have (vavavavoom!) while the guy aliens film it (I've asked for distribution rights in the Milky Way and a 5% up front deal). Afterwords, we all sit around and have a drink with the Captain and play Space Invader on their video screen.

Next thing I know I'm back on earth (they usually plop me back down into a men's room at the GreyHound Bus Station - don't know why!?) and I find myself chomping-at-the-bit to go back again.

But seriously, you have to admit it was pretty neat when the Colonel pumped a slug into his drunk wife while she's lying on the road. I mean you can't see that kind of thing on Bachelor 2!

117 posted on 12/06/2002 5:58:03 AM PST by Doc Savage
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To: spectre
I'm a little fuzzy on the beginning now...I don't remember that he was taken over by the aliens.

That whole "you are the sun and the moon to me" totally grosses me out too. He even said it to his kids when he told them about their mother's death. Crawford is the single most disingenuous character that comes to recent memory.

Last night, a lot of things about Crawford's character came together...I was sad that his son, Sam, died (although I wonder if he actually did?...hmmm.) but it makes perfect poetic justice sense that he did. And I'm very interested to see how Eric's character shapes up...he is exactly like his father!...but definately more snot-nose...you just wanna smack him.

You know what else I like, Spectre? When the little girl sort of rattles off those mini poems at the beginning and the end of the movie...it adds a sort of a whimsical cohesiveness to the story.

How 'bout Jesse?!? It'll be interesting to see what they do with his character. Ack!

Best Regards,

118 posted on 12/06/2002 6:12:17 AM PST by scoopscandal
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To: js1138
Willow is one of my favorite movies...it's been a long time since I've seen it. I don't remember that line...who said it, and why?

Best Regards,

119 posted on 12/06/2002 6:16:14 AM PST by scoopscandal
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To: scoopscandal
If you liked willow and don't remember "Without you I dwell in darkness", you need to rent the movie again. I don't want to spoil it.
120 posted on 12/06/2002 6:18:59 AM PST by js1138
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