
BRAD PEYTON IS NO STRANGER to pushing the boundaries of reality. Consider his three films with Dwayne Johnson: Journey 2: The Mysterious Island, San Andreas and Rampage – each one a bombastic slice of pulpy cinema. Now Peyton returns with Atlas, the story of a data analyst (Jennifer Lopez) stranded on a dangerous planet after pursuing Harlan (Simu Liu), a villainous artificial intelligence terrorist.
“My taste is always to do as much as I can,” the filmmaker tells Red Alert. “I want to push everything as much as possible.”
We’re discussing how he designed the colourful planet that Lopez’s eponymous character Atlas Shepherd cannot escape, and how he wanted to avoid creating another Tatooine. “When I first came to Netflix and pitched this idea, they were like, ‘Well, what’s the overall terrain of the planet?’ I was like, it’s everything. We’re going to do everything.”
The planet became a colourful, characterful landscape featuring forest, snow and desert climates, each serving up different traps for Atlas to conquer while driving her newly acquired mech suit. The film ends up acting as an intergalactic riff on Tom Hanks’s Cast Away, except that rather than having a volleyball to keep her company, Atlas’s high-tech suit comes fitted with an AI named Smith. Atlas, however, has a deep distrust of AI, especially as her mission – and the reason she’s many moons away from Earth – is to hunt down a different AI hellbent on destroying mankind.
Bu hikaye SFX UK dergisinin June 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye SFX UK dergisinin June 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap

FERAL FEMMES
IN JUST TWO SEASONS OF SHOWTIME'S HIT HORROR series Yellowjackets, there's been a catastrophic plane crash, a wild wolf attack, several affairs, a lot of murders and two cannibalistic feasts.

LOVE ON THE EDGE
THE \"DOOR TO HELL\" IS THE UNLIKELY SETTING FOR ROMANCE IN THE GORGE. DIRECTOR SCOTT DERRICKSON EXPLAINS HOW HE MASHED MULTIPLE GENRES TOGETHER FOR HIS VALENTINE'S DAY ACTION-HORROR

MATT'S BACK
Charlie Cox talks wearing the horned cowl again...

DANGING WITH THE DEVIL
AFTER A TUMULTUOUS PRODUCTION, DAREDEVIL FINALLY RETURNS FOR HIS OWN SERIES. SFX MEETS THE TEAM BEHIND BORN AGAIN...

RETURN OF THE KING
Vincent D'Onofrio on Wilson Fisk's terrifying rise to power

Doom's Day
New sorcerer supreme Victor von Doom casts a spell on the Marvel Universe in One World Under Doom

NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN
THE CREATORS OF THE POOHNIVERSE ARE BACK TO TWIST MORE CHILDHOOD TALES WITH PETER PAN'S NEVERLAND NIGHTMARE

THE MONKEY
OZ PERKINS MARCHES TO THE BEAT OF HIS OWN DRUM IN STEPHEN KING ADAPTATION

Superhero Blues
Invincible's executive producers promise a dark season of growth and angst

PART OF YOUR WORLD
IMAGINE IF IN HANS CHRISTIAN Andersen's The Little Mermaid, when its heroine is asked to trade in her voice for legs so she can woo her mortal infatuation on shore, she simply barked back: