Clay Pigeons Movie Review by movieviewr
Clay Pigeons Movie Review by movieviewr
Buy the Movie Poster for Clay Pigeons
After a decent box office turnout for G.I. Jane, Ridley Scott’s next project was slated to be an adaptation of Richard Matheson’s famed horror novel, I Am Legend. Matheson’s story takes place in a futuristic 1976 where a terrible plague has transformed the entire human race into blood-thirsty vampires. Only one man, Robert Neville, has survived the epidemic. Neville spends his days destroying the undead creatures and his nights trying to survive their hungry wrath.
I Am Legend was first published in 1954 and has since been heralded as one of the finest horror novels of the twentieth century. The story has been adapted to film twice before; once in 1964 as The Last Man on Earth starring Vincent Price and again in 1971 as The Omega Man starring Charlton Heston. But when Scott’s proposed budget looked like it was going to top one hundred million dollars, Warner Brothers got cold feet and pulled the plug on the film. Instead of jumping right into another directorial job, Scott decided to spend some time with the projects being developed at his production house, Scott Free. This leads us into his producer’s credit on the neo-noir black comedy Clay Pigeons.
Obviously inspired by the Coen brother’s Fargo, Clay Pigeons is a fairly well played, offbeat, crime thriller with a handful of solid performances. It marks the feature film debut of commercial director David Dobkin, who would eventually move into the big leagues with projects like Shanghai Knights and The Wedding Crashers. The screenplay, written by the equally inexperienced Matt Hearly, is sharp and funny.
That isn’t to say that Clay Pigeons is without it’s faults, but if you’re just looking to have a good time you just might want to give it a peek.
Scott and Matt of the Gods of Filmmaking www.godsoffilmmaking.com
Buy the Movie Poster for Clay Pigeons
After a decent box office turnout for G.I. Jane, Ridley Scott’s next project was slated to be an adaptation of Richard Matheson’s famed horror novel, I Am Legend. Matheson’s story takes place in a futuristic 1976 where a terrible plague has transformed the entire human race into blood-thirsty vampires. Only one man, Robert Neville, has survived the epidemic. Neville spends his days destroying the undead creatures and his nights trying to survive their hungry wrath.
I Am Legend was first published in 1954 and has since been heralded as one of the finest horror novels of the twentieth century. The story has been adapted to film twice before; once in 1964 as The Last Man on Earth starring Vincent Price and again in 1971 as The Omega Man starring Charlton Heston. But when Scott’s proposed budget looked like it was going to top one hundred million dollars, Warner Brothers got cold feet and pulled the plug on the film. Instead of jumping right into another directorial job, Scott decided to spend some time with the projects being developed at his production house, Scott Free. This leads us into his producer’s credit on the neo-noir black comedy Clay Pigeons.
Obviously inspired by the Coen brother’s Fargo, Clay Pigeons is a fairly well played, offbeat, crime thriller with a handful of solid performances. It marks the feature film debut of commercial director David Dobkin, who would eventually move into the big leagues with projects like Shanghai Knights and The Wedding Crashers. The screenplay, written by the equally inexperienced Matt Hearly, is sharp and funny.
That isn’t to say that Clay Pigeons is without it’s faults, but if you’re just looking to have a good time you just might want to give it a peek.
Scott and Matt of the Gods of Filmmaking www.godsoffilmmaking.com
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