A New Year's Message from Producer John Aglialoro and the Atlas Shrugged Team
"3 seasons, 13 episodes per season - that would be 39 episodes to tell the story. To tell it the way it's supposed to be told - explicitly." - John Aglialoro, Producer
Today, he said that. This morning actually. Nothing official yet, but yes, John laid out a plan for a mini-series and set it as a real goal for 2015-2016. How's that for a Happy New Year!?
2015... HERE. WE. COME.
Happy New Year!
Today, he said that. This morning actually. Nothing official yet, but yes, John laid out a plan for a mini-series and set it as a real goal for 2015-2016. How's that for a Happy New Year!?
2015... HERE. WE. COME.
Happy New Year!
Previous comments...
But not as much as Dagny and John, "John Galt theme". It is like Arrakis; "Dune". No one knew the real enemy, yet. And it wasn't the sand worm.
I almost forgot how fun it was to be seriously in love, and not give the big S.
But at least we old have our health. . .oh wait, Obamacare.
DOA.
But Star Trek was way better. And none of us knew it, yet.
Robert Perry
Barbara
Looking forward to the Blu-Ray version of that mini-series ALREADY!
Happy New Year to All!
My DVD at last!
And i nailed my contact problems of recent weeks and got my producer status back.
And then, THIS news.
3 Gulch hits in 4 hours and its only day 2 of 2015.
Happy New Year to everyone in GG!
GO FOR IT!
You have already proven with three movies that you don't have an artistic or movie making or storytelling background. And you can't now suddenly, easy-peasy, try to take on another media and context. Being an exercise equipment magnate or world class poker player does not make one an experienced film or television maker or fiction writer or anything else which involves aesthetics. It is a - totally - different way of using one's mind.
Please step aside Mr. Aglialoro, show some humility, and leave a space for people who have artistic skill --and above all, DECADES of slowly and thoroughly built up experience! --to do this right.
Hank Rearden didn't start out being able to make Rearden metal. He worked his way up by laboring in the steel industry many long years, learning about metals, learning about tension and torsion and heat and chemistry and alloys and so forth.
In other words, he was a professional. You are not in this field.
By "big footing" this you will mess it up for when a genius comes along who can genuinely make a masterpiece on film or television. You will have already tarnished Atlas Shrugged. Moral: a bad effort is worse than no effort at all - certainly in this case.
For what was basically a crowdsourced and sugar-daddy-financed shoestring operation, a lot of us felt that the final product wasn't all that bad, all things considered.
Yeah, we would have loved a 'constant cast' and some better CG and as a wanna-be screen writer, I would have loved to have been able to tweak some of the weaker dialogue, but all in all, after waiting over 40 years from my First Read of AS to finally seeing it on a Really Big Screen, I was still VERY happy to contribute to its making and to see it in theaters, too!
I'd love to see the production fleshed-out to a longer, more complete and in-depth treatment, and in today's changing media world, who knows? By the time the series comes out, Blu-Ray may have been replaced by something else entirely (that comment if for the folks asking for it on DVD.... :) )
But I'll be in with cash support again, too!