August 5, in time for the 80th anniversary to lose the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, the book “Ghosts by Hiroshima“Will hit shelves, written by author Charles R. Pellegrino. The novel, as the cover announces, will eventually become a project for James Cameron – and he insists that he will deal with the subject in a different way than Christopher Nolan did two years ago with its Oscar-winning ‘Oppenheimer. ”
Cameron actually told Deadline That he felt that Nolan took “a bit of a moral police” because of “what he stayed away from” in his story.
“He has a short scene in film Where we see – and I don’t like to criticize another filmmaker’s movie – but there is only a brief moment where he sees some charred bodies in the audience and then the film continues to show how it deeply moved him, “Cameron said.” But I felt it was avoiding the subject. I don’t know if the studio or Chris felt it was a third rail they didn’t want to touch, but I want to go straight at the third rail. I’m just stupid that way. ”
Nolan had insisted at that time that it was not the story he tried to tell, and it can instead take a filmmaker like Cameron to do so. The “Titanic” director plans to follow the conversation.
“Okay, I’ll post my hand. I do, Chris. No problems,” he said. You come to my premiere and say nice things … I can’t tell you today what will be in the movie. I have made notes for 15 years and I have not written a word about the script yet because there is a point where it is everything there and then you start writing. That’s how I always work. I explore around, I remember what affects me. I start mounting ‘them in a story. And then it is a moment that I should not write.
However, there is a filmmaker whose product he wants to emulate in substance. Of course, this is none other than Steve Spielberg, who made a couple of definitive World War II classics with “Schindler’s List” and “Saving Private Ryan” in the 90s. “He showed what it happened,” Cameron said.
In addition to the next “avatar” sequence, Due to December 192025Cameron also writes “The Devils” with his writer Joe Abercrombie.
“This is Joe Abercrombie in absolute top form, opens up a whole new world and an ensemble of delicious new characters,” Said Cameron earlier this month. “Tvings and turns come in a rock-and-valley stroke, and with Joe’s signature Acerbian width and style.” The devils “show Joe’s yellowed view of human nature, in all its dark, selfish glory, which told by some crucial dismal characters. But of course, Joe always teases with the girls of birth that makes it all worth and ultimelatic.