Movies | June 14, 2009 | 27 comments

Live-Action Akira Movie is Dead as a Doornail!

Image
Nettle
It was only a year ago when it was officially announced that Warner Brothers and Leonardo DiCaprio's Appian Way were developing a live-action version of the anime Akira with first-time Irish director Ruairi Robinson. So now its been 15 months and we haven't heard much - but that's because its been struggling internally at the studio. Bloody Disgusting now confirms via "two separate sources" that the project is "dead as a doornail." Robinson is apparently also off of the project. When it was announced last year, the plan was to actually have shot and ready to debut in theaters this summer.

The studio fought for the rights in a bidding war in early 2008, as they had let go of them a few years earlier. The project was being spearheaded by Warner Bros. exec Greg Silverman, who previously brought 300 and Batman Begins to the studio. It was described as "Blade Runner meets City of God" which was more than enough to make me excited. Fans were in an uproar, however, because they were going to move the setting from Tokyo to what was being called "New Manhattan," a new metropolis that was rebuilt after being destroyed 31 years ago. I even heard that Zack Snyder was approached to direct (after 300) but declined.

---

I'm relieved and disappointed at the same time. I imagined one of my favorite movies getting crucified, but was also happy to see anime get some Hollywood lovin'

What do you think?
  1. groups:
    Movies,   Upstream,   Film,   Comic Book Universe,   5 more
  2. tags:
    Movies Film Upstream Entertainment News 4 more
  3.     
    |

27 comments // Live-Action Akira Movie is Dead as a Doornail!

  • CalPerr
    • 0
      CalPerr  
    • Animation is animation for a reason('xept king of the hill).
      Im not saying that animation or live action determines whether something is bad or good but ithey will never the same at all.
      You see the live action Aqua Teen Hunger Force?

    • 2 years ago
  • Viciouspike
    • 0
      Viciouspike  
    • Wow... I just started reading Akira after seeing so many good things about it here and it is a damn good manga.... I'll have to see the animation or what not but this is a damn good thing they did not try to make it a live action...

    • 2 years ago
  • straw2berry89
  • wirehedd
    • 0
      wirehedd  
    • can't decide if I want to cry or cheer as this is one of my favourite movies of all time. I was scared to death at the remake being a bastardization.

    • 2 years ago
  • Bahlkris
  • Nettle
  • Sexirobot
    • 0
      Sexirobot  
    • better canned than sodomized.

      they should have gone with my brilliant suggestion of casting Zac Efron, Tracy Morgan, the cast of twilight and Dane cook for the humor of course.

    • 2 years ago
  • Rosenquartz
  • blueghost09
    • 0
      blueghost09  
    • I bet they wanted Shia LeDouf for a major role, too.

      Good news all around! No bad acting, no lousy plot killing.

      The original animated version stands.

    • 2 years ago
  • Kamilo
  • RaceBannon
  • Mr_Ben
    • 0
      Mr_Ben  
    • I'm not sorry about this, Akira was great as a manga film, I am not so sure it would have survived the Hollywood treatment and remained so. Too many remakes of sub-par quality are trying to cash in on their superior originals.

    • 2 years ago
  • tommytripper
    • 0
      tommytripper  
    • i am happy today... this is wonderful news.

      they would have made a mess of it, now hopefully the same news comes for ghost in the shells live action.

      Hollywood is out of ideas and only ruins new material... look at the ring, the grudge and almost every other film they have remade from foreign sources... its like a continual looping train wreck.

    • 2 years ago
  • tootersmoocher
    • 0
      tootersmoocher  
    • I really wish this project would be laid to rest for good before the Wachowski brothers get a hold of it and jack off in our eyes all over again a la Speed Racer. Stop ruining the best shit from our childhood, Hollywood.

    • 2 years ago
  • bigloutech
  • Mr_Costello
  • Tygerr
  • die_mark
  • Mr_T
  • numinant
  • zwan008
    • 0
      zwan008  
    • I am shocked as this was the first film that made me a fan of the anime/manga world, cause they were planning it from the start at around 2003 but then problems came and now this has to turn up.

      If it did get made then it would have been an anime fan's dream, but you know Hollywood they just might give it to McG or to any other director (not to the one's mentioned in the above column) and turn it into a DBZ Evolution Disaster.

    • 2 years ago
  • Viciouspike
    • 0
      Viciouspike  
    • zwan008:

      Anime should stay anime there is no need for us to see it in live action that is why we watch it.... No matter the director either, it will most likely end out as a nice steamy oversized pile of dog shit in my opinion... Yours are your own and I respect them...

    • 2 years ago
  • numinant
    • 0
      numinant  
    • Ditto.

      Although now that I know that they had planned to let a first-time director make this, I feel more relieved than anything. There's only one reason why a studio would permit a first-time director to helm something this immense: because a director without experience is a director without leverage and the studio would therefor retain ultimate control over the project.

    • 2 years ago
  • current89
    • 0
      current89  
    • "I'm relieved and disappointed at the same time. I imagined one of my favorite movies getting crucified, but was also happy to see anime get some Hollywood lovin'"

      Exactly how i feel.

    • 2 years ago
  • mattbrawn
more from Movies:

top videos