Sam Raimi discusses Warcraft movie

Many promising things were said during the interview, but some points of interest include:
- Raimi and scriptwriter Robert Rodat (Saving Private Ryan, The Patriot) are working on a treatment for the film. So far they've written a 40-page document.
- Raimi is playing WoW to get a feel for the game world. He has a level 72 character.
- Legendary Pictures (Batman Begins, Inception) is excited about the project and Legendary Pictures founder and producer, Thomas Tull is a big fan of the game.
- The movie will be set entirely in the Warcraft universe. No video game component will exist in the film. (Thank Elune.)
For the highlights from the interview, hit the jump.
Collider.com: What's the thing about it [Warcraft] that most excites you as a filmmaker?
Raimi: I love the visual world that the guys over at Blizzard have created. It's incredibly, engrossingly, terrifying and exciting. I like the use of scale; the giant monsters they have. I love the different landscapes that your character can move through. I like the first person interaction you have with other players online. There are so many aspects about the game that I really enjoy, like the battle, doing sword battles. I like performing spells, and learning new spells, and getting to the next level like everyone else.
Collider.com: The big thing that I think a lot of fans are wondering is: is this a film that you're envisioning taking place in the real world, and in this world. What's the angle on it that you guys are aiming for? How did you crack the story?
Raimi: We're still working on the story right now. And we've got a 40-page document, that needs a lot more work, but every draft that we do with Robert Rodat gets better and better. We're finding the characters, and through the characters we're finding the story. The angle -- there's no real angle on it. We're just trying to create realistic characters that can live in the world of Warcraft, as though you were in the game itself in one or two or three of those environments, and see the interaction with those great mythical iconic characters.
Collider.com: What do you see that's cinematic about this world?
Raimi.com: Well like I was saying, the landscapes are incredibly cinematic. They're brilliantly designed. The characters themselves are really unique and fantastic, I love the different sizes and powers that they have. How some are great warriors with axes, like an orc. Or others like a human paladin can carry those great, awesome warhammers. I think that it'd be really cool to see them in battle. I'm attracted to the characters, the weaponry, the environment that they've created.
Collider.com: Are there going to be people in your version of the movie that are playing a video game, or is this all taking place in the world of Warcraft.
Raimi: It would be taking place within the world of Warcraft. All in the world.
Collider.com: Are you using any characters from the game?
Raimi: Well, we're trying to use - there are so many characters in the game, that we're really trying to pull up on the most exciting and different characters of the game. We couldn't -- you know it's so overwhelming. It really is a world -- a universe -- worlds in fact. And so many different characters, and so many different professions I don't think we could touch upon all of them satisfactorily. So we're trying to choose the ones that are interesting and could play a part in a drama that is slowly developing.
Collider.com: As you're deciding on these high profile projects, what sort of things do you think about? "Will this be what I want to spend the next 2 years on?" What is your process?
Raimi: Well, I just look for something that really stirs me up, something I'm excited about, something I love, and I love playing that game. And I really got a sense of the environments and the characters, I feel like there can be great stories told in that landscape. So I try to pursue things that I'm excited about.
Collider.com: Are you one of those people, who have sat there for the whole week, playing morning to night? Fans want to know how you relate to the material. So you, you're a fan of the game, you've been playing it yourself?
Raimi: Absolutely, I had a level 29 shaman that somebody deleted by accident when I worked my way up to. And now I've worked a new character all the way up to level 71 -- 72 sorry, so that's exactly how big a fan I am. I'm not into power leveling -- other people doing it for me -- I've spent that many days in the World of Warcraft.
Collider.com: What studio has the property, and how has it been talking to them about this? Have you been feeling the studio very enthusiastic about the property?
Raimi: The studio is very enthusiastic, and it's Legendary Pictures. Thomas Tull is running Legenday, he's a great fan of the game himself. He's a fellow that really produces good quality pictures, I really like him. he's after making a top-quality movie, that's his only concern. He's very excited about the process, and I love working with him. I think that they release through Warner Brothers, but I consider Legendary the studio right now I think, you know the people who I've been working with creatively.
Collider.com: You seem to be on World of Warcraft, possibly Oz. Are there other things that are circling around you that you're looking at? Or is Warcraft that much of a passion project that you're like "I really want this?"
Raimi: I really do want to make World of Warcraft, it's still a long ways away it's only a 40-page story. I really want to direct a picture. It's possible that a film that is ready to make could come in. I haven't seen it yet, but I love making movies. The development process is a little less interesting to me but it's something you have to do if you want to start something from scratch and that's what we did with World of Warcraft.
In the interview Raimi also dispels the rumors that he might be picking up direction for The Hobbit. He says he's just been spending the past couple months with his family, as well as reading and working with Rodat on the Warcraft script.
From here it's hard to say what film will claim Raimi first. From Raimi's end, Warcraft looks very likely but I would say it's dependent on which studio is more eager to push the projects forward to production. One important thing to note is that Raimi says he's read the Oz script, which while probably not a finished shooting script is still a more than what the Warcraft film has completed. It's still too early to know, though.
Filed under: Interviews, Rumors, Warcraft Movie






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
ss_5inuyasha Jun 25th 2010 6:04PM
I can't wait for this movie :\
Ikarus Jun 25th 2010 7:12PM
I could be wrong here, but to me it feels like WoW is kind of at it's climax right now. We're not hearing the reports about a growing subscriber base like we used to. Don't get me wrong, I love the game, I have 7 80s, but I think this might be as good as it get's. There will be more expansions to be sure, it's not going to all come crashing down over night, but I don't see it getting any bigger than it is now. Which makes me wonder how long it's going to take to get this movie out. If WoW's popularity wanes, will the move me as big of a hit?
Eldoron Jun 25th 2010 7:35PM
"I could be wrong here"
yes you are.
Elmouth Jun 25th 2010 8:47PM
Yes, he is.
besides, in the "dead" season right now. Wait til october/november and try saying WoW is "past its climax" again lol...
Sehvekah Jun 25th 2010 10:13PM
@Ikarus
A well made movie is going to be seen. It won't be "Avatar" big, but it's still going to reach a wider audience than the game is now(and probably wider than it'd *ever* likely reach as a game). And it *will* reach a wider audience, there's a reason Hollywood is making hundreds¹ of new movies every year. And there's going to be a notable chunk of that whole new audience who will say "Oh, *that's* what that WoW thing's all about... Maybe I should give it a try". Not all of them will stay, naturally, but some of them will.
The end result of this being, even *if* WoW's at it's peak now, even *if* SW:TOR takes a big chunk of the subscriber base while other MMOs chip away at the edges, this movie is going to be good for WoW.
You may note I never said anything about WoW's popularity affecting how the movie does, and that's because it's the other way around. Movies are Big Damn Business, much bigger than gaming, and WoWs' player base isn't going to make(or break) the movie. *People who like movies* are going to do that, the 11.5 million people who play now just mean there's a slightly larger buffer of people likely to watch it than one would get from a wholly original IP.
As for feeing like WoW it at it's climax, we *are* at the end of an expansion, we've killed the Lich King that's been taunting us for over a year, of course it feels climatic, it damn well should! If it didn't, *that* would be a sign to worry about WoW. If, two months after Cataclysm hits, we're still looking at ~11-12 million players, *then* you'll have something to back up your doomsaying. Till then, you're just another nutter with a cardboard sign.
¹=You might rightly think I'm exaggerating here. I mean, how *many* movies could really be released in one year?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_in_film
I counted 138(that's ONE-HUNDRED AND THIRTY EIGHT!) movies with a "wide release"(600+ theaters) in 2009. There were at least that many again in limited release films, and four re-released movies(because somehow there weren't enough movies in 2009).
And *that's* during an economic recession, when the studios are being marginally picky about how they throw their money about. So yeah...
gameleon Jun 26th 2010 2:50AM
"I could be wrong here, but to me it feels like WoW is kind of at it's climax right now. "
You're pretty good at predicting these things? (Srry, couldn't resist :) )
Ontopic, I would love to see how this movie turns out. Sam Raimi is a good director who could really take the movie into the right direction. (Unlike some others I could name.................. isn't that right,Uwe Boll? :P)
Marcosius Jun 26th 2010 5:20AM
Well he's not completely wrong, WoW IS pretty much at it's climax. I really don't think the playerbase will grow much larger thant what it is now - my feelings tell me around 14-15 million is the absolute limit it can still grow to, before the amount of subscribers will start to decline. Nothing lasts forever, not even WoW.
But of course I'm not saying it will all fall apart in a day, it will take years until WoW kicks the bucket should the amount of paying customers start declining right now - with Cataclysm looming in the horizon I don't think it will, just now, it might just breathe in the last breaths of life for the game and possibly give a small temporary boost to the subscriber numbers.
On an unrelated note, I find it amusing how the more rabid fans downvote comments that don't worship the ground under Blizzard's feet. IMO he said nothing scandalous, yet was viciously attacked by other commenters.
Gemini Jun 26th 2010 10:13AM
"Movies are Big Damn Business, much bigger than gaming, and WoWs' player base isn't going to make(or break) the movie."
Actually, you're wrong. The video game industry has surpassed Hollywood in annual revenue.
KALGEOR Jun 28th 2010 4:17AM
I have sad news for everyone, wow "is kind of at it's climax". Also wow "was kind of at it's climax" before WotLK and also pre TBH....snif snif
Al Jun 25th 2010 6:07PM
I bet he plays a Lock.
Iirdan Jun 25th 2010 6:16PM
*flashbacks to Evil Dead*
Yeah, definitely a Lock.
Clydtsdk-Rivendare Jun 25th 2010 7:54PM
inb4 the mage boycott
Almoderate Jun 26th 2010 1:40AM
If he liked the shaman he was playing, I'm placing bets on an orc shaman being in the mix somewhere-- particularly considering how he's just talked about orcs. However, I can definitely see him spending some time in Undercity and possibly on a Forsaken toon. And I'm sure we can pretty much rest assured that the Undercity and her queen will make an appearance of some sort in this movie.
vinniedcleaner Jun 26th 2010 9:58AM
Nah, he plays an orc warrior so he can pull out his http://thottbot.com/i32780 and
/y Alright you Primitive Screwheads, listen up! You see this? This... is my boomstick!
Gwalchgwyn Jun 25th 2010 6:10PM
I wished they based the movie on the wars that have occured in warcraft.
Now that would just be so amazing.
nurmi Jun 25th 2010 6:10PM
If this movie doesn't come out there will be blood in the water.
spnife Jun 25th 2010 6:11PM
At least he's got some fantasy roots from producing shows like the Legend of the Seeker, Hercules and Xena...
Task Jun 25th 2010 6:11PM
Raimi had me @ the answer he gave for this interview.
I'm very happy that he's investing so much time and learning about WoW.
/salute Raimi
Jormund Fenris Jun 25th 2010 6:23PM
Level 29 shaman "deleted by accident"?
Oh well, may the spirits be with you.
shkss Jun 25th 2010 7:35PM
Can ghost wolves cry?