Though Ridley Scott has wanted to adapt Joe Haldeman’s classic hard sci-fi tome The Forever War for more than 30 years now, he’s had to sit and watch it frustratingly linger in limbo at 20th Century Fox. The rights have since gone back on the market and now lie with Channing Tatum’s Free Association production company. He’s aiming to produce and star in the eventual film, with Warner Bros. and Sony now locked in negotiation combat to see which can emerge triumphant and make it happen.
Haldeman’s 1947 story follows a group of soldiers, but in particular William Mandella and his friend Marygay, conscripted into the military following an attack on human colonies by the alien Taurans. After gruelling training on Earth, he and his companions are sent through a wormhole-like phenomenon to fight - but the vast distances involved mean that each time they return to Earth, decades or centuries of local time have passed and society has massively changed, even though the soldiers have only experienced weeks or months of subjective time. It’s got big concepts at its core, but audiences might be more ready for them thanks to Interstellar’s exploration of wormhole mechanics and the effects on time.
Other key players here besides Tatum are Richard Edlund, a visual effects artist who worked on (among many other things) the original Star Wars trilogy and who owned the rights, and Prometheus writer Jon Spaihts, who is attached to provide the script. Can The Forever War finally be won? We might at last find out.
from Empire News
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