Loughborough Echo

PLAYERS GONNA PLAY

Steven Spielberg returns to his adventure roots for Ready Player One. The legendary director – and the exciting cast he assembled – tell GEORGIA HUMPHREYS more about the high-tech film

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IT’S 2045, and the world is a scary place. There’s widespread unemployme­nt, the population is beset by poverty and people feel utterly hopeless.

But gamers are able to escape, by becoming their own personal avatars and entering an infinite digital universe called Oasis, where they can be whatever they choose to be.

At least, that’s the future as imagined by US author Ernest Cline in his best-seller Ready Player One, which has now been turned into an action adventure film by none other than Steven Spielberg.

“All you need is an imaginatio­n, and that will take you far in the Oasis,” explains the director, who has been at the helm of such blockbuste­rs as ET, Jaws and Jurassic Park.

“But when you escape from reality, you’re also, in a way, divesting yourself of any real human contact. So, the story is entertaini­ng, but there is also a bit of a social commentary.”

MEETING A LEGEND

THE young hero at the centre of the story, underdog Wade Watts, is played by Tye Sheridan, 21.

Uunderstan­dably, the young actor – who’s also starred in X-Men: Apocalypse – was incredibly nervous before meeting 71-year-old Steven for the first time.

“I actually remember calling my dad and he was like, ‘ You know what, just enjoy the opportunit­y and I’m sure you’re going to be great’,” he says. “I always call my dad before I do stuff. It puts me at ease.”

But the experience was even more overwhelmi­ng once he went inside the room, and realised Steven would be operating the camera himself, at times from just two feet away. “There’s always an intimacy with him,” notes Tye, “which I think does disarm you.”

British actress Olivia Cooke was in that very same audition – and won the role of Samantha and her avatar Art3mis, who “opens up the mind and heart” of Wade and his avatar Parzival.

“You’re put into a waiting room that has Steven Spielberg memorabili­a from all his different films and you’re just sat there just trying to calm yourself down,” recalls the 24-year-old, best known so far for US TV series Bates Motel.

“He put me at ease as much as he possibly could, but I was still having a panic attack!”

PLAYING THE BADDIE

WHEN it came to casting the power-hungry Nolan Sorrento, the head of a giant corporatio­n which wants control of Oasis, Steven chose Australian star Ben Mendelsohn.

“I first saw Ben in the TV series Bloodline, which I was completely infatuated with,” recalls the film-maker. “I said to myself, ‘I don’t know when or in what, but I am going to work with that guy’.”

Sorrento’s chance to take over the Oasis comes when its creator, video game designer James Halliday (played by Mark Rylance), passes away without any heirs. To find a worthy winner of his vast fortune and full ownership of the Oasis, he leaves behind a game within the game – along

Tye Sheridan on working with Steven Spielberg

with three challenges, they also have to find an Easter Egg hidden somewhere inside the virtual universe.

When Wade’s avatar Parzival tops the leaderboar­d, the evil Sorrento decides to drasticall­y up the ante, and it becomes a matter of life or death.

This is far from the first bad guy Ben has played in a film – notably, he was the villain Director Orson Krennic in the Star Wars film Rogue One.

Is he ever concerned about what vibes he must give off to be cast in such evil roles?

“I hope it’s something of a version of ‘job well done’,” quips the actor, before adding with a friendly laugh: “But no, it’s not something I worry about a lot.”

A FILM FOR EVERYONE

BEN calls himself and Steven “OG’s – original gamers”, sharing they’ve played arcade space shooter Asteroids together. Cleverly, in line with the book’s popular culture references, the film itself is crammed with Easter Eggs from iconic video games, comic books and films.

But even viewers who are not gamers themselves will be enraptured with the realityben­ding world of Ready Player One, says Tye.

“That’s the great thing about this movie,” he continues.

“Although there’s a tonne of gaming references, it’s made for people who have never played a game their whole lives.”

Meanwhile, it’s undeniable that gaming is a world that’s had a mixed relationsh­ip with women – there has been sexism controvers­y in the gaming industry in the past, known as Gamergate.

Olivia insists that Ready Player One is an inclusive film for women.

“I think we’ve got such wonderful female characters and the reason why there are sometimes underwritt­en or weak female characters in films is just testament to bad writing,” she says. “I think people can really relate to Lena Waithe’s character, Helen, and mine for being so selfless and so intelligen­t and so passionate and active the whole time.”

NEW TERRITORY

ALTHOUGH he had worked with motion capture on The Adventures Of Tintin and The BFG, with this film Steven wore a VR headset, and used cutting-edge technology to direct his cast in a virtual environmen­t.

“They created an avatar for me that let me walk through the space and see the actual set,” he notes.

“And once I figured out how I was going to shoot each sequence, I asked the actors to put on the goggles so they could get a feeling of what their environmen­t looked like.

“Otherwise, you’re acting in a big white room with a bunch of digital cameras looking down at you. “It’s confusing for any actor or director to walk onto a bare-naked set and try to imagine what’s there. With the goggles on, we didn’t have to imagine.”

Capturing an adventure too big for the real world certainly sounds a new experience, even for Steven, whose career spans a mighty five decades.

“The layers we had to achieve to put the Oasis on screen made it one of the most complicate­d things I’ve ever done,” he confides.

“There was motion capture, live action, computer animation... It was really like making four movies at the same time.” Ready Player One is in cinemas from Wednesday.

There’s always an intimacy with him, which I think does disarm you

 ??  ?? From left are Ready Player One’s Ben Mendelsohn, Hannah John-Kamen, Win Morisaki, Tye Sheridan, Olivia Cooke, Steven Spielberg, Lena Waithe, Philip Zhao and Simon Pegg
From left are Ready Player One’s Ben Mendelsohn, Hannah John-Kamen, Win Morisaki, Tye Sheridan, Olivia Cooke, Steven Spielberg, Lena Waithe, Philip Zhao and Simon Pegg
 ??  ?? Tye Sheridan as Wade Watts in the action-packed movie
Tye Sheridan as Wade Watts in the action-packed movie
 ??  ?? Steven Spielberg wore a VR headset to direct the cast and had his own avatar
Steven Spielberg wore a VR headset to direct the cast and had his own avatar

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