Bangkok Post

Stakes are high for Luc Besson’s intergalac­tic leap into Valerian

- ROLLO ROSS

Introducin­g a brand new multimilli­on dollar intergalac­tic adventure film based on a French comic book strip during a summer box office dominated by superheroe­s and sequels may be considered a big risk to take by an independen­t filmmaker.

But French director Luc Besson was so confident in his vision for adapting the Valerian And Laureline sci-fi comics into a film (opening in Thailand next Thursday), he took his script and sketches to buyers at the Cannes Film Festival three years ago with the hopes of securing funding for the US$150 million (5 billion baht) project.

“They all raised their hands because they loved the script so we had almost 90% of the funding in one day,” Besson said.

Set in the 28th century where humans and aliens have found a home on the space station Alpha, Valerian And The City Of A Thousand Planets follows two space agents, the cocky Valerian (Dane DeHaan) and the spirited Laureline (Cara Delevingne) trying to uncover the origins of a mysterious force.

They journey through the different environmen­ts and diverse population of Alpha, known as the city of a thousand planets where species include sea monsters and organic robots to winged reptilians and thuggish bug-eyed ogres. The film is the fruition of Besson’s nearly 50-year obsession with the comic strip he discovered at the age of 10, setting him on a path to make films such as The Fifth Element

and Lucy.

The stakes are high for Besson’s EuropaCorp film studio as Valerian

enters a box office saturated with superhero films such as Wonder Woman and Spider- Man: Homecoming

and sequels such as War For The Planet Of The Apes and Despicable Me 3.

Still, the director didn’t consider it a gamble.

“You take risks when you do a firsttime director movie at $8 million and no cast. That’s a gamble,” Besson said, adding that Valerian’s theatrical rights had already been bought across nearly 120 countries.

Early reviews for the film have been mixed, with critics praising the vibrant visuals but criticisin­g the plot and performanc­es.

Variety’s Peter Debruge said the film’s “creativity outweighs its more uneven elements”. Hollywood Reporter’s Todd McCarthy dubbed it a front-runner for the Razzies, Hollywood’s annual tongue-in-cheek “worst film” awards.

But Besson believes the audience will determine the success of the film and future instalment­s.

“I wish they love the film because I’m dying to make another one because I love Cara and Dane,” he said.

 ??  ?? Cara Delevinge stars in Luc Besson’sValerian And The City Of A Thousand Planets.
Cara Delevinge stars in Luc Besson’sValerian And The City Of A Thousand Planets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand