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Screen Actors Guild Strike Looming

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By Guy Adams in Los Angeles, in The Independent (London), Tuesday, 24 June 2008

 

To have one trade union paralyse Hollywood was strange; two doing it in quick succession feels like carelessness. A threatened walkout by actors, which could begin as early as next week, is throwing major film and television studios into chaos.

 

The contract dispute, this time between the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and their white-collar bosses, the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), is causing what industry experts have called a "virtual strike".

 

Production deadlines for dozens of major projects have been scrapped amid growing signs that the SAG, which has 120,000 members, will fail to resolve its dispute before a deadline for industrial action on Tuesday next week.

 

Most major film shoots are now either being put on hold, or wrapping-up early to avoid disruption.

 

"No one is doing anything that finishes after 30 June, and nobody's starting anything now," one lawyer representing actors told The Hollywood Reporter. "This is the impact of a strike already."

 

Victims of the crisis include Sir Ridley Scott, who has delayed filming his Robin Hood remake, Nottingham, until late summer. Martin Scorsese, Peter Jackson and Steven Soderbergh are meanwhile rushing to finish their current projects by 1 July. Those films are Shutter Island, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, The Lovely Bones and The Informant.

 

Other stars who are likely to have a busy week include Will Ferrell (currently working on Land of the Lost), together with Seth Rogen (Observe and Report), and the James Bond actor Daniel Craig.

 

The entire cast of High School Musical 3; GI Joe; When in Rome and Disney's Race to Witch Mountain are also racing to complete shoots before any picket lines appear.

 

At issue in the SAG dispute are almost 70 elements of a proposed new contract with the major studios that is being haggled over at AMPTP's headquarters in Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles. Bones of contention are said to include payments for film and video clips screened online, the issue that was at the heart of the previous writers' dispute.

 

With no resolution on the horizon, several major projects are planning to suspend actual filming and work on special effects for however long it takes to resolve the dispute. The Transformers sequel is about to begin a planned hiatus, along with Angels & Demons, the follow up to The DaVinci Code.

 

On television, the autumn season for dozens of network shows, which was already knocked out of schedule by the 100-day writers' crisis, now faces renewed chaos. The hit show Gossip Girl is in the middle of filming its second series. Army Wives, Saving Grace, The Closer and Monk are also mid-production, while 24 has decided not to chance its arm and cancelled an entire year of shows.

 

Whatever happens, the "summer of discontent" could not have come at a worse time for an industry that is counting the cost of its first strike in 20 years.

 

Rest of the article here

 

Yay, another strike!

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After the epic failure that was the writer's strike, let's see how dumb the actors are!

To be fair, in general actors do have more total political power than the writers do. If a star ever gets into a disagreement with a writer about anything on the set, the studio is almost guaranteed to back the star every time. Plus there's a hell of a lot more actors than writers out there.

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Hey but at least all the late night shows will be on the air.

 

Well Lost isn't filming. If it cuts into Lost, then I'll have a problem. The A-List actors aren't going to picket. Also, this is Hollywood's fault by having the contracts end around the same time.

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Wait hold the phone, they're doing a Robin Hood remake? Why?!

 

I just hope their argument is, "we want.. more.. money".

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As the title would indicate, it's really about the Sheriff of Nottingham who is supposed to be portrayed much more kinder in this film and Robin Hood a much more vicious character. Basically a role reversal tale told by the Sheriff or whoever likes the Sheriff.

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Hey but at least all the late night shows will be on the air.

 

Well Lost isn't filming. If it cuts into Lost, then I'll have a problem. The A-List actors aren't going to picket. Also, this is Hollywood's fault by having the contracts end around the same time.

 

Actually, pretty sure they would have too since they are in the guild. Plus really, what are the A-List stars going to do without a supporting cast?

 

I.AM.LEGEND....2

 

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As the title would indicate, it's really about the Sheriff of Nottingham who is supposed to be portrayed much more kinder in this film and Robin Hood a much more vicious character. Basically a role reversal tale told by the Sheriff or whoever likes the Sheriff.

 

That actually sounds pretty good. I'm more shocked that Disney is making another Witch Mountain movie. How long has it been since the last one?

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