Atlas Shrugged Movie Update: Lionsgate Hires Director Vadim Perelman

Sounds like the Atlas Shrugged movie isn’t in turnaround after all. Here’s an update from Variety:

Lionsgate has brought on Vadim Perelman to rewrite “Atlas Shrugged” and direct Angelina Jolie in the starring role.
While Lionsgate needs to get a final script before formally committing to a start date with Perelman at the helm, the move puts the company in a strong position for an early 2008 production start, just a shade over 50 years after Ayn Rand’s famed novel was first published in 1957.
Pic will be produced by Howard and Karen Baldwin and Media Talent Group’s Geyer Kosinski.
Perelman will work from a draft of the script penned by “Braveheart” scribe Randall Wallace, who managed to boil down the Rand manifesto of 1,100-plus pages into a 127-page script. The drama revolves around what happens when great industrialists and thinkers go on strike and the world grinds to a halt.
Wallace will remain involved, and in a recent meeting with Perelman, the pair traded Russian dialogue. Perelman was born in Kiev, while Wallace has picked up the language researching his Catherine the Great pic “The Mercenary”; Rand was born in Russia. Perelman has brought his own take that will be incorporated into Wallace’s script.
Perelman’s latest film, the Uma Thurman-Evan Rachel Wood starrer “In Bloom,” premieres at the Toronto Film Festival. It’s his first since his 2003 breakthrough, “House of Sand and Fog.”
Jolie starts work in early fall on the Clint Eastwood-directed “The Changeling” for Universal, Imagine and Malpaso. She would like to follow with “Atlas Shrugged,” long a passion project for her.

Hat-tip: Joe Duarte.
UPDATE: Oops, I see that Shawn and I have doubled up on this announcement. Oh well, this one probably deserved multiple announcements. 😉

Atlas Shrugged 50th Anniversary Celebration

An announcement from the Atlas Society:

Atlas Shrugged 50th Anniversary Celebration on October 6!
Since its publication half a century ago, Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged has inspired millions. Come hear leading scholars, experts and achievers discuss the literary, philosophical, moral, economic and political aspects of this great novel and its impact on our world–past, present and future. Our keynote speakers are John Stossel of ABC’s 20/20 show and Charles Murray, libertarian scholar. (See full schedule below.)
Hear any updates on the planned Atlas movie. Celebrate with others who love the book. Don’t miss the excitement! If your life and thinking were changed by Atlas Shrugged, this is a day you won’t want to miss!
You can get further information, updates and register online at AtlasEvents.org.
When: Saturday, October 6, 2007, 8:00am- 9:00pm.
Conference and banquet location: Merriott Renaissance Hotel, Washington, D.C.
Afternoon Reception: The Cato Institute, Washington, D.C.
Seminar costs for entire day, reception at the Cato Institute and gala banquet:
$210 before September 21. $250 after September 21. $150 student rate. $199 per night at Renaissance Hotel if registered by September 6.
The Program:
8:00-9:00am — Registration
9:00am — Welcoming Remarks: *Edward Hudgins, executive director, The Atlas Society
9:15-10:30am — Panel One
*Anne Heller, author of an upcoming biography on Ayn Rand — “Atlas and Rand’s Life”
*Mimi Gladstein, author of Atlas Shrugged: A Reader’s Companion — “Atlas and Rand the Writer”
*David Kelley, founder and senior fellow, The Atlas Society — “Atlas in Academia”
10:30-11:00am — Coffee Break
11:00am-12:15pm — Panel Two
*Tibor Machan, professor, Chapman University, philosopher and author — “Atlas and Ethics”
*William Thomas, director of programs, The Atlas Society — “Atlas and Loving Life”
*David Mayer, professor of law and history, Capital University — “Atlas and the American Revolution”
12:30-1:45pm — Luncheon speaker: Charles Murray — “Atlas and Achievement”
2:00-3:15pm — Panel Three
*Edward Younkins, professor of economics, Wheeling Jesuit University — “Atlas and Economics”
*Ed Snider, chairman, Comcast Spectacor — “Atlas and the Entrepreneur”
*Rob Bradley, president, Institute for Energy Research — “Atlas and Business Ethics”
3:15-3:30pm — Coffee Break
3:30-4:45pm — Panel Four
*Fred Smith, president, Competitive Enterprise Institute — “Atlas and Politics”
*Edward Crane, president, The Cato Institute — “Atlas and the Fight for Freedom”
*Edward Hudgins, executive director, The Atlas Society — “Atlas & the Future of Objectivism”
5:00-6:15pm — Reception at the Cato Institute. *Reflections on Atlas Shrugged by Nathaniel Branden and Barbara Branden.
6:30-9:00pm — Gala Banquet *Keynote: John Stossel, “Atlas and America Today.” *Final Remarks: David Kelley

Atlas Shrugged Movie Dead?

A friend of mine posted this on his blog:

The word on the street is that the Atlas Shrugged movie project is in “turnaround” status. That means that the producers (Baldwin Entertainment Group) have given up trying to make the movie right now, and are willing to sell the rights to someone else (presumably for their accrued development costs).
This is a major turn of events since last year, when the film looked like a sure thing. It’s amazing how fast a project can hit a dead end in the movie business.

Sigh.
UPDATE – JUL 18: I’m removing the name of my friend who originally posted this on his blog, because (due to my relative inexperience with LiveJournal) I was quoting a friends-only entry from his blog.
That said, I have telephoned the original source of this rumor, who is a Rand-admiring movie producer uninvolved in the Atlas Shrugged movie, for additional information.
He pointed out — and verified while we were on the phone — that the Pro version of IMDB lists the movie as “Status: Turnaround.” This status, he says, was posted on June 18th.
“Turnaround,” of course, has a very specific meaning in the film industry — basically, that the producer wants to sell the movie.
So it’s either a typo in the Internet Movie Database or the movie is, in fact, in turnaround.

Orit Arfa Profiles ARI's Yaron Brook for JPost

Atlasphere member Orit Arfa has published a profile of Ayn Rand Institute Executive Director Yaron Brook in the Jerusalem Post, titled “You don’t fight a tactic.” It begins:

Dr. Yaron Brook, 46, speaks and carries himself like a Rand hero. His facial features are angular, his demeanor self-confident. His language is principled, logical, certain, fired by moral passion, replete with absolute terms: good and evil, right and wrong, defeat and victory. He has a slight lisp, which is easily overshadowed by the controversial and harsh words that roll off his tongue.
For the first time since he left Israel for America in 1987 – for essentially the same reasons Rand did – Brook gave a lecture in his mother country: “Israel and the West’s War with Islamic Totalitarianism: Why We are Losing.”
Born in Jerusalem and raised in Haifa, Brook met few intellectuals here who could nurture his interest in Rand’s ideas, which he first developed at 16 after reading Atlas Shrugged. The novel catapulted him out of the socialist-Zionist way of thought he had inherited from his South African-Israeli parents and from Israeli education and culture.

See the full article for much more.

Ayn Rand and Malcolm Gladwell's "Blink" Thesis

From a new article at Desicritics.org titled Book Review: Malcolm Gladwell and Ayn Rand:

[I]f you simply dig a little under the words Gladwell uses, such as “instincts,” “snap judgments,” and “thinking without thinking,” what you will realize is that Gladwellâ??s thesis is not novel in any significant sense, at least not to someone who is well-versed with Ayn Randâ??s philosophy of Objectivism.
Ayn Rand had decades ago stated that one must “trust your subconscious” while engaged in the task of writing. However, like much else of what Rand said, this little instruction to trust oneâ??s own subconscious mind can be extended beyond the context of writing and applied to practically every realm and action in life.

See the full article for more on the parallels between Ayn Rand’s philosophy of Objectivism and Malcolm Gladwell’s thesis in Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking.

Rand-o-rama at The Chronicle of Higher Education

From the Chronicle of Higher Education‘s “Rand-o-rama” post of two days ago:

This week The Chronicle features three articles about the intellectual legacy of Ayn Rand. (The intro is here; to get to the main courses, follow the links in the right-hand column.)
In this 2004 interview, the Ayn Rand Instituteâ??s director, Yaron Brook, briefly describes his â??plan to help [objectivist] graduate students get placed in top-level philosophy departments around the country. The program is still in its infancy. It is very ambitious, and we will not know its success for many years.â?
Is that kind of talk creepy and messianic? Or is it the commendable behavior of a group that believes it has a true and important set of ideas to bring to the world? That was one of the debates that occupied faculty members this spring at Texas State University at San Marcos, as they considered whether or not to accept a Rand-related donation.

See the full post by David Glenn for (much) more Rand-related coverage at the Chronicle.