Empire of the Sun - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Empire of the Sun"
Empire of the Sun (1987)
Timing: 2:33 (153 min)
Empire of the Sun - TMDB rating
7.516/10
1855
Empire of the Sun - Kinopoisk rating
7.866/10
28516
Empire of the Sun - IMDB rating
7.7/10
142000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Executive Producer

Robert Shapiro
Executive Producer

Editor

Costume Design

Bob Ringwood
Costume Design

Production Design

Norman Reynolds
Production Design

Stunt Coordinator

Photo Vic Armstrong #22957

Vic Armstrong

Vic Armstrong
Stunt Coordinator

Original Music Composer

Photo John Williams #1889Photo John Williams #1890

John Williams

John Williams
Original Music Composer

Second Assistant Director

Photo Roy Button #13913

Roy Button

Roy Button
Second Assistant Director

Director of Photography

Photo Allen Daviau #73616

Allen Daviau

Allen Daviau
Director of Photography

First Assistant Director

David Tomblin
First Assistant Director

Assistant Costume Designer

Graham Churchyard
Assistant Costume Designer

Screenplay

Photo Menno Meyjes #87529
Menno Meyjes
Screenplay

Novel

Third Assistant Director

Ken Shane

Ken Shane
Third Assistant Director

Assistant Director

Photo Nik Korda #327291

Nik Korda

Nik Korda
Assistant Director
Steve Harding
Assistant Director

ADR Editor

Alan L. Nineberg
ADR Editor

Second Unit

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on J.G. Ballard's autobiographical novel “Empire of the Sun” (1984).
  • Warner Bros. acquired the film rights almost immediately after the book was published. Harold Becker was to direct, and Robert Shapiro was to produce. The first draft of the screenplay was written by British playwright and screenwriter Tom Stoppard in close collaboration with James Ballard himself.
  • After Harold Becker left the project, David Lean took his place, and Steven Spielberg became one of the producers. After working on it for about a year, David Lean resigned for creative reasons, and Steven Spielberg finally took his place. Menno Meyjes was brought in to refine the script, after which Tom Stoppard was brought back to write the final version.
  • The film was shot in the Elstree Studios pavilions in England, as well as in Spain and China. Negotiations with Chinese cultural authorities began in 1985 and continued with varying success for almost a year. Ultimately, permission was granted to film in Shanghai and its surroundings for three weeks in March 1987. It was the first American film to be shot in Shanghai since the 1940s.
  • For the duration of the filming in Shanghai, Chinese authorities allowed for the replacement of a number of road signs and indicators, and the temporary closure of entire blocks. Over 5,000 local residents were used as extras, some of whom may still have remembered the terrible period of Japanese occupation.
  • Japanese soldiers in the film were played by active members of the Chinese People's Liberation Army.
  • To achieve maximum authenticity, Steven Spielberg sought to use cars and aircraft from that period. At his disposal were three full-scale, accurate replicas of Japanese Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters and three restored American The North American Aviation P-51 Mustang fighters that arrived from the United Kingdom. Due to the complexity of the planned flight scenes, filming with their participation took a full ten days. Large-scale, specially recreated models of aircraft were also used, but the resulting footage often did not satisfy the director.
  • The film's title song, Suo Gân, is a traditional Welsh-language lullaby of unknown authorship. Steven Spielberg chose it because the young Christian Bale, who played the main role, was originally from Wales.
  • Tom Danaher, who played Colonel Marshall, was a fighter pilot during World War II in the Pacific. He also piloted one of the Japanese Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters in the film. Actor Robert Stevens later stated in an interview that much of his role was cut during editing. James McGann made the same claim.
  • Mark Rylance could have been cast in one of the roles in the film.
  • Over 4,000 boys auditioned for the lead role in the film. The director was personally recommended to pay attention to Christian Bale by his wife at the time, Amy Irving. She remembered him from his role as Tsarevich Alexei in the television series “Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna,” where they had filmed together previously.
  • Eric Flynn, who played one of the British prisoners of war, was actually held in a Japanese internment camp as a child.
  • The part of the film taking place in the internment camp was significantly cut during editing. As a result, the roles of some actors were practically eliminated.
  • The role in the film was the last for British veteran actor Ralph Michael.
  • Ben Stiller, who played one of his first roles in the film, stated that the idea for 'Tropic Thunder,' filmed twenty years later, came to him during the filming process.
  • The author of the book, James Graham Ballard, appears in a cameo at the beginning of the film as one of the participants in a masquerade ball.
  • Some scenes of the film were shot in Trebujena (Andalusia), Natsford (Cheshire), and Sunningdale in Berkshire.
  • Eric Flynn, who played one of the British prisoners of war, was actually held in a Japanese internment camp as a child.
  • The title song of the film, Suo Gân, is a traditional Welsh lullaby of unknown authorship. Steven Spielberg chose it because the young Christian Bale, who played the main role, was originally from Wales.
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