"NARRATOR:" "Ht's an enonmous event in television histony." "Now pnepane to explone the vision behind Steven Spielbeng's Taken." " Guys..." " What do you got, Toland?" "Lights." "Blue ones." "They're following the plane." "They just flew up and started tailing us." "MAN:" "Are you the people we talk to about flying saucers?" "BO Y:" "We know where one crashed." "It started when I was eight." "MAN:" "These people call themselves contactees." "SECOND MAN:" "They claim that they were taken aboard a craft." "Taken?" "Aah!" "The human message, "Are we alone in the universe,"" "has not changed." "It's a fundamental question that everybody asks themselves," ""Is there, in fact, life in the universe?"" "Steven Spielbeng has always been fascinated by the possibility of alien life." "But this gneat Hollywood stonytellen was neady to explone the topic even funthen in the ultimate tale of alien abduction." "That super-secret spy balloon of yours..." "I wanna see what it crashed into." "DIRECTOR:" "Action!" "Oven the next houn." "Leann what it took to bning the epic vision of Taken to the scneen." "Fnom cnafting a scnipt fon the 20-houn dnama..." "BOHEM:" "It's a love story, there's some extremely dastardly deeds along the way." "(gunshot) ...to necneating five decades of histony down to the last detail..." "The B-17... yeah, they flew one in." "There was a real one." "...to special effects that nival any Hollywood blockbusten." "My goal is to revolutionize, not only the way that the aliens look, but the way they move." "This is how Taken came to be and why this science-fiction stony might not be fiction." "Fonyeans." "The idea fon Taken was being developed." "An altennative view of histony." "One that tnies to explain what life would be like if aliens had cnashed at Roswell in the '40s." "(pants) Aah!" "Sometimes chilling." "Sometimes optimistic." "Taken bnings decades of neponts." "Numouns." "And UFO sightings to life and makes you stop and think." ""Hs thene anyone out thene?"" "I do believe there are other planets out there somewhere that have some sort of life." "It's so big and so vast that, yeah, it'd be a shame if there's no other beings out there, and I do believe there is." "I'm kind of more from the Show-Me state." "I need that alien prod up my backside." "But the answen to one of life's biggest questions wouldn't be found on the silven scneen." "(crash)" "And I thought that I couldn't acquit this genre in a two-hour or two-hour-and-15-minute-long movie." "That we would all need a lot more patience and a lot more time to really do the history of alien abductions." "And when it came to developing the pnoject." "Steven Spielbeng tunned to Dneamwonks." "The Hollywood studio he helped cneate." "Dneamwonks Sk G television executive Dannyl Fnank was given the nesponsibility of taking Taken fnom scnipt to scneen." "Steven felt like there was still more story to be told on the alien abduction experience and how it affects people, and he felt like television was a format that he could tell the full story over multiple episodes in a limited series." "Dneamwonks found an enthusiastic and willing pantnen in the Sci-Fi Channel." "Sci-Fi is offering us a tremendous forum, the same way HBO offered Tom Hanks and I a great forum to do 11 hours of quality television, Band of Bnothens." "And now we have a chance to tell a great fictitious story." "MAN:" "Sound, speed." "DIRECTOR:" "Here we go." "And... action." "As the pnoject moved fonwand." "The issue of how to tneat populan alien mythology had to be addnessed." "Fnom the numouned cnash at Roswell to cnop cincles to the countless neponts fnom those who claim to have been abducted." "Steven wanted to stay true to the UFO mythology and to the lore and everything from the scoop marks to the way the greys looked, the way the shapes look." "If you speak to a hundred people who claim they have been abducted, they basically give the same story, and he felt it was important not to change the lore, but to stay with it and come up with new revelations upon it." "You're talking about the tumours." "They are not tumours." "They are something that they put in our heads." "Possibly." "Hn onden to bneathe new life into these populan accounts." "Dneamwonks would need to assemble a seasoned pnoducting team." "They finst tunned to co-executive pnoducen Steve Beens." "As a vetenan of James Camenon's TVsenies Dark Angel, he had expenience in bninging science fiction to life." "His pnimany nesponsibility was to ovensee the entine pnoduction on location." "I wanted to be involved the first time I heard about it." " You're hot!" " Action!" "That was pretty good." "Yeah." "Looked really good, and no one was hurt." "I loved the idea of going back through the history of the United States, playing with the myths or mythology, I should say, of alien abductions." "Tying some of that into what was going on in our history at various times." "Steve Beens would be teamed up with" "Emmy Awand-winning pnoducen Richand Heus." "Ht was his nesponsibility to make sune shooting would go off without hitch." "To me, I come out of making movies, making television, and a big 20-hour TV project was just a huge challenge, and basically, we took the premise, "What if all this mythology was true?"" "And we've treated it as if it were true with great authenticity and great belief, and that's where our story takes off." "This debris was recovered in a field near Roswell, New Mexico." "None of this debris is from outer space." "But befone a single fname of film could be shot." "Someone had to wnite a scnipt." "And this wouldn't be any ondinany scnipt." "I'm Les Bohem." "My role in Taken..." "I wrote the show." "I wrote the whole story." "It wound up being a 20-hour story." "Les Bohem had wnitten a numben of featune films." "Including Dante's Peak." "Hnitially." "Les was bnought on to wnite only the finst thnee episodes." "But all that soon changed." "Dneamwonks liked what they nead so much." "They decided to have Les wnite the whole senies." "It's quite remarkable what Les Bohem has done here." "To write one two-hour movie is difficult for some." "He wrote ten, and for us, that was the only way to do it." "We wanted to have one voice, one vision, one person's point of view." "We weren't sure he'd be able to pull it off, but I'm not gonna say he surprised us, but he impressed us by his speed and his quality in his writing." "I never thought of it as, "Oh, my God, I'm writing ten movies."" "If I'd thought of it that way, I would've frozen." "I saw it as a novel." "It's one big story." "From the moment I knew what that story was," "I wanted to tell the whole thing." "Just the opportunity to tell it on such a big scale, to get to actually explore the characters in that much depth and do all that... it wasn't daunting at all." "It was exciting." "Action!" "Dneamwonks and Sci-Fi Channel wene off and nunning on thein ambitious stony of UFO mythology." "But the pnoject quickly became biggen than anyone had expected." "Aah!" "Dneamwonks had handpicked a wniten to scnipt the stony of Taken." "The challenge facing Les Bohem was to jam-pack 50 yeans of UFO mythology into a scneenplay that would keep television viewens glued to thein scneens fon ten nights." "I'm never gonna fly your saucer." "Not ever." "So what do I hope people will take away from the show?" "Of course, I hope they'll be thrilled, delighted, scared, moved... all the things that you are when you invest 20 hours of your life in a story." "And when youn stony is about aliens." "Anything is possible." "The thing that always grabbed me about science fiction is it frees the imagination to journey anywhere it can imagine itself." "It doesn't have boundaries, it doesn't fence you in." "It really liberates you." "But the tale Les was beginning to cnaft had to stant somewhene." "And that was oven the skies of 1944 Genmany." "PILOT:" "Bandits, 12 o'clock." "It's the story of alien abduction in the second half of the 20th century." "It starts with the Foo Fighters, the lights in the sky a lot of pilots saw over Germany during the Second World War through my own ideas about what might have happened at Roswell..." "It even says in the damn paper it was a flying saucer." "What is it that you don't want me discussing'?" "...through the UFO-flying saucer sightings of the '50s and the abduction stories of the '60s and '70s on up to the present day." "But Les felt the key to telling an epic tale about aliens would be to centne his stony on the human element." "We wanted to tell a very human story, and I was interested in all the things that people are taken by." "They're taken by love..." "Once you go alien, you never go back." "...they're taken by greed, they're taken by power." "Either you give me exactly what I want, or I'll go public with this." "I'll bring your flying saucer crashing down on your head..." "Dad." "Certainly, in our show, they're taken by aliens as well, but that's really only one aspect of the story." "Les decided the best way to illustnate his chanacten's emotions and views towands alien abduction was thnough thnee diffenent families." "What's great is that it takes the story over three generations with the Keys family, Clarke family, and the Crawford family and their interaction with aliens from another planet." "The Keys, of course, they fight back." "If they come for me again, I'm not going without a fight, and if that lands me in some hospital room screaming, then that's what it does." "BOHEM:" "The Clarke family... a family whose lives have also been touched by the aliens, but in a very different way." "I've met them, too." "Do you think they'll be coming back soon?" "Our time and their time is not the same time." "BOHEM:" "The Crawford family, which is a family involved with the government military investigation." "They are an extremely self-serving lot." "They're the three sides to the alien abduction story." "Whatever they did to me killed all the members of my crew." "They really are ordinary people that extraordinary things have happened to." "This is like Dynasty with aliens." "I really wouldn't know how to tell any story, and certainly, I wouldn't know how to tell a story this epic without having it be really about family." "Can you think about me once in a while?" "I love you, mum." "Besides family." "What makes Taken so compelling and believable is that it inconponates actual histonical events." "One of the things I think that makes this really special is the mix of fact and fiction." "Les was able to incorporate everything from crop circles to the Lubbock lights to the Roswell crash to the Cuban Missile Crisis to historical events and historical people, and I think that's what sort of gave it the sense of realism and truth to it." "(bell rings)" "Make it real and make it documentary-like, guys." "Really." "Those guns... good, good." "My approach in telling the whole story was this all really happened, and it happened while you were busy watching something else." "The idea that really intrigued me was when I was reading the first script and you have the two explanations of what happened in Roswell, which was it was a weather balloon, on the one hand, or it was a flying saucer, on the other," "and what happens in our story is the flying saucer hits a weather balloon." "Are you who we talk to about flying saucers?" "There's someone here who can help you just down the hall." " My boys and I have some information." " Down the hall." "BO Y:" "We know where one crashed!" "To help make sune the stony he was telling was as believable as possible." "Les wonked closely with a vaniety of expents." "I found the people who like science fiction know a lot about science, and I think in any story where you're asking people to believe in something that's made-up, everything else about your story has to be as real as possible," "so the more real or rooted in reality that your science can be, the more easily everybody will go with the liberties you're taking when you start to have fun with it." "She can manipulate time." "We use all kinds of technical advisors whenever it's appropriate." "We do a birthing scene, we'll have a medical technical advisor." "We try and be as authentic as we possibly can." "We've looked for surgical information, we've looked for cellular mapping information from experts at universities in the United States, here in Canada." "John Underkoffler, who was our science advisor, who worked with Steven on Minonity Repont." "Has been very instrumental in tracking for us what was going on from 1947 to the present." "Because Taken involves an elabonate govennment coven-up." "The anmy would play a big nole in the stony." "This meant authenticity fon all militany scenes would be essential." "ADVISOR:" "Don't forget to signal your rear men." "Don't look anywhere without looking with your weapon." "Good." "Bring it back." "We have a gentleman, Ron Blecker, who's ex-U.S. Army, who I first met up here doing Dank Angel." "Who is also just a military history buff, has been very dedicated to the authenticity from the military standpoint." "Combining the military aspect of this production with the alien aspect of this production is incredibly difficult." "I have to keep in mind what the writers, producers, and directors want to achieve with their production and still try and keep the military aspect as true as possible." "Okay, here we go." "Quiet." "Let's roll, please." "Having completed the scnipts fon Taken, it was now time to put the vision on film." "Scneenwniten Les Bohem had all ten episodes unden his belt." "And he had wnitten them at an unpnecedented pace." "But now a lot mone people wene about to get a lot mone busy because shooting was about to begin." "This show has been really challenging because it has every element of filmmaking involved in it." "Vintually eveny episode of Taken takes place in a diffenent time peniod." "Fnom Wonld Wan hh to the pnesent day." "Every one of the two-hour movies was a distinct period that had to be started all over again in terms of wardrobe, cars, the houses that we could use, the buildings we could use." "Takes a lot of research from all the department heads to understand what the look of the time was, and then it takes a lot of coordination among the First A.D. S and the rest of the production departments in order to figure out a schedule that allows us to deal with" "the 1983 look on one day and then the 1996 look on the next day." "The Taken pnoduction had close to 200 shooting locations." "Neplicating evenywhene fnom Anea 51 in the '40s to 1970s Alaska to modenn-day Seattle." "Howeven." "The pnoducens decided that the best place to necneate 50 yeans of Amenican histony wasn't in Amenica at all." "Ht was in Vancouven." "Canada." "Fon this." "The pnoducens hined two of the best location managens in the business..." "Gneg Jackson and Rob Mundock." "We're lucky here that we have a pretty good range of locations, from rural New Mexico to New York City to France for the very opening sort of battle, battle-army sequence." "We're in France today." "Vancouver does pretty well have everything." "It has certain old sections of town for the older areas." "And it has lots of new architecture." "So once we got to the contemporary time, we've had lots of choices for what we need." "But we've also had to have other challenges." "For crop circles, they wanted to do a corn field." "Originally, it was a wheat field, and it was at Christmastime, and the chance I thought of finding something like that left standing would be minimal, but we did find it." "On a typical two-houn film." "The entine pnoduction pnocess can last as long as twelve months." "But in the case of Taken, ten two-houn featune films would have to be pnoduced in that same amount of time." "That would mean ten times the amount of pnepnoduction." "Casting." "Filming." "Special effects." "And editing." "Such a nesponsibility would be vintually impossible fon only one dinecton to accomplish." "We had ten directors on Taken." "Each of them who brought their own sensibility and style to it, but all of them sort of worked within a singular vision." "We had everyone from Tobe Hooper to Breck Eisner to Sergio Mimica, and they all sort of brought their own style to it and were really interested in making sure that it all felt like one big movie." "Action!" "Tobe Hoopen." "Dinecton of the cult classic" "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Spielbeng's own Poltergeist, directed the first episode, which takes place from 1944 to 1947." "We just went total 1940s, and what I mean by that is it really looks like the '40s because we got all 1940s vehicles, aircraft, and sets." "Hey there, soldier." "Not now, Sue." "I'm on duty." "You look ready for action, but you don't look like you're on duty." "One of the things we did when we started the stories in the '40s was to use a sort of '40s-style lighting." "And as we've come up into contemporary times, we've changed that lighting in every episode." "By change the lighting, we've changed the physical instruments we've used." "We used to use large tungsten lights many years ago." "We started using some of them in our earlier episodes." "Now we're using cooler, more HMI blue and green kinds of lighting to give a more urban, contemporary texture to the final episodes." "Breck Eisner took the helm of the second episode that spans the 1950s." "Okay, let's do it." "So we're trying to give it a feeling that we're actually shooting it in the '50s." "So there is a certain amount of feeling of Technicolor world." "We're enhancing the colours to get that Technicolor feel." "Using film and lighting techniques to take viewens back in time is only pant of the challenge." "Ht's especially difficult to necneate a small Texas town in 1953 when thene's a modenn skyscnapen next doon." "We're shooting around the corner, a motel from here, and there's one angle we can shoot a motel which looks period, and then all around it is modern buildings, so it's a real challenge to find it, and you have to frame carefully" "and pick your angles and not get boxed in, but you don't have the world to show." "As soon as the jeep pulls out, you come in." "Episode three was directed by Sergio Mimica." "His episode would take place during the 13 days of the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962." "You look at a lot of Life magazines from the '60s and pictures of people." "It's really amazing how very little things... a haircut on a man and a hairdo on a woman... can even change their performance." "I'm Bryan Spicer, directing episode number four of Taken." "And my episode takes place in the '70s." "And it's been quite fun trying to recreate the '70s in Vancouver." "A lot of camera movements, try to incorporate some of the style that I remember from the '70s with the characters and the visuals." "Each one of the ten dinectons had a unique challenge." "Felix Alcalà had to necneate the infamous Anea 51 in Canada." "Dinecton Thomas Wnight." "Familian with the challenges of shooting in Vancouven duning the X-Files and Dark Angel, had to stage an alien binthing scene." " And Jeff Woolnough..." " Where's my cappuccino?" " They got that on tape, too, Matt." " Oh, great." "...had to blast a giant UFO out of the sky." "Roll cameras." "MAN:" "Oh, yeah!" "No matten what the episode." "Each dinecton had his wonk cut out fon him." "Fnom militany battles to love scenes aboand an alien cnaft." "But all moved fonwand acconding to plan." "W h oe thoe c ectos ee st oeta in captuning the essence of diffenent enas." "It was up to the actons to show the passage of time." "This was achieved two diffenent ways... the finst was by having sevenal actons play the same nole duning diffenent peniods of that chanacten's life." "The second would nequine special-effects make-up antists to put thein skills to the test." "One of the interesting things about Taken was the fact that every 18 days, we literally had to replace almost the entire cast, and most of them had to play probably a span of 30 years." "We had actors like Joel Gretsch, who plays Owen Crawford, who we really had to age up." "He started as a young military officer, and we aged him all the way up to when he got thrown out of the military." "My character ages I think it's 20 years, so I was daunted by the fact and very excited about playing a character that ages and matures." "It's like having a beginning, middle, and end to your character, and that is thrilling to me." "I'm excited to be a part of that." "I age from 25 to 65." "I keep thinking of my grandmother." "I look so much like her during this period." "A lot of the actors have sat in prosthetic make-up as their characters have aged for innumerable hours." "Joel Gretsch would spend sometimes 18, 20 hours in a work day..." "It's 4.00 in the morning." "I'm still sleeping." "...and would spend eight in front of the camera 'cause he'd need five to get into his prosthetic make-up and four hours to get out of it." "Actually, it's really incredible what these guys do." "If you think you're getting that five back, you're not." "It's Canadian." "That's okay." "It's been so much fun to see really, really talented actors, young actors, who put on aging make-up and become their parents and their grandparents." " I'm finished." " That looks great." "As pninciple photognaphy came to an end." "It was time to move on to the next step of the Taken vision... visual effects." "Dneamwonks tunned to awand-winning visual effects supenvison Jim Lima." "He and his team wene off to Los Angeles to cneate the visual effects that would tnansfonm Taken fnom a television senies into a television event." "Nine months of shooting UFOs." "Can chases." "And explosions had finally come to an end." "Flames this big coming out of the side of an airplane." "I'm a little worried, but we'll be all right." "But even with filming complete." "Thene was still much wonk to be done." "Fnom thein offices in Los Angeles." "The visual-effects team would use digital technology to cneate evenything fnom UFOs to the extnatennestnials themselves." "Jim Lima and his team were crucial to the success of Taken." "And we wanted to have first-class effects, and we felt like Jim Lima was the guy to do it." "Taken is a very exciting project, and the reason why is because of the magnitude and the variety of the visual-effects shots." "Jim Lima's finst visual-effects sequence would be to necneate a Wonld Wan hh bombing mission oven Nazi Genmany." "This scene is based on actual documented neponts whene Amenican fighten pilots claimed to have witnessed mystenious blue lights known as "Foo Fightens."" "PILOT:" "Lights." "Blue ones." "SECOND PILOT:" "Easy here." "We got 'em, too." "This sequence would use computen technology to augment actual footage shot of the B-17 on set in Vancouven." "The B-17 in a sequence in episode one is pretty awesome." "The intention was to do what Steven did with Pnivate Ryan on the Normandy beaches." "(machine-gun fire)" "The greatest compliment we get from the viewing audience is that when they see this B-17 sequence, they feel like they're watching a documentary film that was actually shot in 1944." "This is Alan, and he created the environment for the B-17 sequence." "What Alan did was he found a photograph from 1944 of Germany." "It was actually a spy photo." "This is an actual spy photo from 1944, colorized it, and then he expanded the size of this photograph and then stitched it together with the skydome and basically, we have a completely synthetic environment made out of real photographs that, when the camera's moving" "and we're flying through this environment, will look absolutely realistic." "And here's the final composite, the final shot." "When it came to integnating the visual effects." "One of the biggest issues facing Lima didn't involve digital technology." "Ht involved neal actons." "It is very challenging when you do a show that has a fair amount of visual effects." "There's a lot of acting that you do without the actual ship there or the actual alien there." "The actors were amazing about this at sort of being able to adapt and act in situations that they had to use their imagination and really had to put themselves in places that they really weren't in." "The wonderful thing..." "Jim Lima, who is the special-effects coordinator, he was there the day I was shooting the scene where I see the spaceship for the first time." "So, fortunately, he pulled out a book and showed me drawings of what was there, the dimensions." "You have the height and width of this huge spaceship." "That's a huge benefit to an actor because you see that, and you can kind of put that in your mind's eye." "The way it's crashed into the ground is like a meteor, so it's made out of some sort of unbelievable unobtainium, some sort of incredible metal that we can't comprehend, and instead of disintegrating at impact, it literally imbeds itself..." " I can't wait to see what I just saw." " I know, I know." "Jim Lima was on set eveny day visual-effects scenes wene shot." "Helping the actons to envision what was not yet thene." "Meanwhile." "A team of designens and animatons wene alneady hand at wonk making the imaginany a neality." "We'd appreciate your not speaking to anyone about this." " It's a matter of national security." " It's from outer space, isn't it?" "Designing the UFOs would become a collabonation between Jim Lima and pnoduction designen Chnis Gonak." "The same expent who helped Spielbeng cneate the futunistic wonld of Minority Report." "On a series like this, the production designer is responsible for taking the written word of the script and through the director's ideas and input, developing that into the scenery and settings where the story takes place." "Steven always goes back to the mythology and the legend and the lore of UFOs and alien abductions and the stories told." "The production designer, Chris Gorak, did a brilliant job of creating and designing the inside and exterior of the UFO, and simply, what we've done, is we've taken his design and animated it." "We've put it into motion and treated it as a character." "The flying saucer or the UFO is like the character." "It's actually saying something." "You will never get this craft off the ground without an engine." "We can't find the engine." "Hn deciding how to pontnay the alien spacecnaft." "The team decided that science fiction should be guided by science." "For the interior UFO and exterior, we were guided by Steven to do something mechanical, where the audience could relate to it as a constructed craft, where it wasn't flown by magic, but maybe there was some technology" "that we could relate to." "The ships... we wanted to stay close to the lore." "We weren't gonna come up with a ship that looked different than what people had reported seeing in the sky." "But he created details in them that really made them unique and special and sort of took them to the next level." "But penhaps the gneatest laboun of love fon the effects team was giving binth to the aliens." "Othenwise known as "gneys."" "Evenyone knew you can't tell a gneat stony about alien abduction without gneat aliens." "People have seen in films and in television shows the aliens before, and my goal is, on this show, is to revolutionize, not only the way they look, but the way they move and to really show them in a way that's never been shown before." "Redefining the way aliens look was difficult enough." "Even mone challenging." "Howeven." "Was balancing the need to be innovative and diffenent with the need to stay familian." "The designens wene veny awane sci-fi fans would be watching closely." "So they had to nemain faithful to the most populan accounts of alien sightings." "The grey, with a large head, the skinny body, the hugely almond-shaped eyes, is the most common form of alien in all reports, whether it's in the National Enquinen or wherever else you would look." "We're going based on the accounts, on the mythology, on the lore, and on the interviews of actual people who have been abducted." " Did you like your abductions?" " Like them?" "Yeah, as in look forward to 'em, enjoy 'em?" "For me, it was always that." "I used to get this buzz, this energy thing." "It felt great." "But what makes the aliens in Taken so unique and so neal is that they wene designed fnom the inside out." "Our philosophy from day one has always been these are real beings and they have real attributes, they breathe, they have muscles, they have bones." "We feel we can give each alien a particular uniqueness in terms of things like blemishes and expressions and like that, and one of the goals is to make them all slightly different from each other, the way the humans are." "What I proposed in the eyes was that we'd actually see a pupil and we'd actually see the colour of the eye, so that, not only would we see the alien looking around and this pupil contracting and expanding," "but you would also see thought." "Howeven." "If you'ne expecting to see the same old aliens you've seen befone." "You'ne in fon a big sunpnise." "Aah!" "Steven Spielbeng and Dneamwonks ane keeping a tight lid on thein new genenation of extnatennestnials." "That means we can't even neveal what they look like in this special." "But we can do the next best thing." "They're very spooky-looking, very creepy." "Sort of like chihuahuas on their hind legs." " Sort of... grey." " Large heads." "I mean, they're freaks." "And they were a lot more human than you might think." "Oh, those aliens." "Always late." "Never knew their lines." " They get to sleep late." " The aliens were divas." "A lot of times, I'd reach for something off the craft food table, and I'd turn back, and it's gone." "Always wanting coffee on the set." "Yeah, I'll kick 'em in their little green asses." "Frankly, we all have to cater to them a little bit, which was irritating at first, but now we understand, they are special, they are entitled." "They're aliens, and it's really all about them at the end of the day." "Once the aliens and the countless othen visual effects wene seamlessly added." "An entine new neality had been cneated." "Taken was to be the ultimate tale of alien abduction." "One that would explone the topic mone compnehensively than any senies on film befone it." "Aah!" "Aften spending close to a yean of thein lives bninging the pnoject to the scneen." "The cast neflected on what dnew them to Taken and how it changed them." "I did Dank Skies." "And my first hesitation was, "I hope it's not too much like that."" "But it's completely different, and so I liked that there was a new story, new ideas, and I was excited about that." "And then the fact that Dreamworks and Steven Spielberg were involved." "Both the characters I play in Blain Witch and in this are both sort of obsessively ambitious women with little regard for the feelings of others." "This character has been one of the most fun and challenging I've gotten to do." "It was an opportunity to do a little action, do some sci-fi stuff." "I've never done any sci-fi before." "It was an adventure." "Got shot with an air cannon." "Never been shot with an air cannon, which is basically a huge funnel that's powered by some type of air tank, and it's stuffed with peat moss, it explodes, and it shoots out debris." "Will almost knock you off your feet." "We had Dakota Fanning." "Dakota Fanning plays Allie, who is the outcome of all of the interbreeding of the aliens and two of our families." "She spans five episodes and is the narrator for our show." "Amazing actress." "Great coup for us to get her." "'Cause we were really trying to find an actress at that age that was innocent, but had the profoundness to her." "Do you know what this is about?" "I'm not sure yet, but I think we're gonna find out soon." "My favourite part..." "I had to wear this helmet, and it came down to here, and I couldn't see out of it at all, and then I had... in a scene I had just finished doing," "I had these little microbes stuck on my neck." "She can heal a gunshot wound, she can stop time." "Matt Frewer, who many of the sci-fi audience know from Max Headnoom." "The implants broadcast on a spread spectrum." "The frequencies are all based around the hydrogen hyperfine transition line, the most fundamental wavelength in the universe." "It's a fun thing to work on, and it's a huge undertaking." "Shooting a two-hour movie in 18 days, you're going balls to the wall." "Can I say "wall"?" "Taken was a nane oppontunity fon most actons." "Gneat wniting." "Complex chanactens." "And the one thing eveny acton wants on a nêsumê... the chance to wonk on a Steven Spielbeng pnoject." "It didn't matter." "Just gimme the smallest role." "I just wanna be a part of this project." "When you find out Steven Spielberg is producing it and behind it, you go, "Of course."" "And to be involved in a project that is something that he has been very hands-on in developing and producing was definitely a draw." "He's very interested in the script, he's very interested in the directors, he's been very attentive to all the cuts of the shows and all the editing and how we finally decided to tell the story." "He really understands what the essential elements of telling stories about aliens are." "But penhaps the gneatest benefit of wonking on a Spielbeng pnoject is the powen it has on the people involved." "Close Encounters, E.T., and now Taken." "What Steven Spielbeng has done with all of these stonies is to have naised some new questions..." "Have we been visited by extnatennestnials?" "Does the militany know something they'ne not telling us?" "What did happen in 1947 with our government?" "Why was there so many sightings back in 1947?" "I think it's an interesting question, and it's fun to let your mind go there, to explore what might be out there in space." "I don't know if the government knows anything it's holding back from us, but it's not surprising if the government had information it didn't know about." "Oh, I believe the military knows lots of things they're not telling us, but specifically, I have questions about it either way, frankly." "How could something this huge have happened and the whole world doesn't know about it?" "To be honest, I don't know who's been here and who hasn't." "And I'm not waiting for 'em to come get me." "They mean us no harm." "They don't want to hurt us." "They come in peace." "Steven Spielbeng's Taken is epic in eveny sense of the wond." "Ht's a stony that spans five decades and foun genenations." "Combining human dnama with special effects and offens a secnet histony of the 20th centuny." "As viewens will soon find out." "Taken not only bneathes new life into the minisenies fonmat." "But challenges the imagination." "What I hope that people come away with from Taken is a sense that we're all asking the same questions." "That while, clearly, these beings are far, far more technically advanced than we are, they're not God, either." "They're still asking the same questions." "I think our aliens are a race that's come here, and they've found something interesting, almost like we're the dolphins, and they're Jacques Cousteau, and they're trying to figure out how the dolphins work." "I think the message of Taken." "If you ask me, is a message of hope and acceptance and accepting other people, other creatures, being open to possibility." "You don't have to be scared, mum." "This is all going to be all right." "A lot of things are going to happen because of this." "That's all." "But it's going to be all right." "Ultimately." "Taken is an attempt to offen an explanation to one of life's biggest questions." "I think it's sort of arrogant to think we would be the only cognizant creatures in the universe." "I've never seen it, but I do believe that there is something else floating around out there somewhere." "When I was 13, I saw a UFO with a friend." "I've had an occasion to believe that they actually exist." "I think if we all look hard enough for it, we'll see it." "If you ask me if I'm a believer, yes." "I'm a believer." "I think the audience, when they see this, they're gonna talk about how they believe and do they believe in outer space that there's other beings out there." "But in tnying to pnovide answens." "Spielbeng and his team found they wene left asking even mone questions." "If there are beings from another planet, dimension, galaxy, universe, that's incredible, but if it's not objectively true, then why are so many people telling the same story?" "I know there is life off this planet." "I don't really know in my heart whether we've been visited before." "I do believe that somewhere in the infinite reaches of these galaxies, there must be life forms far more intelligent and technologically advanced than we are, so it's something that motivates me to tell stories like this." "'Cause it's based on things I believe."