61Cygni wrote:rdt wrote:Or it could be a "Europa Report," done on a low budget but with a quality script and good direction and acting, and very clever photography, and getting quite nice reviews.
I'll take live actors over cartoon characters any day.
Europa Report, along with
Moon are more smaller-scale intimate sci-fi/thriller films, and can be done well on low budgets. The Honorverse is space opera/military scifi, and unless you want the space battles and action scenes greatly pared down or done in a minimalist style (like people watching the holo plot most of the time), it's going to need a much larger budget. It's why I use
Serenity ($40 million budget) as an example. Another one would be Danny Boyle's
Sunshine, though again it's a sci-fi thriller and doesn't have battles, it does have a lot of space scenes/exterior views.
Of course, one of the prime ways to save money is to cast mostly unknown actors, as well as to cut down on the number of speaking roles (i.e. eliminating and combining characters), and I expect both will be done with HoTQ.
As I recall, there are four "space" battles in HotQ:
the forlorn hope battle in which Courvoisier is killed;
the exchange between McKeon and the enemy LAC;
the short battle in which Theisman disables Truman's ship;
and the ultimate battle in which Honor destroys the Haven/Masadan battle cruiser.
The first requires the most exposition and set up time. Good dialog is needed. In the middle two everything happens rather quickly, so they are all action, but again good dialog is needed to set them up. In the latter, more exposition and set up are needed and are crucial. There's more tactics than shooting, at least until nearly the end of the battle, and it all takes a long time. That will have to be handled carefully, if it is kept in, because it involves a lot of waiting and maneuvering, which might be a drag even though in the book it was suspenseful, but in the movie it might be tediously boring.
There is one "land" battle with almost all the action taking place in interior spaces. And there is the fight in the Protector's Palace, which would be highly choreographed, very fast and violent. And then there is the rest of the movie which is fascinating in the book, but how will it play on the screen? That is why I said the Europa Report was worth looking at.