
EXCLUSIVE: Joe Cornish, who has been offered a ton of projects since his alien invasion breakthrough film Attack The Block, has been set to write and direct the Neal Stephenson novel Snow Crash. The book has just been reacquired by Paramount Pictures, with Kathleen Kennedy and Kennedy/Marshall producing.
It’s the second go around on the project for Paramount, which first developed the book back when it was published in 1992. It is a big bestseller and a seminal cyber-punk book that probably was ahead of its time. The book is set in the near future, when the U.S. exists as a patchwork of corporate-franchise city-states, and private enterprise and the mafia control everything. The plot involves a computer virus that is manifested as a drug called Snow Crash that is transmitted visually from computer screens to unsuspecting users, frying their brains. Hiro Protagonist – that’s the character’s name – a computer hacker/samurai swordsman/pizza delivery driver who investigates and tries to stop the takeover of postmodern civilization. It sounds wild, but it is steeped in its own mythology and has become a cult favorite among the cyberpunk set. Paramount dropped the project years ago and it went to Disney with Kennedy/Marshall and languished. Kennedy introduced Cornish to the book, he committed and it is now back at Paramount and is a priority. Cornish is repped by CAA and Independent Talent and the book was repped by CAA for the lit agency Darhansoff & Verrill.


Okay, first of all, Hiro is half-black and half-asian (technically he’s described as ethnically Korean from a mother who actually grew up in Japan).
Also, to those who claim that Zodiac and REAMDE are more adaptable, maybe that’s true, but they’re not very good (In know, heresy, but I’m a huge Stephenson fan, really I am). Maybe The Big U? But that book is nearly unreadable it’s so awful. Cryptonomicon is quite possible one of the greatest novels written in my lifetime, but it’s over 1,000 pages and incredibly dense. So yes, of all the books that N.S. has written, Snow Crash is probably the best choice to make it to the big screen.
I suppose this is where I’m supposed to insert an inside reference to show I’ve read the book….
I’d much rather see Ridley Scott take on Snow Crash with a proper Budget and make an EPIC movie, or Miyazaki do it as an animated movie.
There is simply NO WAY they are going to be able to reproduce smart wheels, the Metaverse, or 98% of the other tech that’s in Snow Crash unless they have a proper budget. I think the studio’s making a bad move. No Snow Crash movie is better than a BAD Snow Crash Movie.
But as long as you fanboi’s are spooging over who will play what. Who’s your nomination for RAVEN?
Here here! (except maybe occasionally Blade Runner).
Might not be a close fit to the book, but the actor who plays Seraph in the Matrix is a good fit for my mental image of Hiro Protagonist.
I am somewhat adverse to someone from the music indusrty playing the role because I agree with Samuel L. Jackson as he stated in an interview that he wouldn’t consent to star in another movie with a rapper/ singer in a role. I think someone unknown would be great, but if it is someone famous I hope they look the part. I also hope they don’t make him out to be a thug or anything involving lame stereotypes when fleshing out the character and script. The way Hiro is descriped in the book is well-rounded and perfectly constructed- the script out to draw from the dialouge in the book. They should cast some one who looks like Will Demps, the half korean half black football player. There are thousands of starving actors out there with talent looking for a break, I’m sure they’ll find someone who fits the role perfectly!
And for the record I would hate to see the role butchered by Will Smith or Keanu- plus theyre both too old!
FROM AN UBER FAN
YES a young WILL DEMPS would be perfect!!!!
Seriously? You must have never read it. “Snow Crash” refers to a computer crash so potent that it just left the monitor with snow like your television tuned to a dead channel. Used to happen with the old Apple computers that were wedded to the display.
If you never did read it, I challenge you to pick it up and read just the first chapter…. You won’t be able to put it down.