Shia LaBeouf and Michelle Monaghan in Eagle Eye

As big of an event that Comic-Con is, not everyone is able to make it. Some can't afford the trip, some may have a wedding that weekend and some, like director D.J. Caruso and writers/producers Robert Orci and Alex Kurtzman have other issues.. like finishing their latest film, Eagle Eye, before its September 26 release date. So, a day before departing to San Diego, I headed up to Amblin Entertainment for a nifty little pre-Comic-Con event where Caruso, Orci and Kurtzman, after some brief introductory remarks, showcased the first two reels for myself and fellow online journalists. While I truly wish we could've seen more, what I did see was quite a taste of this fast-paced thriller.

When I say fast-paced, I truly mean it. As soon as this film starts up, not only does it never stop, but it speeds up even more, which is pitch-perfect for this type of movie. The film starts at the Pentagon with Michael Chiklis playing a top advisor to the President, who is coming in to see if they have a lock on an elusive terrorist that hasn't been seen in over two years. There is only a 51% probability that this is their man, but, despite those flimsy odd, the President gives the go-ahead and... missiles away, literally. We then meet Jerry Shaw (Shia LaBeouf), a Stanford drop-out with all the smarts but no desire to use them in the real world. He scrapes by a menial living by working at a dull copy machine store and he also stimulates his income in some back-room poker with his fellow employees. Even still he can barely pay his rent and has to sneak into his crappy apartment to try and avoid his cranky landlady... try being the operative word. Even with all this going against him, he has even more bad luck when his identical twin brother is killed in military duty. Soon after that, things start to go even more awry.

After trying to deposit a check his dad (William Sadler) snuck into his backpack, he sees that he has over $750,000 in his once-negative bank account. It gets worse when he gets home and finds a small arsenal of weapons and intelligence gear crammed in his tiny apartment and it really gets worse when he gets a strange, Matrix-like phone call from a woman he doesn't know, telling him he better get a move on before the FBI arrives in under 30 seconds. Skeptisism sets in and Shaw is arrested and interrogated by Morgan (Billy Bob Thornton), who naturally thinks Shaw is some sort of terrorist. The woman on the phone strikes again, though, and through the series of events they displayed on the teaser trailer, Shaw escapes the clutches of the FBI... but it's not over yet.

Shaw keeps following instructions from this mysterious woman over the phone and when he disobeyes, it's clear that this woman, or whoever she's working for, can pull any string there is, which is displayed when Shaw purposefully gets on the wrong train... and she stops and reverses it. He is told to get into a car with Rachel (Michelle Monaghan) at the wheel, a woman who we've also seen fall victim to this mysterious female caller. What ensues is a thrilling, car chase that harkens back to the fantastic chase scenes of The French Connection and The Bourne Identity. Keep in mind, folks, this is just the FIRST ACT!

I was thoroughly impressed with the two reels I saw and after the screening we were rejoined by Caruso, Orci and Kurtzman and answered all of our questions about what we saw and more.

Director D.J. Caruso and Screenwriters/Producers Robert Orci and Alex Kurtzman

So this is one of those films that isn't going to go through the test screening process?

D.J. Caruso: Thank god it's not!

How do you avoid that?

D.J. Caruso: I think we just ran out of time! I'm glad we're not doing it.

Alex Kurtzman: It's such a big movie to cut that rather than rushing it through we wanted to take our time with it. The last thing you want to do after taking so much time prepping and shooting a movie is rush it through post.

Do you have a runtime locked?

D.J. Caruso: We're at 152, 153 minutes, somewhere around there. We're just tweaking and working on things. Obviously in the first two reels... the second reel alone has a lot of choices in it, so we're honing it all. But we're excited.

Did you shoot a lot handheld, perhaps with crew from The Shield?

D.J. Caruso: I didn't use the Shield crew, but it's definitely Shield-influenced. As great as all the Bourne movies are, everybody's saying, "Oh, that's so great!" I'm like, "We were doing that on The Shield nine years ago!" But I wanted to go a little bit handheld. I think there's a tendency now to abuse the handheld camera just to have it. So I wanted to be in there and feel like we were documenting it properly, but not be crazy. And a lot of that, believe it or not, for the first time in my career is Steadicam. I found an operator that I love who makes it have sort of a handheld feel, so a lot of what you're seeing particularly on the ground, is Steadicam.

It's also got a very practical feel. Whether there's a blend of practical and CGI or not, all the car stuff feels very visceral.

D.J. Caruso: I think it's sort of a combination of both. All those cars that you see getting crunched are cars getting crunched. Anything that's digital in there is basically removing the cables that are helping yank them into one another. It's all practical-based with CG elements. And when you have a CG element like in a couple of the crane shots and things we're working on, when they're not done well... you have to have a high standard because our movie isn't like Transformers where you sit and marvel at how amazing it is, it hopefully has to go by in a naturalistic way, which I think makes visual effects that much harder.

Alex Kurtzman:Transformers is a heightened world; it's our world, but it's also a cartoon. This movie does not exist in that world at all. That's why a lot of choices were made to keep it grounded. The shakycam thing, or whatever you want to call it, we just wanted it to feel like you were there.

D.J. Caruso: When I first met these guys and we were talking about it, I said to them, "It feels like The French Connection." To me this is The French Connection, it just so happens that technology is immersed in it.

Robert Orci: Once you said that, we were like "that's it!"

D.J. Caruso: I just wanted it to be as real and naturalistic as possible so that the technology... it's real. Alex, I think said at the end of this movie we want people to fear their BlackBerry.

You've been good about keeping the secrecy with respect to what this movie is about. Was that intentional from the beginning?

D.J. Caruso: I think in general, with (executive producer) Steven (Spielberg), he loves for the plot to stay fresh until you actually see it. I think it's a little bit of both. As the story unfolds it's not like there's this great sort of "a-ha!" moment where you suddenly get it, but you keep working and working and if you know where the movie was going eventually it might not be as enjoyable. You want the audience to be working to figure it out, and even as things unfold and we get to act three you're still trying to figure out exactly what's happening. The first movie I made, The Salton Sea, sorta had that feel. You didn't know exactly what the hell was going on. To me it was one of those unconventional story strengths. I feel like we have that strength as well. You just have to keep working at it and once you think you're on it, it's not exactly what it is. Not like there's uber twists or anything like that, but this movie makes you work and actually, it's a lot more plot-heavy than you would think. You're always wrestling as a director with character versus plot, and a lot of that was happening in this movie.

Alex Kurtzman: And that's interesting because as a writer you say character is plot; you have to tie those two together or else they feel so divided and the audience is seeing one thing and feeling another thing.

Robert Orci: You want the audience to be subjectively in the same place as the main character, so the less they know the more they really are experiencing the same things.

D.J. Caruso: Even the greatest video games, I think, are the ones where you're going around a corner and you have no idea what's coming. The first two reels of this are, in a way, like level two of a game. So eventually you have to take control, and I think that's what our characters decide to do, and as the movie progresses and they're being led around they have no choice and they have to get out of this they have to get control. I think that makes the movie fun; it is sort of a big video game.

Alex Kurtzman: That point of view I think is also borrowing a lot from Hitchcock. When you're watching a Hitchcock movie you, for most of the movie, are playing the guessing game. What's the endgame? What's the plot? How are these people involved? It's the best way to tell the story, and as a viewer, that's what you want to experience.

D.J. Caruso: The other thing there is, it's not necessarily just the "who?"; what is just as important to me in this film is the "why?" As you discover the identity of the "who" you'll try to understand why it's happening, and that's as intriguing.

In a movie like Enemy of the State, they really show how things are happening, but here we don't seem to be seeing how this technology is being taken over. Is that easier to write?

Robert Orci: Not in the least bit, because it all has to make sense retroactively. You can't just do random things. They have to add up.

Alex Kurtzman: This movie was unbelievably hard to construct because you could come up with really cool scene ideas but at the end of the day you'd end up hitting the eject button on half of them because they didn't pay off in the right way. And then you'd just have to let it go. This was a part of, I think, why Steven had this idea ten years ago and it's taken time to get going. If you do it right, it's really complicated and you're going to have to go through many, many drafts to get the architecture right. Enemy of the State is different, too, because it's asking you to step outside the characters a lot. Technology was really new at the time, all the surveillance equipment. This isn't really a movie about surveillance equipment or who's manipulating it, it's a movie about these people and their problem and how they get out of it.

You reference The French Connection, which is a very small movie, but both the most recent trailer and the opening of the movie suggests a very broad scope. How do you balance the tight feel and large scope?

D.J. Caruso: It's really the characters that keep it in that tight feel and with the naturalistic feel. You see it in Chicago and when we go to Indianapolis and the story progresses to DC. It's not your postcard DC or your postcard Chicago, and in fact everything you saw in Chicago, or I should say 99% of what you saw there, was all natural lighting. If there was sodium vapor we had it copied and might have used that for fill light, but we were running and gunning. My favorite thing is, there are four shots in the movie that are from our location scout; we brought a little Arri3 with us and started to roll on the trains, and those are in the movie. That's the French Connection feel, the grit, and you can taste it. You see a lot of popcorn films shot in Chicago and it's all about the postcard Chicago. This, Shia's neighborhood, is a completely different neighborhood. It's a Latino neighborhood that was a Polish neighborhood, and the hallway you see in Shia's apartment is that thin and narrow, and I don't know... there's just something about the texture of it. And as far as the scope, yeah, the movie opens up a little more and gets a little bigger but I think it's the two characters that keep it contained.

Is this meant to be rated R?

D.J. Caruso: It's hopefully going to be PG-13, and after seeing The Dark Knight I'm not that concerned about it!

So are we meant to be aware that in these massive car accidents people are actually dying?

D.J. Caruso: Who died? (Laughs) No, it's a great question because what I realized was that it inhibits your action. You can't shoot great action if you're worried about people dying. And when you get to the end of the movie you'll sort of understand why it's OK for some of those people to die. No, we're not sitting there and harping on it, but there's a body count that's sort of adding up at the end of this film, and you'll realize at the end of the day there's actually a purpose for that. I don't want to say collateral damage, but in a way it's all part of a bigger plan where you have to sacrifice people.

Bob and Alex, is it easier to work on a film like this where you don't have the fanboys breathing down your neck?

Alex Kurtzman: It's just a different experience. We love, love love doing those movies because we are fanboys. But it's really nice to step outside that and do a movie with someone like D.J. that feels like it's grounded in a different kind of reality.

Robert Orci: The flipside is that we don't get any ideas from fanboys.

Do you have room to improvise here, or are you sticking to the script?

D.J. Caruso: My style is always to give the actors freedom as long as long as the words and the story and scene still have the same meaning. We go through a pretty intensive rehearsal process where we don't necessarily lock lines down, we lock our heads and decide what the scene is about, so if the words change along the way, we're cool. And Shia can turn it into gold. He can give the same intent of dialogue on the page that isn't sounding quite right. That's his greatest gift to a filmmaker.

Alex Kurtzman: And we worked with a lot of cool writers on this movie; everyone brought a different thing to it.

D.J. Caruso: The problem with Shia, though, is that the other actors see that and then they think they can do the same thing.

Alex Kurtzman: That's a great point. There are very few actors who are truly good at improvising; that's a real skill. To be a real good improviser, to make something funnier and sexier, that's a very tough thing to do. And Shia makes it look easy because he is that guy.

So do you have a secret deal with Shia to only make movies with him?

D.J. Caruso: Honestly, I would! It's a blessing every day, because he comes to work and just gives 110%. He almost tortures himself because he just wants to be good. Even if it's the smallest thing and he's only there for half a day to do a shot where he picks up a Coke can. He's so committed, and it's infectious. He makes you love your job, so of course I'd work with him again.

Is Y: The Last Man going to happen?

D.J. Caruso: It's probably going to be happening, yeah. With New Line now part of Warner Brothers, Warners is now very high on the project. And Carl Ellsworth and I are probably going to deliver the script to WB/New Line by next week.

Did you direct any of the last season of The Shield?

D.J. Caruso: I didn't get to because I was doing this but I know the last episode is unbelievably explosive. It's so much so it's fantastic. It's sort of a dream, like what I think The Sopranos should have been at the end.

Robert and Alex, what are you writing now? Are you just working on Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen?

Alex Kurtzman: We broke the whole (Transformers 2)story before the strike and they were able to prep an outline we'd written during the strike. The second that ended Bay locked us in a room for two months. It was nuts. We literally lived in a room with Ehren Kruger, the three of us, and they were shooting three weeks later. It was insane.

Robert Orci: We won't come back into that until post, in terms of writing. Once they're animating the robots we can change stuff. And right now we're polishing up The 28th Amendment, a project we wrote a few years back and might be able to get going again, and Fringe.

Why not go to Comic-Con with Eagle Eye?

D.J. Caruso: This movie comes out on September 26. I really feel like I'm going to finish it on September 12. I mean that! I don't know how that happened, but it did. It's enormous. So we figured we'd bring a few people here to see some of it.

The first two reels have a lot of action. Does the movie ever let up?

Alex Kurtzman: It's funny you say that, because before we started today I said, "I hope the first act isn't too slow!" Because when it gets going, it's a bullet to the end.

D.J. Caruso: It's pretty much that, yeah. But there's some great scenes and character in there. It's action with incident, so things are always happening and you're always learning about people as it happens. We don't stop the story.

Do we ever see more of the main characters' lives and backstory?

D.J. Caruso: You're going to be propelled forward, and you're going to get a little bit of a look back into Shia's life particularly. Mostly you get a little bit of him towards the end of act two.

Alex Kurtzman: I think too that these movies are always best when a character is forced to confront their flaws by attrition. They're forced into a situation where you've got basically 24 hours to face your worst demons at a time when you never thought you'd have to do that. That's part of what makes these movies good. So a lot of it is about seeing their lives from a new perspective because the insanity that they're thrown into.

Steven Spielberg came up with this idea ten years ago? What part of that idea survived?

Robert Orci: The kernel of what he pitched us was: what if the world turned against you in every way that it can, when everything is so interconnected?

Alex Kurtzman: What if all the tech that makes your life easier could be manipulated by someone else, and that in turn could turn you into someone you don't want to be?

As the movie goes on, can audiences catch on to clues placed within?

D.J. Caruso: Definitely. They're there, all seeded throughout. They're not intentionally planted so you can figure it you, but if you catch things you'll understand it.

Of what we saw today, what was the most difficult to film?

D.J. Caruso: Obviously the car chase, because it's all the different pieces. And what I loved about this chase was that our characters were meeting each other for the very first time. These two worlds collide and as they're trying to figure things out there's all this mayhem. And also the opening sequence with Chiklis in the Pentagon. It was a tough scene to get all the beats right.

Can you elaborate on what you mean when you say that you've cracked Y: The Last Man?

D.J. Caruso: What I mean by that is that there's so much to choose from. Just trying to narrow down the story, and in all the drafts written over the years there's a lot of great stuff in there, but what I think Y was missing in screenplay form was a ticking clock. So we did something where we separated Yorick from [pet monkey] Ampersand for a brief period of time where Yorick gets very sick, which kind of opened up the movie in the middle of the act. And also the Agent 355/Yorick relationship to me has always been sort of a De Niro/Grodin thing. And so I was working on that and not quite getting it right, believe it or not. Because Yorick to me is so solid, it's really like 355 and her journey with Yorick that's been...and also Act 3, where do you end the first movie and how can you go from there? But I think we licked it.

So is this a trilogy?

D.J. Caruso: I see it as a trilogy. I definitely see it as a trilogy. I see the first movie ending anywhere basically when you pick up after the incident you're picking up about six weeks later, meeting Yorick six weeks later after the incident and progressing down, I think it's about... only a five or six week journey from that point to the end of the first movie. It's been hard, in a good way, just because there's so much good stuff to choose from, and every time you start throwing certain scenes in the screenplay you'll see that it sort of dislodges and starts to head a different way.

When do you think this might happen?

D.J. Caruso: In a perfect world, and I was talking to Shia about this yesterday because he really wants to do it as well, I would like to prep this movie in October and shoot by January.

So you're thinking summer 2010?

D.J. Caruso: 2010. That's what I've been hearing. Warner Brothers is saying, "We need movies for 2010!" And I say "We're the movie!" I've got a movie star, I've got a great comic book, whatever.

And Shia has reached the point where with him and you together...

D.J. Caruso: He has, yeah. He definitely has. But you want to get it right. You don't want to make the movie just for that reason.

So he would do it?

D.J. Caruso: He wants to do it, I want to do it. The thing we have to worry about is him being exhausted. So I said if I prep in the fall and we start in January, that's a nice big break.

Would you film in Australia?

D.J. Caruso: Eh....maybe. I don't know. That's where she goes, but we're not going to follow that throughline too much in the first film, god willing. We've been working on it, showing Vaughn all the things, he's really happy with this and I just want to fine-tune it before giving it to the studio because I always think that first impression... you know. Because to them, it's Warner Brothers now, you're re-educating a new crew.

In going to Warner Brothers, could you end up with a bigger budget?

D.J. Caruso: Honestly I'm still trying to figure out the landscape because I know New Line is going to exist the way Castle Rock existed years ago. So they still have autonomy but now I think if it gets over a certain budget level that's when Warners and New Line pair up. I think that we'll probably fit in that budget level. I'm still going to give it to Toby Emmerich, then I don't know if he has to go to Alan Horn, all I know is my agents keep saying "Warner Brothers wants this!"

Eagle Eye is set to hit theaters on September 26.