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Showing posts with label Howard Gordon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Howard Gordon. Show all posts

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Howard Gordon Book Signing at Mysterious Bookshop NYC March 2, 2012

Howard Gordon Book Signing 
at Mysterious Book Shop NYC March 2, 2012

Met Howard Gordon at the Mysterious Bookshop March 2, 2012 in NYC. He was signing his new book HARD TARGET. It's excellent pick up a copy today! He was also kind enough to sign my 24 Behind the Scenes book too! Fun night Howard - Thanks so much!






Friday, January 14, 2011

Howard Gordon Gideon's War Book Release Party Jan 13, 2011

Howard Gordon Gideon's War Book Release Party Jan 13, 2011
At The Morrs + King Company New York City

I was lucky enough to be invited to Howard Gordon's, Gideon's War,  book release party in New York City. The event was held at the offices of Morris + King on Fifth Avenue. It was a fantastic event, and a wonderful evening.  Howard signed copies of his book, took photos, and food and drinks were served. Carlos Bernard who read the audio book also attended the event. Below are some photos of the event and book signing. 

Special Thenk you to Howard, Meredith at Simon and Schuster, 
Erica at Morris+King and Judith at Morris + King for the invitation. 
It was a wonderful event. 


Good Luck with the book Howard! It's fantastic! 
I highly recommend it to everyone. Everyone should run out and get a copy and start reading. 
It's not easy to put down once you start. It's a hit! 













Video of Howard's Speech

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Howard Gordon's Book Gideon's War Available Today Jan 11, 2011

Howard Gordon's Book Gideon's War Available Today Jan 11, 2011.
Click Here for more book info & for appearances by Howard Gordon. 
www.howardmgordon.com 

Source: YouTube

Friday, January 7, 2011

New Book Gideon's War by Howard Gordon

New Book Gideon's War by Howard Gordon
Release Date: Jan 11, 2011

From the executive producer of 24 and upcoming television thrillers – Homeland, on Showtime, and Legends set for NBC—Howard Gordon makes an action-packed debut as a novelist with GIDEON’S WAR.

A veteran Hollywood writer and producer with more than twenty years of experience in successful franchises like 24The X-Files, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Angel, Gordon’s signature ability to combine thrill-a-minute, nail-biting action and edge-of-the-seat suspense on screen flawlessly translates in his first foray into the publishing world with GIDEON’S WAR: A Novel (Touchstone Hardcover / Simon & Schuster; January 11, 2011; $24.99; ISBN: 978-1-4391-7581-1).

24’s Kiefer Sutherland says “True to form of my eight-year experience with Howard Gordon on 24GIDEON’S WAR is a rip-roaring thriller.”

About the book:
Gideon Davis, an American peacemaker, knows more about hush-hush discussions in Capitol corridors than hand-to-hand combat.  But his more practical, tactical skills come into play when he’s called on by family friend and government bigwig Earl Parker to chaperone a rogue agent from Southeast Asia to Washington, D.C.  The agent, Tillman Davis, has promised to turn himself in—but only to his estranged brother, Gideon.

Unexpected twists and turns send the mission awry, leaving Gideon, with the help of the attractive, cunning Kate Murphy, to evade hostile local insurgents led by Tillman in this page-turner that will surely keep you guessing. Alex Berenson, New York Times bestselling author of The Midnight House says, “Howard Gordon, the man behind 24, makes the transition from screen writer to novelist look easy with his ahead-of-the-curve thriller.” 

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Howard Gordon's New Book Gideon's War & Book Signing Events Plus Carlos Bernard Video

Howard Gordon's New Book Gideon's War will be available Jan 11, 2011.
There will also be book signing events: 


Howard will be at the Bryant Library in Roslyn, NY 2 Paper Mill Rd, Roslyn, NY 11576 on Weds Jan 12, 2011. The event starts at 6:15pm with a screening of Howard's favorite episode of 24, not sure which one that will be yet, and it will be followed by a reading and a signing! 


Howard will also be signing:
Jan 11, 2011 at Barnes & Noble, 189 Grove Drive Los Angeles, CA at 7pm.
Jan 18, 2011 Charlotte, North Carolina.
Jan 19, 2011 West Palm Beach Florida.




Video of Carlos Bernard at the 24 Marathon commenting on Howard's Book.
Carlos Bernard recorded the audio book for Howard's book, Gideon's War.

Gideon's War releases on 1-11-11. 
Pre-order it at http://amzn.to/fVtv7N
YouTube

CLICK HERE for an EXCERPT from Howard's Book Gideon's War
Prologue and Chapter 1 and a note from Howard Gordon


Source: Simon and Schuster


Monday, November 22, 2010

Howard Gordon Interview: On The Final Season of 24

Howard Gordon interview: on the final season of 24

John Moore

As the eight and final season of 24 arrives on DVD, we caught up with writer and executive producer Howard Gordon to talk Jack Bauer and the end of the series...

Published on Nov 18, 2010
Howard Gordon



Howard Gordon started building his geek-friendly CV by co-producing the classic 80s fantasy series Beauty And The Beast, before working a large chunk of the X-Files, and significant bites of Buffy and Angel before overseeing the tortuous life of Jack Bauer as executive producer and writer on 24.

As season 8 comes out on DVD, and the series comes to an end – for now - we sat down to talk to him a few months back about saying goodbye to all that real-time drama...
There are spoilers for the ending of 24 in this article

We’ll just get down to it, shall we? How does it feel to be doing the last round of press on 
24 – for a while anyway? 


Well, y’know it’s funny… I did my last day on 
24 about a month ago, and I was thinking as I came over to do this in the car that it felt like some kind of amnesia has settled over me. I’d completely forgotten. It had fled my mind… Now that I’m being asked, it’s all flooding back. It’s kinda like a high school reunion. But, getting to the end is a very pleasant feeling – this is like meeting an old friend. 
How pleased were you with the way you managed to finish off the series eventually? 


I was, frankly, thrilled. I was very, very satisfied with the way we ended it… it, er… how do I describe it...? I almost let myself off the hook I would say. I revised my expectations way early on this – I came to terms with the fact that this is going to be disappointing to some people, pleasing to some people and the best thing to others. I just wanted an ending that had some emotional integrity and honesty to it.

In terms of the drama that plays out at the end of this season, what was the thinking behind pulling it back to rather claustrophobic personal encounters, and, presumably, ignoring the temptation to go for some sort of big set piece finish? 

That was very much so. We just needed the characters that we cared the most about. From the moment we started talking about the series finale, the conversation was about deciding who are the characters that we care the most about, how do we get them on stage together and what’s the dynamic amongst them? 

It was also about Chloe not just being on the end of the phone doing Jack’s bidding, or for Jack to not to be ‘just’ trying to stop a bomb or President Taylor – but how do you take those characters about whom you’ve learned and who you’ve come to understand, and create a new dynamic amongst them that’s actually interesting?

So the idea of Jack being oppositional to President Taylor, and Chloe being put in a position between them in some sort triangle – and having them work against each other, with Chloe finding a ‘third way’, felt like the right geometry for the end.  

What was Cherry Jones’ reaction – as an actress – to finding out about President Taylor’s ‘fall’? Did she appreciate it as drama, or was she worried that it was the wrong thing to do? 


No, no. She was concerned, and in a polite and professional way asked me: “are you sure about this?” 

I said I was – even though I wasn’t – but Cherry is so terrific, because she is so game. She’s really game for trying stuff and she’ll make it work, that’s what’s so wonderful about her. 
I think she understood it, and I think the real secret there was defining for the actor why the ‘peace’, or the idea of ‘peace’, was so important to her that she would sacrifice these very long-held beliefs about following the law and not being above the law. She [President Taylor] ended up falling for certain, very human, reasons; she fell into the traps that people with a lot of power fall into. She is, after all, human – as heroic as she is, she’s human.
The secret for Cherry - and I think for us - was that Taylor resurrected herself, that she righted herself. Not before it was too late, but in time to save Jack and in time to stop this corrupt peace from being consummated. So the damage had already occurred in this several-hour lapse, but she righted herself and that saved her character from being just trashed…

Some of the drama that plays out in this series is – for my money – some of the darkest stuff you’ve done in the whole run of 24. How much fun was it to get your teeth in to that side of things? 

It was actually a lot of fun! It’s interesting that you should use that word, because it was a lot of fun. I think it was a lot of fun for Keifer as well. Y’know, we were all very aware that, because it was the end of the show, that we wanted to try something new, to take the characters to a place they’d never been before – but what that meant, and what that looked like wasn’t always entirely clear. But I think we found some iconic moments, even though they were tricky to navigate.
For instance, when Keifer puts on the ‘RoboCop’ suit, which could have been the worst part of the series or the best moment – that to me was like a metaphoric thing, Jack is donning this suit like some kind of Samurai, and becoming The Shadow. Y’know, I hate to sound too affected, but in a way that was kinda what was going on.
Some people saw it as absurd, but we just really decided to go for it and indulge in the operatic aspect of it. I think that once you resign yourself to the fact that not everyone is going to love it – that you’re going to just have to please yourself – you just have to be as sure-footed as you can. So we did it and I was very, very pleased with where we wound up – and ultimately, I think the audience was too. Also, the critics came to appreciate the ending…
They’re very perilous things, endings. They always are. And, by and large, they’re… disappointing, frankly. I think most people are disappointed with endings, but I think that – by and large – ours was appreciated.

So, how heavily has the end of the series skewed any further intentions you had for the character?
I think we have to be rigorous. In whatever iteration it takes, we have to be scrupulously honest with ourselves in terms of placing Jack emotionally. And wherever we take him – and presumably, we’re talking about someone who has cut the umbilical chord with this country that he’s sacrificed everything to protect – the real issue is ‘how do you re-arm Jack with some humanity?’ Because if you don’t he’s just a ghost.
Over the ebb and flow of the seasons, Jack has lost most of his very human aspirations: I want to be a father, a husband, I want to be in love. Now, Jack is as cut-off, as ghostly, as he’s ever been. He can’t even hang on to the idea of patriotism that he’s clung on to for so long. So whatever the next iteration is, it’s going to be about Jack finding himself again, finding a reason to live in the world. 
The final shot of Season 8, the drone shot… When was that idea locked as the final shot of the entire series? Was it the final shooting done on the show, did the schedules fall like that?
It happened about two weeks before we shot it. I’d been in search of an image and, to me, this big screen – which is sort of laying there in front of us for the entire season – was just one of those happy gifts. It’s right there, you just don’t know it. 
But it was our relationship, the audience’s relationship to Jack, on the screen - in that it was Chloe’s point of view, who really is our point of view on Jack. She’s saying goodbye to him. 
And I just love the line - in concert with this grainy image of Jack, vulnerable and beaten-up and exiled for good - where Chloe says “Shut it down.” 
That line, in concert with the image on screen, to me… I knew it… I knew it was the cornerstone of the ending. That was the flag, and I think we planted the flag in the right place so the rest really came very, very naturally.
It was not shot in order, and Marilyn [Raskub, who plays Chloe O’Brien] wasn’t shown Jack’s footage, so she didn’t know what she was going to see, so all of that footage is her really just reacting to the image of Jack. And she played that moment so beautifully.   
Of the characters you’ve set against Jack in your time on the show, who have been your favourites? 

I have to say my favourite is Charles Logan…

Then I think it’s fair to say that you’d be in sync with the Den Of Geek team, there… So how did you feel about his ending?

Well, it was high time! It was just a lucky appearance. He became a very interesting character as he came back into the story – very Iago-like. This guy, he’s a snake-in-the-grass and he can’t help himself. He came back into this story at just the right time. 

Gregory [Itzin, who plays Logan] is a friend, though I hadn’t seen him in a year or so. I met him again when he and his wife had a 30th wedding anniversary party at a Mexican restaurant in L.A. one Sunday night. The following Monday I was sitting in the writers’ room and, y’know, his character’s reappearance just presented itself. It probably wouldn’t have, had I not seen him the night before.
Logan is a character who, when we had last left him, could very well have been dead. So the fact that he lived to fight another day is in true 24 fashion. He just can’t help himself; you think for a moment that he’s actually trying to do good – but he’s someone who’s a victim of his own will to power. 
I always saw Charles Logan, and maybe you can inform about how true this is, as being the worst parts of us, of anybody. How much did you use him as that kind of character? 

That’s 1000% correct. Exactly. That’s exactly who he is… He our most venal, fearful, power-hungry selves; he’s insecure and arrogant at the same time… He definitely represents the worst of us. 
It sounds strange, but one of my favourite moments of the series is Logan straightening his tie watching the press conference… 

That is just Greg. That moment, it’s kind of like the 
RoboCop suit… ‘oh jeez, is that really cheesy, or is that really brilliant?’ And, y’know, I think it’s kinda both - which is what makes it so much fun. 
If you were ever to come back to 24 again, would you insist on moving away from the real-time aspect and doing it differently? 
24 is about the power of real-time; but it’s about the power of Jack Bauer in real-time. I think Jack’s a strong enough character that he could lead something that’s not restricted by the real-time narrative… I think. I don’t know, and I may be wrong but I think Jack’s character is powerful, at least sufficiently strong that you could see him in a narrative that’s not real time. 
How close do you think you’ve come to leaving Jack as a character that you can never pull back to being a hero? 

Ahhh, man, that’s such a difficult question… I think his heroism has been much darker, and much more complex because of all that he’s been through. I would guess that if you’d seen 200-odd hours of Jason Bourne - or 200 hours of James Bond for that matter - there’d be such an accretion of tragedy, so much scar tissue, that it would be hard to see the character after a time.
Just by dint of how much the poor guy has been through. 
Jack is a much more complex character than just a hero, I think he is a much more complex hero than we met in the first couple of years; he’s just done too much, lost too much and had to do too many bad things for us to be able to just naively call him a hero.

I’ve heard the production team for the show toyed with the idea of turning Jack to the ‘Dark Side’, but then transposed those ideas onto Tony for Season 7…


That’s correct, yes… 
… So is that a concept you’d consider revisiting? What was the original reasoning for not taking that path? 

I think we did that because the idea created a conundrum: if Jack’s really bad then we don’t want to see it. The flipside of that coin is: if he’s not really bad, then everyone says ‘of course he’s not bad, he’s Jack Bauer!’ It sounded like an attractive idea after a couple of beers, and with enough desperation, but when we actually put the idea down and trotted it out, it fell apart. We tried it; we spent a couple of weeks on a couple of scripts and it felt very counter-intuitive. 
Do you have any advanced projects you’re working on outside of the world of 24

I actually have a novel coming out in January, believe it or not… So I’m just putting some finishing touches to that. I also have a pilot that I’m writing right now, called
Homeland – which based on an Israeli series called Prisoners Of War. I’ve revised it considerably, but in the Israeli version it’s about a POW who has returned from Syria, but in ours it’s about a US soldier who has gone missing, but is recovered after a drone strike in Afghanistan and is alive – but who the CIA believe has actually been turned.
And when do you think we’ll see that? 

Well, I don’t know – it’s actually being written, so I don’t even know if you will! It’s one of those things; you don’t know how it’s going to come out, until it’s come out.
[It was announced this week that former Dexter director/producer Michael Cuesta would be shooting the show’s pilot for Showtime in the US]
As a writer and producer, how quickly does your mind just move on to the next project? 

I have to say that it was literally within a minute. It was almost like I had used 
24to keep all these other ideas at bay - just because it required pretty much all my focus and energy – and as soon as it was over I had to sit down at a computer and write down the dozen or so other things that had suddenly crowded into my head. 
Howard Gordon, thank you very much!
24 Season 8 is available in the US on Dec 14, 2010

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Coming Soon A New Book from Howard Gordon

Coming Soon from Howard Gordon
Executive Producer of "24" a New Book
Gideon's War
Release Date: Jan 11, 2011
Hear Howard Gordon Speak about his new book here
Source: YouTube Simon and Schuster Videos
Amazon Pre-Order Here: Gideon's War

Friday, November 12, 2010

Interview with Howard Gordon Executive Producer of 24

Interview with Howard Gordon Executive Producer of 24

Q&A: The executive producer of '24'!

Thursday, November 11 2010, 1:00pm EST
By Catriona Wightman, TV Reporter

Jack Bauer from 24 Day 8
Fox
People are certainly starting to miss 24 now! The Kiefer Sutherland counter-terrorism drama kept people excited but all good things must come to an end. Luckily, the DVD boxset is being released today to keep us all entertained. To celebrate, we caught up with the show's executive producer Howard Gordon to chat about the show and the 24 movie.

How long did it take you to write the show's final scene?
"Probably an hour. It was one of those things where if you look too hard for something you'll never find it. I was very, very aware that the last few moments, particularly on a real time show, needed to mean something. I was so inspired by
The Sopranos, which I felt commented on the medium. Someone once described it as David Chase as a rockstar who took the guitar and just smashed it on stage. And in this case, Jack has this relationship with screens and with us and the idea of us being in Chloe's point of view. In many ways, Chloe has kind of been our proxy for Jack, and the idea of the words that Chloe says - 'Shut it down' - was to me that punctuation mark. Once I had that image in mind that we were going to use this drone... It was like we had no idea that that was going to be the last governing image of the series, but seeing it blink out to static and then to silence and the clock really felt right, and I knew in that moment it was the right thing to do - Jack looking up at us vulnerable, but still living to fight another day."

How long did you have that image for?
"A week or two before the script was due. This whole series has been this protracted exercise in faith that there's going to be an idea there around the corner even though it looks like there's nothing. So it has required patience and bizarrely enough this belief in one's unconscious or in the creative process. I knew more than the detail. I knew the feeling I wanted to elicit when people watched it. I really wanted people to be leaning forward in their chairs and wanting more. I wanted them to miss the show the moment it ended. I knew the emotion I wanted to conjure - I didn't quite know how I'd conjure it."

So you always had some idea of how you wanted it to end?
"I knew the feeling I wanted to elicit rather than knowing the moment itself. I knew it couldn't be a happily ever after. I didn't want people to feel good and I didn't want people to feel bad. I wanted them to feel somewhere in between."

How do you think the show changed over the series?
"I think it's almost like a romance. A romance is so intense when it begins and because of its newness it's very vivid and it's very exciting and suddenly you're married 25 years. It does gain meaning because of its longevity - because of all that we've been through together, the people behind the scenes and the audience we've shared this show with. It has a context that's very deep and very meaningful. I think the beginning was more exciting, more vivid, more revolutionary and the end was deeper and more wistful and more elegiac."

There was some criticism of the way you changed the character of President Taylor in the eighth season. How do you respond to that?
"To me, because we were ending the show, we had to take some chances. I knew I wanted Jack in this very dark place. And Kiefer and I, we discussed this, that this Renee relationship was going to build up to a point of some kind of consummation and Jack is going to have the hope of something to live for and that will be taken away from him. And again, people hated that too. Everyone's going to hate something. You really have to go with what you believe is the best story and hope in the end that people will still watch. But in the case of President Taylor, her moral compass was so straight and so fixed and so true, and so I thought for her to lose herself is a very human thing to do, particularly under that kind of duress. I felt like the scaffolding for her momentary lapse was there. She wanted this peace accord so badly, she'd lost her own family in the service of this peace. We all get out of joint, we all get disoriented, and she's exhausted. She's a heroic person and she's been so true and that's what's surprising. For her just to continue to make the right choice time after time gets monotonous. For her to have a lapse and to become a monster, to be distorted by her power and by her aspiration and by her fatigue, felt exquisitely human. Believe me, we struggled terribly getting it right. But we got it right, I think. I think at the end, knowing that Taylor could resurrect herself or pull herself out of the nosedive and by the way, not undo the damage she's done, but save her character. But everyone was like, 'What are you doing?'. And I said, 'Trust me'. I didn't know, even when I was saying 'Trust me', that it would work. You must be willing to take chances and fall on your face. That was a liberating feeling to say, 'You know what? F**k it, I'm just going to try it. I think it's right'."

You said you think you got that right, but do you have any regrets about things you've done in 24?
"I hope it doesn't sound arrogant, but I don't. There are things that I'm not particularly proud of, which I'd separate from regrets. There are some bad moments, there are some moments that really don't work and characters that don't work. But a regret implies that I should have made a left instead of a right-hand turn and I can't think what else I would have done. I feel like I explored every possible option, whether it's Kim's cougar moment or whether it's Teri's amnesia or whether it's many parts of season six - I don't know what else I'd have done, even in retrospect, so I can't say that I regret them, just that there are things I'm less proud of."

Aside from Jack, the only other character that appeared in every single season was Aaron (Glenn Morshower), so why wasn't he in season eight?
"We desperately tried to find a place to put him in and just could not find a place to wedge him in without feeling like we'd wedged him in. I love him. These actors have become such great friends and we're so lucky to have been with such great people. And yeah, we talked about it, but couldn't find a place."

Did you think about bringing back Tony (Carlos Bernard)?
"That's another great question because in season seven I think we had perhaps overplayed that hand, so to me his story's been told and probably retold. That was once where you really have to say, 'This is really it'. I mean, look at Logan. Every one of these resurrections are always fraught with their own kind of peril and you have to use them very judiciously. We considered it but something in my head said that's really not going to happen."

Season eight of 24 was obviously the final one but had you seriously discussed a ninth season?
"I had serious discussions with Fox to the extent that I said this was my last season and if they wanted there to be a ninth I would help them find my successor and groom that person or people. So I entertained helping them transition to the infrastructure of a ninth season, but I think in the end Kiefer felt that this was really it and I felt it. Knowing that I was not going to be back may have informed his decision, I don't know."

Why did you decide not to continue for a ninth season?
"I felt frankly that season seven was so challenging for me that I was ready to call it quits, and I was convinced to stay on. But very much to stay on with the idea that this is it for me. I knew it was for the end for me. We had a series of talks about who might take over the show, and I think soon it became pretty clear that it was just not practical to do that."

You've mentioned before that you thought about killing Jack. Did you ever get as far as thinking about how you would have killed him?
"There were two things. I thought of killing Jack in a very off-centre, syncopated way, where you're not expecting it. Kind of in the margin of the scene, just suddenly, and you're left with the rest of the story. But I think that would have been unrecoverable. And then I thought at the very end, the show is a tragedy, and there would have been a moment to kill Jack, where Allison Taylor tries to stop him like
Romeo And Juliet but she's too late. She saves herself and stops this crime from happening but Jack has to pay the price. And Jack ultimately would have had to pay the price for all the bad things he's done as well. There was a symmetry to that and I think that might have worked. I think it would have been very depressing and I think that's the reason why in the end this is a superior way to have ended it. We contemplated it and I think Kiefer was up for it if it was the right thing to do, but I think no-one was prepared to say goodbye to that character and that trumped the surprise or the shock or even the symmetry or the narrative correctness of Jack's death."

Freddie Prinze Jr.'s character Cole seemed like a younger version of Jack. Was that the intention?
"We've had a couple of so-called younger Jacks, whether it was Ricky Schroder or James Badge Dale. Jack is Jack. Yes, what they share is they're men of a certain age, they're men who are good at what they do, but they're all different. The person who's closest to Jack would be Renee. I think she's the only one who really had a trial by fire, who really understood Jack's soul. She's probably the closest to a protege that Jack has had. These other guys were partners and you learn pretty quickly that it becomes kind of a buddy movie, and Jack is a solo act."

Did you ever think 24 could have continued with Freddie Prinze Jr. in the lead?
"That was briefly an idea that we flirted with. He's someone who also is a bit of a boy scout when he starts the season and then of course he learns that he's married to a murderous spy and all the assumptions that he began the day with were all false. It was sort of the education of Cole. I think Freddie did a fantastic job. At the beginning of the season, he got some crap for that casting and I think he's actually a real leading man and conducted himself just beautifully."

Moving on, how far along are you with the 24 movie?
"There is a script. It's being read by Fox now. There's no schedule, there's no green light, there's no plans right now in terms of a calendar for it. But we're working on it."

Did you learn many lessons from 24: Redemption when you were working on the movie script?
"Well,
Redemption was its own sort of animal in because it was a prequel that was written after seven episodes had been written of season seven so only so much could happen. The only lesson we learned was that it felt like you could take a two-hour chunk outside of the 24-hour framework and present it and have it be compelling on its own merits. We learned too that Jack in an exotic locale is compelling. By and large it was a successful exercise. I was very happy with it. I did it grudgingly. Fox came and said, 'Can you... not can you but you will do this', and I was like, 'First of all, how can you tell me to do it, I don't have an idea yet'. I'm glad they did."

You just mentioned it's good to see Jack somewhere exotic. There have been lots of rumors that the movie will be partially set in the UK. Can you say anything about that?
"Right now the UK is a location, Prague is a location and Serbia. And China."

Do you think there'll be more than one movie?
"I think the intent is actually hopefully to build a franchise and [writer] Billy Ray says he's got three."

When does the movie pick up after the end of season eight?
"It's roughly 18 months."

Can you tell me anything about the plot?
"No. Only because it's such a work in progress that anything I say could be invalid tomorrow. We're a couple of weeks away, I think one way or the other we'll know more shortly."

What about which cast members will be back?
"I can tell you... again even that is way subject to change, but right now I can tell you that Chloe... How about Chloe, I'll give you Chloe."

Go on, you were going to say more then!
"I was, but again that could go away, it truly could."

The
24 season eight boxset is available now. (In the UK an available Dec 14, 2010 in the US)

Source: DigitalSpy