Myst: The Motion Picture

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For the general concept of a motion picture set in the D'niverse, see Myst movie. For the puzzle, see Myst: The Motion Picture puzzle.
This page is written from an OOC point of view. Events and elements surrounding the Myst Universe are regarded as fictional.
This page chronicles or is related to an ongoing event. Information may quickly become outdated.
  • Editors should frequently verify that the represented information is up-to-date.
  • Readers should not rely on it to be up-to-date.

Myst: The Motion Picture, codenamed Project Passage, is an in-production feature film based on The Book of Ti'ana that is endorsed[1] by Cyan Worlds. The creators are now known to be Patrick Aaron McIntire and Adrian Paul Vanderbosch. They have promised to reveal more about themselves and the project as time goes on.

Contents

[edit] Discovery

The project came to light on January 1, 2008 with the discovery of a teaser website. At first the website revealed few answers regarding its origin, but it was soon discovered that the webmasters go by the name Mysteriacs. In true Myst fashion, a series of puzzles appeared on the site. The puzzles continued throughout January, culminating in a roughly two week period of inactivity. Finally, on February 16th, 2008 a final puzzle led to the discovery of the project's production blog. Access to the blog periodically revealed the identities of the Mysteriacs.

[edit] Plot

Not much is known about the movie, besides that is based on The Book of Ti'ana. One scene, originally written for Passage to K'veer, is in the most current scene.

[edit] People involved

Besides Patrick and Adrian, there are other people involved in this project. John Howe (Wikipedia) has created some concept art. Christopher Petrocchi created some too. There is a hint that Bear McCreary (Wikipedia) is involved. The Mysteriacs want Carey Mulligan (Wikipedia) to play Anna, and they have someone chosen for Veovis.

[edit] Production

Production of the movie is detailed in the Production Journal. There have also been press releases about production; one was published by WebWire.

[edit] Differences from the book

In the movie, Telanis is dead, but he is alive throughout the book. There is no scene in the book equivalent to the one where Veovis talks to the woman on the bridge.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. M&UO Forums post by GreyDragon [1]
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