Tag: Paul Haggis (Page 2 of 2)

Serious offers and old gossip

Just another sane Monday in movieland.

A robot* Halcyon, a somewhat odd firm with an all but empty website, has officially put its one and only asset and reason for being, the rights to “The Terminator” franchise, on the auction block. So reports Variety and Nikki Finke. Suddenly, over at Whedonesque — yes, the Joss Whedon fansite where the beloved cult TV and occasional film creator occasionally posts  — Whedon links to it and posts a very serious offer. So serious, in fact, that Finke — who occasionally claims she “doesn’t do geek” runs the item. Meanwhile, back at Whedonesque, the Whe-man and a commenter who appears to be both a fan of the Joss and the late singer-songwriter Warren Zevon (some folks are just blessed with too much taste) note an earlier serious offer.

Quote of the week (probably):

Well, here’s what I have to say to Nikki Finke: you are a fine journalist and please don’t ever notice me.

* Sony Classic has picked up the rights to “Mother and Child,” the latest film from arthouse/cable director Rodrigo Garcia, still probably best known to a lot of people as the son of Columbian literary great Gabriel Garcia Marquez. It’s not too surprising a pick-up, even in this tough market, given that the cast includes Annette Bening, Naomi Watts, up-and-comer Kerry Washington (“Ray,” “The Fantastic Four”), and Samuel L. Jackson.

* The box office “actuals” for most of the big releases turned out to be a couple of million higher than the estimates I reported yesterday. Sorry MJ’s ghost.

* Thinking about “The Men Who Stare at Goats” which comes out this Friday, Jeff Bridges gets appropriately trippy but not in too dudish a way.

* This is a few days old, but for those of us who find ourselves unduly fascinating by the Church of Scientology, via Kim Masters, here’s an interesting new story opened up last week. Writer-director Paul Haggis (“Crash”) announced he’s leaving the church.

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When a Double-0 Does It, It is Not Illegal + “G.I. Joe,” F**k No!

A couple of items hot off the action film presses…

* As per Cinematical, writer Peter Morgan has been hired to work on the as-yet-untitled 23rd (!) James Bond film. If the name rings a bell, he’s the playwright and screenwriter best known for the slam-bang action fests “Frost/Nixon” and “The Queen.” (Yeah, I know, but they cut out the lengthy sequence where Helen Mirren as Queen Elizabeth II dons a cat suit and tears a bunch of foreign agents limb from limb as she foils a plot to blow up Buckingham Palace before tea and crumpets with the French premier.)

It’s actually not a big change in strategy. Both “Casino Royale” and “Quantum of Solace” were written by the team of Robert Wade and Neal Purvis with a “polish” from Oscar-winning veteran scribe Paul Haggis (“Crash“, “Million Dollar Baby“). After what many perceived as a bit of a let down on “Quantum” both in terms of story and direction, apparently the idea was to get a fresh Oscar-nominated, if not actually Oscar-winning, writer on board. So, no need to worry that “Bond 23” will be an earnest examination of the legal and ethical issues created by giving random blokes a license to kill people — though I’d pay to see that. As usual, interesting choices are being bandied about for the Bondian director’s chair, but in 22 films, for better or worse, a director with a strong personal vision has yet to be hired, so no reason to think the Bond producers will break the pattern now.

* Rumors have been flying all over the place about a supposed disastrous screening of “G.I. Joe” — a movie that wasn’t exactly being awaited with baited breath at least in my corner of the geeksphere. Anyhow, the upshot is that helmer Stephen Sommers, best known as the writer-director behind the Mummy films, or other heads may or may not roll or be diminished creatively.

For insight, I hereby direct you to Anne Thompson‘s refreshingly FACT-ual approach to the matter. Looking at the trailer, I can’t help thinking that this movie has somehow already been made….

Hey, better late than never, right?

Now we’re talking. After effectively neglecting the entourage during the season’s first four episodes while building Vince’s story, the writers finally doubled back for Turtle and Drama this week. (Eric, from the looks of the previews, will get some love next week.) While buying each of the boys their own Aston Martins, in celebration of “Aquaman” taking down “Spider-Man” at the box office, Vince tells Turtle that he got a radio station to spin Saigon’s disc. Minutes later, Turtle’s phone starts blowing up with people looking for info on Saigon, and Vince even agrees to arrange a sit-down for Turtle with Ari. Boom, just like that, Turtle’s budding career as a music rep finally has some momentum. Only now, Drama wants his own meeting with Ari; instead, he gets the next-best thing: he can come with Turtle. Clearly annoyed that he needs to spend his lunch with Vince’s boys, Ari reluctantly agrees to rep each of them before the check even arrives.

I love it. Ari makes things happen, as evidenced by him setting up meetings with Atlantic Records, Sony and Interscope for Turtle and Saigon. “I think your life’s about to change, Turtle,” Ari tells him over the phone. No shit. With Ari opening doors for him, Turtle’s star should rise in a hurry. As for Drama…well, not so much. Ari only took them on as a favor to Vince, but now that Turtle’s getting some action Ari’s got no problem giving him the attention. Hell, we haven’t even heard Drama talk about any work this season. I’m guessing the writers are really going to start pitting Turtle’s rising career against Drama’s stalled one. Drama was already put off when Vince set up Turtle’s meeting with Ari, and he didn’t exactly look thrilled when Turtle told them about the meetings with Atlantic, Sony and Interscope. Something’s brewing here, and I like what I’m seeing.

Things also got interesting with Vince and his scheduling conflicts. Paul Haggis needs 90 days to film “Medellin,” but Warners can only grant a 65-day delay, which Haggis says is impossible. Vince is dying to play Pablo Escobar but, as Ari reminds him, he signed a contract with Warner. “I know that you would kill in that role and I know that the timing sucks,” Ari says, “but be a man.” Fine. Vince honors the contract and turns down his dream role.

Only, turns out, Haggis isn’t ready to give up. He comes over, bottle in hand, to tell E that he can’t see “Medellin” without Vince. After a brainstorming session that includes some reefer and booze, E comes up with a solution that, Haggis admits, could actually work. Problem solved. Only the head of Warner Bros. says he can’t let Vince do “Medellin.” “I’ve got a billion-dollar franchise to protect, Happy Meals and action figures. I can’t have my Aquaman doing three hours of blow in every multiplex in the country.” He tries to ease the tension by saying “it’s not personal, Vince, just business.” Vinnie’s response? Give me $20 million to do “A2” or I quit. Hey, it’s just business.

Sorry to repeat myself, but now we’re talking. This thing has legs and I don’t see it getting the typical “happy ending” treatment that the writers have become all too liberal with. In fact, now that Ari told Vinnie that Kevin Smith wrote the “A2” screenplay and, to quote one of my colleagues, the “hacktastic” Michael Bay is stepping in for James Cameron behind the camera, I’m going to say Vince backs out of his contract with Warners. They gave him their word that, if he could figure out how to get “Medellin” done in 65 days, he could do it. Well, E and Vinnie worked it out but now that Warner Bros. backed out of their promise, all bets are off, especially with Cameron out of the picture. Vince is clearly ready to play hardball. Question is, will Warners step into the batter’s box?

Oh, as for this week’s Ari moment: After endearing himself to his wife by being so protective of their daughter, Ari asks, “Now how ‘bout a quick blowjob before my Vince dinner?” Not surprisingly, that one didn’t go over too well with the missus.

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