Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

All the dirt. All the top secret stuff. Anything that has to do with the process of getting us to sit and watch something projected on the big screen.

Re: Summer School

Postby TheButcher on Mon Apr 02, 2012 7:54 pm

From THR:
Adam Sandler's Happy Madison to Produce 'Summer School' Remake (Heat Vision Exclusive)
Borys Kit wrote:Paramount has been trying to revisit the 1980s comedy since 2005, but the project has been stuck in development detention.

Happy Madison, the production banner run by Adam Sandler and Jack Giaraputo, is in negotiations to come aboard to produce Paramount’s planned remake of Summer School.

School was a light 1987 comedy directed by Carl Reiner that starred Mark Harmon as a gym teacher forced to cancel his summer plans and teach an English class filled with oddballs and rebels. The film also featured a young Courtney Thorne-Smith.

Paramount has been trying to remake the film since 2005, but the project has been stuck in development detention. Jordan Kerner, the producer behind The Smurfs and Charlotte’s Web, initially was backing a version that would have made the teacher hard-nosed (as opposed to Harmon's laid-back character) and squaring off against one mischievous student.

Another incarnation, this one around 2010, involved Star Trek writer-producers Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci.

By bringing aboard Sandler and Giaraputo, the studio is signaling that it hopes to bring a more comedic focus to the project. Sandler is not attached to star in the project, which soon will hire writers.
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Re: “Die Hard in a…”

Postby TheButcher on Mon Apr 02, 2012 10:48 pm

From Deadline:
Roland Emmerich in Talks to Helm $3 Million Sony Spec ‘White House Down’
MIKE FLEMING wrote:EXCLUSIVE:
Roland Emmerich is in talks to next direct White House Down, the James Vanderbilt-scripted action drama. Sony Pictures paid $3 million when Vanderbilt and his Mythology Entertainment partners brought the spec script to market last week. The film focuses on a paramilitary takeover of the White House and was compared to Die Hard when it fetched the highest sum for a spec script so far this year for Vanderbilt, who scripted The Amazing Spider-Man for Sony and is working on the sequel to the Marc Webb-directed 3D film that stars Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone.

Emmerich and his producing partner Harald Kloser will join Mythology Entertainment partners Bradley Fischer, Vanderbilt, and Laeta Kalogridis to produce the film. It will be his next project as director, and production is slated to begin in the fall. Emmerich will follow White House Down with Singularity, which remains a priority project at Columbia Pictures. Kloser is also a producer of Singularity. Vanderbilt’s script work includes Zodiac, he’s adapting Red Riding for Steve Zaillian’s Film Rites and Ridley Scott, and is doing a production rewrite on Robocop. Emmerich is repped by CAA.
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Re: “Die Hard in a…”

Postby Fievel on Tue Apr 03, 2012 1:10 am

TheButcher wrote:From Deadline:
Roland Emmerich in Talks to Helm $3 Million Sony Spec ‘White House Down’
MIKE FLEMING wrote:EXCLUSIVE:
Roland Emmerich is in talks to next direct White House Down, the James Vanderbilt-scripted action drama. Sony Pictures paid $3 million when Vanderbilt and his Mythology Entertainment partners brought the spec script to market last week. The film focuses on a paramilitary takeover of the White House and was compared to Die Hard when it fetched the highest sum for a spec script so far this year for Vanderbilt, who scripted The Amazing Spider-Man for Sony and is working on the sequel to the Marc Webb-directed 3D film that stars Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone.

Emmerich and his producing partner Harald Kloser will join Mythology Entertainment partners Bradley Fischer, Vanderbilt, and Laeta Kalogridis to produce the film. It will be his next project as director, and production is slated to begin in the fall. Emmerich will follow White House Down with Singularity, which remains a priority project at Columbia Pictures. Kloser is also a producer of Singularity. Vanderbilt’s script work includes Zodiac, he’s adapting Red Riding for Steve Zaillian’s Film Rites and Ridley Scott, and is doing a production rewrite on Robocop. Emmerich is repped by CAA.


Story made me think of Orson Scott Card's book Empire.
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Re: Beetlejuice 2

Postby TheButcher on Thu Apr 12, 2012 1:49 am

Seth Grahame-Smith Touts New Novel 'Unholy Night,' Discusses Movie Schedule and Collaborating With Tim Burton (Q&A)
Andy Lewis wrote:THR: Where does Beetlejuice fit in your schedule?

SGS:The Beetlejuice sequel will come after Unholy Night in my schedule. The first opportunity to tackle that will probably be later this year.
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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby TheButcher on Sun Apr 15, 2012 11:21 pm

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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby TheButcher on Mon Apr 16, 2012 7:47 pm

2012 pic menu more like an '80s stew - Hollywood opts to imitate rather than innovate
Peter Bart wrote:Bill Castle was a colorful producer of a previous generation who had a simple philosophy about filmgoers. "Keep surprising 'em," he used to tell me. "Give 'em something they've never seen before."

Castle would himself be surprised were he around today (he died in 1977 having produced scores of films, including "Rosemary's Baby"). That's because today's tentpoles are usually geared to deliver filmgoers something they've indeed seen before and hopefully will want to see again. Filmmakers of Castle's era were expected to deliver "surprise," but their successors are obliged to summon up the familiar.

The upshot, of course, is an abundance of sequels and prequels and, most recently, remakes from the '80s. The closest thing to a game-changing new movie like "Titanic" is the 3D re-release of "Titanic," which is finding a receptive audience even at 3 hours and 14 minutes of running time.

And now we have "The Avengers," which will be honored April 28 with an extravaganza closing the Tribeca Film Festival -- a new movie with an old cast. Its agglomeration of superheroes -- Iron Man, Thor, Hawkeye, Black Widow, Captain America and the Incredible Hulk -- don't usually touch down at film festivals; tentpoles need tweets and viral buzz, not the nods of cineastes -- but Tribeca decided that its audience, too, would enjoy a glimpse of the familiar.

The box office success of "21 Jump Street" will doubtless spur a recycling of '80s movies and TV shows -- today's Hollywood decisionmakers came of age with this material. Already coming up soon are a new "Dirty Dancing" and the return of "RoboCop" and even a new installment in the "Die Hard" series. This means new careers for Sylvester Stallone, Bruce Willis, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Even Billy Crystal will be a leading man again.

It's a paradox that studios today are working so hard to recapture the familiar, because that's exactly what their predecessors of the '70s were rebelling against. Hollywood back then had lost its "habit audience," and a new generation of filmgoers was embracing films like "Easy Rider," "Midnight Cowboy" and "Bonnie & Clyde." While today's tentpoles desperately seek instantaneous awareness, movies of that era opened in a limited number of markets and slowly built their own awareness. Their impact changed the pop culture of the moment.

I think if Bill Castle were around today, he would take heart in the remarkable success of "The Hunger Games." Even though it was pre-ordained to be a tentpole and opened amid a global explosion of publicity, the movie offered a fresh cast of characters and considerable shock value.

It's always amazing what happens when new ideas are introduced, not old ones recycled.

Heady numbers, indeed

I'm beginning to think that numbers are the new narcotic.

Staring at them leaves me disoriented, if not downright giddy.

Facebook tosses $1 billion at photo startup Instagram. The Dodgers sell for $2 billion. The new boss of Apple frets publicly that he's got $100 billion in cash on his balance sheet and isn't quite sure how to dispose of it.

The mavens responsible for dealing with these numbers dwell in an equally disorienting universe. Hedge funds had a lousy year in 2011 but a manager like Steven A. Cohen paid himself $585 million while John A. Paulson had to settle for $500 million in take-home pay.

Corporate CEOs had reasons for envy. In the entertainment world, Philippe Dauman of Viacom received $43.1 million in compensation and Disney's Bob Iger $31.4 million, leaving Rupert Murdoch in third place with $29.4 million (OK, Rupe arguably earned his pay last year).

Why is all this disorienting? Possibly because most people live in a parallel universe where budgets are still being cut, temps are being hired instead of fulltime workers and gasoline prices are putting a crimp in home budgets.

Besides, I tried Instagram. I think it's a sappy app.
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Re: From Dusk Till Dawn...

Postby TheButcher on Tue Apr 17, 2012 6:43 am

Elgin James Resumes Movie Career With Deal To Direct Indie Thriller ‘Come Sundown’
EXCLUSIVE: Elgin James has been set to direct Come Sundown, a drama scripted by Justin Marks that will shoot in the fall. Jamie Patricof and Lynette Howell of Electric City Entertainment are producing the thriller about a family taken hostage by desperate fugitives determined to get across the border. It becomes a struggle between a father trying to protect his family while hanging onto his humanity, and a hardened criminal with nothing to lose.

It will be the first project for James after spending almost a year in the Los Angeles Metropolitan Detention Center (he spent eight months behind bars, and another three in a halfway house). If you recall, James grew up on the rough streets around Boston and after getting thumped plenty, helped form the rough street gang FSU that battled skinheads and other ethnic gangs, and robbed drug dealers for money and gave half the proceeds to charity. James came to Hollywood with a film deal to tell his story, but after he made a vow to his girlfriend (now his wife) that he would swear off violence and embrace pacifism, he blew off that deal because he was embarrassed by his past actions and knew they would be glamorized in a Robin Hood-like story. Instead, he wrote the script Little Birds, found an advocate in Blue Valentine producer Patricof, and then got accepted into the Sundance Labs program. He made his directing debut on Little Birds, which made the 2011 Sundance Festival (and subsequently got acquired by Millennium Entertainment). He found an agent at WME, and got his first studio job writing Low Riders for Imagine.

Then, just like that, his violent past reared back to bite him. A Chicago judge ordered James to spend a year in jail for attempted extortion. I met James at Sundance on the day Little Birds premiered, as he awaited the judge’s decision. At the time, it struck me that while so many filmmakers in Park City made gritty films that depicted violence they could only imagine, James had lived plenty of that and went out of his way to de-glamorize the violence in his own film.

I spoke with James today, and he confirms that doing time is at least as bad as you might think. “I’d call it the crappiest writing sabbatical ever,” he joked. It was worse than that. “Because it was an administrative facility and high security, I never stepped outside,” he said. “No fresh air, no sunlight for eight months. I tried to use the time positively, with the idea that since I was losing a year just when things started happening, I could figure out my strengths and weaknesses as a filmmaker. I also set a goal to read 100 books, and I read 101.”

James exposed himself to classics like Gone With the Wind, and the fiction of writers like Pat Conroy. His big challenge was not slipping back into a pattern of settling disputes with violence, and keeping to the vow of pacifism that he feels has turned his life around. “It was one thing to embrace non-violence when you’re living in Silverlake, sipping smoothies with Kate Bosworth and Juno Temple, and meeting with all the intelligent beautiful people who inspired me. It’s another thing when you’re thrown into the darkest, most violent place, the general population of the U.S. Federal prison system. Every day I was challenged, especially at the beginning because some people knew who I was, and they knew about my past. I learned that like being an alcoholic, rage does not just go away because you say you won’t act on it. Every day was like the first day of school, times 1000. Not to sound arrogant, but fear of the unknown goes away quickly, and the bigger issue is handling anger. Here I had spent years fighting against drug dealers, bullies and racists and I was surrounded by them. And I was the only guilty person in prison. Everybody else was fighting their case, while I’d said, yes, I did it. I owned up to it, and was serving my time.”

James won his personal battle with rage, walking away from confrontation and surrounded himself with seasoned cons who had seen enough trouble not to look for more. He would make acquaintances with men who seemed nice enough, only to discover they were there because they’d done ghastly things. And he had to stop himself from getting defensive when former Boston kingpin Whitey Bulger took residence in protective custody. To his fellow inmates, Bulger was a rat. While James was growing up on the rough streets around Boston, Bulger was the man.

It was during that struggle that Patricof sent him Come Sundown. The script had been titled Borderline when Rod Lurie was going to direct it. In prison, James was precluded from writing scripts–he has turned in Low Riders, but if he did any scribbling behind bars, he wasn’t telling me–but he read everything sent to him and found a kinship to the protagonist’s dilemma.

“There is this clash of the lower self against the higher self,” James said. “The kidnapped man is a doctor who is a pacifist, and he has to decide whether to put ideals and principles above protecting his family against the ex-con who personified the lower self. I wouldn’t have thought of doing the project beforehand, it was just a violent action thriller when I first read it. But the idea of exploring where that line should be drawn, when the doctor’s insistence on being a pacifist becomes an excuse for cowardice or self-righteousness at the expense of his family, that intrigued me.”

James recalled seeing footage of himself just before he entered the Sundance Labs, the brashness and rage still in him before the Labs humbled him and changed his life, he said. “Once I had a positive light coming out of myself, I didn’t recognize the old me. I thought, what a fucking asshole I was.” That adherence to pacifism kept him out of trouble in prison. The question of how far it would carry his protagonist got James to commit to the film. James worked with Marks to strip away the violence and cliches that felt exploitative, until he and Marks wound up with a real study of contrasting characters.

“The funny while we worked on it was how Justin related to the ex-con,” James said. “Ironically, I was the ex-con, and I related to the doctor determined to be pacifist. I felt his principles were his weapons, his strength.”

Only time will tell if James can follow those principles and become a positive force in Hollywood. Millennium waited for him to open Little Birds, which bows August 17 in New York and Los Angeles. James, on parole, has to walk the straight and narrow to be able to promote the film and travel to shoot his future films where he wants to. Things other filmmakers take for granted.
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Re: Beetlejuice 2

Postby TheButcher on Sun May 06, 2012 10:23 pm

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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby TheButcher on Mon Jun 18, 2012 5:34 am

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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby so sorry on Mon Jun 18, 2012 9:00 am

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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby The Vicar on Mon Jun 18, 2012 4:24 pm



Raging Bull II?
Are you shitting me?
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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby TheBaxter on Tue Jun 19, 2012 9:29 am

Raging Bull II? really?

if this keeps up, before we know it all those Titanic II jokes will someday become a reality.




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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby Spandau Belly on Tue Jun 19, 2012 11:06 am

Will RAGING BULL 2 feature scenes involving Jake LaMotta as advisor on the biopic Scorcese made about him called RAGING BULL? Can we have one actor playing Jake LaMotta advising another actor playing DeNiro playing LaMotta?
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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby so sorry on Tue Jun 19, 2012 12:37 pm

Spandau Belly wrote:Will RAGING BULL 2 feature scenes involving Jake LaMotta as advisor on the biopic Scorcese made about him called RAGING BULL? Can we have one actor playing Jake LaMotta advising another actor playing DeNiro playing LaMotta?



In that briefly described link I think that might actually happen! It sounds like this shit bomb is based on a LaMatta book he wrote about the making of the RB movie and how it affected his life after.
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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby TheBaxter on Tue Jun 19, 2012 1:06 pm

so sorry wrote:
Spandau Belly wrote:Will RAGING BULL 2 feature scenes involving Jake LaMotta as advisor on the biopic Scorcese made about him called RAGING BULL? Can we have one actor playing Jake LaMotta advising another actor playing DeNiro playing LaMotta?



In that briefly described link I think that might actually happen! It sounds like this shit bomb is based on a LaMatta book he wrote about the making of the RB movie and how it affected his life after.


i hope this movie is a hit. then i can pitch my idea for Raging Bull 3, a film about a bunch of bloggers and internet fanboys who get outraged when they hear about some guys making a sequel to Raging Bull, and they hunt them down and beat them up. also based on a true story.
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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby Spandau Belly on Tue Jun 19, 2012 1:18 pm

No no no, the obvious next step is a William Forsythe biopic so that we can get another actor to play Forsythe during his time on the set of RAGING BULL 2 playing LaMotta on the set of the first RAGING BULL advising a different actor playing another actor playing DeNiro playing LaMotta.

I'm sure Charlie Kaufman could be enticed to right the script with the right offer.
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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby minstrel on Tue Jun 19, 2012 1:29 pm

Spandau Belly wrote:No no no, the obvious next step is a William Forsythe biopic so that we can get another actor to play Forsythe during his time on the set of RAGING BULL 2 playing LaMotta on the set of the first RAGING BULL advising a different actor playing another actor playing DeNiro playing LaMotta.

I'm sure Charlie Kaufman could be enticed to right the script with the right offer.


My brain hurts already. Why did you have to bring Kaufman into this?

Maybe they could make this work as a stop-motion animated movie starring an animated bull as LaMotta and barnyard animals as the rest of the cast. Frank Welker could do all the voices. Somebody get Tim Burton on the phone!
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Re: Hollywood has OFFICIALLY run out of ideas

Postby TheBaxter on Tue Jun 19, 2012 2:01 pm

minstrel wrote:
Spandau Belly wrote:No no no, the obvious next step is a William Forsythe biopic so that we can get another actor to play Forsythe during his time on the set of RAGING BULL 2 playing LaMotta on the set of the first RAGING BULL advising a different actor playing another actor playing DeNiro playing LaMotta.

I'm sure Charlie Kaufman could be enticed to right the script with the right offer.


My brain hurts already. Why did you have to bring Kaufman into this?

Maybe they could make this work as a stop-motion animated movie starring an animated bull as LaMotta and barnyard animals as the rest of the cast. Frank Welker could do all the voices. Somebody get Tim Burton on the phone!


can we somehow work in andy serkis playing the motion-captured CGI role of martin scorsese's eyebrows?
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Re: Jumanji

Postby TheButcher on Fri Dec 07, 2012 6:04 am

papalazeru wrote:Someone make Jumanji 3 please.

From THR:
Zach Helm to Write 'Jumanji' Remake (Heat Vision Exclusive)
UPDATED: Matt Tolmach and Bill Teitler are producing the reimagining of the story, based on a Chris van Allsburg book and previously adapted into the 1995 Robin Williams movie.
Borys Kit wrote:Zach Helm, who garnered acclaim for penning Stranger Than Fiction, has been tapped to write Columbia’s reimagining of Jumanji.

Matt Tolmach and Bill Teitler are producing the project, which is a new adaptation of the Chris Van Allsburg book. The tome, first published in 1981, was previously a 1995 movie directed by Joe Johnston that starred Robin Wiliams and Kirsten Dunst. Ted Field and Mike Weber are exec producing the new project.

The movie, blending light comedy and family adventure, told of a board game come to life as two kids discover the supernatural game and release a man trapped in there decades earlier. They also unleash jungle forces and must team up with the man to quell the game’s powerful magic.

The 2005 Jon Favreau-directed film Zathura was a sequel of sorts.

Word of a remake came early this summer when Sony execs said they were developing the project as “an update for the present."

Helm has proven to have a whimsical touch with Stranger Than Fiction and his Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium, the latter of which he directed. He recently did rewrite work on The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, another comedic adventure movie that stars Ben Stiller and will be released Dec. 25, 2013.

He is repped by CAA.
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