Writers' Strike Delays Angels & Demons, Oliver Stone's Pinkville
Plus: Bruce Willis gathers no moss.
The Writers Guild of America strike, now entering its third week, has claimed its first two major film casualties.
Variety reports that Angels & Demons, the Sony-backed prequel to The Da Vinci Code that was supposed to start shooting in February, has been postponed by the studio. According to the report, Akiva Goldsman's Angels script "came in with insurmountable problems." Given that the filmmakers hadn't assembled a supporting cast for star Tom Hanks, putting the project on hold was Sony's only real option. From the article:
"While the filmmakers and the studio feel the screenplay is very strong, we do not believe it is the fully realized production draft required of this ambitious project," a Sony spokesperson said. "At this time, there is no new start date for 'Angels & Demons,' but we are setting a release date of May 15, 2009, and are hopeful to deliver the movie worldwide to theaters on that date. We do not expect any other film on our 2008 slate to be affected."
Also feeling the strike sting is Oliver Stone's Pinkville, which has been halted by United Artists. Variety reports on this shutdown as well, saying:
The studio agreed to finance and distribute the drama about the investigation of the Mai Lai massacre in 1968. The film was to star Bruce Willis, Channing Tatum, Woody Harrelson, Xzibit, Michael Pitt and Toby Jones. The budget was under $40 million and the cast and crew were preparing to leave for Thailand when the plug was pulled Friday.
Stone, a WGA member, tends to work on his films' scripts as he shoots them, but with the strike in effect, neither he nor screenwriter Mikko Alanne have that option. According to Variety, it's unclear whether UA will bring Pinkville back on track after the strike, especially given the poor box-office returns for recent politically charged films -- including the studio's own Lions for Lambs.
One Pinkville cast member who's already moved on to another project is Bruce Willis, who -- as (yep, you guessed it) Variety reports -- has signed on to star in Jonathan Mostow's The Surrogates. Described as "a sci-fi thriller," Surrogates was written by Michael Ferris and John Brancato, who wrote the last movie Mostow directed, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines. From the article:
Story is set in the near future, where humans live in isolation and interact vicariously through surrogate robots who are better-looking versions of themselves. Willis plays a cop who, through his surrogate, investigates the murders of others' surrogates. The cop is forced to venture from his own home for the first time in years and unravels a conspiracy.
Source: Variety (Angels & Demons)
Source: Variety (Pinkville)
Source: Variety (The Surrogates)
Variety reports that Angels & Demons, the Sony-backed prequel to The Da Vinci Code that was supposed to start shooting in February, has been postponed by the studio. According to the report, Akiva Goldsman's Angels script "came in with insurmountable problems." Given that the filmmakers hadn't assembled a supporting cast for star Tom Hanks, putting the project on hold was Sony's only real option. From the article:
"While the filmmakers and the studio feel the screenplay is very strong, we do not believe it is the fully realized production draft required of this ambitious project," a Sony spokesperson said. "At this time, there is no new start date for 'Angels & Demons,' but we are setting a release date of May 15, 2009, and are hopeful to deliver the movie worldwide to theaters on that date. We do not expect any other film on our 2008 slate to be affected."
Also feeling the strike sting is Oliver Stone's Pinkville, which has been halted by United Artists. Variety reports on this shutdown as well, saying:
The studio agreed to finance and distribute the drama about the investigation of the Mai Lai massacre in 1968. The film was to star Bruce Willis, Channing Tatum, Woody Harrelson, Xzibit, Michael Pitt and Toby Jones. The budget was under $40 million and the cast and crew were preparing to leave for Thailand when the plug was pulled Friday.
Stone, a WGA member, tends to work on his films' scripts as he shoots them, but with the strike in effect, neither he nor screenwriter Mikko Alanne have that option. According to Variety, it's unclear whether UA will bring Pinkville back on track after the strike, especially given the poor box-office returns for recent politically charged films -- including the studio's own Lions for Lambs.
One Pinkville cast member who's already moved on to another project is Bruce Willis, who -- as (yep, you guessed it) Variety reports -- has signed on to star in Jonathan Mostow's The Surrogates. Described as "a sci-fi thriller," Surrogates was written by Michael Ferris and John Brancato, who wrote the last movie Mostow directed, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines. From the article:
Story is set in the near future, where humans live in isolation and interact vicariously through surrogate robots who are better-looking versions of themselves. Willis plays a cop who, through his surrogate, investigates the murders of others' surrogates. The cop is forced to venture from his own home for the first time in years and unravels a conspiracy.
Source: Variety (Angels & Demons)
Source: Variety (Pinkville)
Source: Variety (The Surrogates)
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fuj_ball writes: on Nov 19 2007 08:52 AM Yay! (Reply to this) |
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unbreakable_samurai writes: on Nov 19 2007 08:55 AM That sucks about Pinkville, hopefully they start it back up after the strike. The Surrogates sounds interesting though. And I couldn't care less about Angels & Demons. (Reply to this) |
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BrianInSD writes: on Nov 19 2007 09:51 AM I can't believe I'm the first one to make this comment: Since when have "insurmountable problems" delayed production of an Akiva Goldsman script? If "Lost in Space" and "Batman & Robin" were production-ready, that "Angels & Demons" script must really suck. (And yes: I'm aware he won an Oscar for "A Beautiful Mind" and will concede that was a good script.) (Reply to this) |
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FireflyFan4evr writes: on Nov 19 2007 11:22 AM So there ARE film gods! Sony, please realize that there just is not any interest in seeing Angels & Demons. You dropped the ball with the da Vinci Code, so stop now before you lose anymore money. (Reply to this) |
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lestatthevampire writes: on Nov 19 2007 01:55 PM When's Heroes going off? I mean... Pinkville, nooooooo. Ah, I don't care. (Reply to this) |
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Hamboner writes: on Nov 19 2007 07:02 PM In reply to this comment (#1288582) The Da Vinci Code was pretty bad, but I think it is a stretch to say that there is no interest in seeing it. The public loved the last one and will proably love this one too, although the book lacks the name pedigre of the first. On a seperate note, ever since the Fifth Element I have been dying to have Bruce Willis jump back into SciFi. He was lucky enough to be in a good (albeit eccentric) project with that one but I just sweat that movie so hard that I can't help but think he may have a good sense for the genre. (Reply to this) |
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~*Admiral Snowstorm*~ writes: on Nov 20 2007 03:44 AM Say all you want about The Da Vinci Code, but Angels and Demons was a pretty good book, to be honest. Not only that, but it's not as dialogue-driven as The Da Vinci Code was, so it would translate better to screen than The Da Vinci Code. As such, I'm feeling a modicum of anticipation for this movie. That's a shame about Pinkville, I was looking forward to that a bit. The Surrogates sounds kind of interesting, though. I won't put too much faith in its quality, but the premise is somewhat high-concept. I'd like to see what they do with it. (Reply to this) |
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