Tag: bill-paxton

  • Glen Powell joins ‘Twisters’

    Glen Powell plays "Hangman" in 'Top Gun: Maverick' from Paramount Pictures, Skydance and Jerry Bruckheimer Films.
    Glen Powell plays “Hangman” in ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ from Paramount Pictures, Skydance and Jerry Bruckheimer Films.

    Though he’s been working solidly for a few years now, Glen Powell is certainly having a moment thanks to his breakout role as Lt. Jake ‘Hangman’ Seresin in ‘Top Gun: Maverick’. He’s in demand and is now apparently in talks for another big gig.

    As first reported on The Hot Mic Podcast, Powell has his eye on a role in ‘Twisters’, the follow-up to Jan de Bont’s 1996 heavy weather thriller, which starred Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt.

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    Fresh’ actor Daisy Edgar-Jones is already aboard to star, and we could certainly see her and Powell as a charismatic lead duo.

    Daisy Edgar-Jones in 'Where the Crawdads Sing.'
    Daisy Edgar-Jones in ‘Where the Crawdads Sing.’ Photo courtesy of Sony Pictures.

    Related Article: A Sequel to 1996’s ‘Twister’ is Spinning Up at Universal, and Helen Hunt Could Return

    Tell me about ‘Twister’

    The original movie, which also featured the likes of Cary Elwes, Jami Gertz, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Alan Ruck and Todd Field (yes, the director of ‘Little Children’ and ‘TAR’) told the story of the Hardings (Hunt and Paxton) who must deal with their collapsing marriage even as they reunite to create an advanced weather warning system.

    ‘Twister’ was a success, earning $494 million worldwide, and lauded for its state-of-the-art effects. Yet no sequel was developed until much more recently.

    Mark L. Smith, who wrote ‘The Revenant’ and George Clooney’s ‘The Midnight Sky’, has crafted a script that reportedly focus on the now-grown daughter of Jo and Bill Harding, who is a chip off the old storm-chasing block.

    Steven Spielberg (who was a producer on the 1996 movie) is said to be thrilled by the new screenplay and eager for the movie to be made. And all involved are hoping that they can tempt Hunt back in some capacity, even if just for a cameo. Paxton, of course, sadly died in 2017.

    Despite early work kicking off on this one back in 2020, you can certainly point to ‘Maverick’ being a spur for fresh development on this front. And in fact, that movie’s director Joseph Kosinski was attached to what was then being described as a reboot.

    Though Kosinski ended up leaving to focus on the Formula One racing movie he has in development at Apple with Brad Pitt starring, the behind-the-scenes team is still being led by producer Frank Marshall (his wife and fellow powerhouse producer Kathleen Kennedy worked on the original with Spielberg).

    Now, ‘Minari’s Lee Isaac Chung is in the director’s chair and Edgar-Jones is most likely playing the daughter character. We’ll have to wait and see how Powell fits in.

    Daveed Diggs in 'Extrapolations,' premiering March 17, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Daveed Diggs in ‘Extrapolations,’ premiering March 17, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    In related ‘Twister’ sequel news, Daveed Diggs has spoken to Insider about another potential follow-up with which he was involved. Hunt stars in the ‘Blindspotting’ TV series that Diggs and Rafael Casal spun off from their indie movie. In 2021 they pitched the idea of Hunt directing a new take on ‘Twister’. But it didn’t happen, and Diggs has his suspicions as to why.

    Here’s what he said,

    “Oh man, I’m not going to get into it mostly because I’m probably going to misremember things. But all I’ll say is there was an opportunity where we were talking about that, and it didn’t happen, and the reasons that it didn’t happen are potentially shady. But shady in the way that we know the industry is shady.”

    The answer, my friends, is probably blowing in the wind.

    Bill Paxton as Dr. William "Bill/The Extreme" Harding in 1996's 'Twister.'
    Bill Paxton as Dr. William “Bill/The Extreme” Harding in 1996’s ‘Twister.’

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Twisters:’

    Buy ‘Twister’ On Amazon

     

  • ‘Twister’ Sequel in the Works

    Helen Hunt as Dr. Joanne "Jo" Harding and Bill Paxton as Dr. William "Bill/The Extreme" Harding in 1996's 'Twister.'
    (L to R) Helen Hunt as Dr. Joanne “Jo” Harding and Bill Paxton as Dr. William “Bill/The Extreme” Harding in 1996’s ‘Twister.’

    If you’re seeing the sky change around you and hearing the distant rush of a wind vortex, that could be because the long-in-development follow-up to 1996’s ‘Twister’ is once more moving forward at Universal. We’ll let you guess what it’s called. Find out at the end of the story!

    According to Deadline, Universal is working with Warner Bros. (though the latter is only providing financing and will get a cut of any profits) to crank up the wind machines again, 26 years since Jan de Bont had Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton leading a team of storm chasers into the path of giant, swirly twisters, all in the name of science.

    The original movie, which also featured the likes of Cary Elwes, Jami Gertz, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Alan Ruck and Todd Field (yes, the director of new Cate Blanchett drama ‘TAR’) in the story of the Hardings (Hunt and Paxton) who must deal with their collapsing marriage even as they reunite to create an advanced weather warning system.

    ‘Twister’ was a success, earning $494 million worldwide, and lauded for its state-of-the-art effects. Yet no sequel was developed until much more recently.

    Mark L. Smith, who wrote ‘The Revenant’ and George Clooney’s ‘The Midnight Sky’, has crafted a script that reportedly focus on the now-grown daughter of Jo and Bill Harding, who is a chip off the old storm-chasing block.

    Helen Hunt as Dr. Joanne "Jo" Harding and Bill Paxton as Dr. William "Bill/The Extreme" Harding in 1996's 'Twister.'
    (L to R) Helen Hunt as Dr. Joanne “Jo” Harding and Bill Paxton as Dr. William “Bill/The Extreme” Harding in 1996’s ‘Twister.’

    Steven Spielberg (who was a producer on the 1996 movie) is said to be thrilled by the new screenplay and eager for the movie to be made. And all involved are hoping that they can tempt Hunt back in some capacity, even if just for a cameo. Paxton, of course, sadly died in 2017.

    Despite early work kicking off on this one back in 2020, you can certainly point to ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ being a spur for fresh development on this front. And in fact, that movie’s director Joseph Kosinski was attached to what was then being described as a reboot.

    Though Kosinski ended up leaving to focus on the Formula One racing movie he has in development at Apple with Brad Pitt starring, the behind-the-scenes team is still being led by producer Frank Marshall (his wife and fellow powerhouse producer Kathleen Kennedy worked on the original with Spielberg).

    Universal and Kennedy are looking for the right director, and names mentioned so far include ‘Free Solo’ duo Jimmy Chin & Elizabeth Chai Vaserhelyi, ‘Prey’s Dan Trachtenberg and Laika animation boss Travis Knight, who in addition to the stop-motion likes of ‘Kubo and the Two Strings’, found success with live-action ‘Transformers’ prequel ‘Bumblebee’.

    Other candidates are apparently in the mix, but the studio is hoping that the right person or team can be locked in quickly enough to start shooting in the spring. And that proposed title we teased at the start? ‘Twisters’. Yup, bet you’re glad you waited to read that. Will it change? That answer is blowin’ in the wind.

    Bill Paxton as Dr. William "Bill/The Extreme" Harding in 1996's 'Twister.'
    Bill Paxton as Dr. William “Bill/The Extreme” Harding in 1996’s ‘Twister.’
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  • 9 Unforgettable ’90s Disaster Movies, Ranked By Ridiculousness

    9 Unforgettable ’90s Disaster Movies, Ranked By Ridiculousness

  • Bill Paxton’s Family Files Wrongful Death Lawsuit Against Hospital and Surgeon

    Actor Bill Paxton died nearly a year ago on February 25, 2017, at age 61. His official cause of death was listed as a stroke, which he suffered 11 days after having heart surgery on Valentine’s Day.

    According to court documents cited by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram (Paxton was a Fort Worth native), the Paxton family has filed a lawsuit against Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, and also against surgeon Ali Khoynezhad.

    The family plaintiffs include Paxton’s wife Louise, and children James and Lydia (all shown above in a photo from 2011). The lawsuit alleges that Dr. Khoynezhad “intentionally performed unnecessary heart surgery” on Paxton, and during that surgery “acted negligently and/or recklessly and provided harmful and/or offensive management and treatment,” thereby causing Paxton’s death.

    The suit alleges that Khoynezhad was not in the operating room, or possibly the hospital at all, when Paxton suffered multiple complications; they claim the surgeon left “without arranging for continuous care and coverage … and failed to timely return to the operating room upon notification of the complications, causing a delay in treatment resulting in damage.”

    You can read the family’s full lawsuit here. The complaint for damages includes wrongful death, negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, battery, and survival action. The case includes a demand for trial by jury, with damages exceeding $25,000.

    Paxton had wrapped all of his episodes for CBS’s “Training Day” before he died. Paxton’s son James guest starred in Episode 8, “Blurred Lines,” which aired two months after his father died.

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  • ‘The Circle’ Director James Ponsoldt on Casting John Boyega and Then Leaving Him in a Corner

    There are few films as keenly of-the-moment as “The Circle.”

    This nifty little cautionary thriller, based on a book by vaulted author Dave Eggers, follows Mae (Emma Watson), a young woman who gets the chance of the lifetime when she’s given a job at a staggering tech behemoth (run, in part, by Tom Hanks, playing a character as charming as he is potentially dangerous). In “The Circle,” ideas that are in the current conversational bloodstream, provocatively channeling our own fears about transparency, privacy, and surveillance are packaged within compelling character work and a familiar suspense framework. Some of the movie plays like the most edge-of-your-seat TED talk you’ve ever watched, other portions are like “Black Mirror,” but with the more absurd elements toned down considerably.

    And you could feel those modern anxieties at the film’s premiere, as part of the Tribeca Film Festival, in New York. Watson and Hanks were there, as was the film’s director, James Ponsoldt, who I got to sit down with the next day in midtown Manhattan. The filmmaker, who some will know from his previous films “The Spectacular Now” and “The End of the Tour,” makes bold leaps forward with this film, which is playful, colorful, and slick. (Cinematographer Matthew Libatique, a frequent confederate of Darren Aronofsky’s, absolutely kills it.)

    It was a refreshingly wide-ranging conversation that covered everything from working with Eggers on the film’s screenplay to being one of the last filmmakers to direct the late, great Bill Paxton, to what his interest levels are in taking over a big Hollywood franchise. As always, Ponsoldt is engaging and forthcoming. He is, like Mae in the film, totally transparent.

    What was it like adapting Dave Eggers with Dave Eggers?

    It was great. “A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius” came out when I was in college. It made a huge impact on me and pretty much everyone I knew; we were all obsessed with the book. I think I’ve read everything of his since. He feels like a cultural commentator who is speaking not only to my generation, but definitely to my generation. When “The Circle” came out, I was excited to read it was a Dave Eggers novel but it felt really different. It was plagued with genre and was a dark satire and Mae was a character who I felt was compelling and frustrating, and I realize my complicated relationship with the character was because I saw some of myself in the character, for better or worse, probably for worse. And the book really haunted me. That’s what I was bringing to it.

    When I first talked to Dave about it he was just great, in as much as his take was, the book is the book, the movie should be the movie, it shouldn’t be blindly adherent. He thinks the best film adaptations of books take the theme but invent and necessarily have to strip away and invent things for the screen. I think a literal adaptation of that book would have had to be a 10-hour miniseries, and perhaps a great one.

    So Dave said that at the outset, but there was a part of me that was wondering. I would be, if I spent years on a novel, [apprehensive] if someone was diving into it and ripping it apart in some cases. But he was just the best. The first draft of it he read and he sent me back a printed out copy with some penciled in notes but was very supportive. And then it became a constant back-and-forth. He had no ego in it at all. He was the first one to say, “What about this?” and “What about that?” The entire time I found it constantly inspiring. He was a great collaborator.

    Now that Tom Hanks has been in two of his adaptations, is he the Tony Stark of the Dave Eggers Cinematic Universe?

    I don’t know! It’s so funny! It’s pretty cool, that relationship. I was at an amazing fundraiser in San Francisco on Monday night, and Tom was the guest of honor. It was raising money for an organization that Dave is part of. Just watching their rapport was like, Yes, I would listen to one of our most celebrated novelists and one of our most celebrated actors talk all night long. That’s pretty cool.

    Was there any fear that you were going to get to it too late? Because the story is very of-the-moment.

    Yeah, for sure! I think any film in the history of films where technology is any part of it, you have that question, because technology changes. So does the movie become moot? I think that’s always a question. I don’t think so. If you just fetishize the gadgets then, yes, that’s potentially a place where you can get into murky water. But if your real concern is issues of privacy and surveillance and overreach and us and the way we relate to technology and our own ego and our desire for privacy and yet our desire to be known and our love of free and new stuff that might come with fine print that we may or may not read, I don’t see those issues going away.

    A few pages into Dave’s book, he says something to the extent of, “The Circle is a company that has subsumed all of its competitors.” It’s five minutes into the future, it’s an alternate now. We went out of our way to make sure all of the tech in the film is either built from the ground up or seriously adapted from other things so you’ll really only see it in the film. Yes, the technology will definitely change but we still watch movies with older cars.

    And there is a little bit of magic to the technology.

    Oh, totally. There’s certainly a sense of humor to the book and hopefully the movie. It is satire and it is ridiculous and I’m not sure, when the book came out, that everybody read it that way. But it does have a sense of humor about it. I don’t think it an overly techno-phobic or Luddite book. I think there’s some belief that if you write something that engages with issues of technology, that you hate technology. That’s like making a movie about fascism and saying that you hate politics. But it’s like, no, you’d argue for good politics and ethnical politicians. But we were trying to tell the story through one person.

    Was it fun going from the wintery desolation of “The End of the Tour” to “The Circle,” which is so sunny and bright and has graphics all over the place?

    Yeah. But they present their own challenges. On one hand, it’s easy to do a naturalism, although “End of the Tour” had a period naturalism that was pretty hard actually because it was 20 years ago. We think we know what 1946 or 1968 looks like, but 1996 is like now but not quite. So a lot of it was just removing, removing, removing. In this case, I think people are used to anything involving technology being dystopian looking — cold and symmetrical and everyone wears white. But that’s not how these companies look and feel, and it doesn’t benefit the story, it makes things a little too binary. These companies are young and fun and idealistic. They can also feel naïve but there is a youthful energy and spirit there, for better or worse. My time at tech campuses, I spent time in giant open floor plans with walls that say, “DISRUPT.” Where you’re like, is this a parody of itself? But it’s easy to be a cynic in that world.

    You bring up cynicism and what’s interesting about Mae is that she never succumbs to cynicism. She’s the same optimist at the end of the movie that she was at the beginning. Was that important for you?

    Yeah, totally. I think Dave’s book is tricky and fun. It’s like a dark fairy tale or adult fable or something. Through Mae’s choices, there are tragic, cataclysmic repercussions, and it doesn’t mean that she doesn’t fundamentally changes her feelings about privacy or what she’s open to or what she sees in the future. Personally, she’s not going to get into government regulation antitrust issues. She’s a believer. She’s a disrupter who, like all of us, believes our position is better than those that came before us. But the truth is her vision for the future could be far worse. She just can’t possibly know. This year alone we’ve seen what disruption means and that can be aided by the Internet and Twitter, with people using it as a platform to affect elections in multiple countries. I’m sure there were people on both sides who believed they were right and the other side was wrong.

    I wanted to ask you about someone who is becoming a regular collaborator: composer Danny Elfman. His score for this movie is amazing, and I don’t know that he’s ever done a score that’s this electronic.

    I don’t know that he has. You go back to Oingo Boingo, there’s a lot of synth stuff there. Danny is amazing. I was a huge fan. I knew who Danny Elfman was before I understood what composers did. “The Simpsons.” There’s definitely a sound. Danny can do anything. But there’s the stuff with Tim Burton and the stuff with Sam Raimi. There’s also the stuff he’s done with David O. Russell and Gus Van Sant. I was excited for “End of the Tour” because, like most of my films, there’s probably about 20 minutes of music. But I was excited to collaborate with him in a way that I hadn’t heard him do before.

    With “The Circle,” it was a movie with a lot of sound, especially when she gets into the world of The Circle. Surprisingly, there’s a lot of human voice that’s been futzed with, or auto-tuned to the point that you can’t recognize it’s a human voice, which was intentional. We talked a lot about electronic music and I’m a huge fan of it. To some people, who are not fans of it, it can sound cold, but for me I’ve never found that. But starting with Kraftwerk and onward there’s so much humanity and wit and warmth to it. We wanted to create a soundscape for Mae that was overwhelming. There’s a lot. In the same way that the camera doesn’t stop moving when she starts working at the Circle, neither does the score.

    Can you talk about working with Beck?

    Yeah. Working with … “My pal Beck,” say that with quotes. The truth is, when you go to some of these places and I went to one of them for research and there was a free Hot Chip concert on a Thursday night. Of course there’s a free Hot Chip concert and yoga and free food. We wanted someone to come in and perform that feels very matter-of-fact, another Tuesday night at The Circle. When his name came up, I had been a huge fan forever but I didn’t think there was any way he’d do it. And then we heard that he thought it’d be really fun. But I still didn’t think it would happen because I just assume things would fall apart. And we got to the day and it was like, He’s really going to be there, huh? And he was there and he was amazing! It’s hard to tell, but the camera swoops down and swirls around him; it’s pretty elaborate. He was great and had incredible dance moves and was spot on. He did it again and again. Then he said, “We probably have another hour, hour and a half in us.” So I was like, “Cool!”

    Did he know your movies or was he a fan of the book or what? Did you ever find out?

    That’s a really good question. Some of the folks involved, like our music supervisor, grew up in L.A., and she had grown up in some of the same circles as Beck. I don’t know what she told him. I assume he read the book because he’s very cultured and he and Dave Eggers know each other. But beyond that I didn’t fish too much. I didn’t want to tempt fate. I was just excited that he was there.

    You dedicate the movie to Bill Paxton and his performance is so great and affecting. Everyone loved him, and he was known as being the nicest guy. What was your experience with him?

    He was the nicest guy. I hadn’t worked with him before, so my only frame of reference was with this film. He had this kind of aw-shucks Texas demeanor, but he was genuinely kind, properly disciplined; he knew how to do his job and was obsessed with getting the details right for his character and framing the character honestly and humanely and not judging the character.

    Like most great actors, he was most concerned with making his fellow actors feel good. And he was also a really good filmmaker. It’s obvious that he understood how a set worked and what everyone’s job was and had a lot of respect for everyone. He was the glue on set with this animating energy. He is someone who would text me and say, “Turn on TCM, there’s a really obscure noir you need to watch.” I knew him through the lens of that experience.

    Everyone loved him and he seemed to genuinely love everybody. I feel bad, first and foremost, for his family, but it feels like a bummer for everybody — his family, his fans. He should have been here for decades to come.

    Your take on casting is really interesting. Because when I found out Bill Paxton was in the movie I assumed he was one of the Three Wise Men. Can you talk about your approach to casting?

    With the Three Wise Men, my first frame of reference was Dave’s book. So I checked there; I was thinking about people in the real world although they’re fictional characters. It’s like, “Who would have been a hacker programmer in real life?” What do those images look like? And have they been influenced by other movies I’ve seen? What do people who actually run multimillion-dollar companies look like? How do they talk? What’s their background? Are they villainous like I think they’d be? Probably not. It was a lot of those things. In the case of Tom Hanks’s character, what are the aspects of a charismatic person who really believes what he believes? Really wants to democratize the world but that being said is making billions of dollars for the company, which muddies up the intentions.

    Bill’s character was hard because it’s tricky to portray someone with a chronic illness. That’s part of the dynamic of Mae’s family, it’s part of the drama, part of the anxiety, and one of the aspects of The Circle, which is that they have an amazing health care and can treat a member of her family with a preexisting condition. You need an actor like Bill Paxton to get that character spot-on.

    Was it hard casting an actor as charismatic as John Boyega and leaving him in the back of the room for most of his scenes?

    Well, it’s Emma’s movie, right? She’s in every scene. But one is really fortunate to get amazing actors to play those other roles. I’m someone who would make a movie with that actor or actress and have them in every scene. I can’t wait to make a movie that’s John Boyega in every scene or Karen Gillan in every scene. That would be really thrilling. John’s amazing, and you see Tom doing it as well. Tom has had no problem starring in movies but they also have no problem serving the story and being a supporting role. I had loved John in “Attack the Block” and met with him and found him to be so intense in the best way. He was charismatic, intense, and focused. So I was thrilled that he was going to do it, because his life was going to change very soon.

    As a filmgoer, I’m always excited when actors who are typically stars play a very different version that what they’re known for or play a supporting role. Part of having a vibrant career is making those decisions.

    You’re of the age/resume of filmmakers who are having big projects thrown their way. Has that happened to you? Does any of that stuff interest you?

    You know. Yes, they have offered things to me. But it depends. For me, I like ideas that aren’t beholden to massive corporate interests. I could imagine making a movie that’s an absolute no-budget movie or a movie with a pretty big budget. But something that is just part two or three or four or five doesn’t necessarily sound as exciting to me.

    I am writing something for Disney, but it’s an original idea that, if I’m lucky enough to make it, will be a much bigger budget than what I’m used to. So there will be those pressures. But I’m excited to build that world. I have tremendous respect for those filmmakers, some of whom are friends of mine, who step into a franchise where there’s a lot of love for the graphic novel or whatever it is it’s based on. It’s a different type of pressure. It’s nice to build your own little universe and go on and build another one.

    “The Circle” is out today everywhere.

  • Here’s How ‘Training Day’ Honored the Late Bill Paxton

    On March 2, CBS aired the first episode of “Training Day” since the passing of lead actor Bill Paxton.

    Paxton, 61, died Feb. 25 after complications from surgery. The TV series, set 15 years after the 2001 movie, just started airing Feb. 2 and had only aired four episodes before Paxton’s death.

    Episode 5, “Wages of Sin,” started with a dedication to Paxton:

    Paxton played Detective Frank Rourke, opposite Justin Cornwell as Officer Kyle Craig. According to Deadline, production on “Training Day” wrapped in December and all 13 episodes from the show’s first season order had already been filmed. Bill Paxton’s son James is said to guest star in Episode 8, which should air in mid-March.

    It already looked like “Training Day” would only have one season, but that seems especially likely now. CBS has yet to weigh in on the future of the series, but the network and Warner Bros. TV did issue a statement on Oscars Sunday, which is when the news of Paxton’s death broke:

    We are shocked and deeply saddened this morning by the news of Bill Paxton’s passing. Bill was, of course, a gifted and popular actor with so many memorable roles on film and television. His colleagues at CBS and Warner Bros. Television will also remember a guy who lit up every room with infectious charm, energy and warmth, and as a great storyteller who loved to share entertaining anecdotes and stories about his work. All of us here offer our deepest sympathy to his wife, Louise, and his two children.

    “Training Day” continues airs Thursdays at 10 p.m. on CBS.

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  • Bill Paxton Had Finished Taping ‘Training Day’ Season 1 for CBS Before Death

    The late “Training Day.”

    Paxton played Detective Frank Rourke, co-lead opposite Justin Cornwell as Officer Kyle Craig, in a sequel/follow-up set 15 years after the original 2001 film. The TV series just started airing on Thursday, Feb. 2, so only four episodes have shown so far.

    According to Deadline, production on “Training Day” wrapped in December and all 13 episodes from the show’s first season order have already been filmed. Bill Paxton’s son James (that’s him below, with Dad in 2013) reportedly guest stars in Episode 8, which should air in mid-March.

    Premiere Of Disney's 'Saving Mr. Banks' - Arrivals“Training Day” did not have a great start in the ratings, so Season 1 was probably going to be the end of the series anyway. As Deadline reported, it opened with 4.7 million viewers and a 0.9 rating in the adult 18-49 demographic in Live+same day ratings, and by Episode 4 it was down to 3.7 million and a 0.7, with small boosts from DVR.

    It’s possible fans will now catch up, since it’s a last chance to see Bill Paxton. (He will also be seen as Emma Watson’s father in the April 28 movie “The Circle.”)

    Paxton’s “Training Day” co-star Justin Cornwell reacted to the tragic news of Paxton’s death:

    “Training Day” airs Thursdays at 10 p.m. on CBS.

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  • Beautiful Oscars 2017 ‘In Memoriam’ Starts With Bill Paxton, Ends With Carrie Fisher

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-SAG AWARDS-showAs you probably remember, 2016 was a particular dark year in terms of celebrity deaths. But the start of the Oscars 2017 “In Memoriam” segment honored a very recent 2017 death: Bill Paxton.

    Presenter Jennifer Aniston teared up when mentioning Paxton’s death — just announced earlier today —- before the pre-taped video played, and Sara Bareilles sang a stunning rendition of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now.”


    The video was a moving reminder of how many stars we’ve lost in the past year, ending with “Star Wars” icon Carrie Fisher — who died in December 2016 — saying “May the Force be with you.”

    Watch the whole montage:

    Of course, fans will be upset at certain “snubs” but you also have to keep in mind that some celebs (like David Bowie, Alan Rickman, and Leonard Nimoy) were honored at last year’s Oscars.

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  • Ginnifer Goodwin: ‘It Felt Wrong’ to Come to Oscars After Bill Paxton’s Death

    89th Annual Academy Awards - ArrivalsFans were shocked to hear the news of actor Bill Paxton’s untimely death, but Ginnifer Goodwin was more than a fan. She was a sister-wife.

    Goodwin played one of Paxton’s three wives on the HBO series “Big Love,” and she admitted to People that she struggled with the idea of still attending tonight’s 2017 Oscars just hours after hearing about his death:

    “It was hard to come here, it felt wrong to come and celebrate anything. But [my husband] Josh [Dallas] reminded me that Bill loved all things Hollywood history and he would want you to be here.”

    Goodwin voices the lead character in the Best Animated Feature nominee “Zootopia,” so she and her “Once Upon a Time” co-star and husband Josh Dallas celebrated the film with their attendance.

    The actress told People that the second place Paxton would want to be, after hanging out with his family, would be at the Oscars. (Despite his long and impressive career, Paxton was never nominated for an Oscar. But he was nominated for an Emmy and several Golden Globe Awards, and he won a SAG Award for being in the cast of “Apollo 13.”)

    “Once Upon a Time” Season 6 returns from hiatus next Sunday, March 5.

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  • Bill Paxton Dies at Age 61: Celebs Mourn Friend, Co-Star

    Premiere Of Disney's 'Million Dollar Arm' - ArrivalsThis is a heartbreaker. Bill Paxton, beloved actor in “Aliens,” “Terminator,” “Big Love,” “Tombstone,” “Twister,” “Apollo 13,” “Titanic,” “Hatfields and McCoys,” and so many more — has died from “complications from surgery.” He was 61.

    A family representative shared a statement on the tragic news (via People):

    “It is with heavy hearts we share the news that Bill Paxton has passed away due to complications from surgery. A loving husband and father, Bill began his career in Hollywood working on films in the art department and went on to have an illustrious career spanning four decades as a beloved and prolific actor and filmmaker. Bill’s passion for the arts was felt by all who knew him, and his warmth and tireless energy were undeniable. We ask to please respect the family’s wish for privacy as they mourn the loss of their adored husband and father.”

    According to TMZ, Paxton had heart surgery and suffered complications after the operation, resulting in a fatal stroke. He leaves behind a wife of 30 years, Louise Newbury, and two children.

    Bill Paxton’s son James is set to guest star on the eighth episode of CBS’s “Training Day,” which should air in mid-March. The series just premiered on Feb. 2, 2017, with Paxton as co-lead. On the film front, Paxton plays the father of Emma Watson’s character in “The Circle,” co-starring Tom Hanks, which will be released on April 28.

    Paxton’s friends and co-stars reacted to the sad news once it was released on Oscar morning:

    James Cameron, who directed Bill Paxton in “The Terminator,” “Aliens,” “True Lies” and “Titanic,” shared a statement with Vanity Fair:

    “I’ve been reeling from this for the past half hour, trying to wrap my mind and heart around it. Bill leaves such a void. He and I were close friends for 36 years, since we met on the set of a Roger Corman ultra-low budget movie. He came in to work on set, and I slapped a paint brush in his hand and pointed to a wall, saying “Paint that!” We quickly recognized the creative spark in each other and became fast friends. What followed was 36 years of making films together, helping develop each others projects, going on scuba diving trips together, watching each others kids growing up, even diving the Titanic wreck together in Russian subs. It was a friendship of laughter, adventure, love of cinema, and mutual respect. Bill wrote beautiful heartfelt and thoughtful letters, an anachronism in this age of digital shorthand. He took good care of his relationships with people, always caring and present for others. He was a good man, a great actor, and a creative dynamo. I hope that amid the gaudy din of Oscar night, people will take a moment to remember this wonderful man, not just for all the hours of joy he brought to us with his vivid screen presence, but for the great human that he was.
    The world is a lesser place for his passing, and I will profoundly miss him.”

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