Tag: jon-voight

  • Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Megalopolis’ Reportedly in Trouble

    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of 'The Godfather' event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of ‘The Godfather’ event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.

    Francis Ford Coppola is taking a huge risk to make his latest giant movie, ‘Megalopolis’, one that he’s been trying to wrangle into production for two decades. He’s poured millions of his own money into the movie, and while he announced a cast and kicked off shooting late last year, it would appear that there are now big problems with the film.

    ‘Megalopolis’, in case it somehow escaped your attention, is an ambitious story with Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel, Forest Whitaker, Laurence Fishburne, Jon Voight, Talia Shire, Shia LaBeouf, Jason Schwartzman and Dustin Hoffman starring.

    The story is mostly a mystery, but reportedly focuses on an architect who seeks to rebuild New York City––or possibly a metropolis based on it––as a utopia after a disaster.

    With Coppola stumping up the $120 million budget, the Hollywood Reporter has now heard from sources that it’s descending into costly chaos. As in, budget-inflating chaos.

    A plan to shoot using ‘Mandalorian’-style volume techniques (virtual production, where backgrounds are projected onto giant LED screens) has apparently been abandoned in favor of less costly, more traditional greenscreen.

    Several department heads, including the production designer and supervising art director, plus the entire effects team have left or been replaced. “It was absolute madness, being on set,” reports an agent for someone in the film who had visited the production.

    ‘Megalopolis’ is roughly halfway through an estimated 80-90-day shoot, and the director is reportedly pressing on, hiring new team members.

    Sensing that the reports would negatively impact his film, Coppola has begun the damage control process, talking with rival trade site Deadline and seeking to assure that the production is continuing and that he’s confident in his work.

    “I’ve never worked on a film where I was so happy with the cast,” Coppola said. “I am so happy with the look and that we are so on schedule. These reports never say who these sources are. To them, I say, ha, ha, just wait and see. Because this is a beautiful film and primarily so because the cast is so great. I’ve never enjoyed working with a cast who are so hardworking and so willing to go search for the unconventional, to come upon hidden solutions. It is a thrill to work with these actors and the photography is everything I could hope for. The dailies are great. So if we’re on schedule, and I love the actors and the look is great, I don’t know what anyone’s talking about here.”

    “My cast is the most wonderful group of actors, who are doing beautiful work and there isn’t one case of where I wish I had cast another way,” Coppola added. “Every night I go see the dailies, and I understand why I am going through all of this. I love what I see, every night. The look of the film is exactly what I dreamed.”

    Adam Driver in Sony's '65.'
    Adam Driver in Sony’s ’65.’

    Star Driver, meanwhile, was even more vehement that all was well.

    “I’d like to briefly respond to The Hollywood Reporter article published Monday, January 9th,” he said. “All good here! Not sure what set you’re talking about! I don’t recognize that one! I’ve been on sets that were chaotic and this one is far from it. The environment that’s being created by Francis, is one of focus and inspiration. As of now, we’re on schedule, making our days, and honestly, it’s been one of the best shooting experiences I’ve had. Our crew is fast and inventive, our costume department is on point, the actors are incredible and willing, and Francis is one of the most insightful and caring people to work with. I’m very proud to be making this movie with him, and them, and though I haven’t interviewed everyone, I can confidently say that that’s the general attitude on set.”

    But wait! There’s more…

    “Yes, it is true that the art department resigned and VFX were let go,” Driver continues. “Not all departments find cohesion on films and rather than suffer through and making decisions that leave a lasting impression on the film, people quit, get fired, or part ways. It’s unfortunate when it happens, but this production is not out of pocket in comparison to other productions; especially to the point that it merits an article about us descending into chaos. That characterization is inaccurate. No one signed up for this movie expecting the process to be conventional. We were expecting the opposite in the pursuit of making something unique. The only madness I’ve observed is that more productions aren’t allowed to be as creatively wild and experimentally focused, precisely because someone else is paying for it. It’s an effort and risk by Francis that I feel should be applauded, not publicly mischaracterized as troubled.”

    The answer, most likely, is somewhere in between, but Coppola has had a history of chaotic shoot that––a little like James Cameron’s experiences with ‘Titanic’––resulted in classic movies. ‘Apocalypse Now’ was infamous for its tribulations, and there is an entire documentary, ‘Hearts of Darkness’ that chronicles its rollercoaster shoot.

    It remains to be seen whether ‘Megalopolis’ ends up with similar status or even among the director’s best movies. Let’s not forget that this is also the man who made ‘The Godfather’ movies and ‘The Conversation’. He’s a multiple Oscar winner and no one would doubt that he knows what he’s doing when it comes to making films. It’s just that his passion has a habit of leading him down conflicting paths.

    Either way, we’re hoping that someone has been filming behind the scenes on this one––it has the makings of another classic documentary.

    ‘Megalopolis’ has yet to score a release date and may well not hit theaters until next year. But now we’re even more eager to see it.

    Al Pacino, Francis Ford Coppola and Robert De Niro
    Al Pacino, Francis Ford Coppola and Robert De Niro onstage during the 50th anniversary tribute of “The Godfather” at the live ABC telecast of the 94th Oscars® at the Dolby Theatre at Ovation Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, on Sunday, March 27, 2022.
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  • Shia LaBeouf Joins ‘Megalopolis’

    Shia LaBeouf in 2019's 'Honey Boy.'
    Shia LaBeouf in 2019’s ‘Honey Boy.’

    At lot of recent headlines around Shia LaBeouf have not been positive. There have been the ‘Don’t Worry Darling’ exchanges leaked between LaBeouf and director Olivia Wilde, leading to a she-said, Shia-said story about why he left the movie – she claims she fired him; he argues that he left because there wasn’t enough rehearsal time.

    Then there’s his mea culpa on both his abusive treatment of ex-girlfriend, musician FKA Twigs and his admission that his based-on-truth tale ‘Honey Boy’ about his younger days and his troubled relationship with his father was not based on so much truth as he claimed.

    Still, he’s looking to get his career back on track and scored a big new job. He’ll be one of the leads in Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Megalopolis’, according to Giant Freakin’ Robot.

    The director’s passion project, a hugely ambitious movie he’s been trying to bring to life for 20 years, is crawling towards reality. After a false start or two, he recently locked in Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel, Forest Whittaker, Jon Voight, and Laurence Fishburne for the cast.

    Alongside LaBeouf, Coppola has also added the likes of Talia Shire (Coppola’s sister) Jason Schwartzman (Shire’s son), Grace Vanderwaal, Kathryn Hunter and James Remar.

    Jason Schwartzman in 1998's 'Rushmore.'
    Jason Schwartzman in 1998’s ‘Rushmore.’

    Strict story details are sketchy, but the logline is equally ambitious: The fate of Rome haunts a modern world unable to solve its own social problems in this epic story of political ambition, genius, and conflicting interests. To be a little clearer on that, it’ll focus on political and social wrangling in a giant city (modeled on, or even actually, New York) looking to rebuild after a disaster.

    The quest to make this one has consumed Coppola in recent years, and he’s pouring a lot of his own money into making the movie. With a budget in the region of $100 million, it’s a project that has seen backers come and go, but he’s finally setting up a shoot for the fall.

    Speaking to Deadline, Coppola outlined why he’s really making this movie. What would make me really happy? It’s not winning a lot of Oscars because I already have a lot and maybe more than I deserve. And it’s not that I make a lot of money, although I think over time it will make a lot of money because anything that the people keep looking at and finding new things, that makes money,” he says.

    Coppola adds: “So somewhere down the line, way after I’m gone, all I want is for them to discuss ‘Megalopolis’ and, is the society we’re living in the only one available to us? How can we make it better? Education, mental health? What the movie really is proposing is that utopia is not a place. It’s how can we make everything better? Every year, come up with two, three or four ideas that make it better. I would be smiling in my grave if I thought something like that happened, because people talk about what movies really mean if you give them something.”

    ‘Megalopolis’ has yet to set a release date. As for LaBeouf, he’ll next be seen in Abel Ferrara’s ‘Padre Pio’, due for its debut at the Venice Film Festival’s Venice Days section.

    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of 'The Godfather' event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of ‘The Godfather’ event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
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  • Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel and Forest Whittaker Head for ‘Megalopolis’

    Adam Driver in 'The Report'
    Adam Driver in ‘The Report’ by Scott Z. Burns. Photo by Atsushi Nishijima.

    Francis Ford Coppola is a filmmaker whose career includes such stone-cold classics as the first two ‘Godfather’ movies, ‘Apocalypse Now’ and ‘The Conversation’.

    He’s evolved from young and hungry guerilla director to one of the grand elders of cinema, helping others get their work made and investing what he’s earned in other business, including his famous winery. So, you might think his legacy would be secure.

    Yet for Coppola, he’s not yet satisfied, his creative drive powering him to work on one more, giant – and incredibly risky – passion project, a movie he’s been trying to bring to life for 20 years: ‘Megalopolis’. And now he might, finally, be doing it, as Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel, Forest Whittaker, Jon Voight, and Laurence Fishburne are all in the cast for the movie.

    Strict story details are sketchy, but the rough logline runs thus: The fate of Rome haunts a modern world unable to solve its own social problems in this epic story of political ambition, genius, and conflicting interests. To be a little clearer on that, it’ll focus on political and social wrangling in a giant city (modeled on, or even actually, New York) looking to rebuild after a disaster.

    The quest to make this one has consumed Coppola in recent years, and he’s pouring a lot of his own money into making the movie (while deals are being hatched to boost its financing). With a budget in the region of $100 million. It’s a project that has seen cast and backers come and go – most recently, he had it set up with the likes of Oscar Isaac and Zendaya in the lead roles, but that version didn’t quite come together (though Voight and Whittaker were attached then, too).

    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of 'The Godfather' event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of ‘The Godfather’ event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.

    Speaking to Deadline recently, Coppola outlined why he’s really making this movie. What would make me really happy? It’s not winning a lot of Oscars because I already have a lot and maybe more than I deserve. And it’s not that I make a lot of money, although I think over time it will make a lot of money because anything that the people keep looking at and finding new things, that makes money,” he says.

    Coppola adds: “So somewhere down the line, way after I’m gone, all I want is for them to discuss ‘Megalopolis’ and, is the society we’re living in the only one available to us? How can we make it better? Education, mental health? What the movie really is proposing is that utopia is not a place. It’s how can we make everything better? Every year, come up with two, three or four ideas that make it better. I would be smiling in my grave if I thought something like that happened, because people talk about what movies really mean if you give them something.”

    The cameras should be rolling this fall. But is Coppola not concerned that it could still be a tough sell, even when it’s been made? “My films, the more weird they are, the longer they seem to last,” he says. “I don’t even know why.”

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  • 11 Things You Never Knew About ‘Midnight Cowboy’ on its 50th Anniversary

    11 Things You Never Knew About ‘Midnight Cowboy’ on its 50th Anniversary

    United Artists

    Midnight Cowboy” is now half a century old, and it’s aged very gracefully. It’s still a career highlight for stars Jon Voight and Dustin Hoffman and is regarded as one of the best and most important films of the 1960’s. Celebrate this big anniversary by learning more about the making of “Midnight Cowboy.”

    1. While he plays a Texan unfamiliar with life in New York City, Jon Voight is actually a native New Yorker. In fact, he had trouble getting a handle on his character’s southern accent and resorted to recording native Texans to use for research.

    2. Lee Majors was originally cast as Joe Buck before Voight, but Majors had to drop out due to his commitment to the TV series “The Big Valley.”

    United Artists

    3. Both Elvis Presley and Warren Beatty also voiced an interest in playing Joe Buck.

    4. According to Hoffman, the iconic line “I’m walking here!” was improvised and was the result of his genuine anger when a taxi cab interrupted an otherwise perfect take. Hoffman chose to stay in character even as he took out his anger at the driver.

    United Artists

    5. However, producer Jerome Hellman disputes Hoffman’s account, saying the line was included in one draft of the screenplay.

    6. Hoffman put pebbles in one of his shoes in order to ensure that Ratso’s distinctive limp remained consistent from scene to scene.

    7. Filming outdoors was complicated both by the lack of a permit to shoot on the city streets and because Hoffman was regularly mobbed by fans of 1967’s “The Graduate.”

    Embassy Pictures

    8. Director Jon Schlesinger reportedly wanted to include a sex scene between Hoffman and Voight’s characters, but studio executives rejected the idea.

    9. Bob Dylan‘s “Lay Lady Lay” was written specifically for the”Midnight Cowboy” soundtrack, but Dylan wasn’t able to complete it in time.

    United Artists

    10. “Midnight Cowboy” is the only X-rated film ever to receive an Academy Award, though the MPAA later granted the film an R-rating upon its re-release in 1971.

    11. Both the movie and James Leo Herlihy’s original novel were initially banned in Ireland.

  • ‘Ray Donovan’ Season 4 Is ‘Bigger, Bolder,’ and ‘Wacky, Really Wacky’

    Liev Schreiber as Ray Donovan in Ray Donovan (Season 4, Episode 1)With a constant stream of high-end L.A. scandal, extreme family dysfunction, histories of sexual abuse, infidelity, incarceration, violence and the occasional murder, “wacky” is not the first adjective that comes to mind when describing “Ray Donovan.”

    But that’s the word series star Liev Schreiber keeps coming back to when describing the Showtime series’ fourth season. “It’s bigger, bolder — It’s wacky, really wacky, this season,” he says.

    Which may come as only a half-surprise, given that the show very frequently enjoys heading down often hilarious comedic side roads while exploring the various darknesses that often threaten to consume the members of the Donovan family. Still, Season Three ended on a gut-wrenching and potentially game-changing note in which Ray, badass fixer of L.A. rich-people problems, was finally confronted with the enormous emotional toll that childhood sexual abuse at the hands of a Catholic priest had taken — not on only him, but his entire family.

    “Ray has to push the reset button a little bit,” explained Schreiber. “I think at the end of last season, some very big questions were asked. He was asking himself some very big questions about faith, and about sobriety, and his own personal spirituality.”

    But instead of signaling Ray’s descent into a messy morass of depression or rage, acting out against either his family or the lowlifes he encounters on the job, he’s actually more interested in putting the shattered pieces of his psyche back together. “He’s in a mode of repairing himself,” says Schreiber. “Where we pick him up, he’s on the path to healing, to getting better, to recovery. How long that lasts is another question, but he’s certainly on the path.”

    The actor admits that the show’s upscale Hollywood intrigue provides an inviting way into the transplanted Boston clan’s stories, but it’s the alternately cozy and cutthroat family drama that’s captivated him.

    “For me, the journey that he’s taken as a father and as a husband has been the one that’s been most illuminating,” he says. “I love the fixes and I love the scams and I love the trouble he always seems to find himself in. But all of it, for me, is connected to his journey as a father and as a husband. And that’s what I like about the writing on this show. All of those fixes are evocative in one way or another, or refer back to that thing that we can all relate to as men, and as women, as mothers, and lovers, and wives, how we negotiate our work lives and our home lives.”Paul Malcomson as Abby Donovan in RAY DONOVAN (Season 4, Episode 01)Actress Paula Malcomson, who plays Ray’s wife Abby, the very epitome of the “long-suffering” spouse, says that she’s harboring a scary secret while also playing host to almost all of her oft-contentious in-laws. “Actually, all the Donovans are living at Ray and Abby’s house, basically — everyone’s there. It’s really fun, because we’ve got just a house full of people.”

    Her character will also enjoy contented moments … with a caveat. “It depends on how you define happiness. It’s all relative. I think she’s dealing with some personal things. I think there is a certain amount of joy that she has in this long marriage, in this sort of holy grail of relationships, really. She has her moments of joy.”

    Through her own crisis, she’ll strive to remain Ray’s rock. “The fact that she’s the abiding wife is, she’s always there, so there is a place to go: there is a home; there is an intimacy; there is a relationship; there is a safe harbor for him,” she says. “It’s whether or not he chooses to take it.”Jon Voight as Mickey Donovan in RAY DONOVAN (Season 4, Episode 02)Not every Donovan will be under Ray and Abby’s roof. Ray’s ever-troublemaking ex-con father Mickey was essentially run out of L.A. by his son, ending — at least for now — his seemingly ceaseless ability to drag his family into one ill-conceived illegal scheme after another. Actor Jon Voight says Mickey regroups in the three-casino town of Primm, Nevada, on the California border.

    “That roller coaster in Primm, Nevada, had a little bit of poetic resonance for the character,” reveals Voight. “The roller coaster reminds me of Mickey. He goes up, he goes down, he goes up, and that’s who he is. He has highs and lows, and sometimes you’re rooting for him, and sometimes you’re saying, “Stay away from that.” Sometimes you say, “You’re disgusting,” and then you say, “He’s not so bad.” You go on a roller coaster with him.

    Without his blood kin to cajole and corrupt, Mickey assembles a new clan to do his bidding. “He kind of gathers another family,’ says Voight. “All of a sudden, he’s got a couple of guys, and it depends on if he gets people to listen to him. He’s got to bring them problems. He works for someone under and assumed name, and he’s pulling a scam under everyone’s nose. Then it finally becomes revealed, and then they come after him.”

    And of course, Mickey is often the vehicle through which “wacky” enters the picture. “Liev started us off by directing the first episode,” says Voight. “He’s asked me to do some crazy things in this first episode, and it was great to be with Liev doing them. We had a lot of fun, we laughed a lot, and we exhausted ourselves in doing it. We were up in the middle of the night doing crazy stuff. I saw some of it and it looks really wonderful. We were chuckling seeing it!”

    Wackiness aside, Schreiber says the series is truly fueled by the human connections, however fractured, it depicts. “In a script we were just working on the other day, ironically it’s Mickey who said that it really is all about love,” he explains. “At the end of the day, all of the monuments that men have made, this incredible world we live in, in one way or another, every little piece of it was shaped by some expression of love. And that aspect of Ray is really interesting to me. Also, surviving: surviving abuse and surviving life, and particularly Ray’s life, it’s a remarkable achievement.”

    “Ray Donovan” Season 4 premieres Sunday, June 26th at 9 p.m. on Showtime.

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  • ‘Mission: Impossible’: 15 Things You (Probably) Didn’t Know About the Tom Cruise Blockbuster

    Before 1996, “Mission: Impossible” was a long-since-cancelled TV spy series, beloved by Boomers but forgotten by anyone younger. Today, of course, it’s a popular Tom Cruise movie franchise, known for its twisty plotting and jaw-dropping stunt sequences, whose five installments to date have grossed $935 million in North America and $2.8 billion worldwide.

    The change came, of course, with the release of Cruise’s first “Mission: Impossible” 20 years ago, on May 22, 1996. Since then, Brian De Palma‘s clever, convoluted blockbuster has been watched and copied plenty. And while some of the spy franchise’s secrets have become widely known, there are still some that have remained classified — until now.
    1. “Mission: Impossible” marked Cruise’s debut as a producer. In a deal that would become his then-customary contract, he took no money up front but negotiated a lucrative percentage of the theatrical and video gross profits, reportedly as high as 22 percent. Cruise reportedly pocketed an estimated $70 million for the first “Mission.”

    2. The most celebrated (and imitated) action set piece De Palma created for the film was the vault heist at CIA headquarters. That’s really Cruise dangling from those cables and balancing himself inches from the floor. Initially, he kept banging his head on the floor, but he came up with an ingenious way to stay level: He put coins in his shoes as counterweights.
    3. When Jim Phelps (Jon Voight) is reading his team’s personal files on the plane, the one for Jack Harmon (Emilio Estevez) lists his alias as “Tony Baretta,” the name of Robert Blake’s bird-loving sleuth from 1970s detective show “Baretta.”

    4. In another in-joke, a shout out to “Top Gun,” when Cruise’s Ethan Hunt looks over the list of aliases on the NOC spy list, one of them is “Maverick.”
    5. The exploding fish tank stunt was reportedly Cruise’s idea. De Palma tried to shoot it with a stunt double, but the results were unconvincing. So that’s really Cruise you see as he flees from 16 tons of rushing water.

    6. The film’s final action set piece, the battle atop a moving bullet train, almost didn’t happen because the train’s owners didn’t want to allow it, since it appeared too dangerous. Cruise charmed them over dinner, and they changed their minds.7. Even so, much of that sequence was filmed in front of a blue screen on the James Bond soundstage at Pinewood Studios. But the scene where the helicopter blast hurls Ethan onto the surface of the train (above) still involved flinging Cruise himself through the air.

    The producers had to search throughout Europe to find the sole wind machine forceful enough for the stunt. Blowing at 140 miles per hour, it even made the skin on Cruise’s face visibly ripple. “I ended up doing it three or four times and it hurt — I was black and blue for days,” the actor recalled. “But I wanted to make it real, to make it believable.”

    8. Apple ponied up $15 million for a promotional product placement deal, which included showing Ethan using a PowerBook 5300c in key scenes. Unfortunately for the company, it came aboard the production too late to have script approval, so it couldn’t rewrite the scenes where Ving Rhames’ master hacker demands and later uses a Windows laptop. What was worse, the PowerBook was subject of a recall around the time of the film’s release, so consumers inspired by the film to buy one couldn’t find one in stock for four months. Plus, Apple was smarting from a $740 million quarterly loss, the second-worst in the company’s history at the time. As a PR move, the “M:I” tie-in was a compete backfire.
    9. The opening sequence in Prague marked the first time a major Hollywood production had filmed in the Czech capital since the fall of communism. Unfortunately, Cruise and his fellow producers felt gouged by the local authorities when they rented the historic Lichetenstein Palace as an exterior location and were charged 10 times the fee they expected. City authorities claimed the lower-quoted price had never been an authorized offer.

    Playwright-turned-president Vaclav Havel sided with the Americans, arguing that the officials, who were new to capitalism, didn’t see the bigger picture, that they were risking the ultimately more profitable benefits of travel-brochure-worthy footage in a Hollywood blockbuster and a positive reputation among international filmmakers. Indeed, Team Cruise threatened to warn other Hollywood crews against working in Prague, though the actor did use the city again as a double for Moscow in “Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol.”

    10. Thanks in part to Cruise’s deferred fee and De Palma’s limited use of CGI, the film cost just $80 to make, a relative bargain by today’s standards. (Last year’s “Rogue Nation” cost $150 million).
    11. “Mission: Impossible” was the first film to open on more than 3,000 screens. (3,012, to be exact.) It earned $181 million in North America and $458 million worldwide.

    12. Many fans of the original TV series bristled at the radical changes the movie made. After all, Jim Phelps was the only character from the old show who’s also in the movie, and the film makes Voight’s Phelps anything but a hero.

    Peter Graves, who played the original Phelps, said he wished they’d just given Voight’s character a new name. Greg Morris, who played tech whiz Barney Collier, left a screening of the movie partway through. Martin Landau, who played master of disguise Rollin Hand on the show, said of the big-screen version, “It was basically an action-adventure movie and not ‘Mission.’ ‘ Mission’ was a mind game. The ideal mission was getting in and getting out without anyone ever knowing we were there. So the whole texture changed.” He also said he and the other original stars had rejected an early screenplay that would have killed off most of the old team. “Why volunteer to essentially have our characters commit suicide?” Landau added that J.J. Abrams invited him to do a cameo in “Mission: Impossible III,” but he said no.
    13. One original element from the show that remained intact was Lalo Schifrin’s iconic, pounding theme song, which De Palma used over the opening credits. But the film closed with a new version by U2 members Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr. Their pop instrumental became a top 10 hit worldwide and was nominated at the 1997 Grammys, where it competed against Schifrin’s own new recording of the song.

    14. The movie doesn’t offer much backstory on Ethan Hunt or any of his colleagues. But the “Mission: Impossible” Blu-ray includes dossiers on Ethan and his teammates, letting viewers know that Ethan speaks 15 languages (three fewer than his mentor, Jim Phelps) and that he first developed his talent for impersonating other people while playing alone as a child on the Hunt family farm.
    15. “Mission: Impossible” establishes Ethan for the rest of the franchise as a spy who prefers deception and disguise to violence. In this film, though not in future installments, he never gets involved in a gunfight; in fact, he never even fires a weapon. And the body count for the entire film is just seven casualties.

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  • Jon Voight Joins ‘Harry Potter’ Spinoff ‘Fantastic Beasts’

    SHOWTIME And HBO VIP Pre-Fight Party For "Mayweather VS Pacquiao"The eclectic cast of “Harry Potter” spinoff “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” keeps growing, and this time, an Oscar winner is joining the ranks.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, Jon Voight has been added to the ensemble in an undisclosed role. He joins fellow Oscar winner Eddie Redmayne, who’s playing protagonist Newt Scamander, a magizoologist who penned the titular tome, a textbook used by Hogwarts students in the “Potter” series.

    In addition to Voight’s casting, THR also has the scoop that two other actresses have also been cast. They are Humans,” and Carmen Ejogo, who starred in “Selma.” Like Voight, their roles are being kept under wraps for now.

    The script for “Fantastic Beasts” is being penned by “Potter” author J.K. Rowling, and while there have been no real plot details divulged yet, Rowling did tease on Twitter that the American version of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry will be featured in some way in the flick. “Beasts” takes place in New York City approximately 70 years before the events of “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.”

    “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” also stars Colin Farrell, Katherine Waterston, Alison Sudol, Dan Fogler, Ezra Miller, and Samantha Morton. It’s due in theaters on November 18, 2016.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

    Photo credit: Getty Images for SHOWTIME

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  • ‘Ray Donovan’ Season 3 Trailer Is One Big Brawl

    Ray DonovanThose Donovans, they aren’t the establishment types.

    The trailer for season 3 of “Ray Donovan” demonstrates that to be true for both the titular Hollywood fixer (Liev Schreiber) and his ex-con dad (Jon Voight), as they both go about their different ways of breaking the rules.

    The trailer introduces the new characters played by Ian McShane and Katie Holmes for the major storyline of the season. McShane is Malcolm Finney, a billionaire movie producer who hires Ray to keep an eye on his kids while he retires and settles his affairs. Holmes is Malcolm’s daughter, and a tough, cutthroat businesswoman who makes Ray her own deal — one he’s mightily tempted by.

    The other major storyline of the season features Ray’s brother, Terry (Eddie Marsan), in prison. Both Ray and his dad want to get Terry out; the question is, whose tactics will serve Terry better?

    Season 3 of “Ray Donovan” premieres July 12, along with “Masters of Sex.”

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