Tag: mark wahlberg

  • The Long, Strange Journey of ‘Triple Frontier’

    The Long, Strange Journey of ‘Triple Frontier’

    Netflix

    There’s a reason why Hollywood coined the term “development hell” — namely, because even when there’s lots of interest in a project and motivation and big stars and distributors, the process of making a movie can be a protracted, painful experience. Since first garnering attention in 2010, “Triple Frontier” went through director and casting changes, studio shake-ups and more before finally getting released this week via Netflix, a distributor fast gaining a reputation for swooping in and supporting films that are obscure passion projects, underfunded or otherwise troubled. To commemorate its opening, we decided to look back at just a few of those stumbling blocks the filmmakers faced while attempting to get it to the screen.

    When the project was first announced in October 2010, Johnny Depp and Tom Hanks were in talks to star in the film for director Kathryn Bigelow, still hot off of “The Hurt Locker.” Hanks was officially cast a month later and production was set to start early the next year. But some five years later, there was no movement on the project — Bigelow moved on to “Zero Dark Thirty,” and a project focusing on US soldier Bowe Bergdahl and his time as a prisoner in Afghanistan. After “All Is Lost” and “A Most Violent Year” made waves with critics groups, writer-director J.C. Chandor entered into talks in 2015 to direct the project from Mark Boal’s script for Paramount Pictures. He later signed on to direct the film in September of that year.

    By then, Hanks’ commitment to the film was on shakier ground, though he and Will Smith were still negotiating the possibility of joining the film. Additionally, Depp’s name re-entered the picture as a potential star as Smith left the film due to scheduling conflicts for “Collateral Beauty.” But by January 2017, Depp and Hanks were out, and Channing Tatum and Tom Hardy were being considered for roles in the film, followed by Mahershala Ali, who was collecting accolades for his work in “Moonlight.” All three joined the production officially, but by April of that year, Paramount dropped the project altogether, and only Ali remained among the confirmed cast members, now joined by Adria Arjona (HBO’s “True Detective”).

    One month later, Netflix began negotiating for the rights to the film, eyeing Ben Affleck and his brother Casey for the roles that were previously to be filled by Tatum and Hardy. Ben Affleck left the film a month later citing “personal reasons,” and Mark Wahlberg entered into talks to replace him. By July 2017, Charlie Hunnam, Garrett Hedlund and Pedro Pascal had joined the film, even as Ali was forced to drop out due to production delays. And less than a year later, in March 2018, began production in Oahu, Hawaii, with Ben Affleck once again in the lead role.

    In addition to Affleck, Hunnam, Hedlund and Pascal, Oscar Isaac also eventually joined the film — a big get for Chandor, who wanted to reunite with his “A Most Violent Year” star (timing originally prevented them from working together). Chandor, who is a writer or co-writer on all of his films, eventually received a co-writing credit alongside Mark Boal, who first conceived the story. At various stages, the film was also rumored to receive a name change to “Sleeping Dogs,” but clearly that idea didn’t take.

    Nevertheless, Deadline’s Mike Fleming had it right back in March of 2018 when he considered the movie’s endurance a “study in how a worthy script can stay alive , despite setbacks that are often fatal.” “Triple Frontier” is not just a prestige project or star-studded, military-themed thriller, but a testament to the longevity of good ideas and the fortitude of producers and filmmakers committed to bringing them to the screen.

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  • ‘Black Panther’ Star Winston Duke Joins Mark Wahlberg in ‘Wonderland’

    ‘Black Panther’ Star Winston Duke Joins Mark Wahlberg in ‘Wonderland’

    Matt Kennedy/Marvel Studios

    Black Panther” breakout Winston Duke is having a very good week. After landing a key role in the upcoming action thriller “Heroine,” he’s just lined up another high-profile project: Starring opposite Mark Wahlberg in the crime drama “Wonderland.”

    According to Variety, Duke has signed on for the Netflix film, which will mark the fifth collaboration between Wahlberg and director Peter Berg. It’s unclear who Duke will be playing in the flick, but he could be setting himself up for a many more movies: “Wonderland” is based on the Ace Atkins novel of the same name, and is part of the Spenser series, which was originated by the late mystery writer Robert B. Parker and currently consists of 48 novels.

    Here’s the film’s official synopsis, per Variety:

    The story follows Spenser who, fresh out of prison, is sucked back into Boston’s underbelly as he uncovers the truth about a sensational murder and the twisted conspiracy behind it.

    After his “Black Panther” success, Duke has kept incredibly busy. Aside from all the work he’s lined up this week alone, he’s also set to appear as one of the leads in Jordan Peele’s hotly-anticipated “Get Out” follow-up, “Us,” which is due out early next year.

    No word yet on a release date for “Wonderland.” Production is expected to begin sometime this fall.

    [via: Variety]

  • ‘Instant Family’ Trailer: Mark Wahlberg, Rose Byrne Take in Foster Kids

    ‘Instant Family’ Trailer: Mark Wahlberg, Rose Byrne Take in Foster Kids

    Instant Family
    Paramount

    Take a couple, add three foster kids, and — bam! — you’ve got “Instant Family.”

    The first trailer for the family comedy was unveiled today on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” by star Mark Wahlberg. He and Rose Byrne play a married couple who are renovating a five-bedroom house, even though they aren’t planning to have children.

    Then Byrne starts researching foster kids and they decide to take in three siblings (Isabela Moner, Gustavo Quiroz, Juliana Gamiz). But of course, becoming an instant family isn’t quite that easy and hijinks and mistakes ensue as Byrne and Wahlberg learn how to be Mom and Dad.

    The movie is directed by Sean Anders, who based it on his own real-life experience of adopting foster kids with his wife. It’s certainly a family comedy in the vein of his other movies, like “Daddy’s Home,” but with a more emotional edge. Octavia Spencer and Tig Notaro also star.

    “Instant Family” opens in theaters November 16.

  • Box Office: ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ Opens High, ‘Mile 22’ Low, ‘The Meg’ at $300M, ‘Mission’ at $500M

    Box Office: ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ Opens High, ‘Mile 22’ Low, ‘The Meg’ at $300M, ‘Mission’ at $500M

    Mile 22, Crazy Rich Asians
    STX Films/Warner Bros.

    Say hi to your mother for Mark Wahlberg, but goodbye to the odds of Mile 22 launching a franchise.

    Wahlberg is crazy rich in real life, but he’s hit a couple of rough patches at the box office in the past few years, including “Mile 22” taking third place in its opening weekend with $13.6 million.

    Meanwhile, Crazy Rich Asians made $34.7 million over its five day opening, including $25.2 million at the August 17-19 weekend box office. That was reportedly above expectations, aka the tracking numbers that are so rarely right but they keep trying every week bless them.

    “Crazy Rich Asians” is the first romantic comedy to open with more than $20 million since Trainwreck.” It’s certainly notThe Meg”  opening numbers, but in this superhero-action-thriller-sequel-obsessed world, it’s a big win.

    The Meg
    Warner Bros.

    Speaking of “The Meg,” it took second place in its second weekend, picking up $21.1 million — which is about what it was expected to get LAST weekend, when it opened to more than double its predicted take.

    Warner Bros. takes a lot of heat in this Marvel-lovin’ world, but between “The Meg” and “Crazy Rich Asians,” the studio is more than pulling its weight to keep the August box office afloat.

    Director Jon M. Chu‘s “Crazy Rich Asians” (Cinemascore A) had a $30 million budget vs. Peter Berg‘s “Mile 22” (B-) estimated $35 million budget. Another year, the box office results might be flipped. Instead, Berg and Wahlberg’s fourth team-up was one of their lowest. The action thriller was hoped to launch a franchise — and maybe it still will, honestly, who knows — but that opening was even below the high teens estimates.

    “Mile 22” also opened in 3,520 theaters vs. 3,384 for “Crazy Rich Asians.” They both played on several hundred fewer screens than “The Meg.” So the “Crazy Rich Asians” per-screen average was thousands of dollars higher than everyone else.

    Alpha
    Sony Pictures Entertainment

    Fourth place was basically a tie between the other new movie of the week, Alpha,” and Mission: Impossible – Fallout.” “Alpha” picked up $10.5 million from about 2,700 screens. “Mission: Impossible 6” also made $10.5 million from more than 3,400 screens.

    The rest of the top 10 belonged to “Christopher Robin,” “BlacKkKlansman,” “Slender Man (whyyyyyyyy), “Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation,” and Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again.”

    “The Meg” has been out for two weeks and already has $314 million worldwide, with $230 million coming from the foreign box office alone. Those international coins mean EVERYTHING. On that note, “Mission: Impossible 6,” which has been out for four weeks, has $501.4 million worldwide, with $320M alone from the foreign box office. Well deserved.

    What’s next?

    The Happytime Murders and some other stuff are coming next week, but we’re most excited to RSVP for the Winona and Keanu reunion in Destination Wedding” on August 31.

    [Via: Deadline, Box Office Mojo, Variety]

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  • ‘Instant Family’ Starring Mark Wahlberg Gets Earlier Release Date

    ‘Instant Family’ Starring Mark Wahlberg Gets Earlier Release Date

    Mark Wahlberg in Patriots Day
    CBS Films / Lionsgate

    “Instant Family” is giving us some more instant gratification: We no longer have to wait till 2019 to see the upcoming Mark Wahlberg-starring film.

    Paramount adjusted its calendar to make the shift. “Instant Family” is now opening on Nov. 16, just shy of three months earlier than its previous Feb. 15, 2019 release date, Variety reports. Apparently, test audiences have been enjoying it, so the studio decided it could be a good fit for the holiday season.

    That is a kin-centric time of year, so “Instant Family” may indeed be a big draw. Based on real-life experiences of writer-director Sean Anders, it stars Wahlberg and Rose Byrne as a couple who go through the foster system to adopt and end up with a trio of rambunctious kids. Anders wrote the script with John Morris, and they are producing with Wahlberg and Steve Levinson.

    In addition to Wahlberg and Byrne, the film stars Octavia Spencer, Tig Notaro, Isabela Moner, Iliza Shlesinger, and Tom Segura, so you’ll have a chance to spend the holidays with some great actors. There may be stiff box office competition for “Instant Family,” though, as other movies coming out that day include “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald” and “Widows.”

    “Instant Family” hits theaters Nov. 16.

    [via: Variety]

  • Michelle Williams Praises Mark Wahlberg For Donating Reshoot Fee to Times Up

    Premiere Of Sony Pictures Entertainment's 'All The Money In The World' - Red CarpetMark Wahlberg decided it was #TimesUp to do something about the enormous pay disparity between himself and co-star Michelle Williams.

    The actor donated the $1.5 million fee he received for reshoots on “All the Money in the World” to the #TimesUp fund. His agency, William Morris Endeavor, is donating $500,000.

    Wahlberg and WME have been embroiled in controversy since last week’s USA Today report that he received a huge payday from the reshoots while Williams, ostensibly the lead of the movie, only got $1,000. The reshoots took place to replace the disgraced Kevin Spacey with Christopher Plummer.

    Wahlberg remained quiet until Saturday, when he made the donation and issued this statement:

    “Over the last few days my reshoot fee for ‘All The Money in the World’ has become an important topic of conversation. I 100% support the fight for fair pay and I’m donating the $1.5 million to the Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund in Michelle Williams’ name.”

    Williams praised Wahlberg’s action and in her own response, made sure to also credit actor Anthony Rapp, who came forward to make sexual misconduct allegations against Spacey.

    She said, “Today isn’t about me. My fellow actresses stood by me and stood up for me, my activist friends taught me to use my voice, and the most powerful men in charge, they listened and they acted.” She added, “If we truly envision an equal world, it takes equal effort and sacrifice. Today is one of the most indelible days of my life because of Mark Wahlberg, WME and a community of women and men who share in this accomplishment. Anthony Rapp, for all the shoulders you stood on, now we stand on yours.”

  • Mark Wahlberg Refused to OK Christopher Plummer in Reshoot Until He Got Paid: Report

    New details are emerging in the brouhaha over the reshoots of Ridley Scott’s “All the Money in the World,” which replaced the disgraced Kevin Spacey with Christopher Plummer.

    Earlier this week, USA Today published a report that while Mark Wahlberg was paid $1.5 million for the reshoots, co-star Michelle Williams received less than $1,000. The enormous pay gap was particularly infuriating in the wake of the #TimesUp movement’s public coming-out at Sunday’s Golden Globes.

    Now, USA Today provides further damning information on the situation. A source told the newspaper that Wahlberg’s contract included a co-star approval clause — and he used that to leverage a big payday.

    “What he said was, ‘I will not approve Christopher Plummer unless you pay me.’ And that’s how he (expletive) them,” the source said.

    Another source said that Wahlberg’s lawyer formally vetoed Plummer’s casting until the financiers met the actor’s demand for additional payment.

    And an additional source contradicted other reports that Wahlberg’s contract did not include reshoots, while Williams did, and that his reshoots were more extensive. This source claimed both actors’ contracts included reshoots and they filmed nearly the same number of days.

    Wahlberg’s reps and his talent agency, William Morris Endeavor, did not comment on the story. WME represents both Wahlberg and Williams.

    Of the reshoots, Williams has previously explained, “I said I’d be wherever they needed me, whenever they needed me. And they could have my salary, they could have my holiday, whatever they wanted. Because I appreciated so much that they were making this massive effort.”

  • Mark Wahlberg Asked God to Forgive Him for Starring in ‘Boogie Nights’

    Mark Wahlberg‘s role as well-endowed ’70s porn star Dirk Diggler in 1997’s “Boogie Nights” is one of the most acclaimed of his career, though the devoted Catholic recently admitted that he’s asked God to forgive him for starring in the racy flick.

    During an appearance in Chicago targeted at attracting young people to the Church, Wahlberg discussed his commitment to his faith. But that commitment also comes with a healthy dose of Catholic guilt, especially when it comes to his job as an actor in less-than-holy flicks.

    “I just always hope that God is a movie fan and also forgiving, because I’ve made some poor choices in my past,” the actor told Chicago Inc.

    When the outlet followed up and asked Wahlberg “if he’d ever prayed for forgiveness for any movies in particular,” the actor responded, “‘Boogie Nights’ is up there at the top of the list.”

    We’re not entirely sure that Wahlberg was equating past “poor choices” like serving jail time for assault with his portrayal of a porn star, though the actor later noted that he’s constantly seeking to better all aspects of his life through his religion.

    “I go to confession and I want to continue to work hard on myself,” he told Chicago Inc.

    “Boogie Nights,” which nabbed three Academy Award nominations, launched the career of director Paul Thomas Anderson, and co-starred Burt Reynolds and Julianne Moore. Wahlberg, along with the rest of the ensemble, earned a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for the film.

    [via: Chicago Tribune]

  • How Mark Wahlberg Scrambled to Get in Shape for Transformers: The Last Knight

    Mark Wahlberg from Transformers: The Last Knight
    Mark Wahlberg from Transformers: The Last Knight

    For Mark Wahlberg, one of the most impressive transformations in Michael Bay’s “Transformers: The Last Knight” happened off-screen.

    “I just go off of ‘Patriots Day’ so I got as heavy and out of shape as possible to play that part,” Wahlberg tells Made in Hollywood reporter Patrick Stinson. “Then I had three weeks until I started to shoot this movie. When Michael saw me he went a little crazy.”

    But Wahlberg promised the director he’d melt away those pounds from playing a Boston police sergeant and be ready for action — and more action.

    “I just continue the routine throughout the entire movie, the healthy diet, no drinking wine, exercising, running every morning,” says Wahlberg. “It’s not about looking like you’re in shape. It’s also about being able to perform these kinds of stunts and action sequences 12 hours a day for five months.”

    In the fifth and apparently last installment of the blockbuster franchise, humans are at war with the Transformers, and Optimus Prime is gone, so it’s up to the unlikely alliance of Cade Yeager (Wahlberg), an English lord (Anthony Hopkins) and an Oxford professor (Laura Haddock) to save the world.

    Wahlberg says the movie sneaks in some comedy in between the mayhem.

    “I love the fact that (Cade) is thrown into this whole other world,” the actor says. “He’s kind of a fish out of water, with all the opportunity to create a lot of humor and laughs, paired with this upscale English professor, dealing with with Anthony Hopkins, and the fact that he’s decided to go off on the run to allow his daughter to be reintegrated into society, have a chance to go to school and have a normal life. So I just thought it was cool.”

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  • 5 Rappers Who Became Movie Stars

    50 Cent in "Southpaw"
    Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson in “Southpaw”

    His dramatic turn as a boxing promoter opposite Jake Gyllenhaal and Rachel McAdams in “Southpaw” earned Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson raves from critics, but the multiplatinum rapper is hardly the first hip-hop artist to conquer Hollywood.

    Here are five double threats who successfully made the foray into feature films.


    Will Smith
    Newsweek once called him “the most powerful actor in Hollywood” but Smith actually began his career as one half of the hip-hop duo DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh Prince. He went on to star in the ’90s sitcom “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” before making the leap to movie stardom in 1995’s “Bad Boys” and a year later solidified himself as an action star in the hit “Independence Day.” However it’s his performances in drama that earned him the most acclaim of his career, scoring two Best Actor Oscar nods for 2001’s “Ali” and 2006’s “The Pursuit of Happyness.”


    Ice Cube
    No stranger to the spotlight, Cube silenced his naysayers with a standout performance in the 1991 drama “Boyz n the Hood.” Since then, the N.W.A. frontman has proven his acting chops trading barbs opposite Kevin Hart in “Ride Along” and instilling fear as a biker gang leader in “Torque.” He also held his own opposite Anthony Anderson and Cedric the Entertainer in the “Barbershop” movies. When his beginnings as a rapper are are chronicled in the NWA biopic “Straight Outta Compton,” it is his son O’Shea Jackson Jr. who will portray him when the film hits theaters Aug. 14.


    Ludacris
    Chris “Ludacris” Bridges first gained notoriety as a rapper selling 3 million copies of his debut major label album in 2000. But it was his follow-up performance for years later in “Hustle & Flow” that really got people talking. In addition to regular appearances in the “Fast and Furious” franchise, the Atlanta native plays will be seen next as a musician in the basketball drama “Sweetwater,” about the first African-American contracted to play in the NBA.


    Queen Latifah
    It’s true that she’s been nicknamed “The First Lady of Hip-Hop” but Queen Latifah is equally revered in Hollywood. She was the first female rapper to be nominated for an Academy Award (for 2002’s “Chicago”), has her own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and has gone on to star in everything from the big screen adaptation of the Broadway musical “Hairspray” to lending her voice to the animated film “Ice Age.”


    Mark Wahlberg
    He may be a major player in Hollywood now but, a few decades ago, Mark Wahlberg was best known as the frontman for ’90s hip-hop act Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch. Luckily, he made the transition from teen idol to respected actor seem painless, winning countless accolades for performances in “Boogie Nights,” “The Departed” and “Planet of the Apes.”

    “Southpaw” is in theaters now. Watch the trailer below.

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