Tag: neve-campbell

  • Neve Campbell Won’t be Back for Next ‘Scream’ Movie

    Neve Campbell
    Neve Campbell (“Sidney Prescott”) stars in Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group’s “Scream.”

    In the months since the most recent entry in the Ghostface franchise – simply titled ‘Scream’, despite being the fifth movie – we’ve had a flurry of stories that represent good news for fans.

    In February, a month after the latest movie opened, we learned that the next one is already in the works, with directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, part of the filmmaking collective known as Radio Silence, returning behind the camera along with writers James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick.

    That was followed by word that ‘Scream 4’s Hayden Panettiere would be back as her character, Kirby Reed. And just this month, Dermot Mulroney was recruited to join the movie, set to play a cop (which doesn’t point to the healthiest life expectancy for his character).

    But then came the bad news: Neve Campbell, one of the veterans of the franchise, the woman who has brought stalker slasher survivor Sidney Prescott to life in every one of the movies so far, would not be returning for this new one.

    And, as it turns out, it’s because she’s taking a stand over a lowball pay offer. “Sadly, I won’t be making the next ‘Scream’ film,” Campbell says in a statement. “As a woman I have had to work extremely hard in my career to establish my value, especially when it comes to ‘Scream’. I felt the offer that was presented to me did not equate to the value I have brought to the franchise.”

    Neve Campbell
    Neve Campbell (“Sidney Prescott”) stars in Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group’s “Scream.”

    Campbell has a point – this is a run of movies that has so far made around $774 million in the last two decades plus, and fans do keep coming back to see how Sidney fares.

    She goes on to add: “It’s been a very difficult decision to move on. To all my ‘’Scream fans, I love you. You’ve always been so incredibly supportive to me. I’m forever grateful to you and to what this franchise has given me over the past 25 years.”

    The movie has yet to start shooting, so there remains hope that Paramount could dig into its pockets (recently lined with lots of ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ money) and put forth a better offer.

    Fellow ‘Scream’ stalwart Courtney Cox will be back for the new movie as Gale Weathers, and the cast is led by the survivors of this year’s ‘Scream’ – Melissa Barrera (Sam Carpenter), Jasmin Savoy Brown (Mindy Meeks-Martin), Mason Gooding (Chad Meeks-Martin) and Jenna Ortega (Tara Carpenter), whose characters are moving out of Woodsboro to try and start the next chapter of their lives.

    Little else is known about the plot so far, save that Ghostface will naturally be back to terrorize everyone and there’ll be plenty of references to horror movies. Ortega has described the script as getting “more and more gory” as it goes along, and that the masked menace will be “the most aggressive and violent version” yet.

    ‘Scream 6’ is due in theaters on March 31, 2023.

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  • Manuel Garcia-Rulfo Talks ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller
    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in Netflix’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’

    Premiering May 13th on Netflix is the new legal drama ‘The Lincoln Lawyer,’ which is based on the popular novels by Michael Connelly that were made into the movie of the same name starring Matthew McConaughey.

    The new series stars Manuel Garcia-Rulfo (‘The Magnificent Seven’) as Mickey Haller, a defense attorney in Los Angeles who works out of a chauffeur-driven Lincoln Town Car rather than an office.

    In addition to Garcia-Rulfo, the series also stars Neve Campbell (‘Scream’), Becki Newton (‘How I Met Your Mother’), Jazz Raycole (‘Waiting to Exhale’), Angus Sampson (‘Mad Max: Fury Road’), and Christopher Gorham (‘One Night in Miami’).

    Moviefone recently had a chance to speak with Manuel Garcia-Rulfo about his work on ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’

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    You can read our full interview with Manuel Garcia-Rulfo below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Garcia-Rulfo, Becki Newton, and Christopher Gorham.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how would you describe Mickey Haller?

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo: You know what? I think he’s a man of a very few words. Honestly, he’s one of those guys that doesn’t express his feelings very much, he is all about the work.

    MF: Can you talk about why his nickname is “The Lincoln Lawyer?”

    MGR: Well, because he works in the back of his car. That’s where he has his office and he has everything there. He’s a very practical guy and he’s always had to be on the move, it makes him concentrate, I guess. You know, he’s a man of the people and he has to be driving around all the time while he’s working. So, they call him “The Lincoln Lawyer.”

    I think that it’s a part of him. But I don’t think that if he doesn’t have a Lincoln, he cannot be Mickey Haller. It’s one of those things, like the suit for a superhero kind of thing. He is obsessed with them, but it’s more than that, it is like a lucky superstition, I think.

    MF: What was your reaction when you got cast in the role?

    MGR: I was so happy and really thrilled and excited to be a part of this. Especially as a Mexican actor, to be the lead on a show of this magnitude with these huge names like David E. Kelly. Also, to be part of the world of Michael Connelly and to play this loved and iconic character, Mickey Haller. So, for me, it was insane. I was so grateful and happy for it. I’m very proud.

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo and Christopher Gorham
    (L to R) Manuel Garcia-Rulfo and Christopher Gorham in Netflix’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’

    MF: Can you talk about the specific book from the series that the first season of this show is based on?

    MGR: It’s based on the second book, “The Brass Verdict.” That’s how we started. I can’t say much, but we find Mickey Haller at the lowest point of his life. He’s coming from addiction and he’s been out of work for a couple of months now. They took his practice away. So, we find him in a very low point of his life. Then suddenly he gets a call and he inherits an amazing case, not just one but a bunch of them, but one specifically, which is a very huge case. So, all of a sudden, he has to deal with that. That’s where everything starts and you guys have to watch.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about how you prepared to play a lawyer?

    MGR: How did I prepare? Well, I’ve watched a lot of real footage of trials, especially long hours of the O.J. Simpson trials. I really wanted to see how they move and everything. I had a lot of meetings and talks with defense lawyers here in L.A., but basically that was that. All the other information Michael Connelly gives you in the books, which is so specific, are really the details. He gives you a lot to play with. Then I had to learn all the legal terms and all of that because the legal system in Mexico and here are very different. So, it was new to me. I had to really dig into that, so I looked like I knew what I was talking about.

    ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ premieres on Netflix May 13th.

    Neve Campbell and Manuel Garcia-Rulfo
    (L to R) Neve Campbell and Manuel Garcia-Rulfo in Netflix’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’
  • Hayden Panettiere Back for New ‘Scream’ Sequel

    Hayden Panettiere on NBC's 'Heroes.'
    Hayden Panettiere on NBC’s ‘Heroes.’

    Scream’ is a franchise that has not shied away from bringing back people who have appeared in previous movies. In fact, it revels in it.

    So for the next outing full of Ghostface-led killings, directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett have recruited someone from the movies’ past – Hayden Panettiere, who starred as Kirby Reed in 2011’s ‘Scream 4’.

    The most recent ‘Scream’ outing, which arrived this year, successfully brought the movie series back to screens, featuring a combination of younger cast members (including Melissa Barrera, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Mason Gooding and Jenna Ortega) and the returning likes of Courteney Cox, Neve Campbell and David Arquette.

    It has so far made more than $140 million worldwide and a sequel was announced almost as soon as it debuted. As it turns out, the writing and directing team – which includes James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick once again co-writing the script and Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett back calling the shots – had already been figuring out what the next movie should be, and the cameras will be rolling this summer.

    Barrera, Brown, Gooding and Ortega are all officially confirmed to be coming back for more, having survived their encounter with the cloaked menace in the last movie, called, like the original, simply, ‘Scream’.

    Spyglass Media and Paramount have yet to announce much about the story, save for the hint that it follows those four surviving younger characters leaving the town of Woodsboro behind to start a fresh chapter in their lives. This being a ‘Scream’ movie, however, they can expect blood to be splashed across that chapter before too long.

    (L to R) David Arquette and Courteney Cox in Paramount Pictures "Scream."
    (L to R) David Arquette and Courteney Cox in Paramount Pictures “Scream.”

    We don’t yet know whether Cox or Campbell will also be back (spoiler alert in case you’ve yet to see the 2022 ‘Scream’: Arquette’s Dewey Riley didn’t make it out alive), but we’re sure there’s scope for the veterans to show up again should the story call for it.

    Panettiere’s Reed was more of a best friend character in her movie when it started, but she rose to full hero status and ended up almost mortally wounded yet survived to see another day. She’ll probably be hoping that she makes it out of the next movie intact, but we’re interested to see how she factors in.

    Also intriguing? What the next ‘Scream’ will be focused upon, since the last one took on legacy sequels and more recent horror trends. Plus, what will it be called? ‘Scream 2’ ‘Scream And Scream Again?’

    The movie will mark a return to screens for Panettiere, who hasn’t appeared since finishing up work on TV’s ‘Nashville’. It’s notable that she’s thanked in the credits of the last ‘Scream’.

    Assuming all goes to plan, the next ‘Scream’ movie will be slashing its way into theaters on March 31st next year. You can just imagine Ghostface trying to figure out which phone plan will offer the best deal – because there will be some calls to make, and questions to ask…

    'Scream' 2022 Poster Courtesy of Paramount
    ‘Scream’ 2022 Poster Courtesy of Paramount
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  • First Look at ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ TV Series

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo in garage
    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in Netflix’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’

    Novelist Michael Connelly’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ series of crime books were most famously brought to screens by 2011’s eponymous movie, directed by Brad Furman and starring Matthew McConaughey as Mick Haller, the titular legal eagle.

    Though the movie was a success, and chatter about a sequel followed, nothing has emerged on the big screen since. Still, fans of the car-loving lawyer are about to get the next best thing: a TV adaptation from Netflix.

    As a show, ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ adapts ‘The Brass Verdict’, the second book in Connelly’s series. Legal show veteran David E. Kelley – who has brought us the likes of ‘Boston Legal’, ‘Ally McBeal’ and ‘The Practice’ – created the new series, while ‘The Good Wife’s Ted Humphrey is running the show.

    There’s no McConaughey here, though ‘The Magnificent Seven’s Manuel Garcia-Rulfo is taking on the role of Mickey Haller, the iconoclastic idealist lawyer who runs his law practice out of the back seat of his Lincoln Town Car (which is where he gets the name). He drives the streets of Los Angeles helping those who most need it with cases big and small (and bending one or two rules along the way).

    Mickey is trying to find his footing again after spending time away from practicing law. He returns to Los Angeles where he finds himself dragged back into the business with a mystery to solve. He is also working on rebuilding relationships.

    Neve Campbell and Manuel Garcia-Rulfo
    (L to R) Neve Campbell and Manuel Garcia-Rulfo in Netflix’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’

    Mickey has two ex-wives: He most recently divorced Lorna (Becki Newton) who is part secretary and part therapist, and supportive and encouraging of Mickey. Then there’s his first, Maggie (Neve Campbell), with who he shares a daughter named Hayley (Krista Warner).

    The 10-episode series also stars Jazz Raycole, Angus Sampson, Christopher Gorham, Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine, Michael Graziadei, and Jamie McShane.

    Kelley and co. originally set up the show in 2020 at the more traditional network CBS, where Kiele Sanchez was cast to play Lorna. The CBS version saw Mickey returning after spending time in rehab for opioid addiction, and it’ll be interesting to see if that element remains in the Netflix incarnation (though given the usually edgier content on streaming services, we’d be shocked if it didn’t).

    The one vague disappointment here? That Prime Video owns the rights to the connected ‘Bosch’ book series – Haller happens to be the younger half-brother of Harry Bosch – which means a crossover is supremely unlikely, even given the continued presence of Titus Welliver’s Bosch in new IMDb TV series ‘Bosch: Legacy’. Who wouldn’t want to see Bosch bring his grumpy detective wisdom to his younger half-sibling?

    Still, if it’s anything like the movie (and, of course, the novels), ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ could well be worth taking a ride with, especially if it’s successful and leads to more of the books hitting screens. The series will drive on to Netflix on May 13th.

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller
    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in Netflix’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’
  • ‘Scream’ Sequel in the Works

    'Scream' 2022 Poster Courtesy of Paramount
    ‘Scream’ 2022 Poster Courtesy of Paramount

    Do you like scary movies? Paramount is hoping you do.

    With this year’s ‘Scream’ legacy sequel scoring big business at the box office already, the studio is ready to take yet another stab at the long-running horror franchise.

    The company, alongside production company Spyglass, have the same team responsible for that movie returning to create more terror for the residents of the not-always-sleepy town of Woodsboro.

    Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, part of the filmmaking collective known as Radio Silence, will direct again, with the script courtesy of returning writers James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick.

    The latest ‘Scream’ – which was simply known by that name, rather than ‘Scream 5’, successfully relaunched the franchise when it opened in January. To date, it has earned more than $62.6 million domestically and $106.7 million worldwide. It brought audiences back to Woodsboro, where a new killer wearing a Ghostface mask stalked a group of young friends.

    Among the new faces introduced were Melissa Barrera’s Sam, Jack Quaid’s Richie, Mikey Madison’s Amber, Jenna Ortega’s Tara, Dylan Minnette’s Wes, Jasmin Savoy Brown’s Mindy, and Mason Gooding’s Chad, many of whom had links to characters from the original movies.

    There were also appearances from franchise veterans Courteney Cox, David Arquette and Neve Campbell.

    (L to R) David Arquette and Courteney Cox in Paramount Pictures "Scream."
    (L to R) David Arquette and Courteney Cox in Paramount Pictures “Scream.”

    Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett should have the cameras rolling this summer, with the plot being kept secret. Though surely, we know the formula by now: some references to other horror movies, a scary phone call or two and lots of running, screaming, slashing, and slaying. And as for who will be back? We won’t spoil those who don’t survive this year’s movie.

    The ‘Scream’ franchise, of course, started life in 1996 with Wes Craven’s original movie, written by Kevin Williamson. It deconstructed the genre with characters mentioning rules for surviving horror movies and still layered on plenty of terror for the teenagers who are targeted by the masked killer.

    Craven went on to make three more movies, each more referential than the last, and tackling different themes such as the pressure to make a sequel and movie adaptations of horror tales.

    “We are tremendously grateful to the fans around the world who enthusiastically received our film. We can’t wait for audiences to see what Radio Silence, writers Jamie & Guy and Project X have in store for our Woodsboro family,” Spyglass and Paramount said in a joint statement.

    “Working with such a wonderful and talented family of creators — and in the lineage Wes and Kevin so expertly built — has been the thrill of a lifetime, and we’re so excited to bring the next chapter in the ‘Scream’ saga to life,” Radio Silence added.

    “Is this real life? Getting to collaborate once again with our friends on the next installment of the ‘Scream’ story is more than we could have hoped for,” commented writers Vanderbilt and Busick. “We are overwhelmed that we get to continue to play in the sandbox that Kevin and Wes created. It is, as Ghostface would say, an honor.”

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  • ‘Scream’ Movie Facts You Need to Know

    Scream movie 2022
    Paramount Pictures

    The new ‘Scream‘ movie is in theaters now and doing pretty well at the box office with $30.6M on it’s opening weekend.

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    Since the first film’s release on December 20, 1996, there have now been four sequels that have grossed over $615 million worldwide, and counting, as well as a spinoff series on MTV. “Scream” not only became the most lucrative slasher-film series ever, but it also revitalized the teen horror genre.

    Still, as inescapable and relentless as the “Scream” franchise has been, there are still a lot of secrets behind that mask. Here are 16 terrifying tidbits of trivia.

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    1. “Scream” was originally a screenplay by Kevin Williamson called “Scary Movie,” inspired in part by the real-life killings of five college students in Gainesville, Florida in 1990. But Dimension studio chief Bob Weinstein didn’t think the title reflected Williamson’s blend of horror and comedy.

    2. Inspired by the recent Michael Jackson hit, Weinstein renamed the picture “Scream” but kept the “Scary Movie” title for the horror-spoof franchise launched in 2000.

    3. Horror master Wes Craven turned down the movie several times, but the director changed his mind when he learned an actress of Drew Barrymore‘s stature was involved. Barrymore was initially cast as heroine Sidney Prescott, but she then shifted to the smaller role of first victim Casey Becker due to her busy schedule.

    4. Friends” star in a bitchy role. The filmmakers considered Brooke Shields and Janeane Garofalo, but Cox assured them she could play against type.

    5. The menacing phone voice of Ghostface in all the movies belongs to Roger L. Jackson, who also voices the villainous chimp Mojo Jojo on “Powerpuff Girls.” During production of the first three films, none of the other actors even met Jackson but only heard his voice when talking to him on the phone; Craven thought that would make their fear more convincing.

    6. Because of “Scream’s” extreme violence and gore, Craven had to recut and submit it to the ratings board eight times in hope of avoiding an NC-17 rating. Craven even lied that he had no alternate, less bloody take of Barrymore’s stabbing. Eventually, Weinstein persuaded the board that “Scream” deserved an R because the movie was satirizing violence, not glorifying it.

    7. With the success of “Scream,” the sequel was rushed into production, shooting in July 1997 for a release date that December. The haste led to a leak of the script, forcing Williamson to rewrite on set and change the identity of the killers.

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    8. “I hate horror movies,” said Liev Schreiber, after he had played the menacing Cotton Weary in the first two installments. So why did he act in the series? Because he liked the idea of horror movies that were “in on the joke.” Also, he said, “because I knew I wouldn’t have to watch them. I would only have to be in them.” Soon after, he signed on for “Scream 3.”

    9. Cox and David Arquette (Deputy Dewey Riley) met on the set of “Scream.” By the time they shot “Scream 2,” they were a couple off-screen. Just before the “Scream 3” shoot, they got married. When “Scream 4” was shooting in 2010, they were on the verge of splitting up.

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    10. The Columbine High School massacre in April 1999 made Hollywood much more sensitive, at least for a little while, about violence in teen entertainment. As a result, “Scream 3” was rewritten, taking it out of its initial high school setting, playing up the humor, and downplaying the violence.

    11. Williamson proposed a second trilogy in 2008, but only got as far as “Scream 4.” (Blame that film’s less-than-expected box office for why the fifth and sixth films never materialized.) Weinstein instead decided to launch the MTV series in June 2015. Craven’s death in August 2015 probably puts the kibosh on any more “Scream” movies.

    12. Campbell initially didn’t want to return for “Scream 4,” and Williamson had to write Sidney out of early drafts of the script.

    13. The “Scream 4″ filmmakers initially offered Scream Queens” star Emma Roberts.

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    14. Lauren Graham was cast as Roberts’ mom, but left the shoot after just a few days. Mary McDonnell replaced her.

    15. The Ghostface mask was designed by retailer Fun World in 1991, inspired (aptly) by Edvard Munch’s famous painting “The Scream.” It was also inspired by a figure from Gerald Scarfe’s artwork from Pink Floyd’s “The Wall” album and some ghost figures in an old Betty Boop cartoon.

    Scream movie mask
    Dimension

    16. The “Scream” franchise has reportedly made the mask, along with the ragged-edged cloak used in the films, into the best-selling Halloween costume in America.

  • ‘Party of Five’ Reboot Is a Go on Freeform

    ‘Party of Five’ Reboot Is a Go on Freeform

    Freeform

    The immigration-themed reboot of “Party of Five” was just greenlit for 10 episodes at Freeform. (Hey, it’s a great day to talk about rebooting all the Matthew Fox TV shows.)

    Instead of having five siblings whose parents have died, like the ’90s show starring Fox, Scott Wolf, Neve Campbell and Lacey Chabert, the new version will feature the Acosta family trying to cope in Los Angeles after their parents are deported to  Mexico.

    The reboot stars Brandon Larracuente as Emilio, Emily Tosta as Lucia, Niko Guardado as Beto and Elle Paris Legaspi as Valentina.

    The first cast photo has a definite nod to the ’90s show, including some Charlie Salinger-esque floppy bangs and, of course, one of the kids rocking a plaid flannel shirt.

    Campbell likes the idea so much, she said she’d be happy to reprise her role of Julia Salinger. “I love the idea of the new reboot because it’s very timely,” Campbell said. “They’re doing it with a Mexican family whose parents have been sent across the border, and they have to figure out how to stay together and be a family and raise each other. I think that’s really poignant and important, and I’m really impressed. So if they want me to come… and do a scene in it, I probably would.”

    Freeform president Tom Ascheim said in a statement about the new series,  “‘Party of Five’ embodies the heart and soul of what it means to be a family in the most trying of times. We’re so lucky that Freeform gets to be the home for this reimagined story, as we continue to represent the resilience of young adults and the importance of fighting for your voice in times of doubt,”

    “We couldn’t be more excited to bring ‘Party of Five’ to another generation of fans,”  Jeff Frost, president of Sony Pictures Television and co-presidents Chris Parnell and Jason Clodfelter, added.

    [Via The Wrap]

  • Review: Dwayne Johnson’s ‘Skyscraper’ is High Flying Fun

    Universal/Legendary

    Thanks to appearances in sequels for “G.I. Joe,” “Journey to the Center of the Earth” and most notably, “The Fast and the Furious,” where he more or less stole the film series from its erstwhile stars, Dwayne Johnson was rightfully dubbed “franchise Viagra,” amplifying audience interest as his directors took their respective formulas to new and increasingly implausible levels. Johnson has evidently expanded this approach to all of his films going forward, transforming run-of-the-mill crowd-pleasers into events by recruiting collaborators who agree that, cinematically speaking, a hat on a hat on a hat is still two hats too few.

    His latest, the “Die Hard” meets “Towering Inferno” crime-disaster hybrid “Skyscraper,” follows in the footsteps of “San Andreas,” “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” and “Rampage” in its leveling up of familiar blockbuster conventions, as well as its ability to make “over the top” seem positively understated. And yet, Johnson’s sheer force of will makes it a goofy, briskly entertaining experience, especially if (like me) your palms get sweaty at the prospect of an experience that combines precipitous heights, claustrophobic environments and lots of gunfire (and regular fire, for that matter) at the expense of physics, logic or good old fashioned common sense.

    Johnson plays Will Sawyer, a former hostage negotiator-turned-security expert hired to vet the safety of a super-tall Hong Kong skyscraper dubbed “The Pearl.” Shortly after delivering his findings to The Pearl’s billionaire-industrialist owner Zhao Min Zhi (Chin Han), Sawyer learns that a terrorist group led by Kores Botha (Roland Møller) has set a fire in the building between its business and residential sections, and his wife Sarah (Neve Campbell) and two children are stranded inside. Determined to rescue them at all costs, Will fights his way back inside the building, facing down the intensifying flames, gun-toting henchmen, and Hong Kong authorities convinced that he’s perpetrating the disaster himself. But when Botha decides that the best way to accomplish his mission is to force Will to unlock the building’s most impenetrable corners, Will is put in a series of escalating life-or-death situations in order to survive the night, meet Botha’s demands and hopefully rescue his family.

    Universal/Legendary

    Johnson of course comes from a long line of action stars starting with his 1980s forebears, but few of them seemed to get bigger — like, physically larger — with each role like he does. Part of that, of course, is due to his remarkable fitness regimen, but it’s also a byproduct of his outsized personality, and as evidenced in “Skyscraper,” his eagerness to nudge a concept outside the boundaries of audience expectations. The building in “The Towering Inferno?” 138 stories tall. The Pearl? 225. And in “Die Hard,” Bruce Willis plays a scruffy, shoeless cop; 30 years later, Johnson’s character is an ex-FBI hostage negotiator suffering from an attack of insecurity on the eve of his greatest professional success, who remains in peak physical condition despite a debilitating accident that rendered him legless below his left knee. He seems incapable of adhering to the formula set in front of him, and it continues to pay handsome dividends, as it does here.

    Does that mean his self-seriousness and his sincere dedication to making each project as special as possible keeps it from being, well, kind of silly? Unfortunately, no. For better or worse, he is part of a familiar lineage of big-screen heroes, and his filmography is populated more with successful imitations of his predecessors’ projects than even the noble failures of original ones. That’s hardly his fault — so many movies have established, imitated, and ultimately canonized the action-movie lexicon that he effortlessly wields — but it provides him with the only real disadvantage that he’ll likely ever face: he will probably never be the first to explore an idea.

    Then again, when there’s so much fun to be had with an idea as automatically silly as this one, even he doesn’t seem to think it matters. (He recently shared a story posted by Mel Magazine analyzing the unlikely physics of a jump that Will makes, suggesting their math professor wasn’t “drunk” enough to properly make the calculations.) This is a thriller where the solution to most problems is “break a window and scale the outside of a building,” producing a number of wonderfully vertiginous sequences that Johnson makes into great Movie Moments using copious amounts of grit and (in some cases literal) duct tape to make it through safely.

    As Will’s wife Sarah, Campbell makes too few appearances these days but she’s a formidable counterpart for Johnson on screen, not simply waiting to be rescued but making active choices to protect her children. But “Skyscraper” director Rawson Marshall Thurber is Johnson’s real partner on this project, particularly after the two successfully sold the musclebound leading man as the tough outer shell of an overweight high schooler in “Central Intelligence.” Thurber seems to understand that Johnson is at his best when he’s playing against type, and enables the actor to indulge his most furrowed, doubtful instincts as Will. The only shortcoming to this approach? No matter what name he goes by, he’s still The Rock, which means that the kayfabe this former wrestler is breaking is his actual reality — that of the oversized, outgoing, massively confident actor, athlete and leading man who seems unintimidated by anything, even the world’s most altitudinous building. “Skyscraper,” tall a tale as it is, never stood a chance — and neither will audiences.

  • The Rock Says ‘Skyscraper’ Is His ‘Most Intense Role’ Ever

    Skyscraper” has one more test screening to go, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson told his fans. He’s actually a fan of that process, since part of his brand is giving fans what they want (and never what will seriously bum them out).

    “Skyscraper” released its second official trailer on Wednesday (see below), and The Rock previewed that footage by dishing more on how difficult it was to make the film:

    “Most physical, emotional and intense role of my career. This and Tooth Fairy.
    I needed tequila, vacation and therapy once I wrapped the movie.”

    Haha. Below are a couple of his recent “Skyscraper” Instagram posts — including more on the focus group process.

    The most recent screening seemed to go pretty well, but also led them to make some changes. (Hopefully one change was adding even more Neve Campbell, since we miss seeing her on screen.)

    Johnson said director Rawson Thurber came away knowing where “he wanted to refine and elevate the story,” and they went back to the drawing board on “a few crucial notes” from the audience:

    Audience comes first. One of the most critical (and enjoyable) parts of my job is getting my movie in front of test screening audiences to get their direct feedback on how to make our film better before we release it to the world. Check your ego at the door and create a safe environment for your audience to be real about the aspects they loved in the film and what they didn’t. Most important relationship I have in this business, will always be the one I have with my audience. Thank all you so much for your enthusiasm and open dialogue. An exciting time as we gear up to deliver SKYSCRAPER later this summer. One more test screening to go. Why the hell do I even bother wearing a hat? #AudienceFirst #SKYSCRAPER @sevenbucksprod

    A post shared by therock (@therock) on

    Here’s the official synopsis for “Skyscraper”:

    “Global icon Dwayne Johnson leads the cast of Legendary’s Skyscraper as former FBI Hostage Rescue Team leader and U.S. war veteran Will Sawyer, who now assesses security for skyscrapers. On assignment in China he finds the tallest, safest building in the world suddenly ablaze, and he’s been framed for it. A wanted man on the run, Will must find those responsible, clear his name and somehow rescue his family who is trapped inside the building…above the fire line.”

    Written and directed by Rawson Marshall Thurber (Central Intelligence, We’re the Millers), the 3D action-thriller is produced by Beau Flynn (San Andreas, Baywatch), Johnson, Thurber and Hiram Garcia (San Andreas, Central Intelligence).

    The first trailer came out in February. Here’s the new trailer, released May 23:

    “Skyscraper” is scheduled for release in theaters on July 13th.

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  • The Rock’s ‘Skyscraper’ Looks a Lot Like ‘Die Hard’ to Fans (and That’s OK)

    Plus, this one has Neve Campbell!

    Super Bowl 2018 was packed with TV and movie trailers, amid the many commercials and — or so we heard? — a football game.

    One of the trailers was for Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson‘s latest action movie, “Skyscraper.” The title and poster tell you everything you need to know…

    But if you’re curious for more, the trailer fills in the blanks:Fans saw a lot of familiar themes, especially one in particular. Not that there was anything wrong with that.

    Here’s the official synopsis:

    “Global icon Dwayne Johnson leads the cast of Legendary’s Skyscraper as former FBI Hostage Rescue Team leader and U.S. war veteran Will Sawyer, who now assesses security for skyscrapers. On assignment in China he finds the tallest, safest building in the world suddenly ablaze, and he’s been framed for it. A wanted man on the run, Will must find those responsible, clear his name and somehow rescue his family who is trapped inside the building…above the fire line.

    Written and directed by Rawson Marshall Thurber (Central Intelligence, We’re the Millers), the 3D action-thriller is produced by Beau Flynn (San Andreas, Baywatch), Johnson, Thurber and Hiram Garcia (San Andreas, Central Intelligence).

    Skyscraper’s executive producers are Dany Garcia (Baywatch, Ballers), Wendy Jacobson (San Andreas), Eric McLeod (Kong: Skull Island, Pirates of the Caribbean series) and Eric Hedayat (The Great Wall, Real Steel). The film will be released by Universal Pictures.”

    “Skyscraper” opens this summer.

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