Tag: WWII

  • Tom Cruise and Henry Cavill Reportedly on For ‘Broadsword’

    (Left) Tom Cruise attends the Abu Dhabi Red Carpet and Premiere of 'Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One' presented by Paramount Pictures and Skydance at Emirates Palace Hotel on June 26, 2023, in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Photo by Darren Arthur/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures. (Center) Henry Cavill is Agent Argylle in 'Argylle,' directed by Matthew Vaughn. (Right) Marion Cotillard in 'Extrapolations,' premiering March 17, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    (Left) Tom Cruise attends the Abu Dhabi Red Carpet and Premiere of ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’ presented by Paramount Pictures and Skydance at Emirates Palace Hotel on June 26, 2023, in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Photo by Darren Arthur/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures. (Center) Henry Cavill is Agent Argylle in ‘Argylle,’ directed by Matthew Vaughn. (Right) Marion Cotillard in ‘Extrapolations,’ premiering March 17, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Preview:

    • Tom Cruise, Henry Cavill and Marion Cotillard may star in ‘Broadsword’.
    • It’s a World War II movie developed by ‘Mission: Impossible’ co-writer/director Christopher McQuarrie.
    • It may shoot before or after Cruise works with Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu.

    While Tom Cruise and writer/director Christopher McQuarrie are still deep in finishing their latest ‘Mission: Impossible’ movie (for the record, that would be the eighth in the franchise, the follow-up to last year’s ‘Dead Reckoning’ and one that has seen its release date pushed several times for various reasons), they also have one eye on the future and collaborations outside of the world of Ethan Hunt and the IMF.

    Once McQuarrie has finished getting the next ‘Mission’ movie in shape for its May 2025 release, it appears he’s ready to switch things up while still having Cruise star.

    The filmmaker has been putting together a new script, set in World War II, with ‘Dead Reckoning’/eighth ‘Mission’ co-writer Erik Jendresen, and according to World of Reel, it’s called ‘Broadsword’.

    Following the Cruise news, we have word from regular movie scooper Daniel Richtman that Henry Cavill and Marion Cotillard are in talks to join him. Cavill, of course, appeared alongside the actor in 2018’s ‘Mission: Impossible –– Fallout’.

    Related Article: Director Christopher McQuarrie Talks ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’

    What’s the story of ‘Broadsword’?

    Henry Cavill in 'The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare'. Photo: Daniel Smith.
    Henry Cavill in ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’. Photo: Daniel Smith.

    The new movie is reportedly the story of an S.O.E. (Special Operations Executive, an underground army battling the enemy in Europe and Asia) operation in World War II. It follows a marine captain who crashes in France and becomes the sole survivor. Against all odds, he must complete his mission amidst the chaos of war.

    Cavill, of course, has some experience with covert World War II operations thanks to starring in this year’s ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’ for director Guy Ritchie. Cotillard, meanwhile appeared in ‘Allied,’ and Cruise in ‘Valkyrie‘, which McQuarrie wrote.

    What has McQuarrie said about the movie?

    Christopher McQuarrie, writer and director of 'Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One.'
    Christopher McQuarrie, writer and director of ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One.’

    Speaking on one of several mammoth Empire Spoiler Special podcasts for the release of ‘Dead Reckoning’, this is what McQuarrie said about the new movie:

    “There’s a movie that Cruise and I are talking about doing next or in some probable next, that Erik and I developed together –– what has been referred to on the internet as ‘The Gnarly Movie’. It’s that movie that they’re all asking for, and that we want to do.”

    When can we expect ‘Broadsword’ to shoot?

    Tom Cruise plays Capt. Pete "Maverick" Mitchell in 'Top Gun: Maverick' from Paramount Pictures, Skydance and Jerry Bruckheimer Films.
    Tom Cruise plays Capt. Pete “Maverick” Mitchell in ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ from Paramount Pictures, Skydance and Jerry Bruckheimer Films.

    It’s anyone’s guess at this point, though Production Weekly, ‘Broadsword’ will shoot next year. Cruise has been in talks with ‘BirdmanAlejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu to star in his next movie, so it’s possible that will happen next, followed by ‘Broadsword’. And if recent chatter from Glen Powell is to be believed, there is a looming (though not immediate) start date for another ‘Top Gun’ movie too in our collective future too.

    7gVj9BVDN6VgsH5t0SJ404

    ‘Broadsword’ will be produced and distributed by Warner Bros. under its recent deal with Cruise, so naturally the studio will want to move on this as soon as possible. Does that mean Ethan Hunt and the team taking a break for a while? It certainly could –– but that means we get the chance to miss their crazy action antics.

    And let’s not forget that the next ‘Mission’ movie isn’t too far away after all –– it’ll hit theaters on May 23rd next year.

    Tom Cruise and Christopher McQuarrie on the set of 'Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One' from Paramount Pictures and Skydance.
    (L to R) Tom Cruise and Christopher McQuarrie on the set of ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’ from Paramount Pictures and Skydance.

    Other Christopher McQuarrie Movies:

    Buy Christopher McQuarrie Movies on Amazon

    vyD8vid3
  • Jackson Rathbone Talks ‘Warhunt’

    Jackson Rathbone as Walsh in the horror/supernatural thriller, WARHUNT, a Saban Films release. Photo courtesy of Saban Films.
    Jackson Rathbone as Walsh in the horror/supernatural thriller, WARHUNT, a Saban Films release. Photo courtesy of Saban Films.

    Releasing on digital and On Demand January 21st is the new supernatural thriller ‘Warhunt,’ which stars Robert Knepper (‘Jack Reacher: Never Go Back’), Jackson Rathbone (‘Twilight’), and Oscar nominee Mickey Rourke (‘The Wrestler’).

    Directed by Mauro Borrelli (‘The Recall’), the movie follows a squad of US military soldiers who go behind enemy lines during WWII to retrieve top secret material from an airplane crash. They soon find themselves viciously attacked by a coven of witches, who they must defeat before the Nazis can capture them and use their power to take over the world.

    Actor Jackson Rathbone has appeared in several films and television shows including ‘Dread,’ ‘The Last Airbender,’ ‘Mixtape,’ and TNT’s ‘The Last Ship.’ But he is probably best known for playing Jasper Hale in ‘Twilight’ and its four sequels. But Rathbone is not just an accomplished actor, he is also a successful musician and a member of the Los Angeles funk rock band, 100 Monkeys.

    EThCsrxT

    Moviefone recently had the opportunity to speak with Jackson Rathbone about his work on ‘Warhunt,’ as well as acting opposite Robert Knepper and Mickey Rourke, and shooting the movie during Covid.

    You can read the full interview below, or watch the video by clicking the player above.

    MOVIEFONE: To begin with, I understand that the pandemic began just as you were in the middle of shooting this movie. Can you talk about how Covid affected the production?

    Jackson Rathbone: We were filming during the onslaught of the pandemic. So, at the very beginning stages, it kept creeping up, and creeping up, and creeping up, and literally we were seeing it explode in Italy and explode all over.

    We were up in Latvia, so we were in Europe. Then suddenly, we had actors dropping out of the film to go be with their families. It was literally like we were dropping actors every day for a couple weeks before finally they shut down production. So, it really had this sense of a group of soldiers going into the woods, and then dropping like flies. It definitely added to the terror. There was a real sense of dread on set a lot of days.

    We had to stop filming halfway through the film, almost exactly. Then there was about two months where we were off, and they figured out the rules and regulations of testing. Luckily, Latvia, where we were filming, had very little to no cases. So, we went back after two months.

    It was still the height of the pandemic, but oddly enough, it felt very safe. We were being tested every other day, (we had) masks, and the whole nine yards. We were one of the first productions to, I think, resume. But it was definitely nerve-wracking. It was a strange time, and it still is.

    MF: Since you are playing a group of soldiers with a close bond to each other, did the pandemic help bring the cast closer together?

    JR: Oh, for sure. One of other actors and I, Ben McKeown, we have a lot of work to do in the third act together. We started meeting every day for the gym. We were hitting the gym, and then every third day going for cheeseburgers to offset the gym work we had done. It was just that sense of comradery and familiarity with one another, even though we have a tense relationship on screen.

    I really find that if you have a good relationship off screen, the tenseness on screen actually gets way better and much more intense because you trust each other more. So, there’s a scene where he throws me across the room. I trusted him, and I went with it. I actually did a lot of the moves myself, and so did he. We worked hard on it.

    Robert Knepper as Sergeant Brewer in the horror/supernatural thriller, WARHUNT, a Saban Films release. Photo courtesy of Saban Films.
    Robert Knepper as Sergeant Brewer in the horror/supernatural thriller, WARHUNT, a Saban Films release. Photo courtesy of Saban Films.

    MF: Can you talk about working with veteran actor Robert Knepper and what did you learn from the experience of acting on screen with him?

    JR: Getting to work with Robert Knepper, I learned so much just seeing him perform and getting to watch a man like that, an actor like that, really dig in. It was fantastic. He was so kind to me, and took me out to dinner a few times, and we talked about our characters. It’s funny because he and I loved each other. You call cut, we’re hugging, but on action, we’re just headbutting each other right and left. It was a lot of fun.

    Working with Robert, it was a dream come true because whenever I look at projects, there’s so many different things that I consider. I know I’m only getting older, but I like to always consider myself a young actor at heart, by which I mean, I’m going to learn. I want to always learn from people, and see what they do that I love, and I hopefully can take it and bring it into my own repertoire.

    So, I remember doing a scene with Robert where we’re burying some of our dead. He’s doing this speech about the Americans and the Nazis fighting during Christmas and how they put down their weapons for a day or two and sang Christmas carols together. Then they went back to blowing each other’s brains out.

    The way he did it, and the way it was written, couldn’t have been more polar opposite. He brought such humanity and a sense of awe to the speech that watching him perform it, I was literally just like, “Okay, wow.” Because his face, he just registered so much and there were no lies whenever he was in character. That’s the hardest thing, you stand where they tell you to stand, wear what they tell you to wear, but you never lie.

    MF: What was your experience like acting with Oscar nominee Mickey Rourke?

    JR: I’m going to tell you, a great sadness for me is I never actually got to work with Mickey Rourke because our schedules missed each other due to the pandemic. They had to film his part and my part separately because of the laws of the country when they were letting us back in. So, I wasn’t allowed to be in the country whenever he was. It’s this crazy bureaucracy stuff that we got stuck with, but I got to work with his stand-in who was a wonderful Latvian theater performer.

    I watched the film with my wife. She couldn’t believe that we had never been in the same room together. She was just like, “Are you kidding?” I was like, no, they just spliced it together. They did the movie magic. It was fun though, getting to see him chomp on those cigars, and wear his crazy eye patch. He’s an intense guy, and the stories I heard, well, they ran the gamut. Let me tell you, that guy’s a legend!

    (L-R) Actor Mickey Rourke and Co-Writer/Director Mauro Borrelli behind the scenes of the horror/supernatural thriller, WARHUNT, a Saban Films release. Photo courtesy of Saban Films.
    (L-R) Actor Mickey Rourke and Co-Writer/Director Mauro Borrelli behind the scenes of the horror/supernatural thriller, WARHUNT, a Saban Films release. Photo courtesy of Saban Films.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about working with director Mauro Borrelli on this project?

    JR: He’s a passionate Italian man, and he had so much energy on set. He wanted to try just thousands of different things. He wanted to move the camera so many times. There were so many grand ideas he was trying to execute that it would’ve had to have been a three-hour movie.

    When one of the men die in the opening, he imagined that they were an opera singer, and that he wanted to have them dying while singing an operatic ballad, and have that tie in. That didn’t make the final cut of the movie, but it’s one of those things where he’s just a very passionate man, and to have someone so passionate at the helm, it can be a great thing.

    0fVlf52fIHqJCTKvXj5oT3