Steven Spielberg got rejected from the James Bond franchise so many times in his life that if they asked him to make one now, he'd say 'you can't afford me'
"I approached [the Bond producers] after 'Jaws' was a big hit. I’d always wanted to make a James Bond film from the day I saw 'Dr. No,' so I called after 'Jaws' and volunteered"
"I said, ‘If you need a director, I would love to direct one.’ And they said no ... they consistently turned me down [and] never explained why they weren't letting me into the Bond family"
(via The Rest is Entertainment)
The ending of RUSH (2013) is pure goosebumps. After two hours of treating Hunt and Lauda as opposites, the film ends by revealing how much they actually needed each other. Then Hans Zimmer’s score kicks in and sends the whole thing into the stratosphere.
Hugh Jackman has been cast as Long John Silver in a new ‘TREASURE ISLAND’ film.
Directed by Ridley Scott & written by Jack Thorne.
(Source: Deadline)
The Rock turns 30 today, and the urban legends about the film are wild.
Connery is an older Bond in The Rock. Fun theory which I like, but the Connery had a cabin built and stayed on Alcatraz story is bull... he slept at the Hyatt Regency.
Chem weapons were “verified” by the military. Nope, the opposite happened.
Nic Cage “banned from action movies” before making The Rock. No, but there was real scepticism, so he chased roles to prove himself.
It was written solely by three people. Not really. It was massively overhauled by Tarantino, Aaron Sorkin, even Dick Clement & Ian La Frenais (the writer's of porridge) were pulled in to punch up Connery’s lines.
“An actor nearly died”. Wrong again. During the SF balcony stunt, horrified locals called the cops thinking an actual murder was happening in the hotel.
What is true is that it’s one of the best action films of the 90s.
And Connery’s last line here (and “An act of looneyshe”) is perfect.
VAN HELSING (2004) has a 24% on Rotten Tomatoes and honestly, who cares? It’s a movie where Hugh Jackman hunts vampires, fights werewolves, teams up with Frankenstein’s monster, and treats every scene like the fate of the world is at stake. That’s the fun.
Steven Spielberg’s next film, Disclosure Day, is only 18 days away. In honor of the legend’s next film, I’ve gone ahead and ranked Spielberg’s 10 best films ever. If Disclosure Day even approaches this list, we’re in for a treat.
#10. The Fabelmans (2022; Spielberg)
Clickbait. Everybody got their autograph and selfie, the passage to the hotel was kept free for guests, and I still got to the airport on time. One man, no security. Handled. What’s your problem ?
Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning premiered one year ago this exact weekend. I gave the film four stars & stand by that review, despite the fact that most people don’t seem to appreciate the quality of this film. Christopher McQuarrie & Tom Cruise haven’t missed yet.
Marty McFly’s introduction in Back to the Future (1985) is such a perfect character intro since in about thirty seconds you completely understand who he is. The scene does all the work without ever stopping to announce it.
Commando (1985). Written to make the most of Arnold Schwarzenegger's larger than life persona, this '80s action extravaganza sees Arnie carrying huge logs one handed, throwing telephone boxes about, firing rocket launchers and taking his shirt off a lot.