5508 lines
196 KiB
Plaintext
5508 lines
196 KiB
Plaintext
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1992-93 Theatrical Film Releases
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Rev. 1.1 Copyright 1992 by Eric Carter CIS 76050,3563
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1/22/92
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Legend
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------
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70mm = 70mm prints available
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(SR) = Dolby Spectral Recording
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(SRD) = Dolby Digital Sound
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(SS) = Split-Surround
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(CDS) = Cinema Digital Sound
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1.33, 1.66, 1.85, 2.21, 2.35 = Aspect Ratios
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Most Films shot with 65mm negative and 70mm 'scope blowups have aspect ratio
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of 2.21
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Release dates are *very* subject to change.
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Aries Entertainment
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-------------------
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DR. PETIOT TBA
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Dir: Christian de Chalong
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Cast: Michel Serrault
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This film is based on the true story of France's most notorious criminal.
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Excellent macabre word. Opened in London October 25th.
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THE STATION January 3 (NY)
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Rating: None
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Dir: Sergio Rubini
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Cast: Sergio Rubini, Margherita Buy, Ennio Fantastichini
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A romantic thriller about love in a train station when a shy stationmaster in
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an Italian village encounters a glamorous heiress while waiting for the train
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one evening. In Italian with English subtitles.
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Avenue (Avenue is now out of distribution. They will announce deals for
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------ these films shortly.)
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AMERICAN HEART
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Dir: Martin Bell
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Cast: Jeff Bridges, Edward Furlong, Lucinda Jenney, Don Harvey, Tracey
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Kapinsky, Shareen Mitchell, Christian Frizzell
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Producers: Rosilyn Heller, Jeff Bridges
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Screenplay: Peter Silverman
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D.P.: Jim Bagdonas
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Start Date: 8/13/91, Seattle
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Furlong was apparently signed for this plum role of the estranged son of
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Bridges in this sub-$10 million drama before the release of T2.
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THE PLAYER Spring
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Dir: Robert Altman
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Cast: Tim Robbins, Greta Scacchi, Peter Gallagher, Whoopi Goldberg, Anjeclica
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Huston, Scott Glenn, Marlee Matlin, Andie MacDowell, Julia Roberts, Susan
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Sarandon, Lily Tomlin, Jeff Goldblum, Jack Lemmon
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Producer: David Brown
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Everyone in Hollywood has a cameo in this one.
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Buena Vista (Disney)
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-----------
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ADVENTURES OF THE GREAT MOUSE DETECTIVE February 14
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Disney recycles another animated film.
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ALADDIN (Walt Disney) 1.85 70mm November
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Dir: John Musker, Ron Clements
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Producer: Don Ernst
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Screenplay: John Musker, Ron Clements
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Start Date: 3/15/91, Los Angeles
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Disney goes to the era of the Flying Carpet with another big-budget animated
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film. Once again Ashman and Menken provided music and tunes.
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BLAME IT ON THE BELLBOY (Hollywood) February 28 (limited)
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Rating: "PG-13"
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Dir: Mark Herman
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Cast: Dudley Moore, Patsy Kensit, Bryan Brown, Richard Griffiths, Andreas
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Katsulas, Alson Steadman, Bronson Pinchot
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Producers: Steve Abbott, Jenny Howarth
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Screenplay: Mark Herman
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A farce based on the tried and true gimmick of mistaken identity. The word
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is good. Opens January 24th in the U.K.
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BLOOD IN...BLOOD OUT (Hollywood) TBA
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Dir: Taylor Hackford
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Cast: Jesse Borrego, Benjamin Bratt, Damian Chapa, E.J. Castillo, Roxann Biggs,
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Tom Wilson, Karmin Murcelo, Victor Rivers, Jenny Gago, Carlos Carrasco,
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Geoffrey Rivas, Danny Trejo, Victor Mohica, Noah Verduzco, Delroy Lindo, Tom
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Towles, Cing Rhames
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Producer: Taylor Hackford, Jerry Gershwin, Stratton Leopold
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Screenplay: Jimmy Santiago, Jeremy Iacone
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D.P.: Gabriel Beristain
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Start Date: 5/6/91, Los Angeles, San Quentin
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Epic production of the genesis of the Mexican-American "mafia".
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BOMBAY TBA
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Dir: Stephen Herek
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Cast: Emilio Estevez
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Producers: Jon Avnet, Jordan Kerner
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Screenplay: Steve Brill
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Start Date: 1/31/92, Minnesota
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An ex-hockey-playing attorney gets arrested on a DWI charge and must do
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community service for his debt to society. He is given the task of coaching
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a pee-wee hockey team of 10-to-13 year olds in this inspirational story.
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Herek last helmed DON'T TELL MOM THE BABYSITTER'S DEAD.
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BORN YESTERDAY (Hollywood) TBA
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Dir: Luis Mandoki
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Cast: Melanie Griffith, Nick Nolte, Don Johnson
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Producer: Dino Conti
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Screenplay: Douglas McGrath, based on Garson Kanin's play and film
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Start Date: Spring '92
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Griffith takes on the role that won an Oscar for Judy Holliday. Nolte has
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Broderick Crawford's role and Johnson plays the part William Holden filled
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in this remake of the Garson Kanin play/film. Mandoki directed WHITE PALACE.
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CLOSE TO EDEN (Hollywood) Summer
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Dir: Sidney Lumet
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Cast: Melanie Griffith, Eric Thal
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Producers: Howard Rosenman, Steve Golin
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Screenplay: Robert J. Avrech
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D.P.: Andrzej Bartowiak
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Start Date: 9/23/91, New York
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An action thriller set in New York's Hassidic community where a female
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Goy (Irish, in this case) must infiltrate. Avrech co-wrote BODY DOUBLE. May
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open in the Fall.
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CONSENTING ADULTS (Hollywood) TBA
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Dir: Alan J. Pakula
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Cast: Kevin Kline (tentative)
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Producer: Alan J. Pakula
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Screenplay: Matthew Chapman
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Start Date: 1/27/92
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Negative Cost: $18 million
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Pakula and Kline are to be reteamed for the first time since SOPHIE'S CHOICE
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in this "erotic thriller".
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THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN (Hollywood) Fall
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Dir: TBA
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Cast: Eddie Murphy
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Producer: Leonard Goldberg
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Screenplay: Marty Kaplan
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Start Date: 4/92, Washington D.C.
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Yet another mistaken identity comedy (along with some drama) about a con man
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who gets elected to Congress. Murphy gets $12 million.
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ENCINO MAN (Hollywood) July 3
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Dir: Les Mayfield
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Cast: Pauly Shore, Sean Astin, Brendan Fraser, Richard Masur, Michael DeLuise,
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Ellen Blain, Megan Ward, Mariette Hartley
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Producer: Les Mayfield
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Screenplay: Shaun Shepps, Dana Olsen
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D.P.: Robert Brinkmann
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Start Date: 12/5/91, Los Angeles
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Two teenagers discover a frozen caveman in the backyard.
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GONE FISHIN' Summer
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Dir: Steve Herek
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Cast: John Travolta
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Producer: Debra Hill
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Screenplay: Jeffrey Abrams, Jill Mazursky
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Start Date: 12/91, Orlando
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Comedy/adventure about two hen-pecked husbands. Shot at Disney-MGM Studios.
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THE GUN IN BETTY LOU'S HANDBAG (Touchstone) late Summer
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Dir: Alan Moyle
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Cast: Penelope Ann Miller, Eric Thal, Alfre Woodard
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Exec Producers: Ted Field, Robert W. Cort
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Producer: Scott Kroopf
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D.P.: Chuck Minsky
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Start Date: 1/12/92, Mississippi
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Negative Cost: $13 million
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An Interscope pickup.
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THE HAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE (Hollywood) 1.85 January 10
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Rating: "R" For terror, violence, a scene of sexual molestation and for
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language.
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Dir: Curtis Hanson
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Cast: Annabella Sciorra, Rebecca DeMornay, Matt McCoy. Ernie Hudson
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Exec Producers: Ted Field, Robert W. Cort
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Producer: David Madden
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Screenplay: Amanda Silver
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D.P.: Robert Elswit
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Negative Cost: $11.7 million
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This Hitchcockian thriller about a vengeful nanny is a pickup from
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Interscope.
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HONEY, I BLEW UP THE BABY Summer
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Dir: Randall Kleiser
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Cast: Rick Moranis, Marcia Strassman, Robert Oliveri, John Shea, Lloyd Bridges,
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Amy O'Neill, Keri Russell, Ron Canada, Gregory Sierra, Linda Carlson, Julia
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Sweeney, Leslie Neale
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Producers: Dawn Steel, Edward S. Feldman
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Screenplay: Thom Eberhardt
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D.P.: John Hora
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Start Date: 6/17/91, Los Angeles, Las Vegas
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Sequel to the 1988 smash HONEY, I SHRUNK THE KIDS. This time, the new baby
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has been enlarged to gargantuan proportions and goes on a rampage of Vegas.
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Formerly titled HONEY, I BLEW UP THE BABY.
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THE INCREDIBLE JOURNEY March 6
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Cast: Jean Smart
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KING OF THE JUNGLE 70mm Fall, 1993
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Screenplay: Linda Woolverton
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Disney's 32nd animated feature concerns the coming-of-age of a young lion.
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Woolverton wrote the sensational BEAUTY AND THE BEAST.
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MEDICINE MAN (Hollywood) 2.35 70mm February 7
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Rating: "PG-13"
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Dir: John McTiernan
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Cast: Sean Connery, Lorraine Bracco
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Exec Producer: Sean Connery
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Producer: Andy Vajna
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Screenplay: Tom Schulman
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This film is on its third title. First we had THE STAND, followed by THE
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LAST DAYS OF EDEN. Whatever they call it, this ecologically-themed romance
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is set against the backdrop of the deepest Amazonian jungles, where the
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principals have discovered a plant from which a cure for cancer may be found.
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Prospects are bright. Schulman won an Oscar for DEAD POETS SOCIETY.
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NEWSIES (Walt Disney) 2.35 70mm April 3
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Dir: Kenny Ortega
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Cast: Christian Bale, David Moscow, Luke Edwards, Ele Keats, Max Casella,
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Robert Duvall, Ann-Margaret, Marty Belafsky, Arvie Lowe, Aaron Lohr, Trey
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Parker, Gabriel Darmon, Kevin Tighe
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Producer: Michael Finnell
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Screenplay: Bob Tzudiker, Noni White, David Fallon, Tom Rickman
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Composer: Alan Menken and Jack Feldman
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D.P.: Andrew Laszlo
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Start Date: 4/15/91, Los Angeles
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Musical set in a newspaper environment in the 1890's. Concerns
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young striking newspaper workers. Famed hoofer Ortega choreographs, as well
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as directing. Bale toplined sensationally in Spielberg's EMPIRE OF THE SUN.
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Eight songs from Oscar winner Alan Mencken (THE LITTLE MERMAID). Score is by
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J.A.C. Redford. Ann-Margret's first on-screen singing performance since TOMMY
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in 1975. Has been described as "a cross between WEST SIDE STORY and OLIVER".
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NOISES OFF (Touchstone) TBA
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Rating: "PG-13"
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Dir: Peter Bogdanovich
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Cast: Carol Burnett, Michael Caine, Denholm Elliott, Julie Hagerty, Mark
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Linn-Baker, Marilu Henner, Christopher Reeve, John Ritter, Nicolette Sheridan
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Exec. Producers: Peter Bogdanovich, Kathleen Kennedy
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Producer: Frank Marshall
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Screenplay: Marty Kaplan, based on Michael Frayn's play
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D.P.: Timothy Suhrstedt
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Start Date: 5/20/91, Los Angeles
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Negative Cost: $12 million
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Stellar cast should amply serve the big-screen version of this
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hilarious stage comedy. Title change is expected. Marshall got his showbiz
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start as a location manager on Bogdanovich's 1968 directing debut TARGETS.
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From Amblin' Entertainment.
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PASSED AWAY (Hollywood) April 10
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Dir: Charlie Peters
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Cast: Bob Hoskins, William Petersen, Pamela Reed, Nancy Travis, Tim Curry,
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Peter Riegert, Blair Brown
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Producer: Larry Brezner
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Screenplay: Charlie Peters
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Start Date: 10/9/91, Pittsburgh
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Drama about four estranged siblings who gather for their father's funeral.
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PINOCCHIO 1.33 June
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Another re-release for this Disney animated classic.
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PRINCESS OF MARS (Hollywood) 2.35 70mm Summer, 1993
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Dir: John McTiernan
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Cast: Tom Cruise (tentative)
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Producers: Michael Engelberg, Andy Vajna
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Screenplay: Ted Elliot, Terry Rossio, Bob Gale
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Start Date: 6/92
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Huge, huge film based on the Edgar Rice Burroughs classic science fiction
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story. Budget will likely be largest in Disney history. Mega-outlook.
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SISTER ACT (Touchstone) Summer
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Dir: Emile Ardolino
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Cast: Whoopi Goldberg, Maggie Smith, Harvey Keitel, Kathy Najimy, Mary Wicks,
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Bill Nunn, Wendy Makkena, Joe Maher, Richard Portnow, Jenifer Lewis, Charlotte
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Crossley
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Producer: Scott Rudin
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Screenplay: Jim Cash, Jack Epps
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D.P.: Adam Greenberg
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Start Date: 9/20/91, Los Angeles, Reno, San Francisco
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Whoopi Goldberg gets to sing. She plays the ex-girlfriend of a mobster who
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is whisked into the witness protection program as a nun. In the convent she
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leads the nun's choir to national fame and the limelight, where naturally, she
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is vunerable to publicity and the wrath of her ex and his henchmen. Maggie
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Smith plays the Mother Superior.....This script was originally written as a
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vehicle for Bette Midler. Ardolino directed THREE MEN AND A LITTLE LADY.
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STEEPLECHASE (Hollywood) Fall
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Dir: Patrick Hasburgh
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Cast: TBA
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Producer: TBA
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Screenplay: Patrick Hasburgh
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Start Date: 2/92
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Sexy ski instructor tries to make it in the real world in this comedy. Also
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known as ASPEN.
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STRAIGHT TALK (Hollywood) April 3
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Dir: Barnet Kellman
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Cast: Dolly Parton, James Woods, Griffin Dunne, Teri Hatcher, John Sayles, Jay
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Thomas, Michael Madsen, Spaulding Gray, Charles Fleischer, Deirdre O'Connell
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Producer: Robert Chartoff, Fred Berner
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Screenplay: Patricia Resnick, Craig Bolotin
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D.P.: Peter Sova
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Start Date: 7/29/91, Chicago
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MURPHY BROWN director Kellman makes his feature debut with an intriguing
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casting match-up. Parton is a small-town woman who accidentally becomes a
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talk radio star (shrink) in the big city and captures the heart of the reporter
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assigned to profile her.
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SWING KIDS (Hollywood) December
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Dir: Thomas Carter
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Cast: Kenneth Branagh, Barbara Hershey, Robert Sean Leonard, Christian Bale,
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Frank Whaley
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Exec Producers: Chris Meledandri, Frank Marshall
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Producers: Mark Gordon, John Manulis
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Screenplay: Jonathan Feldman
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Start Date: 2/4/92, Prague
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Story of rebellious teenagers in Nazi Germany whose love for American swing
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music drives their passions against the tyranny. Branagh was last seen in DEAD
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AGAIN, Leonard scored big in DEAD POETS SOCIETY, Bale also toplines Disney's
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NEWSIES and Whaley is in Fox' BACK IN THE USSR.
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THE ULTIMATUM (Touchstone) TBA
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Dir: TBA
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Cast: TBA
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Producer: Gale Anne Hurd
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Screenplay: Laurance Dworet, Robert Roy Poole, Jim Kouf
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Thriller concerning political terrorism. Hurd produced ALIENS, TREMORS and
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RAISING CAIN, among others.
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WHO DISCOVERED ROGER RABBIT (Touchstone) Christmas 1993
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Dir: Rob Minkoff
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Cast: Voice of Charles Fleischer, TBA
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Exec. Producer: Steven Spielberg
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Screenplay: Nat Mauldin
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This prequel to the 1988 smash hit WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT will tell us just
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how Roger and the voluptuous Jessica got hooked up in the first place.
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Cannon
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------
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50/50 April 3
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Cast: Peter Weller, Robert Hays
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THE AMERICAN SAMURAI May (limited)
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Cast: David Bradley
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HUMAN SHIELD February 7 (limited)
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Rating: "R" War violence.
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Dir: Ted Post
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Cast: Michael Dudikoff, Tommy Hinkley
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Producers: Christopher Pearce, Elie Cohn, Boaz Davidson
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Start Date: 12/90, Israel
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An action film about an ex-Marine who tries to rescue his younger brother
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from terrorists in Iraq.
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MIDNIGHT RIDE March 13
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Dir:
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Cast: M. Dudikoff, Mark Hamill
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NO PLACE TO HIDE March 13 (limited)
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Dir:
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Cast: Kris Kristofferson
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RESCUE ME April 24
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Cast: M. Dudikoff, Dee Wallace Stone
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TERMINAL BLISS February 28
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Dir: Jordan Alan
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Cast: Luke Perry
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Rich East-Coast kids have lots of sex and drugs. Perry is one of the
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stars of BEVERLY HILLS, 90210.
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TO THE DEATH May (limited)
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Cast: Brad Morris, Michel Qissi
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Castle Hill
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-----------
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OTHELLO February 21 (NY)
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Dir: Orson Welles
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Cast: Orson Welles
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New York's Cinema II gets the honor of first presenting the restored film
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of Orson Welle's rendition of Shakespeare's Othello. Having been shown at the
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Cannes Film Festival in 1952 and winning the Palm D'Or there, it then virtually
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vanished from view. Welles shot this film over a period of four years during
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which he took breaks to do other projects and earn financing for this pet dream
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film. It actually was picked up for release by United Artists and opened on
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9/12/55 at the Pathe Paris in Manhattan. (That house is now the Loew's Fine
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Arts). Reviews were mixed and patrons were caught up in the frenzy of the
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Cinemascope years. It quickly disappered from sight. The nitrate negative
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was discovered in a New Jersey warehouse, where it was restored frame-by-frame
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over a ten-month period. The faulty soundtrack was restored with a new
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digital stereo surround track and the film is now back to the original 91
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minute director's cut. Go see it.
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SHAKING THE TREE January 24 (limited)
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Dir: Duane Clark
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Story of loyalty and friendship between four young men over a span of a
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decade.
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VOYAGER January 31
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Rating: "PG-13"
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Dir: Volker Schlondorff
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Cast: Sam Shepard, Julie Delpy, Barbara Sukowa
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An engineer afraid of emotion suffers the loss of an old friend to suicide.
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On an ocean voyage to a European conference he meets a woman and starts a
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relationship...then the voyage ends. A love triangle with fine credentials.
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Opens at NY's Lincoln Plaza Cinemas.
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Columbia
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--------
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THE AGE OF INNOCENCE December
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Dir: Martin Scorsese
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Cast: Daniel Day Lewis, Michelle Pfeiffer, Winona Ryder
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Producers: Martin Scorsese, Barbara DeFina
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Screenplay: Jay Cocks, Martin Scorsese, based on Edith Wharton's novel
|
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D.P.: Michael Ballhaus
|
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Start Date: 3/92, Upstate New York, Paris
|
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This $30+ million project was put into turnaround at Fox and has found a home
|
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with Sony Pictures Entertainment, as Mark Canton snapped it up. Fox balked at
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the increasing cost of the film, which is an 1870's doomed romance-drama.
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It is based on Edith Wharton's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. Lewis stars in
|
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THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS for Fox and Pfeiffer can be seen meowing in BATMAN
|
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RETURNS for Warner Brothers and LOVE FIELD for Orion. Production Designer is
|
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Dante Ferretti (THE NAME OF THE ROSE), editor is Thelma Schoonmaker (who
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else?), who edited CAPE FEAR, GOODFELLAS, THE LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST and
|
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RAGING BULL, for which she was Oscared. This is one of only two pictures that
|
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Scorsese is permitted to make outside his six-year exclusive deal at Universal.
|
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AMOS AND ANDREW 1993
|
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Dir: E. Max Frye
|
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Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Gary Goetzman
|
||
Screenplay: E. Max Frye
|
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Start Date: 1/92
|
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BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA August 14
|
||
Dir: Francis Ford Coppola
|
||
Cast: Gary Oldman, Winona Ryder, Anthony Hopkins, Keanu Reeves, Sadie Frost,
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Cary Elwes, Bill Campbell, Richard E. Grant, Tom Waits
|
||
Exec Producers: Robert O'Connor, Michael Apted
|
||
Producers: Francis Ford Coppola, Charles Mulvehill, Fred Fuchs
|
||
Screenplay: Jim Hart
|
||
D.P.: Michael Ballhaus
|
||
Start Date: 10/14/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Negative Cost: $40 million
|
||
A very visual production of the classic tale, filmed entirely on the lot at
|
||
Columbia Studios once HOOK vacated the premises. This will be based on the
|
||
original "Dracula" story, rather than the play or the Bela Lugosi film. There
|
||
are 60 sets and 175 special effects shots. All the effects will be done in
|
||
camera, rather than at with blue screens. Magicians, mirrors and trapdoors
|
||
will replace optical houses. Shot with Arriflex cameras. Right on the 70
|
||
day shooting schedule and on budget, thanks to Coppola's innovative electronic
|
||
gear that enables cast and crew to see storyboard, script, and completed
|
||
footage on multiple video monitors simultaneously. Word is that it may get
|
||
slapped with an NC-17 rating.
|
||
|
||
FALLING FROM GRACE February 21
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
Dir: John Mellencamp
|
||
Cast: John Mellencamp, Mariel Hemingway, Kay Lenz, Claude Akins
|
||
Screenplay: Larry McMurtry
|
||
D.P.: Victor Hammer
|
||
Start Date: 7/23/90, Seymour, IN
|
||
Rocker Mellencamp goes to the silver screen in this semi-autobiographical
|
||
drama about a musician trying to deal with his success while living in his
|
||
small, Midwestern hometown. Delayed to 1992 to coincide with his new album.
|
||
Formerly titled SOUVENIRS.
|
||
|
||
A FEW GOOD MEN (Castle Rock) December 23
|
||
Dir: Rob Reiner
|
||
Cast: Tom Cruise, Jack Nicholson, Demi Moore, Keifer Sutherland, Kevin Bacon,
|
||
Kevin Pollack, James Marshall
|
||
Producers: David Brown, Andrew Scheinman, Rob Reiner
|
||
Screenplay: Aaron Sorkin, based on his play
|
||
D.P. Robert Richardson
|
||
Start Date: 10/21/91, Los Angeles, Washington DC
|
||
Negative Cost: $40 million
|
||
Wow. The stage play comes to the big screen with very impressive
|
||
credentials. Nicholson works only 10 days for a whopping $500,000 per.
|
||
|
||
GLADIATOR March 6
|
||
Rating: "R" for violence and language
|
||
Dir: Rowdy Herrington
|
||
Cast: James Marshall, Cara Buono, Robert Loggia, Ossie Davis, Cuba
|
||
Gooding Sr., Brian Dennehy
|
||
Producer: Steve Roth
|
||
Screenplay: Nicholas Kazan, Lyle Kessler
|
||
D.P.: Tak Fujimoto
|
||
Start Date: 1/21/91, Chicago
|
||
Marshall of TWIN PEAKS fame plays a young, working-class boxer.
|
||
Herrington last directed ROAD HOUSE. Kazan wrote REVERSAL OF FORTUNE. Fiklm
|
||
was screened August 22 at the Culver Theatre in LA. It scored 85% in the top
|
||
two boxes. The target audiences (males and females under 21) scored 93% with a
|
||
definite recommend of 75%. Those are excellent figures.
|
||
|
||
GROUND HOG DAY February 1993
|
||
Dir: Harold Ramis
|
||
Cast: Bill Murray
|
||
Producer: Trevor Albert
|
||
Start Date: 2/92, Punxsatawney, PA
|
||
Murray is a disc jockey continually reliving one day in his life. But will
|
||
he see his shadow?
|
||
|
||
HARD PROMISES January 31
|
||
Rating: "PG" (NY, LA, Chicago,Indianapolis)
|
||
Dir: Martin Davidson
|
||
Cast: Sissy Spacek, William Petersen, Brian Kerwin, Mare Winningham, Jeff
|
||
Perry, Rip Torn, Shirley Knight
|
||
Producer: Cindy Chvatal
|
||
Screenplay: Julie Selbo
|
||
D.P.: Andrzej Bartkowiak
|
||
Start Date: 10/1/90, Austin, TX
|
||
Petersen's character returns to his old hometown in order to win back his
|
||
ex-wife (Spacek) who is about to get married once again. Lee Grant was
|
||
replaced in the director's chair.
|
||
|
||
HERO December 18
|
||
Dir: Stephen Frears
|
||
Cast: Dustin Hoffman, Geena Davis, Andy Garcia, Cady Huffman, Joan Cusack,
|
||
Susie Cusack
|
||
Producer: Laura Ziskin
|
||
Screenplay: David Peoples
|
||
D.P.: Oliver Stapleton
|
||
Start Date: 10/30/91, Chicago, Los Angeles
|
||
This tentatively-titled film is a comedy about heroism -- a conniving crook
|
||
who stumbles into it, a desperate stranger who steals it and a star TV reporter
|
||
who gets an even bigger story than she bargained for. Hoffman is the crook,
|
||
Davis is the reporter and Garcia is the stranger. Joan Cusack is Hoffman's
|
||
ex-wife, sister Susie is Hoffman's defense attorney. Frears directed THE
|
||
GRIFTERS and DANGEROUS LIAISONS. Peoples wrote BLADE RUNNER. The story is
|
||
by Laura Ziskin (PRETTY WOMAN, WHAT ABOUT BOB?), Alvin Sargent (ORDINARY PEOPLE,
|
||
JULIA) and David Peoples. Film score is by George Fenton (DANGEROUS LIAISONS,
|
||
THE FISHER KING). The production designer is Dennis Gassner (BARTON FINK,
|
||
BUGSY). Huffman may be seen in THE WILL ROGERS FOLLIES on Broadway.
|
||
|
||
HEXED Fall
|
||
Dir: Alan Spencer
|
||
Cast: Arye Gross, Claudia Christian, Adrienne Shelly, Robin Curtis, Norman
|
||
Fell, Michael Knight, Ray Baker, R. Lee Ermey, Brandis Kemp
|
||
Producer: Marc S. Fisher
|
||
Screenplay: Alan Spencer
|
||
D.P.: James Chressanthis
|
||
Start Date: 11/4/91, Ft. Worth, Irving TX
|
||
A neurotic thriller about a bellboy (Gross) who gets mixed up with a
|
||
beautiful but deadly model dduring her stay at his hotel. Shot in a vacant
|
||
Hilton in Texas.
|
||
|
||
HONEYMOON IN VEGAS July 10
|
||
Dir: Andrew Bergman
|
||
Cast: James Caan, Nicholas Cage, Sarah Jessica Parker, Noriyuki (Pat) Morita,
|
||
Anne Bancroft, Peter Boyle, Seymour Cassel, Lainie Kazan
|
||
Producer: Mike Lobell
|
||
Screenplay: Andrew Bergman
|
||
D.P.: William A. Fraker
|
||
Start Date: 8/19/91, Las Vegas, New York, LA, Kauai
|
||
New York private detective overcomes his fear of commitment and flies to Las
|
||
Vegas to get married. Then thinks go awry.... Bergman wrote and directed
|
||
THE FRESHMAN. Kazan plays the role she has perfected...a Yenta.
|
||
|
||
HOUDINI 1993
|
||
Dir: Robert Zemeckis
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Ray Stark
|
||
Screenplay: Peter Seaman, Jeffrey Price
|
||
Start Date: 1992
|
||
A big screen treatment of the life of legendary illusionist Harry Houdini
|
||
comes to life after twenty years of development by mega-producer Ray Stark.
|
||
The film will approach the subject from the angle of the relationship between
|
||
Harry and his wife and how their lives were interwoven with mysticism and
|
||
spirituality. Stark calls Zemeckis "the most important young adult director
|
||
since John Huston. He has vast cinematic knowledge, but it is never more than
|
||
a background for his feelings toward humanity." Price wrote WHO FRAMED ROGER
|
||
RABBIT. The film is a Columbia-Universal co-production, and it has not been
|
||
announced as to who will release it domestically.
|
||
|
||
THE INNER CIRCLE December 25 (NY,LA,Toronto)
|
||
Rating: "PG-13" January 17 (wide)
|
||
Dir: Andrei Konchalovsky
|
||
Cast: Tom Hulce, Lolita Davidovitch, Bob Hoskins
|
||
Producer: Claudio Bonivente, in association with Mosfilm
|
||
Screenplay: Andrei Konchalovsky, Anatoly Usov
|
||
D.P.: Ennio Guarnieri
|
||
Start Date: 8/20/90, Moscow
|
||
Reportedly the first major film to shoot inside the Kremlin walls,
|
||
this prestige project by expatriate Konchalovsky depicts Hulce as
|
||
Ivan Sanshin, who is thrust into Stalin's inner circle when he
|
||
becomes his personal projectionist. Formerly titled THE PROJECTIONIST. Film
|
||
runs 140 minutes.
|
||
|
||
INTO THE WOODS Christmas 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Exec. Producer: Brian Henson
|
||
Producers: Craig Zadan, Neil Meron, Patrick Duncan Kenworthy
|
||
Screenplay: TBA
|
||
Start Date: late 1992
|
||
Zadan anticipates a $30 million budget on this big-screen adaptation of the
|
||
Tony-winning musical. It will be co-produced by Jim Henson Productions and
|
||
will feature live action mixed with Henson puppets. Stephen Sondheim and James
|
||
Lapine will consult on the production. Filming will be either in Los Angeles
|
||
or London.
|
||
|
||
A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN July 1
|
||
Dir: Penny Marshall
|
||
Cast: Geena Davis, Tom Hanks, Lori Petty, Madonna, Tracy Reiser, Ann Cusack,
|
||
Megan Cavanagh, Rosie O'Donnell, Bitty Schram, Renee Coleman, Freddie Simpson,
|
||
Anne Elizabeth Ramsay, David Strathairn, Jon Lovitz, Garry K. Marshall
|
||
Producers: Robert Greenhut, Elliot Abbott
|
||
Screenplay: Lowell Ganz, Babaloo Mandel
|
||
D.P.: Miroslav Ondricek
|
||
Start Date: 7/10/91, Chicago, Evansville IN, Cooperstown NY
|
||
Negative Cost: $34 million
|
||
Hanks manages an all-female baseball team. But can Madonna handle a real
|
||
chaw? Geena Davis replaced Debra Winger who was unhappy with the "stunt
|
||
casting" of Ms. Ciccone. Marshall's last film was the highly-decorated
|
||
AWAKENINGS.
|
||
|
||
MACHINE GUN KELLY TBA
|
||
Dir: Marek Kanievska
|
||
Cast: William Baldwin
|
||
Producer: Sam Arkoff
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Werb, Anna Hamilton-Phelan
|
||
Start Date: 2/92, Texas, Kansas
|
||
Will the old producing master of B-movies move up a letter in the alphabet?
|
||
Baldwin last scored big in BACKDRAFT.
|
||
|
||
ME AND MONROE TBA
|
||
Dir: John Whitesell
|
||
Cast: Jason Priestley, Jay O'Connell
|
||
Exec Producers: Penny Marshall, Elliot Abbott
|
||
Producer: Debbie Robbins
|
||
Screenplay: Paul Shapiro
|
||
Start Date: 2/92, Los Angeles
|
||
The heartthrob from BEVERLY HILLS 90210 gets a feature starring role.
|
||
|
||
MIDKNIGHT 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: Michael Jackson
|
||
Screenplay: Caroline Thompson, Larry Wilson
|
||
Start Date: 1992
|
||
The Gloved One focuses on another aspect of his multi-media Sony MegaDeal.
|
||
This was to be exec produced and designed by the late Anton Furst.
|
||
|
||
MO' MONEY June 5
|
||
Dir: Peter Macdonald
|
||
Cast: Damon Wayans, Marlon Wayans, Stacey Dash, Joe Santos, John Diehl, Harry
|
||
J. Lennix
|
||
Producer: Michael Rachmil
|
||
Screenplay: Damon Wayans
|
||
D.P.: Don Burgess
|
||
Start Date: 7/8/91, Chicago
|
||
Negative Cost: $14.5 million
|
||
If that title sounds familiar, then you must watch "In Living Color". One
|
||
of the Wayans brothers has extended the concepts of the skits into a
|
||
feature-length script. A con man working in a credit card company mail room
|
||
decides to go straight after falling in love. First he must foil a scam
|
||
already set into motion by some gangsters. "A film about a man who shoulda'
|
||
left home without it".
|
||
|
||
MR. SATURDAY NIGHT (Castle Rock) October 2
|
||
Dir: Billy Crystal
|
||
Cast: Billy Crystal, David Paymer, Julie Warner, Helen Hunt, Mary Mara
|
||
Producer: Billy Crystal
|
||
Screenplay: Lowell Hanz, Babaloo Mandel
|
||
D.P.: Don Peterman
|
||
Start Date: 11/7/91, Los Angeles, New York
|
||
Billy makes his directorial debut directing himself. New Line International
|
||
handles the foreign markets. This film has been having labor problems with the
|
||
screen extras.
|
||
|
||
MY GIRL SEQUEL Fall 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: Anna Chlumsky
|
||
A sequel has already been green-lighted by Columbia and Imagine.
|
||
|
||
NEEDFUL THINGS (Castle Rock) 1993
|
||
Dir: Peter Yates
|
||
Screenplay: W.D. Richter, based on Stephen King's novel
|
||
Start Date: Fall '92, Maine
|
||
|
||
OCTOBER SURPRISE 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Jon Peters
|
||
Screenplay: TBA, based on Gary Sick's book "October Surprise: America's
|
||
Hostages in Iran and the Election of Ronald Reagan"
|
||
Start Date: 1992
|
||
Peters Entertainment and Columbia acquired the rights to this book that
|
||
concerns the theory that the Reagan-Bush campaign and William Casey made a
|
||
secret deal with representatives of Iran in the final weeks of the 1980
|
||
presidential campaign to delay the release of U.S. hostages in Teheran until
|
||
after the election. The promise of arms in trade and improved relations were
|
||
the alleged booty. Columbia sees this project as having the scope and epic
|
||
quality of ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN.
|
||
|
||
THE PICKLE September 11
|
||
Dir: Paul Mazursky
|
||
Cast: Danny Aiello, Shelley Winters, Dyan Cannon, Jerry Stiller, Chris Penn,
|
||
Ally Sheedy, Barry Miller, Griffin Dunne, Little Richard, Paul Mazursky
|
||
Producer: Paul Mazursky
|
||
Screenplay: Paul Mazursky
|
||
Start Date: 9/23/91, New York, Los Angeles
|
||
Aiello plays a director in the midst of previewing his new film. Is this
|
||
autobiographical?
|
||
|
||
POETIC JUSTICE Fall
|
||
Dir: John Singleton
|
||
Second film from the acclaimed young director of BOYZ 'N THE HOOD.
|
||
|
||
RADIO FLYER 2.35 70mm February 14
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
Dir: Richard Donner
|
||
Cast: Elijah Wood, Joseph Mazzello, Lorraine Bracco, John Heard, Adam Baldwin,
|
||
Rhea Perlman
|
||
Producers: Lauren Schuler-Donner, Richard Donner
|
||
Exec Producers: Michael Douglas, Rick Bieber, David Mickey Evans
|
||
Screenplay: David Mickey Evans
|
||
D.P.: Laszlo Kovacs
|
||
Start Date: 6/18/90, halted 6/25/90, resumed 10/3/90, L.A., Novato, Sonora, CA.
|
||
Negative Cost: $31 million.
|
||
Infamous production from first-time scripter Evans, whose initial
|
||
deal included big bucks and directing chores. Production shuttered
|
||
after it became apparent he couldn't direct. Rosanna Arquette was
|
||
paid off on her play-or-pay contract. Donner brought in...rewrites
|
||
done. Evans gets an exec producer credit. This story is of two brothers who
|
||
build a kind of flying machine to escape their abusive lives. Now we'll see
|
||
if a red wagon can fly! Visual flying effects from Zoran Perisic's
|
||
Oscar-winning Zoptic system used so effectively in SUPERMAN. Additional
|
||
Visual Effects from Apogee Productions. From Stonebridge Entertainment.
|
||
Postponed from July 12 due to being behind schedule. Promotional partners
|
||
Dairy Queen and Kraft Marshmallows were very upset. Columbia reimbursed DQ
|
||
some $2 million for expenses on the aborted promotion. Original $15 million
|
||
budget shot to hell. After languishing with a "Fall" release date, Columbia
|
||
has decided on President's Day weekend 1992. Yet another ending has been
|
||
shot for this project (making about 19!) in the winter. Advanced word is
|
||
excellent. Word is that there may not be any 70mm blowups after all.
|
||
|
||
REMAINS OF THE DAY Christmas (limited)
|
||
Dir: Mike Nichols
|
||
Cast: Jeremy Irons
|
||
Exec Producers: Peter Gubers, Jon Peters
|
||
Screenplay: Harold Pinter, based on Kazuo Isigiro's novel
|
||
Story concersn an English butler.
|
||
|
||
SINGLE WHITE FEMALE August 7
|
||
Dir: Barbet Schroeder
|
||
Cast: Bridget Fonda, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Steven R. Weber, Peter Friedman,
|
||
Stephen Tobolowsky, Michele Farr, Tara Karsian, Christina Capetillo, Johnny
|
||
Dapolito
|
||
Producer: Barbet Schroeder
|
||
Screenplay: Don Roos, based on John Lutz' novel "Single White Female Seeks the
|
||
Same"
|
||
D.P.: Luciano Tovoli
|
||
Start Date: 7/8/91, Los Angeles, New York
|
||
Negative Cost: $15.8 million.
|
||
After the triumph of REVERSAL OF FORTUNE, Schroeder tackles even more risque
|
||
material. Fonda is Allie, an ambitious businesswoman who discovers her
|
||
boyfriend Sam (Weber) has been two-timing her. After kicking him out, she
|
||
advertises for a roommate, and Hedy (Leigh) moves in. Her boyfriend eventually
|
||
moves back in and a deadly triangle develops.
|
||
|
||
STEPHEN KING'S SLEEPWALKERS April 10
|
||
Dir: Mick Garris
|
||
Cast: Alice Krige, Brian Krause, Madchen Amick, Ron Perlman, Jim Haynie, Lyman
|
||
Ward, Cindy Pickett, Dan Martin, Glenn Shadix
|
||
Producers: Mark Victor, Michael Grais, Nabeel Zahid
|
||
Screenplay: Stephen King
|
||
Start Date: 6/24/91
|
||
Negative Cost: $15 million
|
||
This supernatural horror flick wrapped production on 9/4/91 and features
|
||
visual effects from John Dykstra's Apogee Productions. Creature effects are
|
||
from Tony Gardner's Alterian Studios. Music is by Nicholas Pike.
|
||
|
||
SUNRISE IN HIS POCKET 1993
|
||
Dir: David Zucker
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Exec Producer: Jon Peters, Peter Guber
|
||
Screenplay: TBA, based on Paul Hutton's book
|
||
The adventures of Davy Crockett are chronicled in this big-screen adaptation
|
||
of the forthcoming U. of Oklahoma Press book.
|
||
|
||
THREE RIVERS 1993
|
||
Dir: Rowdy Herrington
|
||
Cast: Bruce Willis
|
||
Screenplay: Rowdy Herrington
|
||
Start Date: Spring '92
|
||
Negative Cost: $30+ million
|
||
The biggest suspense with this long-in-the-works action film is how much is
|
||
Columbia paying Willis to star? He signed for $13 million a couple of years
|
||
ago, but that was pre-BONFIRE and HUDSON. With his fortunes again on the
|
||
rise, post-BOY SCOUT, how much of a cut will Willis take, if any? Columbia
|
||
reportedly wants to pay *only* $10 million....
|
||
|
||
UNDER SUSPICION 2.35 February 28
|
||
Rating: "R" for areas of strong violence and sensuality, and for language.
|
||
Dir: Simon Moore
|
||
Cast: Patrick Bergin, Laura San Giacomo
|
||
Producer: Brian Eastman
|
||
Screenplay: Simon Moore
|
||
Start Date: 2/18/91, London
|
||
This story is set in London of the late 30's. An amoral divorce
|
||
detective, whose wife helps him establish fake adultery cases, turns
|
||
out to be the chief suspect when his wife is slain. Bergin
|
||
(MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON) was last seen as the nutso husband in
|
||
SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY. San Giacomo (SEX, LIES AND VIDEOTAPE) was
|
||
Holly Hunter's sister in ONCE AROUND. Formerly titled THE OTHER WOMAN. Opened
|
||
in London in September to very positive notices.
|
||
|
||
A VERY GOOD YEAR (Castle Rock) May 8
|
||
Dir: Peter Yates
|
||
Cast: Penelope Ann Miller, Timothy Daly, Louis Jourdan, Art Malik, Robert
|
||
Hardy, Julia McCarthy, Timothy Bentinck, Ian McNeice, Arturo Venegas, Chapman
|
||
Roberts, Nick Brimble, Andrew Robertson, Shane Rimmer, David Bamber, Martin
|
||
Benson
|
||
Producer: Nigel Wooll
|
||
Screenplay: William Goldman
|
||
D.P.: Roger Pratt
|
||
Start Date: 5/27/91, Scotland, England, France
|
||
Formerly titled YEAR OF THE COMET, it's a comedy-adventure in Europe about a
|
||
search for eternal youth and the world's rarest bottle of wine. Yates gave
|
||
us such features as BULLITT, THE DEEP and, dare I say it, KRULL. Score is from
|
||
Oscar-winner John Barry.
|
||
|
||
WOLF 1993
|
||
Dir: Mike Nichols
|
||
Cast: Jack Nicholson
|
||
Producer: Doug Wick
|
||
Screenplay: Jim Harrison
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Concorde
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
|
||
BLOODFIST 3 January 3 (Detroit)
|
||
|
||
CABEZA DE BACA February (NY)
|
||
|
||
IN THE HEAT OF PASSION January 24 (NY,Atlanta)
|
||
Cast: Sally Kirkland
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Four Square Prods.
|
||
------------------
|
||
|
||
KILLER TOMATOES EAT FRANCE Spring
|
||
Dir: John DeBello
|
||
Cast: John Astin, Marc Price, Angela Visser
|
||
A fourth Killer Tomatoes film, this time shot on location in Paris and
|
||
environs.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Greycat Films
|
||
-------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE BACHELOR April (NY, LA)
|
||
Cast: Keith Carradine, Miranda Richardson, Kristin Scott-Thomas, Max von Sydow
|
||
Producer: Mario Orfini
|
||
Carradine plays a man of privilege who can't decide what to do with his life.
|
||
Richardson plays a dual role in this Italian film.
|
||
|
||
THE COLOR OF LOVE
|
||
Dir: Melissa Pearson
|
||
Screenplay: Melissa Pearson
|
||
Film is described as a less angry variant of JUNGLE FEVER. It is frlm the
|
||
point of view of a white woman.
|
||
|
||
DINGO March (Portland, NY, LA)
|
||
Dir: Rolf de Heer
|
||
Cast: Miles Davis, Colin Friels
|
||
Screenplay: Marc Rosenberg
|
||
This Australian film stars the late Miles Davis as trumpeter Billy Cross.
|
||
Friels plays an aspiring Aussie Jazz musician. Film was shot in Australia and
|
||
Paris. It has already one the Australian Writers Guild Award for Best
|
||
Screenplay and the Best Music Australian Film Award for its score by Michel
|
||
LeGrand and Miles Davis.
|
||
|
||
GHOST OF THE CIVIL DEAD
|
||
Australian film was written by a former prison guard and inspired by true
|
||
events at a prison. Said to be as disturbing as HENRY: PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL
|
||
KILLER.
|
||
|
||
THE HORSEPLAYER
|
||
Dir: Kurt Voss
|
||
|
||
LIFE IN THE LAFF LANE
|
||
Road movie about three stand-up comics.
|
||
|
||
RESIDENT ALIEN March
|
||
Dir: Jonathan Nossiter
|
||
Cast: Quentin Crisp, John Hurt, Sting, Holly Woodlawn, Fran Leibowitz
|
||
Documentary about Quentin Crisp. This had test engagements last year in New
|
||
York and Atlanta.
|
||
|
||
WHERE SLEEPING DOGS LIE
|
||
Dir: Charles Finch
|
||
Cast: Dylan McDermott, Sharon Stone
|
||
Producer: Charles Finch
|
||
Screenplay: Charles Finch
|
||
Psychological thriller from the son of the late Peter Finch.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Hemdale
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
BEAUTIFUL DREAMERS January 31 (NY, LA)
|
||
Rating: "PG-13" February (wider)
|
||
Dir: John Kent Harrison
|
||
Cast: Rip Torn
|
||
Producers: Michael MacLear, Martin Walter
|
||
Screenplay: John Kent Harrison
|
||
Torn is Walt Whitman in this drama exploring his relationship with Dr.
|
||
Maurice Backe of the London, Ontario insane asylum and their effect on the
|
||
inmates. One week LA engagement in December is to Oscar-qualify. Opens in
|
||
five additional markets in February.
|
||
|
||
BED AND BREAKFAST February 14 (N.Eng.)
|
||
Cast: Roger Moore, Talia Shire
|
||
|
||
BREAKFAST OF ALIENS (Coyote Releasing) April 1
|
||
Dir: David Lee Miller
|
||
Cast: Vic Dunlop
|
||
Producer: Brian James Ellis
|
||
Screenplay: David Lee Miller, Vic Dunlop
|
||
A likeable perennial loser swallows an alien and becomes a successful
|
||
stand-up comic.
|
||
|
||
THE CHILDREN (Coyote Releasing) March 20
|
||
Dir: Tony Palmer
|
||
Cast: Ben Kingsley, Kim Novak, Karen Black, Geraldine Chaplin, Britt Ekland,
|
||
Joe Don Baker
|
||
Screenplay: Timberlake Wertenbacker
|
||
Edith Wharton's story of a middle-aged bachelor who becomes the guardian of a
|
||
group of kids.
|
||
|
||
COLD HEAVEN February 28
|
||
Rating: "R" for language and sensuality
|
||
Dir: Nicholas Roeg
|
||
Cast: Theresa Russell, Talia Shire, Mark Harmon
|
||
Psychological thriller. Ms. Russell is Mr. Roeg's Mrs. $5 million P&A
|
||
budget.
|
||
|
||
COLLISION COURSE TBA
|
||
Cast: Jay Leno, Pat Morita
|
||
|
||
COMPLEX WORLD February 14 (Boston)
|
||
Dir: James Wolpaw
|
||
Cast: Stanley Matis
|
||
|
||
GOBLINS TBA
|
||
Dir: Kenneth J. Hall
|
||
Cast: Billy DaMota
|
||
Producer: Connie Kingrey
|
||
Screenplay: Kenneth J. Hall
|
||
Start Date: 1/27/92, Miami
|
||
Creatures have a war with children in their efforts to turn humans into
|
||
pumpkins.
|
||
|
||
HIGHWAY TO HELL Spring
|
||
Dir: Ate de Jong
|
||
Cast: Patrick Bergin, Chad Loew, Kristy Swanson, Richard Farnsworth
|
||
Screenplay: Brian Helgeland
|
||
Negative Cost: $10 million
|
||
This science fiction comedy is an warped update of the legend of Orpheus and
|
||
Eurydice. From the director of DROP DEAD FRED. P&A budget is $5 million.
|
||
|
||
THE LEGEND OF WOLF MOUNTAIN (Coyote Releasing) March 13
|
||
Dir: Craig Clyde (Salt Lake City, Denver)
|
||
Cast: Bo Hopkins, Robert Z'Dar, David Shark, Don Shanks, Nicole Lund, Natalie
|
||
Lund, Vivian Schilling, Mickey Rooney
|
||
Producer: Bryce Fillmore
|
||
Screenplay: Craig Clyde
|
||
Negative Cost: $1 million
|
||
Family film set in Northern Utah. Test opening will be supported by
|
||
saturation advertising ala' the defunct Sunn Classics.
|
||
|
||
LITTLE NEMO May 22
|
||
Voices: Mickey Rooney, Rene Auberjonois, June Foray
|
||
Screenplay: Chris Columbus, screen concept by Ray Bradbury
|
||
Negative Cost: $30+ million
|
||
Animated family film about the land of dreams and nightmares is set to open
|
||
in 1000 theatres. Produced by Tokyo's TMS for the American market. Features
|
||
songs sung by Melissa Manchester. Prints and advertising expenditures will
|
||
top $10 million.
|
||
|
||
LOVE AND MURDER
|
||
Rating: "R" Language.
|
||
|
||
OUTBACK March 13
|
||
Cast: Jeff Fahey, Tushka Bergena, Steven Vidler
|
||
Negative Cost: $3.5 million
|
||
This period adventure is naturally situated in Australia. The film will be
|
||
tested in Salt Lake City and Denver.
|
||
|
||
PRIMARY MOTIVE
|
||
Dir: Daniels Adams
|
||
Cast: Judd Nelson, John Savage, Sally Kirkland, Jose Ferrer
|
||
Producer: Tom Gruenberg
|
||
Screenplay: Daniel Adams, William Snowden
|
||
D.P.: John Drake
|
||
Start Date: 4/22/91, Luxembourg, Boston
|
||
|
||
REEFER AND THE MODEL
|
||
Dir: Joe Comerford
|
||
|
||
SEVEN MINUTES March 20 (NY,LA)
|
||
Dir: Klaus Maria Brandauer
|
||
Cast: Brian Dennehy, Reecca Miller, Elisabeth Orth
|
||
Producers: Moritz Borman, Rainer Soehnlein
|
||
Screenplay: Stephen Sheppard, from his novel
|
||
Dennehy portrays the man who attempted to assassinate Hitler in the early
|
||
moments of WWII in Brandauer's feature directorial debut.
|
||
|
||
THE TALE OF RUBY ROSE
|
||
Rating: "PG"
|
||
Dir: Roger Scholes
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
IMAX
|
||
----
|
||
|
||
AT THE MAX 70mm IMAX January 10, '92 (Seattle)
|
||
March (Charlotte)
|
||
Dir: Julien Temple, Roman Kroitor, David Douglas, Noel Archambault
|
||
Cast: The Rolling Stones
|
||
Exec. Producers: Michael Cohl, Andre' Picard
|
||
Negative Cost: $10 million
|
||
The concert film of the Stones' Steel Wheels and Urban Jungles
|
||
tours from 1990 in the 70mm large-frame IMAX format. The 89 minute film is the
|
||
first feature in the format. It will open at some of the domestic IMAX
|
||
and OMNIMAX screens. The suggested ticket price will be $12 - $15. There
|
||
are 74 permanent IMAX and OMNIMAX theatres in the world. Apparently IMAX is
|
||
having great difficulty getting the theatres to book this film since a lot
|
||
of them are associated with educational and research institutions and they
|
||
feel a Stones concert film would not be appropriate.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Interstar
|
||
---------
|
||
|
||
EASTERN GUNS
|
||
An Arizona western.
|
||
|
||
EYE OF THE WIDOW
|
||
Cast: F. Murray Abraham, Ben Cross
|
||
|
||
LITTLE SISTER
|
||
|
||
A MIDNIGHT CLEAR March 6 (limited)
|
||
Dir: Keith Gordon March 13 (wide)
|
||
Cast: Ethan Hawke, Kevin Dillon, Frank Whaley
|
||
Screenplay: Keith Gordon, based on William Wharton's novel
|
||
Members of a high-IQ Army WWII thinktank get a taste of real combat when
|
||
they're confronted by a group of German soldiers in a remote location. Gordon
|
||
directed THE CHOCOLATE WAR and starred in CHRISTINE. Hawke last starred in
|
||
MYSTERY DATE and WHITE FANG.
|
||
|
||
A NEW WORLD
|
||
Cast: Kevin Kline, Isabella Rosellini
|
||
A biography of composer Anton Dvorak.
|
||
|
||
SPLIT SECOND April
|
||
Cast: Rutger Hauer
|
||
Due for a title change.
|
||
|
||
A STAR FOR TWO
|
||
Cast: Lauren Bacall
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
IRS Media
|
||
---------
|
||
|
||
GAS FOOD LODGING Spring
|
||
Cast: Brooke Adams, Ione Skye
|
||
|
||
ME, MYSELF AND I
|
||
Dir: Pablo Ferro
|
||
Cast: George Segal, JoBeth Williams, Shelley Hack, Don Calfa, Betsy Lynn
|
||
George, Sharon McKnight, Ruth Gilbert, Bill Macy, Jaid Barrymore, Sheila
|
||
Scott-Wilkenson, Cheryl Paris, Hartley Haverty
|
||
Screenplay: Julian Barry
|
||
Start Date: 9/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Womanizing screenwriter (Segal) becomes involved with his neighbor, who
|
||
has a multiple personality disorder. Screenwriter Barry won an Oscar for LENNY.
|
||
|
||
MY NEW GUN TBA
|
||
Dir: Stacy Cochran
|
||
Cast: Diane Lane, James Le Gors, Stephen Collins, Tess Harper, Bill Raymond,
|
||
Bruce Altman, Maddy Corman
|
||
Producer: Michael Flynn
|
||
Screenplay: Stacy Cochran
|
||
D.P.: Ed Lachman
|
||
Start Date: 9/91, Teaneck NJ
|
||
Housewife finds herself the reluctant owner of a gift from her husband....a
|
||
handgun. Harper replaced Peggy Lipton in the cast.
|
||
|
||
ONE FALSE MOVE Spring
|
||
Cast: Bill Paxton
|
||
|
||
RAGE AND HONOR TBA
|
||
Dir: Terrence H. Winkless
|
||
Cast: Cynthia Rothrock, Richard Norton
|
||
Producers: Don Penrick, Kevin Reidy
|
||
Screenplay: Terrence H. Winkless
|
||
Start Date: 10/28/91, Los Angeles
|
||
|
||
RUBIN & ED Spring
|
||
Dir: Trent Harris
|
||
Cast: Crispin Glover
|
||
|
||
SHAKES THE CLOWN February 28
|
||
(NY, LA, SF, Boston)
|
||
|
||
|
||
MGM
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
THE BABOON HEART TBA
|
||
Dir: Tony Bill
|
||
Cast: Brad Pitt
|
||
Screenplay: Tom Sierchio
|
||
Start Date: 3/1/92
|
||
Romantic drama about a New Jersey waitress who falls in love with a strange
|
||
young man who hides the fact that he suffers with a very weak heart.
|
||
Screenwriter used to deliver liquor to the director's house. After fighting
|
||
for the female lead and winning it, Madonna has dropped out. Annabella
|
||
Sciorra is said to be the leading candidate.
|
||
|
||
CRISS CROSS 1.85 March 6
|
||
Rating: "R" for language and drug-related scenes, and for brief but strong
|
||
sensuality.
|
||
Dir: Chris Menges
|
||
Cast: Goldie Hawn, Arliss Howard, Keith Carradine
|
||
Hawn is a single mom living in Key West circa 1969. Her husband is a
|
||
frazzled Vietnam vet. She works as a stripper, her son deals drugs. Anything
|
||
to make ends meet.... Menges directed A WORLD APART. Title changed back to
|
||
original from ALONE TOGETHER. Delayed from November 8, 1991 release.
|
||
|
||
THE CUTTING EDGE March 20
|
||
Rating: "PG"
|
||
Dir: Paul Michael Glaser
|
||
Cast: D.B. Sweeney, Moira Kelly, Terry O'Quinn
|
||
Producers: Robert Cort, Cynthia Sherman, Dean O'Brien
|
||
Screenplay: Tony Gilroy
|
||
D.P.: Elliot Davis
|
||
Start Date: 4/8/91, Toronto
|
||
A film set against the 1992 Olympic figure skating competition. Female
|
||
figure skater's partner is injured. Hockey player is recruited to replace
|
||
him. War of the Sexes. A pickup from Interscope.
|
||
|
||
DEAD WOOD 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Producers: Richard Zanuck, Lili Fini Zanuck
|
||
Screenplay: Pete Dexter
|
||
Start Date: 1992, South Dakota
|
||
Story is about the final days of Wild Bill Hickok. Dexter wrote the
|
||
acclaimed PARIS TROUT and RUSH.
|
||
|
||
DIGGSTOWN May
|
||
Dir: Michael Ritchie
|
||
Cast: James Woods, Louis Gossett Jr., Oliver Platt, Heather Graham, Bruce Dern
|
||
Producer: Robert Schaffel
|
||
Screenplay: Steven McKay
|
||
D.P.: Gerry Fisher
|
||
Start Date: 10/11/91, Montanta, Sacramento, Los Angeles
|
||
|
||
OF MICE AND MEN May
|
||
Dir: Gary Sinise
|
||
Cast: John Malkovich, Gary Sinise
|
||
Prodicers: Russ Smith, Gary Sinise
|
||
Screenplay: Horton Foote
|
||
Start Date: 9/16/91, Los Angeles, Northern California
|
||
New film version of the classic Steinbeck play by the folks who should be
|
||
able to do it right.
|
||
|
||
ONCE UPON A CRIME March 20
|
||
Rating: "PG"
|
||
Dir: Eugene Levy
|
||
Cast: John Candy, Jim Belushi, Cybill Shepard, Sean Young, Ornella Muti,
|
||
Richard Lewis, Giancarlo Giannini, Joe Flaherty
|
||
Producer: Dino DeLaurentiis
|
||
Screenplay: Charles Shyer, Nancy Meyers, based on 1960 film CRIMEN (...AND
|
||
SUDDENLY IT'S MURDER), written by Rodolfo Sonego, Giorgio Arlorio, Stefano
|
||
Strucchi, Luciano Vincenzoni, Oreste Biancoli
|
||
D.P.: Giuseppe Rotunno
|
||
Start Date: 2/20/91, Rome, Monte Carlo
|
||
Comic caper set in Monte Carlo follows the exploits of a group who all end up
|
||
as suspects for the murder of an eccentric millionaire. This is Levy's feature
|
||
directorial debut after years of SCTV infamy. Formerly titled CRIMINALS.
|
||
|
||
RICH IN LOVE May
|
||
Dir: Bruce Beresford
|
||
Cast: Albert Finney, Piper Laurie, Jill Clayburgh, Suzy Amis, Kyle MacLachlan,
|
||
Kathryn Erbe, Ethan Hawke, Alfre Woodard
|
||
Producers: Richard Zanuck, Lili Fini Zanuck
|
||
Screenplay: Alfred Uhry, based on Josephine Humphrey's novel
|
||
Start Date: 9/8/91, Charleston SC
|
||
Negative Cost: $14 million
|
||
A young girl struggles to find her identity. Reunion of the creative team
|
||
behind DRIVING MISS DAISY.
|
||
|
||
RUSH 1.85 January 10 (wide)
|
||
Rating: "R" for graphic drug use and sensuality, language and violence
|
||
Dir: Lili Fini Zanuck
|
||
Cast: Jason Patric, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Sam Elliott
|
||
Screenplay: Based on Kim Wozencraft's autobiographical novel
|
||
Leigh is a cocaine-addicted undercover narc. This is Ms. Zanuck's directorial
|
||
debut. She won an Oscar for co-producing DRIVING MISS DAISY. Post-production
|
||
is at Skywalker Sound. Musical score is by Eric Clapton.
|
||
|
||
SIX DEGREES OF SEPARATION TBA
|
||
Dir: Fred Schepisi
|
||
The great John Guare play is brought to the big screen by the director of THE
|
||
RUSSIA HOUSE and A CRY IN THE DARK.
|
||
|
||
UNTITLED JAMES BOND TBA
|
||
Cast: Timothy Dalton
|
||
This one will reportedly be shot in China.
|
||
|
||
THE VAGRANT April
|
||
Dir: Chris Walas
|
||
Cast: Marshall Bell, Bill Paxton, Michael Ironside, Mitzi Kapture, Colleen
|
||
Camp, Stuart Pankin, Patrika Darbo, Teddy Wilson, Mark McClure, Derek Loughran
|
||
Producer: Gillian Richardson Walas
|
||
Screenplay: Richard Jefferies
|
||
D.P.: Jack Wallner
|
||
Start Date: 3/18/91, Phoenix
|
||
Contemporary black comedy about a homeless man who terrorizes the new owner
|
||
of a house he formerly occupied. Walas won an Oscar for his special effects
|
||
work on THE FLY. He directed THE FLY II.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Miramax
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
|
||
AMERICAN DREAM March (Austin, MN)
|
||
Dir: Barbara Kopell
|
||
Oscar-winning documentary concerning the labor dispute at a Hormel meat
|
||
factory has been acquired by Miramax. It was filmed in Austin, Minn. Ms.
|
||
Kopell was responsible for HARLAN COUNTY, USA.
|
||
|
||
BABY BLOOD TBA
|
||
Dir: Alain Robak
|
||
|
||
CHILDREN OF THE CORN II (Dimension) TBA
|
||
|
||
DELICATESSEN early March
|
||
Comes with great word from London.
|
||
|
||
DR. OFF (Dimension Pictures) TBA
|
||
A black man is a teacher by day....a superhero by night.
|
||
|
||
DUST DEVIL (Dimension Pictures) TBA
|
||
|
||
ECOPHORIA (Dimension Pictures) TBA
|
||
Dir: Rene Daalder
|
||
Cast: Balthazar Getty, Drew Barrymore, Alice Kriege
|
||
Producer: Kees Kasander
|
||
Screenplay: Rene Daalder, William Vigil, Doug Freed
|
||
D.P.: David Sperling
|
||
Start Date: 1/92, Los Angeles
|
||
|
||
ENCHANTED APRIL April
|
||
Dir: Mike Newell
|
||
Cast: Joan Plowright, Miranda Richardson, Josie Lawrence, Polly Walker,
|
||
Alfred Molina, Michael Kitchen, Jim Broadbent
|
||
Producer: Ann Scott
|
||
Screenplay: Based on Elizabeth Von Arnim's novel
|
||
BBC-produced comedy about four women who rent a castle in Italy to escape
|
||
their troubled lives in London. Film opens the London Film Festival on
|
||
November 6th. Newell directed DANCE WITH A STRANGER. Word is mixed.
|
||
|
||
ERASERHEAD (SR) April
|
||
Dir: David Lynch
|
||
Cast: John Nance, Charlotte Stewart, Allen Joseph, Jeannes Bates, Judith Anna
|
||
Roberts, Laurel Near, V. Phipps-Wilson
|
||
Producer: David Lynch
|
||
Screenplay: David Lynch
|
||
Re-issue of Lynch's cult fave first film with new Dolby SR stereo
|
||
soundtrack. First public showing was at New York's stunning new Walter Reade
|
||
Theatre in December 1991.
|
||
|
||
HEAR MY SONG January 17 (SF)
|
||
Rating: "R" for language and a scene of sensuality January 19 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Peter Chelsom
|
||
Cast: Ned Beatty, David McCallum, Tara Fitzgerald, Shirley Anne Field, Adrian
|
||
Dunbar, William Hootkins
|
||
Producer: Allison Owen-Allen
|
||
Screenplay: Peter Chelsom, Adrian Dunbar
|
||
D.P.: Sue Gibson
|
||
A magical British film that combines comedy and music, HEAR MY SONG is the
|
||
story of a young man who has troubles with love and truth. He enlists the aid
|
||
of legendary Irish tenor and fugitive Joseph Locke to solve his difficulties.
|
||
The film weaves truth and fiction in a unique way and culminates in a triumphant
|
||
reconciliation. Screened at the Toronto and Boston Film Festivals. Whimsical
|
||
film is a crowd pleaser.
|
||
|
||
HELLRAISER III (Dimension Pictures) Summer
|
||
Rating: "R"
|
||
This pickup opens on 500 screens nationwide as the premiere attraction of
|
||
Miramax' new Dimension Pictures genre banner.
|
||
|
||
HIGH ART TBA
|
||
Rating: "R" for strong graphic violence, and for language and sensuality.
|
||
|
||
INTO THE WEST TBA
|
||
Dir: Mike Newell
|
||
Cast: Gabriel Byrne, Ellen Barkin, Ciaran Fitzgerald, Rory Conway, Colm Meany,
|
||
Johnny Murphy
|
||
Producers: Jonathan Cavendish, Tim Palmer
|
||
Screenplay: Jim Sheridan
|
||
Start Date: 10/91, Dublin and Galway, Ireland
|
||
A magical modern western for the 90s with two young brothers and their magic
|
||
horse. From Miramax' new Family Films division.
|
||
|
||
JOHNNY SUEDE March
|
||
Dir: Tom DiCillo
|
||
Cast: Brad Pitt, Catherin Kenner, Calvin Levels
|
||
Producers: Yoram Mandel, Ruth Waldburger
|
||
Screenplay: Tom DiCillo
|
||
Mildly talented musician discovers his suede shoes, forms a band, sings
|
||
rock-a-billy and becomes a superstar in this comic fable. Pitt scored as the
|
||
charming thief in THELMA AND LOUISE.
|
||
|
||
KAFKA (SR) January 17 (LA, SF)
|
||
Rating: "PG-13" January 24 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Steven Soderbergh
|
||
Cast: Jeremy Irons, Theresa Russell, Alec Guinness, Armin Muller Stahl, Jeroen
|
||
Krabbe, Joel Grey
|
||
Producer: Paul Rassum
|
||
Screenplay: Lem Dobbs
|
||
Composer: Cliff Martinez
|
||
Negative Cost: $12 million
|
||
Fictionalized thriller about writer Franz Kafka as he becomes involved with
|
||
the investigation of the disappearance of one of his colleagues
|
||
at the insurance company at which he works. This is the second feature for
|
||
the hot director of "sex, lies and videotape". Shot on location in Prague,
|
||
Czechoslovakia. Played for one week only in December in New York and LA
|
||
to qualify for the Oscars.
|
||
|
||
K-2 February 21
|
||
Rating: "R" for language
|
||
Dir: Frank Roddam
|
||
Cast: Michael Biehn, Matt Craven, Raymond Barry
|
||
Producers: Jonathan Taplin, Marilyn Weiner
|
||
Screenplay: Scott Roberts, Patrick Meyers
|
||
Based on the play of the same title, K-2 is a character-driven
|
||
action-adventure about two American friends attempting to ascend the second
|
||
highest peak in the world, which is also the most difficult. Opened in London
|
||
in November to mixed notices at best.
|
||
|
||
LOVE CRIMES January 24
|
||
Rating: "R" for strong sensuality and language
|
||
Dir: Lizzie Borden
|
||
Cast: Sean Young, Patrick Bergin
|
||
Producers: Lizzie Borden, Rudy Langlais
|
||
Screenplay: Allan Moyle
|
||
Start Date: 7/15/90, Atlanta, Savannah GA
|
||
Erotic thriller about a female attorney's hunt for a man accused of
|
||
committing sex crimes while posing as a well-known fashion photographer.
|
||
Borden directed WORKING GIRLS and Moyle wrote PUMP UP THE VOLUME.
|
||
|
||
THE MAGIC RIDDLE TBA
|
||
Another family film from Miramax.
|
||
|
||
MAP OF THE HUMAN HEART Summer
|
||
Dir: Vincent Ward
|
||
Cast: Patrick Bergin, John Cusack, Anne Parillaud, Clothilde Coureau
|
||
Producer: Tim Bevan
|
||
Screenplay: Vincent Ward, Louis Nowra
|
||
The epic tale of a love affair torn apart by world at war. When two young
|
||
children meet at an orphanage, they forge an extraordinary romance that spans
|
||
three decades. Parrillaud was LA FEMME NIKITA, Bergin last starred in SLEEPING
|
||
WITH THE ENEMY and the Fox version of ROBIN HOOD. Ward directed THE NAVIGATOR.
|
||
|
||
MEDITERRANEO May
|
||
Dir: Gabriele Salvatores
|
||
Cast: Diego Abatantuono, Claudio Bigagli, Giuseppe Cederna, Claudio Bisio
|
||
Producers: Gianni Minervini, Mario & Vittorio Ceccho Gori
|
||
Screenplay: Vincenzo Monteleone
|
||
While stranded on a Greek Island during WWII, eight Italian soldiers find a
|
||
home among the men, women and children living there with a Mediterranean
|
||
culture similar to their own. Three years pass before a pilot delivers the
|
||
news that the enemy has become their ally, leaving the men with a waiting
|
||
period of trepidation, fear and outrageous expectation before returning to
|
||
Italy.
|
||
|
||
MERCI LA VIE May
|
||
Dir: Bertrand Blier
|
||
Cast: Gerard Depardieu, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Anouk Grinberg, Jean Carmet,
|
||
Annie Girardot, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Michel Blanc
|
||
Producer: Bernard Merascot
|
||
Screenplay: Bertrand Blier
|
||
A coming-of-age film about two young women that has been picked up by Miramax
|
||
after playing in Paris for 8+ months, where it has grossed $3.5 million
|
||
nationwide.
|
||
|
||
RAMPAGE Spring
|
||
Dir: William Friedkin
|
||
Cast: Michael Biehn, Alex McArthur, Nicholas Campbell, Billy Green Bush
|
||
Producers: William Friedkin, David Salven
|
||
Screenplay: William Friedkin
|
||
This 1986 film depicts a deputy D.A. (Biehn) trying to get the death penalty
|
||
for a deranged murderer (McArthur), even though capital punishment is abhorrent
|
||
to him.
|
||
|
||
ROMEO IS BLEEDING TBA
|
||
Dir: Peter Medak
|
||
Cast: Madonna
|
||
Screenplay: Hilary Henkin
|
||
Thriller is co-production of Miramax and their landlord, Tribeca Productions.
|
||
|
||
RULES OF THE GAME March
|
||
Dir: Matthew Meshekoff
|
||
Cast: Courtney Cox, Arye Gross, Kevin Pollak
|
||
Producer: Bobby Newmyer
|
||
Screenplay: Noah Stern
|
||
A heartwarming and comical look at a modern couple as they learn the rules of
|
||
sex and love.
|
||
|
||
SKETCHES Spring
|
||
Dir: Neal Israel
|
||
Cast: C. Thomas Howell, Jason Bateman, Jonathan Silverman, Annie Potts
|
||
Producer: Jonathan D. Krane
|
||
Screenplay: Paul Shapirt
|
||
Three friends on a cross-country trip resolve old problems between themselves
|
||
and remember why they loved each other as children in this 1989 film rescued
|
||
from the MCEG graveyard. Silverman and Howell are c ouple of college freshmen
|
||
whose goal is to live out every fantasy of their friend (Bateman) who is dying
|
||
of cancer.
|
||
|
||
SPOTSWOOD late February
|
||
Dir: Mark Joffe
|
||
Cast: Anthony Hopkins, Ben Mendelsohn, Bruno Lawrence, Rebecca Rigg, Russell
|
||
Crowe
|
||
Producers: Timothy White, Richard Brennan
|
||
Screenplay: Max Dann
|
||
D.P.: Ellery Ryan
|
||
Start Date: 7/30/90, Melbourne
|
||
Comedy-romance about a time and motion expert called in to modernize an
|
||
ailing moccasin factory. Terrific advanced word. Up for Best Picture in the
|
||
Aussie equivalent of the Oscars. "Like an Ealing comedy."
|
||
|
||
WHAT THE MOON SAW
|
||
Dir: Pino Amenta
|
||
|
||
THE WIND
|
||
Dir: Robert Dornhelm
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Screenplay: Jim Sheridan
|
||
Start Date: 9/91, Ireland
|
||
Dornhelm directed REQUIEM FOR DOMINIC, Sheridan directed MY LEFT FOOT.
|
||
|
||
ZENTROPA (Prestige) mid-March
|
||
Dir: Lars Von Trier
|
||
Cast: Jean Marc Barr, Barbara Sukowa
|
||
Winner of the Jury Prize and Grand Prix du Technique at Cannes in 1991, this
|
||
film concerns a naive American who goes to Germany after WWII to become a
|
||
conductor for Zentropa Railways. He falls for the Boss' daughter, who is a
|
||
Nazi terrorist. Formerly titled EUROPA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
MK2
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
ALBERTO EXPRESS March 27 (NY)
|
||
Cast: Sergio Casttellito
|
||
|
||
FOR SACHA June 5 (NY, LA)
|
||
|
||
LA DISCRETE August (NY)
|
||
|
||
RASPAD April 24 (NY, LA)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
New Line Cinema
|
||
---------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
AFRAID OF THE DARK (Fine Line) July 24 (NY)
|
||
Rating: "R" Violence and a scene of sensuality. August 7 (LA + limited)
|
||
Dir: Mark Peploe
|
||
Cast: Fanny Ardant, James Fox, Paul McGann, Clare Holman, Robert Stephens,
|
||
Susan Wooldridge, Struan Rodgers, David Thewlis, Ben Keyworth
|
||
Producer: Simon Bosanquet
|
||
Screenplay: Mark Peploe
|
||
D.P.: Bruno de Keyzer
|
||
Start Date: 9/3/90, London
|
||
A psychological thriller about an 11-year-old boy whose world becomes blurred
|
||
when the boundaries between disturbing daydream and reality become dangerously
|
||
unclear. Peploe was the screenwriter for THE SHELTERING SKY and THE LAST
|
||
EMPEROR.
|
||
|
||
BURN THIS December
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producers: Linda Yellen, Ray Katz
|
||
Screenplay: TBA, based on August Wilson's play
|
||
Negative Cost: $10 million
|
||
Start Date: 4/92
|
||
Big-screen version of the erotic play about a contemporary woman who comes up
|
||
against her fear of intimacy when a tempestuous man enters her life. Scheduled
|
||
to be released in time for 1992 Oscar consideration. Will John Malkovich do
|
||
the honors?
|
||
|
||
DEAD ON TBA
|
||
Dir: Michael Schroeder
|
||
Cast: Ray Sharkey, Leo Rossi, Meg Foster, Miles O'Keefe
|
||
Producer: Lisa Hansen
|
||
Screenplay: Mark Sevi
|
||
D.P.: Jamie Thompson,
|
||
Start Date: 10/29/90, Los Angeles
|
||
|
||
DEAD SLEEP TBA
|
||
Dir: Alec Mills
|
||
Cast: Linda Blair, Tony Bonner, Sueyan Cox
|
||
Producer: Stanley O'Toole
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Rymer
|
||
Start Date: 3/12/90, Queensland
|
||
Psychological thriller about the controversy surrounding certain shock
|
||
therapies.
|
||
|
||
DEEP COVER April 17 (wide)
|
||
Dir: Bill Duke
|
||
Cast: Larry Fishburne, Jeff Goldblum, Clarence Williams III
|
||
Producer: Pierre David, Henry Bean
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Tolkin, Henry Bean
|
||
Start Date: 9/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Fishburne is an undercover narcotics cop who is seduced by the lifestyle of
|
||
drug dealers he is assigned to bring to justice. Duke directed A RAGE IN
|
||
HARLEM. Bean wrote and produced INTERNAL AFFAIRS.
|
||
|
||
DELTA OF VENUS October
|
||
TBA
|
||
This screen adaptation of Anais Nin's sensuous novel about a young woman's
|
||
wild sexual abandon, an author's erotic writing for an anonymous man leads to
|
||
an intense rediscovery of self.
|
||
|
||
EDWARD II (Fine Line) March 20 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Derek Jarman April 10 (wide)
|
||
Cast: Steven Waddington, Andrew Tiernan, Tilda Swinton, Nigel Terry, Kevin
|
||
Collins, Jerome Flynn, John Lynch, Dudley Sutton
|
||
Producers: Steve Clark-Hall, Antony Root,
|
||
Screenplay: Derek Jarman, Stephen McBride, Ken Butler, based on Christopher
|
||
Marlowe's play
|
||
D.P.: Ian Wilson
|
||
Fine Line has picked up North American rights to this complex angry
|
||
metaphorical Bard update reflecting the class-consciousness of modern British
|
||
society and its effect on people of differing histories. Powerhouse acting
|
||
won Ms.Swinton (as Queen Isabella) a Best Actress award at the Venice Film
|
||
Festival. Opened in London in October 1991. U.S. premiere is at the 1992
|
||
Sundance Film Festival in late January.
|
||
|
||
EXCESSIVE FORCE November
|
||
Dir: Jonathan Hess
|
||
Cast: Thomas Ian Griffith
|
||
Producer: Irwin Stoss
|
||
Screenplay: Thomas Ian Griffith
|
||
Martial arts expert Griffith stars as Terry Conner in this action-drama about
|
||
a New York cop with a short fuse and fast fists. When his partners are killed
|
||
and $3 million disappears during a bust, Conner fights to save his life and
|
||
clear his name when he's suspected by the law...and the mob. Griffith was
|
||
featured in THE KARATE KID PART III.
|
||
|
||
FAST GETAWAY (Cinetel)
|
||
Dir: Spiro Razatos
|
||
Cast: Corey Haim, Cynthia Rothrock, Leo Rossi, Ken Lerner, Marcia Strassman
|
||
Producers: Paul Hertzberg, Lisa M. Hansen
|
||
Screenplay: James Dixon
|
||
D.P.: Jacques Haitkin
|
||
Start Date: 5/31/90, Coloradi, Utah
|
||
In this action adventure, a bright young man's estranged family wants him to
|
||
pursue a career in banking. Mom thinks the best route is with an MBA while Dad
|
||
opts for a more direct approach - bank robbery.
|
||
|
||
FATAL CHARM TBA
|
||
Dir: Fritz Kiersch
|
||
|
||
FRIDA: THE BRUSH OF ANGUISH TBA
|
||
Dir: Luis Valdez
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producers: Eduardo Rossoff, Donald Zuckerman
|
||
Screenplay: Luis Valdez, Lupe Valdez
|
||
Start Date: 4/92, Mexico, France
|
||
|
||
GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS (New Line) September
|
||
Dir: James Foley
|
||
Cast: Al Pacino, Alec Baldwin, Jack Lemmon, Alan Arkin, Kevin Spacey,
|
||
Jonathan Pryce, Ed Harris
|
||
Producers: Jerry Tokofsky
|
||
Screenplay: David Mamet, Based on his Play
|
||
D.P.: Juan Ruiz Anchia
|
||
Composer: James Newton Howard
|
||
Start Date: 7/22/91
|
||
Incredible cast makes the wait possibly worth it. This award-winning play of
|
||
survival and ruthlessness in the high-stakes real estate game took five years
|
||
to get the film version off the ground. Spacey (LOST IN YONKERS) and Pryce
|
||
(MISS SAIGON) won Tony Awards just last season.
|
||
|
||
THE LAWNMOWER MAN (New Line) March 13
|
||
Dir: Brett Leonard
|
||
Cast: Jeff Fahey, Pierce Brosnan, Jenny Wright
|
||
Producer: Gimel Everett
|
||
Screenplay: Brett Leonard, Gimel Everett, Based on Stephen King's novel
|
||
A scientist uses computer technology to transform the simple-minded
|
||
"Lawnmower Man" into a intellectual sophisticate through Virtual Reality
|
||
Therapy. The experiment backfires, 'natch. A feature film with much
|
||
computer-generated footage. Slick.
|
||
|
||
LIVE WIRE May
|
||
Dir: Christian Duguay
|
||
Cast: Pierce Brosnan, Ben Cross, Ron Silver, Lisa Eilbacher
|
||
Producer: Suzanne Todd, David Willis
|
||
Screenplay: Bart Baker
|
||
Start Date: 9/91, Washington, D.C.
|
||
Technology and terrorism combine to create the most insidious explosive ever
|
||
known in this topical action drama. When international terrorists begin
|
||
assassinating U.S. senators, the unorthodox bomb diffusion methods of the FBI's
|
||
top expert may be the only recourse to prevent catastrophe.
|
||
|
||
LONDON KILLS ME July 17 (NY)
|
||
Rating: "R" for drug use, language and some nudity July 31 (LA)
|
||
Dir: Hanif Kureishi August 7 (wide)
|
||
Cast: Steven Mackintosh, Emma McCourt, Justin Chadwick, Roshan Seth
|
||
Exec Producers: Tim Bevan, Graham Bradstreet
|
||
Screenplay: Hanif Kureishi
|
||
Start Date: 1/21/91, London
|
||
The story of Clint (Charwick), a street kid who hangs out with a gang of drug
|
||
dealers, the leader of which is Clint's tough friend Muffdiver (Mackintosh).
|
||
When Clint is brutally beaten on his 20th birthday, he decides he needs to live
|
||
an "ordinary" life. Clint's efforts to escape the daily hustle on the streets
|
||
creates a humorous web of diverse experiences and intriguing characters. Hanif
|
||
Kureishi wrote MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE and SAMMI AND ROSIE GET LAID.
|
||
|
||
MIDNIGHT HEAT TBA
|
||
Rating: "R" for strong sensuality and violence, and for language
|
||
Dir: John Nicolella
|
||
Cast: Michael Pare, Adam Ant, Dennis Hopper, Daphne Ashbrook, Charlie
|
||
Schlatter, Tracy Tweed, Little Richard, Cindy Valentine, Joe Lara, Tony Todd,
|
||
Luca Bercovici
|
||
Producers: Kandice King, Lance King
|
||
Screenplay: Max Strom, John Allen Nelson
|
||
D.P.: Chuck Mahoney
|
||
Start Date: 7/1/91, Los Angeles
|
||
|
||
MONSTER IN A BOX April 24 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Nick Broomfield
|
||
Cast: Spalding Gray
|
||
Producer: Jon Blair
|
||
Screenplay: Spalding Gray
|
||
Another filmed monologue from the man who brought us SWIMMING TO CAMBODIA.
|
||
|
||
NIGHT ON EARTH (Fine Line) April 17 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Jim Jarmusch May 8 (wide)
|
||
Cast: Winona Ryder, Gena Rowlands, Armin Muehller-Stahl, Beatrice Dalle
|
||
Producer: Jim Jarmusch
|
||
Screenplay: Jim Jarmusch
|
||
Cult fave Jarmusch's latest work is five vignettes that all take place aboard
|
||
taxicabs in five different cities (New York, Los Angeles, Paris, Rome and
|
||
Helsinki). Financed largely by JVC, as was MYSTERY TRAIN. Was closing night
|
||
attraction at the New York Film Festival.
|
||
|
||
PAST MIDNIGHT (Cinetel) February 28
|
||
Rating: "R" for violence, sensuality and language
|
||
Dir: Jan Eliasberg
|
||
Cast: Rutger Hauer, Natasha Richardson, Clancy Brown
|
||
Producer: Lisa Hansen
|
||
Screenplay: Frank Norwood
|
||
D.P.: Bob Yeoman
|
||
Start Date: 3/5/91, Seattle
|
||
Obsessed social worker becomes dangerously close to client convicted of
|
||
murder. Eliasberg is an award-winning TV director (LA LAW). She was also the
|
||
first woman to direct such action shows as CRIME STORY, MIAMI VICE and WISEGUY.
|
||
|
||
POISON IVY March
|
||
Rating: "R" for sensuality and language
|
||
Dir: Katt Shea Ruben
|
||
Cast: Drew Barrymore, Tom Skerritt, Sara Gilbert, Cheryl Ladd
|
||
Exec Producers: Melissa Goddard, Peter Morgan
|
||
Producer: Andy Ruben
|
||
Screenplay: Katt Shea Ruben, Andy Ruben
|
||
Drew Barrymore is Ivy, a wild young hitchhiker with an unknown past who's
|
||
determined to secure her future through seduction. When befriended by an
|
||
impressionable schoolmate, Ivy uses every means at her disposal to infiltrate
|
||
and destroy her friend's family. "A Lolita for the 90's". Formerly titled
|
||
DESIRE, then POISON IVY.
|
||
|
||
PROOF (Fine Line) March 29 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Jocelyn Moorhouse April 3 (limited)
|
||
Cast: Hugo Weaving, Genevieve Picot, Russell Crowe April 17 (wide)
|
||
Producer: Lynda House
|
||
Screenplay: Jocelyn Moorhouse
|
||
An amusing psychosexual love triangle involving a blind photographer who is
|
||
obsessed with the manner photographs record images that he cannot see. The
|
||
film swept the 1991 Australian film awards and was the talk of the Toronto Film
|
||
Festival.
|
||
|
||
PYRATES TBA
|
||
Dir: Noah Stern
|
||
Cast: Kevin Bacon, Kyra Sedgwick
|
||
Exec Producers: Andrew Meyer, Tom Taylor
|
||
Screenplay: Noah Stern
|
||
Start Date: 11/90, Los Angeles
|
||
Two lovers burn up everything in sight.
|
||
|
||
RIFF-RAFF (Fine Line) May 13 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Ken Loach June 5 (LA + limited)
|
||
Cast: Robert Carlyle, Emer McCourt, Jimmy Coleman, George Moss
|
||
Producer: Sally Hibbin
|
||
Screenplay: Bill Jesse
|
||
Composer: Stewart Copeland
|
||
A black comedy about a recent Glasgow prison inmate who gets a job on a
|
||
non-union construction site with a gang of workers converting a rat-infested
|
||
hospital into luxury flats. This critique of Thatcher's Britain was shot in
|
||
16mm.
|
||
|
||
ROADSIDE PROPHETS (Fine Line) March 27 (NY, LA)
|
||
Rating: "R" For language and a scene of drug use. April 3 (wider)
|
||
Dir: Abbe Wool
|
||
Cast: Adam Horovitz, John Doe, David Carradine, Timothy Leary, Arlo Guthrie,
|
||
John Cusack
|
||
Producers: Peter MCCarthy, David Swinson
|
||
Screenplay: Abbe Wool
|
||
D.P.: Tom Richmond
|
||
Start Date: 9/90, Los Angeles
|
||
A modern road movie about two loners on a winding motorcycle odyssey in
|
||
search of Jackpot, Nevada, wisdom and themselves. In this 1990's "Easy Rider",
|
||
the wandering duo encounters a succession of eccentric "prophets", played by
|
||
famous and infamous characters past and present, including John Cusack, Timothy
|
||
Leary, Arlo Guthrie and David Carradine. Wool wrote SID AND NANCY. Word is
|
||
not particularly encouraging.
|
||
|
||
SIMPLE MEN (Fine Line) September 25 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Hal Hartley October 16 (LA + limited)
|
||
Cast: Robert Burke, William Sage, Martin Donovan, Julia McNeal, Jeff McKay,
|
||
Matt Malloy, Jeff Howard
|
||
D.P.: Mike Stiller
|
||
Negative Cost: $3 million
|
||
Start Date: 11/6/91, Texas
|
||
Comedy of two brothers and their search for their long-lost father from the
|
||
director of TRUST. First TV window goes to PBS' AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE.
|
||
|
||
SKEETERS (Team Players) Summer
|
||
Cast: Cyril O'Reilly, Tracy Griffith
|
||
|
||
STEPKIDS (New Line) March
|
||
Dir: Joan Micklin Silver
|
||
Cast: Griffin Dunne, Margaret Whitton, David Straithairn, Ben Savage
|
||
Producers: Gerald Olson, Laurie Pearlman
|
||
Screenplay: Frank Mugavero
|
||
D.P.: Theo van de Sande
|
||
Start Date: 9/18/90, Mammoth Lakes, Los Angeles
|
||
A funny and touching story of a 15-year-old girl whose parents have divorced
|
||
and remarried so many times, that she now feels lost in a sea of stepkids.
|
||
Silver last directed CROSSING DELANCEY.
|
||
|
||
SURF NINJAS November
|
||
|
||
SWOON (Fine Line) August 19 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Tom Kalin September 11 (wider)
|
||
|
||
Cast: Ron Vawter, Michael Stumm, Michael Kirby
|
||
Producer: Christine Vachon
|
||
16mm B&W pickup was spotted at the Independent Feature Market in New York.
|
||
Story of Nathan Leopold Jr. and Richard Loeb, teenagers involved in a 1924
|
||
kidnap/murder of a young boy. Will make first TV appearance on PBS' AMERICAN
|
||
PLAYHOUSE. Vachon produced Todd Haynes' POISON.
|
||
|
||
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES III March 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Exec Producer: Raymond Chow
|
||
Producer: David Chan
|
||
Screenplay: Stuart Gillard
|
||
Start Date: 6/92, Vancouver
|
||
Negative Cost: $17 million
|
||
The third Turtle film will take over five sound stages at Stephen Cannell's
|
||
studio. Storyline involves time-travel, between today and the 17th Century.
|
||
The Turtle outfits will no longer be from Jim Henson's Creature Shop.
|
||
|
||
TOXIC CRUSADERS Spring 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Troma goes big-time with a $10 million New Line film starring a group of
|
||
environmental accident mutants (ala TMNT) based on THE TOXIC AVENGER. Headed
|
||
by Toxie, they will include Nozone, Major Disaster, Headbanger and Junkyard.
|
||
They fight the evil Dr. Killemoff, Psycho and Bonehead. <groan>
|
||
|
||
TWIN PEAKS: FIRE WALK WITH ME September
|
||
Dir: David Lynch
|
||
Cast: Kyle MacLachlan, Sheryl Lee, Ray Wise, Chris Isaak, Moira Kelly, Dana
|
||
Ashbrook, Michael Ontkean, Harry Dean Stanton, Grace Zabriskie, James Marshall
|
||
Exec. Producers: David Lynch, Mark Frost
|
||
Producer: Gregg Fienberg
|
||
Screenplay: David Lynch, Bob Engels
|
||
Start Date: 9/5/91, Los Angeles, Washington (state)
|
||
New Line paid $6 million to pick up this prequel to the TWIN PEAKS TV series
|
||
for domestic release. Storyline features the seven days before Laura Palmer's
|
||
murder.
|
||
|
||
VOLERE, VOLARE August 7 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Guido Manuli August 28 (LA + limited)
|
||
Cast: Maurizio Nichetti
|
||
Producers: Enesto di Sarro, Mario and Vittorio Cecchi Gori
|
||
This Italian import is a comic fantasy that blends live action and animation.
|
||
Star Nichetti is the acclaimed director of THE ICICLE THIEF.
|
||
|
||
WATERLAND (Palace/Fine Line) October 9 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Stephen Gyllenhaal October 23 (LA + limited)
|
||
Cast: Jeremy Irons, Ethan Hawke, John Heard, Miranda Richardson, David
|
||
Morrissey, Lena Heady, Grant Warnock, Callum Dixon, Cara Buono
|
||
Screenplay: Peter Prince, based on Graham Swift's novel
|
||
D.P.: Robert Elswit
|
||
Start Date: 9/16/91, Pittsburgh, London
|
||
Negative Cost: $8 million
|
||
Contemporary drama about a British teacher in an American high
|
||
school. Irons is a history teacher who breaks through his students' wall of
|
||
indifference by relating his and his family's difficult personal experiences
|
||
in the Europe of World War II. The family comes to life before their very
|
||
eyes. Gyllenhaal directed the acclaimed PARIS TROUT, as well as KILLING IN A
|
||
SMALL TOWN.
|
||
|
||
WE'RE TALKIN' SERIOUS MONEY TBA
|
||
Dir: James Lemmo
|
||
Cast: Dennis Farina, Leo Rossi
|
||
Producer: Lisa Hansen
|
||
Screenplay: James Lemmo, Leo Rossi
|
||
Start Date: 2/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Two hustlers, the mob and the government. Said to be hilarious.
|
||
|
||
WHERE ANGELS FEAR TO TREAD (Fine Line) February 28 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Charles Sturridge March 20 (wide)
|
||
Cast: Judy Davis, Helen Mirren, Helena Bonham-Carter, Rupert Graves
|
||
Producer: Derek Granger
|
||
Screenplay: Tim Sullivan, Derek Granger, Charles Sturridge, based on
|
||
E.M. Forster's novel
|
||
Turn-of-the-century romantic tragedy concerns two British ladies on holiday
|
||
in Tuscany. Sturridge directed A HANDFUL OF DUST and co-directed BRIDESHEAD
|
||
REVISITED. Shown at the Toronto Film Festival.
|
||
|
||
WHERE THE DAY TAKES YOU (Cinetel) May 22
|
||
Dir: Marc Rocco
|
||
Cast: Dermot Mulroney, Lara Flynn Boyle, Will Smith, Kyle MacLachlan, Ricki
|
||
Lake, Sean Astin, Laura San Giacomo, Adam Baldwin. Balthazar Getty, James
|
||
LeGros, Peter Dobson, Alyssa Milano, Rachel Ticotin, David Arquette
|
||
Producer: Paul Hertzberg
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Hitchcock, Kurt Voss, Marc Rocco
|
||
D.P.: Bartlett Gersh
|
||
An outstanding ensemble of young actors star in this urban drama about
|
||
homeless teenagers and their struggle for respect and survival on the streets
|
||
of Hollywood. Good advanced word.
|
||
|
||
THE WIDE SARGASSO SEA (Fine Line) May 1
|
||
Dir: John Duigan
|
||
Cast: Nathaniel Parker, Karina Lombard, Rachel Ward, Michael York
|
||
Producer: Jan Sharp
|
||
Screenplay: John Duigan, based on Jean Rhys' novel
|
||
Start Date: 7/91, Jamaica
|
||
Period romance set in the 19th Century Caribbean details sexual obsession
|
||
between an English aristocrat and the French island lovely that he takes for
|
||
his wife.
|
||
|
||
XTRO II: THE SECOND ENCOUNTER (New Line)
|
||
Rating: "R" For sci-fi/horror violence and language
|
||
|
||
YO, ALICE! 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: David Permut
|
||
Screenplay: TBA
|
||
Negative Cost: <$10 million
|
||
A hip-hop musical film version of ALICE IN WONDERLAND that was developed by
|
||
Maurice Hines, who may choreograph and/or perform in the film. In this
|
||
version, Alice Huxley is a 17-year-old African-American who ventures on a
|
||
voyage of discovery when she and her friend Harvey (who is transformed into the
|
||
Rabbit) get sucked into the VCR. The lead role will be cast with an unknown,
|
||
but there will be some big names in supporting roles.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
October Films
|
||
-------------
|
||
|
||
ADAM'S RIB April (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Orion (Finances willing)
|
||
-----
|
||
|
||
ARTICLE 99 March 13
|
||
Dir: Howard Deutch
|
||
Cast: Ray Liotta, Kiefer Sutherland, Lea Thompson, Forest Whitaker, Kathy
|
||
Baker, John Mahoney, John C. McGinley, Keith David, Jeffrey Tambor, Eli
|
||
Wallach, Julie Bovasso
|
||
Producers: Michael Levy, Michael Gruskoff
|
||
Screenplay: Ron Cutler
|
||
D.P.: Richard Bowen
|
||
Start Date: 10/8/90, Kansas City, MO
|
||
Negative Cost: $17.6 million.
|
||
An irreverent comedy about a group of doctors and nurses working in a VA
|
||
hospital. They are skilled in their profession, but they are equally skilled
|
||
in taking on the bureaucracy they work for. Deutch is Thompson's hubby.
|
||
|
||
BLUE SKY Fall
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
Dir: Tony Richardson
|
||
Cast: Jessica Lange, Tommy Lee Jones, Powers Boothe, Chris O'Donnell, Amy
|
||
Locane, Carrie Snodgress
|
||
Producers: Robert H. Solo, Lynn Arost, Jessica Lange
|
||
D.P.: Steve Yaconelli
|
||
Screenplay: Rama Blum, Jerry Leichtling, Arlene Sarner
|
||
Start Date: 5/14/90, Selma, AL, Florida
|
||
Negative Cost: $15.6 million
|
||
Lange stars in this dramatic period piece about an unhappy wife who moves to
|
||
a military base with her family and finds herself caught in a cover-up
|
||
involving nuclear bomb tests. The late Tony Richardson's last film.
|
||
|
||
CAR 54, WHERE ARE YOU? Summer
|
||
Dir: Bill Fishman
|
||
Cast: David Johansen, John C. McGinley, Fran Drescher, Nipsey Russell, Rosie
|
||
O'Donnell, Al Lewis, Tone Loc
|
||
Producer: Robert H. Solo
|
||
D.P.: Rodney Charters
|
||
Screenplay: Erik Tarloff, Ebbe Roe Smith, Peter McCarthy
|
||
Start Date: 8/27/90, Toronto, New York
|
||
Negative Cost: $10.7 million
|
||
"There's a holdup in the Bronx..." Feature film version of the long-running
|
||
'60s TV sitcom with Officers Toody and Muldoon. Fishman directed TAPEHEADS.
|
||
Johansen stars as Gunther Toody and McGinley portrays his sidekick, Francis
|
||
Muldoon, two mismatched police officers, partners by circumstance but not by
|
||
choice.
|
||
The rollicking comedy also features cameo appearances by Penn & Teller, Tone
|
||
Loc and the Ramones with music by the Ramones, Coati Mundi, Lis Delbello, Mojo
|
||
Nixon and Denny Doherty of the Mamas and the Papas.
|
||
|
||
CHINA MOON Fall
|
||
Dir: John Bailey
|
||
Cast: Ed Harris, Madeline Stowe, Benicio Del Toro, Charles Dance
|
||
Producer: Barry M. Osborne
|
||
D.P.: Willy Kurant
|
||
Screenplay: Roy Carlson
|
||
Start Date: 10/8/90, Florida
|
||
Negative Cost: $14.6 million
|
||
This steamy thriller is about a veteran detective (Harris) in a small
|
||
Florida city whose backstreet romance with wealthy young widow spins a web of
|
||
deceit, betrayal and murder. His official investigation of the crime
|
||
backfires when the trail begins to point to him. "China Moon" is the second
|
||
TIG production, following Orion's "Dances With Wolves."
|
||
|
||
CLIFFORD Summer
|
||
Dir: Paul Flaherty
|
||
Cast: Martin Short, Charles Grodin
|
||
Producers: Larry Brezner, Pieter Jan Brugge
|
||
Screenplay: Steven Kampnamm, Will Aldis
|
||
D.P.: John A. Alonzo
|
||
Start Date: 7/24/90, Los Angeles
|
||
Negative Cost: $18.8 million
|
||
Martin Short stars in dual roles along with Charles Grodin, Mary Steenburgen
|
||
and Dabney Coleman in this comedy about a mischievous, 10-year-old boy left in
|
||
the care of his bachelor uncle (Grodin) while his parents are in Hawaii.
|
||
More than a few catastrophic misadventures are in store for Clifford, a
|
||
juvenile genius with a one-track mind, as his dream of visiting Dinosaurworld
|
||
becomes his uncle's worst nightmare. Delayed from a June, 1991 release.
|
||
|
||
THE DARK HALF Fall
|
||
Dir: George A. Romero
|
||
Cast: Timothy Hutton, Amy Madigan, Michael Rooker, Julie Harris, Robert Joy,
|
||
Rutanya Alda, Kent Broadhurst, Tom Mardirosian
|
||
Exec. Producer: George A. Romero
|
||
Producer: Declan Baldwin
|
||
Screenplay: George A. Romero
|
||
D.P.: Tony Pierce-Roberts
|
||
Start Date: 10/15/90, Pittsburgh
|
||
Negative Cost: $16.1 million
|
||
Based on the best-selling Stephen King novel, this one is about a writer
|
||
whose alter ego, the author of several vicious crime novels, takes on a life of
|
||
his own. Hutton gets to play dual roles.
|
||
|
||
THE FAVOR May
|
||
Dir: Donald Petrie
|
||
Cast: Elizabeth McGovern, Harley Jane Kozak, Ken Wahl, Bill Pullman, Brad Pitt
|
||
Producer: Lauren Shuler-Donner
|
||
Screenplay: Josann McGibbon, Sara Parriott
|
||
Start Date: 9/19/90, Portland, OR
|
||
Negative Cost: $12.9 million
|
||
A romantic comedy about Emily and Kathy, two best friends whose long-time
|
||
bond suddenly snaps when Emily's fantasy about her high school sweetheart
|
||
she hasn't seen in 15 years, and her request of an unusual favor, puts their
|
||
friendship to the ultimate test. Petrie directed MYSTIC PIZZA and
|
||
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS.
|
||
|
||
LOVE FIELD TBA
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
Dir: Jonathan Kaplan
|
||
Cast: Michelle Pfeiffer, Dennis Haysbert, Brian Kerwin, Beth Grant, Louise
|
||
Latham, Peggy Rea
|
||
Producers: Midge Sanford, Sarah Pillsbury
|
||
Screenplay: Don Roos
|
||
D.P.: Ralf D. Bode
|
||
Start Date: 4/2/90, Rocky Mount, NC, Virginia, Washington, DC
|
||
Negative Cost: $17.7 million
|
||
Interracial love story set against the backdrop of the Kennedy assassination.
|
||
Kaplan directed THE ACCUSED. Haysbert (MAJOR LEAGUE) replaced Denzel
|
||
Washington as the love interest. Has been pushed back to 1992 from October 18th
|
||
at Michelle Pfeiffer's request, due to FRANKIE AND JOHNNY's October 11th
|
||
playdate.
|
||
|
||
MARRIED TO IT 1.85 (SR) TBA
|
||
Rating: "R" Language and a scene of sensuality
|
||
Dir: Arthur Hiller
|
||
Cast: Beau Bridges, Stockard Channing, Robert Sean Leonard, Mary Stuart
|
||
Masterson, Ron SIlver, Cybill Shepard
|
||
Producer: Thomas Baer
|
||
Screenplay: Janet Kovalcik
|
||
D.P.: Victor J. Kemper
|
||
Start Date: 7/30/90, Toronto, New York
|
||
Negative Cost: $14.3 million
|
||
A comedy featuring three married New York couples with radically different
|
||
lifestyles. Leonard was the suicidal thespian in DEAD POETS SOCIETY. Music is
|
||
by Henry Mancini. Film runs 110 minutes. Advanced word is tepid.
|
||
|
||
MISSING PIECES 1993
|
||
Rating: "PG"
|
||
Dir: Leonard Stern
|
||
Cast: Eric Idle, Robert Wuhl, Lauren Hutton, Bernie Kopell, Kim Lankford,
|
||
Richard Belzer
|
||
Producer: Aaron Russo
|
||
Screenplay: Leonard Stern
|
||
D.P.: Peter Stein
|
||
Start Date: 10/10/90, New York, Los Angeles
|
||
The comedic adventures of an idealist, a greeting card writer and a gifted
|
||
cellist. Marvin Hamlisch will provide the musical score.
|
||
|
||
OFF AND RUNNING 1993
|
||
Dir: Edward Bianchi
|
||
Cast: Cyndi Lauper, David Keith, Richard Belzer, Anita Morris, Johnny Pinto
|
||
Producer: Aaron Russo
|
||
Screenplay: Mitch Glazer
|
||
D.P.: Andrzej Bartkowiak
|
||
Start Date: 2/8/90, Miami, New York, Washington, DC
|
||
Formerly titled MOON OVER MIAMI.
|
||
|
||
PROBABLE CAUSE January 1993
|
||
Negative Cost: $25 million
|
||
|
||
ROBOCOP 3 Summer
|
||
Dir: Fred Dekker
|
||
Cast: Robert Burke, Nancy Allen, John Castle, CCH Pounder, Bruce Locke, Felton
|
||
Perry, Robert DoQui
|
||
Producer: Patrick Crowley
|
||
Screenplay: Fred Dekker
|
||
D.P.: Gary Kibbe
|
||
Start Date: 2/4/91, Atlanta
|
||
Negative Cost: $23.5 million
|
||
In the film, Omni-Consumer Product Corp. (OCP), the company which originally
|
||
designed RoboCop, has scheduled Detroit's largest neighborhood for extinction
|
||
to make way for a gleaming new city in the future.
|
||
In his effort to serve public trust, RoboCop leaves the Detroit Police
|
||
Department and joins forces with a rebel group to help them defend their homes.
|
||
Among this determined band of homeless revolutionaries is Nikko, a
|
||
10-year-old computer genius who idolizes RoboCop.
|
||
Her devotion and loyalty awakens in RoboCop the human longings and fleeting
|
||
but powerful memories of a murdered cop named Murphy.
|
||
|
||
SHADOWS AND FOG March 20
|
||
Rating: "PG"
|
||
Dir: Woody Allen
|
||
Cast: Woody Allen, Mia Farrow, Madonna, John Malkovich, Jodie Foster, Donald
|
||
Pleasence, Kenneth Mars, Fred Gwynne, David Straithairn, Kate Nelligan
|
||
Exec. Producers: Jack Rollins, Charles Joffe
|
||
Producers: Robert Greenhut, Woody Allen
|
||
Screenplay: Woody Allen
|
||
D.P.: Carlo Di Palma
|
||
Start Date: 11/19/90, New York
|
||
Negative Cost: $21.8 million
|
||
*Everyone* wants to work with Woody! And yes, it's in Black and White and
|
||
set in the Roaring Twenties. It's Woody's most expensive film ever. His
|
||
next film, which went into production in November, '91 will be for TriStar
|
||
and his old friend Mike Medavoy. First showing is December 5th at New York's
|
||
new Walter Reade Theatre for the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
|
||
|
||
THERE GOES MY BABY Fall
|
||
Rating: "R" for language
|
||
Dir: Floyd Mutrux
|
||
Cast: Dermot Mulroney, Rick Schroder, Kelli Williams, Noah Wyle, Jill Schoelen,
|
||
Kristin Minter, Lucy Deakins, Kenny Ransom
|
||
Producer: Robert Shapiro
|
||
Screenplay: Floyd Mutrux
|
||
Negative Cost: $10.5 million
|
||
A bittersweet look at a time in history in the early 60s when things are about
|
||
to change for eight high school graduates, and for the rest of the country. The
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Orion Classics
|
||
--------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE ADJUSTER July
|
||
Rating: "R" for sensuality.
|
||
Cast: Elias Koteas, Maury Chaykin
|
||
|
||
DANZON July
|
||
Dir: Maria Novaro
|
||
This is a Mexican pickup.
|
||
|
||
HOWARD'S END March
|
||
Dir: James Ivory
|
||
Cast: Anthony Hopkins, Vanessa Redgrave, James Wilby, Helena Bonham Carter
|
||
Producer: Ismail Merchant
|
||
Screenplay: Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, based on the novel by E.M. Forster
|
||
D.P.: Tony Pierce-Roberts
|
||
Start Date: 4/22/91, U.K.
|
||
The creators of A ROOM WITH A VIEW and MAURICE tackle yet another E.M.
|
||
Forster novel. Two wealthy English families' contrasting views of life force
|
||
them into battle of style as they compete for inheritance of a house.
|
||
|
||
JACQUOT DE NANTES June
|
||
Dir: Agnes Varda
|
||
Biography of the childhood of Ms. Varda's late husband, director Jacques
|
||
Demy.
|
||
|
||
RAISE THE RED LANTERN February 7 (NY)
|
||
Rating: "PG"
|
||
Dir: Zhang Yimou
|
||
Cast: Gong Li
|
||
This film is Hong Kong's official entry into the Foreign Language Oscar race.
|
||
Yimou directed the Oscar-nominated JU DOU. Opens at Manhattan's Lincoln Plaza
|
||
Cinemas.
|
||
|
||
A TALE OF SPRINGTIME May
|
||
Dir: Eric Rohmer
|
||
Cast: Anne Teyssedre, Hughes Quester, Florence Darel, Eloise Bennett
|
||
Producer: Margaret Menegoz
|
||
Screenplay: Eric Rohmer
|
||
D.P.: Luc Pages
|
||
The French film master spins a story of romantic tension and intrigue when a
|
||
high school teacher stays over at the apartment of her girlfriend's father.
|
||
|
||
A WOMAN'S TALE January (NY, LA)
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
Dir: Paul Cox
|
||
Cast: Sheila Florance, Gosia Dobrowolska, Norman Kaye
|
||
Producers: Paul Cox, Santhana Naidu
|
||
Screenplay: Paul Cox, Barry Dickins
|
||
D.P.: Nino Martinetti
|
||
This Aussie film played at Beverly Hill's Music Hall for a one week
|
||
Oscar-qualifying run in December. Roger Ebert is quoted as claiming it "the best
|
||
film I have seen in 1991". It concerns an elderly, dying woman's budding
|
||
friendship with a young woman.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Paramount
|
||
---------
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE ADDAMS FAMILY II October
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Scott Rudin
|
||
Screnplay: Paul Rudnick
|
||
"Greed is good. Greed works."
|
||
|
||
ALIVE (Touchstone/Paramount) December
|
||
Dir: Frank Marshall
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Exec. Producer: Kathleen Kennedy
|
||
Producer: Robert Watts
|
||
Screenplay: Monte Merrick
|
||
Start Date: 1/92
|
||
Co-production between two studios is another version of that Andes plane
|
||
crash cannibalism episode of several years ago. Marshall directed
|
||
ARACHNOPHOBIA.
|
||
|
||
BEBE'S KIDS July
|
||
Dir: Bruce Smith
|
||
Voices: Saison Love
|
||
Exec. Producers: Reginald and Warrington Hudlin
|
||
Producers: Tom Wilhite, Willard Carroll
|
||
Screenplay: Reginald Hudlin
|
||
Start Date: 10/2/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Animated film features characters created by the late comedian Robin Harris
|
||
(DO THE RIGHT THING, HOUSE PARTY). Saison Love has been signed to perform the
|
||
voice of Harris.
|
||
|
||
BEVERLY HILLS COP III Summer, 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: Eddie Murphy
|
||
Another formula film. This time Murphy gets $15 million up front.
|
||
|
||
BOOMERANG June
|
||
Dir: Reginald Hudlin
|
||
Cast: Eddie Murphy, Robin Givens, Grace Jones, Eartha Kitt, Geoffrey Holder,
|
||
Halle Berry, David Alan Grier
|
||
Producers: Brian Grazer, Warrington Hudlin
|
||
Screenplay: Barry Blaustein, David Sheffield
|
||
D.P.: Woody Omens
|
||
Start Date: 11/13/91, New York
|
||
The Hudlin Brothers scored with HOUSE PARTY. Now they get a major deal at
|
||
Paramount. Murphy is a ladies' man who falls in love with a girl who can't
|
||
stand him. Eddie will get $12 million for this one.
|
||
|
||
COLUMBUS 2.35 70mm October
|
||
Dir: Ridley Scott
|
||
Cast: Gerard Depardieu, Sigourney Weaver, Armand Assante, Fernando Rey,
|
||
Fernando Garcia, Angela Molina, Tcheky Karyo, Kario Salem, Frank Langella, Mark
|
||
Margolis, Arnold Vaslu, Fernando Guillen
|
||
Producers: Ridley Scott, Alain Goldman, Mimi Polk
|
||
Screenplay: Roselyne Bosch
|
||
D.P.: Adrian Biddle
|
||
Start Date: 12/2/91, Spain, France, Costa Rica
|
||
Negative Cost: $40 million
|
||
One of two features in production on the exploits of Christopher Columbus, in
|
||
commemoration of the 500th anniversary of the Discovery of the New World. The
|
||
competing feature from the Salkinds has yet to get distribution. This film
|
||
will likely have a title change. Depardieu is Columbus, of course. Ms.
|
||
Weaver plays Queen Isabella. The other film (directed by John Glen) has
|
||
George Corraface as Columbus, Tom Selleck as Ferdinand, Rachel Ward as Isabella
|
||
and Marlon Brando as Torquemada, the Grand Inquisitor.
|
||
|
||
COOL WORLD July 1
|
||
Dir: Ralph Bakshi
|
||
Cast: Kim Basinger, Gabriel Byrne
|
||
Producer: Frank Mancuso, Jr.
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Grais, Mark Victor
|
||
D.P.: John A. Alonzo
|
||
Start Date: 3/15/91, Las Vegas, Los Angeles
|
||
Combined animation-live action film reportedly tells the story of real people
|
||
who find themselves in a cartoon world and can't figure out why.
|
||
|
||
EMILY BRONTE'S WUTHERING HEIGHTS Fall
|
||
Dir: Peter Kosminsky
|
||
Cast: Ralph Fiennes, Juliette Binoche
|
||
Producer: Mary Selway
|
||
Screenplay: Anne Devlin, based on Emily Bronte's novel
|
||
Start Date: 10/91, England
|
||
Remake of the classic tale WUTHERING HEIGHTS is the first product from
|
||
Paramount Europe. Producer Selway's name will be recognized as one of the
|
||
very top casting directors in the biz.
|
||
|
||
INDECENT PROPOSAL December
|
||
Dir: Adrian Lyne
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Sherry Lansing
|
||
Screenplay: Amy Jones
|
||
Start Date: 3/2/92
|
||
Lyne and Lansing team up one again after FATAL ATTRACTION made so much money
|
||
for Paramount (although it officially just *barely* went into the black...love
|
||
those grosse pointes!)
|
||
|
||
THE INNOCENT TBA
|
||
Dir: John Schlesinger
|
||
Cast: Anthony Hopkins, Campbell Scott, Isabella Rossellini
|
||
Producers: Norman Heyman, Chris Sievernich, Wieland Schulz-Kiel
|
||
Screenplay: Ian McEwan
|
||
Start Date: 3/92, Berlin, Vienna
|
||
Romantic espionage thriller set in 1955 Berlin. Formerly to have been
|
||
directed by Jon Amiel, who is doing SOMMERSBY for Warner Brothers instead.
|
||
|
||
INTERSECTION 1993
|
||
Dir: Mark Rydell
|
||
Producers: Sherry Lansing, Frederic Colchan
|
||
This one is a remake of LES CHOSES DE LA VIE.
|
||
|
||
JENNIFER EIGHT Fall
|
||
Dir: Bruce Robinson
|
||
Cast: Andy Garcia, Uma Thurman, Lance Henriksen, Kathy Baker, John Malkovich,
|
||
Graham Beckel, Kevin Conway, Perry Lang, Nicholas Love, Michael O'Neill, Paul
|
||
Bate, Bob Gunton, Lenny Von Dohlen
|
||
Producer: Scott Rudin
|
||
Screenplay: Bruce Robinson
|
||
Start Date: 9/23/91, Vancouver
|
||
Negative Cost: $20 million
|
||
Garcia stars as Sgt. John Berlin, a former L.A. cop who joins the police
|
||
force of a Northern California town. In his obsessive pursuit of a homicide
|
||
investigation, he believes that he's on the trail of a dangerous killer who has
|
||
just claimed his eighth victim, code-named Jennifer. Helena Robertson
|
||
(Thurman) is a blind woman whose friend has disappeared. Helena may have
|
||
encountered the killer and could provide Berlin with his only chance of solving
|
||
the crimes. The more deeply Berlin becomes involved in the case, the more
|
||
authorities doubt the very existence of the killer. Henriksen plays Freddy
|
||
Ross, Berlin's friend and colleague. Baker is Freddy's wife, Margie.
|
||
Malkovich is St. Anne, the FBI investigator assigned to the case. Garcia
|
||
received an Oscar nod for THE GODFATHER PART III. He also co-stars in DEAD
|
||
AGAIN. Henriksen will be seen in ALIEN3. Baker was recently seen in EDWARD
|
||
SCISSORHANDS and is in the upcoming ARTICLE 99. Malkovich was recently in
|
||
QUEENS LOGIC, THE OBJECT OF BEAUTY and THE SHELTERING SKY. Robinson directed
|
||
WITHNAIL AND I. He was Oscar-nominated for writing THE KILLING FIELDS.
|
||
|
||
JUICE January 17
|
||
Rating: "R" for strong language and some violence
|
||
Dir: Ernest Dickerson
|
||
Cast: Omar Epps, Jermaine Hopkins, Khalil Kain, Tupac Shakur
|
||
Producers: Neal Moritz, David Heyman, Peter Frankfurt
|
||
Screenplay: Gerard Brown, Ernest Dickerson
|
||
D.P.: Larry Banks
|
||
Negative Cost: $5 million
|
||
Spike Lee's cinematographer makes his feature directorial bow with a
|
||
film concerning four black Harlem youths whose brief encounter with
|
||
crime takes a deadly turn. This independent production has been picked up by
|
||
Paramount, who have a $10 million P&A budget. The soundtrack features rap/hip
|
||
hop music. 'natch.
|
||
|
||
LADYBUGS March 27
|
||
Dir: Sidney J. Furie
|
||
Cast: Rodney Dangerfield, Jackee, Jonathan Brandis, Ilene Graff
|
||
Producers: Albert S. Ruddy, Andre Morgan
|
||
Screenplay: Curtis Burch
|
||
Middle-aged salesman agrees to coach a company-sponsored soccer team
|
||
composed of 13-year-old girls called "The Ladybugs", in hopes of securing a
|
||
promotion. A "Bad News Bears" type of comedy.
|
||
|
||
LAME DUCKS
|
||
Rating: "PG" Spring
|
||
Dir: Dennis Dugan
|
||
Cast: John Turturro, Mel Smith, Bob Nelson, Nancy Marchand, John Savident,
|
||
George de la Pena, Spike Alexander, Juli Donaki
|
||
Producers: David Zucker, Jerry Zucker, Gil Netter
|
||
Screenplay: Pat Proft
|
||
D.P.: David M. Walsh
|
||
Start Date: 12/10/90, Los Angeles
|
||
Madcap comedy about three men commissioned to start a ballet company. Dugan
|
||
last directed PROBLEM CHILD. Scheduled to be retitled.
|
||
|
||
PATRIOT GAMES 2.35 70mm May 22
|
||
Dir: Philip Noyce
|
||
Cast: Harrison Ford, Anne Archer, James Earl Jones, Thora Birch, Samuel
|
||
Jackson, Sean Bean, Patrick Bergin, Polly Walker
|
||
Producer: Mace Neufeld, Robert Rehme
|
||
Screenplay: W. Peter Iliff, based on Tom Clancy's novel
|
||
Start Date: 11/2/91, London, Los Angeles, Maryland
|
||
D.P.: Don McAlpine
|
||
Negative Cost: $42 million
|
||
Alec Baldwin pulls out of this sequel to THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER due to
|
||
scheduling problems when the start date was pushed back to November. He will
|
||
be starring on Broadway with Jessica Lange in "A Streetcar Named Desire" in
|
||
February. Harrison Ford will apparently be paid $9 million to take over the
|
||
film. Archer plays Dr. Cathy Ryan and Birch is their seven-year old daughter
|
||
Sally. James Earl Jones once again is Admiral James Greer. Jackson is
|
||
Ryan's buddy. They are victimized by international terrorism in the
|
||
storyline. Ford will also be in the subsequent sequel, CLEAR AND PRESENT
|
||
DANGER. The producers are now bidding big for the following property, THE SUM
|
||
OF ALL FEARS, in which Ford would again topline. Talks for that sequel have
|
||
apparently broken down, CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER will be directed by John
|
||
McTiernan, who helmed THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER. John Badham was in the works
|
||
to direct PATRIOT GAMES, but couldn't strike the right deal.
|
||
Noyce directed DEAD CALM. ...OCTOBER grossed $120 million domestically and
|
||
$77 million overseas. Tom Clancy has stated his dissatisfaction with what
|
||
they have done to his story.
|
||
|
||
PAYDIRT April 24
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
Dir: Bill Phillips
|
||
Cast: Jeff Daniels, Dabney Coleman, Rhea Perlman, Catherine O'Hara
|
||
Producer: Mort Engelberg
|
||
Screenplay: Bill Phillips
|
||
Daniels is a criminal psychologist who makes a deal with one of his patients
|
||
to dig up his buried treasure in return for half of the profits. Unfortunately
|
||
for him, some of the other inmates overheard the plans before escaping....
|
||
|
||
PET SEMATARY II August
|
||
Dir: Mary Lambert
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Ralph Singleton
|
||
Start Date: 1/92, Atlanta
|
||
Greed.
|
||
|
||
THE SAINT December
|
||
Dir: Renny Harlin
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Robert Evans
|
||
Screenplay: Terry Hayes
|
||
Simon Templar comes to the big screen. I hope Roger Moore gets a cameo.
|
||
|
||
SCHOOL TIES Fall
|
||
Dir: Robert Mandel
|
||
Cast: Bredan Fraser, Matt Damon, Randall Batinkoff, Chris O'Donnell, Cole
|
||
Hauser, Anthony Rapp, Ben Affleck, Andrew Lowery, Amy Locane
|
||
Producer: Sherry Lansing
|
||
Screenplay: Darryl Ponicsan
|
||
D.P.: Freddie Francis
|
||
Start Date: 9/3/91, Massachusetts
|
||
|
||
SHOW AND TELL August
|
||
Dir: Chris Crowe
|
||
Cast: Annabella Sciorra, Anthony LaPaglia, Jamey Sheridan, Deborah Unger, John
|
||
Leguizamo, Alan Alda, Jill Clayburgh, Anthony Heald
|
||
Producer: Martin Bregman, Michael Scott Bregman
|
||
Screenplay: Chris Crowe
|
||
D.P.: Michael Chapman
|
||
Start Date: 10/21/91, New York, North Carolina
|
||
Formerly titled SESSIONS.
|
||
|
||
WAYNE'S WORLD February 14
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
Dir: Penelope Spheeris
|
||
Cast: Mike Myers, Dana Carvey, Rob Lowe, Lara Flynn Boyle, Donna Dixon, Colleen
|
||
Camp
|
||
Exec. Producer: Howard W. Koch
|
||
Producer: Lorne Michaels
|
||
Screenplay: Mike Myers, Bonnie Turner, Terry Turner
|
||
Start Date: 8/2/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Another hang-over from Mr. Tartikoff's bag o' tricks winds up at Paramount as
|
||
a feature is made of the Cable-TV public access show segment of NBC's Saturday
|
||
Night Live starring those two mid-pubescent air-guitarers hits the big screen.
|
||
Lowe plays a TV exec who sees commerical potential in the access show. Boyle
|
||
is Wayne's ex-girlfriend and Dixon is Garth's dream girl, a curvaceous doughnut
|
||
shop employee.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Samuel Goldwyn
|
||
--------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
35 UP January 15 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Michael Apted
|
||
Producer: Michael Apted
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Apted
|
||
D.P.: George Jesse Turner
|
||
The fifth in director Apted's series of documentaries begun 28 years ago
|
||
following a group of people's lives every seven years has been picked up by
|
||
Goldwyn. It is the highest grossing documentary in Australian history.
|
||
|
||
BEST INTENTIONS May 22 (limited)
|
||
Dir: Bille August
|
||
Cast: Ghita Norby, Max Von Sydow, Pernilla Ostergreen, Samuel Froler
|
||
Screenplay: Ingmar Bergman
|
||
The story of Bergman's parents' courtship deals with class conflicts and
|
||
passions which lead to near violence. The film covers the decade of 1909 to
|
||
1918 before Ingmar's birth. The film was released in Sweden as a six hour TV
|
||
mini-series. Von Sydow plays his maternal grandfather. August directed
|
||
PELLE THE CONQUEROR.
|
||
|
||
MISSISSIPPI MASALA February 5 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Mira Nair February 14 (LA)
|
||
Cast: Denzel Washington, ASarita Choudhury, Roshan Seth, Sharmila Tagore, Tico
|
||
Wells, Charles Dutton
|
||
Producers: Mira Nair, Michael Nozik
|
||
Screenplay: Sooni Taraporeavala
|
||
D.P.: Ed Lachman
|
||
Start Date: 8/27/90, Greenwood MS, Kampala Uganda
|
||
Story of an Indian family that was forced to flee Idi Amin's Uganda in 1972.
|
||
Twenty years later they find themselves in Greenwood MS, where the daughter
|
||
falls in love with an entrepreneurial carpet cleaner (Washington), which causes
|
||
tension within both the Indian and Black communities. The word is excellent.
|
||
|
||
MR. WONDERFUL TBA
|
||
Dir: Anthony Minghella
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Marianne Moloney
|
||
Screenplay: Vicki Polon, Amy Schor
|
||
Start Date: 1/92, New York
|
||
|
||
THE PLAYBOYS May 1
|
||
Dir: Gillies MacKinnon
|
||
Cast: Albert Finney, Aidan Quinn, Robin Wright, Milo O'Shea, Niamh Cusack, Ian
|
||
McElhinney, Stella McCusker, Niall Buggy
|
||
Producer: Bill Cartlidge, Simon Perry
|
||
Screenplay: Shane Connaughton, Kerry Crabbe
|
||
D.P.: Jack Conroy
|
||
Start Date: 7/1/91, Ireland
|
||
Tara is a strong-willed woman who falls for a traveling actor when his troupe
|
||
sets ip their theatre in her village during the late 1950s. The town police
|
||
sergeant, who has long been in love with Tara, is determined to destroy this
|
||
budding romance. Connaughton wrote MY LEFT FOOT. Wright of THE PRINCESS BRIDE
|
||
replaced the preggers Annette Bening.
|
||
|
||
RETURN TO MYSTIC PIZZA Summer
|
||
Sequel to the 1988 hit that brought Julia Roberts notoriety.
|
||
|
||
ROCK-A-DOODLE April 3
|
||
Rating: "G"
|
||
Dir: Don Bluth
|
||
Cast: Voices of Glen Campbell, Ellen Greene, Christopher Plummer, Phil Harris,
|
||
Sandy Duncan, Eddie Deezen
|
||
Producers: Don Bluth, Gary Goldman, John Pomeroy
|
||
Screenplay: David N. Weiss
|
||
Animated musical about a rooster with the power to bring up the sun. There
|
||
is an 18 minute live-action sequence concerning the farm family. From
|
||
Sullivan/Bluth Productions, creators of AN AMERICAN TAIL, THE LAND BEFORE TIME,
|
||
THE SECRET OF NIMH and ALL DOGS GO TO HEAVEN. Opened in London in July, 1991
|
||
to good notices. Will go out with 1500 prints.
|
||
|
||
THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY TBA
|
||
Cast: Eric Bogosian
|
||
|
||
TRACES OF RED June
|
||
Dir: Andy Wolk
|
||
Cast: Jim Belushi, Lorraine Bracco, Tony Goldwyn, Jim Piddock
|
||
Producer: Mark Gordon
|
||
Screenplay: Jim Piddock
|
||
D.P.: Tim Suhrstedt
|
||
Start Date: 11/4/91, Palm Beach FL.
|
||
Erotic thriller about two police detectives involved with a politically
|
||
powerful woman. Formerly titled BEYOND SUSPICION.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
SGE
|
||
----
|
||
|
||
MCBAIN 1.85 January 31 (2nd rel.)
|
||
Rating: "R" Strong war violence, language and drug use.
|
||
Dir: James Glickenhaus
|
||
Cast: Christopher Walken, Maria Conchita Alonso, Michael Ironside, Steve James,
|
||
Jay Patterson, T.G. Waits, Victor Argo
|
||
Producer: J. Boyce Harman, Jr.
|
||
Screenplay: James Glickenhaus
|
||
Negative Cost: $16 million
|
||
This action film involves a group of Vietnam vets who honor a
|
||
pact made to a former comrade 20 years previously. Features extensive
|
||
computer generated effects. Opened on 9/20/91 with a $1.1 million ad-pub
|
||
budget and 130 prints in NY and LA and tepid results.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Skouras
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
HIGHWAY 61 March
|
||
Cast: Don McKellar, Valerie Buhagier
|
||
|
||
HUNTING February (LA)
|
||
Cast: John Savage, Kerry Armstrong
|
||
|
||
I DON'T BUY KISSES ANYMORE February 14 (LA)
|
||
Cast: Jason Alexander, Nia Peeples
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Symphony Pictures
|
||
-----------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
SECRET SOCIETY TBA
|
||
Dir: Diane Keaton
|
||
Cast: Emilio Estevez, Charlie Sheen, Diane Keaton
|
||
Producers: Martin Sheen, William R. Greenblatt
|
||
A story of racial injustice in the South.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Taurus
|
||
------
|
||
|
||
THE EYES OF THE WORLD late Fall
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: Melanie Griffith, Tracy Griffith
|
||
Screenplay: Melanie Griffith, Tracy Griffith
|
||
Start Date: Summer 1992
|
||
The Griffith sisters star together for the first time in a vehicle that they
|
||
also co-wrote. A portrait artist circa 1912 must choose between being famous
|
||
by compromising his art or painting his subjects as he really sees them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Trimark
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE BUBBLEMAN TBA
|
||
Dir: Stanley Kramer
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Stanley Kramer
|
||
Screenplay: Ron Pearlman, Bob Woodburn, Stanley Kramer
|
||
Start Date: 1/92, Los Angeles
|
||
Negative Cost: $15 million
|
||
Romantic comedy is Stanley Kramer's first film since THE RUNNER STUMBLES in
|
||
1979.
|
||
|
||
CITIZEN SANE TBA
|
||
Negative Cost: $7 million
|
||
A superhero spoof.
|
||
|
||
A DOG OF FLANDERS
|
||
Dir: Daniel Petrie
|
||
Cast: Richard Harris, Max Von Sydow
|
||
Producer: Gary Omura
|
||
Screenplay: David Keating, based on Ouida's novel, previously adapted for 1959
|
||
20th Century Fox film.
|
||
Start Date: 9/16/91, Bokrijk Belgium
|
||
|
||
DOLLY DEAREST February 21
|
||
Dir: Maria Lease
|
||
Cast: Denise Crosby, Sam Bottoms, Rip Torn, Chris Demetral, Candy Hutson
|
||
Producer: Daniel Cady
|
||
Screenplay: Maria Lease
|
||
Archaeologist Karl Resnick (Torn) unknowingly unleashes a terrifying evil by
|
||
opening a centuries-old mass grave in Mexico filled with the corpses of an
|
||
ancient cult, where hundreds of people were buried alive. Dollmaker Eliot
|
||
Read (Bottoms) has moved his family to Mexico after purchasing a factory so
|
||
that he can introduce the world to a beautiful doll, the Dolly Dearest. The
|
||
Read family little suspects the horror that awaits them as Dolly Dearest has
|
||
been possessed by the evil spirit.
|
||
|
||
THE FAVOUR, THE WATCH AND THE VERY BIG FISH March 13
|
||
Rating: "R" for language and sensuality
|
||
Dir: Ben Lewin
|
||
Cast: Bob Hoskins, Jeff Goldblum, Natasha Richardson, Michel Blanc
|
||
Producer: Michelle de Broca
|
||
Screenplay: Ben Lewin
|
||
Louis (Hoskins), a struggling photographer, searches for the perfect model to
|
||
pose as Christ on the cross. His prayers are answered when he meets and falls
|
||
in love with a beautiful actress named Sybil (Richardson), who unwittingly
|
||
leads him to the perfect Jesus, a destitute ex-con (Goldblum). But Louis'
|
||
good fortune starts to unravel when he discovers that his Christ model is a
|
||
madman who is also in love with Sybil and is beginning to take his new-found
|
||
divinity far too seriously.
|
||
|
||
FINAL APPROACH 2.35 (SS) (CDS) March 6 (NY, LA)
|
||
Dir: Eric Steven Stahl
|
||
Cast: James B. Sikking, Hector Elizondo, Madolyn Smith, Kevin McCarthy
|
||
Producer: Eric Steven Stahl
|
||
Negative Cost: $13 million
|
||
This 'scope Cinema Digital Sound film's claim to fame is that it is the first
|
||
film to have an entirely digital soundtrack. It played a one-week
|
||
engagement in CDS at the UA Coronet in Westwood for Oscar qualification. It is
|
||
a psychological thriller concerning a test-pilot who finds himself in a bizarre
|
||
alternate reality. Notices are mediocre.
|
||
|
||
INTERCEPTOR April 3
|
||
Dir: Michael Cohn
|
||
Cast: Jurgen Prochnow, Elizabeth Morehead, Andrew Divoff
|
||
Producers: Kevin M. Kallberg, Oliver G. Hess
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Ferris, John Brancato
|
||
An action thriller about a daring international plot to steal the Stealth
|
||
fighter, the pride of the U.S. Air Force. A sadistic arms dealer (Prochnow)
|
||
plans to intercept a giant C-5 cargo jet en route to the U.S. from the Middle
|
||
East to steal its secret cargo of two Stealth fighters.
|
||
|
||
INTO THE SUN February 7
|
||
Rating: "R" for language
|
||
Dir: Fritz Kiersch
|
||
Cast: Anthony Michael Hall, Michael Pare, Deborah Maria Moore, Terry Kiser
|
||
Producers: Oliver Hess, Kevin Kallberg
|
||
Screenplay: John Brancato, Michael Ferris
|
||
Start Date: 3/5/91, Los Angeles
|
||
A fun-filled action adventure about a young self-center Hollywood superstar
|
||
Tom Slade (Hall) who, in preparation for an upcoming film role, is teamed with
|
||
Captain Paul "Shotgun" Watkins (Pare), a tough, disciplined, by-the-book Top
|
||
Gun pilot stationed in Sicily. This incompatible duo become unlikely allies
|
||
when they are thrust unexpectedly into a real life-or-death situation involving
|
||
combat with rebel Middle Eastern soldiers.
|
||
|
||
LEPRECHAUN May 8
|
||
Dir: Mark Jones
|
||
Cast: Warwick Davis, Jennifer Aniston, Ken Olandt, Mark Holton, Robert Gorman
|
||
Producer: Jeffrey B. Mallian
|
||
Screenplay: Mark Jones
|
||
D.P.: Levie Isaaks
|
||
Start Date: 10/28/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Davis, who played WILLOW, stars as a powerful, wicked leprechaun who embarks
|
||
on a reign of terror to seek revenge against the inhabitants of a rural town
|
||
who have stolen his pot of gold.
|
||
|
||
THE PHILADELPHIA EXPERIMENT II TBA
|
||
|
||
THE SILK ROAD February 21
|
||
Dir: Junta Sato
|
||
Cast: Toshiyuki Nishida, Koichi Sato, Anna Nakagawa, Tsunehiko Watase
|
||
Exec Producers: Yasuyoshi Tokuma, Gohei Kogure, Kazuo Haruna
|
||
Screenplay: Tsuyoshi Yoshida, Junya Sato, based on Yasushi Inoue's novel DUN
|
||
HUANG
|
||
A sweeping tale of romance and conflict in ancient China, a compelling
|
||
personal story of self-discovery set against an epic canvas of desert warfare
|
||
and chivalry. This landmark Chinese-Japanese co-production tells the story of
|
||
a young scholar's coming of age on the war-torn tribal fringes of the Song
|
||
Dynasty in the 11th Century. In Japanese with English subtitles.
|
||
|
||
STEPFATHER III: FATHER'S DAY March 20
|
||
Rating: "R" for violence and some sensuality
|
||
Dir: Guy Magar
|
||
Cast: Robert Wightman, Priscilla Barnes, Season Hubley, David Tom, John Ingle,
|
||
Dennis Paladino
|
||
Producers: Guy Magar, Paul Moen
|
||
Screenplay: Guy Magar, Lee Wasserman
|
||
The film traces the Stepfather's search for an ideal, ready-made family.
|
||
Arriving in the small town of Deer View, the Stepfather (Wightman) soon becomes
|
||
involved with single mother Christine (Barnes), who has a thirteen-year-old
|
||
paraplegic son Andy (Tom). Conflicts arise when Andy leaves for the summer
|
||
to live with his father. This temporary void in his new family leads to the
|
||
Stepfather's inadvertant involvement with another single mother Jennifer
|
||
(Hubley), who has recently moved into town with her young son. Andy's
|
||
unexpected early return throws off the Stepfather's plans, eventually bringing
|
||
about the final conflict between the Stepfather and his two families.
|
||
|
||
WARLOCK II TBA
|
||
Yes, it's a sequel to the stylish pic.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
TriStar
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
|
||
BASIC INSTINCT March 20
|
||
Dir: Paul Verhoeven
|
||
Cast: Michael Douglas, Sharon Stone, George Dzundza, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Denis
|
||
Arndt, Leilani Sarelle
|
||
Producer: Alan Marshall
|
||
Screenplay: Joe Eszterhas
|
||
D.P.: Jan De Bont
|
||
Start Date: 4/5/91, San Francisco, Carmel, Los Angeles
|
||
Very controversial thriller about a lesbian serial killer and the cop who
|
||
becomes sexually obsessed with one of three dangerous suspects. Douglas was
|
||
paid a wallet-busting $14 million for this one. This was to have been
|
||
released in CDS.
|
||
|
||
BITTER MOON (Carolco) TBA
|
||
Dir: Roman Polanski
|
||
Cast: Peter Coyote, Emmanuelle Seigner, Hugh Grant, Kristin Scott-Thomas,
|
||
Victor Banerjee
|
||
Producer: Roman Polanski
|
||
Screenplay: Roman Polanski
|
||
D.P. Tonino Delli Colli
|
||
Start Date: 8/5/91, Paris
|
||
This Carolco production is the latest effort from the talented and notorious
|
||
Mr. Polanski. This erotic thriller was filmed aboard a cruise ship that sailed
|
||
from Venice to Istanbul and Athens, as well as Paris.
|
||
|
||
BREAKING LEGS TBA
|
||
Dir: Bud Yorkin
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Screenplay: Bruce Jay Friedman
|
||
Producer: Bud Yorkin
|
||
Start Date: Spring 1992
|
||
Negative Cost: $15-$16 million
|
||
Yorkin produces and directs a cinematic version of the Off-Broadway play that
|
||
he co-produced. It concerns a young professor seeking backing for a play he
|
||
has written. He winds up getting it financed by the mob. In the screen
|
||
version he will come to Hollywood to try to get his movie made. Yorkin is
|
||
seeking Tom Hanks to topline.
|
||
|
||
BUDDY COPS TBA
|
||
Dir: Allan Metter
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producers: David Permut, Robert Kosberg
|
||
Screenplay: David O'Malley, B.J. Nelson
|
||
Start Date: 10/91, Dallas
|
||
|
||
CHARLIE (Carolco) December
|
||
Dir: Richard Attenborough
|
||
Cast: Robert Downey Jr., Dan Aykroyd, Geraldine Chaplin, Milla Jovovich,
|
||
Mildred Harris, Moira Kelly, Kevin Kline, Diane Lane, Penelope Ann Miller,
|
||
Paul Rhys, Marisa Tomei, Nancy Travis, David Duchovny, Michael Goorjian
|
||
Producers: Richard Attenborough, Mario Kassar
|
||
Screenplay: William Boyd, based on "My Autobiography" by Charles Chaplin and
|
||
"Chaplin -- His Life and Art" by David Robinson
|
||
D.P.: Sven Nykvist
|
||
Start Date: 10/14/91, England, Los Angeles
|
||
Negative Cost: $31 million
|
||
This biopic headlining Downey as Charlie Chaplin has jumped from
|
||
Universal to Carolco. This story of his life begins with his impoverished
|
||
youth in London, continues with his major achievements during Hollywood's
|
||
Golden Age, his fears concerning "talkies", his conflicts with J. Edgar Hoover,
|
||
his exile from America and his brief, triumphant return to accept his special
|
||
Academy Award. Downey will age from 19 to 83 in the process. Aykroyd plays
|
||
Mack Sennett (of Keystone Kops fame), Geraldine Chaplin plays her real
|
||
grandmother, Hannah Chaplin. Jovovich (RETURN TO THE BLUE LAGOON) is Mildred
|
||
Harris, Chaplin's child actress first wife. Kelly (THE CUTTING EDGE, THE BOY
|
||
WHO CRIED BITCH) is Oona Chaplin, his last and dearest wife. Kline works with
|
||
Attenborough for the second time (CRY FREEDOM), this time as Douglas Fairbanks
|
||
Sr. Lane (COTTON CLUB, A LITTLE ROMANCE) is Paulette Goddard, Chaplin's third
|
||
wife and one of the biggest stars of the 40's. Miller (AWAKENINGS, OTHER
|
||
PEOPLE'S MONEY) is Edna Purviance, the Nevada secretary who became Chaplin's
|
||
first leading lady. Rhys (Royal Shakespeare Co., VINCENT AND THEO) is Chaplin's
|
||
elder half-brother Sydney who became Charlie's business manager after abandoning
|
||
his own acting career. Tomei (OSCAR) plays early silent screen star Mabel
|
||
Normand and Travis (AIR AMERICA) is would-be actress Joan Barry, who almost
|
||
destroyed Chaplin.
|
||
|
||
CLIFFHANGER 2.35 TBA
|
||
Dir: Renny Harlin
|
||
Cast: Sylvester Stallone
|
||
Producers: Alan Marshall, Renny Harlin
|
||
Screenplay: Mike France
|
||
D.P. Oliver Wood
|
||
Start Date: 1/92
|
||
Stallone is a park ranger who must make a daring rescue of fallen friends
|
||
while mountain climbing. Screenwriter France is a former TriStar staff
|
||
reader. There are two other major parts, one male, one female, as yet uncast.
|
||
This project is very close to turnaround due to very high costs, reportedly
|
||
some $25 million below-the-line.
|
||
|
||
CITY OF JOY 1.85 April 3
|
||
Dir: Roland Joffe
|
||
Cast: Patrick Swayze, Pauline Collins, Art Malik, Om Puri, Shabana Azmi
|
||
Producers: Roland Joffe, Jake Eberts
|
||
Screenplay: Mark Medoff, based on Dominique Lapierre's novel
|
||
D.P.: Peter Biziou
|
||
Start Date: 2/9/91, Calcutta India, London England
|
||
An American doctor travels to Calcutta and unexpectedly finds love and beauty
|
||
surrounded by the city's stifling poverty. Apparently the filmmakers have been
|
||
experiencing problems with the locals on location. The film will return to
|
||
India in the Fall to shoot the monsoon season scenes. Some interior pickup
|
||
shots were done at Pinewood Studios in London in late August. Delayed from
|
||
Christmas limited release.
|
||
|
||
EVEN COWGIRLS GET THE BLUES TBA
|
||
Dir: Gus Van Sant
|
||
Cast: Jodie Foster, Madonna, Uma Thurman
|
||
Have thumb will travel?
|
||
|
||
HELL CAMP TBA
|
||
Dir: Milos Forman
|
||
Cast: Dylan Walsh
|
||
Producer: Michael Hausman
|
||
Screenplay: Adam Davidson, Milos Forman
|
||
D.P.: John Bailey
|
||
Start Date: 1/92, Tokyo, New York
|
||
Story of a New Yorker sent by his Japanese-owned company to train in Japan
|
||
where he becomes an accomplish sumo wrestler has been put on hold due to
|
||
conflicts with the Sumo Wrestling Society of Japan. It was to have begun
|
||
production on 11/18/91 for a Christmas 1992 release.
|
||
|
||
HIDEAWAY 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Cathleen Summers
|
||
Screenplay: TBA, based on Dean Koontz' novel
|
||
Book is to be released in January 1992. Story is a battle between two men
|
||
who have returned from the dead....one good, the other evil. Dennis Quaid's
|
||
production company has the rights to this via TriStar. No word yet as to
|
||
whether Quaid will topline.
|
||
|
||
LEGENDS OF THE FALL 1993
|
||
Dir: Ed Zwick
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Screenplay: TBA, based on Jim Harrison's novella
|
||
A father and his three sons all have loved the same woman at some time in
|
||
their lives in this Montana-based piece that spans 1912 to 1932. Talks have
|
||
been held with Mel Gibson, Tom Cruise and Sean Connery to star.
|
||
|
||
LES MISERABLES 1993
|
||
Dir: Bruce Beresford
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Cameron Mackintosh
|
||
Screenplay: Alain Boublil, Calude-Michel Schonberg
|
||
Start Date: Spring 1992, France, England
|
||
Negative Cost: $40 million
|
||
Big-screen adaptation of the musical stage hit.
|
||
|
||
MR. JONES Fall
|
||
Dir: Michael Figgis
|
||
Cast: Richard Gere, Lena Olin, Anne Bancroft
|
||
Producers: Alan Greisman, Debra Greenfield
|
||
Screenplay: Eric Roth, Michael Cristofer
|
||
D.P.: Juan Ruiz-Anchia
|
||
Start Date: 11/11/91, Los Angeles, San Diego
|
||
A charming manic-depressive man falls in love with a psychiatrist. That's
|
||
two Gere films this year dealing with psychiatrists.....
|
||
|
||
THE MISTRESS TBA
|
||
Dir: Barry Primus
|
||
Cast: Robert Wuhl, Robert DeNiro, Martin Landau, Danny Aiello, Eli Wallach
|
||
Exec Producer: Robert DeNiro
|
||
Producers: Meir Tepper, Ruth Charny
|
||
Screenplay: Jonathan Lawton
|
||
TriStar has domestic rights to this showbiz comedy from Tribeca Films.
|
||
|
||
THE QUIZ SHOW TBA
|
||
Dir: Harold Becker
|
||
Cast: Richard Dreyfuss
|
||
Producers: Mark Johnson, Fred Zolo
|
||
Screenplay: Paul Antanasio
|
||
The scandalous days of the Fifties' television quiz shows are relived.
|
||
|
||
SNIPER Spring
|
||
Dir: Luis Llosa
|
||
Cast: Tom Berenger, Billy Zane
|
||
Producer: Robert Rosen
|
||
Screenplay: Crash Leyland
|
||
This negative pickup from Odyssey Entertainment is set in the Central
|
||
American jungles. Berenger is a marine sniper and Zane is his untested new
|
||
partner from the NSC. Their mission is to terminate the life of a renegade
|
||
Panamanian general in charge of a resistance movement.
|
||
|
||
SO I MARRIED AN AXE MURDERER TBA
|
||
Cast: Chevy Chase
|
||
|
||
THUNDERHEART May 1
|
||
Dir: Michael Apted
|
||
Cast: Val Kilmer, Graham Greene, Sam Shepard, Fred Ward, Sheila Tousey
|
||
Producers: Robert DeNiro, John Fusco, Jane Rosenthal
|
||
Screenplay: John Fusco
|
||
D.P.: Roger Deakins
|
||
Start Date: 6/13/91, Rapid City, SD
|
||
Negative Cost: $15 million
|
||
DANCES WITH WOLVES' Oscar nominee Greene co-stars in this film concerning
|
||
the investigation of an FBI agent who is sent to South Dakota to uncover the
|
||
murder of an Indian tribesman. Through his efforts he discovers his own Indian
|
||
heritage. The Sioux have permitted the filmmakers to shoot in locations that
|
||
are the sacred grounds of the tribe. Kilmer last starred in THE DOORS.
|
||
Apted has a couple of documentaries under his belt most recently, INCIDENT AT
|
||
OGLALA and 35 UP, along with CLASS ACTION and GORILLAS IN THE MIST. From
|
||
Tribeca Films.
|
||
|
||
UNIVERSAL SOLDIER July 17
|
||
Dir: Roland Emmerich
|
||
Cast: Jean-Claude Van Damme, Dolph Lundgren, Ally Walker, Ed O'Ross, Jerry
|
||
Orbach
|
||
Producer: Craig Baumgarten, Allen Shapiro
|
||
Screenplay: Richard Rothstein, Christopher Leitch
|
||
D.P.: Walter Lindenlaub
|
||
Start Date: 8/12/91, Arizona
|
||
With those two headliners, you know the ground'll be a-shakin' in this one.
|
||
|
||
WILDER NAPALM September 25
|
||
Dir: Glen Gordon Caron
|
||
Cast: Debra Winger, Dennis Quaid, Arliss Howard, Jim Varney, M. Emmet Walsh
|
||
Producers: Barry Levinson, Mark Johnson, Stuart Cornfeld
|
||
Screenplay: Vince Gilligan
|
||
D.P.: Jerry Hartleben
|
||
Start Date: 11/14/91, Florida
|
||
Quaid is a carnival clown in an offbeat, contemporary romantic science
|
||
fiction-comedy. Varney finally gets to play someone other than Ernest
|
||
(I hope). Howard is a volunteer fireman and Quaid is his carnival clown twin
|
||
brother who live together in a mobile home in rural Virginia. They set fires
|
||
and vie for the affections of the same woman (Winger).
|
||
|
||
WIND Summer
|
||
Dir: Carroll Ballard
|
||
Cast: Matthew Modine, Jennifer Grey, Stellan Skarsgard, Rebecca Miller, Cliff
|
||
Robertson, Jack Thompson
|
||
Exec. Producers: Francis Ford Coppola, Fred Fuchs
|
||
Producers: Mata Yamamoto, Tom Luddy
|
||
Screenplay: Rudy Wurlitzer, Larry Gross, Mac Gudgeon
|
||
D.P.: John Toll
|
||
Negative Cost: $29 million
|
||
It's all about romance against the backdrop of sailboat racing as the 1987
|
||
sailing team defends its Americas Cup trophy against Australia. Ballard
|
||
directed THE BLACK STALLION and NEVER CRY WOLF. Shot in Australia, Newport
|
||
RI, Utah and Hawaii. Delayed from an April 15th release.
|
||
|
||
WOODY ALLEN FALL PROJECT '91 Fall
|
||
Dir: Woody Allen
|
||
Cast: Woody Allen, Mia Farrow, Judy Davis, Juliette Lewis, Liam Neeson,
|
||
Cristi Conaway, Sydney Pollack, Lysette Anthony
|
||
Producers: Robert Greenhut, Woody Allen
|
||
Screenplay: Woody Allen
|
||
D.P.: Carlo Di Palma
|
||
Start Date: 11/4/91, New York
|
||
Woody has been greenlighted on doing one film for TriStar, because Orion is
|
||
destitute. Apparently Woody wants to film it in Super 16 and blow it up to
|
||
35mm for a grainy, documentary-like effect. TriStar wants him to use 35mm all
|
||
the way. Woody isn't used to getting interference from the studio.... Film
|
||
concerns a Barnard professor who becomes romantically involved with one of his
|
||
students. Emily Lloyd was replaced by Juliette Lewis of CAPE FEAR fame as his
|
||
amour.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Triton
|
||
------
|
||
|
||
|
||
ALAN AND NAOMI January 31
|
||
Dir: Sterling VanWagenen
|
||
Cast: Lukas Haas, Michael Gross, Vanessa Zaoul, Zohra Lampert
|
||
Producer: David Anderson, Mark Balsam
|
||
Screenplay: Jordan Horowitz
|
||
Story of a friendship between two teenagers in the aftermath of WWII. Opens
|
||
in 18 markets.
|
||
|
||
THE HAIRDRESSER'S HUSBAND April 17 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Patrice Leconte
|
||
Cast: Jean Rochefort, Anna Galiena, Philippe Clevenot, Roland Bertin
|
||
Producer: Thierry De Ganay
|
||
Screenplay: Claude Klotz, Patrice Leconte
|
||
A forty-year-old man has been determined to marry a hairdresser since the
|
||
age of twelve. His dream is finally realized and his passion so great that
|
||
his new wife is always aware that she is the most beautiful woman in the world
|
||
to him. Leconte directed MONSIEUR HIRE.
|
||
|
||
HEARTS OF DARKNESS: A FILMMAKER'S APOCALPYSE January 10 (LA,limited)
|
||
Rating: "R" for language
|
||
Dir: Fax Bahr
|
||
Cast: Eleanor Coppola, Francis Ford Coppola, Robert Duvall, Dennis Hopper,
|
||
George Lucas, John Milius, Martin Sheen
|
||
Producers: George Zaloom, Les Mayfield
|
||
Screenplay: Fax Bahr, George Hickenlooper
|
||
Top-notch documentary concerning the ordeal of Francis Coppola's shoot on
|
||
APOCALYPSE NOW will be given a limited theatrical run after exposure on
|
||
Showtime. 60 hours of 16mm footage shot by Eleanor Coppola was discovered in
|
||
Zoetrope's vaults. Excerpts of this footage, along with newly shot interviews
|
||
with the filmmakers and actors (sans Brando) go into the docu. After running o
|
||
on Showtime, this opened in NY, Seattle, SF and Dallas on 11/27/91.
|
||
|
||
THE LUNATIC January 31 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Lol Creme February 14 (LA)
|
||
Cast: Paul Campbell, Julie T. Wallace
|
||
Ribald comedy with a lusty German woman who takes two Jamaican lovers while
|
||
on vacation in a small village. Director was a founding member of the rock
|
||
group 10CC.
|
||
|
||
MINDWALK Expansion Continues
|
||
Dir: Bernt Capra January 31 (Boston)
|
||
Cast: Liv Ullmann, Sam Waterston, John Heard, Ione Skye
|
||
Producer: Adrianna AJ Cohen
|
||
Politically correct film set against the remarkable Abbey of Mont Saint
|
||
Michel, this ecological conservation film deals with a meeting of three minds.
|
||
Ullmann is a scientist, Waterston a politician and Heard a poet. They
|
||
exchange, debate and share ideas about controversial ideas facing the world in
|
||
the 1990's. It is based on a book "The Turning Point" by director Capra's
|
||
brother Fritjof, who also wrote "The Tao of Physics". Director Bernt was
|
||
production designer on THIS IS SPINAL TAP and BAGDAD CAFE. Film has garnered
|
||
great kudos at festivals in Sundance, Denver and Cleveland. It was at the
|
||
Seattle Film Festival in May '91. Popular among those who don't mind talky
|
||
films.
|
||
|
||
TOTO THE HERO February 21 (NY)
|
||
Dir: Jaco van Dormael March 6 (wider)
|
||
Screenplay: Jaco van Dormael
|
||
Winner of the 1991 Cannes Camera d'Or award is a French-language film about
|
||
a man who looks back at his earlier life, surmising what it might have been and
|
||
what it has become. This film is the largest grossing French-language film
|
||
from Belgium in history.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Triumph
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
|
||
AMBULANCE TBA
|
||
Dir: Larry Cohen
|
||
Cast: Eric Roberts, James Earl Jones, Megan Gallagher, Richard Bright, Red
|
||
Buttons
|
||
Producers: Moctezuma Esparza, Robert Katz
|
||
Screenplay: Larry Cohen
|
||
Another thriller from Larry Cohen..this time strange ambulances take people
|
||
away. The doctors are dealing in human guinea pigs. Excellent advanced word.
|
||
Postponed from a 10/90 opening.
|
||
|
||
BRENDA STARR late April/early May
|
||
Dir: Robert Ellis Miller
|
||
Cast: Brooke Shields, Timothy Dalton, Tony Peck, Diana Scarwid, Jeffrey Tambor,
|
||
Charles Durning, Eddie Albert, Nestor Serrano, Henry Gibson
|
||
Producer: Myron A. Hyman
|
||
Screenplay: Delia Ephron, Noreen Stone, James Buchanan
|
||
It's finally coming out!! This has only been completed for about five
|
||
years, caught up in litigation with Dino DeLaurentiis' defunct company. And
|
||
then it's reported quite awful, as well. It's so old, in fact, that I didn't
|
||
feel like digging that far back in the archives to get all of the production
|
||
info. Delayed twice again, latest time from Fall. Funded by some BCCI
|
||
accounts.....
|
||
|
||
BY THE SWORD TBA
|
||
Dir: Jeremy Paul Kagan
|
||
Cast: F. Murray Abraham, Eric Roberts
|
||
Start Date: 9/90, New York
|
||
Fencing academy instructor is jealous of the success of his new instructor.
|
||
|
||
THE GATE II February 28
|
||
Rating: "R" for scenes of drug use.
|
||
Dir: Tibor Takacs
|
||
Cast: Louis Tripp, Pamela Segall, James Villemaire, Simon Reynolds
|
||
Producer: Andras Hamori
|
||
Sequel to the moderate hit of 1986 with the same director.
|
||
|
||
HIT MAN TBA
|
||
Dir: Roy London
|
||
Cast: Forest Whitaker, Sherilyn Fenn, Louis Anderson, Conchata Ferrell, Seymour
|
||
Cassell, Jim Belushi, Sharon Stone, Lois Chiles
|
||
Producer: Amin Q. Chaudri
|
||
Screenplay: Kenneth Pressman, based on his play "Insider's Price"
|
||
D.P.: Yuri Sokol
|
||
Start Date: 1/9/91, Pittsburgh, Sharon, PA
|
||
Suspense film starring a TWIN PEAKS luminary. Music is by Michel Colombier,
|
||
who performed the same services on NEW JACK CITY.
|
||
|
||
RUBY March 13
|
||
Dir: John Mackenzie
|
||
Cast: Danny Aiello, Sherilyn Fenn, Arliss Howard
|
||
Producers: Sigurjon Sighvatsson, Steve Golin
|
||
Screenplay: Stephen Davis, based on his play "Love Field"
|
||
This one's about Jack Ruby and his assassination of Lee Harvey Oswald. From
|
||
Propaganda Films.
|
||
|
||
WILD ORCHID II: TWO SHADES OF BLUE March 27
|
||
Rating: "R"
|
||
Dir: Zalman King
|
||
Cast: Nina Siemaszko, Tom Skerrit, Robert Davi, Wendy Hughes
|
||
Exec. Producer: Mark Damon
|
||
Producers: David Saunders, Rafael Eisenman
|
||
Screenplay: Zalman King, George Gary
|
||
D.P.: Mark Reshovsky
|
||
Start Date: 10/12/90, Los Angeles
|
||
A beautiful woman's romance with a handsome, wealthy man is jeopardized when
|
||
he sees her in a fake porno film. May open April 3rd. Formerly titled BLUE
|
||
MOVIE BLUE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Turner Pictures
|
||
---------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
ARSENIC AND OLD LACE
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Yet another remake of this classic tale will be produced by the venerable
|
||
Lord Lew Grade. Discussions are underway with Shirley MacLaine and Shelley
|
||
Winters to play the aunts. John Cusack and Mark Harmon are under consieration
|
||
for the lead. This may go to TNT domestically.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
20th Century Fox
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
ALIEN3 2.35 70mm (SS) May 22
|
||
Dir: David Fincher
|
||
Cast: Sigourney Weaver, Charles Dutton, Charles Dance, Brian Glover, Paul
|
||
McGann, Ralph Brown, Daniel Webb, Lance Henriksen
|
||
Producers: David Giler, Walter Hill, Gordon Carroll
|
||
Screenplay: John Fasano, Larry Ferguson
|
||
D.P.: Alex Thomson
|
||
Start Date: 1/14/91, London
|
||
Negative Cost: $57+ million
|
||
Third time's the charm? Ripley arrives on an orbiting prison space station
|
||
only to again be faced with battling the Alien while hindered by the lack of
|
||
technology in this new place. Fincher is a first-time feature director,
|
||
having conquered the music video world already, particularly for Madonna.
|
||
Visual Effects are provided by Boss Films. Supervisor Richard Edlund says the
|
||
EFX will be vastly more sophisticated and numerous than in the previous two
|
||
films. The title alien will be more mobile than in the past and there will
|
||
be some "digital scene creation", such as Edlund used in GHOST's end sequence.
|
||
Production design by multiple Oscar winner Norman Reynolds. The film will go
|
||
through four weeks of reshoots in LA commencing December 9th. It's apparently
|
||
a mess! Fox' exec. VP Tom Sherak says "there's no better way to launch Summer
|
||
1992 that with this latest chapter in the series, which is a stunning
|
||
continuation of the story both creatively and technologically". Film has
|
||
been twice delayed, from November/December 1991, to January/February 1992,
|
||
to Memorial Day Weekend.
|
||
February/March
|
||
BACK IN THE USSR February 7
|
||
Rating: "R", for some language and violence, and for a scene of sensuality.
|
||
Dir: Deran Serafian
|
||
Cast: Frank Whaley, Natalya Negoda, Roman Polanski
|
||
Producers: Lindsey Smith, Ilmar Taska
|
||
Screenplay: Lindsey Smith
|
||
Start Date: 10/1/90, Moscow
|
||
This romantic thriller was shot in and around Moscow. It depicts an American
|
||
student caught up in art theft and murder. as he is framed for murder when a
|
||
priceless icon is stolen. Whaley was last seen in CAREER OPPORTUNITIES and
|
||
THE DOORS. Negoda starred in LITTLE VERA. Formerly titled ICONS.
|
||
From Largo Entertainment. May only receive limited theatrical exposure and/or
|
||
go straight to video.
|
||
|
||
BEFORE I WAKE (Pentamerica) March
|
||
Dir: Michael Lessac
|
||
Cast: Kathleen Turner, Tommy Lee Jones, Esther Rolle, Park Overall, Asha Menina
|
||
Producers: Dale Pollock, Lianne Halfon, Wolfgang Glattes
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Lessac
|
||
A mother's young daughter suddenly becomes mute and develops unusual
|
||
abilities that medical science cannont explain. Postproduction was done at the
|
||
Skywalker Ranch. This is Lessac's feature directorial debut. He is known for
|
||
directing TV sitcoms.
|
||
|
||
BLACK CAT BONE: THE RETURN OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN TBA
|
||
Dir: John Hughes
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: John Hughes
|
||
Screenplay: John Hughes
|
||
Start Date: 3/16/92
|
||
Hughes has written a script that brings the Huck Finn character into modern
|
||
times.
|
||
|
||
THE CROWDED ROOM Fall
|
||
Dir: James Cameron
|
||
Cast: John Cusack
|
||
Producers: James Cameron, Larry Kassanoff
|
||
Screenplay: Todd Graff, from Daniel Keyes' novel "The Minds of Billy Milligan"
|
||
Start Date: 4/92
|
||
Cameron's new non-EFX film (before the EFX-laden SPIDERMAN) concerns a man
|
||
with multiple personalities. Cameron plans to use different actors to play
|
||
the other personalities! Graff wrote the script for USED PEOPLE and was a
|
||
featured actor in Cameron's THE ABYSS. From Lightstorm Entertainment.
|
||
|
||
FERNGULLY: THE LAST RAINFOREST (SR) April 17
|
||
Dir: Bill Kroyer
|
||
Voices: Tim Curry, Samantha Mathis, Christian Slater, Jonathan Ward, Robin
|
||
Williams, Grace Zabriskie, Cheech Marin, Tommy Chong
|
||
Exec. Producers: Robert W. Cort, Ted Field
|
||
Producers: Peter Faiman, Wayne Young
|
||
Screenplay: Jim Cox, based on original children's stories by Australian author
|
||
Diana Young
|
||
Composer: Alan Silvestri
|
||
Start Date: 6/4/90, Los Angeles
|
||
Animated musical feature with an ecological theme uses mythical characters
|
||
to deal with the threat to the world's rain forests. Delayed from 11/22/91.
|
||
There would have been an unprecedented THREE major animated films opening the
|
||
same day! Principal animation was completed by the 120+ animators in early
|
||
October 1991. The animation has been called "visually stunning". There are
|
||
35+ merchandising tie-ins, including Pizza Hut, Target Stores, USPS and Green
|
||
Giant. This is Fox' first animated feature since 1983.
|
||
Johnny Clegg, Sheena Easton, Elton John, Raffi, Tone Loc and Robin Williams
|
||
will perform original songs written for the animated musical fantasy.
|
||
Songwriters include Jimmy Webb, Thomas Dolby, Raffi, Jimmy Buffett, Elton John,
|
||
Bruce Roberts and Alan Silvestri.
|
||
The complete list of songs to be featured in the film follows: "Life is a
|
||
Magic Thing," written by Thomas Dolby and performed by Johnny Clegg; "A Dream
|
||
Worth Keeping," written by Jimmy Webb and Alan Silvestri and performed by Sheena
|
||
Easton; "Some Other World," written by Bruce Roberts and Elton John and
|
||
performed by Elton John; "It's Raining Like Magic," written and performed by
|
||
Raffi; "If I'm Goanna Eat Somebody (It Might As Well Be You)," written by Jimmy
|
||
Buffet and Mike Utley and performed by Tone Loc, and "Batty Rap," an original
|
||
character piece written by Dolby and performed by Robin Williams as the voice of
|
||
brain- fried bat Batty Koda.
|
||
A cover version of the classic song "Land of a Thousand Dances,"
|
||
re-interpreted by producer Teddy Riley (who has four songs featured on Michael
|
||
Jackson's "Dangerous" album) and performed by Guy, and "Toxic Love," written
|
||
by Dolby and performed by Tim Curry, as the evil villain Hexxus.
|
||
|
||
FOLKS May
|
||
Dir: Ted Kotcheff
|
||
Cast: Tom Selleck, Don Ameche, Anne Jackson, Christine Ebersole
|
||
Producers: Victor Drai, Malcolm Harding
|
||
Screenplay: Robert Klane
|
||
A Chicago commodities broker (Selleck) hasn't seen his parents in years.
|
||
They had retired to Florida and he has little contact with them. Everything
|
||
changes with a late-night call from a Florida hospital. He is suddenly wanted
|
||
by the FBI, his assets are frozen, his senile parents move in and his wife
|
||
leaves him. His parents come up with a crazy idea to solve the situation. A
|
||
black comedy from the producers of WEEKEND AT BERNIE'S.
|
||
|
||
FORTRESS TBA
|
||
Dir: Stuart Gordon
|
||
Cast: Christopher Lambert, Kurtwood Smith, Loryn Locklin, Lincoln Kilpatrick
|
||
Producers: John David, John Flock
|
||
Screenplay: Troy Neighbors, Steven Feinberg, Terry Fox
|
||
D.P.: David Eggby
|
||
Start Date: 10/21/91, Queensland Australia
|
||
|
||
THE GOOD SON 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: Macauley Culkin
|
||
Producer: Larry Mark
|
||
Screenplay: Ian McEwan
|
||
Start Date: late 1992, New England
|
||
Production has been delayed a year as Macauley Culkin has been signed to play
|
||
the "bad seed" and he's tied up with HOME ALONE 2. This film takes place in a
|
||
wintry environment so it will now be a 1993 release, rather than Fall 1992.
|
||
Michael Lehmann of HEATHERS and HUDSON HAWK infamy was signed as director. He
|
||
didn't think Culkin was old enough to play the character. He was considering
|
||
two other boys for the part, but Fox inked Culkin instead and delayed the
|
||
picture. Lehmann will not direct. Mary Steenburgen's participation is up
|
||
in the air, too. Culkin will get somewhere in the neighborhood of $1.5-$2
|
||
million.
|
||
|
||
GRAND CANYON 2.35 (SR) January 10 (limited)
|
||
Rating: "R" for language January 17 (wide)
|
||
Dir: Lawrence Kasdan
|
||
Cast: Danny Glover, Kevin Kline, Steve Martin, Mary McDonnell, Mary Louise
|
||
Parker, Alfre Woodard
|
||
Producers: Charles Okun, Michael Grillo, Lawrence Kasdan
|
||
Screenplay: Lawrence Kasdan, Meg Kasdan
|
||
Composer: James Newton Howard
|
||
D.P.: Owen Roizman
|
||
Start Date: 3/11/91, Los Angeles
|
||
A very personal serio-comic look at the ups and downs of L.A. life in the
|
||
Ninties, ala' THE BIG CHILL. Opened in exclusive New York and Los Angeles
|
||
engagements on Christmas Day to qualify for the Oscars and goes wider on
|
||
January 10th. Film runs 134 minutes.
|
||
|
||
HOFFA December
|
||
Dir: Danny DeVito
|
||
Cast: Jack Nicholson, Danny DeVito
|
||
Producer: Edward R. Pressman, Caldecott Chubb
|
||
Screenplay: David Mamet
|
||
Start Date: 1/92, Pittsburgh, Detroit, Washington DC
|
||
Negative Cost: $35 million
|
||
The long in the works biopic about Teamster boss Jimmy Hoffa. Both DeVito
|
||
and Nicholson have had to compromise on their fees to get the greenlight on the
|
||
production, even after talking the project with Disney, Warner Brothers,
|
||
TriStar and Universal. Everyone loved the script, but not the pricetag.
|
||
|
||
HOME ALONE 2: LOST IN NEW YORK November 20
|
||
Dir: Chris Columbus
|
||
Cast: Macauley Culkin, Joe Pesci, Daniel Stern, John Heard, Catherine O'Hara,
|
||
Brenda Fricker, Tim Curry, Eddie Bracken, Rob Schneider
|
||
Producer: John Hughes
|
||
Screenplay: John Hughes
|
||
D.P.: Julio Macat
|
||
Start Date: 12/9/91, New York, Chicago
|
||
Will lightning strike twice? The first film has passed the $500 million
|
||
worldwide boxoffice gross watermark. Culkin is reportedly getting $7 million
|
||
for this one.
|
||
|
||
HOUSE OF CARDS May
|
||
|
||
JACK THE BEAR September
|
||
Dir: Marshall Herskovitz
|
||
Cast: Danny DeVito, Gary Sinise, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Robert J. Steinmiller
|
||
Jr., Miko Hughes
|
||
Screenplay: Steve Zaillen, based on Dan McCall's novel
|
||
DeVito plays a widower who moves his family to Oakland, CA after his wife's
|
||
death. He becomes a late-night TV horror movie host and very popular with the
|
||
neighborhood kids. Herskovitz is known for TV's "thirtysomething". Film was
|
||
delayed from 12/91 release.
|
||
|
||
JUMPIN' AT THE BONEYARD TBA
|
||
Rating: "R" for language
|
||
Cast: Tim Roth, Alexis Arquette
|
||
|
||
THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS 70mm July 3
|
||
Dir: Michael Mann
|
||
Cast: Daniel Day Lewis, Madeline Stowe, Jodhi May, Eric Schweig, Russell Means,
|
||
Steven Waddington, Wes Studi, Maurice Roeves
|
||
Producers: Michael Mann, Hunt Lowry
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Mann, Christopther Crowe, based on James Fenimore Cooper's
|
||
novel
|
||
D.P.: Dante Spinotti
|
||
Start Date: 6/17/91, Asheville, NC
|
||
Negative Cost: $37 million
|
||
The Oscar winner toplines in another version of this classic tale from the
|
||
man who gave us MIAMI VICE. Set against the backdrop of the French-Indian
|
||
wars, Lewis plays a frontiersman who was raised by Mohican Indians. He
|
||
falls in love with the daughter of a British colonel (Stowe). Lewis has
|
||
apparently put on a lot of muscle for this role. Morgan Creek International
|
||
holds foreign distribution rights.
|
||
|
||
LOVE POTION #9 February 14
|
||
Dir: Dale Launer
|
||
Cast: Tate Donovan, Sandra Bullock, Dale Midkiff, Mary Mara
|
||
Producer: Tom Hammel
|
||
Screenplay: Dale Launer
|
||
D.P.: William Wages
|
||
Start Date: 10/7/90, Atlanta
|
||
Romantic comedy about two shy scientists who create a love potion that stirs
|
||
the desire of every member of the opposite sex they meet. Launer makes his
|
||
directorial debut. He wrote RUTHLESS PEOPLE.
|
||
|
||
MAN TROUBLE April
|
||
Dir: Bob Rafelson
|
||
Cast: Jack Nicholson, Ellen Barkin, Beverly D'Angelo
|
||
Producers: Bruce Gilbert, Carole Eastman
|
||
Screenplay: Carole Eastman
|
||
Barkin is a singer who is house-sitting for her sister (D'Angelo). She
|
||
discovers that the security gate is broken and feels threatened. Nicholson
|
||
enters as a con man posing as an attack dog trainer. Romantic fireworks ensue.
|
||
|
||
MY COUSIN VINNY March 13
|
||
Rating: "R" for language
|
||
Dir: Jonathan Lynn
|
||
Cast: Joe Pesci, Ralph Macchio, Mitchell Whitfield, Marisa Tomei, Fred Gwynne,
|
||
Lane Smith, Bruce McGill, Austin Pendleton
|
||
Producer: Dale Launer
|
||
Screenplay: Dale Launer
|
||
D.P.: Peter Deming
|
||
Start Date: 2/11/91, Georgia
|
||
Comedy with Pesci as a lawyer who uses his East Coast swagger to defend two
|
||
cousins framed for murder. Lynn directed NUNS ON THE RUN. Launer wrote LOVE
|
||
POTION #9 and RUTHLESS PEOPLE.
|
||
|
||
NAKED LUNCH January 10 (wide)
|
||
Rating: "R" for heavy drug content, bizarre eroticism, and language
|
||
Dir: David Cronenberg
|
||
Cast: Peter Weller, Judy Davis, Julian Sands, Roy Scheider, Monique Mercure,
|
||
Michael Zelniker, Nicholas Campbell, Joseph Scorsiani
|
||
Producer: Jeremy Thomas
|
||
Screenplay: David Cronenberg, based on William Burroughs' novel
|
||
Composer: Howard Shore
|
||
D.P.: Peter Suschitzky
|
||
Start Date: 1/21/91, Toronto
|
||
Surreal, nightmarish adventure based on Burroughs' literary classic. A
|
||
writer who fears his talent finds liberation when mysterious entities send him
|
||
to Interzone....a fictitious place overrun by witches, junkies, spies and
|
||
shape-shifting monsters. Word is really good. Moved up to Christmas '91
|
||
exclusive engagements in New York and LA for Oscar qualification.
|
||
Won Best Screenplay and Best Supporting Actress (Judy Davis) Awards from the
|
||
New York Film Critics' Circle. "Exterminate all rational thought".
|
||
|
||
NIGHT AND THE CITY November
|
||
Dir: Irwin Winkler
|
||
Cast: Robert DeNiro, Jessica Lange, Alan King, Cliff Gorman, Jack Warden, Eli
|
||
Wallach
|
||
Exec Producer: Martin Scorsese
|
||
Producers: Jane Rosenthal, Irwin Winkler
|
||
Screenplay: Richard Price, based on Jules Dassin's 1950 20th-Fox film, written
|
||
in turn by Jo Eisinger from Gerald Kersh's story
|
||
D.P.: Tak Fujimoto
|
||
Start Date: 11/4/91, New York
|
||
Negative Cost: $20 million
|
||
Remake of the 1950 Jules Dassin classic about a New York hustler trying to
|
||
make his way as a boxing promoter. DeNiro replaces Tom Hanks in the lead role.
|
||
DeNiro and Lange reteamed after CAPE FEAR. A Martin Scorsese presentation.
|
||
From Tribeca Productions. Hey, that's two remakes for DeNiro in one year's
|
||
time!
|
||
|
||
ONCE UPON A FOREST August
|
||
Dir: Dave Michener
|
||
Voices: Michael Crawford, Glenn Close, Andrae Crouch, Ben Vereen
|
||
Producers: David Kirschner, Charles Grosvenor
|
||
Screenplay: Mark Young, Kelly Ward
|
||
Formerly called THE ENDANGERED, this animated film is yet another
|
||
environmentally-themed project. An oil spill and toxic fumes infiltrate an
|
||
underwater paradise. So far 15 merchandising licensees have been signed for
|
||
the film. Music is by James Horner.
|
||
|
||
PRELUDE TO A KISS July
|
||
Dir: Norman Rene
|
||
Cast: Alec Baldwin, Meg Ryan, Patty Duke, Ned Beatty, Kathy Bates, Stanley
|
||
Tucci, Sydney Walker
|
||
Producer: Michael Gruskoff
|
||
Screenplay: Craig Lucas, from his play
|
||
D.P.: Stefan Czapsky
|
||
Start Date: 4/8/91, Los Angeles
|
||
The hit Broadway play about a newlywed who finds that his wife's soul
|
||
has entered the body of an elderly man comes to the big (or small) screen.
|
||
|
||
THE PRETENDER 1993
|
||
Dir: George Gallo Jr.
|
||
Cast: Anthony LaPaglia
|
||
Producer: David Permut
|
||
Screenplay: George Gallo Jr.
|
||
Start Date: 3/92
|
||
|
||
RAPID FIRE August
|
||
Dir: Dwight Little
|
||
Cast: Brandon Lee, Powers Boothe, Nick Mancuso
|
||
Producers: Robert Lawrence, Jerry Olsen
|
||
Screenplay: Alan B. McElroy
|
||
D.P.: Ric Waite
|
||
Start Date: 5/28/91, Los Angeles, Chicago
|
||
Bruce Lee's son stars in this thriller. An art student helps a Chicago cop
|
||
break up the city's heroin biz. Another martial-arts flick.
|
||
|
||
RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT 1993
|
||
Dir: Chris Columbus
|
||
Producer: Stan Buchtal
|
||
An action-adventure.
|
||
|
||
RISING SUN late 1992 /early 1993
|
||
Dir: Philip Kaufman
|
||
Cast: Sean Connery
|
||
Screenplay: Philip Kaufman, based on Michael Crichton's novel
|
||
Start Date: 4/92, Los Angeles
|
||
Crichton's new novel about the insidious influence of Japanese interests in
|
||
an America of the very near future will be directed by the very capable Mr.
|
||
Kaufman, whose last project was HENRY AND JUNE. Kaufman also helmed THE RIGHT
|
||
STUFF and INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS (1978).
|
||
|
||
RUBY CAIRO TBA
|
||
Dir: Graeme Clifford
|
||
Cast: Andie MacDowell, Liam Neeson
|
||
Screenplay: Robert Dillon, Michael Thomas
|
||
Negative Cost: $24 million
|
||
MacDowell is a woman who enters a world of danger and intrigue when she
|
||
attempts to uncover the plot behind her husband's mysterious demise in a plane
|
||
crash. Romantic thriller was shot in LA, Cairo, Athens, Berlin and Veracruz.
|
||
From Kadokawa Pictures. Clifford directed FRANCES. Dillion wrote THE RIVER,
|
||
Thomas wrote LADYHAWKE.
|
||
|
||
SHINING THROUGH 2.35 70mm (SS) (SR) January 31
|
||
Rating: "R" for a scene of sensuality
|
||
Dir: David Seltzer
|
||
Cast: Michael Douglas, Melanie Griffith, Liam Neeson, Joely Richardson, Sir
|
||
John Gielgud
|
||
Producers: Howard Rosenman, Carol Baum
|
||
Screenplay: David Seltzer, based on Susan Isaacs' novel
|
||
D.P.: Jan De Bont
|
||
Start Date: 10/1/90, Berlin, England
|
||
A World War II romantic thriller involves a secretary working in the New York
|
||
office of the OSS who goes on a spy mission to Berlin. She is half-Jewish and
|
||
she infiltrates German security by posing as a housekeeper for Nazi officer
|
||
Liam Neeson. Douglas is her occasional lover and permanent boss, who was paid
|
||
*only* $6 million for this one. Seltzer directed PUNCHLINE. The word is
|
||
good. Delayed from 11/8/91 release.
|
||
|
||
STORYVILLE TBA
|
||
Dir: Mark Frost
|
||
Cast: James Spader, Jason Robards, Joanne Whalley-Kilmer
|
||
Producers: David Roe, Edward R. Pressman
|
||
Screenplay: Mark Frost
|
||
Start Date: 4/29/91, New Orleans
|
||
TWIN PEAKS co-creator Mark Frost makes his directorial debut with this tale
|
||
of a young attorney with congressional ambitions who helps uncover the sins of
|
||
his powerful Louisiana family's dynasty. World premiere is at the 1992
|
||
Sundance Film Festival.
|
||
|
||
THIS IS MY LIFE February
|
||
Rating: "R" for one scene of sensuality
|
||
Dir: Nora Ephron
|
||
Cast: Julie Kavner, Samantha Mathis, Dan Aykroyd, Carrie Fisher
|
||
Producer: Lynda Obst
|
||
Screenplay: Nora Ephron, Delia Ephron, based on Meg Wolitzer's novel
|
||
D.P.: Robert M. Stevens
|
||
Start Date: 3/18/91, Toronto
|
||
Kavner gets her first starring role and Ephron makes her directorial debut in
|
||
this story of a young girl growing up in the shadow of a famous mother. Kavner
|
||
is a working mother whose dream of making it as a standup comic come true with
|
||
the help of her agents (Aykroyd and Fisher) Ephron last wrote THE SUPER and
|
||
WHEN HARRY MET SALLY... Kavner was recently visible in AWAKENINGS and
|
||
ALICE...and of course as the voice of Marge Simpson in THE SIMPSONS. Film
|
||
had world premiere at the 1992 Sundance Film Festival on January 16th in Salt
|
||
Lake City. Excellent advanced word.
|
||
|
||
TOYS December
|
||
Dir: Barry Levinson
|
||
Cast: Robin Williams
|
||
Producer: Mark Johnson
|
||
Screenplay: Valerie Curtin, Barry Levinson
|
||
Start Date: 2/10/92, Los Angeles
|
||
The director and star of GOOD MORNING, VIETNAM are reunited.
|
||
|
||
UNLAWFUL ENTRY (Largo Entertainment) October
|
||
Dir: Jonathan Kaplan
|
||
Cast: Ray Liotta, Kurt Russell, Madeline Stowe
|
||
Producer: Charles Gordon
|
||
Screenplay: Lewis Colick
|
||
D.P.: Jamie Anderson
|
||
Start Date: 10/25/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Russell is a husband whose world goes awry after his house is burglarized.
|
||
|
||
USED PEOPLE (Largo Entertainment) Fall
|
||
Dir: Beeban Kidron
|
||
Cast: Shirley MacLaine, Jessica Tandy, Kathy Bates, Marcello Mastroianni,
|
||
Marcia Gay Harden, Sylvia Sidney
|
||
Screenplay: Todd Graff
|
||
Start Date: 9/11/91, New York, Toronto
|
||
Comedy-drama about recently widowed woman who is courted by a longtime
|
||
admirer on her husband's funeral day is set in Queens NY of 1969.
|
||
Tandy plays MacLaine's mother. Screenwriter Graff was featured in THE ABYSS.
|
||
|
||
WHITE MEN CAN'T JUMP March
|
||
Dir: Ron Shelton
|
||
Cast: Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson, Rosie Perez, Tyra Ferrell, Kadeem
|
||
Hardison, Marques Johnson, Nigel Miguel, Freeman Williams, Cylk Cozart
|
||
Producers: David Lester, Don Miller
|
||
Screenplay: Ron Shelton
|
||
D.P.: Russell Boyd
|
||
Start Date: 5/20/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Cast: Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson, Ernest Harden Jr.
|
||
Mr. Shelton continues with his sports fancy with a basketball comedy/drama.
|
||
Snipes hits big twice in NEW JACK CITY and JUNGLE FEVER. Harrelson is Woody on
|
||
CHEERS.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
21st Century Releasing
|
||
----------------------
|
||
|
||
SILENT VICTIM January
|
||
Dir: Menahem Golan
|
||
Cast: Michelle Greene, Alex Hyde-White, Kyle Secor, Ely Pouget
|
||
Producer: Menahem Golan
|
||
Start Date: 9/25/91
|
||
Topical drama concerns women's rights, fetal rights and abortion. Greene
|
||
(L.A. LAW) is an unhappily married woman who attempts suicide while not
|
||
realizing she is pregnant. As a result, the fetus dies. The child's father is
|
||
the local D.A. and files murder charges against her. She becomes a cause
|
||
celebre' on the issues. Formerly titled HOTHOUSE. Delayed from 12/15/91
|
||
release.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Universal
|
||
---------
|
||
|
||
|
||
AMERICAN ME March 13
|
||
Rating: "R" for strong violence and sensuality and for language and drug
|
||
content
|
||
Dir: Edward James Olmos
|
||
Cast: Edward James Olmos, William Forsythe, Evelina Fernandez, Danny Haro, Cary
|
||
Hiroyuka Tagawa, Pepe Serna, Danny De La Paz, Daniel Villareal, Domingo Ambriz
|
||
Producers: Edward James Olmos, Sean Daniel, Robert M. Young, Irwin Young
|
||
Screenplay: Floyd Mutrux, Edward James Olmos
|
||
D.P.: Ray Villalobos
|
||
Start Date: 6/3/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Negative Cost: $16 million
|
||
Olmos wears all the hats in this period piece about the Mexican Mafia. He is
|
||
a powerful crime boss who winds up in jail yet continues to control his East
|
||
L.A. empire from behind bars. He also organizes the inmates along racial and
|
||
ethnic lines to control illicit inmate activites.
|
||
|
||
ARMY OF DARKNESS August
|
||
Dir: Sam Raimi
|
||
Cast: Bruce Campbell, Marcus Gilbert
|
||
Producer: Robert Tapert
|
||
Screenplay: Sam Raimi, Ivan Raimi
|
||
Start Date: 5/20/91, Southern California
|
||
Sam Raimi's next shockfest features effects by KNB Effects Group, Alterian
|
||
Studios and those nice folks at Introvision. His last feature was DARKMAN.
|
||
|
||
AT PLAY IN THE FIELDS OF THE LORD 1.85 (SR) January
|
||
Rating: "R" for language and sensuality
|
||
Dir: Hector Babenco
|
||
Cast: Tom Berenger, John Lithgow, Daryl Hannah, Aidan Quinn, Tom Waits, Kathy
|
||
Bates, Niilp Kivirinta, Stenio Garcia, Nelson Xavier, Jose Dumont
|
||
Producer: Saul Zaentz
|
||
Screenplay: Hector Babenco, Jean-Claude Carriere, based on Peter Mathiessen's
|
||
1965 novel
|
||
Composer: Zbignew Preisner
|
||
D.P.: Lauro Escorel
|
||
Negative Cost: $36 million
|
||
Independently produced ecological drama was filmed deep in the
|
||
Brazilian jungles. Two American mercenary pilots are stranded in the South
|
||
American jungle and accept a job to bomb a tribe of Indians off their land. A
|
||
prestige pickup release for a prestigious film. Film runs a gargantuan 185
|
||
minutes. Babenco directed KISS OF THE SPIDER WOMAN. Zaentz produced AMADEUS.
|
||
Opened in limited release on 12/6/91.
|
||
|
||
THE BABE April 17
|
||
Dir: Arthur Hiller
|
||
Cast: John Goodman, Kelly McGillis, Trini Alvarado, Bruce Boxleitner, James
|
||
Cromwell, Joseph Ragno, Ralph Marrero, Brett Hadley
|
||
Producer: John Fusco
|
||
Screenplay: John Fusco
|
||
Start Date: 5/13/91, Chicago
|
||
Goodman stars as Babe Ruth in yet another in the wave of baseball-themed
|
||
films. McGillis is his second wife and Boxleitner is Jumpin' Joe Dugan, his
|
||
teammate and friend.
|
||
|
||
BEETHOVEN April 10
|
||
Rating: "PG"
|
||
Dir: Steve Rash
|
||
Cast: Charles Grodin, Bonnie Hunt, Dean Jones
|
||
Exec Producer: Ivan Reitman
|
||
Producers: Joe Medjecuk, Michael C. Gross
|
||
Screenplay: Edmond Dantes, Amy Holden Jones
|
||
D.P.: Victor J. Kemper
|
||
Start Date: 5/1/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Comedy about a St. Bernard named after the great composer. Rash directed THE
|
||
BUDDY HOLLY STORY. Will possibly be a Christmas release, likely not until
|
||
1992.
|
||
|
||
A BRONX TALE TBA
|
||
Dir: Robert DeNiro
|
||
Cast: Chazz Palminteri, Robert DeNiro
|
||
Producers: Robert DeNiro, Jane Rosenthal
|
||
Screenplay: Chazz Palminteri, based on his play
|
||
Start Date: 10/91
|
||
DeNiro makes his directorial debut in this slice-of-life. From Tribeca
|
||
Productions.
|
||
|
||
THE BRUCE LEE STORY TBA
|
||
Dir: Rob Cohen
|
||
Cast: Jason Scott Lee
|
||
Producer: Raffaella DeLaurentiis
|
||
Screenplay: Rob Cohen
|
||
Start Date: Spring '92
|
||
Producer Cohen makes his directorial debut on this biopic focusing on the
|
||
relationship between the martial arts cinema superstar and his Anglo spouse.
|
||
Star Lee is no relation.
|
||
|
||
CATS 1993
|
||
Exec. Producer: Steven Spielberg
|
||
An animated version of the mega-hit stage musical from Amblimation.
|
||
|
||
CHARLIE CHAN
|
||
Dir: David Mamet
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Exec Producers: Brian Grazer, Ron Howard
|
||
Producers: John Davis, Wayne Williams
|
||
Screenplay: David Mamet
|
||
Negative Cost: $20 million
|
||
This Imagine Entertainment film will be budgeted on the southern side of $20
|
||
million. A worldwide search for the actor to be the new Charlie Chan is
|
||
underway. Mamet most recently wrote and directed HOMICIDE.
|
||
|
||
THE CONCIERGE TBA
|
||
Dir: Barry Sonnenfeld
|
||
Cast: Michael J. Fox
|
||
Producer: Brian Grazer
|
||
Screenplay: Lawrence Konner, Mark Rosenthal
|
||
Start Date: 3/92, New York
|
||
A concierge at one of New York's finest hotels wants to run his own
|
||
bed-and-breakfast establishment. In order to do so, he must woo an investor,
|
||
who he learns is having an affair with the woman he wanted to date. Sonnenfeld
|
||
directed THE ADDAMS FAMILY. From Imagine Entertainment.
|
||
|
||
COP AND A HALF TBA
|
||
Dir: Henry Winkler
|
||
Cast: Burt Reynolds
|
||
Exec. Producer: Brian Grazer
|
||
Producer: Paul Maslansky
|
||
Screenplay: Arne Olsen
|
||
Start Date: 3/92
|
||
A story of a hard-as-nail policeman and a precocious boy. The child's role
|
||
was originally written for Macauley Culkin, who priced himself out of the
|
||
running. It was re-written for a girl and Kurt Russell was to star. They
|
||
James Caan was slated with a male child. Now it'll be Burt. From Imagine
|
||
Entertainment. Open call for the boy's part says the boy is "charismatic and
|
||
outgoing with an old soul wisdom. He's physically small and endearing, but
|
||
with a feisty personality and a keen sense of intelligence. He is street smart
|
||
and intuitive, but with the innocence of a child."
|
||
|
||
CREATURE TBA
|
||
Dir: Frank LaLoggia
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producers: Alex Gartner, Stanley Buchthal
|
||
Screenplay: Richard Matheson, based on John Saul's novel
|
||
This story of experiments in athletic training should prove a very timely
|
||
entertainment.
|
||
|
||
THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON TBA
|
||
Dir: John Carpenter
|
||
Producer: Sandy King
|
||
Remake of the classic horror film.
|
||
|
||
THE DAY BEFORE MIDNIGHT TBA
|
||
Dir: Patrick Read Johnson
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producers: Sean Daniel, Jack Freedman, Patricia Herskowitz, Wayne Williams,
|
||
Gary Kurtz
|
||
Screenplay: Ray Gideon, Bruce Evans, John Bishop, based on Steven Hunter's
|
||
novel
|
||
Start Date: 2/92
|
||
A nuclear-themed action thriller concerns bad guys who take over a nuclear
|
||
missile silo and threaten to start World War III. Ordinary Americans save the
|
||
day.
|
||
|
||
DEATH BECOMES HER Summer
|
||
Dir: Robert Zemeckis
|
||
Cast: Meryl Streep, Goldie Hawn, Bruce Willis, Isabella Rossellini
|
||
Producers: Robert Zemeckis, Steve Starkey
|
||
Screenplay: David Koepp, Martin Donovan
|
||
D.P.: Dean Cundey
|
||
Start Date: 12/2/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Streep is a vain actress Hawn writes beauty books. Willis is Streep's
|
||
plastic surgeon husband. Hawn is his mistress. Both women swallow a
|
||
potion they think will grant them eternal youth. However their bodies die
|
||
while their spirits still inhabit them. Sounds weird, but what to expect from
|
||
the writer/producers of APARTMENT ZERO? Chock-full of special visual effects.
|
||
The principals are reportedly taking lower fees than usual in exchange for gross
|
||
profit participation. Kevin Kline was originally set to have the male lead,
|
||
but Universal balked at his $3 million fee. Tracey Ullman was in the cast, but
|
||
has bowed out.
|
||
|
||
FAR AND AWAY 2.21 70mm June 5
|
||
Dir: Ron Howard
|
||
Cast: Tom Cruise, Nicole Kidman, Robert Prosky, Barbara Babcock, Colm Meaney,
|
||
Cyril Cusack, Niall Tobin
|
||
Producers: Brian Grazer, Ron Howard
|
||
Screenplay: Bob Dolman
|
||
D.P.: (65mm) Mikael Salomon
|
||
Start Date: 5/28/91, Billings MT, Boston, Ireland
|
||
The first American feature to be shot in 65mm since what seems like forever
|
||
is a sweeping romantic adventure of about an Irish tenant farmer who becomes
|
||
the unwilling traveling companion to the daughter of his wealthy landlord. They
|
||
are caught up in the Oklahoma land rush after emigrating to the U.S. The
|
||
film was expected to be released in Cinema Digital Sound, before that system's
|
||
"hiatus". Audio Post-production will be handled by Skywalker Sound, as was
|
||
Howard's last feature BACKDRAFT. Film has also been known has THE IRISH STORY,
|
||
AN IRISH STORY and "Untitled". Shot in Panavision's System-65. Yowza!
|
||
|
||
THE FLINTSTONES 70mm Christmas 1993
|
||
Dir: Richard Donner
|
||
Cast: John Goodman
|
||
Exec. Producer: Steven Spielberg
|
||
Start Date: 4/93
|
||
The start date for this live-action feature based on the legendary cartoon
|
||
series has been pushed back a year, since director Donner will be in
|
||
post-production on LETHAL WEAPON 3 at the time that Fred Flintstone Goodman
|
||
will be on hiatus from ROSEANNE in 1992. From Amblin'.
|
||
|
||
FRIED GREEN TOMATOES January 10 (limited adds)
|
||
Rating: "PG-13" January 24 (wide)
|
||
Dir: Jon Avnet
|
||
Cast: Kathy Bates, Jessica Tandy, Mary Stuart Masterson, Mary Louise Parker,
|
||
Cicely Tyson, Stan Shaw
|
||
Producers: Jon Avnet, Jordan Kerner
|
||
Screenplay: Fannie Flagg, Jon Avnet, based on Flagg's Pulitzer Prize-nominated
|
||
novel "Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe"
|
||
Composer: Thomas Newman
|
||
Start Date: 6/10/91, Juliette GA
|
||
Tandy plays octogenarian Ninny Threadgoode who lives in a nursing home down
|
||
South. Bates is the overweight Evelyn Couch, whose husband ignores her at 40.
|
||
They become friends and Ninny relates colorful tales of her life in Whistle
|
||
Stop, Alabama, and the ladies do some female bonding and swap recipes for
|
||
fried green tomatoes and cornbread. Masterson plays the young Ninny
|
||
Threadgoode. Opened in New York and Los Angeles on 12/27/91.
|
||
|
||
GUN FOR HIRE TBA
|
||
Dir: Bruce A. Evans
|
||
Cast: Christian Slater
|
||
Producer: Raynold Gideon
|
||
Screenplay: Bruce A. Evans, Raynold Gideon
|
||
A romantic action comedy featuring the nearly over-exposed Mr. Slater. The
|
||
screenwriters are responsible for STAND BY ME.
|
||
|
||
HOUSESITTER Summer
|
||
Dir: Frank Oz
|
||
Cast: Steve Martin, Goldie Hawn, Dana Delany, Julie Harris, Donald Moffat,
|
||
Peter MacNicol, Richard Shull, Laurel Cronin, Roy Cooper, Christopher Durang
|
||
Producer: Brian Grazer
|
||
Screenplay: Mark Stein
|
||
D.P.: John A. Alonzo
|
||
Start Date: 8/5/91, Boston
|
||
Hawn is a con-artist who, after a one-night stand with architect Martin,
|
||
moves into his empty country house and passes herself off as his wife.
|
||
Hawn replaced Meg Ryan about a month before shooting began. This romantic
|
||
comedy was formerly titled YOURS TRULY. Delany plays the other woman in
|
||
Martin's life. From Imagine Entertainment.
|
||
|
||
JURASSIC PARK 70mm Summer 1993
|
||
Dir: Steven Spielberg
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producers: Kathleen Kennedy, Gerald R. Molen
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Crichton, based on his novel
|
||
Start Date: September 1992
|
||
Negative Cost: $50+ million
|
||
Big, big film version of Crichton's bestseller concerning genetically
|
||
engineered dinosaurs at a futuristic amusement park whose pea-brains
|
||
turn out to have minds of their own. Rights and screenplay cost Universal $2
|
||
million. Visual Effects from ILM. HUGE outlook. From Amblin'.
|
||
|
||
KUFFS January 10
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
Cast: Christian Slater, Tony Goldwyn, Milla Jovovich, Bruce Boxleitner
|
||
Producer: Raynold Gideon
|
||
Screenplay: Bruce A. Evans, Raynold Gideon
|
||
D.P.: Thomas Del Ruth
|
||
A negative pickup that involves Slater as an immature, irreverent younger
|
||
brother to a "contract" policeman in San Francisco who is murdered. Kuffs
|
||
moves to SF, takes over his brother's business and must grow up quickly, as
|
||
well as face danger from the murderers, who now want his hide.
|
||
The Dallas Motion Picture Classification Board has sued to get the MPAA to
|
||
change this films rating ro an "R". They feel that it is too violent for
|
||
children under 16 to see without their parents.
|
||
|
||
LEAVING NORMAL Spring
|
||
Dir: Edward Zwick
|
||
Cast: Christine Lahti, Meg Tilly, Patrika Darbo, Lenny Von Dohlen, Maury
|
||
Chaykin, Brett Cullen
|
||
Exec. Producer: Sydney Pollack
|
||
Producer: Lindsay Doran
|
||
Screenplay: Edward J. Solomon
|
||
D.P.: Ralf Detler Bode
|
||
Start Date: 4/10/91, Vancouver
|
||
Normal, Wyoming is where they're leaving. A second failed marriage and she
|
||
meets an outspoken cocktail waitress. They run off for Alaska together. Zwick
|
||
last directed GLORY. Solomon wrote BILL AND TED'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE.
|
||
|
||
THE LOOTERS August
|
||
Dir: Walter Hill
|
||
Cast: Ice T, Ice Cube, Bill Paxton, William Sadler, Art Evans
|
||
Exec. Produer: Robert Zemeckis, Bob Gale
|
||
Producer: Neil Canton
|
||
Screenplay: Robert Zemeckis, Bob Gale
|
||
D.P.: Lloyd Ahern
|
||
Start Date: 11/4/91, Memphis
|
||
Two Chicago firefighters turned looters, one good, one evil, must go to a
|
||
dangerous place in order to recover buried treasure. Lotsa Ice here. Paxton
|
||
is best remembered from ALIENS. Sadler from DIE HARD 2 and BILL AND TED'S
|
||
BOGUS JOURNEY.
|
||
|
||
LORENZO'S OIL Fall
|
||
Dir: George ("Mad Max") Miller
|
||
Cast: Nick Nolte, Susan Sarandon, Peter Ustinov, Zach Greenberg, Kathleen
|
||
Wilhoite
|
||
Producer: George Miller, Doug Mitchell
|
||
Screenplay: George Miller, Nick Enright
|
||
D.P.: John Seale
|
||
Start Date: 9/9/91, Pittsburgh, Washington D.C.
|
||
Nolte and Sarandon play two parents who go to almost any lengths to secure a
|
||
miracle cure for their terminally ill child. This is Aussie director Miller's
|
||
first film since THE WITCHES OF EASTWICK. May open at Christmas.
|
||
|
||
MAD DOG AND GLORY Spring
|
||
Dir: John MacNaughton
|
||
Cast: Robert DeNiro, Bill Murray, Uma Thurman, Kathy Baker, David Caruso, Mike
|
||
Starr
|
||
Producers: Martin Scorsese, Barbara De Fina
|
||
Screenplay: Richard Price
|
||
D.P.: Robby Muller
|
||
Start Date: 7/15/91, Chicago
|
||
DeNiro plays Wayne Dobie, a timid police photographer sarcastically nicknamed
|
||
"Mad Dog", who inadvertently saves the life of a local gangster, Frank Milo
|
||
(Murray). Milo is aggressively grateful to Dobie and presses him into
|
||
accepting a gift -- a beautiful young girl named Glory (Thurman) -- who will be
|
||
his for a week. MacNaughton directed HENRY: PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL KILLER.
|
||
Price received an Oscar nomination for the screenplay of THE COLOR OF MONEY.
|
||
He also scripted SEA OF LOVE. Muller shot PARIS, TEXAS. The film shoot is
|
||
scheduled for 10 weeks.
|
||
|
||
MOT TBA
|
||
Dir: John Badham
|
||
Cast: John Goodman
|
||
Goodman is a dyslexic janitor named Tom based in San Francisco this film that
|
||
rolls once ROSEANNE goes on hiatus.
|
||
|
||
MR. BASEBALL Fall
|
||
Dir: Fred Schepisi
|
||
Cast: Tom Selleck, Ken Takakura, Dennis Haysbert, Aya Takanashi, Markus
|
||
Flanagan, Chuck Fick, Scott Plank
|
||
Producers: Doug Claybourne, Fred Schepisi
|
||
Screenplay: Ed Solomon, Monte Merrick, Gary Ross
|
||
Start Date: 9/10/91, Nagoya & Tokyo Japan, Los Angeles, New York
|
||
Negative Cost: $40 million
|
||
This long delayed film about an American baseball player in Japan has finally
|
||
wrapped production after many rewrites. It had been experiencing terrible weather
|
||
conditions in Japan during production, which delayed filming. Even so, it
|
||
finished on time. There have been rumblings that some of the film's content
|
||
has been altered since the Japanese takeover of parent company MCA. It was
|
||
originally titled TOKYO DIAMOND.
|
||
|
||
ON THE AIR TBA
|
||
Cast: Michael J. Fox, John Candy
|
||
|
||
OTHER WOMAN 1993
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: Meryl Streep
|
||
Screenplay: Carrie Fisher, Meryl Streep
|
||
|
||
THE PUBLIC EYE Spring/Fall
|
||
Dir: Howard Franklin
|
||
Cast: Joe Pesci, Barbara Hershey, Jared Harris, Stanley Tucci
|
||
Producer: Sue Baden-Powell
|
||
Screenplay: Howard Franklin
|
||
In 1942 New York, a tabloid photographer gets caught up in a black-market gas
|
||
rationing coupon scandal. Hershey is a nightclub owner who becomes
|
||
romantically involved with him.
|
||
|
||
PURE HEART TBA
|
||
Dir: Wesley Strick
|
||
Exec Producer: Martin Scorsese
|
||
Producer: Alan Greisman
|
||
Screenplay: Wesley Strick
|
||
|
||
RAISING CAIN Summer/Fall
|
||
Dir: Brian DePalma
|
||
Cast: John Lithgow, Lolita Davidovich, Steven Bauer, Frances Sternhagen, Mel
|
||
Harris, Gregg Henry, Gabrielle Carteris, Teri Austin, Tom Bower
|
||
Producer: Gale Anne Hurd
|
||
Screenplay: Brian DePalma
|
||
D.P.: Stephen H. Burum
|
||
Start Date: 10/24/91, Northern California
|
||
Davidovich, who was so effective as BLAZE, gets to play Lithgow's wife in
|
||
this one, a contemporary psychological thriller. Lithgow is a child
|
||
psychologist who kidnaps his own daughter and schemes to frame his wife's
|
||
ex-lover for the crime. DePalma's wife Hurd produces the film. Formerly
|
||
titled FATHER'S DAY.
|
||
|
||
SCENT OF A WOMAN Fall
|
||
Dir: Martin Brest
|
||
Cast: Al Pacino, Chris O'Donnell
|
||
Producer: Martin Brest
|
||
Screenplay: Bo Goldman, based on Dino Risi's 1975 film PROFUMO DI DONNA
|
||
D.P.: Don Thorin
|
||
Start Date: 12/3/91, New York
|
||
Drama about bitter war veteran who's been blinded and the innocent 17-year
|
||
old prep school boy assigned to care for him. Brest last directed MIDNIGHT RUN
|
||
for Universal. D.P. Mikael Salomon left the production and was replaced by
|
||
Donald Thorin. May open at Christmas.
|
||
|
||
SNEAKERS Fall
|
||
Dir: Phil Alden Robinson
|
||
Cast: Robert Redford, Sidney Poitier, Mary McDonnell, River Phoenix, Ben
|
||
Kingsley, Dan Aykroyd, David Strathairn
|
||
Producers: Walter F. Parkes, Lawrence Lasker
|
||
Screenplay: Phil Alden Robinson
|
||
D.P.: John Lindley
|
||
Start Date: 10/21/91, San Francisco, Los Angeles
|
||
A caper film about a fugitive student radical from the Sixties, now running a
|
||
legitimate security business, whose past catches up with him when he is
|
||
blackmailed by the government into using this team of experts for a covert
|
||
operation. "Sneakers" refers to people who are hired to break into places to
|
||
test their security. Poitier plays a former renegade CIA agent who is now a
|
||
member of the sneakers team. Robinson scored big with FIELD OF DREAMS.
|
||
McDonnell was Oscar-nominated in DANCES WITH WOLVES. Phoenix last scored in MY
|
||
OWN PRIVATE IDAHO. Redford bombed (boxoffice-wise, that is) in HAVANA.
|
||
Lasker and Parkes wrote WAR GAMES.
|
||
|
||
STOP OR MY MOM WILL SHOOT February 21
|
||
Dir: Roger Spottiswoode
|
||
Cast: Sylvester Stallone, Estelle Getty, JoBeth Williams
|
||
Producers: Ivan Reitman, Michael C. Gross, Joe Medjuck
|
||
Screenplay: Blake Snyder, Will Davies, Will Osborne, Daniel Petrie Jr.
|
||
D.P.: Frank Tidy
|
||
Start Date: 5/14/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Sly stays in the comic mood in this comedy-thriller about a feisty New Jersey
|
||
mother who shows up at her LA cop son's messy home one day. She witnesses a
|
||
murder and the two of them team up to hunt down the killer. Spottiswoode last
|
||
directed the lamentable AIR AMERICA.
|
||
|
||
STREETRACER TBA
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Anthony Yerkovich
|
||
Screenplay: Anthony Yerkovich, Kem Nunn
|
||
Start Date: 1/92, Los Angeles
|
||
From Imagine Entertainment.
|
||
|
||
TAGGET TBA
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
|
||
VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED TBA
|
||
Dir: Robert Harmon
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Michael Preger
|
||
Screenplay: David Himmelstein
|
||
Start Date: 9/91, North Dakota
|
||
Good 'ol Robert Harmon remakes the creepy English film of the early
|
||
Sixties about a village where the children acquire strange powers (and really
|
||
bright eyes). Harmon directed THE HITCHER.
|
||
|
||
WELCOME TO BUZZSAW TBA
|
||
Dir: Francis Veber
|
||
Cast: Matthew Broderick, Jeffrey Jones, Heidi Kling, Marian Mercer, Courtney
|
||
Peldon
|
||
Producers: Ted Field, Robert Cort, Michael Hertzberg
|
||
Screenplay: Joshua & Daniel Goldin
|
||
D.P.: Donald Thorin
|
||
Start Date: 1/1/91, Santa Cruz, Los Angeles
|
||
A black comedy concerning an investment banker who runs into trouble in a
|
||
desolate logging town. His wallet has been stolen and it contains a phone
|
||
number worth some $60 million! Broderick and Jones are reunited again after
|
||
their 1987 smash FERRIS BUELLER'S DAY OFF. Veber directed THREE FUGITIVES.
|
||
|
||
WE'RE BACK November
|
||
Dir: Dick Zontag, Ralph Zontag
|
||
Voices: Walter Cronkite, John Goodman, John Malkovich, Julia Child, Jay Leno,
|
||
Martin Short
|
||
Exec Producers: Kathleen Kennedy, Frank Marshall
|
||
Producer: Steven Spielberg
|
||
Screenplay: John Patrick Shanley
|
||
Another Amblimation animated film produced in LA. Weird cast, huh?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Warner Brothers
|
||
---------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE ARROWTOOTH WALTZ TBA
|
||
Dir: Emir Kusturica
|
||
Cast: Faye Dunaway, Johnny Depp, Jerry Lewis, Lili Taylor, Paulina Porizkova,
|
||
Michael J. Pollard
|
||
Producer: Paul Gurian
|
||
Screenplay: Emir Kusturica, David Atkins
|
||
Start Date: 4/1/91, Douglas AZ
|
||
Negative Cost: $15 million
|
||
Production resumed in September on this comedic western after
|
||
ceasing in June when the director had a nervous collapse due to the fast-paced
|
||
working style of the American crew and completion bond company pressures.
|
||
(Not to speak of the tantrums and fuss of Dunaway and Lewis) Kusturica
|
||
directed TIME OF THE GYPSIES. May be called OUT OF THIS WORLD.
|
||
|
||
BATMAN RETURNS 1.85 70mm (SRD) (SS) June 19
|
||
Dir: Tim Burton
|
||
Cast: Michael Keaton, Danny DeVito, Michelle Pfeiffer, Christopher Walken,
|
||
Michael Murphy, Vincent Schiavelli, Michael Gough, Christi Conaway, Pat Hingle,
|
||
Paul Reubens, Jan Hooks, Steve Witting, Andrew Bryniarski
|
||
Exec. Producers: Jon Peters, Peter Guber, Benjamin Melniker, Michael Uslan
|
||
Producers: Tim Burton, Denise DiNovi
|
||
Screenplay: Dan Waters, based on the DC comics
|
||
Composer: Danny Elfman
|
||
D.P.: Stefan Czapsky
|
||
Start Date: 9/3/91, Los Angeles
|
||
Here we go again! $90 - $100 million budget? Murphy is the mayor of
|
||
Gotham. Film is shooting on nine stages at Warner Brothers in Burbank.
|
||
Reubens is the Penguin's father. The Boy Wonder has been written out of the
|
||
script. Some shooting is being done on the Warner Brothers back lot on the
|
||
New York set designed for ANNIE...also used in MOBSTERS and THE BUTCHER'S WIFE.
|
||
Will be one of the first films to be released in the new Dolby SR-D Digital
|
||
Sound format.
|
||
|
||
BLADE RUNNER 2.35 70mm Fall
|
||
Rating: "R" For violence.
|
||
Dir: Ridley Scott
|
||
Cast: Harrison Ford, Rutger Hauer, Sean Young, Joanna Cassidy, Daryl Hannah,
|
||
Edward James Olmos
|
||
Warner Brothers very successfully tested a 35mm reduction print of the 70mm
|
||
workprint that was previewed before the original 1982 theatrical release of
|
||
BLADE RUNNER. Lack of narration, lack of upbeat ending and different cuts make
|
||
for superior film than the originally released product. Scott will complete
|
||
that version for theatrical exposure in 1992, then home video. WB is
|
||
apparently treating this as a new film for the reissue, which may be a mistake.
|
||
Film has been postponed from 2/14/92 to a date TBA. May be as late as the
|
||
Fall.
|
||
|
||
THE BODYGUARD Fall
|
||
Dir: Mick Jackson
|
||
Cast: Kevin Costner, Whitney Houston, Bill Cobbs, Gary Kemp, Michelle Richards
|
||
Producers: Kevin Costner, Jim Wilson, Lawrence Kasdan
|
||
Screenplay: Lawrence Kasdan
|
||
D.P.: Andrew Dunn
|
||
Start Date: 11/25/91, Los Angeles, N. California, Florida
|
||
Production starts in November on this new production from Costner's Tig
|
||
Prods. Ms. Houston makes her big-screen debut as the mega-star who needs
|
||
guarding. A grip truck driver was killed on the set in early January.
|
||
|
||
BORN TO RIDE TBA
|
||
Dir: Graham Baker
|
||
Cast: John Stamos, John Stockwell, Teri Polo, Kris Kamm, Keith Cooke, Thom
|
||
Mathews
|
||
Producers: Fred Weintraub, Sandra Weintraub
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Pardridge, Janice Hickey
|
||
Start Date: 3/13/90, Yugoslavia
|
||
Has disappeared from the WB release slate.
|
||
|
||
CHICO TBA
|
||
Dir: Chris Menges
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: David Puttnam
|
||
Screenplay: William Nicholson
|
||
Start Date: 4/92, Costa Rica
|
||
Menges directed A WORLD APART.
|
||
|
||
A CLASS ACT April
|
||
Dir: Randy Miller
|
||
Cast: Kid 'n Play, Meschach Taylor, Alysia Rogers, Rick Ducommun
|
||
Exec Producers: Joe Wizan, Berry Gordy
|
||
Producers: Todd Black, Suzanne de Passe, Maynell Thomas
|
||
Screenplay: Richard Brenne, John Semper, Cynthia Friedlob, Michael Swerdlick,
|
||
Wayne Rice
|
||
Musical comedy with the guys who scored in two HOUSE PARTY films.
|
||
An egghead and a juve delinquent's identities are confused when they register
|
||
to enter a new high school. An update to THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER.
|
||
|
||
DENNIS THE MENACE Summer 1993
|
||
Exec. Producer: Steven Spielberg
|
||
Producer: John Hughes
|
||
Dennis comes to the big screen in a live-action version of the venerable Hank
|
||
Ketchum comic strip.
|
||
|
||
DICK AND MARGE SAVE THE WORLD July
|
||
Rating: "PG"
|
||
Dir: Greg Beeman
|
||
Cast: Teri Garr, Jon Lovitz, Jeffrey Jones, Thalmus Rasulala, Dwler Brown,
|
||
Kathy Ireland, Eric Idle, Wallace Shawn, Tony Cox, Debbie Lee Carrington
|
||
Producer: Michael Phillips
|
||
Screenplay: Ed Solomon
|
||
D.P.: Jacques Haitkin
|
||
Start Date: 8/22/90, Southern California
|
||
An outrageous comedy about the surprising interplanetary adventures of Marge
|
||
and Dick Nelson, an ordinary middle-aged couple who are abducted and taken to a
|
||
tiny world ruled by the most vain and insecure character in the universe, Tod
|
||
Spengo, who falls for mom. Dick saves the world. Formerly titled MOM AND DAD
|
||
SAVE THE WORLD.
|
||
|
||
DREADNOUGHT Fall
|
||
Dir: Andrew Davis
|
||
Cast: Steven Seagal
|
||
Producers: Arnon Milchan, Steve Reuther, Steven Seagal
|
||
Screenplay: J.F. Lawton
|
||
Start Date: 2/92, Mobile AL.
|
||
|
||
FALLING DOWN TBA
|
||
Dir: Joel Schumacher
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producers: Arnold Kopelson, Timothy Harris, Herschel Weingrod
|
||
Screenplay: Ebbe Roe Smith
|
||
Start Date: 3/15/92
|
||
|
||
FINAL ANALYSIS February 7
|
||
Rating: "R" for a scene of strong sensuality, and for language and violence
|
||
Dir:
|
||
Cast: Richard Gere, Kim Basinger
|
||
Producers: Paul Witt, Tony Thomas, John Solomon
|
||
Screenplay: Wesley Strick
|
||
Erotic thriller with a New York-based psychiatrist (Gere) who gets involved
|
||
with a patient's sister.
|
||
|
||
FREEJACK January 17
|
||
Rating: "R" for language and violence
|
||
Dir: Geoff Murphy
|
||
Cast: Emilio Estevez, Anthony Hopkins, Mick Jagger, Rene Russo, David Johansen,
|
||
Jonathan Banks, Amanda Plummer, Vincent Schiavelli, John Shea
|
||
Producers: Stuart Oken, Ronald Shusett
|
||
Screenplay: Ronald Shusett, Steve Pressfield, Dan Gilroy
|
||
D.P.: Amir Mokri
|
||
Start Date: 1/28/91, Atlanta, New York
|
||
Negative Cost: $30 million
|
||
A science fiction adventure. Jagger plays a 21st Century bounty
|
||
hunter who plucks Estevez from his 20th Century race car just before he dies
|
||
and whisks him into the year 2020. Immortality is a prime subject here.
|
||
Murphy directed YOUNG GUNS II. Shusett last wrote TOTAL RECALL. Visual
|
||
Effects are from Dream Quest Images, with recent Oscar winner Alex Funke (TOTAL
|
||
RECALL) supervising. Images include a "spiritual switchboard" where in the
|
||
year 2009 the superrich can store their souls in search of new and better
|
||
bodies. From Morgan Creek. Postponed from November, 1991. Estevez was
|
||
been involved in some reshoots in October. Soundtrack features The Scorpions,
|
||
Jane Child, Jesus Jones, Jesus & Mary Chain, Little Feat, Ministry and 2 Die 4.
|
||
|
||
HOOVER 1993
|
||
Dir: Francis Coppola
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Quincy Jones
|
||
Screenplay: based on "J. Edgar Hoover, the Man and the Secrets" by Curt Gentry
|
||
Coppola and Quincy Jones team up for the first time to film the biopic on Mr.
|
||
FBI's life from 1924 until the time of Nixon. Revealed will be the undue
|
||
influence Hoover had over 10 presidencies.
|
||
|
||
HURRICANE SMITH TBA
|
||
Rating: "R" For action violence, sensuality and language.
|
||
Dir: Colin Budds
|
||
Cast: Carl Weathers, Cassandra Delaney, Tony Bonner, Jurgen Prochnow
|
||
Producers: Stanley O'Toole, Kevin Dobson, Sara Altschul
|
||
Screenplay: Peter Kinloch
|
||
Action comedy about a rough-and-tumble guy searching for his missing sister.
|
||
Formerly titled DEAD ON DELIVERY.
|
||
|
||
INNOCENT BLOOD Summer
|
||
Dir: John Landis
|
||
Cast: Anne Parillaud, Anthony LaPaglia, Robert Loggia
|
||
Producer: Lee Rich, Leslie Belzberg
|
||
Screenplay: Michael Wolk
|
||
D.P.: Mac Ahlberg
|
||
Start Date: 1/13/92, Pittsburgh
|
||
A sexy female vampire with a conscience who does not feed on innocent people.
|
||
One of her most ruthless victims, a mob boss, survives her attack and is
|
||
transformed into an even more insidious vampire whom she must destroy with the
|
||
aid of an undercover cop. "Vampire noir" is how this project has been
|
||
classified. Parillaud scored big in LA FEMME NIKITA. Landis characterizes
|
||
the film as "Goodfellas meets Dracula". Roger Corman is also starting a film
|
||
by the same title.
|
||
|
||
INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS TBA
|
||
Dir: Abel Ferrara
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Robert Solo
|
||
Screenplay: Nicholas St. John, Dennis Paoli, Stuart Gordon
|
||
D.P.: Bojan Bazelli
|
||
Start Date: 2/3/92, Alabama
|
||
Tom Burman provides the special effects in this third version of the Pod
|
||
People.
|
||
|
||
JFK 2.35 (SR) December 20
|
||
Rating: "R" for language
|
||
Dir: Oliver Stone
|
||
Cast: Kevin Costner, Gary Oldman, Tommy Lee Jones, Sissy Spacek, Kevin Bacon,
|
||
Sally Kirkland, Michael Rooker, Jay O. Sanders, Numa Bertell, Laurie Metcalf,
|
||
Gary Grubbs, Brian Doyle Murray, Joe Pesci, Beata Pozniak, Jack Lemmon, Walter
|
||
Matthau, John Candy, Donald Sutherland, John Larroquette, Jim Garrison
|
||
Producers: A. Kitman Ho, Oliver Stone
|
||
Screenplay: Oliver Stone, Zachary Sklar, based on books "On the Trail of the
|
||
Assassins" by Jim Garrison, "Crossfire" by Jim Masrs
|
||
D.P.: Robert Richardson
|
||
Start Date: 4/15/91, Dallas, New Orleans, Washington DC
|
||
An outrageous cast in what may be to many an outrageous film concerning the
|
||
alleged conspiracies in the assassination of John F. Kennedy. A big event film
|
||
for Warner Brothers. Stone last directed THE DOORS, Costner last starred in
|
||
ROBIN HOOD: POT. Film runs a whopping 188 minutes. There was no time for
|
||
70mm blowups due to the miniscule post-production schedule.
|
||
|
||
THE KANGAROO KID TBA
|
||
Dir: Dean Semler
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producer: Robyn Burke
|
||
Start Date: 3/30/92, Australia, Dallas
|
||
|
||
LETHAL WEAPON 3 2.35 70mm (SRD) (SS) May 22
|
||
Dir: Richard Donner
|
||
Cast: Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Joe Pesci, Rene Russo, Steve Kahan, Darlene
|
||
Love, Traci Wolfe, Damon Hines, Ebonie Smith, Stuart Wilson
|
||
Producers: Richard Donner, Joel Silver
|
||
Screenplay: Jeffrey Boam
|
||
D.P. Jan De Bont
|
||
Start Date: 10/2/91, Los Angeles, Orlando
|
||
Yet a third in the very popular series. The producers are paying the city
|
||
of Orlando $50,000 to use the October 24th demolition of Orlando City Hall as a
|
||
backdrop to film Mel Gibson and Danny Glover running from an exploding
|
||
building. Russo last seen in FREEJACK. Film may be released in Dolby's SR-D
|
||
digital sound process. Boam wrote INDIANA JONES AND THE LAST CRUSADE.
|
||
|
||
M. BUTTERFLY 1993
|
||
Dir: David Cronenberg
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Exec. Producer: David Geffen
|
||
Screenplay: David Henry Hwang, from his play
|
||
Cronenberg seems oddly correct to direct the big-screen version of the
|
||
Tony-winning play about a French diplomat who was jailed for treason having
|
||
been accused of conspiring with his Chinese Communist mistress of 20 years who
|
||
he thought was a woman, but was a man.
|
||
|
||
MALCOLM X 1.85 70mm Christmas
|
||
Dir: Spike Lee
|
||
Cast: Denzel Washington, Spike Lee, Angela Bassett, Kate Vernon, Al Freeman
|
||
Jr., Theresa Randle, Delroy Lindo, Albert Hall
|
||
Producer: Marvin Worth, Spike Lee
|
||
Screenplay: James Baldwin, Arnold Perl, Spike Lee
|
||
Start Date: 9/16/91, New York, Mecca, Cairo, Soweto, Boston, Newark
|
||
D.P.: Ernest Dickerson
|
||
Composer: Terence Blanchard
|
||
Negative Cost: $33 million
|
||
The long-in-development biopic has Spike Lee at the helm after wresting the
|
||
project away from Norman Jewison. Largo Entertainment distributes overseas.
|
||
This is the first non-documentary to ever receive permission to shoot in
|
||
Mecca (2nd Unit). Will shoot in Cairo in mid-January. Nelson Mandela will
|
||
be photographed in Soweto. Spike Lee and Denzel Washington (among others)
|
||
are deferring salary in order to come in on budget. Lee wanted to shoot in
|
||
65mm, but is shooting in Super 1.85 instead. D.P. Dickerson's directorial bow
|
||
is JUICE, opening on 1/17/92 from Paramount. Film has gone several million
|
||
over the original $25 million budget. Look for a three-hour running time, per
|
||
Mr. Lee. Film is also known as ANY MEANS NECESSARY.
|
||
|
||
THE MAMBO KINGS February 28 (NY/LA)
|
||
Rating: "R" For sensuality. March 20 (wider)
|
||
Dir: Arne Glimcher
|
||
Cast: Armand Assante, Antonio Banderas, Cathy Moriarty, Maruschka Detmers, Desi
|
||
Arnaz Jr., Celia Cruz, Tito Puente
|
||
Producers: Arnon Milchan
|
||
Screenplay: Cynthia Cidre
|
||
Two brothers, fresh from Havana, arrive in New York in 1953, bringing with
|
||
them their vibrant, heart-wrenching mambo songs, and dreams of love and fame.
|
||
By day, they struggle to find work in a strange country; by night, they return
|
||
to their roots through their music. Based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel
|
||
"The Mambo Kings Sing Songs of Love" by Oscar Hijuelos. Linda Ronstadt has
|
||
recorded two songs in Spanish for the soundtrack. Tito Puente and Celia Cruz
|
||
also perform on the soundtrack. Glimscher produced GORILLAS IN THE MIST.
|
||
Delayed from Christmas '91 release.
|
||
|
||
MEMOIRS OF AN INVISIBLE MAN 2.35 70mm February 28
|
||
Rating: "PG-13"
|
||
Dir: John Carpenter
|
||
Cast: Chevy Chase, Daryl Hannah, Sam Neill, Michael McKean
|
||
Producer: Bruce Bodner
|
||
Screenplay: Robert Collector, Dana Olsen
|
||
D.P.: William A. Fraker
|
||
Start Date: 3/7/91, San Francisco, Los Angeles
|
||
Negative Cost: $40 million
|
||
A Wall Street Securities analyst becomes invisible and, as such, a CIA
|
||
target. This film has been five years in gestation. William Goldman was the
|
||
previous screenwriter. Ivan Reitman and Dick Donner have been involved as
|
||
director before. Visual Effects for this story are from ILM. Warner Brothers
|
||
test-screened a rough-cut on October 9th to "sensational" results. Chevy
|
||
Chase says this project is "head and tails" above anything he's done.
|
||
|
||
MEN 1993
|
||
Dir: Sydney Pollack
|
||
Cast: Dustin Hoffman, Bill Murray
|
||
Producers: Mark Rosenberg, Paula Weinstein
|
||
Screenplay: Elaine May
|
||
Remake of Dorris Dorrie's German comedy reteams three of the TOOTSIE
|
||
principals and a three of those from <gulp> ISHTAR.
|
||
|
||
NEW JACK CITY 2 TBA
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producers: Doug McHenry, George Jackson
|
||
Sequel to the 1991 hit starts shooting in early 1992.
|
||
|
||
PASSENGER 57 Fall
|
||
Dir: Kevin Hooks
|
||
Cast: Wesley Snipes, Bruce Payne, Tom Sizemore, Elizabeth Hurley, Robert Hooks,
|
||
Alex Datcher
|
||
Producer: Dan Paulson
|
||
Screenplay: David Loughery
|
||
D.P.: Mark Irwin
|
||
Start Date: 1/13/92, Florida
|
||
Snipes is a tough airline security chief who is called on to free American
|
||
hijack victims from drug terrorist abductors. Hooks last directed STRICTLY
|
||
BUSINESS. Snipes starred in JUNGLE FEVER and NEW JACK CITY. Loughery wrote
|
||
DREAMSCAPE and STAR TREK V.
|
||
|
||
PHANTOM OF THE OPERA Christmas 1993
|
||
Dir: Joel Schumacher
|
||
Producer: Andrew Lloyd Webber
|
||
Start Date: 1/93
|
||
The musical smash is on again as a film.... Schumacher is once again slated
|
||
to helm, after playing musical directors with Franco Zeffirelli. Both quit
|
||
over lack of creative control.
|
||
|
||
THE POWER OF ONE March 27
|
||
Dir: John Avildsen
|
||
Cast: Morgan Freeman, Armin Mueller-Stahl
|
||
Screenplay: Robert Mark Kamen, based on Bruce Courtenay's novel
|
||
South Africa-based period drama about the birth of apartheid as seen through
|
||
the eyes of a teenaged boxer.
|
||
|
||
RECKLESS KELLY TBA
|
||
Dir: Yahoo Serious
|
||
Cast: Yahoo Serious, Alexei Sayle, Hugo Weaving, Tracy Mann, Sophie Heathcote
|
||
Producers: Yahoo Serious, Warwick Ross
|
||
Screenplay: Yahoo Serious
|
||
Start Date: 10/12/91, Australia
|
||
Why would Warner Brothers finance another picture from Yahoo Serious after
|
||
the U.S. disaster that was YOUNG EINSTEIN? Because the film is very
|
||
inexpensive ($7.9 million), and he is very popular Down Under, that's why.
|
||
|
||
THE REST OF DANIEL Fall
|
||
Dir: Steve Miner
|
||
Cast: Mel Gibson, Gabrielle Anwar
|
||
Producer: Bruce Davey
|
||
Screenplay: Jeffrey Abrams
|
||
D.P.: Russell Boyd
|
||
Start Date: 2/4/92, Los Angeles, N. California
|
||
|
||
SARAFINA! TBA
|
||
Dir: Mbongeni Ngema
|
||
Cast: Whoopi Goldberg, John Kani, Miriam Makeba
|
||
Producer: Anant Singh
|
||
Screenplay: Mbongeni Ngema
|
||
Start Date: 12/91, Soweto
|
||
$10 million film version of the acclaimed stage musical concerning life in
|
||
South Africa's black townships. Choreography by Michael Peters. South
|
||
African blacks have promised trouble for Ms. Goldberg. Whoopi is reportedly
|
||
taking a fee of only $250,000...far less than her usual $2 million.
|
||
|
||
THE SECRET GARDEN TBA
|
||
Dir: TBA
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Exec Producers: Francis Ford Coppola, Fred Fuchs
|
||
Producer: Fred Roos
|
||
Screenplay: Caroline Thompson
|
||
Big-screen adaptation of the Broadway musical
|
||
|
||
SINGLES April 10
|
||
Dir: Cameron Crowe
|
||
Cast: Bridget Fonda, Campbell Scott, Kyra Sedgwick, Matt Dillon, Jim True,
|
||
Sheila Kelly, Devon Raymond, Bill Pullman
|
||
Producer: Richard Hashimoto
|
||
Screenplay: Cameron Crowe
|
||
D.P.: Ueli Steiger
|
||
Start Date: 3/11/91, Seattle
|
||
This ensemble piece centers around a Seattle apartment complex. Crowe last
|
||
gave us the terrific SAY ANYTHING.
|
||
|
||
SOMMERSBY TBA
|
||
Dir: Jon Amiel
|
||
Cast: Jodie Foster, Richard Gere
|
||
Producers: Arnon Milchan, Steve Reuther
|
||
Screenplay: Nick Meyer
|
||
This period drama concerns a woman whose husband returns from the Civil War
|
||
as a much better person than when he left. She is led to suspect he is an
|
||
imposter. This is an updated version of THE RETURN OF MARTIN GUERRE. Amiel
|
||
directed the delightful QUEEN OF HEARTS and THE SINGING DETECTIVE.
|
||
|
||
SPEED RACER 1993
|
||
Dir: Patrick Read Johnson
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Producers: Joel Silver, Richard Donner
|
||
Screenplay: Patrick Read Johnson, John Lau
|
||
Big-screen adaptation of the Japanese cartoon series.
|
||
|
||
STAY TUNED Summer
|
||
Dir: Peter Hyams
|
||
Cast: John Ritter, Pam Dawber, Jeffrey Jones, Heather McComb, David Tom, Eugene
|
||
Levy, Bob Dishy, Kristin Cloke, Gianni Russo
|
||
Producer: Arnie L. Schmidt
|
||
Screenplay: Tom S. Parker, Jim Jennewein
|
||
D.P.: Peter Hyams
|
||
Start Date: 10/15/91, Vancouver
|
||
Suburban couple need to put the spark back into their troubled marriage. A
|
||
mysterious salesman gives them a free trial of a satellite dish that catapaults
|
||
them into an alternate television dimension called Hellvision.
|
||
|
||
THAT NIGHT Summer
|
||
Dir: Craig Bolotin
|
||
Cast: C. Thomas Howell, Juliette Lewis, Helen Shaver, Eliza Dushku, John
|
||
Dossett, J, Smith-Cameron
|
||
Producer: Arnon Milchan
|
||
Screenplay: Craig Bolotin
|
||
D.P.: Bruce Surtees
|
||
Start Date: 9/3/91, Baltimore
|
||
A romantic drama.
|
||
|
||
THE THIEF AND THE COBBLER TBA
|
||
Dir: Richard Williams
|
||
Cast: Voices of Vincent Price, Donald Pleasance, Joan Sims, Miriam Margolies
|
||
Producers: Imogen Sutton, Richard Williams
|
||
Screenplay: Richard Williams, Margaret French, John Patrick Shanley
|
||
Start Date: 10/1/90, London
|
||
An animated folk tale from the ancient East about saving the city and winning
|
||
the princess' hand. Long-awaited from triple-Oscar-winning Williams (WHO
|
||
FRAMED ROGER RABBIT).
|
||
|
||
THIS BOY'S LIFE Fall
|
||
Dir: Michael Caton-Jones
|
||
Cast: Robert DeNiro, Ellen Barkin, Leonardo DiCaprio
|
||
Producer: Art Linson
|
||
Screenplay: Robert Getchell, based on Tobias Woolf's book
|
||
Start Date: 2/24/92, Vancouver
|
||
Top-notch cast stars in this biographical story of Tobias Woolf's travels
|
||
with his mother in the 1950s and the relationship between his mother and his
|
||
stepfather. Caton-Jones directed MEMPHIS BELLE.
|
||
|
||
TURTLE BEACH February 28 (NY/LA)
|
||
Dir: Stephen Wallace
|
||
Cast: Greta Scacchi, Joan Chen, Jack Thompson, Art Malik, Victor Longley
|
||
Exec Producers: Arnon Milchan, Greg Coote
|
||
Producer: Matt Carroll
|
||
Screenplay: Ann Turner, based on Blanch D'Alpuget's novel
|
||
The Malaysian-localed story of two women from different backgrounds. One is
|
||
an ambitious journalist, the other an ex-Saigon bar maid.
|
||
|
||
THE UNFORGIVEN August 7
|
||
Dir: Clint Eastwood
|
||
Cast: Clint Eastwood, Gene Hackman, Morgan Freeman, Richard Harris
|
||
Producer: Clint Eastwood
|
||
Screenplay: David Webb Peoples
|
||
D.P.: Jack N. Green
|
||
Start Date: 8/26/91, Alberta Canada
|
||
Yes, it's a western. Same title as the 1960 Burt Lancaster-Audrey Hepburn
|
||
western, too.
|
||
|
||
UNTIL THE END OF THE WORLD 2.35 January 17 (wider)
|
||
Rating: "R" for language and sensuality Adds Boston, D.C., Chicago, SF, Seattle
|
||
Dir: Wim Wenders
|
||
Cast: William Hurt, Solveig Dommartin, Max von Sydow, Jeanne Moreau, Rudiger
|
||
Vogler, Sam Neill, Ernie Dingo, David Gulpilil, Lois Chiles, Allen Garfield
|
||
Producers: Jonathan Taplin, Anatole Dauman
|
||
Screenplay: Wim Wenders, Peter Carey
|
||
D.P.: Robby Muller
|
||
Start Date: 4/20/90, Venice Italy, France, Portugal, U.S., Japan, Australia,
|
||
Germany, USSR, China, Mali
|
||
Negative Cost: $26 million
|
||
A huge-scale science fiction romance/road story filmed around the
|
||
world in nine countries by Berlin's great Wim Wenders. This futuristic (set
|
||
in 1999) thriller concerns a man's efforts to retrieve a valuable invention
|
||
(a device to permit blind people to see recorded images) and a woman's pursuit
|
||
of the mysterious man she loves. Moreau plays Hurt's blind mother, Von Sydow
|
||
is his father. Production was to have been in 65mm, but the demanding location
|
||
requirements resulted in a 35mm production. Title song is by the Irish group
|
||
U2. Other acts on the soundtrack include Neneh Cherry, Lou Reed, R.E.M., Patti
|
||
Smith, Peter Gabriel and Robbie Robertson. Early notices are quite positive
|
||
on some aspects, but mixed on others. Film ran a epic 178 minutes and
|
||
apparently seems somewhat truncated at that length. Wenders cut 21 minutes
|
||
from the film for the American release. Wenders also has a five-hour cut
|
||
that he would like to make the film festival rounds and on home video.
|
||
Opened in Germany to mixed business in September 1991. Reviews in Berlin were
|
||
dreadful, they loved it in Munich. Opened on Christmas, 1991 in New York, Los
|
||
Angeles and Toronto.
|
||
|
||
WHITE SANDS April
|
||
Dir: Roger Donaldson
|
||
Cast: Willem Dafoe, Mickey Rourke, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Mimi Rogers, M.
|
||
Emmet Walsh, Samuel L. Jackson
|
||
Producers: William Sackheim, Scott Rudin
|
||
Screenplay: Daniel Pyne
|
||
D.P.: Peter Menzies
|
||
Start Date: 8/13/91, New Mexico
|
||
This thriller features Dafoe as a small-town sheriff whose seemingly
|
||
routine investigation into a murder balloons into an intricate plot involving
|
||
the FBI and the CIA.
|
||
|
||
WILLY TBA
|
||
Dir: Robin Armstrong
|
||
Cast: TBA
|
||
Exec Producers: Richard Donner, Lauren Shuler-Donner
|
||
Producer: Jennie Lew Tugend
|
||
Screenplay: Keith Walker, Cirey Blechman, Tom Benedek
|
||
Start Date: 5/92, Mexico City, Pacific Northwest
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Release Timeline
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
January 3
|
||
---------
|
||
|
||
THE STATION (Aries) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
January 10
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
AT THE MAX (IMAX) (Seattle)
|
||
FRIED GREEN TOMATOES (Universal) (wider)
|
||
GRAND CANYON (20th Fox) (limited - broadening)
|
||
THE HAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
KUFFS (Universal)
|
||
NAKED LUNCH (20th Fox) (limited - broadening)
|
||
RUSH (MGM-Pathe) (wide)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
January 15
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
35 UP (Samuel Goldwyn) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
January 17
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
FREEJACK (Warner)
|
||
GRAND CANYON (20th Fox) (wide)
|
||
HEAR MY SONG (Miramax) (San Francisco)
|
||
HEARTS OF DARKNESS: A FILMMAKER'S APOCALYPSE (Triton) (LA)
|
||
THE INNER CIRCLE (Columbia) (wider)
|
||
JUICE (Paramount)
|
||
KAFKA (Miramax) (LA, SF)
|
||
UNTIL THE END OF THE WORLD (Warner) (Boston, D.C., Chicago, SF, Seattle)
|
||
|
||
|
||
January 19
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
HEAR MY SONG (Miramax) (New York)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
January 24
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
KAFKA (Miramax) (NY)
|
||
LOVE CRIMES (Miramax)
|
||
SHAKING THE TREE (Castle Hill)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
January 31
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
ALAN AND NAOMI (Triton)
|
||
BEAUTIFUL DREAMERS (Hemdale) (NY, LA)
|
||
HARD PROMISES (Columbia) (NY, LA, Chicago, Indianapolis)
|
||
THE LUNATIC (Triton) (NY)
|
||
MCBAIN (SGE) (2nd release wave)
|
||
MINDWALK (Triton) (Boston)
|
||
SHINING THROUGH (20th Fox) 70mm
|
||
VOYAGER (Castle Hill) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other January Releases
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
|
||
AT PLAY IN THE FIELDS OF THE LORD (Universal) (wider)
|
||
LET HIM HAVE IT (New Line/Fine Line) (wider)
|
||
SILENT VICTIM (21st Century)
|
||
A WOMAN'S TALE (Orion Classics) (NY, LA)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
February 5
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
MISSISSIPPI MASALA (Samuel Goldwyn) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
February 7
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
BACK IN THE USSR (20th Fox)
|
||
FINAL ANALYSIS (Warner)
|
||
THE HAIRDRESSER'S HUSBAND (Triton)
|
||
HUMAN SHIELD (Cannon) (limited)
|
||
INTO THE SUN (Trimark)
|
||
MEDICINE MAN (Disney/Hollywood) 70mm
|
||
RAISE THE RED LANTERN (Orion Classics) (NY)
|
||
UNDER SUSPICION (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
February 14
|
||
-----------------
|
||
|
||
ADVENTURES OF THE GREAT MOUSE DETECTIVE (Disney)
|
||
BED AND BREAKFAST (Hemdale) (regional)
|
||
COMPLEX WORLD (Hemdale) (Boston)
|
||
I DON'T BUY KISSES ANYMORE (Skouras) (LA)
|
||
LOVE POTION #9 (20th Fox)
|
||
THE LUNATIC (Triton) (LA)
|
||
MISSISSIPPI MASALA (Samuel Goldwyn) (LA)
|
||
RADIO FLYER (Columbia) 70mm
|
||
WAYNE'S WORLD (Paramount)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
February 21
|
||
-----------------
|
||
|
||
DOLLY DEAREST (Trimark)
|
||
FALLING FROM GRACE (Columbia)
|
||
K-2 (Miramax)
|
||
OTHELLO (Castle Hill) (NY)
|
||
THE SILK ROAD (Trimark)
|
||
STOP OR MY MOM WILL SHOOT (Universal)
|
||
TOTO THE HERO (Triton)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
February 28
|
||
-----------------
|
||
|
||
BLAME IT ON THE BELLBOY (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
COLD HEAVEN (Hemdale)
|
||
THE GATE II (Triumph)
|
||
THE MAMBO KINGS (Warner) (NY, LA)
|
||
MEMOIRS OF AN INVISIBLE MAN (Warner) 70mm
|
||
PAST MIDNIGHT (New Line)
|
||
TERMINAL BLISS (Cannon)
|
||
TURTLE BEACH (Warner) (NY, LA)
|
||
WHERE ANGELS FEAR TO TREAD (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other February Releases
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
SPOTSWOOD (Miramax)
|
||
THIS IS MY LIFE (20th Fox)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
March 6
|
||
-------------
|
||
|
||
CRISS CROSS (MGM-Pathe)
|
||
FINAL APPROACH (NY, LA)
|
||
GLADIATOR (Columbia)
|
||
THE INCREDIBLE JOURNEY (Disney)
|
||
A MIDNIGHT CLEAR (Interstar) (limited)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
March 13
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
|
||
AMERICAN ME (Universal)
|
||
ARTICLE 99 (Orion)
|
||
THE FAVOUR, THE WATCH AND THE VERY BIG FISH (Trimark)
|
||
THE LAWNMOWER MAN (New Line)
|
||
A MIDNIGHT CLEAR (Interstar) (wide)
|
||
MIDNIGHT RIDE (Cannon)
|
||
MY COUSIN VINNY (20th Fox)
|
||
NO PLACE TO HIDE (Cannon) (limited)
|
||
OUTBACK (Hemdale)
|
||
RUBY (Triumph)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
March 20
|
||
--------------
|
||
|
||
BASIC INSTINCT (TriStar)
|
||
THE CHILDREN (Hemdale/Coyote)
|
||
THE CUTTING EDGE (MGM)
|
||
THE MAMBO KINGS (Warner) (wider)
|
||
ONCE UPON A CRIME (MGM)
|
||
SEVEN MINUTES (Hemdale) (NY, LA)
|
||
SHADOWS AND FOG (Orion)
|
||
STEPFATHER III - FATHER'S DAY (Trimark)
|
||
|
||
|
||
March 27
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
ALBERTO EXPRESS (MK2) (NY)
|
||
LADYBUGS (Paramount)
|
||
ROADSIDE PROPHETS (New Line) (NY, LA)
|
||
WILD ORCHID II: TWO SHADES OF BLUE (Triumph)
|
||
|
||
|
||
March 29
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
PROOF (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other March Releases
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
|
||
AMERICAN DREAM (Miramax) (Austin, MN)
|
||
AT THE MAX (IMAX) (Charlotte)
|
||
BEFORE I WAKE (20th Fox)
|
||
DELICATESSEN (Miramax)
|
||
DINGO (Greycat) (Portland, NY, LA)
|
||
HIGHWAY 61 (Paramount)
|
||
HOWARD'S END (Orion Classics)
|
||
JOHNNY SUEDE (Miramax)
|
||
POISON IVY (New Line)
|
||
RESIDENT ALIEN (Greycat)
|
||
RULES OF THE GAME (Miramax)
|
||
STEPKIDS (New Line)
|
||
WHITE MEN CAN'T JUMP (20th Fox)
|
||
ZENTROPA (Miramax/Prestige)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
April 1
|
||
-------------
|
||
|
||
BREAKFAST OF ALIENS (Hemdale)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
April 3
|
||
-------------
|
||
|
||
CITY OF JOY (TriStar) (limited)
|
||
50/50 (Cannon)
|
||
INTERCEPTOR (Trimark)
|
||
NEWSIES (Disney) 70mm
|
||
PROOF (New Line/Fine Line) (limited)
|
||
ROCK-A-DOODLE (Samuel Goldwyn)
|
||
STRAIGHT TALK (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
April 10
|
||
--------------
|
||
|
||
BEETHOVEN (Universal)
|
||
EDWARD II (Fine Line/New Line)
|
||
PASSED AWAY (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
SINGLES (Warner)
|
||
STEPHEN KING'S SLEEPWALKERS (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
April 17
|
||
--------------
|
||
|
||
THE BABE (Universal)
|
||
DEEP COVER (New Line)
|
||
FERNGULLY: THE LAST RAINFOREST (20th Fox)
|
||
NIGHT ON EARTH (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
PROOF (New Line/Fine Line) (wide)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
April 24
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
MONSTER IN A BOX (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
PAYDIRT (Paramount)
|
||
RESCUE ME (Cannon)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other April Releases
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
|
||
ADAM'S RIB (October)
|
||
THE BACHELOR (Greycat) (NY, LA)
|
||
BRENDA STARR (Triumph)
|
||
A CLASS ACT (Warner)
|
||
ENCHANTED APRIL (Miramax)
|
||
ERASERHEAD (Miramax)
|
||
MAN TROUBLE (20th Fox)
|
||
MARRIED TO IT (Orion)
|
||
SPLIT SECOND (Interstar)
|
||
THE VAGRANT (MGM)
|
||
WHITE SANDS (Warner)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
May 1
|
||
-----
|
||
|
||
THE PLAYBOYS (Samuel Goldwyn)
|
||
THUNDERHEART (TriStar)
|
||
THE WIDE SARGASSO SEA (New Line)
|
||
|
||
|
||
May 8
|
||
-----
|
||
|
||
LEPRECHAUN (Trimark)
|
||
MONSTER IN A BOX (New Line/Fine Line) (wide)
|
||
NIGHT ON EARTH (New Line/Fine Line) (wide)
|
||
A VERY GOOD YEAR (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
May 13
|
||
------
|
||
|
||
RIFF-RAFF (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
May 15
|
||
------------
|
||
|
||
RIFF-RAFF (New Line/Fine Line) (LA)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
May 22
|
||
-------------
|
||
|
||
ALIEN3 (20th Fox) 70mm
|
||
BEST INTENTIONS (Samuel Goldwyn) (limited)
|
||
LETHAL WEAPON 3 (Warner) 70mm
|
||
LITTLE NEMO (Hemdale)
|
||
PATRIOT GAMES (Paramount) 70mm
|
||
WHERE THE DAY TAKES YOU (New Line)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other May Releases
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
|
||
THE AMERICAN SAMURAI (Cannon) (limited)
|
||
BEST INTENTIONS (Samuel Goldwyn)
|
||
DIGGSTOWN (MGM)
|
||
THE FAVOR (Orion)
|
||
HOUSE OF CARDS (20th Fox)
|
||
LIVE WIRE (New Line)
|
||
MEDITERRANEO (Miramax)
|
||
MERCI LA VIE (Miramax)
|
||
OF MICE AND MEN (MGM)
|
||
RICH IN LOVE (MGM)
|
||
A TALE OF SPRINGTIME (Orion Classics)
|
||
TO THE DEATH (Cannon) (limited)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other Spring Releases
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
|
||
HIGHWAY TO HELL (Hemdale)
|
||
KILLER TOMATOES EAT FRANCE (Four Square)
|
||
LAME DUCKS (Paramount)
|
||
LEAVING NORMAL (Universal)
|
||
MAD DOG AND GLORY (Universal)
|
||
THE PLAYER (Avenue)
|
||
RUBIN & ED (IRS Media)
|
||
SKETCHES (Miramax)
|
||
SNIPER (TriStar)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
June 5
|
||
------
|
||
|
||
FAR AND AWAY (Universal) 70mm
|
||
MO' MONEY (Columbia)
|
||
RIFF-RAFF (New Line) (LA + limited)
|
||
|
||
|
||
June 19
|
||
-------------
|
||
|
||
BATMAN RETURNS (Warner) 70mm
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other June Releases
|
||
------------------------
|
||
|
||
BOOMERANG (Paramount)
|
||
JACQUOT DE NANTES (Orion Classics)
|
||
TRACES OF RED (Samuel Goldwyn)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
July 1
|
||
------
|
||
|
||
COOL WORLD (Paramount)
|
||
A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
July 3
|
||
------
|
||
|
||
ENCINO MAN (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS (20th Fox) 70mm
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
July 10
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
HONEYMOON IN VEGAS (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
July 17
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
LONDON KILLS ME (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
UNIVERSAL SOLDIER (TriStar)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
July 24
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
AFRAID OF THE DARK (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
July 31
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
LONDON KILLS ME (New Line/Fine Line) (LA)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other July Releases
|
||
-------------------
|
||
|
||
THE ADJUSTER (Orion Classics)
|
||
BEBE'S KIDS (Paramount)
|
||
DANZON (Orion Classics)
|
||
DICK AND MARGE SAVE THE WORLD (Warner)
|
||
PRELUDE TO A KISS (20th Fox)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
August 7
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
AFRAID OF THE DARK (New Line/Fine Line) (LA + limited)
|
||
LONDON KILLS ME (New Line/Fine Line) (wide)
|
||
SINGLE WHITE FEMALE (Columbia)
|
||
THE UNFORGIVEN (Warner)
|
||
VOLERE, VOLARE (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
August 14
|
||
---------------
|
||
|
||
BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
August 19
|
||
---------
|
||
|
||
SWOON (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
August 28
|
||
---------
|
||
|
||
VOLERE, VOLARE (New Line/Fine Line) (LA + limited)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other August Releases
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
|
||
ARMY OF DARKNESS (Universal)
|
||
LA DISCRETE (MK2)
|
||
THE LOOTERS (Universal)
|
||
ONCE UPON A FOREST (20th Fox)
|
||
PET SEMATARY II (Paramount)
|
||
RAPID FIRE (20th Fox)
|
||
SHOW AND TELL (Paramount)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other Summer Releases
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
|
||
CAR 54, WHERE ARE YOU? (Orion)
|
||
CLIFFORD (Orion)
|
||
CLOSE TO EDEN (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
DEATH BECOMES HER (Universal)
|
||
FAR AND AWAY (Universal) 70mm
|
||
GONE FISHIN' (Disney)
|
||
GUN IN BETTY LOU'S HANDBAG (Disney)
|
||
HELLRAISER III (Miramax/Dimension)
|
||
HONEY, I BLEW UP THE BABY (Disney)
|
||
HOUSESITTER (Universal)
|
||
INNOCENT BLOOD (Warner)
|
||
MAP OF THE HUMAN HEART (Miramax)
|
||
PINOCCHIO (Disney)
|
||
RAISING CAIN (Universal)
|
||
RETURN TO MYSTIC PIZZA (Samuel Goldwyn)
|
||
ROBOCOP 3 (Orion)
|
||
SISTER ACT (Disney/Touchstone)
|
||
SKEETER (New Line/Team Players)
|
||
THAT NIGHT (Warner)
|
||
WIND (TriStar)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
September 11
|
||
------------------
|
||
|
||
THE PICKLE (Columbia)
|
||
SWOON (New Line/Fine Line) (wider)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
September 25
|
||
------------
|
||
|
||
SIMPLE MEN (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
WILDER NAPALM (TriStar)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other September Releases
|
||
------------------------
|
||
|
||
GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS (New Line)
|
||
JACK THE BEAR (20th Fox)
|
||
TWIN PEAKS: FIREWALK WITH ME (New Line)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
October 2
|
||
---------
|
||
|
||
MR. SATURDAY NIGHT (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
October 9
|
||
---------------
|
||
|
||
WATERLAND (New Line/Fine Line) (NY)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
October 16
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
SIMPLE MEN (New Line/Fine Line) (LA + limited)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
October 23
|
||
----------
|
||
|
||
WATERLAND (New Line/Fine Line) (LA + limited)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other October Releases
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
|
||
THE ADDAMS FAMILY II (Paramount)
|
||
COLUMBUS (Paramount) 70mm
|
||
DELTA OF VENUS (New Line)
|
||
UNLAWFUL ENTRY (20th Fox)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
November 20
|
||
-----------------
|
||
|
||
HOME ALONE 2: LOST IN NEW YORK (20th Fox)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other November Releases
|
||
-----------------------------
|
||
|
||
ALADDIN (Disney) 70mm
|
||
EXCESSIVE FORCE (New Line/Fine Line)
|
||
NIGHT AND THE CITY (20th Fox)
|
||
SURF NINJAS (New Line)
|
||
WE'RE BACK (Universal)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
December 18
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
HERO (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
December 23
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
A FEW GOOD MEN (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other Fall Releases
|
||
------------------------
|
||
|
||
BLADE RUNNER (Warner) 70mm
|
||
BLUE SKY (Orion)
|
||
THE BODYGUARD (Warner)
|
||
CHINA MOON (Orion)
|
||
THE CROWDED ROOM (20th Fox)
|
||
THE DARK HALF (Orion)
|
||
THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
DREADNOUGHT (Warner)
|
||
EMILY BRONTE'S WUTHERING HEIGHTS (Paramount)
|
||
THE EYES OF THE WORLD (Taurus)
|
||
HEXED (Columbia)
|
||
JACK THE BEAR (20th Fox)
|
||
JENNIFER EIGHT (Paramount)
|
||
LORENZO'S OIL (Universal)
|
||
MR. BASEBALL (Universal)
|
||
MR. JONES (TriStar)
|
||
PASSENGER 57 (Warner)
|
||
THE REST OF DANIEL (Warner)
|
||
SCENT OF A WOMAN (Universal)
|
||
SCHOOL TIES (Paramount)
|
||
SNEAKERS (Universal)
|
||
STAY TUNED (Warner)
|
||
STEEPLECHASE (Disney)
|
||
THERE GOES MY BABY (Orion)
|
||
THIS BOY'S LIFE (Warner)
|
||
UNTITLED WOODY ALLEN (TriStar)
|
||
USED PEOPLE (20th Fox)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other December Releases
|
||
-----------------------------
|
||
|
||
THE AGE OF INNOCENCE (Columbia)
|
||
ALIVE (Paramount)
|
||
BURN THIS (New Line)
|
||
CHARLIE (TriStar)
|
||
HOFFA (20th Fox)
|
||
INDECENT PROPOSAL (Paramount)
|
||
MALCOLM X (Warner) 70mm
|
||
REMAINS OF THE DAY (Columbia) (limited)
|
||
THE SAINT (Paramount)
|
||
SWING KIDS (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
TOYS (20th Fox)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other 1992 Releases
|
||
-------------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
AMERICAN HEART (Avenue)
|
||
THE ARROWTOOTH WALTZ (Warner)
|
||
ARSENIC AND OLD LACE (Turner)
|
||
THE BABOON HEART (MGM)
|
||
THE BACHELOR (Greycat)
|
||
BITTER MOON (TriStar/Carolco)
|
||
BLACK CAT BONE (20th Fox)
|
||
BORN YESTERDAY (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
BREAKING LEGS (TriStar)
|
||
A BRONX TALE (Universal)
|
||
THE BRUCE LEE STORY (Universal)
|
||
BUDDY COPS (TriStar)
|
||
BURN THIS (New Line)
|
||
CHILDREN OF THE CORN II (Miramax/Dimension)
|
||
CITIZEN SANE (Trimark)
|
||
CLIFFHANGER (TriStar)
|
||
THE COLOR OF LOVE (Greycat)
|
||
THE CONCIERGE (Universal)
|
||
CONSENTING ADULTS (Disney/Hollywood)
|
||
THE DAY BEFORE MIDNIGHT (Universal)
|
||
DR. OFF (Miramax/Dimension)
|
||
DUST DEVIL (Miramax/Dimension)
|
||
EVEN COWGIRLS GET THE BLUES (TriStar)
|
||
EYES OF AN ANGEL (Triumph)
|
||
FRIDA: THE BRUSH OF ANGUISH (New Line)
|
||
GHOST OF THE CIVIL DEAD (Greycat)
|
||
GOBLINS (Hemdale)
|
||
HIT MAN (Triumph)
|
||
HURRICANE SMITH (Warner)
|
||
THE INNOCENT (Paramount)
|
||
INTO THE WEST (Miramax)
|
||
JOHNNY SUEDE (Miramax)
|
||
JUMPIN' AT THE BONEYARD (20th Fox)
|
||
LIFE IN THE LAFF LANE (Greycat)
|
||
THE MAGIC RIDDLE (Miramax)
|
||
ME, MYSELF AND I (IRS)
|
||
THE MISTRESS (TriStar)
|
||
MY NEW GUN (IRS Media)
|
||
THE PUBLIC EYE (Universal)
|
||
RAGE AND HONOR (IRS)
|
||
RECKLESS KELLY (Warner)
|
||
RISING SUN (20th Fox)
|
||
ROMEO IS BLEEDING (Miramax)
|
||
RUBY CAIRO (20th Fox)
|
||
SARAFINA! (Warner)
|
||
SOMMERSBY (Warner)
|
||
STORYVILLE (20th Fox)
|
||
STREETRACER (Universal)
|
||
TAGGET (Universal)
|
||
VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED (Universal)
|
||
THE ULTIMATUM (Disney/Touchstone)
|
||
WARLOCK II (Trimark)
|
||
WE'RE TALKIN' SERIOUS MONEY (New Line)
|
||
WHERE SLEEPING DOGS LIE (Greycat)
|
||
THE WIND (Miramax)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
February, 1993 Releases
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
|
||
GROUND HOG DAY (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
March, 1993 Releases
|
||
--------------------
|
||
|
||
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES III (New Line)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Spring, 1993 Releases
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
TOXIC CRUSADERS (New Line)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Summer, 1993 Releases
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
BEVERLY HILLS COP III (Paramount)
|
||
JURASSIC PARK (Universal) 70mm
|
||
PRINCESS OF MARS (Disney) 70mm
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Fall, 1993 Releases
|
||
-------------------
|
||
|
||
MY GIRL SEQUEL (Columbia)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Christmas, 1993 Releases
|
||
------------------------
|
||
|
||
THE FLINTSTONES (Universal) 70mm
|
||
INTO THE WOODS (Columbia)
|
||
PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (Warner)
|
||
WHO DISCOVERED ROGER RABBIT? (Disney) 70mm
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other 1993 Releases
|
||
-------------------
|
||
|
||
CATS (Universal)
|
||
DEAD WOOD (MGM)
|
||
DENNIS THE MENACE (Warner)
|
||
THE GOOD SON (20th Fox)
|
||
HIDEAWAY (TriStar)
|
||
HOOVER (Warner)
|
||
HOUDINI (Columbia-Universal)
|
||
INTERSECTION (Paramount)
|
||
KING OF THE JUNGLE (Disney) 70mm
|
||
LEGENDS OF THE FALL (TriStar)
|
||
LES MISERABLES (TriStar)
|
||
MEN (Warner)
|
||
MIDKNIGHT (Columbia)
|
||
MISSING PIECES (Orion)
|
||
M. BUTTERFLY (Warner)
|
||
NEEDFUL THINGS (Columbia)
|
||
OCTOBER SURPRISE (Columbia)
|
||
OFF AND RUNNING (Orion)
|
||
THE PRETENDER (20th Fox)
|
||
RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT (20th Fox)
|
||
SPEED RACER (Warner Brothers)
|
||
SUNRISE IN HIS POCKET (Columbia)
|
||
THREE RIVERS (Columbia)
|
||
WE'RE BACK (Universal)
|
||
YO, ALICE! (New Line)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|