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Tag: chris columbus

  • Macaulay Culkin and ‘Home Alone’ Director Chris Columbus Share Set Secrets, Dismay at Franchise’s “Really Bad Sequels” and Ideas for a New Movie

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    In honor of the 35th anniversary of Home Alone, star Macaulay Culkin and director Chris Columbus sat down for a conversation about the film‘s past, present and future.

    Somehow marking the very first time they’d discussed the hit movie together, the pair united for a screening at the Academy Museum on Saturday where they began at the beginning, with John Hughes first bringing the script to Columbus. That came after the filmmaker had quit Hughes’ National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation — with Columbus admitting, “I had to call John Hughes and say, ‘I don’t get along with Chevy Chase. I don’t think I can make a movie with him’” — and thinking he may never direct again.

    Of course he did, with Home Alone becoming a smash hit and a holiday classic still to this day, something Columbus credits to “a feeling of timelessness about the look of the movie and the feel of the movie.” It’s also in the elaborate traps that 8-year-old Kevin McCallister lays for thieves Harry (Joe Pesci) and Marv (Daniel Stern) that were done so realistically that “every time [the stuntmen] did a stunt, it was not funny. We’d watch it and we thought they were dead.”

    The stars also got in on the action. In the scene where Pesci’s character’s head catches on fire, the actor had to wear a special cap; Columbus remembered “when we offered it to Joe, he said, ‘There’s no way I’m wearing that fucking thing.’” Producer Mark Radcliffe then “brought out his 9-year-old daughter, put the cap on her and we put the torch on her to actually show Joe Pesci, you’re gonna be OK, Joe, this is fine,” which eventually convinced him. And Stern had a real tarantula crawl on his face, but couldn’t scream because the spider “would then bite and get upset;” he had to pretend to scream and have his vocals added in post, the filmmaker revealed.

    The conversation also touched on possible ways Culkin and Columbus could return to the franchise; they both stopped after 1992’s Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, but the movies carried on, with 1997’s Home Alone 3, 2002’s Home Alone 4, 2012’s Home Alone: The Holiday Heist and 2021’s Home Sweet Home Alone.

    Columbus got honest about his thoughts on those films, telling The Hollywood Reporter before the onstage conversation that his problem returning to the franchise is “it’s been revisited with really bad sequels. Sorry to insult anybody, but they’ve completely fucked it up. It started with Home Alone 3 and then it just went downhill from there; Home Alone 3 is sort of the best of the bunch of the bad movies.” He partially blamed their failure on using wires in action scenes, which “give a false sense of the stunt,” and as Culkin pointed out, “also they didn’t have us.”

    Despite this, Culkin has recently been speaking publicly about a sequel idea he came up with, which he elaborated on at the event. “I like the idea that maybe Kevin’s older, that he’s like a widower or something like that. He’s raising his kid and they don’t really get along, he’s working all the time. … it’s almost like a Liar, Liar kind of thing,” the actor mused. “There’s one of two ways you can do it. One, he actually leaves the kid behind by mistake; he calls up his mom like, ‘So sorry, I get it now.’ Or I leave him behind on purpose, like, ‘Oh, that made me the man I am today.’”

    Culking continued, “Then he locks me out of the house and he’s setting up traps and things like that. And I think I see them coming because, you know, I’m the expert. It also explains why I don’t call the police or locksmith because I’m embarrassed my kid is beating me and this is my gig. And I think the house would be kind of a metaphor for getting back into the kid’s heart kind of thing.”

    Chris Columbus, Macaulay Culkin and Academy Museum director of film programs K.J. Relth-Miller.

    Academy Museum Foundation/Andrew Ge

    Columbus, though — who said he’s “heard about 600 different ideas” over the years of how to continue the story — thinks it would only be worth it if Culkin, Pesci and Stern all returned, as Culkin joked, “Joe Pesci is 82; I’m pretty sure he would still take a fall, right?”

    The filmmaker elaborated to THR that two decades ago, he considered an idea where Harry and Marv were getting out of jail after 20 years and “they’re bitter, they’re angry, and they want revenge. And who do they want revenge on? Macaulay. And at that point, I thought Macaulay could have a kid, sort of Kevin’s age, and it would be his own kid dealing with these two guys.” Columbus added, though, “I don’t think Joe Pesci would be interested. I haven’t seen Dan Stern since 1992, I don’t know if he would be interested. The problem is when you’re doing a film like this, a lot of it is really based on cast; part of it is based on the cast at that age, at that particular time, and I don’t think you can duplicate that.”

    The pair finished out the conversation by answering questions from kids in the audience, as Culkin talked about showing the movie to his own children — who don’t realize that he’s the star.

    “They don’t even call it Home Alone, they call it Kevin. They’re like, ‘Wow Kevin’s really funny’; I go, ‘He’s also handsome, somebody that your mom [Brenda Song] might be into,’” he joked. “I showed my oldest — he wanted to see a picture of me and my siblings, so I pulled up this old photo; it’s all my siblings and he looks right at me and he goes, ‘Who’s that? That looks like Kevin.’ I go, ‘Oh, no, nobody, here’s your aunt.’”

    Culkin continued, “Their little cousin was over, she’s 5 years old. They told her, ‘We’re gonna watch Kevin tonight.’ And she turned to me, she goes, ‘You’re Kevin.’ I said, ‘No you’re Kevin, shut up!’ I’m trying to keep the magic alive.” He left the stage by giving Home Alone 2‘s signature line, telling the crowd, “Merry Christmas, ya filthy animals.”

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    Kirsten Chuba

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  • The Goonies’ Ke Huy Quan Shares Exciting Sequel Movie Update

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    Ke Huy Quan addressed one of the most talked about questions surrounding the future of The Goonies while promoting his latest project. The original cast member explained where development on the long discussed sequel currently stands. They also shared new details about the progress of the script.

    Ke Huy Quan talks about The Goonies sequel

    Ke Huy Quan discussed the status of The Goonies sequel in an interview with ComicBook while promoting Zootopia 2. He said he has not read the script but confirmed that a second draft has been completed. Quan explained, “I first heard about it when I saw Steven Spielberg at an event and he was so excited,” and added, “We try to do it, so let’s manifest it. I know we’ve been trying for the last 40 years, but I feel quite good about it.”

    Chris Columbus and Steven Spielberg are developing the sequel, Quan said. He noted the progress on the script, stating, “I read he turned in the second draft and they’re really happy about it.” He also told Fortune Feimster, “We’re gonna do it. I want her to be in it,” while confirming that he wants to play Richard “Data” Wang again. He said, “I would love to revisit that character and go on another adventure with my Goonies brothers and sisters.”

    Potsy Ponciroli joined the project as the screenwriter when the announcement was made earlier in the year. Warner Bros. reported in January that the team had begun work on a sequel, and the studio confirmed in February that the film was officially moving forward. The 1985 film was a hit and later entered the United States National Film Registry for its cultural significance.

    Josh Brolin shared information about earlier drafts in August (via Entertainment Online). He said writers had produced several scripts in previous years, but the team did not approve them. Reports at the time noted that these versions did not align with the direction the studio intended to pursue.

    Quan’s comments about a completed second draft marked the latest step in the ongoing development of a new Goonies film.

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    Vritti Johar

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  • The Thursday Murder Club Adaptation is An Insult to the Intelligence of the Audience Its Geared Toward

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    There is an ever-burgeoning genre in the world of film and TV: that which can be ascribed to something like a “rest home caper.” From Book Club to Poms to Queen Bees to A Man on the Inside, the growing genre isn’t without its merit. However, apart from A Man on the Inside, there has yet to be a truly standout offering within this category in recent years. The Thursday Murder Club proves no exception to the rule. And, like most movies (whether Netflix or otherwise), it is adapted from a novel of the same name. Though one imagines the book’s author, Richard Osman, didn’t quite have this in mind when envisioning the translation of his work from the page to the screen (but then, he likely never suspected that Netflix and co. would come knocking on his door at all, so why not just take it as a blessing, no matter how the final product turned out?).

    Of course, to cushion the blow of the, shall we say, “wonky” execution, there is the cast: Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, Ben Kingsley and Celia Imrie. A veritable who’s who of British heavy hitters of “a certain generation.” But it’s Imrie who has the most experience with this genre, having previously appeared in Calendar Girls and The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (along with its sequel). Alas, her “experience” with this kind of material does little to spare it from being a hatchet job. Regardless of Steven Spielberg being a producer on the project via Amblin Entertainment. And yes, one imagines that it was Spielberg’s long-standing relationship with writer-director Chris Columbus that landed him the gig, replacing Ol Parker as director. Yet it is Parker who has more adjacent experience with the “rest home caper” genre, with The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again all under his belt. No matter, apparently. The production went on with Katy Brand and Suzanne Heathcote taking over the screenwriting process and, in so doing, trimming away here and there at the book’s original structure, which often features diary entries from Joyce (Imrie), the retired nurse that Elizabeth (Mirren), Ron (Brosnan) and Ibrahim (Kingsley) invite into their club to help them with a particular “humdinger” of a case involving a woman named Angela Hughes, whose murder ultimately went unsolved in 1973—indeed, the Thursday Murder Club specializes only in cold cases.

    Cold cases that require a sharp mind to solve. So it is that, by bringing Joyce into their group, she quickly learns two things: 1) part of the reason she’s been enlisted is to replace Penny Gray, a former detective inspector recently transferred to hospice care and 2) because of Penny’s former profession, they have access to these types of files that would otherwise be confidential. In the book, Joyce acknowledges these two points as follows: “I suppose there had been a vacancy, and I was the new Penny… Penny had been an inspector in the Kent Police for many years, and she would bring along the files of unsolved murder cases. She wasn’t really supposed to have the files, but who was to know? After a certain age, you can pretty much do whatever takes your fancy.”

    To that point, when you get right down to it, that is what this genre is all about—reminding people that the elderly aren’t to be underestimated or written off. For to do so is often at one’s own peril. And yes, it’s also a “gentle” nudge for those audiences outside the demographic it’s aimed for to remember that they, too, will “be there” someday. Albeit probably not in a place as tony as Coopers Chase, which also happens to be one of the linchpins to solving this seemingly quagmiric mystery. One that all goes back to the murder of Hughes.

    However, it isn’t Penny who brought this cold case to the TMC’s attention, which should be the first red flag to viewers. Instead, it’s Elizabeth who fished it from the proverbial wreckage, curious at how a woman could have died from a stab wound in that particular part of her body so quickly—this stabbing done before being thrown out of a window. And thrown out of it just as Hughes’ boyfriend, Peter Mercer (Will Stevens), happened to be walking home from the pub, seeing a masked man run away from the scene of the crime. It is from this very moment, the outset of the movie, that the believability factor, combined with the acting delivery, is made apparent in its badness by how “la-di-da” this Peter character is about chasing after his girlfriend’s presumed aggressor, barely bothering to walk after him, let alone run as he shouts, just once, “Stop!” But, of course, after about another two hours of circuitous attempts at offering “red herrings” (in the spirit of Agatha Christie, which the book version of The Thursday Murder Club had intended), the viewer is at last shown, in an extremely dry iteration of how Mystery Incorporated (a.k.a. Scooby and the gang) unveils their findings, who the true killer is. And, in truth, Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! actually does offer more sense (and entertainment) in terms of the final results of their cases.

    With The Thursday Murder Club, it’s obvious that the tone and wit of the book dissipated in the translation, making the way in which the case unfolds less of a “joy” and more of a grin-and-bear-it fest. And no, even the presence of some younger British heavy hitters, like David Tennant and, increasingly, Naomi Ackie, can’t do much to alleviate the core problem of the movie: it insults the intelligence of its intended audience with its hyper-saccharine nature. To be sure, Chris Columbus does tend to be responsible for making these types of movies (e.g., Gremlins and The Goonies). However, in the past, the final result has been far more, let’s say, “aware of itself” (see also: Mrs. Doubtfire, the obviously far better collaboration between Columbus and Brosnan).

    Whereas, with The Thursday Murder Club, it’s clear that Columbus feels there is an “elevated” aura to it…and surely, in part, because of the “Spielberg cachet.” What’s more, Spielberg, too, is well-known for being a champion of the saccharine. But, like Columbus, he has had much better luck in the past with carrying it off than he does here, where the mantra of everyone involved seems to be, “Just an entire vat of sugar makes the medicine go down” (even if you might almost immediately yak it up right after).

    That medicine, in this scenario, being the notion that—gasp!—the elderly can have a life after “a certain age.” Can still use their bodies and, even more importantly, their minds to great effect. Often to greater effect than those younger than they are. Just not when it comes to this particular adaptation of a book.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Chris Columbus Says ‘Harry Potter’ Reunion Is “Never Going to Happen” Due to J.K. Rowling’s Transphobia

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    Chris Columbus, who directed the first two Harry Potter movies, said a reunion with the original cast is “never going to happen” due to author J.K. Rowling‘s anti-trans stances.

    The filmmaker has previously expressed interest in a film adaptation of the Broadway play Harry Potter and the Cursed Child with the cast of the beloved franchise, but has since scrapped his plans because it’s gotten too “complicated.”

    “It’s never going to happen,” Columbus recently told The Times U.K. “It’s gotten so complicated with all the political stuff. Everyone in the cast has their own opinion, which is different from her opinion, which makes it impossible.”

    The Hollywood Reporter reached out to Rowling’s reps for comment.

    Rowling has been criticized in recent years for her transphobia, as she’s been outspoken on social media against the trans rights movement. Earlier this year, she also celebrated the U.K. Supreme Court’s landmark ruling that trans women should not be recognized as women and that “sex” should legally mean biological sex.

    Columbus, who helmed 2001’s Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone and 2002’s Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, has previously publicly said he disagrees with the author’s controversial views. He added to The Times U.K., “I haven’t spoken to Miss Rowling in a decade or so, so I have no idea what’s going on with her.”

    As for the original cast, which includes Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson, the filmmaker said he’s still quite close with them. “I keep very close contact with Daniel Radcliffe and I just spoke to him a few days ago,” he said. “I still have a great relationship with all the kids in the cast.”

    Rowling can’t say the same, as the author previously stated she would not forgive those who have supported trans healthcare, including Harry Potter stars Grint, Watson and Radcliffe. In response, the latter said Rowling’s comments make “me really sad.”

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    Carly Thomas

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  • Robin Williams Improvised So Much of ‘Mrs. Doubtfire’ That the Cameras Ran Out of Film

    Robin Williams Improvised So Much of ‘Mrs. Doubtfire’ That the Cameras Ran Out of Film

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    When Robin Williams got going, there was absolutely no stopping him. According to director Chris Columbus, the late, great Williams improvised so much while shooting Mrs. Doubtfire that nearly 2 million feet of film was amassed during production.

    Columbus spoke about the stockpile of footage in a Business Insider article celebrating the 30th anniversary of Mrs. Doubtfire, revealing that there are almost 1,000 boxes of footage from the classic film starring Williams as Daniel Hillard, a recently divorced voice actor who, in order to stay close to his three children, goes undercover as British nanny Mrs. Doubtfire. “There are roughly 972 boxes of footage from Doubtfire—footage we used in the movie, outtakes, behind-the-scenes footage—in a warehouse somewhere, and we would like to hire an editor to go in and look at all of that,” said Columbus.

    Columbus told Business Insider that he hopes to release a documentary about the making of Mrs. Doubtfire, sharing that a team is “talking about it and trying to get it done.” The goal is to highlight Williams’s singular comedic talent and process. “There is something special and magical about how he went about his work, and I think it would be fun to delve into it,” he explained. “I mean, there’s 2 million feet of film in that warehouse, so there could be something we can do with all of that.”

    A lot of that footage, it seems, is of Williams improvising. “If it were today, we would never end,” said Columbus. “But back then, we were shooting film, so once we were out of film in the camera, we would say to Robin, ‘We’re out of film.’ That happened on several occasions.” Although Williams was burning through film, he was so funny that the studio execs didn’t mind and “were loving what they were seeing.” 

    Williams starred in Mrs. Doubtfire opposite Sally Field, Pierce Brosnan, and Harvey Fierstein. “It got to the point that I had to shoot the entire movie with four cameras to keep up with him,” explained Columbus. “None of us knew what he was going to say when he got going, and so I wanted a camera on the other actors to get their reactions. For Pierce Brosnan and Sally Field, it was quite difficult for them not to break character.”

    To his credit, Williams was upfront about the way he liked to work and his love of improvisation. According to Columbus, Williams came up to him at the beginning of the process and said, “Hey, boss, the way I like to work, if you’re up for it, is: I’ll give you three or four scripted takes, and then let’s play.” Still, Columbus admitted that it couldn’t have been easy for those working on the film, particularly those tasked with working on the script. “The poor script supervisor,” he said. “She was handwriting it, and Robin would change every take. So Robin would go to a place where he couldn’t remember much of what he said. We would go to the script supervisor and ask her, and sometimes she didn’t even get it all.”

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    Chris Murphy

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