FROM THE WRAP:
Ed here: I realize that I am alone in the
universe finding Will Smith's acting flashy, cloying and empty. He's
a showboat.
Now whatever you thought of Sam Peckinpah he was a
serious man with a serious vision about this vale of tears we inhabit. Watch
"The Deadly Companions" sometime or of course "The Wild
Bunch." These are bold and violent and heartbreaking statements.
Will Smith ruined "I Am Legend" (apparently he's about to ruin it
again with a sequel or prequel).
Maybe he'll try "Caligula" next. With some
dancing it.
Will
Smith is in talks to star in and produce Warner Bros.' reboot of Sam
Peckinpah's classic 1969 Western "The Wild Bunch," individuals
familiar with the project have told TheWrap.
Smith
would produce through his Overbrook Entertainment banner along with Jerry
Weintraub, who recently worked with Smith on "The Karate Kid" remake.
The
original "Wild Bunch" followed a group of aging outlaws that plan one
last score on the Texas-Mexico border as the traditional American West changes
around them in 1913.
A
modern remake involving cartels south of the border, the "Wild Bunch"
reboot is expected to follow a disgraced D.E.A. agent who assembles a team to
go after a Mexican drug lord and his fortune.
Warner
Bros. and Weintraub have been looking to reboot the property for years. David
Ayer was hired to write a script and most recently, Tony Scott was developing
the project with Oscar winner Brian Helgeland ("L.A. Confidential"),
who wrote about half of the screenplay before Scott died last year.
The
studio and producing team are currently looking to hire a new writer for the
project, which provides the opportunity to surround Smith with a strong
ensemble. The original "Wild Bunch" starred William Holden,
Ernest Borgnine, Robert Ryan, Edmond O'Brien, Warren Oates, Jaime Sanchez and
Ben Johnson.
Smith
has never done a proper Western before, though he was sought to star in Quentin
Tarantino's "Django Unchained" and Kathryn Bigelow's since-abandoned
"Triple Frontier." WB's 1999 movie "Wild Wild West" was set
in the Old West but the material was played for laughs.
3 comments:
Whew! That sounds rotten, Ed. Yeah, there's no remaking THE WILD BUNCH.
Smith demonstrated some range in a serious role in The Pursuit of Happyness, IMO.
Smith is another Scientologist jackass. I don't waste my time or money on their movies or TV shows.
Post a Comment