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    Tom Cruise to Resume Filming 'Mission: Impossible 7' in September

    Paramount Pictures

    The cast and crew members of the next ‘Mission: Impossible’ installment will be back to work this coming fall without any changes to the filming locations.
    Jun 3, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Tom Cruise will resume shooting “Mission: Impossible 7” in September 2020 following a forced hiatus due to the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the film’s first assistant director.
    Production on the movie was shut down in Italy in February, as the European nation emerged as one of the epicentres of the pandemic, with plans to shift production to London also scuppered when the U.K. also had to impose a lockdown due to the spread of the coronavirus.
    Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Tuesday, June 2, 2020, Tommy Gormley, first assistant director to helmer Christopher McQuarrie, said the cast and crew plan to start shooting in the autumn – and won’t alter any locations.
    “We hope to restart in September,” he revealed. “We hope to visit all the countries we planned to. We hope to do a big chunk of it back in the U.K. on the backlot and in the studio.”
    Gormley went on to assert that he is “convinced” that the Paramount production could be finished by May at the latest and ready for its November 2021 release date with time to spare.
    Cast and crew, including Cruise, who plays superspy Ethan Hunt in the hit franchise, were in Venice, Italy waiting to shoot scenes when they had to leave the country as it imposed a stringent lockdown due to a surge in Covid-19 cases.
    Gormley went on to say that troublesome location shoots or stunt set-pieces would not be moved, shelved, or rendered with CGI due to the difficulties posed by the pandemic.
    “This is our challenge,” he added. “We are not a chamber piece movie. We do spectacle, and that is what people expect of us.”
    Film and TV productions in the U.K. are now getting up and running again as the country eases its lockdown, with some resuming as early as next week, albeit with strict social distancing regulations.

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    Patricia Reed Scott, Who Cast New York as Hollywood East, Dies at 86

    Patricia Reed Scott, who was instrumental in transforming New York into Hollywood-on-the-Hudson as the city’s film, television and theatrical production promoter under two mayors, died on May 23 in Neptune, N.J. She was 86.The cause was a subdural hematoma sustained in a fall, her son, Matthew Scott, said.A former singer and host of an Emmy Award-winning television series on aging, Ms. Scott played a major but invisible role in the hundreds of productions she helped lure to New York in the 1980s and ’90s.As defunct factories were transformed into television studios and sound stages, the city was reborn as a film mecca, recapturing its early-20th-century primacy, which prevailed before the industry decamped to California to evade Thomas Edison’s motion picture patents and unpredictable East Coast weather.Ms. Scott’s former husband, George C. Scott, won (and refused) an Oscar for playing the swaggering George S. Patton in the 1970 film about the World War II general, but it was Ms. Scott who actually did perform as a kind of real-life field general when she commandeered the Brooklyn Bridge for three hours one Sunday morning so that Bruce Willis could order Army tanks across the span to corner supposed Arab terrorist sympathizers in the 1998 thriller “The Siege.”Ms. Scott pulled another Patton-worthy feat when she cleared Times Square of vehicles and pedestrians for two hours early one Sunday so that a panicked Tom Cruise could sprint through it during a dream sequence for the 2001 film “Vanilla Sky.”Ms. Scott served as director of the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting under Edward I. Koch from 1983 to 1989 and as commissioner of the office under Rudolph W. Giuliani from 1994 to 2002.“There is no point in trying to reinvent something when, in fact, the original invention was the very best,” Mr. Giuliani said when he appointed her.Her second stint was book-ended by two economic crises: a Hollywood boycott of production in New York in the early 1990s to protest what studios considered exorbitant labor costs, and the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, which had a devastating effect on the entertainment industry.“In her seven years in between, however,” James Sanders, the author of “Celluloid Skyline: New York and the Movies” (2001), said in an email. “Pat was able to encourage and nurture growth of the film industry, and, importantly, demonstrate that New York City could flexibly accommodate truly large-scale demands for major studio productions.”By 2000, according to a study commissioned by the city, the industry spent $5 billion in New York making feature films, television programs and commercials and employed about 70,000 people. Mr. Sanders said Ms. Scott had “successfully guided the city’s film and television production industry though a delicate and important time, setting the groundwork for its dramatic later expansion in the 2000s and 2010s.”Alan Suna, chief executive of Silvercup Studios, a New York City-area production company, recalled working with Ms. Scott “when the industry was just building momentum” in the city. “She was one of its earliest advocates,” he said, “lobbying to bring more production work to New York.”Shirley Patricia Reed was born on March 1, 1934, in Portsmouth, Va. Her father, Frank Stovall Reed, was a chief petty officer in the Navy. Her mother, Mary Ellen (Hudson) Reed, owned a grocery.Pat, as she became known, performed publicly for the first time as a 5-year-old, when, accompanied by her mother, she appeared on a local radio program to read Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart” and sing a song.If she was smitten by the stage, she patiently waited until she graduated from George Washington University with a degree in English before pursuing a career in the performing arts.She met Mr. Scott in Washington during a production of Luigi Pirandello’s play “Six Characters in Search of an Author,” then worked with him in summer stock near Detroit, where they placed a bet on a long-shot horse named Pat Again and won $600, enough to stake them for their search for Broadway stardom.She and Mr. Scott married and lived in a cold-water flat while he worked overnight in a bank and spent days auditioning. Ms. Scott co-founded a company called Studio Duplicating Service, which typed and copied scripts. When her husband was cast as Richard III in 1957 in Joseph Papp’s New York Shakespeare Festival, she publicized his sudden success and found him an agent.Their marriage ended in divorce in 1960. In addition to their son, Matt, she is survived by a daughter, Devon Scott; and a grandson. Mr. Scott died in 1999 at 71.Ms. Scott turned to music, becoming a nightclub jazz singer who appeared, in some cases, on the same bill with Sarah Vaughan and Barbra Streisand and performed on “The Today Show.” Then, with rock superseding jazz in popularity, she shifted careers and joined the Harry Walker Agency, which represented clients for speaking engagements.In the 1970s, Ms. Scott was hired to handle public relations for the city’s Department of the Aging. In 1976 she won two Emmys for producing the television series “Getting On” for PBS. She was a deputy press officer under Mayor Koch before he appointed her to the film office, where she initiated Early Stages, a program to familiarize young people with live theater.To attract filmmakers, the city offered incentives like tax abatements and low-interest loans and expedited the permit approval process, provided police details for crowd control and boasted of the pool of creative talent and postproduction facilities.“It’s always been our position that we don’t censor scripts,” Ms. Scott said, adding that her office gave a film a good review if it made money for the city. More

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    'Lord of the Rings' Original Stars Show Off Matching Tattoos on Josh Gad's 'Reunited Apart'

    Instagram

    Andy Serkis, Liv Tyler, Karl Urban, Hugo Weaving and their ‘Fellowship of the Ring’ co-stars get together with director Peter Jackson during a Zoom meeting benefiting No Kids Hungry.
    Jun 2, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Josh Gad has pulled off his most impressive “Reunited Apart” cast reunion yet – by assembling all nine members of the “Lord of the Rings” Fellowship, plus director Peter Jackson and other franchise stars including Andy Serkis and Liv Tyler.
    The “Frozen (2013)” actor’s latest star-studded Zoom teleconference meeting, taped last week, aired on YouTube on Sunday, May 31, and it has already raised more than $90,000 (£73,000) to benefit bosses at No Kids Hungry, who are working to feed hungry schoolchildren during the coronavirus pandemic.
    Chiefs at U.S. company Cheerios have also donated $1.3 million (£1 million) in support of the virtual get-together.
    Josh managed to assemble the leads from “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring” – the first film in the famed franchise, released in December, 2001 – plus fellow cast members Miranda Otto, Andy Serkis, Liv Tyler, Karl Urban, and Hugo Weaving, as well as director Peter Jackson, composer Howard Shore, and screenwriter Philippa Boyens.
    The 50-minute chat included all nine members of the Fellowship showing off the matching tattoos they had inked when the third and final film in the series, “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King”, wrapped. They also shared set secrets and anecdotes.
    [embedded content]
    The reunion is part of Gad’s “Reunited Apart” series, which previously brought together the casts of “The Goonies”, “Back to the Future”, and “Splash”. Find out how Gad has pulled off the reunions here.

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    Spike Lee Uses '3 Brothers' as Powerful Statement About George Floyd's Death

    WENN

    When debuting the short film on Don Lemon’s CNN special news report, the ‘BlacKkKlansman’ director points out that the country was founded on the deaths of black people.
    Jun 2, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Spike Lee has made his own powerful statement about the death of George Floyd at the hands of police by releasing a short film comparing his treatment to a scene from his film “Do the Right Thing”.
    Floyd passed away last Monday (May 25) after being apprehended by police in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with Derek Chauvin, an officer who was filmed kneeling on his neck facing a third degree murder charge and three other officers dismissed over the incident.
    His death, and U.S. authorities’ subsequent response has prompted protests and unrest across America, with Lee adding his own voice on Sunday (May 31) by debuting a short film, “3 Brothers”, on a CNN special news report, hosted by Don Lemon.
    The short opens with the words “Will History Stop Repeating Itself”, before cutting together footage of the arrests of Floyd and Eric Garner, whose death after being placed in a chokehold by a New York City Police Department (NYPD) officer in 2014 also sparked protests. It also includes scenes from Spike’s 1989 movie “Do the Right Thing”, in which Radio Raheem, the character played by Bill Nunn, dies during a brawl after being choked by police officers.

    Speaking to Don, the “BlacKkKlansman” director, who was wearing a T-shirt carrying the date 1619, generally thought to be the year the first indentured labourers arrived in the state of Virginia, said the U.S. was founded on the deaths of black people – and protesters, even those who have turned to rioting, are merely demanding justice.
    “How can people not understand why people are acting the way they are?” he warned. “This is not new, we saw with the riots in the 60s, the assassination of Dr (Martin Luther) King, every time something jumps off and we don’t get our justice, people are reacting they way they do to be heard … We are seeing this again and again and again…This is the thing: the killing of black bodies, that is what this country is built upon.”
    Spike has also posted the short film on Twitter.

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    Chris Evans Finds Losing 'Fracture' Role to Ryan Gosling 'Tough'

    WENN

    Admitting that he hates auditioning, the ‘Captain America’ star recalls thinking he had ‘never had a better audition in my life’ than when eyeing the part of district attorney William ‘Willy’ Beachum.
    Jun 1, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Chris Evans found losing the lead role in the 2007 movie “Fracture” to Ryan Gosling “tough”.
    The 38-year-old actor told The Hollywood Reporter he had “never had a better audition in my life”, so was naturally devastated when he was pipped to the role of district attorney William ‘Willy’ Beachum.
    “I hate auditioning. I despise it. I think most actors do, but I got that one and knocked it right out. And it was so great and I had such a great rapport with the director and really felt like it was coming my way.”
    Chris added: “Anthony Hopkins was already attached and you really think, this is another one of those moments where I might be able to turn a corner. And to lose that one… obviously, Ryan, if you’re going to lose to someone, lose to Ryan. But it was just one of those things where you think, ‘Man, this is tough’.”
    Other movies that Chris missed out on around that same time were “Gone Baby Gone”, “Milk”, and “Elizabethtown”, and the actor recently admitted the disappointments, along with on-set panic attacks, almost led him to quit acting.
    “There was a period of time where you start thinking, ‘Man, I can’t make a good movie. I don’t know what it is. I wonder how many chances I’m gonna get at this’,” he shared.
    Fortunately for Chris, he soon landed the career-making role of Captain America in “The Avengers” franchise and went on to become one of Hollywood’s most popular stars.

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    Robert Pattinson Confesses to Having No Clue What 'Tenet' Is About

    WENN/Nicky Nelson

    When speaking about director Christopher Nolan’s much-anticipated new release, the ‘Twilight’ actor admits to honestly telling co-star John David Washington he has no idea what’s happening.
    Jun 1, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Robert Pattinson is looking forward to the release of his new movie “Tenet” – as he has no idea what the film’s about.
    The “Twilight” star, who will be back at work on “The Batman” when the coronavirus-prompted filming lockdown is lifted in the U.K., admits director Christopher Nolan’s much-anticipated new release had him scratching his head as he was making it.
    Speaking to Esquire alongside co-star John David Washington, he says, “It’s an incredibly complicated movie, like all of Chris’ movies. I mean, you have to watch them when they’re completely finished and edited three or four times to understand what the true meaning is.”
    “When you’re doing them, I mean, there were months at a time where I’m like, ‘Am I… I actually, honestly, have no idea if I’m even vaguely understanding what’s happening’. I would definitely say that to John David.”
    “On the last day, I asked him a question about what was happening in a scene, and it was just so profoundly the wrong take on the character. And it was like, ‘Have you been thinking this the entire time?'”
    “There’s definitely a bond in the end in kind of hiding the fact that maybe neither one of us knew exactly what was going on. But then I thought, ‘Ah, but John David actually did know. He had to know what was going on’.”
    “Tenet” will hit cinemas when they re-open.

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    NASA Official Hopes for Tom Cruise to Inspire the Next Elon Musk With His Space-Themed Movie

    WENN

    The NASA administrator has high hope for Tom Cruise’s next big-screen project which, in collaboration with Tesla founder, will be filmed in the outer space.
    Jun 1, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Tom Cruise’s “Top Gun” character Lieutenant Pete ‘Maverick’ Mitchell inspired NASA Administrator James Bridenstine to embark on a career as a Navy pilot.
    The actor leads the action movie franchise, which began in 1986, and his U.S. Navy pilot character prompted Bridenstine to follow a similar career path, which led him to the job he’s in today.
    “There was a day when I was in elementary school and I saw Top Gun. From that day, I knew I was going to be a Navy pilot. It’s just the way it was,” he said while gearing up for the launch of the SpaceX rocket this weekend, reported JustJared.com. “The goal here (is similar], and it’s what we’re doing today (with the rocket launch).”
    NASA officials are planning to shoot a new movie onboard the International Space Station with Cruise, and Bridenstine confessed he hopes the actor will similarly inspire a new generation to embark on a career in science.
    “If we can get Tom Cruise to inspire an elementary kid to join the Navy and be a pilot, why can’t we get Tom Cruise to inspire the next Elon Musk? That’s what we need,” he added.
    “We need a new generation of many Elon Musks. That’s what we’re doing with our launch (and the film). It’s all about the next generation.”
    Doug Liman is currently attached to direct the movie, with tech mogul Musk also reportedly on board with the project alongside his Space X partners.

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