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the champions Tagged Articles at Cinematical

Tom Cruise and Christopher McQuarrie, Together Forever

Filed under: Action », Drama », Foreign Language », Thrillers », Deals », Mystery & Suspense », United Artists », Warner Brothers », Scripts », Newsstand », Tom Cruise », Comic/Superhero/Geek », Remakes and Sequels », War »

Okay, maybe Tom Cruise and Valkyrie screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie won't be together forever ... but they are in for a very long haul. Variety reports that McQuarrie is penning no less than three projects for Cruise to star in.

The first up is likely to be The Tourist, which has Cruise and Charlize Theron attached as the leads. A remake of the French thriller Anthony Zimmer, the original script was penned by Julian Fellowes. McQuarrie is quickly rewriting it so that the film can begin shooting by March.

The pair also might be returning to World War II, as McQuarrie and Mason Alley are teaming up to write Flying Tigers, the real life story of a volunteer fighter squadron that was formed to assist the Chinese in fighting the Japanese during WWII. Cruise isn't formally attached, but he has been itching to do another fighter pilot movie since the days of Top Gun.

But the most intriguing film on the McQuarrie-Cruise slate is the UA project The Champions, which McQuarrie is penning and producing alongside Guillermo del Toro. Based on the British television series about super-powered government agents, it's now being developed for Cruise to star in. It was inevitable that Cruise was going to want in on this whole "superhero" trend -- the aura around his Tropic Thunder costar Robert Downey Jr. was espcially hard to miss. How could he not want some of that? Remember, he's already attached to Sam Raimi's Sleeper, so he's obviously waking up to the trend and franchise potential of superpowers. Well, best of luck to McQuarrie and Cruise -- may the relationship be a fruitful one.




Christopher McQuarrie Lands 'The Champions' and 'The Monster of Florence'

Filed under: Action », Drama », Sci-Fi & Fantasy », Thrillers », Deals », Mystery & Suspense », United Artists », Scripts », Newsstand », Remakes and Sequels »

As William Goss noted yesterday, Guillermo Del Toro must be allergic to sleep. He's moving forward with another producing project on his insanely busy slate -- The Champions, a big screen version of the British television series of the 60s. Variety reports that Christopher McQuarrie will be penning the script for United Artists, and acting as a producer alongside Del Toro, Tom Cruise, and Paula Wagner. Del Toro optioned the project last November, and seemingly mindful of the anniversary, has brought on McQuarrie.

Frankly, I'm surprised The Champions hasn't been grabbed long before now, since everyone is dying to have a franchise of superheroes. The series (which ran for a single year) followed a team of government agents who were rescued from a plane crash in the Himalayas by an advanced civilization. As if rescue wasn't nice enough, the super civilization gave them superpowers. Yeah, this is totally going to end up a franchise.

Del Toro has apparently found himself a writer as happy to be sans sleep as he is -- McQuarrie is a hot property at UA after Valkyrie. In addition to The Champions, he'll also be penning and producing The Monster of Florence. Based on Douglas Preston's book, it will follow his investigation into the serial killer nicknamed the Monster of Florence, Italy's version of Jack the Ripper. Preston discovered that one of the murders had been committed on his just-purchased Italian property, and decided to pair up with Italian journalist Mario Spezi to try and solve the case. Their well-meaning investigation ended up embroiled in controversy, arrests, and all kinds of tense insanity that should make for a really enjoyable crime movie -- and be easy peasy for the writer of The Usual Suspects.

Guillermo del Toro to Direct 'Haters'

Filed under: Drama », Horror », Sci-Fi & Fantasy », New Releases », Universal », Scripts », Comic/Superhero/Geek »

Guillermo del Toro is a busy man. Monika just told you that he is directing an adaptation of 60's spy television show The Champions. He produced The Orphanage, which is due December 28th and has been getting great reviews, including one from our own Scott Weinberg. (Check out the poster here, the trailer here, and James' interview with the director here.) He has penned a supposed-to-be-awesome adaptation of the H.P. Lovecraft novella At the Mountains of Madness. He wants to do another adaptation of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. He's got Hellboy II: The Golden Army coming out this summer, and a ghost story with ties to the Spanish Civil War called 3993 in the works.

You'd think the dude would want to take a little break! But no! Joblo is reporting that the Pan's Labyrinth director has signed on to direct a new project called Haters, based on David Moody's novel -- Hater. The plot synopsis sounds mighty sweet. Here's some snippets -- "Society is rocked by a sudden increase in the number of violent assaults on individuals. Christened "Haters" by the media, the attackers strike without warning. Their attacks are brutal, remorseless, and extreme...In seconds rational, controlled people become vicious killers...You can no longer trust anyone, no matter how well you think you know them...By the end of today you could be a killer. By the end of today you could be dead." Dead! Kind of sounds like a zombie movie without zombies, doesn't it? Sounds like something del Toro could smash out of the park. It's currently sold out at Amazon -- has anyone read Hater?



Guillermo del Toro to Direct 'Champions'

Filed under: Action », Sci-Fi & Fantasy », Deals », Scripts », Comic/Superhero/Geek », Remakes and Sequels »

Guillermo del Toro is the champion, my friends. Or rather, Variety has reported that del Toro will write, direct and produce a science-fiction action film called Champions -- based on the '60s spy series, The Champions. The premise: a plane carrying a group of secret government agents crashes. Usually. this would mean bad things. In lateral thinking puzzles, planes crash on borders and bring up the problem of burying survivors. In real life and on film, a downed plane could also mean a scary case of cannibalism. But the champions, they somehow got the plane-crash jackpot.

As the premise goes on the television series, three agents crash into the Himalayas. Lucky for them, they don't have to eat each other to stay alive -- they are rescued by a secret civilization. Instead of just saving their lives, the rescuers give the agents superhuman powers like ESP, precognition, and enhanced physical abilities, and then they send the group out to be "Champions of law, order, and justice." It's like The Greatest American Hero...just without the sexy suit, manual, and aliens. I'm not quite sure how I missed the original show, but it starred long-time General Hospital star Stuart Damon, Alexandra Bastedo, and William Gaunt. This could be one sweet production... What do you think?
 
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