The director of Back to the Future is headed back to the future again ... sort of. Our spies tell us that Robert Zemeckis — who directed all three movies in the franchise that made Michael J. Fox a star — is now in serious talks with Warner Bros. Pictures to direct Replay, a project based on the bestselling 1987 novel by Ken Grimwood, about a man who moves around in time, granted without the help of a DeLorean.
In Replay, a 40-something radio journalist dies of a heart attack in 1988, but re-awakens back in 1963, in his 18-year-old body, with the memories and accrued wisdom of the previous 25 years intact. He always dies in 1988, and then goes back to the late sixties, but each time he has the ability to make a new sets of choices, resulting in different spouses, progeny, and jobs in each “life.”
Unlike Back to the Future, Replay isn’t an action-comedy; it’s a thriller in which the main character slowly learns he can’t prevent his own death, but sets about trying to prevent the death of his daughter.
The project is also a case of art imitating life imitating art: Steven Spielberg executive produced Zemeckis’ Back to the Future movies, and during one “replay" in Replay the character notices a movie that’s been directed by ... Steven Spielberg. (The fictional Spielberg movie in Replay ends up leading the protagonist to his soul mate, a fellow time-jumper, and the movie's screenwriter.)
The script for Replay has itself been stuck in a bit of a Groundhog Day time loop. It comes from screenwriter and TV producer Jason Smilovic (he wrote both the feature film Lucky Number Slevin and executive produced NBC's failed 2008 Christian Slater spy series, My Own Worst Enemy), but has actually been rattling around Hollywood almost from the moment it was published. Grimwood, who died in 2000, first sold the rights to United Artists in the late eighties, then saw the project move to Disney, where it was most recently under consideration for Ben Affleck to direct. When Affleck elected to instead make the Iranian hostage crisis-based Argo, the project moved to Warner Bros., where we hear former Julia Roberts agent-turned-producer Ellen Goldsmith-Thomas is still aboard and gamely trying to get it made.
Deadline recently reported that Zemeckis would next be directing Flight at Paramount, a drama that has Denzel Washington attached to star. It’s unclear if or when Washington will commit to starring in the film, and in the meantime, we’re told that Zemeckis seems to be doing Replay first, and then circling back for Flight.
We’ll let you know if Spielberg plans on cameoing.-Joey's Two Cents: I've been hoping to see this movie get made for a while now, so this is terrific news to me...thoughts?
When Affleck was circling the project, I was very excited, and still am with Zemeckis. If Affleck starred still, it might be the role that gets him some real Best Actor attention...
ReplyDeleteI'm glad Zemeckis is directing live action films again. As much as I liked A Christmas Carol (2009) I was getting tired of all of his motion capture stuff.
ReplyDeleteI think if he alternates, that's fine. I just felt it was a shame to abandon live action.
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