Jurassic Park 4, Today in show business news: An indie filmmaker is getting the keys to Spielberg's dinosaur kingdom, Ang Lee heads to television, and Corbin Bleu has seen better days.
Though it probably shouldn't be getting made at all, the next Jurassic Park movie does have an interesting director. Steven Spielberg and Universal have picked director Colin Trevorrow to helm the fourquel (ugh), which is curious because this will only be Trevorrow's second movie, after doing the small indie Safety Not Guaranteed last year. That's the one with Aubrey Plaza and Mark Duplass. That small. And now he's going to be directing big CGI dinosaurs, who are notoriously fussy and are protected by a very strict union. It's going to be a whole new world for him. A whole lost world? Whatever, the point is that's a very interesting choice and hopefully it will pay off. If the movie's going to happen, which again it probably shouldn't, at least they hired an interesting director for this one. (Who, by the way, was also up to direct the new Star Wars.) That's no knock on Joe Johnston's Jurassic Park III, mind you, except, well... Yeah, actually it is. Be better than Jurassic Park III, Jurassic Park 4. [Deadline]
Horrible Bosses costars Charlie Day and Jason Sudeikis are reteaming with their Horrible Bosses director Seth Gordon to make a movie called One Night on the Hudson, a romantic drama about two men meeting on the Metro North. Well, no, it's a comedy about a crook and a cop fleeing crooked cops. So. Seth Gordon also directed Identity Thief, so he knows from crooks, I guess. Hard to get excited about this one, though. We're talking Horrible Bosses and Identity Thief, after all. Not exactly a sterling track record. Ah well. Those two guys are funny. There's that, at least. [The Hollywood Reporter]
Speaking of hack directors (just kidding), recent Oscar winner Ang Lee has signed on to direct a TV pilot for FX. Yes, like David Fincher and Alfonso Cuaron before him, the acclaimed director is headed to the small screen. I guess it's OK now? TV is respectable? I think that once Glenn Close showed up on television, everyone else figured it was OK too. Lee will be directing the pilot of Tyrant, a show from two Homeland producers about "an unassuming American family drawn into the workings of a turbulent Middle Eastern nation." Hm. That's a funny choice for Ang Lee. He's done action-y stuff before, obviously, but this is like a geopolitcal thriller kind of a thing. Seems like an odd fit. Well, he probably wants a change of pace. No more CGI orangutans and dreamy music for him. Now it's the cozy budgets of a basic cable pilot. [Deadline]
Jai Courtney, the hunk of bologna who costarred in A Good Day to Die Hard, has been cast in the big YA novel adaptation Divergent. That's the one where as a kid you're put into one of four different, but equally badly named, groups of people — Candor, Amity, Dauntless, or, OK this is actually worse than the others, Abnegation. They're fancy words, y'see. Anyway, Courtney will be playing one of lead girl Shailene Woodley's enemies, some brute from the Dauntless gang. As far as I know they have yet to announce who's playing Woodley's big love interest, but Kate Winselt, Maggie Q., Zoe Kravitz, and this thing have already been cast. Welcome to the YA fold, Mr. Courtney. [The Hollywood Reporter]
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