Probably just a matter of time.
Probably just a matter of time.
Disney could have gone crazy and included all of the Aladdin outtakes for the 25th anniversary DVD they just released, but they only provided an additional 5-10 minutes or so. Nothing in Williams' will would have stopped them from doing that.
Granted it is slightly less awkward to pick up things with a thumb, but let's not overthink this joke too much.
Sounds to me more like a convenient scapegoat for scrapping a prequel idea that wasn't exactly lighting the entertainment world on fire. It's not like Williams would have been involved with a live action version whether he was alive or not so there's really nothing stopping Disney from going a new direction on this…
Okay, maybe not EVERY movie is terrible. I did like "Bartleby". And he's got that bit in "Hot Tub Time Machine."
I interviewed Crispin Glover on the red carpet at some Sundance event back in '07 or so. (I was there for a client capturing various celebrity promotional interviews and shout-outs.) At any rate, it was effing cold, like 5 degrees below zero, and most people were getting the interviews over as quickly and efficiently…
Hepburn WAS awesome. In so many ways.
Yeah, this is where I chime in an mention that my dual major of film studies and US history, while interesting in college, wasn't exactly a killer marketing angle in the working world. :-)
I like Bringing Up Baby and The Awful Truth precisely because they add the physical element to the comedy as well. Cary Grant got his start as an acrobat in a circus troupe and you can tell he enjoyed bringing that aspect of his life to his work in films.
Features one of my all-time favorite throw-away lines: When Hildy enters the office for the first time and weaves her way through the secretarial / office pool, Hildy says to the female advice columnist:
I feel like John C. Reilly could possibly fill that void in the right production.
Noises Off made me laugh so hard.
I don't love "Holiday" best, but I do love it an awful lot.
I disagree with that entirely. "Cary Grant" as we know him now is first introduced in "Sylvia Scarlett," five years earlier. More fully recognized in 1936's "Topper" and is full on in 1937's "The Awful Truth." And then came "Bringing Up Baby."
Nicely played. (As is your screen name.)
He was oh so solid as the police officer investigating the missing children in "Hook."
Well that's reassuring! :-)
So basically with one exception (his small role in "In and Out") Tom Selleck has a lifetime career of projects I'm absolutely uninterested in watching.
Hahahahaha.
In addition to Kevin Kline, I think Tom Hanks was considered as well? Along side Williams, I think all three really could have done interesting things with the material and have been plausible both as the childish Pan and the adult Peter.