‘Heat 2’: Michael Mann Still Working On Script With Plans Of Shooting Anticipated Prequel/Sequel Sometime In 2024

1995’s “Heat” is arguably one of the more mainstream commercial successes of Michael Mann‘s directing career and is still considered by many, like myself, as one of the greatest action films in cinema history and not just 1990s. Mann managed to elevate the material (A remake of his television movie “L.A. Takedown” that aired on NBC in 1989) with the help of high-profile actors like Al Pacino and Robert De Niro taking lead roles alongside others such as Val Kilmer. The pic pits two groups of extremely efficient Los Angeles professionals working both sides of the street. A slick twist on the classic cops and robbers genre with the LAPD major crimes unit closing in on a team of highly skilled heist-men after a job goes south in the opening of the film.

A novel co-written by Mann and Meg Gardiner covering the events before and after the original film in 1988/2000 was recently released with the aim of turning it into a follow-up feature film. While chatting recently with Variety to promote his current release, “Ferrari,” a biopic about the famed sports car and racing magnate Enzo Ferrari starring Adam Driver (“Marriage Story”), the filmmaker shared a minor update on the current status of “Heat 2.” Stating that while he was still ironing out the script, there are plans to shoot the prequel/sequel sometime in 2024.

Mann says he has plans for “Heat 2” to shoot in 2024, and has been putting the final touches on the script that he calls both a “prequel and sequel.”

A good sign that official casting news is on the horizon as most of the roles will have to be recast due to the timeline of the novel. Last April, Driver was reportedly up for a lead role and reunion but has yet to be made official.

Here is the book’s synopsis via publisher Harper Collins which will be the inspiration for the upcoming crime thriller:

One day after the end of ‘Heat,’ Chris Shiherlis (Val Kilmer) is holed up in Koreatown, wounded, half delirious, and desperately trying to escape LA. Hunting him is LAPD detective Vincent Hanna (Al Pacino). Hours earlier, Hanna killed Shiherlis’s brother in arms Neil McCauley (Robert De Niro) in a gunfight under the strobe lights at the foot of an LAX runway. Now Hanna’s determined to capture or kill Shiherlis, the last survivor of McCauley’s crew, before he ghosts out of the city.

In 1988, seven years earlier, McCauley, Shiherlis, and their highline crew are taking scores on the West Coast, the US-Mexican border, and now in Chicago. Driven, daring, they’re pulling in money and living vivid lives. And Chicago homicide detective Vincent Hanna—a man unreconciled with his history—is following his calling, the pursuit of armed and dangerous men into the dark and wild places, hunting an ultraviolent gang of home invaders.

Meanwhile, the fallout from McCauley’s scores and Hanna’s pursuit cause unexpected repercussions in a parallel narrative, driving through the years following Heat.

While there are plans to shoot “Heat 2” in 2024, we don’t have a production timetable for that, a release date, or a full cast of actors outside of Driver being in talks. So, as things are coming together nicely we’re not there just yet. We’re sure more updates are coming later in the year, stay tuned.

SOURCE: VARIETY

Michael Man Reportedly Remaking Korean Crime Thriller ‘Veteran’ With U.S. Adaption

Yet another Michael Mann (“Ferrari”) upcoming feature film project has surfaced thanks to a new report from Variety. The outlet has revealed that the filmmaker aims to continue working within the crime thriller genre and will now help develop a remake of the 2015 South Korean film “Veteran” alongside Korea’s CJ ENM. Noteworthy that the report isn’t entirely sure if Mann will ultimately direct or simply become the project’s producer and writer, as he’s said to be working on the remake’s script.

Ryoo Seung-wan‘s original film (that skewed within the action comedy realm) is described via a synopsis as “A maverick detective’s crime-fighting skills are tested when he targets the ruthless heir to a corrupt corporation and crime syndicate.” It’s a bit unclear when this Western version of “Veteran” will actually move forward as it sounds like they’re only in the development stage and things had stalled due to the WGA strike that recently has been resolved.

We’ll be curious to see if Mann and his studio partners attempt to recast with white actors or decide to push for an Asian-American cast, which could help potentially connect the film’s story/setting between South Korea and the Korean community in the United States.

Mann is looking to turn his novel “Heat 2,” which he co-wrote with Meg Gardiner as a follow-up to his iconic cops-and-robbers movie “Heat” from 1995, into his next feature film. With the presumption that his “Ferrari” lead Adam Driver might be landing a lead role in it. The film would cover the events prior to and after the original film, allowing for the recasting of multiple parts with new actors given the ages of the folks who starred in “Heat” along with how the story fluxes between different time periods.

This trend of Hollywood remaking films from Asian cinema is nothing new there are plans to do an English remake of Bong Joon-ho’s Oscar-winning class satire “Parasite,” a long-gestating Western take of the Korean zombie thriller “Train To Busan,” and director Martin Scorsese reworked the Hong Kong crime thriller “Infernal Affairs” as the Boston-set pic “The Departed.” One of the more recent projects that Mann has worked on was the HBO Max series “Toyko Vice” which spent a good chunk of time shooting on location in Japan.

You can check out the trailer for “Veteran” below.

SOURCE: VARIETY

‘Ferrari’ Teaser Trailer: Michael Mann & Adam Driver Explore The Iconic Enzo Ferrari In New Drama Coming This December

American filmmaker Michael Mann is behind some of the most thrilling action and dramatic pieces of cinema from his film “Manhunter” introducing the world to Hannibal Lector years before “Silence of The Lambs” to the crime masterpiece “Heat,” the director seemingly has a sixth sense about what it takes to put extremely cool elements and imagery onto the big screen. Mann returns this year with “Ferrari” a film that explores the life of Formula 1 driver and car magnate, Enzo Ferrari, played by the dashing and aptly named Adam Driver (A role originally meant for Aussie actor Hugh Jackman).

A new first-look trailer (See below) has been released online and we now have a better idea of what to expect from the biopic, which will seemingly mix the elements of the thrill of racing alongside the equally dramatic home life of Ferrari. Joining Driver on the call sheet includes Penélope Cruz, Shailene Woodley, Sarah Gordon, Gabriel Leone, Jack O’Connell, and Patrick Dempsey.

The film also boasts Oscar-winning cinematographer Erik Messerschmidt, who also worked on another film that will be screening at the Venice Film Festival with David Fincher’s assassin thriller “The Killer.”

NEON, the film’s distributor, has released the following synopsis for “Ferarri”:

It is the summer of 1957. Behind the spectacle of Formula 1, ex-racer Enzo Ferrari is in crisis. Bankruptcy threatens the factory he and his wife, Laura built from nothing ten years earlier. Their volatile marriage has been battered by the loss of their son, Dino a year earlier. Ferrari struggles to acknowledge his son Piero with Lina Lardi. Meanwhile, his drivers’ passion to win pushes them to the edge as they launch into the treacherous 1,000-mile race across Italy, the Mille Miglia.

While the film makes its debut at the Venice Film Festival, a fitting tribute to the Italian subject/setting, audiences will have to wait a bit longer to experience “Ferrari” for themselves as it will be released in theaters on Christmas.

You can watch the aforementioned trailer below.

SOURCE: NEON

‘Too Old To Die Young’ Cinematographer Diego Garcia Worked On Michael Mann’s HBO Max Crime Series ‘Tokyo Vice’

Originally, filmmaker Destin Daniel Cretton was attached to direct a Japanese-set crime series based on the non-fiction novel Tokyo Vice by journalist Jake Adelstein, but had to exit due to scheduling conflicts with his Marvel Studios film Shang-Chi & The Legend of The Ten Rings, that was shooting in Australia. Instead, HBO Max ended up hiring the best replacement imaginable for a crime series, Michael Mann. Since he was the creative force behind the original Miami Vice series.

The Ronin has been able to confirm that one of the show’s cinematographers is Diego Garcia, who worked on the Nicolas Winding Refn thriller series Too Old To Die Young and the upcoming Jennifer Lawrence drama at A24 from director Lila Neugebauer.

One of the other names mentioned for the series has been Westworld cinematographer John Grillo.

After a long pause in 2020, production resumed in November despite allegations of sexual assault against the show’s lead actor Ansel Elgort (Westside Story, Baby Driver) from last summer as the American actor wasn’t replaced.

Tokyo Vice is a firsthand account of a young American journalist (Elgort) working the Tokyo Metropolitan Police beat. Elgort stars as Adelstein as he embeds himself into the Tokyo Vice police squad to reveal corruption. The series chronicles Adelstein’s daily descent into the sordid underbelly of Tokyo, where nothing and no one is truly what or who they seem.

Ken Watanabe, Rinko Kikuchi, Rachel Keller, and Ella Rumpf also have key roles.

Tokyo Vice’s production resuming happened to take place around the same time Destin Daniel Cretton was finishing up principal photography on Shang-Chi and moving into post-production. Cretton remains as the show’s executive producer alongside Michael Mann and series leads Ken Watanabe and Ansel Elgort.

Director Michael Mann is best known for his impressive body of work that consists of Thief, Manhunter, Heat, The Insider, Collateral, Miami Vice, Public Enemies, and Blackhat. Oddly enough, he never directed an episode of the Miami Vice series but did helm a single episode of the Chicago-set show Crime Story starring the late Dennis Farina.

The impressive part of the series is that they’ve done a lot of filming in country in Japan, which is notoriously expensive for foreign/western productions because of the endless red tape and scheduling that is involved. I also can’t imagine the added costs with pandemic delays and protocols thrown into the mix.

Michael Mann’s HBO Max Series ‘Tokyo Vice’ Resumes Production In Japan This Week

Filming paused on the Japanese crime series Tokyo Vice back in March but according to The Hollywood Reporter the HBO Max series will resume filming this week in Japan.

Heat’s Michael Mann is set to direct all 10-episodes of the series starring Ansel Elgort (Baby Driver), Ken Watanabe (Inception, The Last Samurai), and Rinko Kikuchi (Pacific Rim, The Brothers Bloom). The new series is loosely inspired by the real-life experiences of American journalist Jake Adelstein chronicled in his 2009 memoir, Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter On The Police Beat in Japan. Adelstein covered crime for the one of the largest newspapers in Japan becoming one of the few Westerners to do so and spent 12 years there.

Originally, Destin Daniel Cretton was tapped to direct the show but there was a scheduling conflict with Marvel’s Shang-Chi & The Legend of The Ten Rings and Michael Mann was brought on as a replacement. Mann is best known for being the architect of the popular 1980s series Miami Vice but never directed an episode. However, he did make the 2006 reboot film starring Colin Farrell and Jamie Foxx.

HBO Max has yet to announce when they expect episodes will begin airing on the streaming service.

SOURCE: THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER

Michael Mann’s ‘Ferrari’ Speeding Forward With Hugh Jackman Playing Enzo Ferrari

Reporting out of the Cannes Virtual Market via Deadline has revealed that Michael Mann’s upcoming film Ferrari is now seeking distribution partners next week.

They’re also expected to begin shooting Ferrari by next spring.

The film will chart the summer of 1957 when all the forces in Ferrari’s life – which were often as combustible and volatile as the iconic race cars he built – collided. The now legendary car company he and his wife Laura built was at the time going broke. Their tempestuous marriage had already suffered the death of their son, Dino, and Ferrari’s other son, 12-year old Piero, the product of a wartime romance, was struggling to find his place in the world.

The entrepreneur rolled the dice for all their futures on one race – 1,000 miles across Italy, the brutal and infamous 1957 Mille Miglia. The film will be framed so that during the highly dangerous race, Laura discovers long kept secrets, we see opportunities rise and fade, and drivers, who are like surrogate sons, are pushed beyond the edge.

X-Men actor Hugh Jackman is currently in discussions to play the Enzo Ferrari role, but there isn’t word about who will play Laura.

They also reveal that Mann has reworked the script that was originally penned by Italian Job and Kelly’s Heroes screenwriter Troy Kennedy Martin, who passed in 2009. Michael has been trying to get the film made for almost two decades.

Ferrari’s resurgence certainly comes at the right time after James Mangold’s own racing biopic Ford v Ferrari from 2019 did okay at the box office and earned a handful of Oscar nominations including Best Picture. I’m sure both Mann and Jackman see the film as potential awards contender.

STX will distribute Ferrari in the UK and Ireland.

STX is now handling international sales and will directly distribute the film in the UK and Ireland. We understand Amazon is tying up a deal to bolster international with STX and has been integral in the process. CAA Media Finance arranged the financing and is repping domestic.

Mann was in the middle of shooting the pilot episode of HBO Max’s Tokyo Vice in Japan before the Coronavirus pandemic paused filming. Hugh Jackman most recently starred in the HBO film Bad Education and had wrapped on the Warner Bros. sci-fi thriller Reminiscence directed by Westworld’s Lisa Joy.

SOURCE: DEADLINE