Welcome back to What I’m Hearing+. I’m happy to report the Tom Cruise white
chocolate coconut bundt cake has begun to appear in the chosen few offices and homes around town, signaling the official start of the holiday season in Hollywood. One person not on the Cruise cake list (besides me) is Kim Masters, who is here tonight with more on the crazy-sounding saga of Donald Trump and Rush Hour 4,
including Brett Ratner breaking his silence on the project in typical Ratner fashion.
All yours, Kim…
Discussed in this issue: Brett Ratner, Larry Ellison, John Travolta, Melania Trump, Tarak Ben Ammar, Dwayne Johnson, Charlotte Kirk, Chris Tucker, Jackie Chan, Jim Cameron, Elie
Samaha, Matt and Ross Duffer, James Gunn, Ram Bergman, and many, many more…
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A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
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| Kim Masters
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- Paramount already dangling
Warner jewels…: We’ve seen that the Ellisons like to start things off with a bang when they buy a studio. A couple of weeks after closing the Skydance acquisition of Paramount on August 7, the company announced a $7.7 billion deal to bring the UFC to CBS and Paramount+. That was soon followed by a four-year pact with Matt and Ross Duffer, coming off of Stranger Things.
It appears that early planning is already in place,
when—and if—the Ellisons lock up Warner Bros. Discovery. According to a knowledgeable source, Paramount has been crushing lately on writer-director Zach Cregger, red hot after August’s Weapons grossed $268 million worldwide on a budget of about $40 million. Josh Greenstein, the co-chair of Paramount Pictures, recently trekked to Prague to court Cregger, who is trying to concentrate on his Resident Evil reboot for Sony.
I’m told
Cregger discussed with Greenstein his desire to write and direct a movie set in a particular corner of the DC universe (which character or characters are involved is unclear), and Greenstein said he would be more than happy to make that happen, if possible. As things now stand at Warner Bros., James Gunn and Peter Safran control who directs DC movies, choices they make after they have developed scripts to their liking. It sounds like change may be in the wind
if, indeed, the Ellisons prevail. (Paramount declined to comment.) - Can you have your Netflix and eat it too?: The third Knives Out movie is currently in limited release ahead of its December 12 debut on Netflix, and writer-director Rian Johnson was recently feeling a little down about not having a proper
theatrical run for Wake Up Dead Man. The first movie in the series was a critical and box office success, earning more than $312 million back in 2019—so much so that Netflix paid Johnson $450 million for two sequels. Of course that check would have come with the expectation of a limited-at-best theatrical run. When I spoke to Johnson and his longtime producer Ram Bergman on my show, The Business, last week, I asked the pair the age-old question: Can a
Netflix movie mint a genuine cultural phenomenon? They were aware that their circumstances were fairly unique, given the original Knives Out’s healthy run in theaters. “We have an advantage that people already knew the character, and there was a movie that had already penetrated into the culture,” Bergman said.
So… maybe? For a property with wind its sails already? K-Pop Demon Hunters notwithstanding? “The first movie, which was a theatrical hit, the difference in terms
of the cultural saturation between that and when the second movie came out… it’s the difference between throwing a bullet and shooting it,” Johnson said. “I could genuinely feel [it] in terms of the world knowing about Benoit Blanc, with these movies coming out on Netflix.” (Listen to the whole thing here.)
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Now on to the main event…
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The shock announcement of a fourth film in the Jackie Chan–Chris Tucker action franchise,
willed to life with help from the president, has led to far more questions than answers. Chief among them: How did Brett Ratner pull this off?
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When I first heard that Donald Trump had asked Larry Ellison to make
Rush Hour 4 happen for canceled filmmaker Brett Ratner, I imagined a conversation that went something like this:
Trump: Hey, you should make Rush Hour 4 with Brett Ratner. He’s done a tremendous job on the Melania movie.
Ellison: Sure, I’ll mention it to David.
And that would have been the end of it. Because making Rush Hour 4 is, in the view of many longtime Hollywood players, a terrible idea. And it’s not just
that Ratner became toxic in 2017, after six women accused him of sexual harassment and misconduct. (At the time Ratner, through his attorney, “categorically disputed” their accounts.) Indeed, Ratner has boasted, even during his wilderness-wandering era, that Rush Hour 4 was going to be his next project. But the thing had been
pitched all over town, to no avail. One of the many executives who passed on the movie called it “a geriatric money play”—and not the kind that results in a box office bonanza for the studio.
Rush Hour 4 has become the kind of property that Hollywood tries to foist off on unwary outsiders—like when producer Elie Samaha famously convinced German investors to finance John Travolta’s Battlefield Earth. The Rush Hour franchise was
birthed at Warners’ New Line division, so the studio had the rights to do a fourth installment, but you didn’t see anyone there jump at that opportunity. Eventually Toby Emmerich, then head of the film studio, let producer Arthur Sarkissian shop it to other bidders, though Warners loaded any potential project with onerous terms. It would be licensed for one picture only and the studio would retain a piece of first-dollar gross, among other terms—all of which
didn’t help the picture find a distributor. Neither did the prospect of doing business with Ratner.
Even Paramount’s film executives were unwilling to take on the film—until now. Leadership has been trying to inoculate the studio from criticism by saying it will only distribute the movie. I’m told by a source with knowledge of the situation that some of the film’s breathtaking $100 million production budget will come from Saudi Arabia, which is also backing the Ellisons’ bid for Warner
Bros. Discovery.
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A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
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Just letting the production rent the studio’s distribution system—in what appears to be yet another bid to
maintain Trump’s support for the Ellisons’ pursuit of Warners—might not inflict much financial pain. But it’s still unclear whether Paramount will be on the hook for marketing, and as the studio has agreed to release the film worldwide, that could easily cost another $100 million—or more.
One of the big mysteries here is why Trump went to bat for Ratner at all. Maybe he loved Rush Hour, or maybe he’s thrilled with the Melania documentary that Ratner shot with $40 million
of Amazon’s money (speaking of outlandish prices). Also, Sarkissian, the producer who has waited so long for a chance to launch another Rush Hour, just produced a pro-Trump documentary called The Man You Don’t Know. One longtime producer, who is merely observing from the sidelines, said Trump’s support is a tribute to Ratner’s ability to ingratiate himself with powerful people. True, the filmmaker has not only managed to make friends with oligarchs but partnered for a time with
Australian billionaire James Packer and then with Steven Mnuchin, who went on to serve as Treasury secretary in the first Trump administration.
But could it really just be Ratner’s charm? (And I should note that not everyone finds him charming. Writer Will Landman, a former production intern on Saturday Night Live, tweeted on November 25: “Fun Fact: Brett Ratner is one of the biggest pieces of shit I’ve met while working on
SNL.”) Trump doesn’t seem to do favors without expecting something in return. After Melania Trump announced her Muse Films production company, I wondered if she might have a role in Ratner’s project. I texted Brett to ask, mentioning what I’d heard about the budget and the Saudi financing arranged through longtime producer Tarak Ben Ammar. This was his answer: “Muse Films is absolutely not involved in Rush Hour 4. What a ridiculous assumption that Muse
Films is producing. Tarak is the producer and financier and I am not privy to the details of his conversations. The budget is over 100m. Happy Holidays.”
The Tunisian-French Ben Ammar, 76, is a veteran player in the international market. (He also served on The Weinstein Co.’s board and just received a four-year suspended sentence in France for filing a fraudulent bankruptcy,
which he is appealing.) He responded to my inquiry about the project by text, saying, “Unfortunately I don’t discuss deals while in progress.”
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Is Ratner really positioned for a comeback? And a comeback from what? Who even is Brett Ratner? That’s a
question I’ve had long before the allegations against him. To say he’s a filmmaker seems too simple. Sure, he directed X-Men: The Last Stand in 2006 and Tower Heist in 2011. His last feature as a director was 2014’s Hercules, with Dwayne Johnson, which grossed $243 million worldwide.
But before the 2017 allegations, Ratner had become known more as a financing producer and a very social animal. Ratpac Entertainment, his production company, was
settled in Frank Sinatra’s old offices on the Warners lot. He threw parties at his house at which the guests were “mostly male executives and producers and wannabe actresses,” one attendee told me. “And,” this person said, “he made introductions.”
He was also involved in two of the biggest Hollywood sex scandals of the 2010s. In 2012, he met aspiring British actress Charlotte Kirk, then 19, at Dan Tana’s in West Hollywood. Then in his early 40s, Ratner
wrote a letter to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to help Kirk get a visa to work as an actress. Though she was a total unknown, Ratner said Kirk was “an outstanding actress with remarkable talent” who possessed “the unique ability to deliver each of her lines seamlessly.” (Ratner has denied Kirk’s later allegation that he demanded sexual favors in exchange for writing the letter.)
That same year, Kirk began an affair with Ron Meyer, then vice chairman of
NBCUniversal. The following year, Packer, Ratner’s producing partner at the time, set Kirk up for a late-night encounter with then-Warners chairman Kevin Tsujihara at the Hotel Bel-Air. (Packer had already burned through his own affair with Kirk.) Subsequently, Kirk repeatedly implored Meyer, Tsujihara, and Ratner to help her book roles. Both studio executives wound up losing their jobs when their conduct came to light.
Following the 2017 allegations against him, Ratner
largely slipped off of Hollywood’s radar. That changed last January, when news began circulating of a documentary about the first lady’s return to the White House. As I reported earlier this year, a source involved in the bidding for the project told me that Ratner had been living at Mar-a-Lago as Melania’s guest without having met her. (Ratner did
not respond to a request for comment at the time.) It’s unclear why Melania Trump put her faith in Ratner, but perhaps more will be revealed when the doc lands on Amazon in January.
And now, finally, Ratner has lined up a follow-up to that project—though the laws of the business mean that a movie can always fall apart. Ratner has told studio executives that Jackie Chan, now 71, and Chris Tucker, whose last leading movie role was Rush Hour 3 in
2007, are ready to make Rush Hour 4. (I couldn’t reach reps for either to confirm those details.) It’s unclear who else might want to join the cast, but these are lean times and people do like to eat.
It remains to be seen whether Ratner, now 56, will be a more disciplined director than he was in the previous Rush Hour era. One producer who worked with him told me that “he’s an infant” who was “more focused on his cellphone than on what was going into the camera.” A
studio executive who has also worked with Ratner said, “There have certainly been moments on set where that would be a fair statement. But regardless of what you believe or know about his behavior, to entirely dismiss the slate of films he’s created would be an injustice. He’s not making Kurosawa movies, but if you look at the list, he did a good job of making audience-satisfying movies.”
This exec is one of the few who thinks the very long-delayed fourth Rush
Hour installment could actually work, though maybe not so much with that price tag. “There are certain franchises that are dead and gone and finished, but I think the passage of a significant amount of time between installments does change the calculus,” he argued. The key is whether “there’s reason to believe people still have fond feelings about characters. ‘Does the global audience care?’ is a different question.”
I also checked in with an insider at WME, which had dropped Ratner
in the #MeToo era. Would the agency take him back? “I think that would be a bridge too far, to represent Brett Ratner,” this person said. After all, “He’s not Jim Cameron. And why would anyone sign him right now? You’re not going to be commissioning this project.” But then came the caveat: “You never say never in this environment that we’re in.”
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Thanks, Kim. Julia Alexander will be here tomorrow, and I’ll be back on
Thursday.
Matt
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Puck founding partner Matt Belloni takes you inside the business of Hollywood, using exclusive reporting and insight to explain
the backstories on everything from Marvel movies to the streaming wars.
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Ace media reporter Dylan Byers brings readers into the C-suite as he chronicles the biggest stories in the industry: the future
of cable news in the streaming era, the transformation of legacy publishers, the tech giants remaking the market, and all the egos involved.
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