Rare is the year that a studio moves up a release date, in order to ensure that their film is "the first Western in the marketplace." But such is the case this fall, as Lionsgate has decided to open James Mangold's 3:10 to Yuma a month ahead of schedule, in order to get a jump on the competition (ie: The Coen Brothers' No Country For Old Men, and The Assassination of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford, starring Brad Pitt). But while Lionsgate might have dodged their genre competition, September's an increibly crowded month for "prestige" releases; still, 3:10's biggest competition on that particular weekend will be hardly-fearsome The Nanny Diaries.
Spike Lee held another press conference in Italy yesterday, in which he wowed the local journalists with his usual "don't call me mainstream, I'm just here to scout locations for my $45 million film" bon mots. Amongst other revelations, Lee intimated that recent success has hardly made his life in Hollywood any easier. "My last feature film, Inside Man, was my most successful so far, and I was naive enough to think that that meant I could go from there and make any film I wanted to make. But I was very, very wrong about that."
Apparently attempting to replicate the, um, success of Bewitched, Nicole Kidman will produce and star in a wacky romantic comedy called Monte Carlo.
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