Time for "Color of Money 2"????

Eagleshot said:
Isn't it time for a new movie in the Hustler saga.

Tom Cruise as the Stake????

Opening scene:

Tom Cruise is doing a television commercial promoting a book
that "people don't want you to know about" while Jeanette Lee
is in the background playing with that "miracle cue" and then
she joins him and they offer a TV special, buy it now in the next
30 minutes for only $xxx - telephone operators are standing by
for your order :barf:
 
Eagleshot said:
Isn't it time for a new movie in the Hustler saga.

Tom Cruise as the Stake????

Actually The Color of Money 2 that I would like to see is
Efren vs. Earl in Hong Kong - the re-match.
 
asiasdad said:
Opening scene:

Tom Cruise is doing a television commercial promoting a book
that "people don't want you to know about" while Jeanette Lee
is in the background playing with that "miracle cue" and then
she joins him and they offer a TV special, buy it now in the next
30 minutes for only $xxx - telephone operators are standing by
for your order :barf:

Sounds promising! :rolleyes:
 
Eagleshot said:
Isn't it time for a new movie in the Hustler saga.

Tom Cruise as the Stake????

Yah. I am sure he is going to forego his $10 million per film fee to do what basically amounts to an indie film.

:rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

Russ
 
not a stake horse

The Tom Cruise character(what was his name?),is a broke 2 bit gambler living off SS and $5.00 weekly tournaments,lives in a trailer......
 
Tom Cruise could be a sandbagging APA player trying to win his big trip to Vegas. One scene could be him arguing about how wimpy the cut break is and how it should be banned. That scene could lead into an argument about a loose rack. When the big tournament is over at the end the tournament director played by Jack Black can come out and tell all the players the prize money will be Fedexed 11 percent at a time over a 5 year period and assure everyone the checks won't bounce. There's allot of different things you could do with this movie. Can't wait.:grin:
 
ScottW said:
Considering both movies were based off novels by Walter Tevis... and he's been dead for over 20 years... good luck squeezing a sequel out of his remains :/

Why is that baby eating that giant scorpion? Is this a thinly veiled reference to Johnny Archer? Are you saying that baby could give Archer the 7-out and still eat him for lunch??
 
hopefully there will be a sneak preview of poolhall junkies 2 right before it starts :thumbup:
 
I would love to see another great pool movie even if it was a whole diferent cast and character set. Does anyone know if there is even anything in the works??? I am kinda in a dead hole of nowhere and havent heard anything.
 
Russ Chewning said:
Yah. I am sure he is going to forego his $10 million per film fee to do what basically amounts to an indie film.

:rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

Russ

For his role in Magnolia, Cruise worked for scale, which came out around 10-15K, if I remember correctly.
 
Russ Chewning said:
Yah. I am sure he is going to forego his $10 million per film fee to do what basically amounts to an indie film.

:rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

Russ


I think i's more like $20-25 million.
 
I posted this a few months back under the title "The next great pool movie can be":

"The Color of Money."

No, not a remake of Scorsese's film, but a film that remains faithful to the book. For those who haven't read it or might not know, Scorsese's film is a completely different story altogether. In Tevis's book, there's no Vincent, Carmen, or Grady Seasons. Eddie is not a liquor salesman, but a middle-aged divorced pool room owner who is undergoing something of mid-life crisis and decides to once again devote his life to pool.

The opening scene has Eddie reuniting with Fats on a beach in Florida, asking Fats if he'd be interested in playing a series of exhibition matches against him for a television production company. Fats drills him in the first match, 150-9. Eddie has clearly lost his stroke. Nonetheless, Eddie's passion has returned and he's back on the table practicing his heart out.

However, the re-match with Fats is simply a sub-plot. In this installment, Fats is more of a mentor than an opponent. The main narrative concerns Eddie's desire to regain his lost talent and become the best. Unfortunately for Eddie, no one plays straight pool, his best game, anymore, so if he wants to get back on top, he is going to have to learn a game he loathes: 9 Ball, which he calls "A kid's game."

He doesn't dive into world-class 9 Ball right away. Today's players are too good and Eddie is still out of stroke. Plus, since his divorce has drained him, he needs to find a way to make some cash. At the advice of Fats, and with a new girl at his side, Eddie starts out his journey as low-level roadman, playing 8 Ball in Bars. Piece by piece, his is game is coming back to him. These bar players are good, but they're no Fast Eddie, and he's laying 'em to waste with that custom Balabushka. He feels it now, but is he good enough? One night he befriends a kind Japanese player he just beat out of 7 grand, and asks the man if he could compete with the best 9 players in the world. The man flatly answers, "No."

Tevis's writing doesn't simply move from plot point to plot point. He takes time to describe all the minute details of the game that a non-pool playing reader might not care about. One key scene has Eddie recovering an old pool table, and Tevis creates a feeling of ceremony in the way he meticulously describes the process. A lesser writer would've spent maybe a paragraph and moved back into the action as quickly as possible. Tevis, on the otherhand, spends a good 5 pages, creating a wonderful piece of prose. It's obvious Tevis loves the game, its characters, and its mystique.


As a film, this could never be a blockbuster. If Scorsese originally wanted to stay faithful to the book, there's no doubt Hollywood influenced him to blow up apart Tevis's story to make room for lead characters who can be played by young, attractive actors. The book version is deliberate, meditative, reflective, and thematically deals with aging and self-actualization. This doesn't sell tickets.

But, there's always Independent film, and this would make a good one. Not a bare-bones indie like "Chalk", a film I like, but which I admit is inaccesible for the average movie-goer. It's too avant-garde for the general audience. This would need a modest budget and a professional cast. Big stars often balance their big-budget work by doing Indies. Someone like George Clooney would work great for the middle-aged Eddie Felson.

And of course you'd have to change the title. Personally, I like "Felson."

Anyhow, just a brainstorm. It probably will never happen, but if I had an extra 5 million lying around, you'd all be seeing the film next year.
 
Vincent has a nightmare!!!

The opening scene is Vincent having a nightmare about Barney. Oh wait, thats another thread, Sorry. LOL
 
rep to you

midnightpulp said:
I posted this a few months back under the title "The next great pool movie can be":

"The Color of Money."

No, not a remake of Scorsese's film, but a film that remains faithful to the book. For those who haven't read it or might not know, Scorsese's film is a completely different story altogether. In Tevis's book, there's no Vincent, Carmen, or Grady Seasons. Eddie is not a liquor salesman, but a middle-aged divorced pool room owner who is undergoing something of mid-life crisis and decides to once again devote his life to pool.

The opening scene has Eddie reuniting with Fats on a beach in Florida, asking Fats if he'd be interested in playing a series of exhibition matches against him for a television production company. Fats drills him in the first match, 150-9. Eddie has clearly lost his stroke. Nonetheless, Eddie's passion has returned and he's back on the table practicing his heart out.

However, the re-match with Fats is simply a sub-plot. In this installment, Fats is more of a mentor than an opponent. The main narrative concerns Eddie's desire to regain his lost talent and become the best. Unfortunately for Eddie, no one plays straight pool, his best game, anymore, so if he wants to get back on top, he is going to have to learn a game he loathes: 9 Ball, which he calls "A kid's game."

He doesn't dive into world-class 9 Ball right away. Today's players are too good and Eddie is still out of stroke. Plus, since his divorce has drained him, he needs to find a way to make some cash. At the advice of Fats, and with a new girl at his side, Eddie starts out his journey as low-level roadman, playing 8 Ball in Bars. Piece by piece, his is game is coming back to him. These bar players are good, but they're no Fast Eddie, and he's laying 'em to waste with that custom Balabushka. He feels it now, but is he good enough? One night he befriends a kind Japanese player he just beat out of 7 grand, and asks the man if he could compete with the best 9 players in the world. The man flatly answers, "No."

Tevis's writing doesn't simply move from plot point to plot point. He takes time to describe all the minute details of the game that a non-pool playing reader might not care about. One key scene has Eddie recovering an old pool table, and Tevis creates a feeling of ceremony in the way he meticulously describes the process. A lesser writer would've spent maybe a paragraph and moved back into the action as quickly as possible. Tevis, on the otherhand, spends a good 5 pages, creating a wonderful piece of prose. It's obvious Tevis loves the game, its characters, and its mystique.


As a film, this could never be a blockbuster. If Scorsese originally wanted to stay faithful to the book, there's no doubt Hollywood influenced him to blow up apart Tevis's story to make room for lead characters who can be played by young, attractive actors. The book version is deliberate, meditative, reflective, and thematically deals with aging and self-actualization. This doesn't sell tickets.

But, there's always Independent film, and this would make a good one. Not a bare-bones indie like "Chalk", a film I like, but which I admit is inaccesible for the average movie-goer. It's too avant-garde for the general audience. This would need a modest budget and a professional cast. Big stars often balance their big-budget work by doing Indies. Someone like George Clooney would work great for the middle-aged Eddie Felson.

And of course you'd have to change the title. Personally, I like "Felson."

Anyhow, just a brainstorm. It probably will never happen, but if I had an extra 5 million lying around, you'd all be seeing the film next year.

Excellent post...BTW how long till you finish the screenplay?
 
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