Cannon, promotion.
Promos
Page 2
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May 1986 &
February 1987
Sincere thanks to Your Video Store Shelf for donating these great Variety images to cannon.org.uk
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Van Damme got dusted before it it was
changed to Death Warrant
(1990)
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Chuck –Almost Cannon
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No Dudikoff or Steve James -and a name
change.
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Cannon’s
CANNONBALL
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Avenging Force (1986) I
reckon.
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Cobra (1986)
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Nothing against Mr Bradley but Cannon
Video should change
“The American Ninja” to “An
American Ninja” as any true
American Ninja fan will tell you,
there’s only one American Ninja,
and that’s The
Dudikoff™.
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6 ft /1.8m high. Probably
seemed a good idea at the time.
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click images for larger version click images for larger version Ben, Bonzo and Big
Bad Joe became: Going Bananas
(1987) AKA My African Adventure Duet for One (1986) would be made minus Dunaway. Citizen Joe would have been a follow-up to Joe (1970) Number One with a Bullet
(1987) was made but had no sign of Belushi. Thanks to Tim for the great scans.
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Intended Cannon/CBS TV production. From Cannon’s “5th
Year at
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for larger
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...from Cannon to 21st Century


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THE 12-YEAR CYCLE TO GREEN-LIGHT 'THE YELLOW By JACK MATHEWS Getting a movie made is a piece of cake,
producer Gary Mehlman thought when he optioned Ralph Hurne's novel "The
Yellow Jersey." He got the rights to the book in November, he made a
deal with Columbia Pictures in May, and two days after that, he was on his
way to Those dates were November, 1973, and May, 1974. It wasn't as
easy as he thought. "It sure looked easy then," Mehlman says. "I
couldn't believe it. I made a deal on Monday, and on Wednesday I was on the
plane. I had money in my pocket, we had a writer and we were negotiating with
a director. I was gone, gone!" For the last 12 years, Mehlman has made a living on his bad
luck. "The Yellow Jersey," about an aging bicyclist
who nearly wins the Tour de France, has not been made, but it has been
productive. It's been in development with four studios and several
independent production companies and has generated expenses of nearly $2
million. A lot of that money has gone to Mehlman. Development deals
routinely pay producers a fee, as well as providing for the costs of script
rewrites and running an office. In the meantime, he has been back to Always, something stopped the movie from being made . . . until
now. Maybe. Last April, Cannon Films bought the rights to "The Yellow
Jersey" from Columbia Pictures and, in July, spent nearly $1 million
shooting 200,000 feet of footage of the Tour. "This was the last year we could do that," Mehlman
says. "I have had the rights to shoot the Tour since 1974. The man who
runs it has become almost a part of my family and he's let me keep the
rights. But he said this would be the last year, there was too much pressure
on him from other people wanting the rights." Mehlman started with "Dustin was passionate about doing it, and that was the
first time I was in a position to make some really good money with it,"
Mehlman says. "He had a deal with In 1984, Hoffman and director Michael Cimino accompanied Mehlman
to But the deal fell through with Cimino, and Hoffman wasn't
satisfied with any of the directors that Mehlman or the studio suggested. The
directors Hoffman said he would work with weren't available. Meanwhile, time was running out on Mehlman. Last December,
looking ahead to the 1986 Tour as his last chance to get footage, he pleaded
with both Hoffman, who at nearly 50 is getting too old for the part, and "I had mixed feelings about it," Mehlman says.
"It meant I had another chance. At the same time, I had the feeling, 'At
last, it's dead.' " At the suggestion of his agent, Mehlman and his
producer-partner, John Veitch, made an appointment to pitch "The Yellow
Jersey" to Cannon's Menahem Golan. Mehlman had pitched the film so many times, he had accumulated visual aids (a stirring
seven-minute videotape of old Tour footage) and marketing plans (the Tour has
more commercial spinoffs and sponsors than the Olympics). But Golan cut him short. In what has become either "It is the best treatment I have ever received," says
Mehlman, who produced films in the 1970s with the late writer/producer Carl
Foreman. "There are a lot of people in town who can make the decision to
spend $100,000 on development, but only a few who can make the decision to
spend $10 million making a movie. And most of them don't want to. Menahem
does, and he gives you an answer." There have been reports that Golan has offered Harrison Ford $10
million to play the role of Jim Western in "The Yellow Jersey."
There has also been talk of trying to get Robert De Niro. "The Yellow Jersey" is a star vehicle, so the star
will be cast before the director, Mehlman says. The main character is
expected to be signed within the next few weeks. The film will cost between
$10 million and $15 million, depending on who is cast. Principal photography
is set for next spring in the South of France. Mehlman says Golan sees "The Yellow Jersey" as a
potential Oscar winner for Cannon and that the Cannon chairman had insisted
on he and his partner, Yoram Globus, being the
credited producers. Mehlman and Veitch agreed, after getting Golan to include
a provision in the contract providing that in all applications for festivals
and awards, their names also will be listed. "I don't care what it says on the screen," Mehlman
says. "But after all these years, if by some miracle it wins the Academy
Award, I want to go up there." Whatever happens, Mehlman says he is not sore about the 12-year
gestation of "The Yellow Jersey." The whole thing started because
he fell in love with "The good thing was that I always knew, no matter what the
frustrations, come summer time I would be in Although the rights to the novel were bought outright many years
ago, Mehlman says he still keeps in touch with author Hurne, who lives in You know the question. "I don't know, I'm thinking about it," Mehlman says,
laughing. "If I could go through another 12 years like the last 12, I
would be pretty happy." |
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May 1987
When you click on an image, click the back logo
on the main menu (to your left) or your
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Sincere thanks to Your Video Store Shelf for donating these great Variety images to cannon.org.uk
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