Anyone fancy another dip in the hot tub?
MGM is in early talks to draw up plans for a sequel to its 2010 comedy Hot Tub Time Machine.
The company is in what insiders characterize as “exploratory talks” with Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson and Clark Duke to reprise their roles for the follow-up. Corddry could end up being involved in fashioning a script with Steve Pink, the director of the original who is in talks to return to direct the sequel.
John Cusack, who also starred in the original, is not involved at this point. The pieces have slowly been coming together for the past several months and sources caution that deal-making is in an early stage and could fail. However, insiders also say that if a deal makes, production would be fast-tracked.
HHTM was the last movie produced under Mary Parent‘s run at MGM, before the company went into bankruptcy. The $36 million movie grossed around $50 million at the box office but proved to be a massive home entertainment hit.
The movie centered on four men, bored and unhappy with their lives, who travel back in time via a hot tub to a fateful night of their teenaged years in the 1980s. The movie, which also starred Chevy Chase, was a love letter to '80s teen comedies but seen through a modern -- somewhat coarse -- lens.
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Source-THR
MGM is in early talks to draw up plans for a sequel to its 2010 comedy Hot Tub Time Machine.
The company is in what insiders characterize as “exploratory talks” with Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson and Clark Duke to reprise their roles for the follow-up. Corddry could end up being involved in fashioning a script with Steve Pink, the director of the original who is in talks to return to direct the sequel.
John Cusack, who also starred in the original, is not involved at this point. The pieces have slowly been coming together for the past several months and sources caution that deal-making is in an early stage and could fail. However, insiders also say that if a deal makes, production would be fast-tracked.
HHTM was the last movie produced under Mary Parent‘s run at MGM, before the company went into bankruptcy. The $36 million movie grossed around $50 million at the box office but proved to be a massive home entertainment hit.
The movie centered on four men, bored and unhappy with their lives, who travel back in time via a hot tub to a fateful night of their teenaged years in the 1980s. The movie, which also starred Chevy Chase, was a love letter to '80s teen comedies but seen through a modern -- somewhat coarse -- lens.
Please Leave A Comment-
Source-THR
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