Variety

Battered and Bruised

The most savage fights involving the remake of ‘Road House’ took place off-screen

- By Tatiana Siegel

Hollywood loves a bareknuckl­e brawl. And the town got a battle royal with “Road House.”

The reboot of the 1989 cult favorite, which launches on Amazon Prime on March 8, sparked a fierce fight behind the scenes over its release. While studio-filmmaker standoffs are not uncommon, this one featured such subplots as the involvemen­t of a notorious private investigat­or, a cameo from Ari Emanuel and a director going scorched-earth. Even more shocking, some of the embarrassi­ng details began to publicly spill out in recent months, culminatin­g with director Doug Liman promising to boycott the film’s premiere at SXSW in March.

Despite the drama, the movie is expected to be one of Amazon Prime’s most watched films this year. So how did things go wrong?

In November 2021, Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy were running MGM and began negotiatin­g with Liman to direct and Jake Gyllenhaal to star as the tough-guy bouncer, played by Patrick Swayze in the original. Joel Silver, who produced the Swayze version for MGM, was on board to bring the film into the modern era (Gyllenhaal’s character is now a former UFC fighter). At the time, MGM was making movies for the big screen, and the prospect of streaming didn’t factor into discussion­s. But after Amazon closed its $8.5 billion acquisitio­n of MGM in March 2022, the trajectory of “Road House” changed.

In July 2022, De Luca and Abdy left to run Warner Bros., and the film was put into turnaround. Still, Amazon Studios chief Jennifer Salke quickly salvaged it and was poised to greenlight the film with a cast that included Billy Magnussen, Daniela Melchior and Lukas Gage. Sources familiar with the negotiatio­ns say the filmmakers and Gyllenhaal were given a choice: Make the film for $60 million and get a theatrical release or take $85 million and go streaming only. They opted for the latter. (Amazon and Liman declined comment.)

On Aug. 2, 2022, Amazon put out a press release that erased any ambiguity about the film’s distributi­on plans. “Road House” was labeled an Amazon Prime Video movie, with Salke touting the appeal “for our global audience.” Liman and Silver both signed off on the press release, with Liman gushing, “I’m thrilled to put my own spin on the beloved ‘Road House’ legacy,” and Silver noting he was “so excited to bring this newly imagined version to audiences around the world.”

But the acrimony was only just beginning.

Silver continued to push for a theatrical release and grew so combative that the studio threatened to cut ties with him. That prompted Emanuel, CEO of WME parent Endeavor, to lobby on Silver’s behalf. Sources say Emanuel reached out to Salke and begged her not to fire the legendary producer. Emanuel enlisted private investigat­or-turned-quasi consultant Anthony Pellicano in an effort to help Silver keep his job. (WME declined comment.)

“It made no sense why Ari cared,” says an insider. “WME doesn’t even rep Liman. CAA does.”

But in late 2023, Salke finally booted Silver from working on the “Road House” rollout for verbal abuse of several staffers, including Amazon Studios and MGM marketing head Sue Kroll and Amazon film head Courtenay Valenti. The studio also severed ties with Silver on the upcoming Mark Wahlberg film “Play Dirty,” prompting the producer to hire high-profile Hollywood litigator Bryan Freedman. When news of Silver’s ouster broke on Nov. 30, Pellicano became the de facto spokespers­on on the brouhaha, noting, “The parting of the ways is amicable. He was not fired. There were just disagreeme­nts with creative concerns.”

Just as the maelstrom was dying down, Liman went nuclear with an open letter on Jan. 24, writing that he would boycott the film and claiming that “Amazon has no interest in supporting cinemas.”

The missive appears to be the final shot on a project fraught with discord. Ultimately, it’s left some with a bad taste. “It’s so disrespect­ful to everyone who worked hard on it,” says one person involved. “It’s a great big fun streaming movie.”

 ?? ?? Director Doug Liman has promised to boycott the film’s SXSW premiere.
Director Doug Liman has promised to boycott the film’s SXSW premiere.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States