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- Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson's highly sought-after upcoming movie, "Red Notice," has moved over to Netflix.
- In a shocking development, on Monday the streaming giant announced that it had bought the $130 million-budgeted heist movie. Originally it was in development at Universal.
- Gal Gadot and Ryan Reynolds are also attached to the movie.
- It's likely that hefty pay days for three of the biggest stars in the world caused Universal to tap out.
- But Netflix has never been scared to write a big check (despite a recent report from The Information that the studio was becoming more budget conscious), and Netflix needs a movie like "Red Notice" if it's going to compete with the likes of Disney Plus and Apple TV Plus.
- "Red Notice" is set to begin production in 2020.
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Netflix has just grabbed a movie with three of the biggest stars in the world attached to it.
On Monday, Deadline broke the news that Netflix had bought the rights to the heist movie "Red Notice" - starring Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, Gal Gadot, and Ryan Reynolds - and would start production in 2020. The $130 million-budgeted globetrotting action movie, which is centered around the capture of the most wanted art thief in the world, will be written and directed by Rawson Marshall Thurber ("Central Intelligence," "Skyscraper").
The announcement was a complete shock to many in Hollywood, as the project had been in development at Universal since early last year when the studio bought it after a heated bidding war that involved all the major studios (Deadline noted that Netflix was also in the mix back then). Universal made the two previous projects that Thurber and Johnson teamed on, "Central Intelligence" and "Skyscraper." But something clearly led to the duo parting ways with the studio.
Deadline reported that late last month, Thurber and Johnson sensed Universal was getting cold feet on the project, which by then had Gadot and Reynolds attached. The project had clauses in place regarding progress to production (the studio had the movie slated for a November 13, 2020 release), and leading up to the 4th of July weekend, an opportunity presented itself that the project could be shopped somewhere else, leading to Netflix jumping on it and nabbing a major title for its library.
Netflix
Netflix, on the other hand, has had no trouble writing big checks, despite a recent report in The Information that the streaming giant was becoming more budget conscious, particularly on high-budget movies like the Ben Affleck thriller, "Triple Frontier."
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Along with "Red Notice," Netflix has other high-priced projects in the pipeline, like Martin Scorsese's "The Irishman," which will feature pricey motion-capture tech to de-age stars Robert De Niro and Al Pacino; the Ryan Murphy-produced musical "The Prom," starring Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman, and Awkwafina; an upcoming George Clooney-directed project; and Denzel Washington producing the August Wilson play "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom," which will star Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman.
Netflix needs these kinds of titles (especially "Red Notice"), as the competition that the service will face in the years to come will be fierce. With many conglomerates launching their own streaming services - Disney Plus, Apple TV Plus, and services from the likes of WarnerMedia and Comcast coming soon - the landscape is only going to get more cutthroat when it comes to where audiences turn to find their entertainment outside of a movie theater.