Tag: Entertainment-HollywoodReporter

  • The Mermaid Battle That Nearly Killed ‘Splash’ — and Made Tom Hanks a Superstar

    The Mermaid Battle That Nearly Killed ‘Splash’ — and Made Tom Hanks a Superstar

    It was 1983, and a 26-year-old producer named Brian Grazer was sitting across from the most feared man in Hollywood.

    Ray Stark had a rival mermaid movie loaded with Warren Beatty, Jessica Lange, Herbert Ross directing and Robert Towne writing the script. Grazer had a scrappy fairy tale at Disney — a studio whose most recent live-action release was Gus, a flop about a field goal-kicking mule — and a leading man whose cross-dressing sitcom had just been canceled.

    Stark’s message was simple.

    “He threatened to just crush me,” Grazer says. “That I ‘Have nothing. Nothing.’ They’d ‘kill’ me.”

    Then came the offer: 5 percent of the first-dollar gross if Disney would kill Splash. Disney said no, however, and Splash opened March 9, 1984. It became a top-10 hit, made Tom Hanks a movie star overnight, invented the Touchstone label, cracked March open as a release window, birthed Imagine Entertainment and gave the English language a new girl’s name: Madison.

    Sitting down with It Happened in Hollywood, Grazer and Ron Howard lay out how one of the great sleeper hits of the decade almost never existed — and how close it came, repeatedly, to disappearing.

    The origin is pure Grazer: At 25, producing a TV movie on Zuma Beach, he spotted “the hottest girl at USC, literally,” who had never given him the time of day. Then someone whispered: That’s the producer. “Seconds later, she’s asking me out,” he recalls.

    A parade of newly interested women followed. Grazer found it clarifying, if vexing. Were they into him for him — or for what he could do for them? He went home and wrote down, literally, the attributes of someone who might actually love him back.

    “That became the mermaid,” he says.

    The script bounced through United Artists, Warner Bros. and nearly every studio in town. Nobody wanted to touch it. Not with Beatty circling and the powerful Stark looming. Executives didn’t say no —they just vanished.

    Eventually, the project landed at Disney — a move that, at the time, felt like a step down. This was pre-Renaissance Disney. Howard for one wasn’t convinced.

    “That is really the minor leagues,” he recalls thinking.

    But Disney was eager, on one condition: the mermaid needed a bikini top.

    “That was a no-go,” Howard says. What followed was a surreal pitch to Disney’s seven-person board, where Grazer found himself explaining mermaid logic to chairman Card Walker. The compromise — long hair, body stocking, no visible nudity — got them over the line.

    Then Stark called. When the bribe didn’t land, the pressure shifted to Disney chairman Ron Miller, Walt Disney’s son-in-law and, as Grazer puts it, “a tough guy.”

    His response, per Grazer: “We’re doing it anyway. Fuck you. “

    Now they had a greenlight — and a race. Howard, coming off Night Shift, promised he’d beat Ross to theaters. “I’m 26 years old. He’s not going to beat me,” he remembers telling them.

    Grazer remembers it more vividly: “You said you’d be like a military grunt climbing under barbed wire.”

    Howard shrugs. “Yeah, I probably did.”

    But Ross’s movie never materialized. Splash did.

    The casting followed the same pattern: almost everyone said no. John Travolta passed. Richard Dreyfuss passed. Others declined without meetings. One agent reportedly sneered that his client would “never act in a movie with Ron Howard and Tom Hanks.”

    Tom Hanks, at that point, wasn’t Tom Hanks. He auditioned for the brother role — the John Candy part — after a tip from writer Lowell Ganz. “He was crackling with intelligence,” Howard says. After the audition, Howard and Grazer looked at each other. “Could he be the lead?” they both wondered. Grazer went in and sold it.

    As for the mermaid, Daryl Hannah had already made an impression in Blade Runner. Then she walked in and said she’d spent her childhood practicing underwater breathing with a garden hose. “I’ve dreamed of being a mermaid all my life,” she told them, landing her the part.

    She also got sealed into a custom tail that took hours to remove, swam without a mask and outperformed professional “mermaids” in test tanks. Bathroom breaks were not an option.

    The shoot itself was controlled chaos. The East River jump required stunt performers to be inoculated against typhus. (“Then, you could get typhus,” Howard notes.) At the Statue of Liberty, they had to wrap before the first ferry arrived. Howard had a 102-degree fever. They pulled off 63 setups before 7:45 a.m.

    Splash: Tom Hanks and Daryl Hannah in the 1984 feature.

    Courtesy Everett Collection

    And then there’s the lobster scene. Hannah, a strict vegetarian, was handed a fake lobster stuffed with string cheese and potatoes. It didn’t work. Howard demonstrated by biting into a real claw. Hannah tried once, screamed and dropped it. Then she did it again; that’s the take in the movie.

    By the time exhibitors saw Splash, the reaction flipped instantly. (“They all wanted it,” Grazer says.) The film opened in March — a dead zone at the time — and became a top-10 hit. Disney created Touchstone to release it. March became viable. High-concept comedy got a new blueprint. And “Madison,” pulled from a Manhattan street sign, became one of the most popular baby names in America.

    The closest Grazer came to quitting wasn’t Stark. It was the slow accumulation of rejection. “I was so embarrassed,” he says, recalling how people would actively avoid him at social events, worried he’d try to sell them on his “mermaid movie.”

    What kept him going, improbably, was Steven Spielberg — who had E.T. put into turnaround, as star Henry Thomas detailed in another recent episode of It Happened in Hollywood, whose current season is taking a closer look at the magical films of 1980s.

    “I thought, this guy made Jaws and Raiders. I can’t take this personally,” Grazer says.

    Howard’s memory of the shoot is almost the opposite of the fight to get there.

    “It was one of the least stressful movies I’ve ever made,” he says. “Once we were rolling, it was working.”

    The full episode of It Happened in Hollywood with Brian Grazer and Ron Howard is available now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and wherever you get your podcasts. Splash is streaming on Disney+.

  • ‘Heartstopper’ Finale Movie Sets Release Date

    Netflix has set a release date for the Heartstopper finale. The franchise will wrap when feature film Heartstopper Forever releases on July 17.

    The send-off movie will stand in for the fourth season of the LGBTQ+ coming-of-age series that stars Kit Connor and Joe Jocke, and is based on series creator Alice Oseman’s Heartstopper book series.

    The film, dated by Netflix on the fourth anniversary of the first season’s release, will follow an inseparable couple as they confront the challenges of a long-distance relationship as Nick (Connor) prepares for university and Charlie (Jocke) gains independence at school.

    “Doubts take hold, and their relationship faces its biggest challenge yet. Meanwhile, their friends are also navigating the ups and downs of love and friendship, confronting the bittersweet challenges of growing up and moving on. Can first loves really last forever?” reads the synopsis from Netflix.

    The streamer also released a video montage of the Heartstopper cast through their first three seasons of the popular drama, along with a new behind-the-scene image on set.  

    The ensemble cast for the movie supporting Nick and Charlie as they continue their journey to becoming young adults includes William Gao, Yasmin Finney, Corinna Brown, Kizzy Edgell, Tobie Donovan, Jenny Walser, Rhea Norwood and Leila Khan.

    The Heartstopper YA romance franchise, also written by graphic novelist Oseman, debuted in 2022. On the Netflix Tudum site, Oseman expanded on the storyline behind the wrap film: “The movie will be an exploration of time, memory, love, pain, the changing of the seasons, endings and beginnings, and the core element of Heartstopper: the ordinary magic of our everyday lives.”

    The final film from See-Saw Films is directed by Wash Westmoreland from a script by Oseman. The executive producer credits are shared by Patrick Walters, Iain Canning, Emile Sherman, Oseman, Euros Lyn, Locke and Connor.

  • ‘Heated Rivalry’ Author Rachel Reid to Receive The Hollywood Reporter’s Women in Entertainment Canada Honor

    ‘Heated Rivalry’ Author Rachel Reid to Receive The Hollywood Reporter’s Women in Entertainment Canada Honor

    Heated Rivalry author Rachel Reid is set to be honored at The Hollywood Reporter’s Women in Entertainment Canada gala and summit on May 28.

    Reid will receive the Changemaker Award at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Toronto, while also participating in a feature interview on stage. She is best known for penning the Heated Rivalry book series that has been adapted into the popular Crave and HBO Max romance drama about gay hockey players.

    “By championing new perspectives, elevating underrepresented voices and pushing boundaries through storytelling, Reid has helped to shape a more dynamic and forward-looking entertainment landscape,” the WIE Canada event organizers said in a statement on Wednesday.

    Reid receiving the Changemaker honor is fitting as Heated Rivalry is part of the book author’s Game Changer series, which follows the steamy romance between Shane Hollander and Ilya Rozanov, played in the Heated Rivalry drama by Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie, respectively.

    Heated Rivalry season two will be released next year, and Reid will publish her seventh book, Unrivaled, in the Game Changers series in June 2027.

    The upcoming third annual WIE Canada summit will again bring together the Canadian industry across TV, film and music to celebrate and recognize the achievements of women leading the industry forward. The all-day event is attended by top homegrown producers, actors, musicians and execs.

    Reid joins earlier announced honorees Andrea Martin, Malin Akerman and Alethea Arnaquq-Baril and Stacey Aglok MacDonald. Additional honorees and speakers will be announced in the coming weeks.

  • Naomi Watts to Play Ballet Legend Margot Fonteyn in ‘Margot & Rudi’

    Naomi Watts to Play Ballet Legend Margot Fonteyn in ‘Margot & Rudi’

    Take that, Timothée!

    Naomi Watts has signed on to play ballet legend Margot Fonteyn in Margot & Rudi, the new romantic drama from Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris director Anthony Fabian that is set in the world of Swinging Sixties ballet.

    The film explores the iconic partnership between Fonteyn, a 42-year-old prima ballerina and Britain’s most famous dancer, and Rudolf Nureyev, the 23-year-old rebellious Soviet defector who became her partner on stage (and, it was rumored, off it as well).

    Their explosive, undeniable on-stage chemistry sparked speculation, never confirmed and never fully denied, that their affection extended into their private lives. Fonteyn was married at the time, and Nureyev was openly gay, known for his long-term, volatile relationship with Danish dancer Erik Bruhn.

    Alexandr Trush, principal dancer with the Hamburg Ballet, will play Nureyev. The Russian-speaking Ukrainian ballet star is known for his productions of Giselle and Romeo and Juliet, two iconic ballets that will also feature in the film.

    “Growing up in Mexico City, watching Margot and Rudi’s performances in the cinema sparked my passion for stories that blend music, theater, and dance,” said Anthony Fabian. “Their love, defying barriers of culture, age, class, and sexuality, is romantic, unconventional, and thrilling—a love story like no other.”

    Two-time Oscar-nominated Watts studied dance becoming an actress. The Mulholland Drive, 21 Grams and The Impossible star recently played Jackie Kennedy Onassis in FX’s Love Story and will be seen next alongside Luke Evans in The Housewife.

    The Margot & Rudi cast includes Richard E. Grant (Can You Ever Forgive Me?), Demián Bichir (The Hateful Eight) and Harriet Walter (Succession). Fabian will direct from a script by Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris writer Olivia Hetreed.

    Fabian will produce the film through his Elysian Films outfit, together with Hetreed at Sympathetic Ink, Mike Goodridge at Good Chaos and Chris Coen. Executive producers are Thom Mount, Jeffrey Berg and Andy Paterson.

    WestEnd Films has boarded world sales on Margot & Rudi and will introduce the project to buyers at the Cannes film market next month.

  • YouTube Partners With SiriusXM on Audio Advertising For Podcasts and More

    SiriusXM is teaming up with YouTube as the most popular podcasting platform looks for better ad measurement services across audio. 

    In a rare pact, SiriusXM will be the exclusive advertising partner for YouTube audio-first inventory in the U.S. YouTube is the most popular podcasting platform among users, while SiriusXM has the largest formal podcasting network by reach. 

    While YouTube is known for its video content, according to a study by SiriusXM and Edison Research, about 74 percent of U.S. users aged 13 and up consume YouTube audio or engage in listening-first behaviors on YouTube, amounting to 212 million monthly YouTube audio users. Per the study, 45 percent of U.S. consumers aged 13 and up watch videos with static visuals; 40 percent engage with podcasts; 47 percent consume spoken word content (talk, interviews, sports) and 48 percent listen while video is minimized or in the background.

    The partnership, which begins this fall, will include ad sales on the audio versions of podcasts, music, talk shows and more.

    “Audio is one of the most powerful mediums for listeners, creators, and advertisers alike, and at SiriusXM Media, we’re proud to be at the forefront helping brands harness that impact at scale,” said Scott Walker, SiriusXM’s Chief Advertising Revenue Officer. “By partnering with YouTube, a true leader in ad-supported content consumption, we’re uniting our unique skillset with their audience, creating an unparalleled opportunity for marketers and creators to grow their businesses.”

    “YouTube has become a primary destination for audio-first content, where fans engage with their favorite podcasts, music, and creators,” said Romana Pawar, Senior Director of Product, YouTube Ads. “By partnering with SiriusXM Media, we are making it easier than ever for advertisers to tap into these high-attention moments.”

  • ‘The Other Bennet Sister’ Becomes BBC’s Biggest U.K. Drama Launch in a Year

    While audiences in the U.S. keenly wait on The Other Bennet Sister‘s BritBox release, the BBC can boast some fantastic viewership numbers.

    The first episode of the BBC-BritBox adaptation of Janice Hadlow’s bestseller has captured the hearts of BBC viewers with a consolidated audience of 7.3 million people.

    Since the show launched on March 15, the 28-day figure makes The Other Bennet Sister the biggest launch of a new drama in the U.K. across all platforms and streamers since May last year, with 4.1 million (56 percent) of the audience viewing through BBC iPlayer.

    Playing the oft-overlooked middle sister in Pride and Prejudice, Mary Bennet, titular star Ella Bruccoleri caught up with The Hollywood Reporter about fan reaction only last month. “It’s a story about the transformative power of kindness, really,” she said in the sitdown interview. “It’s about realizing that you’re worth more than just your appearance. And it’s about found family. I think it’s quite an affirming watch.” The show is set to drop on BritBox May 6.

    Lindsay Salt, director of BBC Drama, said the Beeb is “delighted” the series has been taken into the nation’s hearts. “It seems Mary, brought beautifully to life by Ella Brucolleri, may have been overlooked by her own family, but she has been embraced with open arms by the audience. How glorious is that!”

    Jane Tranter, CEO of production company Bad Wolf, added: “Bringing such a significant new audience to the world of Jane Austen on the BBC has been, from start to finish, a joy. Janice Haddow’s brilliant original story was loved into life by Sarah Quintrell, Jennifer Sheridan and Asim Abbasi and of course our brilliant cast led by the incomparable Ella Bruccoleri.

    “Mary Bennet may have begun this journey as a wallflower, but she is now, quite rightfully, on everyone’s dance card. Hugest thanks to the BBC for giving us the chance to make this piece, and to the whole Bad Wolf crew in Cardiff for their talent, commitment, and support.”

  • ‘The Rings of Power’ Season 3 to Premiere Later This Year (Exclusive)

    Some good news for you Tolkien fans: Prime Video‘s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power will make its debut later this year.

    The next installment of Amazon‘s high-budget smash-hit had been rumored to arrive in 2027, but a source close to production tells The Hollywood Reporter it’ll be a little sooner than that.

    The show, an enormous success for the streaming platform with around 170 million viewers worldwide and a major driver of Prime membership signups, is set to execute a pretty chunky time jump in season three.

    The official plot synopsis reads: “Jumping forward several years from the events of season two, season three takes place at the height of the War of the Elves and Sauron, as the Dark Lord seeks to craft the One Ring that will give him the edge he needs to win the war and conquer all Middle-earth at last.”

    We last visited J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth in October 2024 (when the season two finale hit Prime Video), making it another two-year gap between seasons. The War of the Elves occurs before the clash seen in the prologue of Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings films, known as the War of the Last Alliance.

    Returning cast members for Rings of Power include Charlie Vickers as Sauron, Morfydd Clark as Galadriel and Robert Aramayo as Elrond. Among the recently announced newcomers are Stranger Things‘ Jamie Campbell Bower, Ray Donovan‘s Eddie Marsan, as well as Andrew Richardson, Zubin Varla and Adam Young, whose exact roles are not yet known.

    Showrunners and executive producers J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay had teased to THR their season three plans ahead of the season two premiere, telling us: “We’re working on it. We’re cooking. Let us cook!” The official renewal came in February 2025, with production underway at the U.K.’s Shepperton Studios soon after.

    Payne and McKay are joined by EPs Lindsey Weber, Justin Doble, Kate Hazell and executive producer-director Charlotte Brandstrom. Matthew Penry-Davey is producer and Ally O’Leary, Tim Keene and Andrew Lee are co-producers.

  • Can Fireproofing Be Climate-Friendly?

    Can Fireproofing Be Climate-Friendly?

    An Amazon package arrived at my door a few days after the Eaton and Palisades fires ignited. It contained a small air purifier, sent by friends who were worried about the city’s air quality. It underlined that, despite my Miracle Mile address, I was not impervious to the fire’s consequences. Even if I couldn’t see or smell them, microscopic particles were being blown across the state by robust winds that would enable the fires to burn through 38,000 acres, incinerating 16,000 structures alongside their contents — Hoka Bondis, Tesla car batteries, Magna tiles, Vitamix blenders, iPads, Stanley cups, High Sport pants — the stuff of life in the 21st century. That air purifier is still on, every filter change a reminder that nothing about the device, designed to keep me safe, is recyclable. It’s a microcosm of the dilemma facing homeowners as rebuilding slowly begins to take shape throughout the city. How do we weigh sustainability against personal safety, durability against the future of the planet, comfort against conscientiousness? As interior designer Oliver Furth wonders, “Isn’t the most sustainable option the one that survives?”

    Architect Dustin Brammel, a founder of Case Study: Adapt, a program created in response to the fires, weighs in. His own rebuild employs RSG-3D, fabricated from layers of wire-reinforced foam sandwiched between wire mesh with a sprayed-on concrete exterior. I’m surprised by the inclusion of concrete, commonly understood to have a harmful impact on the atmosphere. “It’s a balancing act,” Brammel acknowledges. “While concrete does have marginally higher levels of embodied carbon initially, building with it ensures that our house will be noncombustible, earthquake-resistant and energy-efficient, allowing the embodied carbon to be amortized over centuries, not decades.”

    How long a project will take to construct and how much waste it will generate also influences a homeowner’s decision. Construction company Bevyhouse attempts to address these concerns by rethinking the entire building process, marrying the efficiency of factory construction (aka prefab construction) to the beauty of a custom home. Founder Bryan Henson compares it to children’s building blocks. “We manufacture the interiors, the boxes that make up a home’s rooms, in the factory while the foundation is being poured on-site. We deliver them, drop them in place and finish the build on-site, adding decks, garages and details.” Yellowstone’s Josh Lucas, who watched as his own home was installed, was impressed. “Seeing the pieces perfectly fit together, already wired with plumbing and insulation, puts you five months ahead of a conventional build.”

    One of Bevyhouse’s rebuilds in Malibu.

    Courtesy of Bevyhouse

    Henson’s experience with the Santa Barbara, Montecito and Malibu fires and his background in sustainability (he’s taught classes at UC Santa Barbara) impact his approach to construction: ventless attics and crawl spaces — which protect a home against flying embers — are standard. Clients are encouraged to add energy recovery ventilators, which swap stale air with fresh, filtered air, reducing the load on the HVAC system. And, instead of wood, the homes are constructed from fiber cement board. The multipurpose material — a mix of cement, sand and cellulose fibers that are noncombustible, fire-resistant and considered sustainable because of its longevity and low maintenance — also has won over architect Barbara Bestor, whose client list includes such heavyweights as LACMA CEO Michael Govan and Oscar-winning composer Ludwig Göransson. Bestor admires its versatility: “You can do lap siding, you can do modern, you can do storybook.” Both Bestor and architect Tim Barber, who counts Matt Duffer and Ramin Djawadi as clients, employ Densdeck Roof Boards and Densinglas sheeting, a fiberglass-matt gypsum panel considered sustainable because of its durability and recycled content, in their work. “It also adds extra invisible layers of fire protection,” Barber notes.

    Some architects, including William Hefner, have swapped out wood framing in favor of steel, which is fire-resilient, recyclable and durable. “My clients want to live and build in more energy-efficient and conscientious ways,” Hefner stresses. While the bans on gas appliances have been lifted for homes that are being rebuilt, he’s preparing for the future by installing solar panels and electric systems: heat pumps that, despite their name, also cool the air, water heaters, dryers and induction stoves. Interior finishes also have undergone a recalibration with interior designers and clients focused on B-Corp brands (companies certified by the independent, nonprofit B-Corp Lab to meet its high standards for environmental and social responsibility) like Alkemis’ single-coat mineral paints, Fireclay’s domestically made tiles, Armadillo’s natural fiber rugs and Parachute bedding. Laun’s Rachel Bullock points out that even small moves, like multipane windows, can make a big difference in both a home’s energy-efficiency and its fire-resilience.

    “My vision isn’t just to rebuild structures; it’s to bring our communities back for another century,” says architect May Sung, articulating the sentiment that underlines every conversations about rebuilding. And isn’t that the sustainability we’re all after?

    This story appears in The Hollywood Reporter’s 2026 Sustainability Issue. Click here to read more.

  • ‘All We Imagine as Light’ Director Payal Kapadia Heads Up Cannes Critics’ Week Jury

    ‘All We Imagine as Light’ Director Payal Kapadia Heads Up Cannes Critics’ Week Jury

    Payal Kapadia, the Indian filmmaker whose All We Imagine as Light won the Grand Prix at Cannes in 2024, will serve as president of the jury for the 65th Cannes Critics’ Week, running May 13-21 alongside the main festival.

    Kapadia will be joined on the jury by Canadian actor Théodore Pellerin (Lurker), French singer-songwriter Oklou, Ghanaian-British producer Ama Ampadu (My Father’s Shadow) and journalist and Bangkok World Film Festival director Donsaron Kovitvanitcha.

    Kapadia’s short films Afternoon Clouds and And What is the Summer Saying were selected at the Cinéfondation and the Berlinale, before her debut feature documentary A Night of Knowing Nothing went to Cannes in 2021, and won the L’Oeil d’Or for Best Documentary.

    All We Imagine as Light, her second feature, was a standout at the 2024 Cannes festival, and marked her arrival as one of the most exciting voices in contemporary world cinema.

    “My own journey as a filmmaker was supported early on because of film festival selections,” Kapadia said in a statement. “Through these, I had the opportunity to meet others like myself from across the world and helped me build a community of future collaborators.”

    Kapadia said she embraced the jury role at a time when independent cinema is “being eroded in every country,” adding that supporting first films is “almost a resistance to market forces.” With a nod to the Cannes Critics’ Week’s Raison d’être, she called film criticism “one of the key components of the independent and art house film ecosystem. The first films are often freer, more daring and fearless, having an individual voice and to champion those is absolutely essential. First films are also fragile, and to be nurtured in a section like Critics’ Week helps them blossom amongst already established filmmakers’ work.”

    The Critics’ Week jury will award the Ami Paris Grand Prize for best feature, the Louis Roederer Foundation Rising Star Award for best actor or actress, and the Sony Discovery Prize for best short film.

  • ‘Logan’s Run’ Had a Unique Solution for Overpopulation: Death at 30

    ‘Logan’s Run’ Had a Unique Solution for Overpopulation: Death at 30

    Fifty years after the science fiction film’s release, environmental themes tackled in Logan’s Run have helped the movie extend its cultural lifespan.

    Director Michael Anderson’s dystopian feature was based on authors William F. Nolan and George Clayton Johnson’s 1967 novel that MGM had tried unsuccessfully for years to adapt for the big screen. Set in the 23rd century, the film centers on a hedonistic society where the remaining humans live in a domed, AI-run city; a crystal lodged in each resident’s left hand blinks from red to black when they turn 30, at which point they are killed through a ritual called “Carousel.”

    Michael York, known for films like Cabaret, starred as Logan 5, a police officer who tracks down “runners” for refusing to participate in Carousel — until he, too, finds himself marked for termination. Jenny Agutter and Richard Jordan rounded out the cast. After other screenwriters took a crack at it, David Zelag Goodman’s script finally helped move the adaptation out of development hell thanks to upping the maximum age from 21 in the book, thus expanding the pool of potential stars, including then-34-year-old York.

    The star, who bonded with Anderson on their 1975 film Conduct Unbecoming, saw a pre-fame Farrah Fawcett playing tennis at a friend’s home and suggested her for a small role in Logan’s Run. “I’m responsible for her whole wonderful career,” York jokes to THR about the actress, whose series Charlie’s Angels would make her a household name when it premiered in the fall of 1976.

    United Artists released Logan’s Run on June 23, 1976, and it collected a pleasing $25 million ($145 million today). THR’s review noted that the movie “has little freshness or originality to offer” but added that “York displays a great deal of energy and screen presence.”

    Not only did the movie spawn a short-lived spinoff series on CBS, but a potential remake from producer Joel Silver had been in development over the decades, attaching such directors as Joseph Kosinski, Nicolas Winding Refn and Simon Kinberg. In 1999, Anderson called Logan’s Run “a piece that I’m very proud of.”

    York imagines that a new take on Logan’s Run could find success — the 84-year-old actor quips, “Of course, I’m way too old for it” — and he still appreciates his version’s prescient narrative: “The themes about sustainability have become very important.”

    This story appears in The Hollywood Reporter’s 2026 Sustainability Issue. Click here to read more.