Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Trivia / Supernova2000

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Moved from Trivia.Supernova and YMMV.Supernova

Added DiffLines:

* AlanSmithee: Creator/WalterHill used the name "Thomas Lee" after Creator/{{MGM}} constantly interfered with the production and editing process (even bringing in Creator/FrancisFordCoppola to reshoot some scenes). His use of the pseudonym is the first time the DGA allowed another pseudonym as "Alan Smithee" was too well-known to work anymore.
* BillingDisplacement: Played with. [[spoiler: Third billed Creator/RobertForster only has a few moments of screen time and is killed off at the 18 minute mark, far sooner than the rest of the supporting cast members.]]
* BoxOfficeBomb: Budget, $90 million. Box office, $14,828,081. Became an OldShame to Creator/WalterHill (he even took his name off the film) in addition to being one of the biggest bombs of the 2000s.
* CreatorBacklash: While Hill think's Spader's performance is one of the few things that wasn't ruined by the studio's intercessions, Spader himself considers this the film of his he would be least hurt if you skipped.
* CreatorKiller: This is the second film and bomb for David C. Wilson's career after 1991's The Perfect Weapon, and his career was sent back into deep space until ''Film/TheManFromUNCLE'' in 2015.
* ExecutiveMeddling: Creator/{{MGM}} recut AND reshot the film without director Creator/WalterHill's input, and he removed his name from the finished film in response.
* SavedFromDevelopmentHell: The film was in development for 12 years and cost an estimated 60 million dollars. Although the theatrical version runs only 87 minutes (the director's cut is 91), reportedly several hours of completed footage exists, much of it self-contradictory due to changes made to the script during the filming stage. Both Creator/FrancisFordCoppola and Creator/HRGiger were involved at one point.
* TheShelfOfMovieLanguishment: The movie was filmed in 1998, but was shelved until January 2000 due to its TroubledProduction, with Creator/WalterHill disowning the finished product.
* TroubledProduction:
** The script started off in 1990 as ''Dead Star'', which the writer described as "''Film/DeadCalm'' [[JustForFun/RecycledINSPACE in space]]". Over the next few years of DevelopmentHell, it evolved to be more like ''Film/{{Hellraiser}}'' in space, more of a sci-fi horror flick, without any of the originally envisioned scenes set on Earth.
** After some reshufflings of stars and directors attached to the project, filming finally got underway in 1998 with Creator/JamesSpader in the lead and Creator/WalterHill in the director's chair. MGM wanted it in the can before a possible SAG strike that summer, however, and Hill only had a few weeks to prepare, most of which he spent fixing script problems, unaware that the studio head had greenlighted the production precisely because he liked the version of the script[[note]]itself already extensively rewritten by multiple hands[[/note]] that Hill was now rewriting. (It may not have helped that Hill felt the script at that point was a little too like ''Film/{{Alien}}'', which he'd written and produced almost 20 years earlier).
** Halfway through principal photography, the budget was cut after a deal with Digital Domain, which would have produced the special effects at low cost in exchange for a stake in not only the film but other MGM productions, fell through. Again, Hill had to rewrite the script around a number of scenes that now had to be scrapped.
** Hill spent six months editing the film after it wrapped. His initial cut did not include even the process shots that the film still had the money for, as they had not yet been finished. Nevertheless, MGM insisted on previewing it for test audiences anyway. Hill warned the studio that it would not go over well without the effects and refused to attend the screening, which MGM took as him not being a team player. After the audience did, in fact, hate the movie, Hill quit.
** MGM then hired Jack Sholder to salvage something from the footage Hill had shot, perhaps with some reshoots to tie his version together. His cut got rid of many character development scenes Hill had shot, adding some more humor and giving Spader's character a slightly bigger role. It went over a little better with test audiences. But that wasn't good enough for MGM's new executive team, who went back to Hill. He asked for about $5 million worth of reshoots. After the studio again said no, he was done with the project for good.
** In August 1999, MGM hired Creator/FrancisFordCoppola to re-edit the film. He was able to restore a zero-gravity sex scene cut from previous versions by digitally pasting Spader and co-star Creator/AngelaBassett's faces onto two other actors. But MGM wasn't happy with his version, either, despite spending an additional million dollars, and put the film back on [[TheShelfOfMovieLanguishment the shelf]] with the intention of selling it.
** It couldn't, and thus MGM decided on [[DumpMonths a January 2000 release]]. Its version eliminated the villain's transformation into a demonic monster for the climactic battle, despite considerable expense on the makeup, since the studio wanted audiences to be able to see the actor. Hill successfully petitioned the Directors' Guild to be credited as "Thomas Lee", which gave ''Supernova'' a place in film history as the first use of a directorial pseudonym other than the recently retired "Alan Smithee". Its ''sole'' place in film history. A film a decade in the making, costing by some accounts almost $90 million, has as of 2020 grossed barely $15 million.
* WhatCouldHaveBeen: Hill's cut, supposedly much straighter, darker and more disturbing. Creator/VincentDOnofrio in the lead. A corresponding supercomputer AI named "George" on the moon that provides some exposition. Karl transforming into a demonic creature during the climax.

Top