valkyrieTom Cruise is a crazy, scary man.  If you read the tabloids long enough you’ll find scads of stories about him, his sheer lunacy, and the sheer lunacy that applies to his dealings with Scientology.  But one thing is true…he’s a pretty good actor. And when you run to the video store and grab a copy of Valkyrie, well, you’ll probably notice that yourself.

In Valkyrie, we’re introduced to a huge and incredibly convoluted plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler by elements within his own army.  The best part is, much of this actually happened.  Klaus von Stauffenberg (a real person, here played by Tom Cruise) is part of the military arm of the attempt to kill Hitler, using his own plans against him.  See, Hitler had a plan just in case someone should turn against him called Operation Valkyrie, in which a reserve contingent of the German army, dubbed the Reserve Army, was kept around Berlin in the event of an uprising to suppress civil insurrection.  So Stauffenberg and his contingent feign an uprising…on the part of Hitler’s own SS.  This allows them to enact Operation Valkyrie to seize the SS, and with both the Reserve Army and the SS removed from the equation, the path becomes clear to seize Hitler’s government.

The most amazing part of this entire exercise is that this actually happened, and essentially came within a gnat’s whisker of actually succeeding, which would have brought the war to an end quite a bit sooner than it actually did.  Frankly, with stuff like this going on, it’s a wonder Hitler’s regime managed to last as long as it did.  Watching this epic story of love of country and betrayal play out is downright amazing—even more so when you consider that Hitler would commit suicide just nine months after the events of Valkyrie.  It’s as though something was conceived that day that would be born as real as any man.

History aside, however, this is actually a very riveting movie, made doubly so by the fact that it has an unusually long runtime of a full two hours, in an era where eighty to ninety minutes is standard operating procedure.  It’s a stunning, deep and rich epic that makes its viewer sit up and take notice.  While most of us who haven’t studied World War II history extensively may not have known about Operation Valkyrie or the other fourteen assassination attempts on Hitler, this one carries an authenticity to it that makes it especially good.  These were men so concerned about the direction of their country that they were willing to surrender their status and their very lives to bring about its downfall and rebirth.

And though the Stauffenberg heirs didn’t personally care for Cruise’s portrayal of him, I confess that I liked it just fine.  If Tom Cruise would lay off the lunacy and do more acting like this, more people would take him much, MUCH, more seriously.

But that aside, Valkyrie is a great thriller / suspense title  and deserves your dollars and your time to watch.  It’s downright inspiring in its portrayal of resistance to a madman, and it looks as beautiful as the plot itself is deep.

The box office weekend estimate came in this morning with the help of Variety.  Marley and Me hit the top with Bedtime Stories, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and Valkyrie, respectively.  I am not surprised that two family films are at the top. The holidays are definitely a time for families to be together. 

December 26, 2008 - December 28, 2008 (*millions)

  FILM GROSS
1 Marley And Me $37,000,000
2 Bedtime Stories $28,069,000
3 Curious Case Of Benjamin Button, The $27,200,000
4 Valkyrie $21,531,000
5 Yes Man $16,450,000
6 Seven Pounds $13,400,000
7 Tale Of Despereaux, The $9,367,605
8 Day The Earth Stood Still, The $7,900,000
9 Spirit, The $6,510,000
10 Doubt $5,675,000

Working relationships are the key to “making it” in Hollywood as I am sure many know. It looks like a solid working valkyrietcruiserelationship formed with Valkyrie co-writer and producer Christopher McQuarrie and Tom Cruise.

Variety reports that McQuarrie is currently working on three projects with Cruise, which is designed as potential star vehicles for the actor.

McQuarrie and Mason Alley are set to write Flying Tigers, centered on the volunteer fighter squadron created to help the Chinese fight the Japanese prior to the U.S. entering World War II.

Though Cruise isn’t officially attached the ace flier-actor has long sought to return to the skies, and several years ago was attached to The Few, a Paramount project about the first American pilots to battle Germans in WWII, with director Michael Mann and scribe John Logan.

Another project for McQuarrie is writing and producing with Guillermo del Toro the earlier announced United Artists project The Champions.  McQuarrie is penning the script with a hope of driving it into a Cruise vehicle. The Champions is based on the British TV series. About a team of government agents rescued from a plane crash in the Himalayas by an advanced civilization and given superhuman abilities. Sounds like a franchise to me.

Finally, the Cruise-McQuarrie alliance with the most importance is espionage drama The Tourist. McQuarrie task is to rewrite for Cruise to star with Charlize Theron in the Bharat Nalluri-directed remake of the 2005 French thriller Anthony Zimmer.

Here’s a fun clip of Tom Cruise on Jay Leno’s “Tonight Show” the other night. Valkyrie, directed by Bryan Singer with an all-star cast opens on Christmas Day.

 

The final trailer for United Artists’ Valkyrie will premiere on Yahoo! Movies around 8pm PST on Thursday, October 30th. In the meantime, Screenhead was sent new production stills and widget that are just too awesome not to share.

Reviews from sneaks have been very positive.  I look forward to seeing this film by Brian Singer who also directed X-men, Superman Returns and The Usual Suspects. My only concern is that the title Valkyrie may not be understood by the public, and thus not know that the film is based on a true story.

Valkyrie trailer premieres tonight at Yahoo.  The above picture is the star Tom Cruise as a proud military man, Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg. The other picture is Cruise with director Bryan Singer.

Cruise plays is a loyal officer who serves his country all the while hoping that someone will find a way to stop Hitler before Europe and Germany are destroyed. Realizing that time is running out, he decides that he must take action himself and joins the German resistance. Armed with a cunning strategy to use Hitler’s own emergency plan – known as Operation Valkyrie – these men plot to assassinate the dictator and overthrow his Nazi government from the inside.

With everything in place, with the future of the world, the fate of millions and the lives of his wife and children hanging in the balance, von Stauffenberg is thrust from being one of many who oppose Hitler to the one who must kill Hitler himself.

VALKYRIE is produced by Bryan Singer, Christopher McQuarrie and Gilbert Adler. McQuarrie co-wrote the original screenplay with Nathan Alexander who also serves as co-producer. The executive producers are Chris Lee, Ken Kamins, Daniel M. Snyder, Dwight C. Schar and Mark Shapiro.

The film was shot in Germany at various locations where many of the actual events occurred, including the historic Bendlerblock. Recreating the atmosphere of urgency and paranoia inside the German resistance is a team that includes Singer’s frequent collaborators Newton Thomas Sigel (SUPERMAN RETURNS, X2, X-MEN) as director of photography and editor/composer John Ottman (SUPERMAN RETURNS, X2); as well as production designers Lilly Kilvert (two-time Oscar-nominee for THE LAST SAMURAI and LEGENDS OF THE FALL) and Patrick Lumb (THE OMEN) and costume designer Joanna Johnston (MUNICH, SAVING PRIVATE RYAN).

In a country in the grips of evil, in a police state where every move is being watched, in a world where justice and honor have been subverted, a group of men hidden inside the highest reaches of power decide to take action. Tom Cruise stars in the suspense film, VALKYRIE, based on the true story of Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg (CRUISE) and the daring and ingenious plot to eliminate one of the most evil tyrants the world has ever known. Director Bryan Singer (THE USUAL SUSPECTS, X-MEN, SUPERMAN RETURNS) re-teams with Academy Award-winning USUAL SUSPECTS screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie to bring to life the story of the men who led the operation to assassinate Hitler. The film also stars an acclaimed cast including Kenneth Branagh, Bill Nighy, Tom Wilkinson, Carice van Houten, Thomas Kretschmann, Eddie Izzard, Christian Berkel and Terence Stamp.

 

 

I don’t know about you. But, after viewing this trailer, I understand the movie and I want to seeValkyrie. The film is directed by Bryan Singer with an all star cast: Tom Cruise, Tom Wilkinson, Kenneth Branagh. 

Val

 

 

The latest production still from Tom Cruise’s Valkyrie. From what I know about the film, this shot takes place in North Africa. This shot says it all. Doesn’t it?

 

 

 

You would think that this is the “Tom Cruise and Paula Wagner Hour” because another item came up in the industry trades just now — their Valkyrie is back on the 2008 slate.

MGM has moved the film to open Dec. 26, instead of the Feb. 13 date that was previously announced.

Apparently, the move was made for purely commercial reasons, after a screening of the film went well; I personally read a great sneak peek review on the Internet. The studio sees it as a holiday movie and award consideration was not a factor.