Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Adrien Brody sues to stop release of horror film

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Adrien Brody doesn't want anybody to see his work in the Italian horror flick "Giallo," which is scheduled to be released Tuesday on DVD.
Brody has sued for $3 million and is attempting to stop the film's release. Not because the film bombed with critics or never got released theatrically in the U.S., but rather because he alleges that producers lied to him in order to stop him from walking off the set.
Brody stars as an Italian detective who teams with an American woman to track down her kidnapped sister.
Prior to the shoot, the Oscar-winning actor allegedly signed a "pay or play" deal to star in the Dario Argento-directed film. This meant he was to be paid regardless if the film was made or not.
About a week into production, Brody says he discovered the film was underfunded and that producers had failed to pay $640,000 into an escrow account.
Brody was prepared to walk, but was allegedly told that the film had new guaranteed funding lined up from a $2 million sale of Italian distribution rights.
Producers allegedly asked Brody to sign a new agreement whereby he would continue to act and temporarily defer his $640,000 in exchange for having the "absolute right to withhold consent to the use of his likeness in the Picture" until he was paid in full.
Brody says in a lawsuit filed on Thursday in federal court in California that he was never paid and that the story of new funding was "phony."
When Brody attempted to exercise his rights to hold back the picture, producers allegedly ignored him and said that they would never pay him.
The actor wants a permanent injunction against distribution of the film as well as the $640,000 he's owed, plus $2 million more for breach of contract, breach of fair dealing, fraud, and misappropriation of his publicity rights.
(Editing by Zorianna Kit)