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Clint Eastwood, Sylvester Stallone, & More Legends Who Were Almost Superman


The ‘Superman’ casting list was a veritable who’s who of 1970s Hollywood.
Superman is a difficult character to get right on screen. He embodies old-fashioned values. Despite his invulnerability, he has to somehow show a degree of vulnerability. Superman has to be likable, but believable as a force to be reckoned with. Difficult, yes, but not impossible. There are a number of actors who have done well with the Superman legacy on their shoulders. Tyler Hoechlin is the most recent to wear the “S”, and his portrayal of the hero, alongside Elizabeth Tulloch’s Lois, has made Superman & Lois must-watch television for comic book fans. David Corenswet is next up in Superman: Legacy, and with James Gunn in the driver’s seat it would seem unlikely that the hero isn’t set up to embody those qualities. Yet the quintessential portrayal was, and still is, Christopher Reeve in 1978’s Superman and its sequels. Reeve made us believe in both Superman and Clark Kent. Reeve made us believe that he truly cared for the people of Earth, particularly Lois Lane (Margot Kidder), which gave him that vulnerable quality. And, yes, he made us “believe a man can fly.” Yet as seemingly a no-brainer casting if there ever was, there were famous actors in contention for the tights.

Which 1970s Actors Almost Played Superman?
Ilya Salkind, producer of Superman, revealed that DC Comics had a “wish list” of actors that they approved of that could be approached for the role of Superman. From a variety of sources, that list had almost every big-time 1970s Hollywood actor on it, including (but not limited to) Paul Newman, Warren Beatty, Dustin Hoffman, Robert Redford, Clint Eastwood, Nick Nolte, James Caan, Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds, Charles Bronson, Sylvester Stallone, and Steve McQueen. Superman was, after all, one of the publisher’s biggest names, with revenues running second only to Batman for DC properties ($494 million vs. $277 million in 2014 alone). They wanted that marquee star quality for their hero, a major name that came with a built-in fan base. What they didn’t consider, though, was if the name on the list would even make a good Superman.

One name that Ilya Salkind offered up in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter is Dustin Hoffman, stating, “One side, they were extraordinarily protective [of the character’s image] and on the other side, they weren’t so aware of reality because as much as Dustin Hoffman is a fantastic actor, I don’t think he would have been a great Superman. Perhaps he could have been.” But they did recognize that Hoffman would be perfect for another role: Lex Luthor. In that same interview, Salkind says that they met with Hoffman at Cannes over dinner and offered the role to him, but it “didn’t work out.” Other names on the list to play Superman were crossed off as being not quite right for the hero. Burt Reynolds would have kept his mustache. Charles Bronson, well into his fifties, was deemed “too earthy” for the role. Stallone screen-tested but was “too ethnic” for Superman (although other reports, according to Esquire, suggested that Marlon Brando refused to let a rising star overshadow him). Paul Newman was actually offered a choice between Superman, Jor-El, or Lex Luthor at a cool $4 million, but turned it down. Nick Nolte knew the ‘Superman producers’ were interested in him for the role, but turned the role down by saying that he would only do it if he could “play him as a schizophrenic.” Robert Redford perhaps came the closest, except money demands and the absence of a finished script shut that option down.
The ‘Superman’ Casting Process Considered Non-Actors

While some of the actors on the list would have been questionable to play Superman, they did share one common element: they are all actors, a talent that one would think would be a primary reason to cast anyone in a movie. This makes the next three names considered for the role very… unconventional. According to Salkind, in an interview with Barry M. Freiman of Superman Homepage, singer Neil Diamond expressed how he wanted to play Superman, but was passed over (although “Sweet Lois Lane” does have a certain je ne sais quoi, no?) Following the 1976 Olympic Games, Caitlyn Jenner auditioned for the role. “I was asked to go to Rome and do a screen test for the original Superman [movie],” Jenner recalls, “I got the whole cape on, went back there, spent a week… I went to the ice crystal (the Fortress of Solitude), had fights with Lex Luthor, did all that stuff.” As her presence in the Village People 1980 comedy Can’t Stop the Music would attest, casting Jenner as Superman would have been one bullet that didn’t bounce off Supes.
Another Superman name? How about the eternal Muhammad Ali? The Hollywood Reporter cites Salkind revealing that the boxing legend was on DC’s approved list for the role. If it wasn’t before, it was clear then that DC was approving the casting list on name alone, not who would be the best fit for the role. Despite Ali’s popularity, he wasn’t ultimately chosen for the part. He did, though, make an appearance with Superman in the pages of DC Comics. The same year Superman was released, DC issued Superman vs. Muhammad Ali, an oversized one-shot story that saw a depowered Superman fight Ali, with the winner set to fight against an alien warrior to determine the fate of the Earth. Now THAT would be a movie!

According to Fox News, despite the many actors that had tried out for the role of Superman, Salkind couldn’t shake the impression that Christopher Reeve made on him, and called him back for another look. The actor was perfect, save for one aspect: he was too thin. So they turned to David Prowse to help train Reeve, and soon the actor gained 40 pounds of muscle, capturing the essence of the character in every aspect. Similarly, the role of Lois Lane had a few actors in contention, like Leslie Ann Warren and Stockard Channing, but Salkind got the same feeling from Margot Kidder that he did for Reeve, that there was simply no one better for the role. And Salkind nailed it, bringing together two actors with an instant, complementary connection that perfectly encapsulated the iconic pair of Superman and Lois Lane. Really, who else could it have been?

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‘I am officially off the market’: When Margot Robbie revealed she made the ‘conscious’ decision of not dating actors


Margot Robbie revealed her decision to not date actors because of the media scrutiny that came with a public relationship of two high-profile actors
Back in 2015, A-lister Margot Robbie made a declaration that she would not be dating any actors. The actress may have alluded to her fiance Tom Ackerley, who she married the following year in 2016. In an exclusive interview with Marie Claire, she revealed that being in a relationship as an actor herself came with its own set of challenges. She believed that dating someone who was popular would add on to the media scrutiny.

Margot Robbie opened up on why she made a conscious decision to not date actorsTalking to Marie Claire, she claimed, “I am officially off the market.” She then shared the reasoning behind her decision and added, “I made a conscious decision not to date actors.” She continued to explain, “But not because I hate actors. That’s a nasty generalization to make, and that’s not the case. People take such an interest in your love life when you have a profile, it puts a lot of stress on a relationship.”
The Barbie actress continued, “So two people with profiles, I figure it’s just double the amount of scrutiny, and I’d like to avoid that at all costs.” This came after reports of her locking lips with Tarzan co-star Alexander Skarsgard started making rounds. It was reported that she was caught kissing the actor during the Sundance Film Festival.

Margot Robbie revealed she opted for a minimal lifestyle even after becoming an actorIn the interview, Robbie also opened up about how she was adapting to fame. She shared, “I have a normal 24-year-old life. If I were a waitress, I’d probably have the exact same lifestyle. I’d go to the same clubs I go to already, live in the same house with the same housemates, hang out with the same people.”
However, Margot Robbie tied the knot with Tom Ackerley who is an English producer and actor. The duo met on the sets of 2013 movie Suite Francaise where Tom was working as an assistant director. Post marriage, both of them launched their production company LuckyChap Entertainment.

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Monica Bellucci and Tin Burton at lunch in the restaurant in Selci Lama


For All Saints’ Day, the Hollywood star from Tiferno returned to his native Umbria to enjoy a moment of relaxation and then visit his parentsOn the occasion of the All Saints’ Day celebrations, the Hollywood star of Tiferno origin, Monica Bellucci, returned to her native Umbria to enjoy a moment of relaxation and to visit her father Pasquale and her mother Brunella.Flanked by her current partner Tim Burton, she went to lunch, together with about twenty old friends, at the Osteria del Musicista, which has always been her favorite restaurant, in Selci Lama.Menu dedicated to typical dishes of the area, which includes an appetizer with breadsticks lined with coppa, duck in porchetta and grilled pork livers, polenta with wild boar sauce accompanied by the very typical cappelletti in broth.To conclude, a dessert based on fried “ciaccia” with Nutella and roasted chestnuts.
Having paid the bill and greeted the restaurant owner and lifelong friend, Roberto Polchi, Monica brought home cappelletti and broth for a family dinner.

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‘Rocky’ Was Quite Different In His Original Screenplay, Sylvester Stallone Claims


Sylvester Stallone took his friend’s advice on a rewrite of the original screenplay to Rocky. A few tweaks later, he was on his way to major success.
In the new Netflix documentary Sly, Stallone discussed how he initially conceived of the project, which had a much harder edge. In the early version, Rocky was depicted as a “thuggish” character, inspired by Martin Scorsese’s crime drama, Mean Streets.

But Stallone’s perspective changed when a friend read the script and thought the boxer was too cruel for audiences to actually care about him.
Stallone recalled her crying.

“She goes, ‘I hate Rocky. I hate him. He’s cruel. He hits people. He beats them up.’”
Stallone took it to heart, and asked what he could do to soften the character.

“I said, ‘what if you stop short of it?’ Like, maybe he almost did. He could have, that’s his job, but he doesn’t?’ ‘That’d be nice,’” he added. “I said, ‘What if he had a girlfriend or something?’ ‘Yeah, that’s nice.’ So I go back, start writing that: ‘Girlfriend. Nice.’”
$117 million in box office later, a franchise was born.

Stallone also revealed that actor Dolph Lundgren sent him to the hospital during one fight scene in Rocky IV.
“Dolph Lundgren… he pulverized me,” Stallone says in the documentary. “Later that night, my heart started to swell—which happens when the heart hits the chest—and then my blood pressure went up to 260, and they thought I was going to be talking to angels. Next thing I know, I’m in intensive care, where I’m surrounded by nuns, and I thought, ‘OK, that’s curtains.’”
Stallone was in the hospital for nine days following the incident, praying for “one more round.”
“For the first minute of the fight, it is going to be a free-for-all,” Stallone told Lundgren. The Swedish actor joked in a separate interview that all he did was “obey orders,” explaining, “[Stallone] was the boss. I did what he told me.”
Doctors allegedly told Stallone that he received a blow to the ribs that made his heart rattle around in his ribcage, a condition typically seen in head-on collisions. “I did hit a bus, of sorts,” Stallone joked.

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