December,29, 2008
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LOS ANGELES - It was an improbable plot hatched during World
War Two and to match it on movie screens, Hollywood offered
perhaps the most unlikely casting of a hero at the holidays
— Tom Cruise playing a German army officer.
Cruise, of course, enjoys All-American looks that helped
send him to movie stardom playing heroic young men such as
Lt. Pete "Maverick" Mitchell in 1986 movie, "Top
Gun." As of late, he's been on a mea culpa tour to explain
his odd behavior in recent years and to regain his good-guy
image with fans.
The improbable plot was a plan by German officers to kill
Adolf Hitler by placing a bomb near him at a top secret meeting,
and the resulting movie about that attempt is "Valkyrie,"
starring Cruise as Colonel Claus Von Stauffenberg who was
at the center of the assassination attempt.
"Stauffenberg was unique, handsome, and Tom had a lot
of the same attributes, besides the physical looks of the
character," "Valkyrie" director Bryan Singer
told Reuters.
"I look for similarities in the actor and the person
and in that world -- you take all (Tom's) baggage away --
and you've got a good casting choice," he said.
But it didn't always seem that way to Hollywood watchers,
and like most movies, "Valkyrie" did not make it
from script to screen without some bumps along the way.
Its release, initially set for summer 2008 was moved several
times before landing on December 25, leading industry watchers
to wonder if problems with the film caused the delay.
The crew had difficulty getting permission to film at historical
sites in Germany where Singer and Cruise wanted to shoot,
although they eventually prevailed. And the film's big budget
was cited by some industry insiders as one reason for the
exit of Cruise's long-time business partner Paula Wagner from
her job as chief executive of United Artists in August.
Joel Goodson as a Nazi officer?
Yet, the biggest threat may have always been casting Cruise
as a German army officer who fought for Hitler.
When pictures comparing the likeness of a Stauffenberg to
Cruise began making their way around the Web in 2007, concerns
arose that Cruise's squeaky clean public image would be further
tarnished by playing a Nazi.
Cruise already had suffered publicity setbacks with his couch
jumping incident on "Oprah" and verbal sparring
with Matt Lauer of "Today." In fact, to polish his
still tarnished image, Cruise was back on "Today"
earlier this month admitting he "came across as arrogant"
with Lauer.
But Singer, a self-described history buff, looks differently
at the film and at Cruise as von Stauffenberg.
He sees the movie as a thriller, a genre Cruise mastered
in the blockbuster "Mission: Impossible" flicks.
Singer also views Stauffenberg as a true hero who tried to
kill one of the 20th Century's most notorious villains.
"In the context of an assassination thriller ... Tom
Cruise was a natural for this character," Singer said.
Audiences apparently agree. With mixed reviews and against
stiff competition that included family films "Marley
& Me" and "Bedtime Stories," as well as
Oscar hopeful "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,"
"Valkyrie" held its own at box offices.
Early reports had the film taking in an estimated $8.5 million
in ticket sales on Christmas Day, although its studio backer
United Artists -- owned by Cruise, Wagner and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
-- had not issued official numbers.
"Considering the subject matter and level of competition,
'Valkyrie' did just fine," said Paul Dergarabedian, president
of box office tracker Media by Numbers.