CRIT WIT
There isn't a producer in Hollywood who doesn't hate
at least one film critic. But few of them have had the nerve to
name a villain after one. Mark Johnson, currently producing the
DreamWorks sci-fi comedy Galaxy Quest (which stars Tim Allen),
has called the movie's evil alien ''Sarris.'' As in the New York
Observer's Andrew Sarris? ''You said it, not me,'' says Johnson.
''It was either Sarris or Haskell'' (writer Molly, Sarris' wife).
Although Johnson wouldn't elaborate, the enmity may stem from
Sarris' pan of The Natural, which the critic called ''a pathetic
strike-out.'' For his part, Sarris doesn't seem fazed. ''It
probably won't make enough money for me to sue for $10 million,''
he deadpans. ''I'm 70 years old. This guy wants to insult me? Oh,
boohoo. As long as they spelled my name right, I'm okay.''
TRICKY DICK
Not even a movie about Richard Nixon can escape
scandal. Presidential speechwriter-turned-game-show host Ben
Stein claims the idea for Columbia's Dick was stolen from him by
first-timer Sheryl Longin. ''I was working on a treatment based
on two Valley Girls working in the White House,'' says Stein, for
whom Longin did research during college. ''I would question
whether [she] could say there's no connection between her script
and the one I was working on.'' Longin, who shares a writing
credit with Dick director Andrew Fleming, insists she is not a
crook: ''Frankly, I don't know what Ben is talking about.'' Longin
says that Dick is loosely based on a childhood incident, when
she threw ice cubes at Nixon's Secret Service men. ''I can't
imagine he's seen the movie,'' she says. ''I mean, it's really
anti-Nixon and he's a staunch Republican.'' For now, the courts
won't be involved. ''I have no plans to sue her at this point,''
says Stein. ''It would have been a different story if she called
to say she's sorry. But sadly, this is just typical Hollywood
behavior.''
BUSY SIGNAL
Fox has been trying to find a good connection for
its thriller Phone Booth about a man inside the eponymous
enclosure who's in a sniper's sights ever since the script by Maniac Cop's Larry Cohen was reportedly bought for mid-six
figures back in December. Although Michael Bay (Armageddon) says
he was close to directing a rewrite by Brian Helgeland(Payback), and actors like Will Smith and Nicolas Cage had
expressed interest, no deals were struck. ''They wouldn't let me
blow up the booth,'' jokes Bay. Now Allen and Albert Hughes (Dead
Presidents) have signed on, says Zucker-Netter Productions
president Gil Netter, who's looking for a writer to do ''a quick
little polish'' before he sends it off to the A-listers. ''We're
eyeing the usual suspects,'' says Netter. ''I'm sure we'll get one
of them.''
FURTHERMORE
Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me's Jay Roach,
whose Mystery, Alaska opens this fall, will next direct Meet the
Parents, a comedy about a guy and his in-laws, which may star Ben Stiller and Robert De Niro.... Music video ace McG, 28, will
make his feature directorial debut with Charlie's Angels,
starring Drew Barrymore and Cameron Diaz.... Soon to be seen in Blue Streak, Martin Lawrence will next star in the Fox comedy Big Momma's House, playing an undercover cop who impersonates,
among others, a Southern grandmother.


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