“Fast and Furious Seven” could be cancelled after Paul Walker's death!!
In the initial few days after the sudden death of Paul Walker, who was
killed in a fiery car crash along with close pal Roger Rodas in Southern
California on Saturday, plans were being made to determine how “Fast and
Furious 7” could and would resume production once the cast and crew had time to
mourn.
However, that task may now have proven to be too challenging for Universal
Pictures, director James Wan and the rest of the creative team.
A source confirmed to FOX411, as first reported by entertainment industry
trade The Wrap, that the nearly $200 million production may be canned
altogether as the power players ponder how best to preserve the integrity of
the franchise. The film is said to be more than halfway complete, although many
integral scenes featuring Walker were not shot.
The cast and crew were on Thanksgiving hiatus and slated to return to the
Atlanta, GA set this week but production was promptly shut down immediately
after the tragedy.
Speculation is also now said to be swirling over whether to start over with
a fresh script sans Walker’s character, the leading role of Brian O’Conner, but
one source connected to the film told us that that would likely be more
problematic.
“They (filmmakers) should understand that Paul was the essential character.
But his character did have a baby,” noted the insider. “They could finish it
here and pick it up ten years later.”
Nonetheless, the decision of next steps will likely not be made for at least
a week or two. And losing the seventh installment would be a huge blow
given that the “Fast” franchise remains one of the most successful of all time,
and has made more than $2.3 billion worldwide for the first six over the past
eleven years.
TheWrap also reported that the conversation between the movie’s key decision
makers has now moved away from the possibility of using special effects to put
Walker’s face on another actor’s body, and the studio is particularly concerned
about the sensitivity of losing an actor to a high-performance car crash in a
movie that ultimately glorifies street racing.
Source: http://www.foxnews.com/
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