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Cussler's Last Stand
MATTHEW
McCONAUGHEY AND PENELOPE CRUZ are big draws, but don't look for Clive
Cussler in line when their new film, Sahara—based on his 1992
book—opens March 25. The novelist has no immediate plans to see the $130
million flick, which marks the first time in 25 years that Dirk Pitt,
Cussler's swashbuckling explorer, will appear on the big screen. In
fact, Cussler is suing production company Crusader Entertainment (now
known as Bristol Bay Productions) for at least $10 million, charging
that they bungled the script.
In a 2001 deal
that reportedly brought Cussler more than $30 million, Crusader optioned
film rights to three books in the Pitt series. Sahara, the
first installment, finds Pitt tearing across the North African desert
with sexy UN scientist Eva Rojas (Cruz) and wisecracking sidekick Al
Giordino (Steve Zahn) as they race to save the planet from a deadly
toxin. But Cussler claims the final Sahara script "just wasn't
up to snuff." "I wanted to work with a screenwriter, but they wouldn't
let me," he grouses. The production company, which declined to comment
on the issue, will meet Cussler in a Los Angeles courtroom later this
year. |
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