An undated handout photo shows US actor Tom Cruise
dressed in his role as Nazi German Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg during the
production of "Valkyrie," near Berlin. -Xinhua
Tom Cruise's World War II thriller "Valkyrie" has pushed back its release
date to 2009, the second postponement for a production that has endured its
share of headaches.
The MGM release has been moved from October 3 to February 13, coinciding with
the U.S. Presidents Day holiday weekend. Last December, it was pulled from its
original July 4 holiday weekend berth where it would have competed with the
Angelina Jolie thriller "Wanted."
"When an opening became available for President's Day Weekend, we seized the
opportunity," said MGM distribution president Clark Woods, referring to
Universal's recent decision to pull "The Wolf Man" out of that slot and into
April 3.
"Valkyrie" is the true story of a German officer, played by Cruise, who tried
to assassinate Hitler. The German government initially banned the production
from shooting on location at the Berlin site where the plot was hatched and the
conspirators executed.
Some of the footage shot at the site was later damaged during processing,
requiring re-shoots. Last August, 10 extras were injured when they fell off the
back of a truck during shooting in Berlin.
The movie is being produced by MGM's United Artists banner, which Cruise runs
with business partner Paula Wagner. UA's debut release under the new regime, the
Cruise vehicle "Lions for Lambs," bombed at the box office last
November.