Richard Jewell: Sam Rockwell ... Watson Bryant: Brandon Stanley ... Student: Ryan Boz ... Student: Charles Green ... Dr. W. Ray Cleere: Olivia Wilde ... Kathy Scruggs: Mike Pniewski ... Brandon âŚ
In June, Sam Rockwell was cast as the lawyer, and Paul Walter Hauser as Jewell. Kathy Bates, Olivia Wilde, Jon Hamm, and Ian Gomez were also cast. In July 2019, Nina Arianda joined the cast. Filming began on June 24, 2019, in Atlanta.
Dec 12, 2019 ¡ Richard Jewell's lawyer agrees the movie smeared Atlanta newspaper reporter. "There was NO evidence to support a storyline" that Kathy Scruggs traded sex for tips about Richard Jewell, his ...
Dec 13, 2019 ¡ For Richard Jewellâs mother and lawyer, Clint Eastwoodâs new film brings both pain and healing Watson Bryant and Bobi Jewell, who are portrayed by Sam Rockwell and Kathy Bates in the new film...
Dec 14, 2019 ¡ Jewellâs lawyer Watson Bryant is a real person. Watson Bryant told the AP in a July 30, 1996 article about the FBI search of Jewellâs momâs apartment: âQuite frankly, we welcome this.â He predicted...
"Bryant's character in the film was a composite character of all of us." Wood noted that Bruce was not a lawyer but he "was very, very helpful to Richard's legal team in the first months in performing many tasks, including driving Richard to make sure he was at appointments."Dec 26, 2019
91Â years (May 31, 1930)Clint Eastwood / AgeHe is 91 years old, and the script fails to fully embrace his age in an interesting way. Being an older actor in a western can open up unique possibilities for the genre by adding interesting dynamics that a younger actor can't embrace.Sep 25, 2021
$500,000In December 1996, NBC negotiated a settlement with Jewell for a reported $500,000. CNN and ABC settled, too, as did Piedmont College, which Jewell had sued for allegedly supplying false information.
August 29, 2007Richard Jewell / Date of death
103Â years (1916â2020)Kirk Douglas / Age at death
84Â years (June 1, 1937)Morgan Freeman / Age
There are still some holes in this case." Even though NBC stood by its story, the network agreed to pay Jewell $500,000.
Jack Brennan in Manhunt Deadly Games if one of the FBI agents investigating the terrorist bombing that happened during the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. The true crime anthology series follows the FBI who is trying to hunt down the terrorist responsible for the Atlanta bombing.Dec 15, 2020
Richard Jewell died on August 29, 2007 as the result of heart failure due to complications from Type 2 diabetes. He was 44. His mother, Bobi Jewell, feels that the stress from his ordeal contributed to his early death.
Scruggs died in 2001 from a prescription drug overdose, due, in part, to a chronic back problem, still troubled by the repercussions of her Jewell reporting. In a feature last month, the Atlanta Journal Constitution reported that Scruggs was disturbed by a lawsuit naming the AJC.Dec 13, 2019
Event organizers honored Jewell for his heroic efforts before the deadly bombing. Jewell's wife and mother attended the ceremony. ATLANTA - A new monument in Centennial Olympic Park recognizes first responders who came to the aid of people caught in the 1996 Olympic bombing in Downtown Atlanta.Nov 10, 2021
Directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Jon Hamm, Olivia Wilde, Kathy Bates, Paul Walter Hauser and Sam Rockwell, Richard Jewell is the true story of the Atlanta security guard wrongly accused of a 1996 bombing and his persecution by both the FBI and the media.Jan 22, 2020
In 1986, Richard Jewell works as an office supply clerk in a small public law firm, where he builds a rapport with attorney Watson Bryant. Jewell leaves the firm to pursue a law enforcement career. At some point Jewell is hired as a sheriff's deputy, but ends up discharged. In early 1996, he's working as a security guard at Piedmont College, but is fired after multiple complaints of acting beyond his jurisdiction. Jewell later moves in with his mother Bobi in Atlanta. In the summer of 1996, he works as a security guard at the Olympic Games, monitoring Centennial Park .
Richard Jewell premiered at the AFI Fest on November 20, 2019 and was theatrically released in the United States on December 13, 2019, by Warner Bros. Pictures.
It is based on the 1997 Vanity Fair article "American Nightmare: The Ballad of Richard Jewell" by Marie Brenner and the 2019 book The Suspect: An Olympic Bombing, the FBI, the Media, and Richard Jewell, the Man Caught in the Middle by Kent Alexander and Kevin Salwen. The film depicts the July 27 Centennial Olympic Park bombing and its aftermath, ...
Richard Jewell grossed $22.3 million in the United States and Canada, and $21.3 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $43.7 million, against a production budget of $45 million. The film's performance was characterized as a box office flop by several media outlets.
Clint Eastwood. Written by. Billy Ray. Based on. "American Nightmare: The Ballad of Richard Jewell". by Marie Brenner. The Suspect: An Olympic Bombing, the FBI, the Media, and Richard Jewell, the Man Caught in the Middle. by Kent Alexander and Kevin Salwen. Starring.
However, the film was criticized for its portrayal of a real-life reporter, Kathy Scruggs. The film grossed $43 million against its $45 million budget. For her performance, Bates won the National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actress, and earned nominations at the Academy Awards and Golden Globes .
Olivia Wilde as Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter Kathy Scruggs in the movie 'Richard Jewell.'. Warner Bros. The attorney for Richard Jewell, who came under suspicion in the 1996 Olympic Park bombing before he was exonerated, criticized the movie "Richard Jewell" on Thursday night, calling its depiction of a reporter at the center ...
Jewell died in 2007 at age 44. The Journal-Constitution has maintained that there is no evidence that Scruggs slept with anyone involved in the investigation and has demanded that Warner Bros. and the filmmakers release a statement acknowledging that they took dramatic license in their portrayal of Scruggs.
Eric Rudolph , an American domestic terrorist, was later found to have been responsible for setting off the bomb, which killed one person and injured 111 other people at the Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta in July 1996. Jewell, a security guard at the park, helped to evacuate the area after the bomb was discovered.
Watson Bryant and Bobi Jewell, who are portrayed by Sam Rockwell and Kathy Bates in the new film âRichard Jewell,â photographed by The Times on Nov. 20, 2019, in West Hollywood.
Richard Jewell loved movies, particularly anything with John Wayne or Clint Eastwood. Living with his mother, Bobi, in her Atlanta apartment, Jewell, who worked as a security guard, would sometimes tell her when there was a film he thought sheâd like so they could watch it together. âHis schedule was iffy â he was gone at night most ...
Meanwhile, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution has criticized the movie over its portrayal of the late reporter Kathy Scruggs, played by Olivia Wilde, saying it falsely depicts her as trading sex for information and demanding a disclaimer.
Josh Rottenberg. Josh Rottenberg covers the film business for the Los Angeles Times. He previously worked as a senior writer at Entertainment Weekly, and his work has also appeared in the New York Times, Fast Company and other publications.
Eastwood was unavailable to comment for this story. Director Clint Eastwood with Bobi Jewell on the red carpet for the premiere of âRichard Jewellâ at AFI Fest on Nov. 20. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times) For his part, Rockwell says he doesnât see the film in political terms at all.
Paul Walter Hauser attends the âRichard Jewellâ screening at Rialto Center of the Arts on December 10, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. The Vanity Fair article describes how FBI agents Don Johnson and Diader Rosario knocked on Jewellâs motherâs apartment door and told him, âWe need your help making a training film.â.
The movie makes journalist Kathy Scruggs into a pretty one-note villain. In real life, she was a lot more complex than that. Itâs true that she was a reporter for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution newspaper when the bombing occurred, and itâs true she broke the story that the FBI was looking at Jewell.
According to an Associated Press story from July 29, 1996, the bomb killed a woman and injured more than 100 people. She was Alice Hawthorne, 44, of Albany, Georgia. Her daughter was also injured. A Turkish cameraman also died from a heart attack while rushing to the scene.
Clint Eastwoodâs biographical drama Richard Jewell is based on the real-life story of the security guard (played by Paul Walter Hauser) who was wrongly investigated by the FBI as a suspect in the bombing at the 1996 Summer Olympics. The movie was adapted from a lengthy 1997 Vanity Fair article by Marie Brenner and The Suspect, ...
As in the movie, Richard Jewell really did help discover the pipe bomb by virtue of his famously thorough adherence to protocol. He saw a backpack under a bench by his station and insisted that it be treated as a potential threat. While both Jewell and the Georgia Bureau of Investigationâs Tom Davis initially suspected little of the package, The Suspect suggests Jewell really did treat it somewhat more seriously than Davis did. Then, as Jewell put it to Vanity Fair, âWhen Davis came back and said, âNobody said it was theirs,â that is when the little hairs on the back of my head began to stand up.â Jewell continued to do his part when the bomb was identified, clearing a 25-foot perimeter around the backpack and heading twice into the sound and light tower to warn the people inside to evacuate. Ultimately, the explosion directly killed one woman and injured more than 100 others. A cameraman from a Turkish television network also died of a heart attack he had while running to the site of the bombing.
Unlike Tom Shaw, Kathy Scruggs, who died in 2001, was a real reporter at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution who really did break the news that Jewell was the focus of the FBI investigation. Wildeâs Scruggs is cartoonishly vampy in a way that seems unfair to Scruggsâ memory, but the most damaging aspect of the movieâs depiction is the suggestion that she offered to sleep with a source for a scoop, an insinuation that recently provoked the AJC into threatening a defamation lawsuit against Eastwood and the filmmakers. (In movies, female reporters sleeping with sources is an old sexist trope . In real life, itâs an egregious violation of journalistic ethics.)
Well, what differs from reality is the movieâs portrayal of Bryant as Jewellâs one and only lawyer. Jewell actually had several lawyers. In fact, he had an entire team. In addition to Bryant, he had a legal team including Lin Wood, Wayne Grant, Jack Martin, Richard Rackleff, and Watson's brother Bruce, according to Slate.
Jewell was formally exonerated in 2005, two years before his death, when the real bomber Eric Rudolph was convicted. Editor's note: This story has been modified to reflect that Wood and Grant joined Jewell's legal team the day before a press conference was held to announce that Jewell passed a polygraph test.
As the FBI pegs him as a possible lone bomber, Jewell reaches out to his previous employer Watson Bryant (played by Sam Rockwell), who by this point is only working as a real estate lawyer. Heâd never represented an alleged murderer, let alone someone accused of a domestic terror attack that killed two people and injured another 111.
Olive Wilde as Kathy Scruggs Photo: Warner Bros. One of the lawyers who represented the man at the center of Clint Eastwoodâs new movie âRichard Jewellâ has blasted the filmâs depiction of a female journalist. Before the filmâs Friday debut, it had already been criticized for its vampy portrayal of Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter Kathy ...
Lin Wood, a defamation lawyer who represented Jewell in lawsuits filed against The Journal-Constitution and other media outlets for defamation, spoke out against the movieâs portrayal of Scruggs. "I handled Richard Jewell's case against AJC for 16 years,â he tweeted.