In the latest Midnight Run sequel development, Charles Grodin is being courted to return. When Universal Pictures and Tribeca Productions hired Tim Dowling to write the sequel to the 1988 classic, the plan at the time was to only bring back the bounty hunter character played by Robert De Niro (who’s producing). He would chase the son of Grodin’s character, but there were no plans to bring back Grodin, whose mob accountant character was last seen slipping away at the airport in Los Angeles. They also want to involve Marty Brest and original writer George Gallo. Sounds like it’s probably as producers, but sources close to Brest said no approach has yet been made.
Said Grodin: “I’ve been led to believe by someone I won’t name that they will ask me and I will consider it.”
This could actually be the kickoff of a movie comeback for Grodin. He’s shown up in a couple films but for the most part halted a thriving movie career in 1993 when his son Nick was entering first grade. Grodin called his agent, Jim Griffin, and told him he was quitting because he was determined not to be an absentee parent. That son is now a young movie actor himself, and Grodin’s ready to work again–as long as the jobs allow him to be home in Connecticut by nightfall. That severely limits his options, but Grodin isn’t letting that stop him. He’s even had exploratory conversations with the Nederlanders and Jujamcyn about matinee-only runs that Grodin feels will not only appeal to him but thesps like Alan Alda and Carol Burnett.
“I just turned down the new Muppet movie,” Grodin told me Tuesday. “I was in The Great Muppet Caper and I think they are bringing back those of us still alive for a reprise. Jim Henson was dear to me but I’m not flying 6000 miles to Los Angeles to work one day.” He’s nixed recent overtures by Brett Ratner and Adam Sandler because their films also required cross country travel.
When Grodin stopped acting after Beethoven 2, Griffin–who mostly reps broadcasters–helped his client become a TV and news radio pundit. This led to the pursuit that takes up most of Grodin’s time–volunteer advocate for poor, first-time offenders hit with impossible prison sentences because of mandatory sentencing laws. His first exposure came while still acting, helping Elaine Bartlett—a mother of four sentenced to 16 years in a first offense coke selling conviction–whose case was the catalyst for repealing the Rockefeller drug laws. Grodin now takes on cases all over the county, giving hope to prisoners and using his celebrity to cut through bureaucracy. Current cases includes an L.A. youth who got in a drunken brawl and got a life sentence through a felony murder rule, even though he wasn’t convicted of the murder; and a Florida youth who got life for lending his car to a roommate who allegedly used it in the commission of a violent crime. Said Grodin: “This guy was home asleep in bed, but gets life with no chance of parole because the prosecutors says, ‘no car, no murder.’ That’s the main one I’m dealing with now, trying to get this felony murder law ruled unconstitutional.” He recently helped get a clemency ruling for a mother of three children, who, after rejecting a 6-to-12-year plea for pawning stolen jewelry, drew 27-55 years because the man who gave her the jewelry allegedly got it while committing rape. “I don’t deal with cases that are highly debatable, because there are too many that aren’t,” said Grodin.
That’s why Grodin–who rarely sees films or watches TV–wasn’t sad when a Midnight Run return wasn’t initially offered. “I always assumed they’d go with a young actor,” Grodin told me. He’s proud of the original, but said, “What I remember is there were 18 locations, including New Zealand, and for me, it isn’t so much the acting as it is the travel and the waiting. I started in movies in 1963 and the first big one was Rosemary’s Baby in 1967. While you don’t notice it right away, it finally dawns on you that 80% of the time, you’re doing nothing. Where I am right now, trying to get people out of prison and get laws changed, it is a funny twist that Bob De Niro’s once again trying to put an innocent man in prison, while I am trying to get them out.”






1. Props to Grodin on his post ‘Beethoven 2′ work. BIG props. He puts his money where his mouth is in a way that very few actors do. Props, sir. BIG props. You’ve been missed on screen, but your time has clearly been very well spent.
2. ‘Midnight Run 2′ – Really? Well, if this is the way of the gravy train, I suppose I don’t wanna miss out. Anyone wanna help me start outlining the script for ‘Joe Versus The Other Volcano’? Or maybe ‘Steel Magnolias In The Spring’? Oh snap, forget either of those. I’ve got the REAL tent pole, summer 2012 flick…’Howard The Duck In Tatooine’! Who’s with me???
Geeze, you guys are missing the point. I have an idea… let’s remake Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner. OK, they tried that already, with Ashton, and it tanked. Midnight Run was a mismatched buddy picture from the late 80′s, lots of action, lots of comedy, about a rich, white collar guy on the run with a disgraced street cop from Chicago. Since we all ‘get along’ today, where does the class tension come from? How do you mount this for all 4 quadrants today? Where’s the dramatic tension in the story? Here’s 12 bucks, I’ll buy you a ticket for the A-Team next month. See how that works for you.
Enough with the movie redux — it won’t ever catch the mood and feel of the original. But Grodin IS great. How about giving him back his cable show? That was a blast. He could work to save his prison victims and generally be more entertaining and impassioned than Anderson Cooper’s I Feel Your 360 Pain.
Went to high school with his son, funny kid.
Worst Memorial Day week-end for Hollywood in 17 years. I know, let’s dig up Charles Grodin and a do sequel to a movie made during the Taft Administration. That’s the ticket!
Gosh, those are some scary laws – it’s heartening to see how he has been using his time, and talents. Much as I like the Muppets, I think he is needed elsewhere.
I’m a fan of Charles Grodin as well, but didn’t anyone watch his talk show? It was one of the most bizarre programs on television while it ran. A bit of a cross between Donahue and call-in show hosted by an astrologer on public access. It was weird.
Not counting a made-for-TV sequel without DeNiro and Grodin called “Another Midnight Run” (Christopher McDonald starred), a true sequel to “Midnight Run” with DeNiro, Grodin and Martin Brest returning to direct is one of the few sequels I’ve hoped for (thought it was a pipe dream) for over 20 years now. It almost sounds too good to be true for it to happen. The key to the sequel working is to have as much comical yet insightful interaction between DeNiro’s bounty hunter and Grodin’s accountant as in the original. EVERYBODY loves the original.
You’d think that those who read Deadline Hollywood would understand by now that almost every decision in Hollywood is governed by money. Obviously, the need to remake the film isn’t an aesthetic consideration, it’s one geared toward the possibly of extracting more revenue from a pre-sold title.
The quality of remakes, reboots, and sequels is exactly the same as any other movie… 75% suck, 20 percent are watchable, and 5% are must-see.
Don’t hate ‘em until they give you something to hate!
Love to watch Grodin embarass David Letterman when he is on his show!
I would love to see Yaphet Kotto on Midnight Run 2
“Seems Like Old Times” is amazing. So is Grodin’s wig.
For me, Charles Grodin will always be the true “Heartbreak Kid;” what a marvelous performance. It still makes me laugh.
And it’s refreshing to see a man who puts his family and life ahead of fame. He doesn’t do every project that comes along just to keep his face out there.
Now if he could just pass along that idea to DiNiro.
Dennis Farina was as brilliant as Mr Grodin.
What a cast it was. I loved the movie and although it’s been awhile, I could enjoy it all over right now.
I had the dumb luck of hanging out with Charles Grodin in the early 1990s, when the PR company I work for (B|W|R) represented him. Even though I was only an assistant shepherding him to various interviews, including the radio show of the late, great Tom Snyder, Grodin was always nice to me. I do remember that he hated air travel, and was somewhat “Rainman”-esque when it came to specific types of planes and hotel arrangements. I used to say that he was “easygoing, in an uptight sort of way.” And always funny, whether he intended to be or not.
Sequel should have been made 20 yrs ago. Still a great movie.
years ago…….while working in downtown pgh………i was reading ” it would be so nice if you weren’t here ” ……on the bus to and from work. i was laffing so hard…….everyone asked what book i was reading. ’twas a brilliant piece of prose…..sheer genious. if there’s any way for you to reprise THE DUKE……bring IT on ! i grew up in squirrel hill…….not far from highland park…..where charles grew up. i’m proud to say we’re both from DA ‘BURGH ! “