
HBO has assembled another star-studded team for its next pilot, comedy All Talk. Ben Stiller has signed on to star, direct and executive produce the project from acclaimed novelist Jonathan Safran Foer (Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close). Emmy winner Alan Alda is in negotiations to co-star in the project, which is being executive produced by top film producer Scott Rudin, along with Stiller, Eli Bush and Foer. Filming is tentatively scheduled to begin in the fall of 2012. Written by Foer, All Talk is described as “politically, religiously, culturally, intellectually and sexually irreverent” and
revolves around the daily and life-altering dramas of a Jewish family in Washington, DC. “Ben Stiller continues to be a major, multi-talented star because of his discerning ability to embrace creative and innovative projects – whatever the medium,” said HBO’s president of programming Michael Lombardo. “From major blockbuster motion pictures to small independent films; from Broadway to off-Broadway, the common thread is always the excellence of the material. We were enormously pleased that Ben responded to this extraordinary work from Jonathan Safran Foer.”
Stiller, who started off in TV, toplining his own series, The Ben Stiller Show, will next star in, direct and produce The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. He recently wrapped production on Neighborhood Watch opposite Vince Vaughn and Jonah Hill, which is set for release in July. This marks a reunion for Stiller and Rudin who have collaborated many times over the past decade, most recently with the Broadway revival of John Guare’s The House of Blue Leaves and previously in Noah Baumbach’s Greenberg. Their credits together also include Zoolander and The Royal Tenenbaums and a project in the works that would also re-team them with Baumbach, While We’re Young. This is the third high-profile HBO pilot produced by Rudin to receive a green light in the past year, following Aaron Sorkin’s The Newsroom, starring Jeff Daniels and Emily Mortimer, with Jane Fonda set to recur; and Noah Baumbach’s The Corrections, starring Chris Cooper, Dianne Wiest and Ewan McGregor, with Maggie Gyllenhaal, Bruce Norris, Greta Gerwig and Rhys Ifans in talks to join.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


OH PLEASE OH PLEASE – ALAN ALDA WOULD BE ABSOLUTELY GREAT FOR THIS AND TO SEE HIM BACK AGAIN. BOTH OF THESE GUYS ARE GREAT !
I love it!
Is it a little surprising to see a still-successful movie star jump into series television? Yes, he’s maybe inching past his days of box-office glory in a studio system that no longer gives carte blanche to the names above the title. And, yes, HBO offers a place where a big talent like Stiller can really thrive. But I’m still a little surprised by this move. Seems like a sign of the times. I’m just not sure what’s being signified.
It’s not series television, it’s HBO.
Which is why viewers are fleeing in droves and canceling their subscriptions in tens of thousands. Their real hits were from not famous writers and directors. The Soprano’s, Sex In The City, The Wire… were great projects with great writers not famous ones. Now it’s all about whoever the NY Times praises. The audience wants great stories well told.
HBO is now hype over substance. Sad. The audience knows.
Sounds like curb your enthusiasm is not coming back..
What are you talking about? This sounds awesome.
Would <3 to see this get green lit.. AND film here in DC like HBOs. VEEP!
so what’s the deal? scott produces everything now?
Clearly, no one at HBO has ever had the pleasure of working with Ben. He’s a sheer joy. A wonderful human being. Just ask anyone who has worked with him.
Great news! Troubled by the “Neighborhood Watch” portion though. Stiller (good), Vaughn (playing Vaughn again, no doubt), …Jonah Hill? To save time in the future, you’re probably better off listing the movies he WON’T be in. What’s he do, 10 movies a year?
Hey, cut Hill a break. He was just nominated for Best Supporting Actor.
Tv is the new medium!!!! Movie stars will all be doing tv from now on cuz movies suck and dont pay actors what they deserve. and studios are greenlighting half the films they used to. good for Ben for getting that HBO is cooler than doing bad indies and mediocre studio movies! other actors will now follow suit! sign of the shitty state of the movie business. plus the writing for tv is just plain better!
I don’t have cable, but I enjoyed Ben Stiller’s Fox show back then. It was brief, yet brilliant. I was actually watching the DVD of it yesterday and thought it was still hilarious.
“Vaughn is a robot!”
“the daily and life-altering dramas of a Jewish family in Washington, DC.”
Way to break ground.