BLABBERMOUTH.NET
KISS's longtime manager
Doc McGhee spoke to Talking Metal about the band's upcoming biopic
"Shout It Out Loud". The film, which recently landed at
Netflix, will be directed by
Joachim Rønning, the Norwegian filmmaker whose credits include
"Kon-Tiki",
"Maleficent: Mistress Of Evil" and
"Pirates Of The Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales". The script is written by
Ole Sanders.
"Actually, we have a script that's completely done,"
Doc said (as transcribed by
BLABBERMOUTH.NET). "
Mark Canton, who is a very, very powerful producer and production company who has the TV series
'Power' and
'Ghost' and all that stuff, and he was a president of Sony and all that, he's done 300 films — a really, really great guy — his team and
Universal Music and ourselves have partnered up with
Joachim Rønning, who is a very sought-after director that did things like
'Pirates Of The Caribbean', and
'Kon-Tiki' was up for an
Academy Award. And the script is about the first four years of
KISS. Basically, it's before they were famous — it was up to Cadillac High, that kind of thing," referring to the October 1975 concert
KISS played in a high school gym in Cadillac, Michigan. "And I think it's a very interesting look at the formation of
KISS, the mindset of how that came about, the social pressure that everybody was in in the '60s and '70s that brought something like
KISS to the forefront, that it could actually happen. So it's a very interesting, and I think it's a well-written movie. And our partners right now is
Netflix. It'll be a theatrical release, then
Netflix."
According to
Doc, casting hasn't started yet. "We're finishing our deal with a couple of distributors in Europe and the U.S., and then we'll get into casting," he said. "I believe before Thanksgiving we'll be in the casting."
Earlier this year,
KISS frontman
Paul Stanley told
Download host
Kylie Olsson that the
KISS biopic was "definitely happening. And that's gonna be really interesting," he said. "The script was really good. And we really waited until we felt comfortable.
"Look, you get once chance to do it, and I would rather not do it than do it half assed or poorly," he explained. "Our director is the real deal. He did
'Maleficent 2', and he's not some hack; he knows how to make movies. It should be great. Casting hasn't begun yet. But that will be interesting too."
Asked which actor he would like to play him in the movie,
Stanley said: "And I will tell you this: for casting to be accurate in terms of age, we are looking at actors in their early 20s. Honestly, I don't know a whole lot of actors in their early 20s. When people get asked these kinds of questions, they'll say, 'Oh,
Brad Pitt,' or this one or that one. Well, those guys are in their 50s or 60s, so you're talking about another generation of actors. And I'm the first to say I'm not up on a lot of them. But as the casting process goes on, I'll certainly be there and watching. It'll be interesting to see how someone else — be it the casting people or the director — how they view who I am and who they see doing that. I think I'll learn a lot about their perception of me by who they cast."
"Shout It Out Loud", which will have close cooperation from bandleaders
Stanley and
Gene Simmons, will be a co-production of
Canton's
Atmosphere Entertainment and
Universal Music Group. The film will be produced by
Canton through his
Atmosphere Entertainment,
Leigh Ann Burton through
Opus 7,
Courtney Solomon,
David Blackman and
Jody Gerson through
Universal Music Group,
McGhee through his
McGee Entertainment,
Rønning, and
Simmons and
Stanley.
Atmosphere's
Dorothy Canton and
David Hopwood are the executive producers.
KISS launched its farewell trek in January 2019 but was forced to put it on hold last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
"End Of The Road" was originally scheduled to conclude on July 17, 2021 in New York City but is now expected to last well into 2022.
KISS's current lineup consists of original members
Stanley and
Simmons, alongside later band additions, guitarist
Tommy Thayer (since 2002) and drummer
Eric Singer (on and off since 1991).
Formed in 1973 by
Stanley,
Simmons, drummer
Peter Criss and lead guitarist
Ace Frehley,
KISS staged its first "farewell" tour in 2000, the last to feature the group's original lineup.
Netflix previously had rock-biopic success with
MÖTLEY CRÜE's
"The Dirt", which premiered in March 2019. An adaptation of the book of the same name about the iconic rock band, it had been in the works since 2003. It was previously set up at
Paramount and
Focus Features before
Netflix picked it up in 2017.
"The Dirt", which reportedly cost more than $20 million to produce, currently has a 38% critic score from 72 reviews on
Rotten Tomatoes, the online review aggregation service that allows both critics and the public to rate movies. The same site has an 94% audience score for
"The Dirt" from more than 6,000 reviews.