BY BRIAN BONITTO Associate Editor -- Auto & Entertainment bonittob@jamaicaobserver.com Tuesday, February 10, 2015
REGGAE superstar Jimmy Cliff says a sequel to the 1972 Jamaican cult classic The Harder They Come is on the cards for later this year.
Cliff, 66, was speaking to the Jamaica Observer in an exclusive interview on the weekend.
Jimmy Cliff in Studio |
"We don't know what we'll be calling it yet. But as with the first movie, we had called it Hard Road To Travel and somewhere along the way we called it The Harder They Come," Cliff told the Observer.
"Right now, we're calling it Many Rivers to Cross," he continued.
According to the Grammy-winning artiste, production is slated to begin this winter and scenes will be shot in Britain and Jamaica.
Cliff said the storyline is being put together by an established Broadway writer in New York, but couldn't remember his name.
"He is a scriptwriter, so he's putting in a basic script form," he said.
Directed by Perry Henzell and co-written by Trevor Rhone, the low-budget film The Harder They Come made its debut in Britain in 1972. It made its American run the following year and was shown in New York City, New England and California. The flick introduced Jamaican pop culture to a rock and college audience.
Cliff starred as Ivan, a youth from rural Jamaica who moves to Kingston in search of his big break as a singer. When that fails, he turns to a life of crime. The film is based on Ivanhoe 'Rhygin' Martin, a criminal who terrorised sections of west Kingston in the late 1940s. For the sequel, Cliff says he will reprise the character of Ivan. more
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