Knockaround Guys (2001) is the movie that I essentially left "Buffy" to do. This was an incredible opportunity that got presented to me. The guys that had written Rounders (1998) were directing their first feature. Lawrence Bender was producing it, a relatively unknown Vin Diesel was starring in it. Barry Pepper and Andy Davoli, and then Tom Noonan, John Malkovich and Dennis Hopper. So it was a great opportunity for me to play something that I'd never played before: a darker, more complicated, kind of tragic character. And that movie, it just got tied up in politics. New Line was going to release it, and they had had a string of failures leading up to it and were kind of bottoming out their distribution budget and focusing everything on starting The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001). They were about to put all their money into developing and producing three back-to-back movies, and as a result, a ton of pictures got shelved until they could figure out what to do with them. Some were going directly to DVD, some were gonna get released on cable, some were still being held out for theatrical, and they felt like "Knockaround Guys" was a theatrical release. So it got held for a while, and unfortunately that wound up looking like . . . It got held long enough that Vin Diesel became a big star and got paid $20 million to do xXx (2002), and then the marketing people thought, "Well, we should just wait until 'xXx' comes out to release this movie, as opposed to trying to put it out beforehand". And what that looked like was an opportunistic release, leading people to believe that the movie was no good and that they were just trying to capitalize on the success of "xXx" and Vin becoming a bigger star. It was just unfortunate, because I really loved the movie, and I don't think it ever got seen by anyone, and there was kind of a stigma around it that it was shelved for a lack of quality, which just wasn't the case.
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