“Ethan Hawke was on our list too, but I thought at that time he was too young,” Emmerich said. “It was pretty clear it had to be Will Smith and Jeff Goldblum. That was the combo we thought. The studio said, ‘No, we don’t like Will Smith. He’s unproven. He doesn’t work in international [markets].’
Devlin added, “They said, ‘You cast a Black guy in this part, you’re going to kill foreign [box office].’ Our argument was, ‘Well, the movie is about space aliens. It’s going to do fine foreign.’ It was a big war, and Roland really stood up for [Smith] — and we ultimately won that war.”
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“It was pretty shortly before the shoot and we still hadn’t locked in Will and Jeff,” Emmerich concluded. “I put my foot down. ‘Universal people are calling every day, so give me these two actors or I move over there.’ I don’t think it would have been a possibility [to actually move studios], but it was a great threat.”
Anyone familiar with “Independence Day” knows just how wrong the studio was to think the movie would not play around the world with Will Smith in the lead role. The film grossed $817 million worldwide, becoming the highest grossing movie of 1996 and the second highest grossing movie in film history worldwide at the time behind only Steven Spielberg’s “Jurassic Park.”
“Spielberg invited us to the ‘Jurassic Park 2’ set,” Emmerich recalled, “and the first line he says to Dean and me is, ‘You guys reinvented the blockbuster. After this movie, nobody can do a normal blockbuster anymore.’”
Head over to The Hollywood Reporter to read the 25th anniversary “Independence Day” oral history in its entirety.
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