Tie-up with Sly was decades in making: Arnie ‘I’m sure ‘Expendables 2’ will be big hit’

LOS ANGELES, Aug 4, (Agencies): Arnold Schwarzenegger said he and fellow 1980s action star Sylvester Stallone wanted to work together for decades, but it wasn’t until they met up at a hair salon that their first collaboration came together.
The “Rocky” and “Terminator” actors had talked about uniting on screen for 20 years, Schwarzenegger said on Friday, but never found the right script at a time when they were both free of other commitments.
“There was always something off. The script was not right, or the studio was not as much interested in it as we were. ... It just didn’t happen,” Schwarzenegger said at a Television Critics Association meeting, where he appeared to promote an upcoming documentary on ESPN website Grantland.com.
“Then one day I was sitting at my hairdresser, and Sly came up to me and he said ‘oh man, it would be so great if you could be doing just a little bit of something in my ‘Expendables’ movie,” said the 65-year old actor-turned politician.

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At the time, Schwarzenegger was serving as governor of California and had put his action movie career on hold. He said he agreed right there to film a few hours for “Expendables” on weekends so it wouldn’t take time away from his gubernatorial duties, and that he worked for free. The movie came out in 2010.
When Schwarzenegger’s cameo was well-received, Stallone approached him to appear in “The Expendables 2.” Schwarzenegger, who stepped down as California governor in January 2011, said he did four days of work in Bulgaria on the film, which reaches US theaters Aug 17.
Their next project came together when Stallone told the producer of upcoming film “The Tomb” that he didn’t want to make the film unless Schwarzenegger was involved. Schwarzenegger liked the script and joined the film - one of five movies he has in the pipeline.

While joking that the two were “in love with each other,” he said they have no plans to work on other films together. But he added: “I’m sure ‘Expendables 2’ is going to be a big hit. ... Then (Stallone) will be probably coming back again and asking me to be in the next movie.”
In another return to the screen, Schwarzenegger will appear in a documentary short film called “Arnold’s Blueprint” that focuses on the former bodybuilder’s service in the Austrian Army.
Schwarzenegger said his time in the military as a teenager helped shape his future career as a bodybuilder, actor and politician. The story “is about overcoming obstacles,” he said.
Schwarzenegger said he worked around his military training to find time for bodybuilding. He later won bodybuilding titles, and used the sport to propel him to international stardom.
“I had a very clear vision of where I wanted to go,” he said. “You realize you have to pay no attention to the naysayers. When you learn those lessons in sports, you can apply those lessons for the rest of your life,” he said.

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BEVERLY HILLS, California: Arnold Schwarzenegger was so eager to start his bodybuilding career that he briefly ended up in an Austrian military brig, the actor and former California governor said Friday.
He was 18 and serving a mandated year with the army in his native Austria in the mid-1960s when he snuck out of camp for the Junior Mr. Europe contest in Germany, Schwarzenegger told a meeting of TV critics.
He won the contest but also earned two or three days in the army jail, Schwarzenegger said. But military officials felt “uncomfortable” and he was released, he said.
Schwarzenegger, 65, is the subject of a new ESPN Films documentary, “Arnold’s Blueprint,” set to debut Sept. 26 on the ESPN website Grantland.com. It’s one of a series of short documentaries that will be available online.
His army superiors ended up supporting his bodybuilding efforts, he said: They created a makeshift gym for him and helped him get the food he needed to pack on 25 pounds of muscle in a year.
Schwarzenegger, who went on to parlay titles including Mr. Olympia and Mr. Universe into a Hollywood career, said his drive to be an athlete helped him during his seven-year tenure as governor that ended in 2011.
When he began pursuing bodybuilding as a youth, he recalled, his parents dismissed his activities as self-indulgent and suspect.
But “I had a very clear vision of where I wanted to go,” Schwarzenegger said, including America and movie stardom.
When he encountered resistance to his political goals, he had the ability to ignore cries of “no, no, no, it’s impossible,” he said.
“I never saw a ‘no’ as a ‘no.’ I always heard ‘yes,’” he said, speaking to the Television Critics Association at the final session of the group’s summer meeting.

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