- Adam Sandler was considered for the role of Max, and even met with director Michael Mann before Jamie Foxx was cast.
- According to Cuba Gooding Jr., he met with Michael Mann about playing the role of Max but Mann turned Gooding down because he and Cruise had already worked together in Jerry Maguire (1996).
- To help Tom Cruise and Jamie Foxx best to capture the spirit of their characters, Michael Mann wrote documents containing the background of Vincent and Max. Cruise said that the document of Vincent had information on how he began to like jazz, for instance.
- Val Kilmer was cast in the role of Detective Fanning, but pulled out before filming began due to schedule conflicts with Alexander (2004). Mark Ruffalo later took the role.
- Hans Zimmer was attached to the film, in an early stage. He was replaced by James Newton Howard, probably by scheduling conflicts.
- Frank Darabont wrote a draft of the screenplay in September 2000. Once attached as director, Michael Mann revised the screenplay substantially.
- The song that plays in the theatrical trailer to this film is "Man in the Box", sung by Alice in Chains.
- Russell Crowe came close to playing the role of Vincent, but couldn't commit to the picture because he was busy preparing for "Eucalyptus", the doomed Australian film project co-starring Nicole Kidman.
- The original draft was set in Manhattan, New York. When Michael Mann came on board, he shifted the setting to LA.
- There are no opening credits to the film, nor title. The only credits we see is at the end where it begins with the "Directed By Michael Mann". The title is at the end.
- Edward Norton was offered the role of Vincent.
- Colin Farrell was offered the role of Vincent
- In an interview in American Cinematographer, Michael Mann said that as far as he was aware, this was one of the first movies to attempt to make a "look" out of digital video rather than trying to make DV look like film. This approach meant the movie could be shot in the low-light scenes of urban desolation Mann wanted - because Digital reacts much better to low light than film. The approximately 20% of the picture that was shot on film was mostly, according to Mann, the portion set in the "Fever" nightclub - because this is the scene with the brightest lighting states, a condition in which DV does not perform as well.
- One of the photos in Ida's hospital room is of Mischa Barton. Two of the other pictures feature TV shows made by Paramount: "Becker" (1998) and "Sister, Sister" (1994).
- According to Michael Mann, Vincent is one that is able to get in and out of anywhere without anyone recognizing him or remembering him. To prepare for the movie, Tom Cruise had to make FedEx deliveries in a crowded LA market without anyone recognizing him as Tom Cruise.
- Contrary to Michael Mann's interview with American Cinematographer, Paul Cameron, whom he worked for the first three weeks of photography claimed that the digital cameras used lacked the ergonomics, color bandwidth and the standard camera lens support. These interviews and claims were brought to the attention of Panavision USA who subsequently developed the Genesis camera system based on that feedback and its usage was pioneered in the upcoming Superman Returns (2006).
- According to Jamie Foxx, one night during production, Tom Cruise bought In N Out fast food for the entire cast and crew.
- Three weeks into principal photography, cinematographer Paul Cameron left the project due to "creative differences". Michael Mann replaced him with Dion Beebe.
- Vincent's guns used throughout the movie are: 1. His main sidearm is his Heckler and Koch USP45, as stated by Mann in the commentary. 2. His secondary handgun is a Smith and Wesson 5906 in 9mm.(used at ending mostly) 3. The gun he uses to kill the man at the jazz club is a Ruger MKII .22LR handgun with integral sound suppressor.
- This movie takes place 24-25 January 2004.
- Stuart Beattie, the screenwriter, wanted the studio to cast Robert De Niro as Max (once again making him a taxi driver, though the exact opposite of Travis Bickle). However the studio refused, insisting they wanted a younger actor in the role.
- Jamie Foxx actually crashed the cab with Tom Cruise in it during a "side swipe" scene.
- This movie begins at an airport and ends in a subway. Michael Mann's Heat (1995) begins on a subway and ends at the airport.
- Before Michael Mann was hired, Spike Lee, Martin Scorsese, and Steven Spielberg were all offered the chance to direct the movie.
- Mick Gould was hired to train Tom Cruise for the action sequences - including showing him how to fire live rounds. Michael Mann himself trained with various weapons so he knew how to direct the action sequences to full effect.
- The USB flash drive containing Vincent's prep is a PNY Attaché.
- The computer is an HP TC-1100 tablet PC. Text can be entered via a stylus or a detachable keyboard (not shown in the film).
- The F.B.I. Tactical Unit in the SUV ( L.A. 105 ) is composed of real Tactical Unit officers from F.B.I., D.E.A. and L.A.P.D.
- The sunglasses Vincent wears are Silhouette 4048 with special frames attached.
- The phone Tom Cruise uses in the cab is a Nokia 6800
- Before it was offered to Michael Mann, the script was offered to the Brazilian director Fernando Meirelles, who was planning on doing it in the style of Martin Scorsese's After Hours (1985).
- When Max enters Annie's office, the names on the door are Annie Farrell and David Canning. David A. Canning is the digital imaging technician on the movie.
- Max's full name is Max Durocher. It can be seen on the ID in the cab early in the film
- The voice enhancing software that is used to enhance what Max is telling the bouncer's by the F.B.I. is Sony Vegas 4.0, a video editing software
- When the FBI led by Pedrosa enter Club Fever, Pedrosa commands, "Clean shots; watch your background!" This echoes Vincent Hanna's line in Heat (1995) while arriving with his men at the bank: "Get clean shots. Watch your background!"
- The song played in the jazz club was "Spanish Key" from Miles Davis' "Bitches Brew" album, and it wasn't improvised, it was played almost note for note as it was on the original album.
- Although he never uses his gun in the film, Mark Ruffalo nevertheless underwent rigorous weapons training so he would look believable sporting a gun.
- Jada Pinkett Smith spent an entire day with a couple that Michael Mann felt were quite similar to her character. She also spent a day shadowing a female prosecuting attorney, giving her ideas on how to dress and carry herself.
- In preparation for his role, Jamie Foxx also trained as a cab driver.
- Between them, Michael Mann and writer Stuart Beattie constructed elaborate back stories and family histories for the main characters, right down to photographs of their hometowns.
- The train sequence was shot with a green screen background because director Michael Mann had very precise ideas about what should be visible through the train windows.
- Tom Cruise was highly impressed when he came on board as much of the backstory on his character had already been completed by Michael Mann.
- Michael Mann had already experimented with hi-def digital cinematography on his short-lived TV series "Robbery Homicide Division" (2002).
- "Collateral" sat on DreamWorks development books for three years. Mimi Leder was initially attached to direct, it then passed on to Janusz Kaminski. It wasn't until Russell Crowe became interested in playing Vincent, the hitman, that the project started generating any heat. Crowe brought Michael Mann on board, but the constant delays meant that Crowe left the project. Mann immediately went to Tom Cruise with the idea of him playing the hitman and Adam Sandler as the cabbie.
- Stuart Beattie was waiting tables when he ran into a friend called Julie Richardson, who he'd met on a UCLA Screenwriting Extension course. Richardson had become a producer on the lookout for good thriller scripts in particular. Beattie pitched her his screenplay "The Last Domino" and she liked it. Her boss Frank Darabont also liked it and set up a meeting with HBO. They passed on the project after Beattie submitted another draft. He then begged his agent to set up a meeting at DreamWorks where an executive called Marc Haines read the script over a weekend. The studio bought the screenplay the following week.
- Australian Stuart Beattie was only 17 when he took a cab home from Sydney airport. It was on that cab ride that he had the idea of a homicidal maniac sitting in the back of a cab with the driver nonchalantly entering into conversation with him, trusting his passenger implicitly. Beattie drafted his idea into a two-page treatment. Later, when he was enrolled at Oregon State University, he fleshed it out into his first screenplay. Entitled "The Last Domino", he put the script away, taking it out occasionally for revisions and rewrites over the following years.
- There were 17 different versions of Max's taxicab.
- When it was decided that Vincent should be a slightly older character, Tom Cruise was obliged to dye his hair gray.
- On-set, Jamie Foxx accidentally drove his car into Tom Cruise's. Foxx was bemused to see that the crew immediately rushed to Cruise's aid first, he being the bigger star.
- The seating of the two leads was crucial to certain scenes. For their more intimate exchanges, Cruise would sit directly behind Foxx, out of his peripheral vision and therefore making him more vulnerable and uncertain of his opponent.
- The film has particular resonance for director Michael Mann - he used to drive a cab, as did his father and his grandfather owned a cab company.
- Jamie Foxx prepared for the car chase sequences by racing old cars in the desert. Michael Mann often joined him.
- The first major motion picture to be shot in Viper FilmStream HD.
- James Newton Howard who scored this film recorded more than an hour of music for this film only to have it replaced with source music and additional music by 'Antonio Pinto'. This is a trademark of Michael Mann's films of this type.
- Starting with the Car Crash sequence up to the film's finale and End Credits, James Newton Howard's score lasts roughly around 17 minutes and was intended this way according to director Michael Mann on his DVD commentary.
- Cameo: [Jason Statham] The man Tom Cruise bumps into at the airport and ask each other if they're alright.
- Composer 'Antonio Pinto' provided the additional music score on this film was the composer of the music for the hit foreign film, Cidade de Deus (2002), directed by 'Fernando Meirisilles', who was considered to direct this film at one point.
- Marque de fabrique du metteur en scène: [Michael Mann] [diegetic music] Use of source music and very little original music score.
- The film's title is used in one scene where 'Jaime Foxx' is outside the jazz club talking to himself and Tom Cruise's character kills Daniel the jazz club owner and then proceeds to beat him up, muttering the line "I'm just collateral anyway" before he's attacked.
>>> WARNING: Here Be Spoilers <<<
Trivia items below here contain information that may give away important plot points. You may not want to read any further if you've not already seen this title.
- SPOILER: Towards the end of the movie, a subway sign reads: "Today is January 25, 2004. The Time 5:40 A.M." The time is displayed/referenced 5 times in the film. - 9:30 is displayed on Max's Fare reader, before Vincent kills his 2nd victim. - 10:00 PM, when Agent Fanning is calling his partner from the Morgue. - 2:20 AM in a brief shot from the interior of the FBI agents truck on their way to the club. - When Max is calling Annie from the top of the Parking Garage from the cell phone, the time is 4:47 A.M. - The subway train arrives at the station at 5:40 A.M.
- SPOILER: Vincent kills 16 people in one night. 1) Ramone Ayala (fat guy) 2) Sylvester Clarke (penthouse guy) 3) and 4) Two hoods in the alley 5) Daniel (jazz guy) 6) and 7) Two of Felix's henchmen at Club Fever 8) through 13) Six security guards at Club Fever (one's neck broken, one's face bashed in, four shot) 14) Peter Lim (Korean guy at club) 15) Detective Fanning 16) Security guard at DOJ building.
- SPOILER: The guns that Vincent carries are a Heckler and Koch (HK) USP .45ACP and a Ruger Mk II .22 with integrated suppressor. Vincent didn't use a silenced USP Tactical or Mk.23 SOCOM as was previously suggested. The silenced pistol was a .22 Long Rifle caliber Ruger Mk II with the upper receiver and barrel replaced with a custom integral silencer. After killing the security guard at the DOJ building, Vincent uses a 9mm S&W 5906.
- SPOILER: Various parallels to Heat (1995) throughout the film. They include a stand off between the two main characters at the end, the use of subways and airports at the start/end, the referral to the shooting patterns as "double tap" entry wounds, the main characters are loners, gunshots are louder and more realistic that conventional Hollywood action films, the first crime committed does not go accordingly to plan, aerial camera shots of LA at night time and the use of a police helicopter.
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