Development (1994) In 1994 director Tony Scott was sent an article from the British newspaper
The Mail on Sunday by his business manager Neville Shulman. The article, written by
Sacha Gervasi and titled ''My gun for hire: Why a movie star's rebel daughter turned into a bounty hunter'', was about an English woman named Domino Harvey who was working as a bounty hunter, apprehending fugitives who had skipped bail for the Celes King Bail Bond agency in
South Central Los Angeles. While Harvey was one of the few female bounty hunters, what caught the attention of Shulman and Scott was that she was the daughter of actor
Laurence Harvey. Tony Scott tracked Domino to
Beverly Hills, where she was living at the time with her mother
Paulene Stone and Stone's then-husband
Peter Morton. He invited Domino to his office, where he proposed a film of her life. Domino agreed and sold Scott the film rights. According to the
Los Angeles Times, Harvey was paid $360,000 for the rights. Tony Scott interviewed Harvey about her life and her work bounty hunting. Scott also met and interviewed Ed Martinez and Choco, who were Domino's bounty-hunting colleagues. She took him to meet
Celes King III, the bail bondsman they worked for.
20th Century Fox, which had a first refusal deal on the project, turned it down and in the end the film was financed by
New Line Cinema. Steve Barancik wrote the first draft of the screenplay, in 1997, which Scott rejected. A second script was written by Roger Avary, but was also rejected by Scott. Scott described the two rejected screenplays as conventional biopics of Domino Harvey's life, which was not what he had in mind. Finally, Richard Kelly was asked to write the screenplay after Scott read his script for
Southland Tales. Kelly was sent transcripts of Domino Harvey's interviews with Tony Scott, but he did not read the scripts that Scott had rejected. In discussing the finished product, Kelly commented that "...Domino might be one of the most subversive films released by a major studio since
Fight Club". Tony Scott thought of
Keira Knightley for the role of Domino after seeing her in
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.
Mickey Rourke initially turned down the film, describing the part of bounty hunter Ed Moseby as "one-dimensional"; he agreed to do the film when Scott had the role rewritten.
Filming Filming began in
Los Angeles on October 4, 2004. Filming locations included the
Ambassador Hotel, the
Hotel Alexandria, and the
Wilshire Grand Hotel. Scenes were also shot at the Santa Monica Department of Motor Vehicles. Filming moved to
Nevada in early December 2004. Scenes were filmed at the
Valley of Fire State Park, as well as
Hoover Dam and
Needles, California. The Stratosphere was not in the original script. Executive producer Barry Waldman met with the casino's owners in the summer of 2004 to discuss featuring it in the movie, which the owners agreed to after small changes were made to the script. Scenes were filmed at the
Bonnie Springs Ranch motel on December 20, 2004. Filming lasted a combined total of 62 days. ==Release==