Commercials The success of his elder brother's fledgling television commercial production outfit, Ridley Scott Associates (RSA), drew Tony's attention to film. Ridley recounted, "Tony had wanted to do documentaries at first. I told him, 'Don't go to the
BBC, come to me first.' I knew that he had a fondness for cars, so I told him, 'Come work with me and within a year you'll have a Ferrari.' And he did!" Tony recalled, "I was finishing eight years at art school, and Ridley had opened Ridley Scott Associates and said, 'Come and make commercials and make some money' because I owed money left and right and centre." After the feature film successes of fellow British directors
Hugh Hudson,
Alan Parker,
Adrian Lyne and his elder brother during the late 1970s, all of whom had graduated from directing advertising commercials, he received initial overtures from Hollywood in 1980. His eldest brother Frank died, aged 45, of skin cancer during the same year.
Early films Scott reflected on his career in 2009: Scott persisted in trying to embark on a feature film career. Among the ideas interesting to him was an adaptation of the
Anne Rice novel
Interview with the Vampire then in development.
MGM was already developing the vampire film
The Hunger, and hired Scott as director in 1982. Despite starring
David Bowie,
Susan Sarandon and
Catherine Deneuve, and having elaborate production design, it failed to find an audience or to impress the critics although it later became a cult favourite. Finding few film opportunities in Hollywood over the next two and a half years, Scott returned to commercials and music videos. In 1985, producers
Don Simpson and
Jerry Bruckheimer collaborated with Scott to direct
Top Gun, having been impressed by
The Hunger, and a commercial he had done for Swedish automaker
Saab in 1983 featuring a
Saab 900 racing a
Saab 37 Viggen fighter jet. Scott, initially reluctant, finally agreed to direct
Top Gun. While the film received mixed critical reviews, it was a box office smash, becoming the highest-grossing film of 1986, taking in more than $350 million, and making a star of its young protagonist,
Tom Cruise. Labelling
Top Gun "the key 1980s movie made by the British ad invasion", Sam Delaney of
The Guardian writes, "By the mid-80's, Hollywood was awash with British directors who had ushered in a new era of blockbusters using the crowd-pleasing skills they'd honed in advertising. The vast resources and freedom made available to ad directors during advertising's boom era during the 1970's enabled them to innovate and experiment with new techniques that weren't then possible in TV or film."
Hollywood success Following the stellar success of
Top Gun, Scott found himself on Hollywood's A-list of action directors. His next feature,
Revenge (1990), a thriller of adultery and revenge set in Mexico, starred
Kevin Costner,
Madeleine Stowe and
Anthony Quinn. Once again directing Tom Cruise, Scott returned to the Simpson-Bruckheimer fold to helm the big-budget racing film
Days of Thunder (1990). Scott later stated that it was difficult to find the drama in racing cars in circles, so he "stole from all race movies to date ... then tried to build on them." Scott's next film was the cult action thriller
The Last Boy Scout (1991) starring
Bruce Willis and
Damon Wayans and written by
Shane Black. In 1993, Scott directed
True Romance costing just $13 million, from a script by
Quentin Tarantino. The cast included
Christian Slater,
Patricia Arquette,
Dennis Hopper,
Christopher Walken,
Gary Oldman,
Brad Pitt,
Tom Sizemore,
Chris Penn,
Val Kilmer,
James Gandolfini and
Samuel L. Jackson. Although it received positive reviews from
Janet Maslin and other critics, it earned less than it cost to make and was considered a
box office failure, although it has since attained
cult status. In 1996, Scott directed
The Fan, starring
Robert De Niro,
Wesley Snipes,
Ellen Barkin and
Benicio del Toro. His 1998 film
Enemy of the State, a conspiracy thriller, starred
Will Smith and Gene Hackman, and was his highest-grossing film of the decade. In 2006, he contributed voice-over to a song called
Dreamstalker on
Hybrid's album
I Choose Noise; Scott collaborated with Hybrid on several films through their mutual friend, the highly successful film score composer
Harry Gregson-Williams. In 2005, Tony Scott directed
Domino, starring
Keira Knightley. While notable for its use of experimental film techniques, it was drubbed by critics and rejected by audiences. In autumn 2006, Scott again worked with Denzel Washington, this time on a sci-fi action film,
Déjà Vu. The two collaborated again on
The Taking of Pelham 123, a remake of the
1974 film of the same title, and which also starred
John Travolta. It was released on 12 June 2009. In 2009, Tony and Ridley Scott were executive producers for
The Good Wife, a legal drama television series. In 2010, the Scott brothers produced the feature film adaptation of the television series
The A-Team. The same year, Scott collaborated again with Denzel Washington on
Unstoppable, which also starred
Chris Pine, and hit the screens in November. Shortly before his death, Tony Scott produced
Coma, a medical thriller miniseries, the
Coca-Cola short film
The Polar Bears and the thrillers
Stoker and
The East, the latter two with his brother, Ridley.
Unrealised projects Tom Cruise was with Scott just two days prior to the director's suicide, scouting locations for a sequel to
Top Gun, scheduled for production in 2013. In December 2012, Paramount announced that the project was officially cancelled, but they would go ahead with a
3D IMAX remastering of the original
Top Gun, which was released on 8 February 2013. In June 2013, it was confirmed by Bruckheimer that
Top Gun 2 had been greenlighted once again, with
Joseph Kosinski announced as the project's new director in June 2017. The film,
Top Gun: Maverick, was released on 27 May 2022, and was both a critical and financial success, and is the second-highest grossing film of 2022.
Top Gun: Maverick was posthumously dedicated to Scott. At the time of his death, Scott was also slated to direct
Narco Sub, from a script by
David Guggenheim and
Mark Bomback, about "a disgraced American naval officer forced to pilot a sub carrying a payload of cocaine to America", and the action film
Lucky Strike, with
Vince Vaughn slated to star. Scott also considered a remake of the classic western
The Wild Bunch (1969), and an adaptation of the comic book
limited series Nemesis by
Mark Millar. ==Directing style==