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{{short description|2010 film by James Mangold}}
{{use mdy dates}}
{{other|Night and Day (disambiguation)}}
{{Infobox Film
{{pp-pc}}
| name = Knight and Day
{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2021}}
| image = Knight and day 09.jpg
{{Infobox film
| caption = Teaser poster
| name = Knight and Day
| director = [[James Mangold]]
| image = Knight and day 09.jpg
| producer =
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| writer = Patrick O'Neill (other writing credits pending WGA arbitration)
| director = [[James Mangold]]
| starring = [[Tom Cruise]]<br />[[Cameron Diaz]]<br />[[Maggie Grace]]<br />[[Paul Dano]]<br />[[Marc Blucas]]<br />[[Viola Davis]]<br />[[Olivier Martinez]]
| producer = {{Unbulleted list |[[Cathy Konrad]]|[[Todd Garner]]|[[Steve Pink]]}}
| music = [[John Powell]]
| writer = Patrick O'Neill
| starring = {{Unbulleted list |[[Tom Cruise]]|[[Cameron Diaz]]|[[Peter Sarsgaard]]|[[Viola Davis]]|[[Jordi Mollà]]|[[Paul Dano]]}}
| music = [[John Powell (film composer)|John Powell]]
| cinematography = [[Phedon Papamichael]]
| cinematography = [[Phedon Papamichael]]
| editing = {{Unbulleted list |[[Michael McCusker]]|Quincy Z. Gunderson|}}
| editing =
| studio = {{Unbulleted list |[[Regency Enterprises]]|[[Dune Entertainment]]|New Regency<ref name=numbers>{{cite web|title=Knight and Day (2010) - Financial Information|work=[[The Numbers (website)|The Numbers]]|access-date=7 March 2021|url=https://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Knight-and-Day#tab=summary}}</ref>|Pink Machine<ref name=numbers/>|Todd Garner Productions<ref name=numbers/>|Tree Line Film<ref name=numbers/>}}
| studio = [[Regency Enterprises]]
| distributor = [[20th Century Fox]]
| distributor = [[20th Century Fox]]
| released = {{start date|2010|6|25}}
| released = {{Film date|2010|06|16|[[Seville]]|2010|6|23|United States}}
| runtime = 109 minutes<ref name="rottentomatoes" />
| runtime =
| country = United States
| country = United States
| language = English
| language = English
| budget = $95,000,000
| budget = $117 million<ref name=mojo/>
| gross = $262 million<ref name="mojo">{{cite web|url=https://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=cruisediaz10.htm|title=Knight & Day (2010)|publisher=[[Internet Movie Database]]|work=[[Box Office Mojo]]|access-date=2014-03-20}}</ref>
| preceded_by =
| followed_by =
| amg =
| imdb = {{imdb title|id=1013743|title=Knight and Day}}
}}
}}
'''''Knight and Day''''' is a 2010 American [[Satire (film and television)|satirical]] [[action comedy film]] directed by [[James Mangold]] and starring [[Tom Cruise]] and [[Cameron Diaz]]. The film was the second on-screen collaboration of Cruise and Diaz after ''[[Vanilla Sky]]''.<ref name="Candler">{{cite web|url=http://www.independentcritics.com/reviews/vanillasky.htm |title=Independent Critics – Review Page |publisher=www.independentcritics.com |access-date=February 23, 2009 |last=Candler |first=T C |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080829181320/http://www.independentcritics.com/reviews/vanillasky.htm |archive-date=August 29, 2008 }}</ref> The film follows June Havens (Diaz), a classic car restorer, who unwittingly gets caught up with Roy Miller (Cruise), an eccentric secret agent, as Roy is on the run from the [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]].


The film's investors offset funding costs by paying Cruise a lower advance fee and providing him a share of revenue only after the financiers were repaid their investment in the production.<ref name="foxtosneak" /> Filming took place in several locations, mainly in several cities located in [[Massachusetts]], while other scenes were filmed in [[Spain]] and parts of [[Austria]] and [[Jamaica]].
'''''Knight and Day''''',<ref>[http://weblogs.variety.com/bfdealmemo/2009/10/cruise-pic-gets-a-title.html "Cruise Pic Gets a Title"] from ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]''</ref> (formerly titled '''''Wichita''''') is an upcoming action comedy film starring [[Tom Cruise]] and [[Cameron Diaz]]. The film is directed by [[James Mangold]]. It will mark the first time Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz have starred together on-screen since the 2001 film ''[[Vanilla Sky]]''.<ref name="Candler">{{cite web |url=http://www.independentcritics.com/reviews/vanillasky.htm |title=INDEPENDENT CRITICS – Review Page |publisher=www.independentcritics.com |accessdate=February 23, 2009 |last=Candler |first=T C }}

</ref>
''Knight and Day'' was released in the United States on June 23, 2010, and received mixed reviews from critics with praise for its action sequences and the performances of Cruise and Diaz, but criticised its script.<ref name="rottentomatoes">{{cite web|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/knight_and_day/ | title=Knight and Day Movie Reviews, Pictures | work=Rotten Tomatoes | publisher=[[Flixster]], Inc. | access-date=2010-06-26}}</ref><ref name="metacritic">{{cite web | url=https://www.metacritic.com/film/titles/knightandday | title=Knight and Day reviews at Metacritic.com | publisher=[[CBS Interactive]] | work=Metacritic | access-date=2010-06-25 | archive-date=June 21, 2010 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100621052515/http://www.metacritic.com/film/titles/knightandday | url-status=dead }}</ref> The film grossed $262 million worldwide and was remade in [[Hindi cinema|Hindi]] as ''[[Bang Bang!]]'', with [[Hrithik Roshan]] and [[Katrina Kaif]] in the lead roles.<ref>{{cite web|title=Hrithik Roshan-Katrina Kaif Starrer 'Bang Bang' to Release in 3 Languages|website=[[International Business Times]] |date=July 17, 2014 |url=http://www.ibtimes.co.in/hrithik-roshan-katrina-kaif-starrer-bang-bang-release-3-languages-604697|access-date=21 July 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Hrithik prepping up for Knight and Day remake|url=http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/hindi/bollywood/news-interviews/Hrithik-prepping-up-for-Knight-and-Day-remake/articleshow/18441696.cms|access-date=21 July 2014 | work=The Times Of India}}</ref>


==Plot==
==Plot==
June Havens, who is returning home to [[Boston]] from buying car parts in [[Wichita, Kansas|Wichita]], collides with Roy Miller at the airport, and is [[overselling|bumped]] to a later flight. John Fitzgerald, a [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] agent, assumes June is working with Roy and puts her back on the plane. While June is in the restroom, Roy subdues the passengers and flight crew, who are agents sent by Fitzgerald, and crash-lands the plane in a cornfield. Drugging the shocked June, Roy warns that agents will come after her. Waking at home, June prepares for her sister April's wedding.
Miller (Cruise) is a secret agent who goes on a blind date with unlucky-in-love June Havens (Diaz), and ends up pulling her into a serious yet comedic journey to protect a powerful battery that holds the key to an infinite power source. Matters are further complicated when Miller's former spymasters contact June and claim that Miller has suffered a psychotic breakdown in the past week, leaving her increasingly doubtful who she can trust.

June learns April wants to sell their father's 1966 [[Pontiac GTO|Pontiac GTO tri-power]], which June had planned to restore as a wedding gift. She is picked up by Fitzgerald and his agents. Roy appears and rescues her, while also killing numerous agents in a highway chase. She flees to her ex-boyfriend Rodney, a firefighter, before Roy arrives and pretends to take June hostage, shooting Rodney in the process. Roy convinces June she is safer with him and reveals that he has the Zephyr, a [[Perpetual motion|perpetual energy]] battery; he had been assigned to guard its inventor Simon Feck, until Fitzgerald tried to steal the battery, framing Roy.

In [[Brooklyn]], June and Roy discover Feck has gone into hiding, but left Roy a clue that he is in the [[Alps]]. They are attacked by henchmen sent by Antonio Quintana, a Spanish arms dealer. June gets drugged again and drifts in-and-out of consciousness as they are captured and then escape to Roy's off-the-grid island. Accepting a call from her sister, June accidentally leads Quintana's men to the hideout. Escaping Quintana's unmanned aerial assault vehicle in a helicopter, Roy knocks June out to circumvent her fear of flying in the tiny helicopter.

June wakes up aboard a train in [[Austria]], where Roy has reunited with Simon, and they manage to kill Bernhard, an assassin hired by Quintana. After checking into a hotel in [[Salzburg]], June follows Roy to a meeting with Naomi, Quintana's henchwoman, where he offers to sell the Zephyr. Fitzgerald and [[Director of the Central Intelligence Agency|CIA Director]] Isabel George finds June and reveal Roy used her at the airport to smuggle the Zephyr past security. Heartbroken, June leads them to the hotel. Fleeing across the rooftops, Roy is shot and falls into the river with the Zephyr.

Simon is kidnapped from CIA custody by Fitzgerald, the real traitor, to be delivered to Quintana in Spain. Returning home, June attends her sister's wedding, and visits an address Roy had been monitoring, where she meets his parents and learns his real name is Matthew Knight. They believe their son, an [[U.S. Army|Army]] sergeant and [[Eagle Scout (Boy Scouts of America)|Eagle Scout]], was killed in action and have won various lotteries and sweepstakes they do not remember entering. Leaving a message on her own answering machine declaring she has the Zephyr, June is taken by Quintana's men to [[Seville]].

Drugged with a prototype [[truth serum]], June explains that Roy's deal with Quintana was meant to alert the CIA so June would be returned home safely in time for the wedding. Roy tracks Fitzgerald, rescues June and leads Quintana and his men on a car chase. Quintana is killed by a bull stampede and Roy trades the Zephyr to Fitzgerald for Simon. Fitzgerald shoots at Simon anyway, but Roy takes the bullet. Right after Simon reveals that the battery is unstable it explodes, killing Fitzgerald.

Roy is hospitalized in [[Washington, D.C.]], where George tells him June has moved on and welcomes him back to the CIA. However, George's coded language reveals that he will be killed. June, disguised as a nurse, drugs Roy and breaks him out of the hospital. Waking up in the rebuilt GTO, Roy and June drive towards [[Cape Horn]] and his parents unexpectedly receive their own tickets there.


==Cast==
==Cast==
{{Div col}}
* [[Tom Cruise]] as Miller
* [[Cameron Diaz]] as June Havens
* [[Tom Cruise]] as Roy Miller/Matthew Knight
* [[Maggie Grace]] as April Havens
* [[Cameron Diaz]] as June Havens
* [[Peter Sarsgaard]] as Fitzgerald
* [[Peter Sarsgaard]] as John Fitzgerald
* [[Marc Blucas]] as Rodney
* [[Jordi Mollà]] as Antonio Quintana
* [[Viola Davis]] as CIA Director Isabel George
* [[Paul Dano]]
* [[Viola Davis]]
* [[Paul Dano]] as Simon Feck
* [[Falk Hentschel]] as Bernhard
* [[Olivier Martinez]]
* [[Marc Blucas]] as Rodney
* Lennie Loftin as Braces
* [[Maggie Grace]] as April Havens
* Rich Manley as Danny
* [[Dale Dye]] as Frank Jenkins <!--Please see the talk page before changing this back to Frank Knight-->
* [[Celia Weston]] as Molly Knight
* [[Gal Gadot]] as Naomi
* Jack O'Connell as Wilmer
{{Div col end}}


==Production==
==Filming location==
===Development===
Principal photography began in mid-September 2009 in [[Boston]] and [[Bridgewater, Massachusetts]]. Airport terminal scenes were filmed at [[Worcester Regional Airport]]. Filming also took place in Melrose, Danvers, and New Bedford, Massachusetts.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wickedlocal.com/melrose/fun/entertainment/arts/x665153617/Melrose-s-Hollywood-streak-continues-with-Tom-Cruise-filming-on-Friday |title=Melrose's Hollywood streak continues with Tom Cruise filming on Friday |last=Staff reports |date=October 28, 2009 |work=Melrose Free Press |publisher=''[[GateHouse Media]]'' |accessdate=October 28, 2009}}</ref> Spanish cities [[Cadiz]] and [[Seville]], as well as Austrian city [[Salzburg]], were also chosen as locations<ref>[http://akas.imdb.com/title/tt1013743/locations]</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://diepresse.com/home/kultur/film/519744/index.do |title=Tom Cruise-Film: Komparsen für Salzburg-Dreh gesucht |last=|date=November 6, 2009 |work=|publisher=Die Presse |language=German |accessdate=November 6, 2009}}</ref>.
Before film director James Mangold signed on to ''Knight and Day'', it was previously associated with director [[Tom Dey]].<ref name="zeitchik">{{cite news| last =Zeitchik | first = Steven | title =James Mangold wrestles 'Knight and Day' to the screen | work = [[Los Angeles Times]] | date =June 24, 2010 | url = https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-mangold-20100624,0,6848019.story | access-date = 2010-06-24 }}</ref> More than 12 writers contributed to the film. The [[Writers Guild of America, West]], decided that due to this large number of contributors, only Patrick O'Neill, who had worked on the beginning layout of the script, would get credit.<ref name="zeitchik" /> Other writers that worked on the film's script included [[Scott Frank]], [[Laeta Kalogridis]], [[Ted Griffin]], [[Dana Fox]], and [[Simon Kinberg]].<ref name="zeitchik" />

===Casting===
The film changed lead cast members multiple times while the production was mired in "[[development hell]]".<ref name="labyrinth" /> Prior to finalizing on actors [[Tom Cruise]] and [[Cameron Diaz]], when the film was titled ''Wichita'', comedian and actor [[Adam Sandler]] was offered a starring role in the film; he declined, saying, "I just don't see me with a gun."<ref name="labyrinth" /> ''Wichita'' was developed under production at [[Revolution Studios]]; the film was later moved to [[Sony Pictures]].<ref name="labyrinth" /> At Sony Pictures, actors [[Chris Tucker]] and [[Eva Mendes]] were slated to portray the two lead roles in the film; it was titled ''Trouble Man'' and intended as a romantic vehicle film for the two actors.<ref name="zeitchik" /><ref name="labyrinth">{{cite news| last = Cieply | first =Michael | title =Out of the Labyrinth and Onto the Screen | work = [[The New York Times]] | date = April 14, 2010 | url = https://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/15/movies/15knight.html| access-date =2010-06-27 }}</ref>

After Tucker and Mendes dropped out of the lead roles, Diaz signed on to the film with Sony Pictures, and actor [[Gerard Butler]] met with production staff regarding starring opposite Diaz.<ref name="labyrinth" /> Butler instead decided to take on the lead role in the film ''[[The Bounty Hunter (2010 film)|The Bounty Hunter]]'', opposite actress [[Jennifer Aniston]].<ref name="labyrinth" /> Tom Cruise, who at the time was [[audition]]ing for parts in five films, including ''[[Salt (2010 film)|Salt]]'', and ''[[The Tourist (2010 film)|The Tourist]]'',<ref name="labyrinth" /> decided he wanted to star in ''Knight and Day'', and he wanted to modify the role of the male lead character with his own ideas.<ref name="labyrinth" />

===Financing===
The film's production partners, [[New Regency]] and [[Dune Entertainment]], offset financing for the film by paying Tom Cruise a lower advance fee than he normally received.<ref name="foxtosneak" /> Cruise previously normally received $20 million or higher in an advance fee, but he only received $11 million for ''Knight and Day''.<ref name="foxtosneak" /> Cruise also agreed not to receive [[first-dollar gross]], which was customary for him.<ref name="foxtosneak" /> That meant that Cruise would not receive a share of the film's [[revenue]] until ''Knight and Day'' funding investors had first gained back their investment in the production.<ref name="foxtosneak" /> In total, production costs for the film exceeded $125 million.<ref>{{cite news| last = Goodale | first =Gloria | title = Weak 'Knight and Day' opening: The fall of Hollywood stars? | work = [[The Christian Science Monitor]] | publisher = www.csmonitor.com | date =June 24, 2010 | url = http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2010/0624/Weak-Knight-and-Day-opening-The-fall-of-Hollywood-stars | access-date =2010-06-24 }}</ref>

===Filming===
Principal photography began in mid-September 2009 in [[Boston]] and [[Bridgewater, Massachusetts]]. Airport terminal scenes were filmed at [[Worcester Regional Airport]]. Filming also took place in [[Melrose, Massachusetts|Melrose]], [[Danvers, Massachusetts|Danvers]], and [[New Bedford, Massachusetts]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.wickedlocal.com/melrose/fun/entertainment/arts/x665153617/Melrose-s-Hollywood-streak-continues-with-Tom-Cruise-filming-on-Friday |title=Melrose's Hollywood streak continues with Tom Cruise filming on Friday |last=Staff reports |date=October 28, 2009 |work=Melrose Free Press |publisher=[[GateHouse Media]] |access-date=October 28, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100610220225/http://www.wickedlocal.com/melrose/fun/entertainment/arts/x665153617/Melrose-s-Hollywood-streak-continues-with-Tom-Cruise-filming-on-Friday |archive-date=June 10, 2010 }}</ref> Filming was also done in Spanish cities [[Seville]] and [[Cadiz]], the Austrian city of [[Salzburg]],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://diepresse.com/home/kultur/film/519744/index.do |title=Tom Cruise-Film: Komparsen für Salzburg-Dreh gesucht |date=November 6, 2009 |publisher=Die Presse |language=de |access-date=November 6, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091113093542/http://diepresse.com/home/kultur/film/519744/index.do |archive-date=November 13, 2009 |url-status=dead }}</ref> and the Jamaican town of [[Port Antonio]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20100626/ent/ent1.html | title=Knight and Day | date=June 26, 2010 | publisher=The Gleaner | language=en | access-date=January 28, 2022}}</ref>

===Music===
{{Main|Knight and Day (soundtrack)}}
[[The Black Eyed Peas]] recorded a theme song for the film, titled "Someday".<ref>[http://www.blackeyedpeas.com/home/news/801961 Black Eyed Peas new Song Someday ('Knight and Day' theme) for Upcoming Tom Cruise/Cameron Diaz Movie] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100728210704/http://www.blackeyedpeas.com/home/news/801961 |date=2010-07-28 }}</ref>


==Marketing==
==Marketing==
''Knight and Day'' had been set for a June 25, 2010, release date, but FOX moved its debut up two days to June 23;<ref name="expectedtobe">{{cite news| last = Fritz | first = Ben | title ='Toy Story 3' expected to be No. 1 again at box office | work =[[Los Angeles Times]] | date =June 24, 2010 | url = http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-0625-ct-projector-20100625,0,5761351.story| access-date =2010-06-25 }}</ref> in the face of poor initial tracking numbers.<ref name="fernandez" /><ref name="desperation" /> ''[[The New York Observer]]'' analyzed the marketing for the film, which included an attempt at pushing a "viral video" of the two main stars; journalist Christopher Rosen commented on the desperation level of the publicity campaign, "the marketing for this thing has seemed more intrusive and desperate than any other big-ticket release in some time."<ref name="desperation">{{cite news| last = Rosen | first = Christopher | title = The Knight and Day Desperation Index| work = [[The New York Observer]] | date = June 17, 2010 | url = http://www.observer.com/2010/culture/knight-and-day-desperation-index | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100619045038/http://www.observer.com/2010/culture/knight-and-day-desperation-index | url-status = dead | archive-date = June 19, 2010 | access-date = 2010-06-17 }}</ref> Film producer [[Don Carmody]] commented negatively regarding the film's trailer, calling it "dull", and said the film would not do well because of the age of its two stars, "Cameron Diaz I think was a star, but she's no longer a star. Some of those stars are getting a little up there (in age)."<ref>{{cite news| last =Howell | first =Peter | title = Howell: Speaking truth to boo birds of summer | work = [[The Toronto Star]] | publisher =www.thestar.com | date =June 17, 2010 | url = https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/article/825044--howell-speaking-truth-to-boo-birds-of-summer | access-date = 2010-06-17 }}</ref> ''[[The Hollywood Reporter]]'' noted that "potential viewers remain startlingly indifferent to whether they actually end up seeing it. And attention thus far is still drawn mostly by those under 25, which indicates that the fans who grew up with star Tom Cruise have moved on."<ref name="fernandez">{{cite news | last = Fernandez | first = Jay A. | title = Bullseye | work = [[The Hollywood Reporter]] | date = June 17, 2010 | url = http://riskybusiness.hollywoodreporter.com/2010/06/17/bullseye-boxoffice-forecast-for-toy-story-3-salt-jonah-hex/ | access-date = 2010-06-18 | archive-date = June 20, 2010 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100620111018/http://riskybusiness.hollywoodreporter.com/2010/06/17/bullseye-boxoffice-forecast-for-toy-story-3-salt-jonah-hex/ | url-status = dead }}</ref>
The teaser premiered with ''[[Avatar (2009 film)|Avatar]]'' on December 18, 2009. The full trailer was released on March 29, 2010.

FOX attempted to increase [[word of mouth]] advertising for the film by showing a [[sneak preview]] on June 19, 2010;<ref name="poisedtobeat">{{cite news| last = DiOrio | first =Carl|author2=Gregg Kilday | title ='Grown Ups' poised to beat 'Knight and Day' | work = [[The Hollywood Reporter]] | publisher = www.hollywoodreporter.com | date =June 24, 2010 | url =https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/grown-ups-poised-beat-knight-24969/ | access-date = 2021-09-01 }}</ref> the ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'' reported the same day that pre-release surveys determined that the film was likely to become a [[Box office bomb|commercial flop]].<ref name="foxtosneak">{{cite news| last = Eller | first = Claudia |author2=Ben Fritz | title =Fox to sneak-preview movie 'Knight and Day' to generate missing buzz | work =[[Los Angeles Times]] | location = California | date = June 19, 2010 | url = https://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-ct-cruise-20100619,0,6083180.story | access-date = 2010-06-19}}</ref> Projections indicated that the film would only make $20 million at the [[box office]];<ref name="foxtosneak" /> much less than the film production cost of $125 million.<ref name="struggles" /><ref name="soso">{{cite news | last = Friedman | first = Roger | title = Tom Cruise New Film | work = Hollywood News | publisher = www.hollywoodnews.com | date = June 20, 2010 | url = http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2010/06/20/tom-cruise-new-film-so-so-reviews-sold-out-sneak-preview/ | access-date = 2010-06-21 | archive-date = June 23, 2010 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100623010139/http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2010/06/20/tom-cruise-new-film-so-so-reviews-sold-out-sneak-preview/ | url-status = dead }} [http://www.showbiz411.com/2010/06/20/tom-cruise-new-film-so-so-reviews-sold-out-sneak-preview alternate link]</ref> FOX production President Emma Watts said of the film's commercial prospects, "We aren't exactly where we hoped we would be."<ref name="foxtosneak" /> The ''Los Angeles Times'' noted that "... Cruise and Diaz are not as popular with younger moviegoers, who often drive big opening weekends in the summer. ... Among teenage and college-age males, the movie is barely registering, according to people who have seen the survey results."<ref name="foxtosneak" /> ''[[New York Magazine]]'' reported the film was "tracking miserably" before its first week.<ref name="struggles">{{cite news | title = Fox Struggles to Overcome the Tom Cruise Problem with Knight and Day | work =[[New York Magazine]] | publisher = nymag.com| date =June 18, 2010 | url = https://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2010/06/tom_cruise_knight_and_day.html | access-date = 2010-06-19 }}</ref> ''New York Magazine'' reported that "one of the film's biggest handicaps: its star, Tom Cruise".<ref name="struggles" /> A FOX official commented to ''New York Magazine'' regarding the film's pre-release polling data, "at those numbers, we can't open the movie right now. Hopefully, they'll change in the next few days."<ref name="struggles" />

Upon hearing that tracking data on June 22, 2010, showed the film was not likely to produce revenue over $30 million in its first five days on screen, a FOX executive told ''TheWrap'' he was "confounded", and commented, "Tracking says one thing, but our sneak previews this weekend said something totally different. ... but if you look at the empirical data, we're nowhere."<ref>{{cite news | last = Frankel | first = Daniel | title = Box Office: Looks Like a Long Day for 'Knight & Day' | work = TheWrap | publisher = www.thewrap.com | date = June 22, 2010 | url = https://www.thewrap.com/movies/article/box-office-looks-long-day-knight-day-18666 | access-date = 2010-06-23 | archive-date = August 26, 2017 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170826114646/http://www.thewrap.com/movies/article/box-office-looks-long-day-knight-day-18666/ | url-status = dead }}</ref> ''New York Magazine'' reported that the day before the film's release, a [[Scene (film)|long scene]] from ''Knight and Day'' was made available on [[iTunes]] in an attempt to improve the lackluster 28–31% "definite interest" level of the movie.<ref>{{cite news| last = Brodesser-Akner | first = Claude| title =Fox Hopes iTunes Can Save Knight and Day | work = [[New York Magazine]] | publisher = nymag.com | date = June 22, 2010 | url = https://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2010/06/knight_and_day_itunes.html | access-date = 2010-06-22 }}</ref> After results were reported from the film's initial debut, FOX distribution executive Bruce Snyder commented to ''The Hollywood Reporter'', "It's an adult movie opening on a Wednesday, but we opened it there and snuck it on Saturday because we believe the word-of-mouth will be good, so we're set for a pretty good opening weekend. Remember, it's an original, adult movie, which we expect will run for quite a while."<ref name="poisedtobeat" />

==Alternative versions==
An "extended cut", which adds eight minutes of footage mostly extending scenes and a new opening that better establishes June Haven's profession as a car restorer, was released on [[Video On Demand|VOD]] in North America. {{as of|2011|1}} it had not been released in [[DVD region code#Region codes and countries|DVD region 1]], though it had been released in regions 2, 3, and 4.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1013743/alternateversions|title=Knight and Day (2010) Alternate Versions|website=[[IMDb]]}}</ref>

==Reception==
===Box office===
''Knight and Day'' grossed $76.4 million in the [[United States]] and [[Canada]] and $185.5 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $261.9 million.<ref name="mojo"/> It performed poorly at the box office in its debut, with a take of [[United States dollar|US$]]3.8 million the day after its initial June 23, 2010, release, from ticket sales in the [[United States]] and [[Canada]].<ref name="openstosoft">{{cite news| last =Fritz | first = Ben | title = Cruise-Diaz movie 'Knight and Day' opens to soft $3.8 million at box office Wednesday | work = [[Los Angeles Times]] | date = June 24, 2010| url =http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/entertainmentnewsbuzz/2010/06/cruisediaz-vehicle-knight-day-opens-to-soft-38-million-at-box-office-wednesday.html | access-date = 2010-06-24 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news| last =Cantor | first = Brian | title ="Knight and Day" Bombs In Box Office Debut | work =Headline Planet | publisher = headlineplanet.com| date = June 24, 2010 | url =http://headlineplanet.com/home/2010/06/24/knight-and-day-bombs-in-box-office-debut/ | access-date =2010-06-24 }}</ref> This was much less than the film ''[[Toy Story 3]]'', which earned $13 million at the box office on the same day.<ref name="openstosoft" /> ''Knight and Day'' did not place within the top 50 all-time Wednesday film openings.<ref name="openstosoft" /> An analysis of the opening day results by ''[[Box Office Mojo]]'' noted it was the worst attended action film debut for Tom Cruise since his appearance in the 1986 ''[[Legend (1985 film)|Legend]]''.<ref name="fallsflat">{{cite news| last = Gray | first = Brandon | title = 'Knight & Day' Falls Flat on First Day | work =[[Box Office Mojo]] | publisher =www.boxofficemojo.com | date =June 24, 2010 | url = https://www.boxofficemojo.com/news/?id=2833&p=.htm | access-date = 2010-06-25 }}</ref> It was the lowest-grossing opening day for Cruise in a leading role since his performance in the 1992 film ''[[Far and Away]]''.<ref name="fallsflat" /> Cruise's last starring role before ''Knight and Day'', in the 2008 film ''[[Valkyrie (film)|Valkyrie]]'', generated $8.5 million on its opening day.<ref name="fallsflat" /> The previous film with Cameron Diaz and Cruise as the lead roles, ''[[Vanilla Sky]]'', garnered $8.9 million on its opening day.<ref name="fallsflat" />

Moira Macdonald of ''[[The Seattle Times]]'' characterized the film's initial revenue results as "a box-office disappointment";<ref>{{cite news| last =Macdonald | first = Moira | title ="Knight and Day"? No. "Day & Night"? Yes! | work = [[The Seattle Times]] | publisher = seattletimes.nwsource.com| date =June 24, 2010 | url =http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/popcornprejudiceamovieblog/2012197536_knight_and_day_no_day_night_ye.html | access-date = 2010-06-24 }}</ref> Roger Friedman noted for ''Hollywood News'', "Bad reviews didn't help. 'K&D' has registered only 52% on Rotten Tomatoes. Even those reviews counted as positive weren't so good. They were stretching.";<ref>{{cite news | last = Friedman | first = Roger | title = Tom Cruise's 'Knight and Day' opens to a mere $3.8M | work = Hollywood News | publisher = www.hollywoodnews.com | date = June 24, 2010 | url = http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2010/06/24/tom-cruises-knight-and-day-opens-to-a-mere-3-8m/ | access-date = 2010-06-24 | archive-date = August 14, 2022 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20220814133103/https://www.hollywoodnews.com/2010/06/24/tom-cruises-knight-and-day-opens-to-a-mere-3-8m/ | url-status = dead }} [http://www.showbiz411.com/2010/06/24/tom-cruise-film-flop-meager-3-8-million-for-knight-and-day alternate link]</ref> Nicole Sperling of ''[[Entertainment Weekly]]'' noted, "audiences just aren't showing up the way Fox might have hoped";<ref>{{cite magazine|last=Sperling |first=Nicole |title=Box office preview: 'Knight & Day' and 'Grown Ups' are no match for 'Toy Story 3' |magazine=[[Entertainment Weekly]] |publisher=ew.com |date=June 24, 2010 |url=http://hollywoodinsider.ew.com/2010/06/24/box-office-preview-knight-and-day-grown-ups/ |access-date=2010-06-24 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100626215433/http://hollywoodinsider.ew.com/2010/06/24/box-office-preview-knight-and-day-grown-ups/ |archive-date=June 26, 2010 }}</ref> and Ben Fritz of ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'' called the film's debut a "soft" opening,<ref>{{cite news| last = Fritz | first = Ben | title =Movie Projector: 'Toy Story' to rule over solid 'Grown Ups,' struggling 'Knight and Day' | work = [[Los Angeles Times]] | date = June 24, 2010 | url =http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/entertainmentnewsbuzz/2010/06/toy-story-to-rule-over-solid-grownups-struggling-knight-day.html | access-date = 2010-06-24 }}</ref> and commented, "It wasn't a good first day or night at the box office for 'Knight and Day.'"<ref name="openstosoft" />

The film's revenues dropped nine percent on its second day of release, earning $3.5 million in ticket sales.<ref>{{cite news| last =Kilday | first = Gregg | title = 'Knight and Day' holds low but steady – Film drops 9% Thursday after middling Wednesday debut| work =[[The Hollywood Reporter]] | publisher = www.hollywoodreporter.com | date =June 25, 2010 | url = https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3i14a7e72d3d44c14d254ebe5ada259a55| access-date = 2010-06-25 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news| last = Stewart | first = Andrew | title = 'Knight and Day' earns $3.5 million Thursday| work = [[Variety (magazine)|Variety]] | date =June 25, 2010}}</ref> During the same period that revenues dropped for ''Knight and Day'', ticket sales for ''Toy Story'' only fell by three percent, ''[[The Karate Kid (2010 film)|The Karate Kid]]'' dropped by six percent; while other films increased revenues at the same time, including, ''[[Shrek Forever After]]'', ''[[Sex and the City 2]]'', ''[[Get Him to the Greek]]'', ''[[Killers (2010 film)|Killers]]'', and ''[[Robin Hood (2010 film)|Robin Hood]]''.<ref>{{cite news| last = Friedman | first =Roger| title =Tom Cruise's 'Knight and Day' drops 8.7% in one day | work = Hollywood News | publisher = www.hollywoodnews.com | date = June 25, 2010 | url = http://www.hollywoodnews.com/2010/06/25/tom-cruises-knight-and-day-drops-8-7-in-one-day/ | access-date = 2010-06-25 }}</ref> In its first weekend, ''Knight and Day'' was paired up against ''[[Grown Ups (2010 film)|Grown Ups]]'', a comedy film starring [[Adam Sandler]], [[Kevin James]], [[Chris Rock]], [[David Spade]] and [[Rob Schneider]].<ref>{{cite news | last = Williams | first = Joe | title = Summer box-office smackdown: Tom Cruise vs. Adam Sandler | work = [[St. Louis Post-Dispatch]] | publisher = www.stltoday.com | date = June 24, 2010 | url = https://www.stltoday.com/life-entertainment/local/movies-tv/summer-box-office-smackdown-tom-cruise-vs-adam-sandler/article_c568e7d2-801a-11df-a4a5-00127992bc8b.html}}</ref> The Friday of its first weekend after release, ''Knight and Day'' took third place at the box office, behind both ''Grown Ups'' and ''Toy Story 3''.<ref>{{cite news| last = Cavna | first = Michael | title ='Toy Story 3' wins Friday box office | newspaper = [[The Washington Post]] | date =June 26, 2010 | url = http://voices.washingtonpost.com/comic-riffs/2010/06/toy_story_3_wins_friday_box_of.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20121008001648/http://voices.washingtonpost.com/comic-riffs/2010/06/toy_story_3_wins_friday_box_of.html | url-status = dead | archive-date = October 8, 2012 | access-date =2010-06-27 }}</ref> The film brought in a total of $6.4 million on its third day of release.<ref>{{cite news| last = Wigler | first =Josh | title = 'Grown Ups' Stand Up To 'Toy Story 3' In The Saturday Box Office Report | work = MTV Movies | publisher = mtv.com | date =June 26, 2010 | url = http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2010/06/26/grown-ups-stand-up-to-toy-story-3-in-the-saturday-box-office-report/ | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100629115605/http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2010/06/26/grown-ups-stand-up-to-toy-story-3-in-the-saturday-box-office-report/ | url-status = dead | archive-date = June 29, 2010 | access-date = 26 June 2010}}</ref>

===Critical response===
On [[Rotten Tomatoes]], the film has an approval rating of 52% based on 234 reviews and an average rating of 5.60/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "It's pure formula, but thanks to its breezy pace and a pair of charming performances from Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz, ''Knight and Day'' offers some agreeably middle-of-the-road summer action."<ref>{{cite web|title=Knight & Day (2010)|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/knight_and_day|work=[[Rotten Tomatoes]]}}</ref> On [[Metacritic]], the film has a score of 46 out of 100 based on 38 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.metacritic.com/movie/knight-and-day|title=Knight and Day Reviews|work=[[Metacritic]]}}</ref> Audiences polled by [[CinemaScore]] gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.<ref name="CinemaScore">{{cite web|url=https://www.cinemascore.com/|title=Home - Cinemascore|work=cinemascore.com}}</ref>

Justin Chang of ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' characterized the film as "a high-energy, low-impact caper-comedy that labors to bring a measure of wit, romance and glamour to an overworked spy-thriller template".<ref name="justinchang">{{cite news| last = Chang | first = Justin | title = Knight and Day | work = [[Variety (magazine)|Variety]] | publisher = Reed Elsevier Inc. | date = June 19, 2010 | url = https://www.variety.com/review/VE1117942987.html?categoryId=31&cs=1 | access-date = 2010-06-19}}</ref> Kirk Honeycutt of ''[[The Hollywood Reporter]]'' wrote: "Bottom Line: Logic and plausibility take a holiday in this nonstop actioner that counts on stars Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz to sell the nonsense." Honeycutt criticized the writing, "the script is too lazy to develop any of its characters – and that includes the leads", and commented, "laziness permeates the film from the inexplicable escapes to the neglected romance".<ref name="honeycutt">{{cite news| last =Honeycutt | first = Kirk | title =Knight and Day – Film Review | work = [[The Hollywood Reporter]] | publisher = www.hollywoodreporter.com | date = June 19, 2010 | url = https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-reviews/knight-day-film-review-29739/ | access-date = 2021-01-01 }}</ref> Michael Phillips of the ''[[Chicago Tribune]]'' criticized the script, the direction, cinematography, set pieces, and action sequences. Phillips concluded, calling it "A 21st Century ''[[Charade (1963 film)|Charade]]'' pumped up on all the wrong steroids, 'Knight and Day' may well suffice for audiences desperate for the bankable paradox known as the predictable surprise, and willing to overlook a galumphing mediocrity in order to concentrate on matters of dentistry."<ref name="chicagotribune">{{cite news| last = Phillips | first =Michael J | title = 'Knight and Day' tries for laughs, goes down with its flames | newspaper= [[Chicago Tribune]] | publisher =www.chicagotribune.com | date = June 21, 2010 | url = https://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/ct-xpm-2010-06-21-chi-100621-knight-day-movie-review-story.html | access-date = 2021-09-01 }}</ref>

[[Emanuel Levy]] was critical of the film's writing, calling it a "mindless flick"; he noted, "The story moves at a breakneck speed, as if to conceal the incongruities in the storytelling." Levy gave the film a grade of "C", and commented, "Preposterously plotted, the saga is dominated by long, energetic, uneven action sequences, but it lacks any logic and pays minimal attention to characterization. Repetitious in structure, and with humor that more often than not misses the mark, 'Knight and Day' is characterized by nihilistic violence and amoral tone, which wouldn't have mattered had the movie been witty or fun to watch."<ref name="levy">{{cite news | last = Levy | first = Emanuel | author-link = Emanuel Levy | title = Film review – Knight and Day | work = Emanuel Levy – Cinema 24/7 | publisher = emanuellevy.com | date = June 21, 2010 | url = http://emanuellevy.com/reviews/details.cfm?id=15840 | archive-url = https://archive.today/20130122064530/http://emanuellevy.com/reviews/details.cfm?id=15840 | url-status = dead | archive-date = January 22, 2013 | access-date = 2010-06-22 }}</ref> Simon Abrams of ''[[Slant Magazine]]'' gave the film a rating of two stars out of four, and commented of the film's director and writer, "Clearly O'Neill and Mangold are trying to give viewers what producers would undoubtedly like to sell as 'something for everybody,' but there's no consistency to the thing and no chemistry whatsoever between Cruise and Diaz, making the alternating tug-of-war between girly and manly elements of the film seem extraordinarily forced."<ref name="abrams">{{cite news| last = Abrams | first =Simon | title = Knight and Day | work = [[Slant Magazine]] | publisher = www.slantmagazine.com | date = June 21, 2010 | url = https://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/knight-and-day/4871 | access-date =2010-06-22 }}</ref> Rene Rodriguez of ''[[The Miami Herald]]'' wrote that there was "no chemistry between Cruise and Diaz", and commented regarding Cruise's acting, "Tom Cruise spends much of 'Knight and Day' looking as if he's waiting for someone to pour casting mold over his head to make an action figure."<ref>{{cite news| last = Rodriguez | first = Rene | title = Review – No chemistry between Cruise and Diaz in lackluster 'Knight and Day'| work = [[The Miami Herald]]| publisher = www.miamiherald.com | date =June 23, 2010 | url = http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/23/1695872/review-no-chemistry-between-cruise.html | access-date = 2010-06-23 }}</ref> Peter Howell in the ''[[Toronto Star]]'' commented, "There is supposed to be romance in ''Knight and Day'' — and Diaz is up for it — but Cruise still looks as if he's taken charisma lessons from Al Gore."<ref>{{cite news| last = Howell| first = Peter | title =Knight and Day: No funny business here | work = [[Toronto Star]] | publisher = www.thestar.com | date = June 22, 2010 | url = https://www.thestar.com/article/827122--knight-and-day-no-funny-business-here | access-date =2010-06-22 }}</ref>

''[[Entertainment Weekly]]''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s Lisa Schwarzbaum gave ''Knight and Day'' a grade of "C+", and compared it to the 2010 film ''[[Killers (2010 film)|Killers]]'' starring [[Katherine Heigl]] and [[Ashton Kutcher]], "The producers assume that audience interest in movie stars is bigger than audience interest in characters. The conclusion is overdetermined, since Roy and June are such flimsy constructions. ... At least they're not Katherine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher in Killers."<ref>{{cite magazine | last = Schwarzbaum | first = Lisa | title = Knight and Day | magazine = [[Entertainment Weekly]] | publisher = www.ew.com | date =June 22, 2010 | url = https://ew.com/article/2010/06/23/knight-and-day-2/ | access-date = 2021-09-01 }}</ref> Colin Covert of ''[[Star Tribune]]'' made a similar comparison, "The film looks unambitious, like a remake of 'Killers,' the Ashton Kutcher-Katherine Heigl guns-and-giggles toss-off everyone has already forgotten, but with bigger stunts and more star wattage."<ref>{{cite news| last = Covert | first = Colin ([[Star Tribune]]) | title =On the eve of Knight and Day,' examining the enigma that is Tom Cruise | work = [[Miami Herald]] | publisher = www.miamiherald.com| date = June 21, 2010| url = http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/21/1692198/on-the-eve-of-knight-and-day-examining.html | access-date =2010-06-21 }}</ref> In a review for ''[[The Huffington Post]]'', critic Marshall Fine observed, "the movie bubbles happily for almost an hour before it flags".<ref>{{cite news | last= Fine | first= Marshall | title = Movie review: Knight and Day | work = [[The Huffington Post]] | publisher =www.huffingtonpost.com | date = June 21, 2010| url = https://www.huffingtonpost.com/marshall-fine/movie-review-iknight-and_b_619328.html | access-date = 2010-06-21 }}</ref> Robert Bell of ''[[Exclaim!]]'' wrote of the script, "Sure, things slow down a bit around the midway point, making it clear that there is very little going on here aside from cheesy escapist fantasy, but things quickly pick up again, engaging us in the moment of a movie that knows exactly what mainstream trash cinema should be."<ref>{{cite news | last = Bell | first = Robert | title = Knight and Day Review | work = [[Exclaim!]] | publisher = www.exclaim.ca | location = Canada | date = June 21, 2010 | url = http://www.exclaim.ca/motionreviews/latestsub.aspx?csid1=144&csid2=871&fid1=47440 | archive-url = https://archive.today/20130219191304/http://www.exclaim.ca/motionreviews/latestsub.aspx?csid1=144&csid2=871&fid1=47440 | url-status = dead | archive-date = February 19, 2013 | access-date = 2010-06-21 }}</ref> In a review for the ''[[Orlando Sentinel]]'', critic Roger Moore commented, "The blase plot devices (a gadget, the nerdy guy who invented it), the bland villains, the too-fast dash through exotic locales, don't matter so long as Cruise and Diaz click and spark their scenes – chases and embraces – to life. And Cruise, hurling himself at this as if his Mission: Impossible future and indeed his whole career depended on it, makes sure they do."<ref>{{cite news| last = Moore | first = Roger| title =Movie Review: Knight and Day | work = [[Orlando Sentinel]] | publisher = www.orlandosentinel.com| date = June 21, 2010 | url = http://www.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment/movies/os-movie-review-knight-day,0,2503553.story | access-date = 2010-06-21 }}</ref>

''[[The Wall Street Journal]]'' critic Joe Morgenstern commented, "'Knight and Day' woke me up to just how awful some summer entertainments have become. It isn't that the film is harmful, except to moviegoers' wallets and movie lovers' morale, but that it is truly phenomenal for the purity of its incoherence."<ref>{{cite news| last =Morgenstern | first =Joe | title =Not the Day for 'Knight' | work = [[The Wall Street Journal]] | date = June 25, 2010 | url = https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704911704575326640302391252?mod=WSJ_ArtsEnt_LifestyleArtEnt_2 | access-date = 2010-06-25}}</ref> Writing for the ''[[Chicago Sun-Times]]'', [[Roger Ebert]] rated the movie 3 stars out of 4 and wrote, "'Knight and Day' aspires to the light charm of a romantic action comedy like 'Charade' or 'Romancing the Stone,' but would come closer if it dialed down the relentless action. The romance part goes without saying after a [[Meet cute|Meet Cute]] contrived in an airport, and the comedy seems to generate naturally between Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz. But why do so many summer movies find it obligatory to inflict us with CGI overkill? I'd sorta rather see Diaz and Cruise in action scenes on a human scale, rather than have it rubbed in that for long stretches, they're essentially replaced by animation."<ref>{{cite news | date = June 21, 2010 | last = Ebert | author-link= Roger Ebert | first = Roger| title = June 21, 2010| work = [[Chicago Sun-Times]] | publisher=RogerEbert.suntimes.com | url = https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/knight-and-day-2010 | access-date = 2021-09-01 }}</ref> Ty Burr of ''[[The Boston Globe]]'' stated, "The movie's a piece of high-octane summer piffle: stylish, funny, brainless without being too obnoxious about it, and Cruise is its manic animating principle."<ref>{{cite news| last =Burr | first =Ty | title = Knight and Day | work = [[The Boston Globe]] | publisher =www.boston.com | date =June 22, 2010|url=https://www.boston.com/ae/movies/articles/2010/06/22/cruise_adds_spark_of_anarchy_to_stylish_and_fun_action_adventure_film_knight_and_day/ | access-date = 2010-06-22 }}</ref> Writing for the [[Associated Press]], Christy Lemire commented, "Cruise's presence also helps keep things light, breezy and watchable when the action – and the story itself – spin ridiculously out of control."<ref>{{cite news | last = Lemire | first = Christy ([[Associated Press]]) | title = Review: Charismatic Cruise enlivens 'Knight & Day' | work = [[San Francisco Chronicle]] | publisher = www.sfgate.com | date = June 21, 2010 | url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2010/06/21/entertainment/e155649D95.DTL | access-date = 2010-06-22 }}</ref> Bill Goodykoontz of ''[[The Arizona Republic]]'' observed, "Mangold, working from a script by Patrick O'Neill, accelerates events in a way that is either a perfect representation of how current action films are made or a demonstration of everything that's wrong with movies today. Maybe it's both."<ref>{{cite news | last = Goodykoontz | first = Bill | title = Knight and Day | work = [[The Arizona Republic]] | publisher = www.azcentral.com | date = June 21, 2010 | url = https://www.azcentral.com/thingstodo/movies/articles/2010/06/21/20100621knight-day.html#ixzz0rat5sWFu | access-date = 2010-06-22 | archive-date = April 5, 2016 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160405010727/http://www.azcentral.com/thingstodo/movies/articles/2010/06/21/20100621knight-day.html#ixzz0rat5sWFu | url-status = dead }}</ref> ''[[CNN]]''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s Tom Charity commented, "there's a creeping anxiety about this project, a tendency to over-compensate that speaks to underlying inadequacies."<ref>{{cite news| last = Charity | first = Tom | title = 'Knight and Day': Cruise loses control | work = [[CNN]]| publisher = [[Time Warner]] | date =June 25, 2010 | url = http://www.cnn.com/2010/SHOWBIZ/Movies/06/24/knight.day.review/?hpt=C2 | access-date =2010-06-25 }}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|Comedy|Film}}
*[[2010 in film]]
* ''[[Bang Bang!]]'', 2014 Bollywood film and remake of ''Knight and Day''
*[[Comedy film]]


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.knightanddaymovie.com Official Movie Site]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20100819114931/http://www.knightanddaymovie.com/ Official website]
* {{mojo title|id=cruisediaz10|title=Knight and Day}}
* [http://twitter.com/kanddmovie Official Twitter Channel]
* {{IMDb title|id=1013743|title=Knight and Day}}
* [http://www.tomcruise.com/knight-and-day-movie-real-time-fan-page.html www.TomCruise.com ''Knight and Day'' Real-Time Web Fan Page]
* {{TCMDb title|id=53021}}
* [http://www.tomcruise.com/blog/?s=knight+day&x=0&y=0 www.TomCruise.com ''Knight and Day'' blog updates]
* {{Metacritic film|title=Knight and Day}}
* [http://www.trailerpulse.com/knight-and-day-trailer/ Movie Trailer]
* {{rotten-tomatoes|knight_and_day}}
* {{imdb title|id=1013743|title=Knight and Day}}
* {{cite web |title=Update Hollywood movie Knight & Day with bull runs |publisher=CAS International |date=November 24, 2009 |url=http://www.cas-international.org/nc/en/news/newsitem/persbericht/update-hollywood-movie-knight-day-with-bull-runs}}


{{James Mangold}}
{{James Mangold}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Knight And Day}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Knight And Day}}
[[Category:Upcoming films]]
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Latest revision as of 00:45, 22 December 2024

Knight and Day
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJames Mangold
Written byPatrick O'Neill
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyPhedon Papamichael
Edited by
Music byJohn Powell
Production
companies
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release dates
  • June 16, 2010 (2010-06-16) (Seville)
  • June 23, 2010 (2010-06-23) (United States)
Running time
109 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$117 million[3]
Box office$262 million[3]

Knight and Day is a 2010 American satirical action comedy film directed by James Mangold and starring Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz. The film was the second on-screen collaboration of Cruise and Diaz after Vanilla Sky.[4] The film follows June Havens (Diaz), a classic car restorer, who unwittingly gets caught up with Roy Miller (Cruise), an eccentric secret agent, as Roy is on the run from the CIA.

The film's investors offset funding costs by paying Cruise a lower advance fee and providing him a share of revenue only after the financiers were repaid their investment in the production.[5] Filming took place in several locations, mainly in several cities located in Massachusetts, while other scenes were filmed in Spain and parts of Austria and Jamaica.

Knight and Day was released in the United States on June 23, 2010, and received mixed reviews from critics with praise for its action sequences and the performances of Cruise and Diaz, but criticised its script.[2][6] The film grossed $262 million worldwide and was remade in Hindi as Bang Bang!, with Hrithik Roshan and Katrina Kaif in the lead roles.[7][8]

Plot

[edit]

June Havens, who is returning home to Boston from buying car parts in Wichita, collides with Roy Miller at the airport, and is bumped to a later flight. John Fitzgerald, a CIA agent, assumes June is working with Roy and puts her back on the plane. While June is in the restroom, Roy subdues the passengers and flight crew, who are agents sent by Fitzgerald, and crash-lands the plane in a cornfield. Drugging the shocked June, Roy warns that agents will come after her. Waking at home, June prepares for her sister April's wedding.

June learns April wants to sell their father's 1966 Pontiac GTO tri-power, which June had planned to restore as a wedding gift. She is picked up by Fitzgerald and his agents. Roy appears and rescues her, while also killing numerous agents in a highway chase. She flees to her ex-boyfriend Rodney, a firefighter, before Roy arrives and pretends to take June hostage, shooting Rodney in the process. Roy convinces June she is safer with him and reveals that he has the Zephyr, a perpetual energy battery; he had been assigned to guard its inventor Simon Feck, until Fitzgerald tried to steal the battery, framing Roy.

In Brooklyn, June and Roy discover Feck has gone into hiding, but left Roy a clue that he is in the Alps. They are attacked by henchmen sent by Antonio Quintana, a Spanish arms dealer. June gets drugged again and drifts in-and-out of consciousness as they are captured and then escape to Roy's off-the-grid island. Accepting a call from her sister, June accidentally leads Quintana's men to the hideout. Escaping Quintana's unmanned aerial assault vehicle in a helicopter, Roy knocks June out to circumvent her fear of flying in the tiny helicopter.

June wakes up aboard a train in Austria, where Roy has reunited with Simon, and they manage to kill Bernhard, an assassin hired by Quintana. After checking into a hotel in Salzburg, June follows Roy to a meeting with Naomi, Quintana's henchwoman, where he offers to sell the Zephyr. Fitzgerald and CIA Director Isabel George finds June and reveal Roy used her at the airport to smuggle the Zephyr past security. Heartbroken, June leads them to the hotel. Fleeing across the rooftops, Roy is shot and falls into the river with the Zephyr.

Simon is kidnapped from CIA custody by Fitzgerald, the real traitor, to be delivered to Quintana in Spain. Returning home, June attends her sister's wedding, and visits an address Roy had been monitoring, where she meets his parents and learns his real name is Matthew Knight. They believe their son, an Army sergeant and Eagle Scout, was killed in action and have won various lotteries and sweepstakes they do not remember entering. Leaving a message on her own answering machine declaring she has the Zephyr, June is taken by Quintana's men to Seville.

Drugged with a prototype truth serum, June explains that Roy's deal with Quintana was meant to alert the CIA so June would be returned home safely in time for the wedding. Roy tracks Fitzgerald, rescues June and leads Quintana and his men on a car chase. Quintana is killed by a bull stampede and Roy trades the Zephyr to Fitzgerald for Simon. Fitzgerald shoots at Simon anyway, but Roy takes the bullet. Right after Simon reveals that the battery is unstable it explodes, killing Fitzgerald.

Roy is hospitalized in Washington, D.C., where George tells him June has moved on and welcomes him back to the CIA. However, George's coded language reveals that he will be killed. June, disguised as a nurse, drugs Roy and breaks him out of the hospital. Waking up in the rebuilt GTO, Roy and June drive towards Cape Horn and his parents unexpectedly receive their own tickets there.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Development

[edit]

Before film director James Mangold signed on to Knight and Day, it was previously associated with director Tom Dey.[9] More than 12 writers contributed to the film. The Writers Guild of America, West, decided that due to this large number of contributors, only Patrick O'Neill, who had worked on the beginning layout of the script, would get credit.[9] Other writers that worked on the film's script included Scott Frank, Laeta Kalogridis, Ted Griffin, Dana Fox, and Simon Kinberg.[9]

Casting

[edit]

The film changed lead cast members multiple times while the production was mired in "development hell".[10] Prior to finalizing on actors Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz, when the film was titled Wichita, comedian and actor Adam Sandler was offered a starring role in the film; he declined, saying, "I just don't see me with a gun."[10] Wichita was developed under production at Revolution Studios; the film was later moved to Sony Pictures.[10] At Sony Pictures, actors Chris Tucker and Eva Mendes were slated to portray the two lead roles in the film; it was titled Trouble Man and intended as a romantic vehicle film for the two actors.[9][10]

After Tucker and Mendes dropped out of the lead roles, Diaz signed on to the film with Sony Pictures, and actor Gerard Butler met with production staff regarding starring opposite Diaz.[10] Butler instead decided to take on the lead role in the film The Bounty Hunter, opposite actress Jennifer Aniston.[10] Tom Cruise, who at the time was auditioning for parts in five films, including Salt, and The Tourist,[10] decided he wanted to star in Knight and Day, and he wanted to modify the role of the male lead character with his own ideas.[10]

Financing

[edit]

The film's production partners, New Regency and Dune Entertainment, offset financing for the film by paying Tom Cruise a lower advance fee than he normally received.[5] Cruise previously normally received $20 million or higher in an advance fee, but he only received $11 million for Knight and Day.[5] Cruise also agreed not to receive first-dollar gross, which was customary for him.[5] That meant that Cruise would not receive a share of the film's revenue until Knight and Day funding investors had first gained back their investment in the production.[5] In total, production costs for the film exceeded $125 million.[11]

Filming

[edit]

Principal photography began in mid-September 2009 in Boston and Bridgewater, Massachusetts. Airport terminal scenes were filmed at Worcester Regional Airport. Filming also took place in Melrose, Danvers, and New Bedford, Massachusetts.[12] Filming was also done in Spanish cities Seville and Cadiz, the Austrian city of Salzburg,[13] and the Jamaican town of Port Antonio.[14]

Music

[edit]

The Black Eyed Peas recorded a theme song for the film, titled "Someday".[15]

Marketing

[edit]

Knight and Day had been set for a June 25, 2010, release date, but FOX moved its debut up two days to June 23;[16] in the face of poor initial tracking numbers.[17][18] The New York Observer analyzed the marketing for the film, which included an attempt at pushing a "viral video" of the two main stars; journalist Christopher Rosen commented on the desperation level of the publicity campaign, "the marketing for this thing has seemed more intrusive and desperate than any other big-ticket release in some time."[18] Film producer Don Carmody commented negatively regarding the film's trailer, calling it "dull", and said the film would not do well because of the age of its two stars, "Cameron Diaz I think was a star, but she's no longer a star. Some of those stars are getting a little up there (in age)."[19] The Hollywood Reporter noted that "potential viewers remain startlingly indifferent to whether they actually end up seeing it. And attention thus far is still drawn mostly by those under 25, which indicates that the fans who grew up with star Tom Cruise have moved on."[17]

FOX attempted to increase word of mouth advertising for the film by showing a sneak preview on June 19, 2010;[20] the Los Angeles Times reported the same day that pre-release surveys determined that the film was likely to become a commercial flop.[5] Projections indicated that the film would only make $20 million at the box office;[5] much less than the film production cost of $125 million.[21][22] FOX production President Emma Watts said of the film's commercial prospects, "We aren't exactly where we hoped we would be."[5] The Los Angeles Times noted that "... Cruise and Diaz are not as popular with younger moviegoers, who often drive big opening weekends in the summer. ... Among teenage and college-age males, the movie is barely registering, according to people who have seen the survey results."[5] New York Magazine reported the film was "tracking miserably" before its first week.[21] New York Magazine reported that "one of the film's biggest handicaps: its star, Tom Cruise".[21] A FOX official commented to New York Magazine regarding the film's pre-release polling data, "at those numbers, we can't open the movie right now. Hopefully, they'll change in the next few days."[21]

Upon hearing that tracking data on June 22, 2010, showed the film was not likely to produce revenue over $30 million in its first five days on screen, a FOX executive told TheWrap he was "confounded", and commented, "Tracking says one thing, but our sneak previews this weekend said something totally different. ... but if you look at the empirical data, we're nowhere."[23] New York Magazine reported that the day before the film's release, a long scene from Knight and Day was made available on iTunes in an attempt to improve the lackluster 28–31% "definite interest" level of the movie.[24] After results were reported from the film's initial debut, FOX distribution executive Bruce Snyder commented to The Hollywood Reporter, "It's an adult movie opening on a Wednesday, but we opened it there and snuck it on Saturday because we believe the word-of-mouth will be good, so we're set for a pretty good opening weekend. Remember, it's an original, adult movie, which we expect will run for quite a while."[20]

Alternative versions

[edit]

An "extended cut", which adds eight minutes of footage mostly extending scenes and a new opening that better establishes June Haven's profession as a car restorer, was released on VOD in North America. As of January 2011 it had not been released in DVD region 1, though it had been released in regions 2, 3, and 4.[25]

Reception

[edit]

Box office

[edit]

Knight and Day grossed $76.4 million in the United States and Canada and $185.5 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $261.9 million.[3] It performed poorly at the box office in its debut, with a take of US$3.8 million the day after its initial June 23, 2010, release, from ticket sales in the United States and Canada.[26][27] This was much less than the film Toy Story 3, which earned $13 million at the box office on the same day.[26] Knight and Day did not place within the top 50 all-time Wednesday film openings.[26] An analysis of the opening day results by Box Office Mojo noted it was the worst attended action film debut for Tom Cruise since his appearance in the 1986 Legend.[28] It was the lowest-grossing opening day for Cruise in a leading role since his performance in the 1992 film Far and Away.[28] Cruise's last starring role before Knight and Day, in the 2008 film Valkyrie, generated $8.5 million on its opening day.[28] The previous film with Cameron Diaz and Cruise as the lead roles, Vanilla Sky, garnered $8.9 million on its opening day.[28]

Moira Macdonald of The Seattle Times characterized the film's initial revenue results as "a box-office disappointment";[29] Roger Friedman noted for Hollywood News, "Bad reviews didn't help. 'K&D' has registered only 52% on Rotten Tomatoes. Even those reviews counted as positive weren't so good. They were stretching.";[30] Nicole Sperling of Entertainment Weekly noted, "audiences just aren't showing up the way Fox might have hoped";[31] and Ben Fritz of Los Angeles Times called the film's debut a "soft" opening,[32] and commented, "It wasn't a good first day or night at the box office for 'Knight and Day.'"[26]

The film's revenues dropped nine percent on its second day of release, earning $3.5 million in ticket sales.[33][34] During the same period that revenues dropped for Knight and Day, ticket sales for Toy Story only fell by three percent, The Karate Kid dropped by six percent; while other films increased revenues at the same time, including, Shrek Forever After, Sex and the City 2, Get Him to the Greek, Killers, and Robin Hood.[35] In its first weekend, Knight and Day was paired up against Grown Ups, a comedy film starring Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Chris Rock, David Spade and Rob Schneider.[36] The Friday of its first weekend after release, Knight and Day took third place at the box office, behind both Grown Ups and Toy Story 3.[37] The film brought in a total of $6.4 million on its third day of release.[38]

Critical response

[edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 52% based on 234 reviews and an average rating of 5.60/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "It's pure formula, but thanks to its breezy pace and a pair of charming performances from Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz, Knight and Day offers some agreeably middle-of-the-road summer action."[39] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 46 out of 100 based on 38 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[40] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[41]

Justin Chang of Variety characterized the film as "a high-energy, low-impact caper-comedy that labors to bring a measure of wit, romance and glamour to an overworked spy-thriller template".[42] Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "Bottom Line: Logic and plausibility take a holiday in this nonstop actioner that counts on stars Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz to sell the nonsense." Honeycutt criticized the writing, "the script is too lazy to develop any of its characters – and that includes the leads", and commented, "laziness permeates the film from the inexplicable escapes to the neglected romance".[43] Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune criticized the script, the direction, cinematography, set pieces, and action sequences. Phillips concluded, calling it "A 21st Century Charade pumped up on all the wrong steroids, 'Knight and Day' may well suffice for audiences desperate for the bankable paradox known as the predictable surprise, and willing to overlook a galumphing mediocrity in order to concentrate on matters of dentistry."[44]

Emanuel Levy was critical of the film's writing, calling it a "mindless flick"; he noted, "The story moves at a breakneck speed, as if to conceal the incongruities in the storytelling." Levy gave the film a grade of "C", and commented, "Preposterously plotted, the saga is dominated by long, energetic, uneven action sequences, but it lacks any logic and pays minimal attention to characterization. Repetitious in structure, and with humor that more often than not misses the mark, 'Knight and Day' is characterized by nihilistic violence and amoral tone, which wouldn't have mattered had the movie been witty or fun to watch."[45] Simon Abrams of Slant Magazine gave the film a rating of two stars out of four, and commented of the film's director and writer, "Clearly O'Neill and Mangold are trying to give viewers what producers would undoubtedly like to sell as 'something for everybody,' but there's no consistency to the thing and no chemistry whatsoever between Cruise and Diaz, making the alternating tug-of-war between girly and manly elements of the film seem extraordinarily forced."[46] Rene Rodriguez of The Miami Herald wrote that there was "no chemistry between Cruise and Diaz", and commented regarding Cruise's acting, "Tom Cruise spends much of 'Knight and Day' looking as if he's waiting for someone to pour casting mold over his head to make an action figure."[47] Peter Howell in the Toronto Star commented, "There is supposed to be romance in Knight and Day — and Diaz is up for it — but Cruise still looks as if he's taken charisma lessons from Al Gore."[48]

Entertainment Weekly's Lisa Schwarzbaum gave Knight and Day a grade of "C+", and compared it to the 2010 film Killers starring Katherine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher, "The producers assume that audience interest in movie stars is bigger than audience interest in characters. The conclusion is overdetermined, since Roy and June are such flimsy constructions. ... At least they're not Katherine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher in Killers."[49] Colin Covert of Star Tribune made a similar comparison, "The film looks unambitious, like a remake of 'Killers,' the Ashton Kutcher-Katherine Heigl guns-and-giggles toss-off everyone has already forgotten, but with bigger stunts and more star wattage."[50] In a review for The Huffington Post, critic Marshall Fine observed, "the movie bubbles happily for almost an hour before it flags".[51] Robert Bell of Exclaim! wrote of the script, "Sure, things slow down a bit around the midway point, making it clear that there is very little going on here aside from cheesy escapist fantasy, but things quickly pick up again, engaging us in the moment of a movie that knows exactly what mainstream trash cinema should be."[52] In a review for the Orlando Sentinel, critic Roger Moore commented, "The blase plot devices (a gadget, the nerdy guy who invented it), the bland villains, the too-fast dash through exotic locales, don't matter so long as Cruise and Diaz click and spark their scenes – chases and embraces – to life. And Cruise, hurling himself at this as if his Mission: Impossible future and indeed his whole career depended on it, makes sure they do."[53]

The Wall Street Journal critic Joe Morgenstern commented, "'Knight and Day' woke me up to just how awful some summer entertainments have become. It isn't that the film is harmful, except to moviegoers' wallets and movie lovers' morale, but that it is truly phenomenal for the purity of its incoherence."[54] Writing for the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert rated the movie 3 stars out of 4 and wrote, "'Knight and Day' aspires to the light charm of a romantic action comedy like 'Charade' or 'Romancing the Stone,' but would come closer if it dialed down the relentless action. The romance part goes without saying after a Meet Cute contrived in an airport, and the comedy seems to generate naturally between Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz. But why do so many summer movies find it obligatory to inflict us with CGI overkill? I'd sorta rather see Diaz and Cruise in action scenes on a human scale, rather than have it rubbed in that for long stretches, they're essentially replaced by animation."[55] Ty Burr of The Boston Globe stated, "The movie's a piece of high-octane summer piffle: stylish, funny, brainless without being too obnoxious about it, and Cruise is its manic animating principle."[56] Writing for the Associated Press, Christy Lemire commented, "Cruise's presence also helps keep things light, breezy and watchable when the action – and the story itself – spin ridiculously out of control."[57] Bill Goodykoontz of The Arizona Republic observed, "Mangold, working from a script by Patrick O'Neill, accelerates events in a way that is either a perfect representation of how current action films are made or a demonstration of everything that's wrong with movies today. Maybe it's both."[58] CNN's Tom Charity commented, "there's a creeping anxiety about this project, a tendency to over-compensate that speaks to underlying inadequacies."[59]

See also

[edit]
  • Bang Bang!, 2014 Bollywood film and remake of Knight and Day

References

[edit]
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  4. ^ Candler, T C. "Independent Critics – Review Page". www.independentcritics.com. Archived from the original on August 29, 2008. Retrieved February 23, 2009.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Eller, Claudia; Ben Fritz (June 19, 2010). "Fox to sneak-preview movie 'Knight and Day' to generate missing buzz". Los Angeles Times. California. Retrieved June 19, 2010.
  6. ^ "Knight and Day reviews at Metacritic.com". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on June 21, 2010. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
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  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Cieply, Michael (April 14, 2010). "Out of the Labyrinth and Onto the Screen". The New York Times. Retrieved June 27, 2010.
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  43. ^ Honeycutt, Kirk (June 19, 2010). "Knight and Day – Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. www.hollywoodreporter.com. Retrieved January 1, 2021.
  44. ^ Phillips, Michael J (June 21, 2010). "'Knight and Day' tries for laughs, goes down with its flames". Chicago Tribune. www.chicagotribune.com. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
  45. ^ Levy, Emanuel (June 21, 2010). "Film review – Knight and Day". Emanuel Levy – Cinema 24/7. emanuellevy.com. Archived from the original on January 22, 2013. Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  46. ^ Abrams, Simon (June 21, 2010). "Knight and Day". Slant Magazine. www.slantmagazine.com. Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  47. ^ Rodriguez, Rene (June 23, 2010). "Review – No chemistry between Cruise and Diaz in lackluster 'Knight and Day'". The Miami Herald. www.miamiherald.com. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
  48. ^ Howell, Peter (June 22, 2010). "Knight and Day: No funny business here". Toronto Star. www.thestar.com. Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  49. ^ Schwarzbaum, Lisa (June 22, 2010). "Knight and Day". Entertainment Weekly. www.ew.com. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
  50. ^ Covert, Colin (Star Tribune) (June 21, 2010). "On the eve of Knight and Day,' examining the enigma that is Tom Cruise". Miami Herald. www.miamiherald.com. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
  51. ^ Fine, Marshall (June 21, 2010). "Movie review: Knight and Day". The Huffington Post. www.huffingtonpost.com. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
  52. ^ Bell, Robert (June 21, 2010). "Knight and Day Review". Exclaim!. Canada: www.exclaim.ca. Archived from the original on February 19, 2013. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
  53. ^ Moore, Roger (June 21, 2010). "Movie Review: Knight and Day". Orlando Sentinel. www.orlandosentinel.com. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
  54. ^ Morgenstern, Joe (June 25, 2010). "Not the Day for 'Knight'". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
  55. ^ Ebert, Roger (June 21, 2010). "June 21, 2010". Chicago Sun-Times. RogerEbert.suntimes.com. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
  56. ^ Burr, Ty (June 22, 2010). "Knight and Day". The Boston Globe. www.boston.com. Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  57. ^ Lemire, Christy (Associated Press) (June 21, 2010). "Review: Charismatic Cruise enlivens 'Knight & Day'". San Francisco Chronicle. www.sfgate.com. Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  58. ^ Goodykoontz, Bill (June 21, 2010). "Knight and Day". The Arizona Republic. www.azcentral.com. Archived from the original on April 5, 2016. Retrieved June 22, 2010.
  59. ^ Charity, Tom (June 25, 2010). "'Knight and Day': Cruise loses control". CNN. Time Warner. Retrieved June 25, 2010.
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