Leonardo DiCaprio and Christian Bale have signed on to lead Michael Mann’s “Heat 2,” with production set to begin in November after roughly a year of negotiations, according to a report from The Wrap. Bale will play LAPD detective Vincent Hanna, the role Al Pacino originated in 1995, while DiCaprio takes on Chris Shiherlis, the character Val Kilmer played in the original film.
Sources described the deals as either closed or nearing completion, though a representative for Amazon MGM Studios said nothing had been finalized as of publication. DiCaprio reportedly spent more than six months weighing his options, deciding between Shiherlis and the younger version of Neil McCauley, the role Robert De Niro made famous. His choice of Shiherlis, the heavier of the two parts in Mann’s source novel, signaled his full commitment to the project.
Mann wrote “Heat 2” with novelist Meg Gardiner, publishing it in 2022 as a story that functions as both prequel and sequel to his original crime saga. The narrative tracks a younger McCauley building his criminal reputation in one timeline while following Shiherlis’s fractured life after the first film’s climactic shootout in another. Warner Bros. originally developed the adaptation before dropping it over a budget that had climbed to $200 million; Amazon MGM picked it up with the cost now closer to $170 million, aided by nearly $40 million in California tax incentives.
Casting beyond the two leads remains fluid. Adam Driver is in talks to play Otis Wardell, a villain created for the novel, while Stephen Graham is being pursued for the De Niro role and Jason Clarke for a supporting part. Producers have also been searching for an actress to fill the role Ashley Judd played in the original. Jerry Bruckheimer is producing alongside Amazon MGM’s Scott Stuber and Nick Nesbitt, marking Bruckheimer’s first collaboration with Mann since 1981’s “Thief.”
Filming is expected to run six to seven months across locations including Los Angeles, Chicago, Paraguay and Singapore. One insider familiar with the project described its scale in blunt terms, calling it “Spartacus with machine guns.”




















































