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Hey you guys, the Goonies are back in town!
The cast of the 1985 cult classic reunited Monday for Ke Huy Quan’s hand and footprint ceremony at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles.
The film’s screenwriter, Chris Columbus, and stars Corey Feldman, Jeff Cohen, Kerri Green and Josh Brolin were all there to celebrate Quan, 53.
Brolin, 56, spoke at the event and praised Quan, calling the Oscar winner “truly one of the last existences of the American dream.”
“I won’t say much but that after ‘The Goonies,’ I too lived in the ethers of our business for 19 years. The only difference is I was still chipping away at leftovers and trading stocks full time while you pursued a whole other profession and excelled in it famously,” Brolin said, referring to how Quan took a nearly 20-year hiatus from acting and worked as a stunt choreographer and assistant director.
“You have that Midas touch, my friend, and you have it because you have that heart of gold that you always have,” Brolin added.
The “Dune” star said that while he was 16, and Quan was “a spritely 13” when they filmed “The Goonies,” he remembered Quan’s family “having the same heart-driven, totally inclusive disposition, always welcoming, always with open arms.”
“I could not be happier for you. I know we all are, all us Goonies here for an honor that is not only totally deserved but celebrates all that is right in this industry,” Brolin told Quan.
Brolin also read a letter from “Goonies” producer Steven Spielberg, who couldn’t be at the ceremony.
“I’m proud of you for your meteoric rise as a child, and then your second meteoric rise as a grown-up, and believe me, very few of us get two bites of that apple,” Spielberg’s letter said.
Quan’s co-stars Martha Plimpton and Sean Astin both missed the event. Quan and Astin, 53, recently reunited for Quan’s new movie “Love Hurts,” which comes out in theaters on Feb. 7.
“I actually texted Sean after production reached out to him, and I said, ‘Hey, buddy, it’s been 40 years since we’ve shared the screen together. It would be incredible to be able to do it again,’” Quan told The Hollywood Reporter last year of working with Astin again.
“The Goonies” was directed by Richard Donner, who died in 2021 at age 91.
Spielberg, 78, devised the story for the classic family movie, which followed a group of neighborhood kids living in Astoria, Oregon, who head out on a perilous adventure.
Several cast members have died including John Matuszak, Anne Ramsey, Mary Ellen Trainor, Keith Walker and Lupe Ontiveros.
Last year, it was reported that a “Goonies” sequel was in the works, with the original cast expected to return. The outlet claimed the sequel would film in 2025 and come out in 2026 or 2027.
However, Plimpton, 54, quickly squashed the rumor.
“People, there is no Goonies2 script, there is no one ‘attached,’ Spielberg is not directing, it’s not real,” the actress wrote on Instagram.