All it takes is one director to change the entire vision of a film for better or worse. Long before Sam Raimi swung with "Spider-Man," James Cameron was considering giving his own take on the wall-crawler a go . There was also a time when Steven Spielberg was the first choice to give us a live-action run at "Harry Potter" (even though he's glad he didn't) . There was one occasion, however, when the Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams-starring tearjerker "The Notebook" was set to be handled by an, at that point, relatively unknown director. Even stranger, the reason he was a little too busy for the love story for the ages was that he was about to break big in a horror that would label him as the all-new Master of Suspense.

During an appearance on "Good Morning America" (via Entertainment

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