Movie News
Priscilla’s L.A. premiere on Monday has been derailed by an ongoing IATSE contract dispute with the American Legion Theater in Hollywood. Distributor A24 confirms to The Hollywood Reporter that it decided on Friday to move to another, yet-to-be-announced location after becoming aware of the labor fight Thursday night.
THR published an in-depth examination of the Legion Theater’s travails on Sept. 26, which detailed how the venue at the venerable U.S. veterans club, known as Post 43, has become a battlefield for its warring membership over money, power and claims of sexual assault. (The Los Angeles Times ran its own detailed report on Sept. 27.) The underlying financial tensions have led to the conflict with the union.
IATSE Local 33, which represents projectionists, first picketed the property on Sept. 14. “American Legion Post 43 has committed multiple unfair labor practices, most significantly reneging on an agreement reached in April 2023 for a new collective...
THR published an in-depth examination of the Legion Theater’s travails on Sept. 26, which detailed how the venue at the venerable U.S. veterans club, known as Post 43, has become a battlefield for its warring membership over money, power and claims of sexual assault. (The Los Angeles Times ran its own detailed report on Sept. 27.) The underlying financial tensions have led to the conflict with the union.
IATSE Local 33, which represents projectionists, first picketed the property on Sept. 14. “American Legion Post 43 has committed multiple unfair labor practices, most significantly reneging on an agreement reached in April 2023 for a new collective...
- 10/13/2023
- by Gary Baum
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Miramax has prevailed in the bidding war for television rights to the “Halloween” horror franchise, meaning Michael Myers could soon be slicing and dicing his way across the small screen or assorted streaming platforms. The indie studio beat out other contenders, including A24, which was also in the mix for the rights, according to an insider with knowledge.
The auction was held by Malek Akkad’s Trancas International Films, which controls the franchise’s TV rights. It makes sense that Miramax would move aggressively to nab the option to make a television off-shoot, as the company shares ownership of the film rights with Trancas. Plus, the horror franchise has been very lucrative for Miramax, which also co-produces the “Scream” movies.
The deal comes a week after Miramax CEO Bill Block was canned from the company’s top post after overseeing a lackluster run of films such as “Confess, Fletch” and “He’s All That.
The auction was held by Malek Akkad’s Trancas International Films, which controls the franchise’s TV rights. It makes sense that Miramax would move aggressively to nab the option to make a television off-shoot, as the company shares ownership of the film rights with Trancas. Plus, the horror franchise has been very lucrative for Miramax, which also co-produces the “Scream” movies.
The deal comes a week after Miramax CEO Bill Block was canned from the company’s top post after overseeing a lackluster run of films such as “Confess, Fletch” and “He’s All That.
- 10/12/2023
- by Brent Lang and Matt Donnelly
- Variety - Film News
Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos shed some light on why negotiations between striking actors union SAG-AFTRA and Hollywood’s biggest producers fell apart.
After a blistering statement from the guild in the wee hours on Thursday morning accused the studios and streamers of “bully tactics,” Sarandos hit the main stage of Bloomberg’s Screentime conference and ran head first into questions about the breakdown.
Sarandos said that Wednesday evening talks ended with the guild proposing a “levy” on each of Netflix’s roughly 238 million subscribers.
“We had very productive talks going, then what kind of happened last night — they introduced this levy on subscribers, on top of… historic highs in terms of increases across the board,” Sarandos said at the Los Angeles event. The executive pointed out that while the producers’ offer to actors mirrors the studios’ newly ratified contract with the Writers Guild of America, it will cost “four-to-five times...
After a blistering statement from the guild in the wee hours on Thursday morning accused the studios and streamers of “bully tactics,” Sarandos hit the main stage of Bloomberg’s Screentime conference and ran head first into questions about the breakdown.
Sarandos said that Wednesday evening talks ended with the guild proposing a “levy” on each of Netflix’s roughly 238 million subscribers.
“We had very productive talks going, then what kind of happened last night — they introduced this levy on subscribers, on top of… historic highs in terms of increases across the board,” Sarandos said at the Los Angeles event. The executive pointed out that while the producers’ offer to actors mirrors the studios’ newly ratified contract with the Writers Guild of America, it will cost “four-to-five times...
- 10/12/2023
- by Matt Donnelly
- Variety - Film News
Lionsgate has landed U.S. rights to “The Home,” a thriller starring Pete Davidson. The movie, directed by James DeMonaco (“The Purge”), was backed by Miramax and screened for buyers outside of competition at this year’s Toronto Film Festival. It’s expected to land in theaters sometime in 2024.
“The Home” follows Davidson as Max, a former foster child who begins working at a retirement home, only to discover that its residents and caretakers harbor sinister secrets.
“We went into ‘The Home’ not knowing what to expect and James and Pete delivered an exhilarating ride of a movie that is pure suspense-filled fun and just plain bonkers,” says Charlotte Koh, Lionsgate’s executive VP of acquisitions and co-productions. “Audiences won’t know what hit them.”
DeMonaco and Adam Canto wrote “The Home,” which was produced by Bill Block and Sebastian K. Lemercier. Koh will oversee the film for Lionsgate.
“James...
“The Home” follows Davidson as Max, a former foster child who begins working at a retirement home, only to discover that its residents and caretakers harbor sinister secrets.
“We went into ‘The Home’ not knowing what to expect and James and Pete delivered an exhilarating ride of a movie that is pure suspense-filled fun and just plain bonkers,” says Charlotte Koh, Lionsgate’s executive VP of acquisitions and co-productions. “Audiences won’t know what hit them.”
DeMonaco and Adam Canto wrote “The Home,” which was produced by Bill Block and Sebastian K. Lemercier. Koh will oversee the film for Lionsgate.
“James...
- 10/12/2023
- by Rebecca Rubin
- Variety - Film News
On Wednesday night, the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers declared that negotiations with SAG-AFTRA are suspended, given that the gap between the parties is “too great.”
“Negotiations between the AMPTP and SAG-AFTRA have been suspended after SAG-AFTRA presented its most recent proposal on October 11,” the trade association representing studios and streamers in negotiations said in a press release Wednesday night. “After meaningful conversations, it is clear that the gap between the AMPTP and SAG-AFTRA is too great, and conversations are no longer moving us in a productive direction.”
Early Thursday morning, SAG-AFTRA shot back at the AMPTP, telling members that the studios walked away from talks with the union and accused them of using “bully tactics.” “[The studios] intentionally misrepresented to the press the cost of the above proposal — overstating it by 60 percent,” the message to union members said. “They have done the same with AI, claiming to protect performer consent,...
“Negotiations between the AMPTP and SAG-AFTRA have been suspended after SAG-AFTRA presented its most recent proposal on October 11,” the trade association representing studios and streamers in negotiations said in a press release Wednesday night. “After meaningful conversations, it is clear that the gap between the AMPTP and SAG-AFTRA is too great, and conversations are no longer moving us in a productive direction.”
Early Thursday morning, SAG-AFTRA shot back at the AMPTP, telling members that the studios walked away from talks with the union and accused them of using “bully tactics.” “[The studios] intentionally misrepresented to the press the cost of the above proposal — overstating it by 60 percent,” the message to union members said. “They have done the same with AI, claiming to protect performer consent,...
- 10/12/2023
- by Katie Kilkenny
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
After a prolonged legal battle spanning more than two years, Gerard Butler and the producers of the “Olympus Has Fallen” franchise reached a settlement regarding the actor’s $10 million lawsuit on Thursday. The suit sought a share of profits generated by the 2013 White House action franchise.
The actor claimed in the 2021 lawsuit that he was owed payment for his work on the 2013 blockbuster, which in the decade since spawned two sequels.
Defendants Nu Image and Millennium Media’s attorneys filed a “Notice of Settlement of Entire Case” paperwork on Tuesday, according to The Hollywood Reporter, which first reported the news.
“The settlement agreement conditions dismissal of this matter on the satisfactory completion of specified terms that are not to be performed within 45 days of the date of the settlement,” the filing in L.A. Superior Court said. “A request for dismissal will be filed no later than (date): Jan.
The actor claimed in the 2021 lawsuit that he was owed payment for his work on the 2013 blockbuster, which in the decade since spawned two sequels.
Defendants Nu Image and Millennium Media’s attorneys filed a “Notice of Settlement of Entire Case” paperwork on Tuesday, according to The Hollywood Reporter, which first reported the news.
“The settlement agreement conditions dismissal of this matter on the satisfactory completion of specified terms that are not to be performed within 45 days of the date of the settlement,” the filing in L.A. Superior Court said. “A request for dismissal will be filed no later than (date): Jan.
- 10/12/2023
- by Umberto Gonzalez
- The Wrap
Malaysian Tiger To Roar In Singapore
“Tiger Stripes,” the Malaysian coming-of-age, body horror film that debuted in Cannes’ Critics Week section has been set as the opening title for this year’s Singapore International Film Festival (Nov. 30 – Dec. 10). Directed by Amanda Nell Eu, the film is a multinational coproduction that involved Singapore-based Fran Borgia and Akanga Film.
A handful of other Singaporean titles have also been teased by the festival, which will not make its full lineup announcement until Oct. 25. Three will play in competition: “Tomorrow Is a Long Time,” directed by Jow Zhi Wei; “Dreaming & Dying,” directed by...
“Tiger Stripes,” the Malaysian coming-of-age, body horror film that debuted in Cannes’ Critics Week section has been set as the opening title for this year’s Singapore International Film Festival (Nov. 30 – Dec. 10). Directed by Amanda Nell Eu, the film is a multinational coproduction that involved Singapore-based Fran Borgia and Akanga Film.
A handful of other Singaporean titles have also been teased by the festival, which will not make its full lineup announcement until Oct. 25. Three will play in competition: “Tomorrow Is a Long Time,” directed by Jow Zhi Wei; “Dreaming & Dying,” directed by...
- 10/12/2023
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety - TV News
David Gordon Green's The Exorcist: Believer didn't seem to impress theater goers very much. The film made a respectable $26.5 million in its opening weekend, but critic reviews and audience opinion weren't kind. It's no surprise. The franchise has a long history of disappointment. 1977's Exorcist II: The Heretic is regarded as one of the worst horror movies ever made. The Exorcist III was a dud when it came out in 1990, but has thankfully become a cult hit over the decades. In 2004, there was an attempt to bring the IP back with Renny Harlin's Exorcist: The Beginning. It was so unimpressive that another cut of the same movie came out the next year under director Paul Schrader called Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist, but it wasn't any good either.
- 10/14/2023
- by Shawn Van Horn
- Collider.com
A hero as iconic as Batman has always required a villain that is just as memorable and impactful for audiences. The Joker, with his own standalone movie starring Joaquin Phoenix in the titular role and its sequel, Joker: Folie à Deux, set for 2024, is easily one of the greatest comic book antagonists that has left a lasting legacy in theaters as well as on the page. Bringing a character as uniquely eccentric and visually striking as the Joker from an illustrated medium into a live-action one has always been an adaptational challenge, eliciting different approaches from makeup artists, wardrobe designers, and even the actors themselves as they bring the Clown Prince of Crime to the big screen.
- 10/14/2023
- by Emmanuel Ronquillo
- Collider.com
Actor brings seven-decade career to close, saying he wants to go out on a high note after his last role in The Great Escaper
Michael Caine has confirmed his retirement at the age of 90, drawing to a close a glittering career in which he won two Oscars.
After his comments last month that he was “sort of retired”, Caine made it official, telling the BBC’s Today programme: “I keep saying I’m going to retire. Well I am now.
Michael Caine has confirmed his retirement at the age of 90, drawing to a close a glittering career in which he won two Oscars.
After his comments last month that he was “sort of retired”, Caine made it official, telling the BBC’s Today programme: “I keep saying I’m going to retire. Well I am now.
- 10/14/2023
- by Clea Skopeliti
- The Guardian - Film News
Quentin Tarantino has openly celebrated the notion that his films "steal" from every movie that came before, beginning with his feature directorial debut Reservoir Dogs which took heavy inspiration from City on Fire. In 2012, the writer-director made his first entry into the Spaghetti Western genre, even naming the film and its character after Sergio Corbucci's Django from 1966. This wasn't stealing exactly, since the immediate success of Corbucci's '60s hit led to almost 40 other Spaghetti Westerns in the following years renaming their own movies to include the word "Django", and capitalizing upon its success. Tarantino's Django Unchained is by far the most different of the bunch, swapping out the quiet caucasian gunslinger for a liberated deep-south slave.
- 10/14/2023
- by Aled Owen
- Collider.com
Almost a decade after its initial release, 2014's It Follows (it didn't arrive in U.S. theaters until 2015) is now on Netflix. Director David Robert Mitchell's film is one of the most chilling of the last decade, a throwback film that's part Halloween and part A Nightmare on Elm Street, but also its own brilliant creation. While It Follows wasn't exactly a huge hit when it came out, it did make a respectable $22 million worldwide. In the years since its release, It Follows has gathered a cult following before becoming more mainstream thanks to streaming services and the rise of Maika Monroe as a known actress in the horror genre. It Follows might feel familiar, but its themes go much deeper than your typical teenagers-in-danger horror flick. Whether you're revisiting it for the tenth time or only being introduced to it now, here's a full breakdown of everything that happened in the film's finale.
- 10/14/2023
- by Shawn Van Horn
- Collider.com
Ghostwatch was a 90-minute TV special presented as a piece of live television that aired on the BBC on Halloween night in 1992, and despite the fact that there were some pre-credits, many viewers were fooled into believing it was real. The premise saw a ghost investigation spiral out of control with increasingly terrifying results. No one could have prepared for the impact it would go on to have on British audiences, least of all writer Stephen Volk. When he first concocted the idea for Ghostwatch, it was intended to be a six-part series.
- 10/14/2023
- by Adam Donald
- Collider.com
While it may not have been what its pioneers intended, the medium of film has provided a great platform for the art of cursing. For young film viewers coming of age, the taboo phenomenon of using forbidden words is often first introduced on the big screen. In some cases, vulgarity acts as an exhilarating process in the same vicinity as a great action set piece. Swearing has become such a reliable device that a handful of prominent actors in Hollywood are defined by the act, placing it firmly in their repertoire. The actor with the most use of curse words on screen in history is not who you'd expect, though. Forget Samuel L. Jackson, Al Pacino, or Joe Pesci, Jonah Hill is the one who holds the profanity crown.
- 10/14/2023
- by Thomas Butt
- Collider.com
What is the true cost of turning your dreams into reality? The limits of human ambition have always been a source of inspiration for stories that expose the terrifying underbelly of desires that come at a cost. After all, the tale of someone actualizing their desires at great personal cost makes for compelling horror, the kind that each one of us can resonate with, as it taps into the primal fear of loss. Jordan Peele's revamp of "The Twilight Zone" inaugurated the horror anthology series with this specific sentiment, with the episode titled "The Comedian," which follows the journey of a struggling artist who embraces the limelight at a terrible price.
This comedian, Samir Wassan (Kumail Nanjiani), starts off as a conscientious young man with non-negotiable morals, but as time passes, the sweet taste of success spurs him to commit horrible deeds to ensure his continued fame. By the...
This comedian, Samir Wassan (Kumail Nanjiani), starts off as a conscientious young man with non-negotiable morals, but as time passes, the sweet taste of success spurs him to commit horrible deeds to ensure his continued fame. By the...
- 10/14/2023
- by Debopriyaa Dutta
- Slash Film
She went from straight-a student to the star of Scandal, but always had a nagging doubt about her place in the world. Then the actor agreed to go on a US genealogy show - and discovered her own story wasn’t quite as it seemed …
That Kerry Washington comes from a seemingly perfect family is something to which I thought I could attest. Four years ago, on an icily grey day in New York City, I met the actor after watching her gut-wrenching performance on Broadway in the play American Son. I sat on a sofa on the vacated stage, in deep conversation with Washington’s parents, Earl and Valerie: she a professor, he a businessman, who had raised their daughter in a hard-working, predominantly black neighbourhood in the Bronx. I remember thinking how good-looking, charming and erudite they seemed. And Washington – gracious and gorgeous in real life – made so much sense as their offspring.
That Kerry Washington comes from a seemingly perfect family is something to which I thought I could attest. Four years ago, on an icily grey day in New York City, I met the actor after watching her gut-wrenching performance on Broadway in the play American Son. I sat on a sofa on the vacated stage, in deep conversation with Washington’s parents, Earl and Valerie: she a professor, he a businessman, who had raised their daughter in a hard-working, predominantly black neighbourhood in the Bronx. I remember thinking how good-looking, charming and erudite they seemed. And Washington – gracious and gorgeous in real life – made so much sense as their offspring.
- 10/14/2023
- by Afua Hirsch
- The Guardian - Film News
Released in 1988, Penny Marshall's Big is the film that turned Tom Hanks into a Hollywood megastar. He was already a star in the late '80s, thanks to his Bosom Buddies sitcom, and film roles like Splash and The Money Pit. Hanks was doing okay with those parts, but Big shot Tom Hanks up to household name status. The movie was a huge success, making $115 million in the United States. After that, Tom Hanks was off, becoming arguably the most successful actor of the '90s. It's hard to not see Hanks in the role of Josh Baskin now, a twelve-year-old stuck in a grown man's body, but the part was originally given to a bigger name at the time. Believe it or not, Robert De Niro was cast as Josh. That sounds absurd, but it's true. With De Niro as a boy in a man's body, Big wouldn't...
- 10/14/2023
- by Shawn Van Horn
- Collider.com
One sign of a terrific actor is that he can hold you even when he’s not doing anything. Pierce Brosnan is like that. I wouldn’t call him a minimalist, though he never wastes a word or a movement; he has the precision of an expensive watch. Yet as he’s gotten older, his inner quality of elegant puckish cutthroat gravitas has only grown stronger. You’re hooked by him when he’s not doing anything in part because he projects the unwavering confidence that you will be.
That makes him the ideal actor to play a seen-it-all hit man — who also happens to be a highly civilized gourmet cook — in Phillip Noyce’s “Fast Charlie,” a Deep South crime drama that may be the twelfth movie this year to center on a hit man. But the new hit-man movies, like David Fincher’s “The Killer” and Richard Linklater’s “Hit Man,...
That makes him the ideal actor to play a seen-it-all hit man — who also happens to be a highly civilized gourmet cook — in Phillip Noyce’s “Fast Charlie,” a Deep South crime drama that may be the twelfth movie this year to center on a hit man. But the new hit-man movies, like David Fincher’s “The Killer” and Richard Linklater’s “Hit Man,...
- 10/14/2023
- by Owen Gleiberman
- Variety - Film News
On Friday nights, IndieWire After Dark takes a feature-length beat to honor fringe cinema in the streaming age.
First, the spoiler-free pitch for one editor’s midnight movie pick — something weird and wonderful from any age of film that deserves our memorializing.
Then, the spoiler-filled aftermath as experienced by the unwitting editor attacked by this week’s recommendation.
The Pitch: It’s the Sagrada Familia of Shitty Horror Movies
“Oh, this is your Sagrada Familia,” IndieWire’s Christian Zilko said to me as the credits of “Event Horizon” rolled, tears from laughter still streaming down my face. “You’re like one of those architecture nerds who think it’s more beautiful because it’s unfinished.”
Much like the semi-sentient spaceship in Paul W. S. Anderson’s magnificently misguided horror flick from 1997, Zilko knows me so well that I’m occasionally startled by his insights into my cinematic soul. That...
First, the spoiler-free pitch for one editor’s midnight movie pick — something weird and wonderful from any age of film that deserves our memorializing.
Then, the spoiler-filled aftermath as experienced by the unwitting editor attacked by this week’s recommendation.
The Pitch: It’s the Sagrada Familia of Shitty Horror Movies
“Oh, this is your Sagrada Familia,” IndieWire’s Christian Zilko said to me as the credits of “Event Horizon” rolled, tears from laughter still streaming down my face. “You’re like one of those architecture nerds who think it’s more beautiful because it’s unfinished.”
Much like the semi-sentient spaceship in Paul W. S. Anderson’s magnificently misguided horror flick from 1997, Zilko knows me so well that I’m occasionally startled by his insights into my cinematic soul. That...
- 10/14/2023
- by Alison Foreman and Christian Zilko
- Indiewire
Despite being one of the greatest movies ever made, it was no easy feat making The Wizard of Oz. Even by today's standards, this 1939 classic holds up as an impressive feat of filmmaking. We all love its well-crafted story and fun cast of characters, and even its special effects have managed to remain charming in 2023. That said, in the '30s, this movie was nothing short of groundbreaking. All kinds of tricks and techniques had to be made in the middle of production to bring the land of Oz to life. As interesting as that sounds, it made for a hellish, stressful atmosphere on set. Not only that, but there were loads of issues behind the scenes keeping the people on board that were making the movie. Sometimes, a classic movie comes together easily, but in the case of The Wizard of Oz, it was a total nightmare.
- 10/14/2023
- by Samuel Williamson
- Collider.com
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This year, "Oppenheimer" became an unstoppable hit for Universal Pictures. Of course, a new movie from "The Dark Knight" and "Inception" director Christopher Nolan is always going to pique the curiosity of even the most general audiences. But the fact that a three-hour historical biopic starring Cillian Murphy in his first leading role as J. Robert Oppenheimer, the man responsible for creating the atomic bomb, made over $939 million at the worldwide box office is quite shocking. Bolstered by the natural hype phenomenon known as Barbenheimer, which paired this year's hit "Barbie" with an unlikely double-feature partner, "Oppenheimer" is one of the biggest cinematic successes of 2023. And soon, you can find out how it all came together.
Insight Editions
This month, Insight Editions is releasing "Unleashing Oppenheimer: Inside Christopher Nolan's Explosive Atomic-Age Thriller," a 272-page book that chronicles the making of the film,...
This year, "Oppenheimer" became an unstoppable hit for Universal Pictures. Of course, a new movie from "The Dark Knight" and "Inception" director Christopher Nolan is always going to pique the curiosity of even the most general audiences. But the fact that a three-hour historical biopic starring Cillian Murphy in his first leading role as J. Robert Oppenheimer, the man responsible for creating the atomic bomb, made over $939 million at the worldwide box office is quite shocking. Bolstered by the natural hype phenomenon known as Barbenheimer, which paired this year's hit "Barbie" with an unlikely double-feature partner, "Oppenheimer" is one of the biggest cinematic successes of 2023. And soon, you can find out how it all came together.
Insight Editions
This month, Insight Editions is releasing "Unleashing Oppenheimer: Inside Christopher Nolan's Explosive Atomic-Age Thriller," a 272-page book that chronicles the making of the film,...
- 10/14/2023
- by Ethan Anderton
- Slash Film
Whenever something noteworthy or downright idiotic takes social media by storm, a diehard Simpsons fan will appear in the comments with a Gif, video, or screen grab to prove that the brilliant prognosticators on the show's writing staff predicted the event and/or calamity long ago. What became something of a meme on Twitter and other social media platforms resulted in a slew of list-based articles opining the show's divinely accurate soothsaying. But many of these so-called predictions can be boiled down to a philosophy one might refer to as Simpsons' razor. This is a humorous spin on an actual real philosophy, Occam's razor, which suggests that the simplest explanation is often the best one. Simpsons' razor, in contrast, is a philosophy stating that the dumbest possible result is often the most likely. The comedy writers on The Simpsons may appear to be predicting future events, but in reality, they...
- 10/14/2023
- by Matt Shore
- Collider.com
Sometimes, late in a show’s run, an actor will decide it's time for them to depart the series. Whatever the reason may be, it’s often disappointing for the fans, and leaves the showrunners with two options: One, write the character off entirely. Or two, recast the character with someone new. While the most obvious and simple choice would seem to be just writing the character off, some shows do go with the second option and recast a character with someone new. Such was the case with The Fosters, when Jake T. Austin decided he was going to be departing the show. Rather than writing his character off, he was replaced by a new actor, and to put it gently, fans were not happy. From the very first episode of The Fosters Jake T. Austin portrayed Jesus Foster, one half of a set of twins adopted by Lena (Sherri Saum...
- 10/14/2023
- by Samantha Graves
- Collider.com
The Walking Dead wrapped up its final season in late 2022, but not before setting the stage for several spin-off stories following a number of characters from the core cast. The series even closed out with essentially a trailer for the upcoming series that will follow Rick Grimes, played by Andrew Lincoln, the show's first and primary protagonist, and Michonne, played by Danai Gurira, who left the series in Season 10, Episode 13, "What We Become," to search for Rick and bring him home to their children and their found family. This spin-off is hotly anticipated as it can finally shed light on where Rick has been in the years that have passed since Season 9, Episode 5 when he was taken away in a mysterious helicopter. Another series also sees Daryl Dixon, played by fan favorite Norman Reedus, set off on an international adventure in Europe. But there is one spin-off that doesn't make...
- 10/14/2023
- by Ben Gibbons
- Collider.com
Jennifer Gamez and Kellie Marsalli were strangers until a chance encounter at AMC Lincoln Square 13 on Friday night. As one ascended and the other descended the escalator at one of New York City’s busiest movie theaters, they swapped friendship bracelets to commemorate being among the first to watch the “Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour” concert film.
“I was admiring her bracelet selection and her cat shirt,” Gamez, 33, says. Marsalli, 53, wearing a “Lover”-inspired pink suit over a feline-printed top, adds, “That’s the whole thing with Taylor Swift. She brings all ages, all backgrounds, all different personalities together.”
There’s no missing the Swifties in the room, likely decked out in pastels, glitter and concert tees. Inside the lobby, the energy was palpable as new friends took pictures of each other and old pals posed for selfies with posters. Thanks to Swift’s global appeal, her concert film — which...
“I was admiring her bracelet selection and her cat shirt,” Gamez, 33, says. Marsalli, 53, wearing a “Lover”-inspired pink suit over a feline-printed top, adds, “That’s the whole thing with Taylor Swift. She brings all ages, all backgrounds, all different personalities together.”
There’s no missing the Swifties in the room, likely decked out in pastels, glitter and concert tees. Inside the lobby, the energy was palpable as new friends took pictures of each other and old pals posed for selfies with posters. Thanks to Swift’s global appeal, her concert film — which...
- 10/14/2023
- by Rebecca Rubin
- Variety - Film News
"Our goal is scary and original," Jason Blum said of Blumhouse at New York Comic Con 2023. "Even when we're doing IP or sequels, we always try to do something new."
Blum is a curator of the bloodcurdling, often with a dash of comedic rib-cracking. After all, he told his fans that "comedy and horror are cousins in many ways." The timing of a scare is linked to the timing of a joke. His producing credits include the likes of "M3GAN" and the "Halloween" trilogy. With that in mind, a house of horror-heads gathered at New York Comic Con's "Blumfest" to splash into more Blum-produced films, from the time travel hijinks of "Totally Killer," an evil swimming pool in "Night Swim," and the highly anticipated video game adaptation "Five Nights at Freddy's." The respective directors for each of these films joined Blum on the stage, with each of them having something...
Blum is a curator of the bloodcurdling, often with a dash of comedic rib-cracking. After all, he told his fans that "comedy and horror are cousins in many ways." The timing of a scare is linked to the timing of a joke. His producing credits include the likes of "M3GAN" and the "Halloween" trilogy. With that in mind, a house of horror-heads gathered at New York Comic Con's "Blumfest" to splash into more Blum-produced films, from the time travel hijinks of "Totally Killer," an evil swimming pool in "Night Swim," and the highly anticipated video game adaptation "Five Nights at Freddy's." The respective directors for each of these films joined Blum on the stage, with each of them having something...
- 10/14/2023
- by Caroline Cao
- Slash Film
Only a handful of TV shows have wielded the power to captivate, educate, and unsettle quite like Netflix’s Painkiller. It casts a stark light on the aggressive marketing of prescription painkillers, like OxyContin, and their role in fueling widespread addiction and devastation. This gripping series not only intrigues but also haunts its viewers, as it puts a spotlight on the harrowing opioid crisis by intricately weaving together multiple narrative threads.
- 10/14/2023
- by Jom Elauria
- Collider.com
David S. Goyer is one of the most prolific screenwriters working in Hollywood, but his laundry list of unmade projects might be even more fascinating than those that came to fruition. Over the years, Goyer has tackled tons of franchises and worked with heaps of different filmmakers. He undertook The Dark Knight series with Christopher Nolan, explored vast parts of the Dceu with folks like Zack Snyder, and brought Blade to life with filmmakers like Stephen Norrington and Guillermo del Toro. The original Blade, in particular, could have been a very different movie, had David Fincher ended up with the job. That's right, we're talking about the Se7en and Fight Club David Fincher! But what would that movie have been like, and how would it have strayed from the Blade movie that we ended up with?...
- 10/14/2023
- by Samuel Williamson
- Collider.com
Although Adam Driver portrays legendary sports-car magnate Enzo Ferrari in Michael Mann’s biographical drama, the actor didn’t get to drive one of the 1950s-era replicas for “Ferrari.” Instead, he drove an “open-wheel single seater” that was modified to connect a camera to it.
Asked how it was getting behind the wheel of that particular vintage sports car, Driver simply replied, “Terrifying.”
“It teleports you back to the time and you realize if you turn left or right the wrong way, then you’re dead,” Driver told Variety at the “Ferrari” North American premiere at the New York Film Festival Friday night. “There’s at least seatbelts in the newer cars.”
Driver described the single seater as a “moving coffin” at a New York Film Festival press conference earlier on Friday.
The driving occurred at “an abandoned airstrip in Modena, Italy,” he recalled. “And you can really feel how dangerous they are obviously,...
Asked how it was getting behind the wheel of that particular vintage sports car, Driver simply replied, “Terrifying.”
“It teleports you back to the time and you realize if you turn left or right the wrong way, then you’re dead,” Driver told Variety at the “Ferrari” North American premiere at the New York Film Festival Friday night. “There’s at least seatbelts in the newer cars.”
Driver described the single seater as a “moving coffin” at a New York Film Festival press conference earlier on Friday.
The driving occurred at “an abandoned airstrip in Modena, Italy,” he recalled. “And you can really feel how dangerous they are obviously,...
- 10/14/2023
- by Michaela Zee
- Variety - Film News
Tom Oyer, senior vice president of member relations and awards at the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, is exiting his post after 16 years, Variety has learned exclusively.
On Friday, Oyer shared the news of his departure in a letter sent to colleagues and industry professionals.
A beloved figure by Academy members and staffers, Oyer has made vital and notable contributions during his tenure, including his involvement with diversity initiative Aperture 2020, modernizing the voting process for awards and the digital Academy Screening Room. His other footprints are seen in fundamental rules and changes within the various branches, particularly in the Documentary Branch. In 2012, he was crucial in implementing the seven-day theatrical requirement for docs and expanding the preliminary voting to the entire branch membership. Before that, only a small number of volunteers would vote.
“Tom has been an integral and valuable member of this team for many years,” the...
On Friday, Oyer shared the news of his departure in a letter sent to colleagues and industry professionals.
A beloved figure by Academy members and staffers, Oyer has made vital and notable contributions during his tenure, including his involvement with diversity initiative Aperture 2020, modernizing the voting process for awards and the digital Academy Screening Room. His other footprints are seen in fundamental rules and changes within the various branches, particularly in the Documentary Branch. In 2012, he was crucial in implementing the seven-day theatrical requirement for docs and expanding the preliminary voting to the entire branch membership. Before that, only a small number of volunteers would vote.
“Tom has been an integral and valuable member of this team for many years,” the...
- 10/14/2023
- by Clayton Davis
- Variety - Film News
Browse any reputable list of the scariest horror movies ever made, and you’ll see The Texas Chain Saw Massacre occupying a prominent position near the top. It’s as inevitable as death, taxes, and Christopher Nolan films receiving criticism for their sound design – but unlike its companions, this is an achievement worth celebrating. Tobe Hooper may have only been a fresh-faced director when he envisioned using the heinous crimes of murderers like Ed Gein to critique the sociopolitical landscape of a post-Watergate America, but upon witnessing his creation in person, one can rightly identify it as the work of a true master. Few films capture the terror of a living nightmare so accurately, and even fewer torment their viewers with such emotional and visceral abuse they’re left just as damaged as its unfortunate protagonist.
- 10/14/2023
- by Matthew Mosley
- Collider.com
In Barbie, director Greta Gerwig made fantastical use of the eponymous Mattel toy to offer meta commentaries on gender, society, and the iconic doll itself. After years of animated content in the Barbie Dreamhouse series, Gerwig's blockbuster brought Barbie into the live-action sphere and launched Mattel Films into the Hollywood mainstream. 35 years prior, however, a different director made his debut film using Barbie-like dolls in equally creative ways. Though it didn't receive Mattel's blessings and is notoriously hard to find due to copyright issues, the unique film perseveres as a cult-classic for those lucky enough to have seen it.
- 10/14/2023
- by Andrew McGowan
- Collider.com
Darren Aronofsky’s Sphere film, “Postcard From Earth,” is responsible for establishing all kinds of historic cinematic firsts — like the fact that it is the only movie ever to be released in 18K resolution on a screen that spans 160,000 square feet.
But movie buffs will particularly enjoy one first that doesn’t fully reveal itself until the very last 90 seconds or so of the 50-minute running time, in the massive Las Vegas dome where the film just premiered.
The end credits begin appearing in the middle of the screen, as one would expect — or at least in what counts as the middle, if your field of vision is trained forward and not skyward. And then the credits expand out from there, bit by bit, until a substantial portion of the LED screen is filled by the entire list of names of people who worked on “Postcard From Earth,” all at once.
But movie buffs will particularly enjoy one first that doesn’t fully reveal itself until the very last 90 seconds or so of the 50-minute running time, in the massive Las Vegas dome where the film just premiered.
The end credits begin appearing in the middle of the screen, as one would expect — or at least in what counts as the middle, if your field of vision is trained forward and not skyward. And then the credits expand out from there, bit by bit, until a substantial portion of the LED screen is filled by the entire list of names of people who worked on “Postcard From Earth,” all at once.
- 10/14/2023
- by Chris Willman
- Variety - Film News
Known for The Virgin Suicides and Lost in Translation, the Academy Award-winning filmmaker has made a name for herself in the industry, enduring one of the most intriguing directors of her generation. Although she is the daughter of renowned filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola, Sofia has a distinctive style of her own that makes her stand out from the bunch. Her approach to female teenage characters and girlhood, for one — both of which she tackles with respect and earnestness — is one of the most defining features in her dreamy, aesthetically pleasing films.
- 10/14/2023
- by Daniela Gama
- Collider.com
From hidden gems to films everyone's buzzing about, there are seemingly limitless good movies on Netflix. It can be difficult to choose, but this article will help you find just what you're looking for: whether it be a comedy that'll have you laughing so hard you cry or a heartbreaking drama that'll have the tears flowing for a different reason. We've compiled the best movies to watch on Netflix right now to help you with the process. Better yet? We update this list every week to keep the suggestions fresh.
- 10/14/2023
- by Yael Tygiel
- Collider.com
The iconic director and creative mastermind Tim Burton, known for projects such as Edward Scissorhands, Beetlejuice, Batman, and the recent Netflix sensation Wednesday starring Jenna Ortega, has become synonymous with classic gothic entertainment (read: gold for Hot Topic shoppers). Though his hits are critically revered and have huge fanbases, he does have the occasional movie that misses the mark. Mars Attacks, for instance — 1996's campy dark comedy about alien space invaders — is beloved by fans, but received mixed reviews. From the depths of Planet of the Apes to the heights of A Nightmare Before Christmas, Burton has been all over the critical board. Dark Shadows, Burton's take on a beloved '60s vampire soap, was no different. Though Burton and the film's frequent collaborator, Johnny Depp, often talked about their personal passions for the project, the resulting product — a strange mix of comedy, horror, shockingly pale skin, and understated performances — was not well received.
- 10/13/2023
- by Cameron Gorman
- Collider.com
"Lost in Space" star and early television mainstay Mark Goddard has passed away, The Hollywood Reporter confirms. The actor who was best known for his role as pilot Major Don West in the seminal sci-fi series was 87 years old and is survived by his wife Evelyn Pezzulich, and his children, including producer Melissa Goddard.
Pezzulich announced Goddard's passing in a Facebook post (via Deadline), writing that the actor ultimately succumbed to lung disease that was not diagnosed until shortly before his death. "I'm so sorry to tell you that my wonderful husband passed away on October 10," Pezzulich shared. She continued: "Several days after celebrating his 87th birthday, he was hospitalized with pneumonia. We were hopeful when he was transferred to a rehabilitation center, but then doctors discovered he was in the final stages of pulmonary fibrosis for which there is no cure."
"Lost in Space" castmate Bill Mumy also memorialized Goddard on Facebook,...
Pezzulich announced Goddard's passing in a Facebook post (via Deadline), writing that the actor ultimately succumbed to lung disease that was not diagnosed until shortly before his death. "I'm so sorry to tell you that my wonderful husband passed away on October 10," Pezzulich shared. She continued: "Several days after celebrating his 87th birthday, he was hospitalized with pneumonia. We were hopeful when he was transferred to a rehabilitation center, but then doctors discovered he was in the final stages of pulmonary fibrosis for which there is no cure."
"Lost in Space" castmate Bill Mumy also memorialized Goddard on Facebook,...
- 10/13/2023
- by Valerie Ettenhofer
- Slash Film
Looking for the best shows to binge-watch on Netflix? Never fear. We've compiled a list of the best shows on the platform ready for you to peruse, from the funniest comedies to the most devastating dramas to crime and sci-fi series that'll have you on the edge of your seat. There are quite literally thousands of good shows to watch on Netflix — this article will help you choose which to dive into next.
- 10/13/2023
- by Yael Tygiel
- Collider.com
Martin Scorsese may not have been all about bombs and Barbies this summer, but he still appreciates the push “Barbenheimer” made for theatergoing.
The “Killers of the Flower Moon” director told the Hindustan Times that while he still has not seen “Barbie” or “Oppenheimer,” he found the summer event of the season with both blockbusters to be “wonderful” for the state of cinema.
“I do think that the combination of ‘Oppenheimer’ and ‘Barbie’ was something special,” Scorsese said. “It seemed to be, I hate that word, but the perfect storm. It came about at the right time. And the most important thing is that people went to watch these in a theater. And I think that’s wonderful.”
The Oscar winner continued, “The way it fit perfectly — a film with such entertainment value, purely with the bright colors — and a film with such severity and strength, and pretty much about...
The “Killers of the Flower Moon” director told the Hindustan Times that while he still has not seen “Barbie” or “Oppenheimer,” he found the summer event of the season with both blockbusters to be “wonderful” for the state of cinema.
“I do think that the combination of ‘Oppenheimer’ and ‘Barbie’ was something special,” Scorsese said. “It seemed to be, I hate that word, but the perfect storm. It came about at the right time. And the most important thing is that people went to watch these in a theater. And I think that’s wonderful.”
The Oscar winner continued, “The way it fit perfectly — a film with such entertainment value, purely with the bright colors — and a film with such severity and strength, and pretty much about...
- 10/13/2023
- by Samantha Bergeson
- Indiewire
The red carpet for Sofia Coppola’s “Priscilla” premiere in L.A. on Monday has been canceled amid current world events, distributor A24 confirmed. Furthermore, the venue for the screening has been changed because of a dispute between IATSE and the Hollywood Legion Theater, which is a part of the veterans’ organization American Legion.
A representative for the film released a statement about the red carpet saying, “Out of respect for the events going on in the world, we will be forgoing a red carpet for the ‘Priscilla’ Los Angeles Premiere.”
With escalating violence in Israel and Palestine, the “Priscilla” carpet is not the first to be canceled. The Academy Museum also decided to forgo the red carpet at the annual fundraising gala, which was scheduled for Saturday, before choosing to postpone the event altogether “out of respect for the devastating conflict and loss of life happening overseas.”
Regarding the...
A representative for the film released a statement about the red carpet saying, “Out of respect for the events going on in the world, we will be forgoing a red carpet for the ‘Priscilla’ Los Angeles Premiere.”
With escalating violence in Israel and Palestine, the “Priscilla” carpet is not the first to be canceled. The Academy Museum also decided to forgo the red carpet at the annual fundraising gala, which was scheduled for Saturday, before choosing to postpone the event altogether “out of respect for the devastating conflict and loss of life happening overseas.”
Regarding the...
- 10/13/2023
- by Jaden Thompson
- Variety - Film News
From Capote to Punch Drunk Love, Philip Seymour Hoffman proved that he had limitless range when it came to the scope and breadth of the characters he plays. Maybe his most emotional role of all is in a film that you might have skipped over back in 1999 when he played a gay drag queen named Rusty opposite Robert De Niro in Flawless. Though the film was not one of Hoffman's most widely seen projects, his heart-rendering story of a flamboyant drag queen awaiting gender reassignment surgery is one of the most poignant roles of his career. Flawless was his first film coming off the heels of two very successful box office hits Boogie Nights and a smaller role in The Big Lebowski, and just before The Talented Mr. Ripley and Magnolia, so it flew under the radar a little bit. Of course, we are talking about a cisgender male actor playing a trans woman.
- 10/13/2023
- by Jeffrey Speicher
- Collider.com
George Lucas' Star Wars was always intended to be enormous, told across multiple movies. For example, one needs to look no further than the title of an early draft of his script, "The Adventures of Luke Starkiller, as taken from the Journal of the Whills, Saga One: The Star Wars". However, while shooting the 1977 original, few could predict the accuracy of Lucas' predictions for how the franchise would evolve, with some actors portraying the now-iconic characters for over 40 years. "Harrison [Ford], Mark Hamill, Billy [Dee Williams] and I [became] heritage players" according to C-3Po actor Anthony Daniels, who admits that he doubted Star Wars would amount to anything special at the time of filming.
- 10/13/2023
- by Aled Owen
- Collider.com
There are so many good movies on Hulu, from side-splitting comedies to passionate romances to terrifying horror films. There are so many good ones, in fact, that it can be hard to wade through everything to find the cream of the crop. Never fear: We've compiled a list of the best movies on Hulu so you can find new and old favorites alike fast.
- 10/13/2023
- by Yael Tygiel
- Collider.com
This post contains spoilers for "Gen V."
The college-age characters on "Gen V" have some powers that are pretty unique from those we've seen on its parent show, "The Boys." The most mysterious powers, however, belong to Marie (Jaz Sinclair). Sure, we've seen blood-bending in various forms before in other media, but the full extent of Marie's capabilities has yet to be seen. Each episode sees her revealing more elements of her abilities, because an attunement to blood is going to be really powerful. A whole lot of living things are chock-full of the stuff, including humans, which makes her a serious possible threat. Many other supes have some kind of restrictions to their abilities but the only thing that could really short out Marie seems to be losing too much of her own blood, which hasn't come close to happening yet.
In episodes 4 and 5 of "Gen V," Marie's blood...
The college-age characters on "Gen V" have some powers that are pretty unique from those we've seen on its parent show, "The Boys." The most mysterious powers, however, belong to Marie (Jaz Sinclair). Sure, we've seen blood-bending in various forms before in other media, but the full extent of Marie's capabilities has yet to be seen. Each episode sees her revealing more elements of her abilities, because an attunement to blood is going to be really powerful. A whole lot of living things are chock-full of the stuff, including humans, which makes her a serious possible threat. Many other supes have some kind of restrictions to their abilities but the only thing that could really short out Marie seems to be losing too much of her own blood, which hasn't come close to happening yet.
In episodes 4 and 5 of "Gen V," Marie's blood...
- 10/13/2023
- by Danielle Ryan
- Slash Film
Neon head Tom Quinn opened up about the international submission process for the Academy Awards during this week’s “Screen Talk” podcast.
According to Quinn, the process for how countries submit their films to the Oscars makes “absolutely no sense.” Quinn was a surprise guest at IndieWire’s Screen Talk Live during the 2023 New York Film Festival. The executive told co-hosts Anne Thompson and Ryan Lattanzio that “The Taste of Things” being selected as the official submission from France over Neon-distributed “Anatomy of a Fall” for Best International feature is an example of the pitfalls of a “humiliating” process to submit films in an “Eurovision”-esque competition, with only one movie representing each country.
“Anatomy of a Fall” won the Palme d’Or at Cannes and has screened at Telluride and the New York Film Festival, among other festivals. Trần Anh Hùng’s “The Taste of Things,” starring Juliette Binoche,...
According to Quinn, the process for how countries submit their films to the Oscars makes “absolutely no sense.” Quinn was a surprise guest at IndieWire’s Screen Talk Live during the 2023 New York Film Festival. The executive told co-hosts Anne Thompson and Ryan Lattanzio that “The Taste of Things” being selected as the official submission from France over Neon-distributed “Anatomy of a Fall” for Best International feature is an example of the pitfalls of a “humiliating” process to submit films in an “Eurovision”-esque competition, with only one movie representing each country.
“Anatomy of a Fall” won the Palme d’Or at Cannes and has screened at Telluride and the New York Film Festival, among other festivals. Trần Anh Hùng’s “The Taste of Things,” starring Juliette Binoche,...
- 10/13/2023
- by Samantha Bergeson
- Indiewire
Spoiler Alert: This article contains spoilers for “Divinity,” which releases in New York on Friday, Los Angeles on Oct. 20 and goes wide on Nov. 3.
In his latest movie “Divinity,” Stephen Dorff’s character is introduced with an extended sex scene and ends the film transformed into a monstrous, muscular creature with a “mushroom cloud” head that looks suspiciously like a penis. It’s not your average sci-fi movie, to say the least.
“Divinity” is a black-and-white, out-of-this-world indie, written and directed by Eddie Alcazar, that premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival and received a SAG-AFTRA interim agreement ahead of its wide release. Dorff plays Jaxxon Pierce, the son of a scientist who invented a magical drug attempting to grant immortality. Years later, Jaxxon has taken control of his father’s company and corrupted his father’s original dream. The drug, called Divinity, grants its users youth and beauty,...
In his latest movie “Divinity,” Stephen Dorff’s character is introduced with an extended sex scene and ends the film transformed into a monstrous, muscular creature with a “mushroom cloud” head that looks suspiciously like a penis. It’s not your average sci-fi movie, to say the least.
“Divinity” is a black-and-white, out-of-this-world indie, written and directed by Eddie Alcazar, that premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival and received a SAG-AFTRA interim agreement ahead of its wide release. Dorff plays Jaxxon Pierce, the son of a scientist who invented a magical drug attempting to grant immortality. Years later, Jaxxon has taken control of his father’s company and corrupted his father’s original dream. The drug, called Divinity, grants its users youth and beauty,...
- 10/13/2023
- by Jordan Moreau
- Variety - Film News
This Christmas Day will be more than just festivities and Mariah Carey for some, because motorheads will spend around two hours in front of the big screen watching Michael Mann’s Ferrari. Ferrari, which will be distributed by Neon, has released a fresh new poster of the movie, featuring teaser art of star Adam Driver. The movie itself, as evident by the name, is based on the real-life story of Enzo Ferrari (Driver). The movie has intense racing sequences, including a terrible, graphic accident based on a true story. The plot is based on a book written by Brock Yates in 1991 and touches on the themes of bankruptcy, divorce, grief, racing, and ambition.
- 10/13/2023
- by Safwan Azeem
- Collider.com
The Simpsons is getting into spooky season with a first look at the upcoming Treehouse of Horror Xxxivi episodes. Otherwise known as Halloween specials for the longtime animated sitcom, The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror episodes all encompass a closed three-episode arc for the family. As these stories all have horror or supernatural elements attached to them, Treehouse of Horror typically takes place outside the show's continuity. Traditionally, these horror-comedy episodes tend to unleash absolute mayhem on the city of Springfield. And while the feature won't air until after Halloween, the network is laying out breadcrumbs for fans to enjoy as a palate cleanser until Treehouse of Horror Xxxivi airs.
- 10/13/2023
- by Jasmine Roberts
- Collider.com
Luann de Lesseps and Bethenny Frankel both were co-stars on The Real Housewives of New York. Bethenny ended up leaving the show in 2019. She went on to call out studios, including her own, for exploiting talent. Bethenny was inspired by the SAG-AFTRA strike and put out demands such as a need for a union in reality television to address issues of fair payment. Many other reality TV stars supported her actions and agreed with her demands. This included The Real Housewives star Nene Leaks, Carole Radziwill, and Lisa Vanderpump.
- 10/13/2023
- by Areesha Khan
- Collider.com
When Black Panther was released in 2018, it quickly became one of the most important and impactful MCU films. It made incredible strides in representation and on-screen diversity, in addition to being a visually striking and emotionally impactful story. Much of the narrative weight came from the heavy focus on family relationships, loyalties, and responsibilities. The film followed T’Challa (Chadwick Boseman) becoming the King of Wakanda and addressed his relationship with his late father, his mourning mother Ramonda (Angela Bassett), and his younger sister Shuri (Letitia Wright). But it’s not just his direct family that he engages with as T’Challa’s relationships with his former lover, friend, and cultural advisors are also vitally important in the movie’s narrative.
- 10/13/2023
- by Emmanuel Ronquillo
- Collider.com
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