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Kathleen Kennedy Says ‘Indiana Jones 5’ Isn’t A Reboot, Harrison Ford “Can’t Wait”

At some point, somebody’s going to have to make a decision about the future of Indiana Jones. For now, Lucasfilm is content to give Harrison Ford one more crack at the whip. While on the BAFTAs red carpet, Lucasfilm’s Kathleen Kennedy confirmed Indiana Jones 5 will not be a reboot, and development on the long-awaited sequel is moving right along, albeit slowly…

“We’re working away, getting the script where we want it to be and then we’ll be ready to go,” Kennedy told BBC. “Harrison Ford will be involved, yeah. It’s not a reboot; it’s a continuation. He can’t wait. He absolutely is [up for it.]”

At Ford’s age he can’t afford to wait long for anything. Assuming the film hits the July 9th 2021 release date, Ford will be on the verge of his 79th birthday. How much rope swinging and swashbuckling can be in his future, really?

If plans had stayed on course for a 2019 release date we’d probably be talking about who will take over the role after Ford. That’s not to say this next movie will see him passing the torch, but something will have to be done at some point soon, right?  It’s unclear what screenwriter David Koepp, Lucasfilm, and director Steven Spielberg have in store. All we know is there’s been a real struggle to nail down the script. This is Koepp’s second go’round, with Dan Fogelman and Jon Kasdan, giving it a shot before he returned.

At one point it was rumored Koepp would be continuing his story from 2008’s Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, a film that continues to be a sore spot with fans. Given the way that was received, not only would it be a terrible idea for fans, but for possibly finishing off Ford’s run as the character.

Will Forte and Katlin Olson Ruin Their Resale Value in ‘Flipped’

It must be Quibi trailer day! This one seems to fit a bit more then the trailer for The Fugitive we posted earlier. Will Forte and Kaitlin Olson play a couple who buy a home to renovate as part of an HGTV style house flipping contest. The game changes a bit on demo day when they knock down a wall and find that those walls are filled with cold, hard, drug money. So they put it in a high interest savings account and lived happily ever after…..nope, you guessed it, the drug lords show up. Instead of killing them however, they….make them design houses? Yeah, comedy! On that premise I would pass, but the trailer makes a strong case, Will Forte is one of the most underrated comedic talents out there and any one that’s seen an episode of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia… knows how great Kaitlin Olson can be. The chemistry between the two is kind of tough to make out with what we get here but as long as that’s not totally absent we may have one worth watching on our hands.

The One-Armed Man Is At It Again. Quibi’s ‘The Fugitive’ Show Has a Trailer

Quibi, yet another streaming site, this one focusing on small bits of entertainment designed to be watched specifically on mobile devices, has caused a bit of buzz as of late. Now we have a trailer, and while the run-times may be small it doesn’t look like the expense to make this new remake of The Fugitive was. It looks fine, Kiefer is Jack Bauer and Boyd Holbrook does a lot of running, I’m sure it’ll be entertaining…I just can’t help to wonder how a company with such a unique and original idea decided on a remake of a remake, of a remake, was the way to go for their big debut. Surely there’s some cool idea out there that would take advantage of the length and format. Check out the trailer below…maybe I’m just being grumpy.

‘The Way Back’ Trailer: Ben Affleck Coaches Basketball To Overcome His Personal Demons

So in my review of Dee Rees’ The Last Thing He Wanted, I commented on Ben Affleck’s listless performance, one that saw the actor completely checked out from what was going on. The thing is, Affleck doesn’t seem to be all that interested in the stuff he has no real investment in. Fortunately, he seems to be on the ball in The Way Back (aka Finding the Way Back in the UK), a sobering drama about an alcoholic who sets himself on the road to recovery by coaching high school basketball at his alma mater.

It’s a fairly typical setup, sure, but so what? Affleck gets to reunite with director Gavin O’Connor, who he worked with on the surprise smash The Accountant. O’Connor is also the director behind Miracle, only the greatest hockey drama ever made. This should be right in his wheelhouse. The rest of the cast includes Al Madrigal, Michaela Watkins, Janina Gavankar, and Glynn Turman.

Warner Bros. has kicked the movie around a little bit, which could be a reason for concern. It was due to open late last year for a potential awards season push, but was delayed until March 6th where it has remained.

SYNOPSIS: Jack Cunningham (Ben Affleck) once had a life filled with promise. In high school, he was a basketball phenom with a full university scholarship, when suddenly, for reasons unknown, he walked away from the game, forfeiting his future. Now years later, Jack is spiralling down, triggered by an unspeakable loss, and drowning in the alcoholism that cost him his marriage and any hope for a better life. When he is asked to coach the basketball team at his alma mater, which has fallen far since his glory days, he reluctantly accepts, surprising no one more than himself. As the boys start to come together as a team and win, Jack may have finally found a reason to confront the demons that have derailed him. But will it be enough to fill the void, heal the deep wounds of his past, and set him on the road to redemption?



‘I Am Not Okay With This’ Trailer: Sophia Lillis Is A High Schooler With Superpowers

Whether it’s her roles in It and It: Chapter 2, HBO’s Sharp Objects, or the currently-in-theaters horror Gretel & Hansel, one thing is clear: Sophia Lillis is a star on the rise. And now she turns her attention to Netflix for I Am Not Okay with This, a series that boasts the combined talents of the minds behind Stranger Things and The End of the F***ing World, so it’s got a good shot of being a huge hit.

The series stars Lillis as an awkward teen dealing with all of the usual angst that comes along with being a high schooler, only on top of that she’s also dealing with her growing superpowers.

SYNOPSIS: I Am Not Okay With This is an irreverent origin story that follows a teenage girl who’s navigating the trials and tribulations of high school, all while dealing with the complexities of her family, her budding sexuality, and mysterious superpowers just beginning to awaken deep within her. From director/EP of The End of the F***ing World Jonathan Entwistle and the producers of Stranger Things comes a new series based on the Charles Forsman graphic novel.

Behind the show are  The End of the F***king World’s Jonathan Entwistle and Christy Hall, with Stranger Things’ Shawn Levy as an exec-producer. Lillis is reunited in the cast by It co-star Wyatt Oleff, along with Sofia Bryant and Kathleen Rose Perkins.

I Am Not Okay with This comes to Netflix on February 26th.

DC Readers: Attend A Free Early Screening Of ‘Downhill’

We’re happy to offer our DC readers the chance to hit the slopes early and attend a free screening of Downhill, the new comedy starring Will Ferrell and Julia Louis-Dreyfus. The film is directed by Nat Faxon and Jim Rash (The Way Way Back) and is inspired by the acclaimed Swedish comedy Force Majeure.

SYNOPSIS: Barely escaping an avalanche during a family ski vacation in the Alps, a married couple is thrown into disarray as they are forced to reevaluate their lives and how they feel about each other. Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Will Ferrell star in this biting comedy. 


The screening takes place on Tuesday, February 11th at 7:00pm at AMC Mazza Gallerie. If you’d like to attend, simply go to the Fox Searchlight site here. Please remember all screenings are first come first served and you will need to arrive early to ensure seating. Enjoy the show!

Downhill opens in theaters on February 14th.

Disney Announces ‘Hamilton’ Movie With Original Broadway Cast Coming In 2021

We know that a Hamilton movie is going to happen someday, it’s only a matter of time. But before that happens, Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Broadway smash will be seen on the big screen, and it’s coming sooner than you might think.

Back in 2016 we learned that a “live capture” of the show was filmed at the Rogers Theatre in New York City, featuring the Broadway cast and Miranda just as he was exiting the production…

We didn’t know what they were going to do with it or when we’d see it, but now Disney has confirmed the film will arrive on October 15th 2021. The original Broadway cast features a number of stars who have gone on to bigger things. Besides Miranda himself, the cast included Anthony Ramos, Leslie Odom Jr., Chris Jackson, Jonathan Groff, Daveed Diggs, and Renee Elise Goldsberry.

So for those who couldn’t be “in the room where it happened”, this is your chance to experience the phenomenon on the big screen. Check out the press release below.

The film of the original Broadway cast performingHamiltonis a leap forward in the art of “live capture.” This movie transports its audience into the world of the Broadway show in a uniquely intimate way. Combining the best elements of live theater and film, the result is a cinematic stage performance that is a wholly new way to experience Hamilton.

Female ‘Star Wars’ Director Will “Absolutely” Happen Says Lucasfilm’s Kathleen Kennedy

The saddest thing about what Lucasfilm’s Kathleen Kennedy said about hiring a female director for Star Wars is that it needs to be reported at all. The franchise’s lack of diversity has been a hot-button issue for quite a while, and we’ve begun to see that change with The Mandalorian, but on the big screen there doesn’t appear to be a change on the horizon. Yet. But Kennedy assures us a change is coming, and that a woman will direct a Star Wars movie…someday.

“Oh, we already got’em,” she told BBC from the BAFTAs red carpet. “We’re doing ‘The Mandalorian’ [and] we’ve got two or three fantastic women working with ‘Star Wars’…we’re cultivating a lot of great talent.”


The ladies she’s referring to her Bryce Dallas Howard and Deborah Chow, the latter also getting behind the camera for the upcoming Obi-Wan Kenobi series. 

But when asked about the big screen, Kennedy enthusiastically replied “Oh, absolutely! Without question.”


You would think Kennedy would be eager to get a woman behind the camera given the way things have worked out with the male directors lately. Perhaps a female is what Star Wars needs to turn things around? Maybe in 2022 when the next movie, whatever that may be, is expected to drop?

Review: ‘Gretel & Hansel’, The Brothers Grimm Tale Gets An Occult, Feminist Spin

The power that comes from a young girl’s transition into womanhood has long sent chills up the spines of men, and been the basis of many a horror film by male directors. Into that specific sub-genre comes Oz Perkins’ Gretel & Hansel, which as the title suggests puts an emphasis on the sister, played by It and Sharp Objects star Sophia Lillis. It doesn’t take long to figure out why the Brothers Grimm tale has been flipped in such a way. Femininity, seen as both a curse and a gift, is the driving force in a film rich with symbolism and foreboding atmosphere, but not much in the way of urgency.

In this version of the story, Gretel is 16-year-old and on the cusp of becoming a woman; her brother Hansel (Sam Leakey) is an annoyingly precocious 8-year-old, always starving for food and attention. Their mother has effectively thrown them out of the house due to her own hardships, and navigating the world as a beautiful female proves dangerous for Gretel. They need work and food, but when Gretel is asked by a disgusting landowner about a job as a servant girl, his reply is to question whether she’s maintained her “maidenhead” or virginity. Clearly, this guy doesn’t need a servant to tidy up around the house. Hansel doesn’t understand when his sister comes out jobless, all he knows is he wants cake and that dirty old man might’ve had some.

We aren’t the only ones who perceive Hansel to be a deadweight on Gretel’s back. Approaching a strangely polygonal home that smells of a buffet dinner, Hansel and Gretel are invited inside by the Witch (played by the Borg Queen herself, Alice Krige), a nefarious smile always on her face, a stern lesson about power always a moment away, and a table full of food always at the ready. She takes a keen interest in Gretel, recognizing in her a deep well of eldritch energy linked to her own origin. The Witch wants Gretel to embrace it and everything that comes with it. And to do that…well, Hansel might need to get stuffed into a meat pie or something. The boy’s gotta go.

So forget the gingerbread and gumdrop houses; Gretel & Hansel is draped in shadow and rich in dark mythology, working in concert with a murky Gothic style that has become popular since Robert Eggers’ The Witch. And like that film, its plodding pace and heaviness are less likely to appeal to casual audiences who are expecting more scares and a pushing beyond the PG-13 envelope. Other than a grisly smorgasbord of human entrails splayed out as the evening’s supper the movie is slight on genuine chills. The film’s strengths are in its evocative style blending the past and present, aided by a bold synth score by Robert Coudet, not to mention the simmering performance by Lillis, and Krige’s continuing ability to scare the pants off of us with a single look. Krige is terrific here, as the Witch can barely contain her ignoble motives behind every seeming act of charity. At only 87 minutes, Gretel & Hansel doesn’t dig into its womanly themes for too long, but the investment will be worth it for those eager for an occult spin on the empowerment narrative.

3 out of 5

New ‘Silent Hill’ And ‘Fatal Frame’ Movies In The Works From Christophe Gans

While some are looking at Detective Pikachu and the possible success of Sonic the Hedgehog as proof video game movies have finally arrived, there have been successful ones for years. Looking beyond the Resident Evil series of movies, there was also 2006’s Silent Hill, based on the popular horror video game and directed by Christophe Gans. The movie made $100M and launched an eventual sequel, 2012’s Silent Hill: Revelation, a critical failure with an entirely new creative team.

Now Gans says he’s planning his comeback to Silent Hill, along with another horror film project, Fatal Frame, which is based on the Project Zero video game series.  He tells French site Allocine

“I am working on the adaptation of the video game Project Zero (aka Fatal Frame). The film will take place in Japan. I especially don’t want to uproot the game from its Japanese haunted house setting, and we’re also working on a new Silent Hill. The Silent Hill project will always be anchored in this atmosphere of a small American town, ravaged by Puritanism. I think it’s time to make a new one.”


Gans was deeply invested in the first Silent Hill movie, which is why it was so surprising when he didn’t return for the sequel years later. It was probably for the better. Fatal Frame, which centers on characters that use a powerful camera which traps and pacifies spirits, has been targeted for adaptation for nearly two decades, with Steven Spielberg involved in the script with John Rogers. There hasn’t been any news on it since 2014, however, and it’s unclear who is involved other than Gans.

We haven’t seen much from Gans since Silent Hill. He skipped out on the sequel so he could direct the 2014 French adaptation of Beauty and the Beast (starring Lea Seydoux and Vincent Cassel), and that’s pretty much been it. He first came to the attention of American audiences with the 2001 historical action flick, Brotherhood of the Wolf.