Paramount really wants to stay in the Jeff Nichols business, and who can blame them? The Midnight Special and Loving director was entrusted to do a spinoff of John Krasinski’s wildly successful A Quiet Place, and now they’ve hired him for a future project in a similar genre.
Deadline reports Paramount has set Jeff Nichols to write and direct a still-untitled sci-fi film. That’s all we know about it, sadly, but anything with Nichols involved promises to not be easily defined.
Nichols’ A Quiet Place movie has a March 2023 release date and will be taking priority, which should come as no surprise. He’s done some big stuff before, but nothing on the franchise level before.
Throughout the history of Hollywood few things have gotten more attention then when a film or series promises to pit two action heroes against each other. In the 80s it was Schwarzenegger and Stallone, the 2000s gave us Vin Diesel vs The Rock and now, in 2021, we see the next generation do battle when Dave Bautista meets Jason Mamoa on the field of battle in season 2 of Apple TV+’s See
Apple TV+ has been struck by some weird curse wherein they deliver awesome programming but the hype machine never really takes notice. See premiered last year amongst a bevy of new shows (For All Mankind was one of the most notable), but I never heard a peep about it outside of official PR channels. Take a look at this official synopsis:
Far in a dystopian future, the human race has lost the sense of sight, and society has had to find new ways to interact, build, hunt, and to survive. All of that is challenged when a set of twins is born with sight.
A compelling plot, a charismatic star, and as you’ll notice in the trailer below, some real money thrown into production. Whatever the issue, Apple is doing their damnedest to get people to take notice. In the world of See, it has definitely worked on me. The trailer below is a montage of battle and carnage laden scenes narrated by Bautista, who plays not only Mamoa’s brother, but an enemy general that appears to have captured Mamoa’s daughter. I do have to admit that I’ve been spending alot of time playing Ghost of Tsushima, so the fact that Mamoa is dressed as a Samurai, and Bautista as a Mongol warlord may have something to do with my excitement. Regardless, I think you’ll be just as hyped as me after checking out the trailer below.
The great Baba Voss is storming into new territory to confront an old enemy, his brother. Starring Jason Momoa, Dave Bautista, and Alfre Woodard, return to the world of SEE on August 27 exclusively on Apple TV+
Kenya Barris is on quite a roll. The Black-ish creator recently wrote Eddie Murphy’s hit Coming 2 America, and is working on a remake of Cheaper by the Dozen along with a Richard Pryor biopic. And now you can add another big project, one that will star two-time Oscar nominee Jonah Hill.
THR reports Barris and Hill are teaming up on an untitled Netflix comedy inspired by the classic comedy Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner. That 1971 film starred Sidney Poitier, Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, and Katharine Houghton, centering on a white family who are stunned when their daughter brings home a black boyfriend.
Barris has proven himself skillful at tackling issues of race through comedy, and this seems like the perfect vehicle for him. He will make his directorial debut and co-write the script with Hill, who will also star in the film.
You can’t go wrong with the source material…well, mostly. Ashton Kutcher, Zoe Saldana, and Bernie Mac led the awful Guess Who back in 2005 and nobody wants a repeat of that.
Hill last appeared in 2019’s The Beach Bum opposite Matthew McConaughey and had voice roles in How to Train Your Dragon 3 and The Lego Movie 2. He’ll be seen in Adam McKay’s star-studded Don’t Look Up later this year.
Holler is set in a rural pocket of Southern Ohio where American manufacturing and opportunity are drying up. A determined young woman finds that she must balance school, grueling work and a broken family while trying to survive life’s unrelenting battles to avoid sinking into poverty. Alongside her older brother Blaze, Ruth Avery joins a dangerous scrap metal crew in order to pay for rent and basic necessities. Making her feature film debut and local Ohio native is writer and director, Nicole Riegel (Variety’s 10 Directors to Watch 2020).
Ruth Avery (Jessica Barden ,The End Of The F***king World) is in her senior year of high school and is grappling with what to do after graduation. Does she leave the home she knows to pursue a better life or stay local with her family who are barely keeping afloat? Ruth and her older brother Blaze (Gus Halper, Cold Pursuit) are left to take care of themselves when their drug addicted mother Rhonda (Pamela Adlon, King of the Hill and Californication) ends up in jail. Blaze (Halper) is seen at times visibly struggling to mentally fill the parental role but he couldn’t be more perfect. The love and tenacity he has while looking out for his younger sister is quite frankly, heroic. With notices piling up and no running water, the siblings scavenge through trash to trade cans for cash at a local junkyard. Even then, the payout is minimal.
Ruth gets an unexpected letter in the mail that says she’s been accepted into college and is upset that Blaze sent her application behind her back. She’s reluctant to go but knowing they need more money, she and her brother attempt to steal scraps at the very yard they would intend to sell back to. Needless to say, that idea doesn’t go as planned. The junkyard boss, Hark (Austin Amelio, The Walking Dead) is sympathetic to their situation and makes them an offer they can’t afford to lose. Ruth and Blaze spend the brutal winter working the scrap yards during the day and stealing valuable metal from the once thriving factories by night. Ruth realizes that the ultimate cost of an education for a girl like her may be more than she bargained for. She soon finds herself torn between a promising future and the family she would leave behind.
Holler captures grit and authenticity that centers around real issues that teenagers face when transitioning from adolescence to adulthood in dying industrial towns throughout America. Barden is powerful and sassy, portraying a girl who’s had to take on a lot at an even younger age while fanning her way out of a potential drug addicted and/or young pregnancy dark cloud that could eventually, consume her. Ruth (Barden) tries to maintain a relationship with her mother but proves to more difficult to withstand when it’s clear they won’t see eye to eye. She finds solace with Linda (Becky Ann Baker, Hunters and Freaks and Geeks) who is a close friend of her mothers. Linda is manager at one of the last remaining factories in town and is quite literally, an awesome ass mother figure to everyone. She is loving, respectful and a tough as nails woman who is a wonderful asset to a small town filled with diminishing hope.
Images of smoke stacks and dilapidated buildings are scattered throughout the film. The atmospheric ambiance projected is isolated, bleak, and saturated in gray tones. A beautiful use of visual and emotional context that really embodies the full gravity of what individuals affected by these overwhelmingly frustrating problems are subjected to. Although, some people may think that these elements could come across as slow and mundane. Holler is a poignant story with a talented cast, bringing truth to light of what’s happening beneath our crumbling and left to rot towns. I say, it’s worth a watch.
Holler will play in select theaters and on Demand/Digital on June 11th.
It’s a week of diverting blame and mischief as we talk through the newest foray into the weird and sometimes wicked lives of Ed and Lorraine Warren with The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It. Then it’s on to the last stop on the train to the next major MCU release with the first two episodes of Loki!. All this and much more, including Namor’s debut in Black Panther 2, and a thorough trashing of Jupiter’s Legacy…we like to kick things while they’re down.
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In the 1980s, the United Kingdom was flooded with video nasties – low budget exploitation and horror films. Enid Baines (Niamh Algar) plays a vital part in keeping British citizens safe from these films in Censor. Enid is a film censor – she watches hours upon hours of video nasties, viewing the atrocities so the public doesn’t have to. Along with the rest of her team, Enid decides what films wouldn’t be too damaging if the public viewed them. Enid is also as professional as they come. She is one of the first to arrive, and the last to leave. Often, she will sit alone in her dark and dimly lit office, pouring over reports, trying to get every detail right. Enid has the ability to separate her work from reality, allowing her to view these horrors without any lingering effects.
One fateful day a producer of one of the video nasty studios, Doug Smart (Michael Smiley), is in the office with a special film. It is an archival movie from a legend in the business – Frederick North (Adrian Schiller). North and Smart want Enid to be the one to watch and score the film. As Enid watches, she begins to uncover suppressed memories from her childhood. Memories from the day her little sister Nina (Amelle Child Villiers) disappeared, never to be heard from again. Memories that she’s watching unfold in front of her on screen – courtesy of Frederick North. As Enid keeps watching, she can’t help but notice how much actress Alice Lee (Sophia La Porta) looks like what she envisioned Nina would as an adult. Enid is convinced this is no coincidence and vows to find her sister.
Censor is directed by Prano Bailey-Bond who also co-wrote the film with Anthony Fletcher. Censor is Bailey-Bonds first feature length film and overall was an impressive debut. Bailey-Bond makes numerous cinematic choices throughout the film that work incredibly well. She manipulates colors to not only show the dark and desolate state of the world, but Enid’s inner turmoil. Enid is frequently bathed in red and/or blue mirroring the struggle within her. The meticulous and dependable Enid versus the reckless Enid that is obsessed with finding Nina. Bailey-Bond highlights Enid continuing down this treacherous path through the distortion of sound and sight, with Enid in a hazy, almost dream like state.
Bailey-Bond and Fletcher weave in flashbacks throughout the narrative to give the audience a glimpse of Enid’s past. As Enid is unearthing the memories the audience is experiencing them as well. These flashbacks not only help move the narrative forward, but they fill in valuable gaps of Enid’s past and what made her the way she is. Bailey-Bond and Fletcher manage to insert brief moments of humor. Just a quick line or statement at various points during Censor, but a majority of the humor lands. As Censor progresses, it devolves into the exact type of video nasty that Enid is trying to keep from the public. The film had an interesting premise and first few acts, but it begins to waiver in the second half. For a horror, the scares are also few and far between. Censor is worth a watch, but make sure to keep expectations in check.
Censor is available in theaters now, and will hit VOD on June 18th.
Are you ready to take to the seas again with James Wan, Jason Momoa, and Amber Heard? Wan revealed on his social media that the upcomingAquaman sequel will be titled Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom.
The news was later confirmed by Warner Bros. over Twitter…
So what is this “Lost Kingdom”, anyway? Well, there’s a theory out there that I think is pretty accurate. Remember this poster?
This poster was released way back in 2015 in the run-up to Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, and the assumption was that it referred to uniting the Justice League. But it’s looking as if it may have actually been a reference to the seven kingdoms of Atlantis. Remember, Justice League only had six members so it couldn’t have been a reference to that.
Those kingdoms of Atlantis are Trench, Brine, Xebellian, the Fisherman kingdom, the Atlanteans, the Deserters, and the lost city. Pretty cool.
Now, this is all just a theory that’s out there. Honestly, I think it’s too much to think there was this kind of plan so many years in advance, especially with all of the changes to the DCEU post-Snyder.
Then again, maybe all of this is right? We’ll find out when Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom opens December 16th 2022.
Of the many new characters introduced in Rogue One, Forest Whitaker’s rebel Saw Gerrera has been the most prevalent throughout the Star Wars universe. The character was introduced in The Clone Wars, only to go on to appear in the Fallen Order video game, Star Wars Rebels, and even this season of The Bad Batch. So am I at all surprised to discover Whitaker will return alongside Diego Luna in upcoming Andorseries on Disney+? Nope.
The news was revealed to a Swedish outlet by Andor co-star Stellan Skarsgard, who says he shares a “juicy” scene with Whitaker. Since we know little about Skarsgard’s character, it’s hard to say what his connection is to Saw Gerrera’s group of Partisans. Perhaps they’re fighting on the same side? Perhaps not.
The rest of the cast includes Adria Arjona, Fiona Shaw, Denise Gough, Kyle Soller, Robert Emms, and Genevieve O’Reilly who returns as Mon Mothma.
Andor hits Disney+ in 2022 and will run for 12 episodes.
What would a She-Hulk series be without one of her greatest and most powerful rivals? According to The Illuminerdi, villain Titania will be part of the Disney+ series, and she’ll be played by The Good Place‘s Jameela Jamil, which is pretty damn awesome.
Now, this is still unconfirmed but the prospect of Jamil being part of the MCU is just too delicious. The English actress is known for her role as the self-absorbed Tahani Al-Jamil on NBC’s The Good Place, and surprisingly, that background makes her perfect for this new version of Titania who is described as a “Kardashian-esque social media influencer in her 30s with a dark side.”
In the comics, Mary McPherran/Titania was a scrawny, bullied woman until granted immense superhuman strength by Doctor Doom. She then becomes the bully herself, battling She-Hulk and joining teams such as the Frightful Four and Masters of Evil.
Jamil would join a cast led by Tatiana Maslany as Jennifer Walters/SHe-Hulk, Mark Ruffalo as Bruce Banner/Hulk, Renee Elise Goldsberry as Amelia, Tim Roth as the Abomination, and Ginger Gonzaga as Walters’ best friend. She-Hulk will be directed by Kat Coiro and is expected to arrive in 2022.
Amazon’s hugely expensive Lord of the Rings series isn’t the only trip to Westeros fans can look forward to. Warner Bros. and New Line are working on a big screen animated movie, The War of the Rohirrim, set years before events in the main trilogy.
Behind the camera is director Kenji Kamiyama, known for Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex and Blade Runner: Black Lotus. Jeffrey Addiss and Will Matthews (The Dark Crystal: Age of Extinction) will write the screenplay.
Connection abound to Peter Jackson’s Oscar-winning trilogy of live-action films. Not only are we seeing Warner Bros. and New Line reunite for another trip to Middle Earth, but trilogy writer Philippa Boyens is consulting.
Here’s how TheWrap describes the film: “Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim” is set roughly 250 years before the events of “The Fellowship of the Ring” and follows the story of Helm Hammerhand. Casual “LOTR” fans may recognize that name for Helm’s Deep, the fortress that serves as the setting for the epic battle at the end of “The Two Towers.” But diehard Tolkien fans will know that Hammerhand was once a legendary King of Rohan. Tolkien described events of his life in appendices from the books, but the specifics of his story were never outlined.
Interestingly, this is planned as a standalone effort but will tie-in to Jackson’s trilogy, making this a must-see for the millions who look at those as classics. There will be no connection to anything Amazon is working on, however.