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Controversial ‘Rub & Tug’ Movie Reborn As TV Series With Trans Lead Actor And Writer

Remember Rub & Tug? I know it sounds like some R-rated Aubrey Plaza comedy, but for a couple of weeks in 2018 it was causing all kinds of drama in Hollywood. This was the movie that was going to star Scarlett Johansson in the true story of trans man Dante “Tex” Gill, and you can imagine the uproar at having her in that kind of role. Especially since this was coming off the whole white-washing controversy with Ghost in the Shell, and that its director, Ruper Sanders, was to join her on this, too? It was quite a thing.

Anyway, Johansson eventually took the hint that people didn’t like the idea of her playing trans. When she dropped out, that seemed to be the end of the movie, but now it’s back in a different way.  Deadline reports New Regency will develop Tex Gill’s story as a TV series, with Emmy-nominated Pose and Transparent writer Our Lady J on the script.  A trans actor will be cast in the role of Gill.

It’s easy to see why the story of Tex Gill just couldn’t be left to sit idle. Gill was a trans man who ran a criminal ring out of massage parlors in 1970s Pittsburgh. During that time, Gill also distributed anabolic steroids to players for the Pittsburgh Steelers, helping them dominate as Super Bowl champs.

No word on a start date, but here’s what Our Lady J had to say:

“Tex’s life story is like no other, and the rich landscape of this unexplored moment in time has truly captured my imagination. I couldn’t be more excited about the opportunity to write a gangster drama based on such a fascinating and diverse web of queer characters.”

“The show is about the promise of reinvention, and the peril of losing oneself in the process. Tex Gill was out and proud in an era – the late 1970s – when living authentically came with the price of social ostracization, leaving him vulnerable to a life of crime and lawlessness. Having grown up in Pennsylvania myself, I’m also excited to delve deep into Pittsburgh’s underbelly as it unspools the story of Tex’s remarkable life – it’s also the story of a city’s struggle for rebirth and a proud community’s efforts to make its voice heard.”

 

‘Rogue’ Trailer: Megan Fox Battles Armed Rebels And Hungry CGI Lions In Action Flick From ‘Solomon Kane’ Director

Megan Fox has always gravitated towards action movies, whether it’s the Transformers or TMNT franchises. But in those films she was typically relegated to the sidelines, however, the action is all on her shoulders in the new flick, Rogue, from Solomon Kane and Silent Hill: Revelation director M.J. Bassett.

This trailer is pretty crazy, too. Fox plays mercenary Samantha O’Hara, who leads her team on a dangerous rescue mission to save the daughter of the Governor of a small African nation. Left stranded, she must battle armed rebels and ravenous lions while seeking refuge.

The film was not only directed by Bassett, but she also co-wrote the script with daughter Isabel. It was the well-received screenplay that attracted the attention of Fox, giving her the rare chance to lead her own action flick. This looks like it would’ve been the type of film that would do gangbusters on Netflix. Does it look any better or worse than Extraction? I don’t think so.

Rogue hits VOD and digital on August 28th, then Bluray/DVD on September 1st.

SYNOPSIS: Megan Fox (Transformers) tackles a thrilling new role as a battle-hardened mercenary in this explosive action saga. As team leader O’Hara, she leads a lively squad of soldiers on a daring mission: rescue hostages from their captors in remote Africa. But as the mission goes awry and the team is stranded, O’Hara’s squad must face a bloody, brutal encounter with a gang of rebels—and the horde of ravenous, enraged lions they encounter.

‘Don’t Look Deeper’ Trailer: Don Cheadle, Emily Mortimer, And Helena Howard Lead Catherine Hardwicke’s Sci-Fi Series

It’s a shame so much of Quibi’s launch has focused on their sagging subscription numbers, because they’ve got a lot of great content out there by some exceptional talents. Don’t Look Deeper is a sci-fi series from Catherine Hardwicke, who is joined by a tremendous cast that includes Don Cheadle, Helena Howard, and Emily Mortimer. Pretty hard to complain about that.

Like all of Quibi’s programming, Don’t Look Deeper is broken up into bite-sized chapters that comprise a larger whole. Set slightly ahead of our time, it follows a high school teen who discovers she’s very different from the other kids her age, and that revelation sets off a chain of events that turn her life upside down.

Hardwicke last directed the 2019 remake Miss Bala, but she’s known for her teen-skewing films such as Twilight, Thirteen, and Lords of Dogtown. While Cheadle and Mortimer need no introduction, Howard might be a new face. She had her breakout role in Josephine Decker’s wildly ambitious film Madeline’s Madeline, and I’m very interested in seeing where her young career goes.

Don’t Look Deeper hits Quibi beginning July 27th.

SYNOPSIS: Set in Merced, California, “fifteen minutes into the future,” ​DON’T LOOK DEEPER ​centers on a high school senior who can’t seem to shake the feeling that something about her just isn’t right. And that something is… she’s not human… not one of us. This revelation of what she really is, where she comes from, and who has started looking for her, sets in motion a series of events that suddenly puts her entire life in jeopardy.

‘The Bay Of Silence’ Trailer: Hitchcockian Thriller Stars Claes Bang, Olga Kurylenko, And Brian Cox

A number of Hitchcockian elements collide in The Bay of Silence, a new mystery-thriller from Oscar-nominated Zus & Zo director  Paula van der Oest.

The film stars Claes Bang (Dracula, The Burnt Orange Heresy), Olga Kurylenko (Quantum of Solace), and Brian Cox (Succession), and it has everything that should lead one to expect the worst. A married couple who buy an oceanside home looking for a fresh start; she’s a renowned artist whose work is “interesting” to say the least; a pregnancy that does not go as planned; and a mysterious stepfather.  When the wife disappears with their children, the husband locates them in a remote French village, but there’s only tragedy, secrets, and lies to his discovery.

Adapting Lisa St Aubin de Terán’s novel is actress-turned-screenwriter Caroline Goodall. This is van der Oest’s first feature since 2016’s award-winning drama Tonio.

The Bay of Silence hits virtual cinemas and VOD on August 14th.

SYNOPSIS: When Will (Claes Bang) discovers his wife Rosalind (Olga Kurylenko) and their three children have suddenly disappeared, he sets off on a frantic search across Europe. He finally locates them in a remote village in northern France, but relief turns to horror when Will discovers his baby son has mysteriously died. Will sets out to discover the truth about his wife’s disappearance and the death of his son, finding himself at odds with Rosalind’s former stepfather, Milton (Brian Cox), who wants to ‘protect’ her for his own private reasons.

‘Radioactive’ Interviews With Marjane Satrapi And Sam Riley

My interview with director Marjane Satrapi went exactly as I hoped it would. While meeting her on Zoom wasn’t always in the plan, seeing her there at home in her trademark black clothing, clearly having just finished a cigarette…well, that was the way I had always envisioned it. Satrapi was there to talk about her new film, Radioactive, a biopic on groundbreaking scientist Marie Curie, starring Rosamund Pike and Sam Riley.

Satrapi gets right into it, talking about the imbalance in depictions of women on the big screen. She attacks the issue with the same straight-forward attitude that we see from Curie, as she demands respect from male colleagues for her discoveries. But the film isn’t just about what she accomplished, it’s about the impact radiation has on the world, both for good and bad, and how Curie carries the burden of her genius.

I was fortunate to have a few minutes speaking with Satrapi about Radioactive, and what her latest graphic novel adaptation means to her. Not only that, but Sam Riley also joined me to talk about his role as Pierre Curie, a man ahead of his time in that he embraced and did not resent his wife’s intellect.

Radioactive hits Prime Video on July 24th. You can check out my review here and watch both interviews below.

 

 

 

‘The New Mutants’ Appears Headed To Disney+ This September

For months there has been speculation that The New Mutants, after numerous caused by coronavirus and other problems, may not open in theaters next month as intended. With Disney moving other films intended for theatrical release over to their streaming platform, the finale of Fox’s X-Men made sense for the same, especially given the box office failure of Dark Phoenix.

A new TV spot for The New Mutants appears to confirm a Disney+ debut, only it will be a week later on September 4th.

This comes just a couple of days after a new trailer had suspiciously left out the release date, fueling speculation of another delay as COVID-19 spikes around the country. But it’s just as likely due to an upcoming announcement of a move to Disney+, perhaps tomorrow when Comic-Con @ Home launches.

Until Disney officially releases this TV spot and confirms the news themselves, still take this with a grain of salt. But it certainly does appear that The New Mutants will be available to watch from the comfort of our couches in a couple of months. While part of me is sad to see that happen, this is the new reality we all have to deal with.

Review: ‘The Rental’

Dave Franco's Directorial Debut Expertly Weaves Paranoia And Panic During A Vacation Getaway

Imagine this: two couples in tangled, troubled relationships; a getaway weekend of rest and relaxation in a beachside home; a mysterious caretaker. A setup like this absolutely screams formulaic vacation horror, and certainly Dave Franco’s directorial debut The Rental plays into those expectations. But over the course of 90-minutes, Franco’s film slashes and burns into many of those familiar tropes, when he isn’t giving into them. The result is impressive if an uneven start to Franco’s directing career. It took his brother James more than a decade to make a movie half as competent.

Franco directs from a script he co-wrote with Joe Swanberg, one of the original “mumblecore” practitioners, and The Rental feels like one of those talk-heavy indies. In fact, it pretty much is, only with a malevolent twist. Basically a four-hander, the film is an exploration of how lies, privilege, lust, and secrecy can decimate a relationship, both familial and romantic. Dan Stevens is Charlie, a successful, if slightly arrogant tech wiz who gets along a little too well with his business partner, the sexy and brilliant Mina, played by Sheila Vand. Alison Brie is Charlie’s somewhat bland yet faithful wife Michelle, who says she isn’t upset by his closeness to Mina. Besides, Mina is dating Charlie’s slacker but well-meaning bro, Josh, played by Jeremy Allen White.

I’ve always said that my favorite movies involve simply putting a group of people in a room and letting their personalities bounce wildly against the walls. The Rental starts out this way, a potboiler of tension in which everybody is just a little bit out of sync. They can’t seem to get on the same page about anything; when to take walks alongside the Pacific, when to eat, when to do the illicit drugs they brought for a night of fun. And of course, there’s the undercurrent of secrecy, with Charlie and Mina appearing to be just a little too close for their own good.

Into this mix is the vacation home’s caretaker, a crusty sort (played by Toby Huss, forever of Pete & Pete) who might be a racist who denied renting the place out to Mina, an Iranian-American. He’s uncommonly good at stoking fires between them that he shouldn’t know even exist…oh, and he might be spying on them. Or it could all be one gigantic misunderstanding. Franco teases the mystery then leaves it to settle, effectively keeping it out of view but never out of mind.

While the bulk of his acting career has ventured towards the comedic, Franco shows that his directorial influence sways towards Joe Swanberg, Andrew Bujalski, and others who favor subtle jabs of humor in conversational, naturalistic tone. Franco also makes the most of the gorgeous scenery, and I’m not just referring to the locale which appropriately looks like it should be splashed across the Airbnb homepage.  There’s no angle in which Franco’s cast is ever going to make him look bad, and they aren’t bad at playing people who all have multiple layers of deception at play.

Franco gets so much from the paranoia of cheating couples and peeping toms that it’s almost unfortunate when The Rental shifts into formulaic thriller territory. There were no easy solutions to the romantic entanglements Franco and Swanberg weaved, but the introduction of a homicidal maniac is a simple form of distraction and, ultimately, a cop out that does the film a disservice.

 

 

 

COVID Made Them Do It. “The Conjuring 3…” Has Officially Moved To June 2021

the conjuring 3

Release dates have been at the top of the movie news ticker since the first film was moved due to COVID-19 back in March, and there’s no sign of these articles stopping. Earlier we reported on the fall of a titan as the one-time lone holdout for release, Tenet finally gave in to a new schedule, along with the devastating announcement that August would not bring Falcon and the Winter Soldier as originally planned. Like so many days this year the hits just keep on coming. The latest in one of the most successful horror franchises of the last 20 years, The Conjuring 3: The Devil Made Me Do It, is officially moved to June 4th, 2021. I’m all for optimism but at this point it just seems silly that we are still anticipating any films, even those like Halloween Kills which is slated for October, are still even considering a traditional theatrical release in 2020. Look, best case the theaters open up at 50% capacity and they sell out. You’re still only making 50% of what you wanted to..and I know they can run 50%  in more theaters but lets be honest people aren’t going out for a run of the mill movie. They need to re-open when it’s safe and test the waters by doing a series of special re-releases, something like Raiders of the Lost Ark or Star Wars then build up to it. For a mid-level horror film the only obvious option to me is streaming, they were made for that model.

I’m sure much smarter people then me are figuring this stuff out but it just doesn’t make sense to me. One thing I think we can all agree on, 2021 is going to be a BOMBASTIC year for film.

 

For all the latest on these every changing release dates bookmark THIS link

 

Julia Roberts Reunites With Denzel Washington For Netflix Thriller ‘Leave The World Behind’

Even before they first starred together in The Pelican Brief, Julia Roberts and Denzel Washington’s careers have been on a parallel track. They both rose up around the same time in the 1980s, and were only separated by a couple of years in their first Oscar nominations; him for Glory in 1987, and her for Steel Magnolias in 1989. By the time they crossed paths for The Pelican Brief in 1993, they were two of the top actors on the planet. It’s only taken nearly 30 years for them to be reunited, but Netflix has managed to make it happen.

THR reports that Netflix has won a hot bidding war for Leave the World Behind, which will reunite Julia Roberts and Denzel Washington. It will also see Roberts working once more with writer/director Sam Esmail, who she worked with on Amazon’s Homecoming series. Esmail is also the creator of Mr. Robot.

Leave the World Behind is based on the upcoming novel by Rumaan Alam and “follows a husband and wife as they head out to a remote corner of Long Island expecting a vacation with their teenage son and daughter. When the owners of the rental return in a panic one night after they say a sudden blackout has swept through the city, the couple aren’t sure what to believe. With the TV and internet down and no cell service, the two families are forced into a tense living situation.” Issues of race, class, and parenting will be tackled.

No word on when this will start. Email and Roberts are already working together on another series, titled Gaslit, and she has another Amazon series Charlotte Walsh Likes to Win. Upcoming for Washington are John Lee Hancock drama The Little Things, followed by a new Macbeth film from Joel Coen.

Marvel’s ‘WandaVision’ Still On Track For 2020 Premiere

Marvel’s film slate has been completely reworked due to COVID-19, and we’ve seen the same thing happen with their upcoming Disney+ shows. Just a couple of days ago it was revealed that Falcon and the Winter Soldier would no longer meet its August release date, due to delays caused by the outbreak. While other series such as Hawkeye keep progressing, we’re also learning that another, WandaVision, will debut as planned.

In Deadline’s report, it was confirmed that WandaVision is likely to make its December 2020 premiere as planned, despite all of the production headaches others have faced. With so much uncertainty right now it’s looking very likely this will be the first Marvel Disney+ series to air. That’s interesting because the MCU is so connected, that moving one domino out of place could topple the whole thing. For instance, WandaVision is meant to be a lead-in to Doctor Strange and the Multiverse of Madness.

WandaVision stars Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda “Scarlet Witch” Maximoff and Paul Bettany as Vision, as she deals with the fallout from Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame. She lost years of her life having been snapped out of existence, but worse than that, she lost her lover, the android Vision. The series will show her creating a weird 1950s sitcom version of reality, in what looks to be a manifestation of her reality-warping powers through her fractured mind.