Shazam director David F. Sandberg is having some fun with the return of Henry Cavill as Superman. You may recall that Supes made a “cameo” of sorts in Sandberg’s superhero film, introduced as a pal to Shazam and a surprise at Freddy Freeman’s school. But due to Cavill’s status with Warner Bros. being a little bit dodgy at the time, they couldn’t show Superman’s face. Just his costume-enhanced bod. Well, that’s now been corrected.
Sorta.
Sandberg has now fixed that Superman cameo apparently as a response to fans who have been begging him for it. Well, never say directors don’t give the people what they want…
I know a lot of you asked for this but I’m not so sure this is an improvement. But hey, at least you can stop messaging me about it now. pic.twitter.com/Y4BdiJ2MjE
Taa-daa!! You asked to see Superman’s face, and you got it along with a stretchy Plastic Man neck. Enjoy!
Now that Cavill is really back, there’s a good chance he’ll actually show up in Shazam 2 with normal body proportions, or as close to proportional as Cavill gets. But it’s still too early to know where that appearance will be, and if it will lead to an eventual Man of Steel sequel. Fingers crossed that it does.
The Dark Universe may be long dead, but Universal has found a way to revive their collection of movie monsters. Following on the box office success of The Invisible Man, Variety reports they’re now moving forward on Wolfman, and the iconic monster is going to look a lot like a really hairy Ryan Gosling.
Ryan Gosling is going to star in Universal’s Wolfman remake. The character goes back to 1935, but is probably best remembered for the 1941 movie The Wolf Man in which he’s played by the great Lon Chaney Jr. An attempted reboot in 2010 starred Benicio Del Toro, Anthony Hopkins, and Emily Blunt, but didn’t do well enough to warrant a franchise.
This latest version will be set in the present, much like The Invisible Man, as Universal looks to modernize their classic movie monsters. Jake Gyllenhaal’s moody thriller Nightcrawler is the tone they’re going for, which is interesting. The script is by Orange is the New Black writers Lauren Schuker Blum and Rebecca Angelo.
As far as a director goes, the hunt is on but definitely in the mix is Cory Finley, who was at the helm of Thoroughbreds and Bad Education.
A start date hasn’t been set. Gosling is currently attached to an astronaut movie from Phil Lord, Chris Miller, and the author of The Martian. Universal’s upcoming slate of horrors includes Elizabeth Banks’ Invisible Woman, Paul Feig’s Dark Army, and a new Dracula movie by Karyn Kusama.
With Jennifer Lawrence and Cate Blanchett already set to star in Don’t Look Up, Adam McKay is clearly putting together another star-studded lineup. We’ve come to expect that from him ever since his Anchorman days, and it has carried over since he became an Oscar-winning filmmaker on films such as The Big Short and Vice. So what’s one more? If you have a chance to add Leonardo DiCaprio into the mix, you do it.
With budget concerns causing a hiccup in Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, DiCaprio found himself with a little bit of extra time. According to Variety, that time might be spent with a role in McKay’s Don’t Look Up, as DiCaprio is eyeing a project to do beforehand. Nothing is confirmed at this point, though, and DiCaprio could decide to do something different.
So we’ll see what happens on this, but the prospect of McKay directing fellow Oscar winners Lawrence, Blanchett, and DiCaprio is hella enticing.
We’re learning more about what caused Paramount to balk at ponying up $150M for Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon. A couple of days ago Apple came into co-finance, but the reason they were needed at all had to do with a crucial change made the movie’s script. That change affected Leonardo DiCaprio’s character drastically, making the studio a bit nervous.
THR says the original plan for Killers of the Flower Moon was to have DiCaprio play a member of the newly-formed FBI, investigating the murders of the wealthy Osage people over oil reserves. Paramount was cool with that and willing to pay the budget, which could’ve gone as high as $180M-$200M. However, when Scorsese and DiCaprio took another round at the script, and changed DiCaprio’s character to the nephew of Robert De Niro’s villain, Paramount no longer was for a movie they felt would be tough to market.
So that necessitated bringing in Apple, who will have exclusive rights to stream it on Apple TV+ after a theatrical run. It also caused a bit of a delay in production, which has left DiCaprio free to possibly do something else in-between. As of now, Killers of the Flower Moon is still a long way off.
There’s always room for a mindless action flick and Debt Collectors fits the bill. Following up it’s 2018 predecessor – The Debt Collector – we see where life has taken French (Scott Adkins) and Sue (Louis Mandylor). French is a down-on-his luck former soldier who is trained in martial arts. After his failed stint as a…debt collector…he is going from one shitty job to the next. His old partner Sue has things a little more under control. Sue is a retired boxer who taught French the debt collecting trade. After a near death experience, Sue decides to stop drinking and turn some aspects of his life around. One day Sue pays French a surprise visit. Seeing as French thought Sue was dead, it’s safe to say the surprise worked.
Sue convinces French to get back into the game. Their old boss Tommy (Vladimir Kulich) has people who owe him money, and he needs French and Sue to collect. With tens of thousands coming in a pay day, French doesn’t really have much choice but to accept. French and Sue quickly fall back to their old gangster ways and it’s like they haven’t missed a beat.
They’re quick to joke around with each other, and even quicker to kick some ass when they need to. Well French more so than Sue. Sue is getting up there in years and has no problems letting the young buck take the lead. Just when things seem to be going well, French and Sue realize they’re getting tailed. The pair start to think that Tommy might not be calling the shots anymore, but if he isn’t – who is?
Not only are Adkins and Mandylor back, but the whole gang joins them. Jesse V. Johnson is once again at the helm, directing and writing with Stu Small also on board to write. The Debt Collector had a lot of things going for it. Between the chemistry seen among the leads to the style (pacing, music, cinematography) – Johnson found a fairly successful formula. Fans of the first will be happy to know that not much has changed. The buddy cop aspect of The Debt Collector is once again shown in full force.
Along with humor throughout, the film is overflowing with action – pretty much from the get-go. The Debt Collector established a fantastic seedy gangster-filled world that carries over into Debt Collectors. It is a world in which people can go from kicking each other’s ass to cracking jokes from one second to the next. This leads to multiple hilarious moments and the film wouldn’t feel the same without that mindset.
For those of you who haven’t seen the original, you’ll be just fine tuning in for Debt Collectors. The first film had very little backstory or character development and just got right into the thick of things. The sequel does pretty much the same, so you’re not missing much. Debt Collectors isn’t about emotions or growth, it’s about fighting and fun. If you’re looking for anything with more substance, you are in the wrong place. Johnson & co. know what they have and what they’re going for, they don’t try and pretend to be anything more. They embrace it and that makes for a better product. Just like the original, if you want to turn your brain off and enjoy the ride, don’t hesitate to check out Debt Collectors.
Andrew Patterson’s delightfully weird, atmospheric The Vast of Night plays like somebody trapped within The Twilight Zone watching an episode of The X-Files. Set in the UFO-crazed 1950s, it’s a film that will leave you swooning with extraterrestrial suspense and mystery, Cold War conspiracy theories, and government paranoia. While at its core this is a story we think we’ve seen a million times before, Patterson plays with genre to create something wholly unique and fascinating.
A voice akin to Rod Serling introduces us to The Vast of Night, which takes place in a small New Mexico border town. It’s one of those places where the people are connected by a single switchboard operator, everyone attends the high school basketball games, and where the introduction of one of those new-fangled cassette tape recorders can cause the town to buzz with excitement. The first 20-minutes is basically an extended walk-and-talk between Fay (Sierra McCormick), the town’s nighttime switchboard girl, and her friend Everett (Jake Horowitz, brimming with offbeat Sam Rockwell energy), radio DJ and raconteur. This brilliantly-crafted sequence sets up the pervasive shadowy mood of this sleepy little place that we know is about to be woken up from its slumber.
A strange frequency begins coming through the switchboard, cutting off the signals to callers and, ultimately, Everett’s radio show. Then the calls start coming in. Something strange has been seen in the night sky. You keep waiting for reports of people disappearing, but Patterson, along with screenwriters James Montague and Craig W. Sanger, don’t need to go that far. They have trust in the audience to use their imagination. Soon, Fay and Everett begin racing around the city, locating people who claim to have information on the signal’s true nature, hinting at a conspiracy that has been going on for years and is bigger than the two scrappy teens could possibly imagine.
Patterson grips you with the promise of alien invasion, but it’s the retro aesthetics and the build-up of suspense that hooks you for the long haul. Shifting gears frequently, the film sometimes is presented like it’s being watched on an old-fashioned TV set, before sucking us directly into the episode. That’s just one of a variety of effective visual cues that catapult us from one gripping moment to the next, but at no point does the obsidian cover of night ever leave. Even during long, extensive monologues, Patterson finds ways to keep the spookiness factor high, cutting completely to black so the words hang in the air as if they were said by a deathly spirit. Deft editing and sound design add to the tension at every turn; while a film that moves at its own leisurely pace, The Vast of Night is thrilling from start to finish.
This is the kind of bold, confident debut that careers are built on. Patterson makes the most of a limited budget, ratcheting up tension through ominous tracking shots that pull us in so deep we feel as trapped in the night’s oddities as Fay and Everett. Speaking of which, the casting here is also on point. McCormick, sporting giant glasses that capture her wide-eyed fascination, is a ball of pure energy. Horowitz has the unstoppable motormouth and roguish vibe of the aforementioned Rockwell. Together, Fay and Everett make a fascinating, quirky pair of amateur detectives. If The Vast of Night had franchise aspirations we’d want to follow these characters to their next big mystery. It’ll probably have to do that we can follow Patterson to whatever he does next, because I predict big things are in his future.
The Vast of Night is available now on Amazon Prime.
Given our COVID-shortened movie year, Sonic the Hedgehog may end up one of 2019’s greatest success stories. Earning over $300M worldwide, it became the highest-grossing movie ever based on a video game, and that’s with a theatrical run shortened by the pandemic. So it’s no surprise at all that Paramount is moving fast on a sequel, with the original creative team coming back for a second lap.
Director Jeff Fowler confirmed his return on Twitter. He’ll be joined by screenwriters Pat Casey and Josh Miller…
It’s too early to know if Ben Schwartz will return as the voice of Sonic, or if Jim Carrey will once give us another bonkers performance as Dr. Robotnik. Good lord I hope so.
Sonic the Hedgehog is based on the popular Sega video game mascot, the face of the bestselling franchise since 1991. In the movie, he’s forced to leave his faraway home for a new one on Earth, where he faces enemies who’d like to harness his incredible speed. The film also starred James Marsden and Tika Sumpter.
Paramount almost had a disaster on their hands with the release of the movie’s first trailer, showing a Sonic design that was weirdly human and far from what fans wanted. Fowler and the art team went to work on totally redesigning Sonic, and pushing the release date from November to February. The extra time investment obviously paid off.
When YouTube started to get into the Original Programming game, they chose a unique show to kick off their entry into the streaming business. Many people were scratching their heads when they decided to continue the events of the original Karate Kid after a 34-year wait and instead tell the story from the bad guy’s perspective. But low and behold, Cobra Kai was friggin outstanding! I even stressed that the show had “absolutely no business being this damn good” on our Best New Shows of 2018 list, coming in at #1. Cobra Kai gave many 80s babies our childhood back in an honest, raw, and engaging fashion and was such an underrated gem.
With two excellent seasons of the show done at YouTube and the subsequent failing of YouTube Premium’s subscription service really kicking off (as the Youtube is now in favor of moving to an ad-based model vs subscription-based model of revenue and is moving away from Original Programming in favor of Unscripted Programming), Google is now reevaluating their shows, and even though Cobra Kai is their flagship show, they couldn’t promise producers a fourth season.
Deadline reports that Cobra Kai’s producers and Sony TV negotiated to shop the successful show around to other streaming networks for exclusive rights for season 3 and non-exclusive rights to seasons 1 and 2 of the show. Naturally, Netflix and Hulu are considered the front-runners to continue the show. Both streaming services have the capital to not only purchase the show (along with the rights to seasons 1 and 2), but also the capital to produce and market many more seasons of the show. I always thought that if the show aired originally on Netflix, William Zabka would have gotten an Emmy (or nomination at least) for his portrayal of Johnny Lawrence as he really was great. As of right now, everything’s still in the negotiation phase, but after the cliffhanger of the season 2 finale, fans really want a third season of Cobra Kai to happen as soon as possible.
Way back in 2013, Dakota Fanning signed on to star in the English-language debut by Miss Bala director Gerardo Naranjo. Titled Viena and the Fantomes, the musical drama centered on a roadie as she embarks on a journey of self-discovery while traveling across American with a punk rock band in the 1980s. Shot in 2014, the film just sorta vanished. No premieres, no festival dates, nada. And now, in the time of streaming dominance, it has been unearthed and set for a straight-to-digital release.
Universal Home Entertainment will release Viena and the Fantomes digitally on June 30th. The film stars Fanning alongside Caleb Landry Jones, Zoë Kravitz, Evan Rachel Wood, Frank Dillane, Jeremy Allen White, and Jon Bernthal.
I’m very curious to know about everything that went down with this film that caused it to be ghost for so long.
SYNOPSIS: Viena, a beautiful, young roadie, travels with the Fantomes, an edgy post-punk band, as they tour through America in the 1980s. What starts out as a wild ride of concerts and parties quickly descends into an alcohol and drug induced haze. Viena finds herself trapped in a dangerous love triangle between a good natured roadie and an unbalanced band member, as she is forced to find her own means of survival-no matter the cost.
Finally, The Lonely Island’s trippy rom-com Palm Springs has a release date. The highest-selling movie in Sundance history (beating Birth of a Nation by pennies) will be coming to Hulu on July 10th. The film stars Andy Samberg, Cristin Milioti, and JK Simmons.
The Lonely Island dropped the news themselves on Twitter…
— The Lonely Island (@thelonelyisland) May 28, 2020
Palm Springs was acquired by Neon at Sundance for a reported $17.5M (and change), the biggest ever for the festival. The story has been described as a twist on the time-loop narrative of Groundhog Day, with Samberg and Milioti playing attendees at a wedding who find they can’t escape the venue or one another…
SYNOPSIS: While stuck at a wedding in Palm Springs, Nyles (Andy Samberg) meets Sarah (Cristin Milioti), the maid of honor and family black sheep. After he rescues her from a disastrous toast, Sarah becomes drawn to Nyles and his offbeat nihilism. But when their impromptu tryst is thwarted by a surreal interruption, Sarah must join Nyles in embracing the idea that nothing really matters, and they begin wreaking spirited havoc on the wedding celebration.
The Lonely Island produced Palm Springs but it’s newcomer Max Barbacow as director, working from a screenplay he co-wrote with Andy Siara.
Neon and Hulu have quickly built quite a relationship. They recently teamed up on the Hulu release of Best Picture-winner Parasite, as well as Portrait of a Lady On Fire.