If you’re one of those who has cut ties with Twitter/X (You’re not alone) then count yourself lucky for missing the chaos of last night. Believe it or not, but Scream star Melissa Barrera has been fired from the upcoming sequel, meaning the franchise is missing its leading lady. What could cause Spyglass Media Group to make such a decision? Well, the Israeli/Palestine conflict, that’s what.
The violence in the Middle East, sparked by the terrorist attack by Hamas in Israel on October 7th, has caused a deep political divide in Hollywood. Barrera has been very active on social media with her support for a ceasefire in Gaza, noting the thousands of deaths of Palestinians as Israeli forces retaliate. She also posted an antisemtic trope about Jews controlling all of media, while calling Israel’s attacks a form of genocide.
Spyglass responded to the uproar over Barrera’s firing, which many see as a rash, overblown move, with a statement of their own:
“Spyglass’ stance is unequivocally clear: We have zero tolerance for antisemitism or the incitement of hate in any form, including false references to genocide, ethnic cleansing, Holocaust distortion or anything that flagrantly crosses the line into hate speech.”
This isn’t an issue that’s going to go away anytime soon, and we could see other firings across multiple productions. The Variety report goes on to mention Sorry to Bother You director Boots Riley, whose call to boycott an industry screening of footage of Hamas atrocities has led La La Land producer Marc Platt to ask for him to be dropped by his agency.
Going back to Scream 7, director Christopher Landon is the only one involved who has dared to say anything, although his tweet was quickly deleted: “This is my statement. Everything sucks. Stop yelling. This was not my decision to make.”
Barrera has yet to make a formal response, only briefly posting then deleting a meme on IG that read: “At the end of the day, I’d rather be excluded for who I include, than be included for who I exclude.”
I would expect that more of Melissa Barrera’s co-stars will chime in, but then again with every statement politicized and scrutinized to death, could they face consequences, too?
Are movies about flawed musical conductors the critical equivalent of studio blockbusters about dinosaurs? Following last year’s Tár which starred Cate Blanchett as a conductor who worshipped at the altar of Leonard Bernstein, Bradley Cooper utterly transforms himself into Bernstein for Maestro. A true labor of love that finds Cooper giving everything creatively to capture the full scope of Bernstein as a talent, a husband, and out gay man, the film is inspiring, swelling with emotion, and rapturous. It’s also overwhelming, with Cooper attempting to take on so much that it doesn’t always stay in rhythm.
This isn’t a movie about Leonard Bernstein’s career so much as it is about his marriage to actress and socialite Felicia Montealegre, played with poise and grace by the always-wonderful Carey Mulligan. The first half of the film is the most interesting in the first half, shot in gorgeous black & white, with cinematographer Matthew Libatique sweeping us through the fairy tale courtship of Leonard and Felicia. He’s still a young, strapping American man who ran with his surprise shot to conduct the New York Philharmonic. The toast of the town ever since, Leonard doesn’t feel the need to hide his homosexuality; although at one point it’s suggested he hide his Jewish heritage with a name change. At this stage of his life, Bernstein is a livewire sparking every room he enters. It’s also at this time that he’s knocked off of his feet, surprisingly, by Felicia, who he meets at a party thrown by his sister (Sarah Silverman).
There’s a mad, zany rom-com energy to this part of the film, as Leonard and Felicia begin their unusual courtship. You can see how she captivates him and how she does the same for him. They jabber to one another non-stop; in a cute bonding scene they shit back-to-back in a park playing guessing games. They are as close to kindred spirits as two people can be. As for his sexuality, there’s an unspoken acknowledgement that his tastes are wide and varied; but his love for Felicia is never in doubt.
When Maestro goes blazing into full color, the bloom is off the rose, so to speak. It’s impossible not to pale underneath Bernstein’s shadow, and there’s some obvious resentment by Felicia for the stagnation of her own career to become a mother and caretaker. But the love between them remains, even as his ego has expanded and his workrate has increased exponentially, robbing him of some of the creative zeal of his earlier years. Inevitably, this takes a toll and when Felicia sets out for a life of her own again, Leonard loses control without her steady guidance. If anything, this is a film about the demands of creative genius, and the sacrifices it demands of everyone in their orbit. There are vast periods of depression that find Leonard depriving himself of the people who mean the most to him. This also deprives him of the joy needed to fuel the spark of creativity. Leonard’s indiscretions with younger men start to become a problem, his children begin hearing the whispers (Maya Hawke plays the eldest daughter most affected by these rumors), and Felicia lashes out in a rage that drives him nearly to the brink of despair.
Cooper bites off more than he can chew trying to encapsulate so much of Leonard Bernstein into a 2-hour movie. There are whole portions of his life that fall by the wayside, but also for Felicia who lived a full life, as well. Gone are their political activities which were such a huge part of their lives together. Cooper and co-writer Josh Singer navigate the complicated contours of Leonard and Felicia’s marriage with soft steps. We see the big blow-ups, feel the impact of major decisions, but not the little allowances that would eventually balloon into full-blown disasters.
A lot has been made by the Jewish community of Cooper’s decision to sport a large prosthetic nose to portray Bernstein. The composer’s family was okay with it, and in execution it’s less pronounced than it looks in still imagery. I was struck by the distinct change in voice, from the high-pitched younger Leonard to the gravelly, throaty tenor of the composer in his final years. Cooper’s resemblance to Bernstein is uncanny, as is the way he captures his movements and mannerisms. It’s undeniable the commitment Cooper has made to Maestro and to bringing Bernstein’s story to the screen with complete authenticity. The proof is an absolutely jaw-dropping tour de force scene in which Bernstein conducts Mahler’s Second Symphony at the Ely Cathedral in London. Cooper, dripping with sweat and matching all of Bernstein’s strokes like a true master, studied for six years to get this moment exactly right with real musicians all in one sweeping shot.
When it’s over, Leonard rushes into the waiting arms of Felicia, leaving a sweaty stain on her satin blue dress. Maestrodelves into some dark territory following this glorious highlight. Leonard could be a bastard at the best of times, but Cooper doesn’t seek to soften who he was just to make an easily palatable biopic. Some will complain that they don’t see enough from the making of “West Side Story” or of this musical or that one. But to Cooper it’s a lot less interesting to see how he made those musicals than it is to see the people and the relationships that inspired Bernstein to create those musicals. It’s that kind of uncompromising vision that Leonard Bernstein would’ve respected.
Maestro is in select theaters now before streaming to Netflix on December 20th.
The success of Cobra Kai on Netflix opened the door to a revival of The Karate Kid as a feature film franchise. And last year Sony began taking steps in that direction, setting a summer 2024 release date for a new sequel that would be a continuation of the original ’80s movies that starred Ralph Macchio and Pat Morita. Well, there’s been a slight change, but it’s an exciting one. The Karate Kid is back…and Macchio won’t be alone.
As seen in a new video, Ralph Macchio will be teaming with Jackie Chan, who led the 2010 Karate Kid with Jaden Smith, on a brand new sequel The promo doesn’t actually reveal much, but it does have both actors opening a nationwide casting call for an actor to be the next one to “wax on, wax off” while learning some martial arts, life lessons, and more.
Meanwhile, THR has dug a bit deeper and come up with even more info. The new Karate Kid already has a director, Jonathan Entwistle, known for creating such TV shows as I Am Not Okay With This and The End of the F***ing World. The script by Rob Lieber (Goosebumps 2) has a story that takes place on the East Coast and centers on a new teen from China who learns karate and how to handle all the punches life throws his way.
One more thing; the release date has changed from summer 2024 to December 13th 2024. So, who is going to be the next Karate Kid? And will he still have to do that lame Crane Kick? Will it crossover with Cobra Kai?
Star Wars fans have been waiting for this moment to happen for years. Dave Filoni, creator of Star Wars Rebels, The Mandalorian, and Star Wars: Ahsoka, has been given the title of Chief Creative Officer at Lucasfilm. He confirmed the news to Vanity Fair earlier this week.
Filoni has been the heir apparent ever since he studied under George Lucas. Fans have generally been very happy with the work Filoni has done, which respects the groundwork laid by Lucas while forging new storylines that take Star Wars into the future.
The promotion will put Filoni in the early process of all Star Wars-related projects, rather than coming in later in an advisory capacity…
“In the past, in a lot of projects, I would be brought into it, I would see it after it had already developed a good ways”, Filoni said.
There’s a lot going on in Filoni’s corner of the galaxy. Not only does he have his own feature film in the works that will combine the storylines of his various series, but there’s hope of a second season of Ahsoka. That’s going to be a bitter pill to swallow, as the first season featured late actor Ray Stevenson as ex-Jedi Baylan Skoll, and picking up on that will be tough…
“Obviously, there’s a story there,” he told VF. “We’re in a wait-and-see pattern at this point. But I’m glad the conversation is about Ray and how great he was…. I used to have mini debates with him and say, ‘Ray, you’re the villain here.’ And he’d be like, ‘I don’t think so.’ I was like, ‘I know you don’t think so, but you are. I love that you’re playing it like you’re not.’ Which is exactly the way Baylan thinks.”
Ahsoka star Rosario Dawson seems confident the series will not only get a second season, but that Filoni is already working on it…
“I mean, they’ve not said anything officially, but I remember when we were at Star Wars Celebration in London, and they were like, ‘We’re giving Dave a movie!’” Rosario Dawson said in an interview for the story. “And I was like, ‘I kind of feel like that means we’re probably going to get a second season.’ For a while now, and especially now with the strike and everything, no one can say anything. But he did say he was working on an outline. So, we’ll see.”
Earlier today on X I joked that Nicholas Hoult, who was recently cast as villain Lex Luthor in Superman: Legacy, probably would’ve taken the Jimmy Olsen role if this hasn’t worked out. Well, fortunately for him it did work out, because the Olsen role has now been filled by someone else.
According to THR, The Binge actor Skyler Gisondo has been cast as Clark Kent’s pal Jimmy Olsen in Superman: Legacy. Gisondo has been on the comedy scene for a while, having also appeared in Vacation, Booksmart, and Licorice Pizza.
Not only that, but Deadline has the news that Portuguese model Sara Sampaio has won the role of Eve Teschmacher, usually seen as a close confidante to Lex Luthor. It’s a role that originated for the early Superman films by Richard Donner, and has become a regular within the DC Comics universe. So now we have an idea who Hoult will be sharing some considerable screen time with. Sampaio has appeared in an episode of Billions, as well as the 2021 crime thriller Crisis.
Gisondo should fit right in, completing the core friend group that will include David Corenswet as Clark Kent and Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane. Also in the cast are Nathan Fillion as the Guy Gardner version of Green Lantern, Isabela Merced as Hawkgirl, and Maria Gabriela De Faria as The Authority villain The Engineer.
To star in a movie by beloved filmmaker John Carney is to confront a certain amount of fear. Carney isn’t just another director; his movies are like a genre all to themselves. He makes musical romances unlike any other; swooning masterpieces that aren’t so much about matters of the heart, but of the power of music to bring people together. His films Once, Sing Street, Begin Again, and his latest, Flora and Son, encompass love in many different forms, and they aren’t all romantic. It’s the harmonious chemistry of Carney’s leads that sends these stories to the moon, and with Flora and Son, he found something special with stars Eve Hewson and Joseph Gordon-Levitt.
Hewson, the daughter of U2 frontman Bono, gets her biggest feature role yet as Flora, a single mother from Dublin who is struggling to build a relationship with her estranged son Max (Orén Kinlan), while also just trying to keep a roof over her head. One day she decides to get Max a hobby by buying him an old guitar, but when he refuses to use the gift, she takes up the instrument for herself. Gordon-Levitt plays Jeff, the washed-up L.A.-based guitar player and songwriter who helps guide Flora through her lessons, while at the same time learning to trust one another and move on from their troubled pasts.
I attended the world premiere of Flora and Son at Sundance earlier this year and absolutely loved the film. It’s another Carney instant classic, with I think some of the best on-screen chemistry he’s found yet. The irony is that Hewson and Gordon-Levitt’s characters are thousands of miles apart, which was a special challenge for all involved.
It was my pleasure to speak with both Eve Hewson and Joseph Gordon-Levitt about Flora and Son. They spoke with me about, first of all, just convincing Carney that they had the goods to even star in his movie as he had specific ideas in mind. Hewson also talked with me about Carney, her fellow Dublin native, about how he and his movies are perceived over there relative to how he’s perceived here in America. This was quite a treat for me.
Flora and Son is streaming on Apple TV+ now. Check out the interviews below.
John (John Higgins), Martin (Martin Herlihy), and Ben (Ben Marshall) have been best friends forever in Please Don’t Destroy: The Treasure Of Foggy Mountain. The three have been inseparable – they live together, work together, and do everything together. That is until Martin started dating Amy (Nichole Sakura) and hasn’t been around as much. Apparently, Ben suddenly cares about work and impressing his father Farley (Conan O’Brien). Which kind of just leaves John being John. With his two best friends growing up and moving on, John realizes he must do something to keep the band together. That’s when the idea of an adventure to Foggy Mountain was born.
When the three of them were younger, they found a compass in a river. Unbeknownst to them at the time, it belonged to an old French explorer who hid a treasure in Foggy Mountain. He put a treasure map on the compass and left it for future explorers to find. Legend has it that the treasure is worth 100 million. John, Martin, and Ben could sure use the cash – so why not? The three set out to the mountain for an adventure of a lifetime. Right off the bat, things get interesting when John draws the attention of Lisa (Megan Stalter), a park ranger. Lisa’s partner Taylor (X-Mayo) convinces her to steal the map and take the treasure for themselves. No way in hell are the three guys going to give up that easy – the race is on.
Higgins, Herlihy, and Marshall make up the comedy group “Please Don’t Destroy.” The three of them have been putting out digital content for a few years and recently became SNL writers. Please Don’t Destroy: The Treasure Of Foggy Mountain is their feature-length debut. Please Don’t Destroy wrote the film while Paul Briganti directs. Briganti has a few films under his belt but has mostly worked in television. He also has ties to SNL where he directed segments from 2016 through 2022. The comedic backgrounds of all involved are certainly put to good use.
Please Don’t Destroy: The Treasure Of Foggy Mountain is pretty hilarious. The film may be dumb, but I found myself laughing throughout the 90-minute or so runtime. Please Don’t Destroy’s chemistry is undeniable, and everyone seemed to be truly enjoying themselves. On top of that, the score is fantastic, at times adding to the humor. The movie is ridiculous from the jump and that only escalates as it progresses. If stupid humor isn’t your cup of tea, then Please Don’t Destroy: The Treasure Of Foggy Mountain will most likely disappoint. If you’re looking to turn off your brain and enjoy a silly adventure, it’ll do the trick.
Please Don’t Destroy: The Treasure Of Foggy Mountain is streaming now on Peacock.
More Jason Bourne? While talk of a new sequel to the super spy franchise has been dormant since 2016’s Jason Bourne, no brand is ever left on the shelf for long, and Universal has its sights set on a film with a director who isn’t Paul Greengrass. But what about Matt Damon?
Deadline reports that Universal has hired All Quiet On the Western Front director Edward Berger to helm a fifth Bourne movie. So far, Berger is the only creative attached to the project, and the hope is that someone will come up with an idea that will lure star Matt Damon back into the fold. Because without him, what do you really have? A total reboot? Berger is likely to be deeply involved in the process, especially when it comes to finding a writer and hashing out a story that could attract Damon’s attention.
It could still prove difficult. The report notes that “everything has to be executed perfectly for Damon even to consider coming back to the franchise, and that starts with a great script and story, and so as of right now, no commitment from him until all of that is in place.”
If Damon were to refuse, it’s not as if the franchise has completely died without him. Damon and Greengrass exited together after 2007’s The Bourne Ultimatum, and a 2012 spinoff, The Bourne Legacy, arrived in 2012 with star Jeremy Renner and director Tony Gilroy. Results were mixed, however. Damon and Greengrass returned with Jason Bourne four years later. And let’s not forget the Bourne spinoff TV series, Treadstone, which aired for one season in 2019.
Universal isn’t going to let Jason Bourne go without a fight, so expect them to put a lot of effort into getting Damon aboard. Berger is a strong choice for the material, as well. His critically-acclaimed WWI film earned nine total Oscar nominations, winning four including Best International Feature. I think it’s crucial to these films, as it was with “All Quiet”, to have a foreign filmmaker’s perspective. One of the things that made the best Bourne films was that they steered clear from typical American action movies, while the one directed by Gilroy felt very traditional.
There seems to be a movement by filmmakers of a certain vintage to reintroduce the classic Hollywood epic, historical biopics (always about powerful, flawed white men) that would’ve been huge celebrity affairs back in the day with scores of ink spilled about their production. Although audiences today have largely decided they don’t care about such movies, Ridley Scott, whose movies audiences have decided they don’t care about no matter what he does, has charged ahead with Napoleon. Both self-serious and ridiculous often at the same moment, it’s a film that turns the powerful French commander and war hero into a gibbering laughingstock who is only interesting for how ardently he can be portrayed by Oscar winner Joaquin Phoenix.
Scott reunites with screenwriter David Scarpa, who delivered the atrocious All the Money in the World, for a biopic that at least doesn’t feel like a history lesson. Historical accuracy be damned, the film is purely meant for entertainment purposes and at least Scott can say he won on that front. Napoleon is never boring as it swings for the fences with scenes that are over-the-top brutal and uproariously silly. Phoenix, with his expressive face contorted like a demon’s mask, hams it up to play the diminutive Napoleon Bonaparte, an ambitious gunnery sergeant who has witnessed the execution of Marie Antoinette, and correctly gauged the mood of the people and how it can be wielded as a weapon. He uses this skill to work his way up the ranks into a position of power, showing exemplary tactical ability on the battlefield.
Scott doesn’t waste time throwing us into the first major conflict, the battle of Toulon. And predictably, Scott excels in these massive, well-choreographed set pieces. Right from the beginning you’re struck by the urgency of it all, as Napoleon’s horse takes a cannonball square on that nearly ends his rise to prominence right then and there. There’s an intimate familiarity that Scott shows in the savagery of war; each one growing in intensity, bloodshed, scale, and the outlandishness of Napoleon’s accomplishments. From firing cannonballs at Egyptian pyramids to trapping an entire enemy force under a sheet of ice, Napoleon is made to look more like a comic book villain than an actual person.
We’re expected to see more of the man in the scenes in between, as the film largely deals with Napoleon’s obsession with Josephine (Vanessa Kirby), a widow and rebellious aristocrat known for her promiscuity. She practically tells him she’ll be unfaithful as soon as she catches his eye, and yet he cannot help himself. Predictably, she plays Napoleon like a fiddle, the jealous commander and husband writing her letters while off at war, meanwhile she’s at home taking on new lovers. And yet, they are both survivors in a way, and this bonds them throughout their tumultuous relationship. It’s a shame that we don’t see more of the film from her perspective, as was initially promised. Napoleon is far more interesting exploring how they deal together with an ever-changing world, one in which they have increasing power and influence, but also an increase in enemies seeking to destroy them.
The best battles aren’t on a blood-soaked field of battle, but in the oft-hilarious confrontations between Napoleon and Josephine. During one particularly testy meal, she calls her husband “fat”, which is true as he bursts at his outfit’s seams while stuffing his face. He responds readily with “I enjoy my meals. Destiny has brought me to this lamb chop” and it’s as much of a mic drop as the time period could possibly allow. Phoenix has a grip on the kind of movie he’s in. He shifts easily between Napoleon’s commanding tone to the vulnerable, awkward simp he often was when in Josephine’s presence. For Kirby, this is more evidence that she’s one of the best actresses working today, trading with Phoenix expertly in their fiery opening engagements. But she’s even better later on, as Josephine’s power fades and she’s forced to stand by and watch the world move on from the sidelines, without being able to move on from it herself.
But is Napoleon meant to be a historical satire? It’s hard to tell, because there’s definitely some admiration for Napoleon Bonparte as a war hero, leader, and political strategiest who knew how to manuever his way to the top. But his ego is as big as all of France, and when he gets outplayed it’s done in such a comical manner as to make him look like a clown in a big Cap’n Crunch hat. This includes his ultimate defeat at Waterloo, which I hope isn’t a spoiler and if it is you should probably have studied more in school.
Like Scott has done with far too many of his films lately, the director is trying to have it every which way and accomplishing little. Napoleon is not a historical biography to be respected, nor does it have the dark comic wit to be particularly edgy. With only a few ludicrous Phoenix lines of dialogue to hang its hat on, this is a film that will almost certainly be overlooked this awards season, and forgotten by the time Scott trots out whatever his next project will be.
Nicholas Hoult seems to be up for every major franchise project rigth now. In the case of Superman: Legacy, he was a contender to land the Clark Kent role that ultimately went to David Corenswet. But Hoult was also up to play the movie’s villain and Superman’s archnemesis, Lex Luthor. And, well, Hoult might want to get his barber on the line.
Deadline reports that Hoult is in talks to play Lex Luthor in Superman: Legacy. He would be beating out Skarsgard brothers Bill and Alexander who were both reportedly up for the role. The Lex Luthor character has been played previously on the big screen most famously by Gene Hackman, but also by Kevin Spacey, and Jesse Eisenberg.
Hoult joins a large cast that includes Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane, Nathan Fillion as the Guy Gardner version of Green Lantern, Isabela Merced as Hawkgirl, and Maria Gabriela De Faria as The Authority villain The Engineer.
According to writer/director James Gunn, the recent strikes haven’t slowed down Superman: Legacy which is still set for a July 11th 2025 release. When it hits theaters, it’ll put Hoult in rare territory as an actor with major roles for Marvel and DC. For years he played Hank McCoy aka Beast in Fox’s X-Men movies.