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The movie will be available on 4K, Blu-ray, DVD and digital ahead of the holidays.

After being the first studio tentpole to venture back into theaters amid the continued pandemic shutdown, Christopher Nolan's Tenet is heading to home entertainment.

The feature will be available on 4K, Blu-ray, DVD and digital on Dec. 15. The 4K Combo Pack will be available for $44.95, Blu-ray for $35.99 and DVD for $28.98, with pre-orders starting on Nov. 10.

The 4K combo pack and Blu-ray will contain the special feature "Looking at the World in a New Way: The Making of Tenet,” an hour-long exploration of the development and production of the film that includes interviews with the cast and crew.

Still playing in theaters, Tenet has grossed $347.1 million at the global box office— $53.8 million domestically— as of Nov. 1.

Written and directed by Nolan, Tenet sats John David Washington as a spy that is tasked with a mission to prevent a global war that sees him learn to manipulate the flow of time.

 

Article by: Mia Galuppo for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Harry Styles, Florence Pugh and Chris Pine star in the thriller.

The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed that a positive COVID-19 test has shut down production on Olivia Wilde's Don't Worry Darling, which stars Florence Pugh, Chris Pine and Harry Styles.

New Line, the studio behind the feature, halted filming after a member of the production tested positive following the required and ongoing on-set testing. The person is now in isolation and the film, which began shooting in October, will resume photography in accordance with safety guidelines that typically call for a 14-day freeze.

Gemma Chan, Kiki Layne and Dakota Johnson also star in the movie, which is the second directorial effort for Wilde, following Booksmart.

Plot details on the film are being kept secret, but the setting is an isolated, utopian community in the 1950s California desert and centers on a housewife who uncovers a disturbing truth about her seemingly perfect life.

Don't Worry Darling is the latest feature production to halt filming after a positive COVID-19 test. Matt Reeves' The Batman halted filming when star Robert Pattinson tested positive, and Jurassic World: Dominion had to shut down last month for two weeks after several members of the production tested positive for the virus, despite later testing negative.

 

Article by: Mia Galuppo for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The right to do a prequel or sequel to Breakfast at Tiffany's, or even a television series inspired by the 1961 film classic, is the subject of a new lawsuit filed on Wednesday against Paramount Pictures in Los Angeles Superior Court.

A few years before he died, Truman Capote, who wrote the 1958 novella that serves as the movie's basis, set up a charitable trust. Now, Alan Schwartz, the trustee of the charity, alleges that rights to the property reverted to Capote's Executor upon his death in 1984 and then was transferred to the charity.

"In 1991, Plaintiff and the Capote Estate entered into an agreement with Paramount, whereby Paramount optioned certain sequel and prequel rights, among others, with respect to the film," states the complaint. "The agreement provided that, if a motion picture was not produced within a certain amount of time, the rights would revert back to Plaintiff."

Since no movie was made, Schwartz claims ownership. According to the complaint, Paramount contests.

The studio "claims that no reversion occurred, that it had the right, but not the obligation, to produce the film, and that it purchased this right for $300,000.00," continues the complaint. "What is most inconceivable, however, is that Paramount claims that whether or not it had an actual obligation to exploit Plaintiff's valuable film rights depended exclusively on the timing of its acquisition payment."

The plaintiff, represented by attorney Ed McPherson, takes the position that rights reverted because under the old copyright law, if the author died during the initial 28-year term, the right to renew copyright passed to statutory heirs. In some ways, the dispute recalls the fight over Hitchcock's Rear Window that went all the way up to the Supreme Court in 1990. According to this suit, because of the high court's decision, Paramount was subsequently facing the "devastating prospect of forever losing the right to exploit" its original Breakfast at Tiffany's and initially took the position that Capote's successors were "legally obligated" to negotiate a new deal. That, according to the complaint, led to the 1991 agreement that the plaintiff believes has opened the door to reclaiming sequel rights.

The suit further details negotiations over the property this past January where the Capote charity has been engaging with producers about a potential Breakfast at Tiffany's television series. The charity says it has gotten numerous bids of hundreds of thousands of dollars plus backend too. But Paramount has raised objections and negotiations have come to a halt. According to the complaint (read here), Paramount chairman Jim Gianoulos prefers a feature project over a TV series, has a screenplay, and has an intention to sell the project to a streaming platform.

Paramount hasn't immediately returned a request for a response, but the suit figures to settle whether the studio really has an unfettered right to produce a new film about the property.

 

Article by: Eriq Gardener for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Almost every other Hollywood tentpole scheduled for this fall has delayed its release or gone straight to the home video market.

Speaking out for the first time since his latest movie opened in theaters, filmmaker Christopher Nolan says that Hollywood studios are drawing the "wrong conclusions" from Tenet's box office performance at the expense of distressed theaters.

"Warner Bros. released Tenet, and I’m thrilled that it has made almost $350 million. But I am worried that the studios are drawing the wrong conclusions from our release — that rather than looking at where the film has worked well and how that can provide them with much needed revenue, they’re looking at where it hasn’t lived up to pre-COVID expectations and will start using that as an excuse to make exhibition take all the losses from the pandemic instead of getting in the game and adapting — or rebuilding our business, in other words," Nolan told The Los Angeles Times.

Throughout the summer, Nolan — a champion of the cinematic experience — was adamant that his big-budget espionage tentpole open around the globe as soon as it was safe to do so. In North America, where Tenet unfurled over Labor Day, that meant opening without such major markets as Los Angeles, New York City and San Francisco in play.

Almost every other Hollywood tentpole scheduled for this fall has delayed its release or gone straight to the home video market.

Tenet was originally set to hit the big screen in mid-July, but was pushed back several times because of COVID-19 and ongoing theater closures. It rolled out overseas in late August, ahead of the U.S.

Tenet has grossed a tepid $53.8 million domestically. Internationally, it has fared notably better, grossing $293.3 million for a global total of $347.1 million through Nov. 1. Movie theaters throughout Europe and Asia rebounded in a major way this summer, although in recent days, a surge in COVID-19 cases has caused reclosures in major European markets.

Tenet cost $200 million to produce before marketing and is facing losses in the tens of millions.

Nolan's comments were included in a Q&A with British film critic Tom Shone, promoting Shone's new book The Nolan Variations.

Both were asked about the future of moviegoing.

"Well, it’s a difficult question to speak to. If you’re talking about the acceleration of existing trends, that’s something I started reading right at the beginning of the pandemic. And it ignores the reality that 2019 was the biggest year for theatrical films in history. They’d made the most money. The admissions were huge," Nolan said.

"Long term, moviegoing is a part of life, like restaurants and everything else," he continued. "But right now, everybody has to adapt to a new reality."

 

Article by: Pamela McClintock for the Hollywood Reporter.

                                                                                                                                          

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"[Warner Bros.] was there much thought given as to how this representation of limb differences would effect the limb difference community?!" wrote Paralympian Amy Marren on Twitter.

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Warner Bros. has issued a statement saying the studios regrets "any offense caused" by a character design seen in recent release The Witches after online backlash from the disability community.

In the Robert Zemeckis-directed adaptation of the classic Roald Dahl children's book, the villainous witches, including the coven leader played by Anne Hathaway, are seen as having only three fingers. The design looks similar to ectrodactyly, also known as split or cleft hand, which is a limb disability that is the absence of one or more digits from the hand.

Paralympic swimmer Amy Marren called out the design on Twitter, writing, "[Warner Bros.] was there much thought given as to how this representation of limb differences would effect the limb difference community?!"

In a lengthier post on Instagram, she offered: “It’s not unusual for surgeons to try and build hands like this for children/adults with certain limb differences, and it’s upsetting to something that makes a person different being represented as something scary."

"Yes, I am fully aware that this a film and these are witches," added the English swimmer. "My fear is that children will watch this film, unaware that it massively exaggerates the Roald Dahl original and that limb difference begin to be feared."

The titular witches in Dahl's book are described as "claws hidden by gloves" and are depicted in the cover art as having five fingers. In the 1990 film that was led by Anjelica Huston, the witches are also shown as having five fingers.

The Paralympic Games echoed Marren's sentiments on its official Twitter account, writing, "Limb difference is not scary. Differences should be celebrated and disability has to be normalised."

In a statement in response to the backlash, a studio spokesperson says, "We the filmmakers and Warner Bros. Pictures are deeply saddened to learn that our depiction of the fictional characters in The Witches could upset people with disabilities, and regret any offense caused."

The Witches, which was set for a theatrical release prior to the pandemic theatrical shutdown, debuted on Warner Bros.' sister streaming service HBO Max on Oct. 22.

"In adapting the original story, we worked with designers and artists to come up with a new interpretation of the cat-like claws that are described in the book," the statement continued. "It was never the intention for viewers to feel that the fantastical, non-human creatures were meant to represent them. This film is about the power of kindness and friendship. It is our hope that families and children can enjoy the film and embrace this empowering, love-filled theme."

Americans with physical or mental disabilities include one-quarter of the population, a 2018 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found, and represent a $1 billion market segment, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. But USC's Annenberg Inclusion Initiative found that only 1.6 percent of all speaking characters in the top 100 grossing films of 2018 had a disability.

As the entertainment industry continues to reckon with its diversity representation, both on- and offscreen, a light has been shone on how disability is portrayed in Hollywood projects. Last month, the Ford and Andrew W. Mellon foundations announced Disability Futures Fellows, which awards $50,000 grant to disabled creatives in the hopes of addressing the financial and professional challenges often confronted by disabled creatives.

 

Article by: Mia Galuppo for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Amazon Prime Video Channels has landed in Spain, where the streaming platform’s a la carte service is now available with several of the country’s popular networks, and more to come.

Already available in the U.S., Canada, Japan, U.K. and Germany, and launching today in Italy and the Netherlands, Prime Video Channels is meant to serve up a traditional broadcaster alternative where convenience is the name of the game. All Prime Video Channels content is available through the Amazon Prime Video app, on any compatible device, using the same user interface and charged in the same monthly bill.

According to Ampere Analysis’ Guy Bisson, “The next frontier really for streaming television globally, is how we really aggregate everything that’s been disaggregated over the past 10 years.”

“It’s a great thing for customers that there’s so much TV and movie content out there. Amazon obsesses about the customer, and we’re always trying to add great selection for them while at the same time trying to make it convenient,” Julian Monaghan, director of Prime Video Channels E.U., told Variety in a conversation ahead of the service’s Spanish launch.

In addition to the aggregated and curated on demand content offered by Channels, Monaghan explained that broadcasts from partnering networks with live TV feeds will also be available through Prime Video. Examples can be seen in the U.S., where the MLB TV service is available, or in parts of Europe, where next summer’s European Championships soccer tournament will be streamable.

“Anyone who subscribes to that service can find a carousel in our interface for the live TV that is on at any moment. They can then watch it live, or catch it on demand later,” he went on.

The majority of Prime Video Channels networks globally are, so far, similarly priced to buying them straight from the source, meaning that consumers won’t necessarily save on any individual network, but have more control over the content they do pay for. The same is true with the service’s Spanish offerings.

“We want to make content affordable, but only the content customers really want,” said Monaghan. “So we let the customer pay only for that content that they want to watch, rather than paying a higher price for a package with a bunch of content included that they may have no interest in at all.”

Prime Video Channels isn’t only about appealing to customers either. According to Monaghan, it offers up a unique opportunity to potential network partners by providing access to Amazon’s pre-existing base of Prime Video customers.

“We want to talk to anybody interested and have that conversation,” Monaghan said of potential future Channels additions. “We know that for each network out there, there is an audience, and we’ve likely got someone from that audience as a Prime customer already. We want to make the networks available to them.”

Prime Video Channels will be available through the Prime Video app on a selection of Smart TVs, mobile devices, Fire devices, Apple TV, gaming consoles, Chromecast, Vodafone TV and via primevideo.com.

 

Article by: Jamie Lang for Variety .

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The musical guest for this weekend’s “Saturday Night Live” post-election episode is perhaps apt given that one of their most famous songs is  “Everlong,” which also happens to describe the current state of affairs in the election.

Foo Fighters have been announced as the musical guest to accompany host Dave Chappelle on the Nov. 7 episode. Precisely what the tone and general mood of that episode will be remains to be seen, as the election still hangs in the balance and counting could well go on beyond this weekend.

This will mark the eighth occasion on which the band from Seattle graces the “SNL” stage. They are currently celebrating the 25th anniversary of their self-titled debut album. Chappelle meanwhile is hosting for the second time, the first time being right after the 2016 presidential election. The comedian garnered an Emmy for his hosting performance.

Previous host-musical guest combinations for this 46th season of “SNL” include Chris Rock and Megan Thee Stallion from the premiere episode, as well as Bill Burr and Jack White, Issa Rae and Justin Bieber, Adele and H.E.R., and John Mulaney and the Strokes.

“SNL” has been leaning heavily into the election this season, with Alec Baldwin and Jim Carrey appearing in every episode so far as Donald Trump and Joe Biden respectively. The show has also been enlisting Maya Rudolph to play Kamala Harris once again, with regular cast member Beck Bennett playing Mike Pence.

“Saturday Night Live” airs live coast-to-coast on Saturdays at 11:30 p.m. ET / 8:30 p.m. PT on NBC.

 

Article by: Will Thorne for Variety.

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For many, this Election Day will be spent devouring as much coverage of the voting results as possible, flipping between different news channels while simultaneously checking Twitter and refreshing several different election results websites.

Others, however, may need to take a break from all the election coverage — or perhaps shut out everything having to do with the election entirely, as a necessary distraction from what would otherwise be fuel for a spiral down into a bottomless chasm of unresolvable anxiety and doom.

And who needs that, especially in 2020? No one! So here are some hopefully helpful — and by no means comprehensive — suggestions for alternative ways to ride out the election, both via streaming and over old fashioned linear TV.

If You Love Politics, Just Fictional and Hopeful

“The West Wing”

There is rarely a bad time to watch Aaron Sorkin’s love letter to a time when the occupants of the White House were good faith public servants dedicated to the common good. All seven seasons are available on Netflix, but if you’re especially keen for an alternative history of a presidential election, the seventh and final season — starring Jimmy Smits and Alan Alda as the respective Democratic and Republican nominees — is just the ticket.

 

If You Love Politics, Just Fictional and Set in a Bleak, Post-Apocalyptic America

The Hunger Games: Catching Fire

Watch Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) take on the totalitarian government of Panem as she learns to manipulate public sentiment and rally the fractured remnants of what was once the United States, and take comfort in how real life remains, for the moment, much less dire.

 

If You Love Politics, Just in Its Purest Expression

What the Constitution Means to Me Amazon

“What the Constitution Means to Me”

If you missed Heidi Schreck’s acclaimed play on Broadway — and statistically speaking, you likely did! — then this is your chance to swim in her deeply engrossing and engaging explication of the U.S. Constitution, the 9th and 14th Amendments, immigration, domestic abuse, sexuality, and whether we should throw out the country’s founding document entirely.

 

If You Love Christmas TV Movies

The Christmas Club The Christmas Aunt

“The Mistletoe Promise,” “The Christmas Club” and “Christmas Wishes & Mistletoe Kisses”, “Twinkle All the Way,” “Candy Cane Christmas” and “The Christmas Aunt”

Yes, it’s not even Thanksgiving yet, but that hasn’t stopped Lifetime and Hallmark from inundating their airwaves with a bounty of holiday movies that involve strangers meeting by chance, renewing beloved holiday traditions, learning to see past outdated holiday traditions, and tons and tons of the finest fake snow basic cable TV movies can muster. Bathe in their cozy yuletide glow.

 

If You Love "Friends" But Think It Needed Actual Black People and Gay People

“Happy Endings”

For a three years in the early 2010s, ABC aired this sublimely silly sitcom about six friends (played to perfection by Eliza Coupe, Elisha Cuthbert, Zachary Knighton, Adam Pally, Damon Wayans Jr., and Casey Wilson) in their late 20s/early 30s whose romantic and professional foibles and affection for ever-escalating wordplay captivated fans worldwide. Then ABC canceled the show after its third season, and the show’s true legend was born. Fizzy, funny, easily binged — a perfect distraction.

 

If You Love Classic American Cinema

The Godfather and The Godfather Part II

“The Godfather” (5:30pm ET) and “The Godfather Part II” (9:30pm ET)

Francis Ford Coppola’s epic about the Corleone crime family cuts deep into the heart of America, as we watch favored son Michael Corleone (Al Pacino, at the very start of his career) transform from a war hero determined to transcend his family’s mafioso way of life into the cold-hearted head of the entire criminal operation. So it’s not an uplifting experience, per se, but it is a profoundly engrossing one — and they’re arguably the very best two American films ever made.

 

If You Love Looking at Other People's Incredible Homes

“Home”

Whether it’s a tiny modular apartment in Hong Kong or an innovative greenhouse built over a log-cabin house in Sweden, this Apple TV Plus series hits that comfy architecture porn sweet spot — especially in month eight of a pandemic in which we’ve all seen far too much of our own homes.

 

If You Love '90s Sitcoms From the Stars of the "Bad Boys" Franchise

Martin Fresh Prince of Bel Air

“Martin” (6-8 p.m. ET); “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” (8-11 p.m. ET)

Just as returns start rolling in, stave off your spiking anxiety by flipping over to two of the very best ’90s sitcoms starring Martin Lawrence and Will Smith, respectively. Episodes include Kid of Kid n’ Play winning a date with Lawrence’s sharp-tongued alter-ego Sheneneh on “Martin,” and Will and the Banks kids letting Bell Biv DeVoe shoot a music video in their house on “Fresh Prince.” It’s the ’90s!

 

If You Love, Well, "Chopped"

Chopped

“Chopped” (1 p.m. to 4 a.m. ET)

If all else fails, Food Network is running a “Chopped” marathon all day and all night. Whether you enjoy trying to guess what the generic food brands are supposed to be replacing (like “sponge cake snakes” for Twinkies!), rolling your eyes whenever anyone grabs the truffle oil, or screaming whenever anyone cuts themselves, you can be confident that you will disappear into a comforting bubble of bizarre ingredients and inventive cuisine.

 

Article by: Adam B. Vary for Variety.

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Remi Weekes looks at the origins of his Netflix horror film, which centers on a South Sudan refugee couple.

This Halloween season offered no shortage of new horror movie releases, spanning a variety of subgenres. One that stands out is Remi Weekes’ His House, which premiered Oct. 30 on Netflix. The film follows a South Sudan refugee couple, Bol (Sope Dirisu) and Rial (Wunmi Mosaku) who are given asylum and are relocated in a small English town. Their new setting proves to be challenging, not only because of the dilapidated housing project they’re forced to stay in, but because of prejudiced neighbors, and the watchful eyes of government inspector, Mark (Matt Smith).

These issues are amplified by the presence of something supernatural that forces them to relive their traumatic escape from South Sudan, and makes them question if there’s anywhere they truly belong.

Exploring the horrors that come with the Black experience is finally mainstream, a topic explored in Xavier Burgin’s Shudder documentary, Horror Noire: A History of Black Horror (2019). His House furthers that conversation by taking it outside of the borders of America and telling an eye-opening, and spine-chilling narrative with global and personal ramifications. His House isn’t only socially-concerned in its aims, it’s also frightening.

The Hollywood Reporter spoke to director Remi Weekes about the challenges of directing his first feature film, gaining insight into the perspectives of South Sudan refugees, and using filmmaking to create larger conversations about the human experience.

How did you develop the idea of His House and come aboard this project?

Two producers in the U.K. spoke to me while I was doing commercials and short film work and told me right there that they wanted to do a horror film based on the immigrant perspective and they were currently working with two writers but felt that it wasn’t quite where they wanted it to be yet. So they asked me if I could pitch them my take. And I guess I just pitched them what you see in the film which is a two-hander psychological story about two people trying to overcome their trauma, and then survive after surviving.

In terms of getting into the experience of Sudan refugees, did you talk with a lot of people from that area to get insight into the characters at the center of your film?

Yeah, we did. During the development of this film we did a lot of research on the first-hand experiences of asylum seekers in the U.K. and people from South Sudan. And we also looked at the process and infrastructure of immigration and how the government treats you. When we were doing the research one of the things I found particularly interesting, which began the journey of the film, was that when you claim asylum you’re given accommodations, given a house, but there’s a really draconian rule that you’re not allowed to leave or go to a different house. You have to stay put. And you can’t get a job. You’re given a small allowance. So for many people claiming asylum it can be traumatizing. And that was the center of the film.

This being your first feature, what were the challenges or surprises that came with it?

I guess for my first feature it was all such an overwhelming experience. And not only that, but when you’re making short film work you work so hard for that one or two-day shoot and then it’s over and you can relax. But for this, I really had to pace myself. That was very much a new experience to me too, to work on something, including pre-production for months on end and really build a family with the people you’re working with.

Is horror a genre you’re interested in sticking around in for a while in terms of future projects?

I’m not sure. I don’t want to speak too soon. But I really love just any kind of cinema that takes you on a journey, and that takes you somewhere emotionally. That’s the kind of cinema I’ve always been interested in.

I think Jordan Peele really opened the doors for people of color who haven’t really been the focus on the genre. One of the things I admire about His House is how it broadens that conversation globally. Was creating a space for more Black people in the genre something you were aware of?

No, I wouldn’t say that was on my mind. I guess I have grown up loving movies and I always loved spectacle and going to the movies and seeing something big and bold, and exciting. Generally what happens when you’re a fan of any kind of art form is you can love it but also be aware that the people inside the film don’t really share your same references, or that the faces in a scene aren’t the people you spend your life with. I think probably for me I want to tell the same scale of story and employ the same type of experimentation, and spectacle to create conversations that may be more relevant to my life. So this film for example creates a conversation about assimilation and how much of yourself do you let go to fit into a new world.

 

Article by: Richard Newby for the Hollywood Reporter.

 

 

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Warner Bros. broke decades of tradition by changing its protocol for releasing grosses for 'Tenet' — and, amid a pandemic and a shift to PVOD for blockbuster releases, less transparency could become the new norm.

Here's a little-discussed tidbit: Hollywood studios are under no obligation to reveal box office grosses. Certainly, a conglomerate has to disclose an official write-down to shareholders, but that duty is rarely triggered when it comes to individual film titles.

So why would studios willingly reveal grosses day after day, weekend after weekend, exposing themselves to the risk of a film being declared a bomb mere hours after opening? Well, to engage consumers and generate global headlines. It worked for decades until the novel coronavirus struck, decimating moviegoing and sending high-profile titles to streaming or PVOD, where they escape that scrutiny. Now studios get to rethink whether they want to continue sharing grosses on a 24/7 basis with rivals, analysts and the media.

After all, box office transparency didn't always exist. Grosses weren't a perpetual fascination until the late 1980s and early '90s. Until studios started allowing theaters to feed grosses into centralized databases managed by an outside firm (such as Rentrak, which is now Comscore), numbers weren't so readily available.

"Somebody realized that nothing sells like success," says Sony Pictures chief Tom Rothman. "And, in that moment, the first stone was cast. It turns out people were as interested in that as in the number one TV show. Sure enough, it worked." Rothman believes the rise of box office reporting fundamentally changed the landscape — and not necessarily for the better — as marketing budgets skyrocketed and theatrical shelf lives shortened. "It was the beginning of narrowing what kind of big movies were made for theaters," he says. "A movie had to be a simple enough idea to open wide."

'The Broken Hearts Gallery' (TriStar)grossed slightly more than $1.1 million in its opening weekend.

It's why Rothman started Fox Searchlight in 1994 with the aim of ensuring specialty films are judged by awards, critical acclaim and word-of-mouth instead of box office returns. "Before that, it wasn't a parachute business. Now it is. You open or you die. There wasn't an instant pronouncement of judgment," adds Rothman. "And so the same way it is about sports — there's a winner and there's a loser — it became that way about films. It wasn't a question of whether a movie was good or bad — which is fair enough — it became a question of whether the movie had opened or not opened, which is much less fair."

Here's how it typically works: Theaters feed ticket-sales data directly into Comscore. That data is available to studios that are Comscore customers. By Friday afternoon, distribution execs across town prepare a flurry of memos for their bosses assessing how the box office is doing overall, not just with regard to their own titles. Those memos are updated throughout the weekend and often shared with media and filmmakers.

Warner Bros. has majorly deviated from the norm in how it has reported grosses for Christopher Nolan's Tenet, which opened in early September in the U.S. Hoping to manage the narrative without interjection from pundits, it only supplies weekend numbers on Sundays (followed by Monday actuals) and has blocked rival studios from seeing Tenet figures on Comscore, keeping the daily data to itself.

Usually, other distributors would be livid over such obscured grosses. With Tenet, however, competitors have largely understood, considering Warners is the only major studio to brave releasing a big-budget tentpole as cinemas struggle to reopen — and without New York and L.A. theaters in play. Says one rival studio exec, "I actually was very, very sympathetic to Warner Bros. and agreed it was a mistake to encourage opening-weekend pronouncements."

Sony followed Warners' lead, albeit to a far lesser degree. It's delaying the release of daily Comscore numbers until the Monday after opening weekend — but otherwise, it's adhering to traditional reporting protocols, as are other distributors. (Sony also gives a weekend estimate to the press on Sundays.)

'Unhinged' (Solstice), another pandemic release, took in $4 million.

Warners insiders explain there was concern that competitors might encourage the media to compare Tenet with Nolan's previous films, ignoring the extenuating circumstances. Generally speaking, though, reporters have been keenly aware that using comparisons for Tenet (or any other movie) is unfair amid the pandemic. Nor is there much point in noting the list of "worst-ever" records being set.

In the case of Tenet — which cost $200 million to produce before marketing — the film has grossed $53.8 million domestically, but few have dared to declare it a bomb. Internationally, it has fared notably better, grossing $293.3 million for a global total of $347.1 million through Nov. 1.

"We have come through the looking glass and things have become forever changed in terms of how we perceive, interpret and report on the numbers," says Paul Dergarabedian, Comscore's chief box office analyst. "We are living in a parallel universe. Suddenly, a $3 million opening has become something to celebrate" — as opposed to being a case for the usual studio schadenfreude.

Maybe that isn't such a bad thing.

 

Article by: Pamela McClintock for the Hollywood Reporter.

 

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Cronenberg mused on the dangers of technology, the impossibility of making sense of the pandemic and how people read too much into connections with is father's movies during an online talk with fans at Tokyo International Film Festival.

Now would seem to be the ideal moment for Brandon Cronenberg’s 2012 debut Antiviral, but the director told a Talk Salon at Tokyo International Festival that a global pandemic was not the time for his movie about a deadly virus.

"The virus stands in for something in the film. As is the case often in sci-fi and horror, the horror is metaphorical, but now those things are so immediate and so literal," said Cronenberg via a video link from his Toronto hometown.

The festival is screening his second feature, the psychological body-swapping, sci-fi horror Possessor, and Cronenberg took questions from Japanese fans in an online talk moderated by festival programmer Yoshi Yatabe.

Asked by Yatabe how he views a world in the middle of the pandemic, in light of the prescient topic of his debut, Cronenberg replied, "I feel it’s impossible to see the world in 2020 because so much is changing, some of it terrifying, all of it fascinating and unexpected. I think we’ll only be able to see it in five or 10 years’ time, when we will be able to comprehend the repercussions of what is happening now."

Possessor has won critical praise for its disturbing examination of identity, shadowy corporate malfeasance and the dangers of technology, along with some inevitable comparisons with the work of Cronenberg’s father David.

The idea for Possessor "came from a somewhat trivial personal place," said Cronenberg, describing the experience of his press tour for Antiviral as, "consciously or unconsciously inventing a public persona and performing a version of yourself."

"It was very much the idea of a film about a person who may or not be an impostor in their own life and who may not understand whether they are. The sci-fi elements were built out from there, but those quieter and less dramatic scenes were the seeds of the film," he added.

The common themes of shady companies exploiting scientific advances in his two films are a reflection of Cronenberg’s concerns about the direction of society.

"I think corporate activity in many ways is defining all of our narratives right now because corporations are so incredibly powerful and influential in defining the ways we communicate, essentially building the tools we use to speak to each other, even as we are now," said Cronenberg in a discussion conducted via Zoom and streamed on YouTube. "That is having a dramatic effect on our psychology in ways we are just beginning to realize."

Questioned by the moderator and fans about the graphic gore in the film, Cronenberg responded, "The violence in Possessor is incredibly narrative because so much of Vos’s character [played by Andrea Riseborough] is defined by her relationship with violence… It was important for audiences to understand those experiences on a visceral level because that’s how they can understand her. The depiction of violence in the film shifts to track her psychology."

Pressed on whether it was really necessary to show so much bloodshed, the director quipped, “Even one stab less and the whole film would have been ruined.”

Despite almost inviting people to see connections with his father's work by casting Jennifer Jason Leigh, who appeared in Cronenberg senior’s eXistenZ, the director politely deflected questions on the topic.

“You’re maybe reading into it too much. Other people have more interest in that dynamic than me,” he replied to one. “I’m too close to my work and too close to him to have that kind of perspective,” he answered another.

The technology in Possessor, in which corporate assassins take over people’s bodies to carry out their crimes, is possible, if not for a few years yet, according to the director, who said he had researched the neuroscience behind it.

Science fiction is a useful medium through which "explore the world because I can create a caricature of the real world with through sci-fi," suggested Cronenberg.

E-cigarettes are a rarity in Japan as it is illegal to sell vape juice containing nicotine, leading one local fan to ask why so many characters in the film were vaping.

"In my mind, I set it in 2008 in Toronto in an alternative timeline, a parallel world. I imagined technology had developed in a different way," said Cronenberg. "So I thought everyone vaping would be kind of funny. It’s also very cinematic to have that much vapor coming out of someone’s mouth."

 

Article by: Gavin Blair for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The legendary actor was Steven Spielberg's only choice to play Indiana Jones' dad.

Harrison Ford paid tribute to his Indiana Jones' father, Sean Connery. The legendary actor died Saturday at his home in the Bahamas. He was 90.

Among Connery's numerous, iconic roles and films, one of his most beloved was Henry Jones Sr. in 1989's Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.

"He was my father … not in life … but in Indy 3," Ford said in a statement to The Hollywood Reporter. "You don’t know pleasure until someone pays you to take Sean Connery for a ride in the sidecar of a Russian motorcycle bouncing along a bumpy, twisty mountain trail and getting to watch him squirm. God we had fun — if he’s in heaven, I hope they have golf courses. Rest in peace dear friend."

Director Steven Spielberg said in a making-of featurette that the casting of Indiana's father was a no-brainer. "There is only one option when it comes to playing Indy's father and that is James Bond. The original James Bond, the great James Bond: Sean Connery," Spielberg said.

Along with all the wit and humor that Connery brought to the role, his character also delivered what is considered by most fans to be the most emotional moment in the entire series: When the elder Dr. Jones finally calls his son "Indiana" in order to save him from falling to his death.

George Lucas said of Connery's death: "Sir Sean Connery, through his talent and drive, left an indelible mark in cinematic history. His audiences spanned generations, each with favorite roles he played. He will always hold a special place in my heart as Indy’s dad. With an air of intelligent authority and sly sense of comedic mischief, only someone like Sean Connery could render Indiana Jones immediately into boyish regret or relief through a stern fatherly chiding or rejoiceful hug. I’m thankful for having had the good fortune to have known and worked with him. My thoughts are with his family."

 

Article by: Ryan Parker for the Hollywood Reporter.

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In a streaming-centric Hollywood, the beloved ragtag troupe is poised for a rebirth, but first its corporate overlords must rectify a workplace that hasn't been inclusive.

Since buying the Muppets in 2004, Disney has never been quite sure what to do with the ragtag gang. But after years of fits and starts, the Muppets may have found their moment. Hollywood's streaming-first strategy has primed the property — with its rich back catalog including 10 features, 120 episodes of The Muppet Show and dozens of specials and spinoffs, its deep bench of beloved character IP and its ability to captivate homebound children for hours on end — for a renaissance. They even have the boss' favor: Bob Chapek, the former head of Disney parks who took over as CEO in February, is internally known to be much more of a fan than former CEO Bob Iger ever was. And the brand's latest swing at relevance, a six-episode series for Disney+ called Muppets Now, has been lauded by critics as having ushered the Muppets into the TikTok era.

Despite this potentially rosy and modern future, however, the internal culture of the Muppets remains mired in the past — little has changed since its boys' club beginnings in the early 1970s. The world has evolved, but behind the scenes — particularly where it involves current sensitivities around sexism and inclusivity — the Muppets have not. Muppets insiders interviewed for this article say it's virtually impossible for female Muppets performers to advance alongside their male counterparts by being invited into what's known as the "core Muppets players" — an elite cadre of six puppeteers, all of them white men, who perform the most famous characters. The current core consists of Matt Vogel (Kermit the Frog), Eric Jacobson (Fozzie Bear, Miss Piggy), Dave Goelz (the last original Muppets performer and creator of Gonzo), Bill Barretta (Rowlf the Dog), Peter Linz (Walter, a character from the 2011 feature reboot The Muppets) and David Rudman (Scooter, Janice).

A seventh full-time Muppets performer, Julianne Buescher, who has worked with the company for 30-plus years and plays a leading role on Muppets Now (Beverly Plume, a turkey who hosts a cooking show), has never been invited to join the core, keeping her at a lower rung than her male counterparts. Buescher, who would not comment for this story, is listed as an "additional Muppet performer" on Muppets Now — a credit typically assigned to supporting puppeteers who operate hands or play rats and chickens. For that, she earns scale — or $1,500 a week, far less than what the core performers make. (Disney would not reveal those figures, nor would it make any Muppets Studio employees available for comment. But insiders say they command fees more in keeping with typical live-action series leads — easily tens of thousands of dollars per episode.)

Compounding the problem is Disney's hands-off approach to the property. Between 2004 and 2017, the Muppets Studio (formerly the Muppets Holding Co.) was shuffled among Disney Consumer Products (whose president, Kareem Daniel, was recently elevated to lead the company's new Media and Entertainment Distribution division), Walt Disney Studios, its special events group and Disney Interactive Media. (The Muppets finally landed in Chapek's domain when a 2018 company reorganization moved digital under his Parks, Experiences and Products unit.) Throughout, Disney has tried to evolve the property creatively, resulting in hits (2011's The Muppets, which won an Oscar for original song and grossed $165 million worldwide) and misses (the low-rated 2015 mockumentary sitcom of the same name, canceled by ABC after one season). But to those who work there, the Muppets have never seemed a priority.

According to Muppets performers consulted for this report — several of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity — Disney's frugality (it has tried repeatedly to skirt union minimums for puppeteers by giving them nonperformer titles) and general lack of HR oversight (there are no Muppets performers of color at Disney, nor has there ever been) has taken a toll on the brand. Says one veteran puppeteer, "I believe very strongly that there is not enough diversity within the core group."

Asked about a pattern of underpayments to Muppets puppeteers by Disney that dates to 1990, a SAG-AFTRA representative responds that "some companies have attempted to place puppeteers under contracts that are inappropriate to their type of work in order to get around contractual obligations like consecutive employment and overtime. Just as an example, puppeteers have sometimes been hired as [lower-paid] stunt puppeteers when they are not performing any stunt work."

Recently, Disney has been hiring fewer and fewer noncore puppeteers as a cost-saving measure. Not too long ago, Michelan Sisti, who got his start when Jim Henson chose him to play Michelangelo in 1990's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, made a steady living with the Muppets. "I was the drumming hands of Animal for the last decade or more," Sisti says, "and penguins, chickens, rats, things of that nature." But well before the COVID-19 pandemic, Sisti's work with the company had dried up. "They stopped using as many of us additional puppeteers as they did before," he says. "That's been the biggest change." He figures he's hung up the drumsticks for good: "Where the Muppets are concerned, I'm a retired guy."

Also controversial was the 2017 firing of Steve Whitmire, a Henson disciple who joined The Muppet Show in 1978, eventually inheriting Kermit from Henson after his 1990 death. A virtuoso puppeteer, Whitmire was nevertheless a thorn in Disney's side for years, advocating aggressively on behalf of puppeteers' rights while doing his best to ensure that the Muppets ethos — i.e., "how Jim would have done it" — remains intact. A Disney statement at the time of his termination referred to Whitmire's "repeated unacceptable business conduct over a period of many years." Whitmire refutes that characterization, telling THR, "There's a fine line between being difficult to work with and being difficult to take advantage of."

Many in the Muppets community found his dismissal shocking. "All I could see was Steve being very professional," says David Alan Barclay, a veteran puppeteer who manned Jabba the Hutt in 1983's Return of the Jedi and worked alongside Whitmire on ABC's The Muppets. "There would come up certain things in the scripts that all us puppeteers would say, 'Well, Kermit wouldn't say that,' and Steve would very gently say, 'I'm not sure this line is quite correct for Kermit.' He seemed to be very caring about the characters." (Others, however, counter that Whitmire grew too powerful and protective of the Muppets legacy, going so far as to blacklist puppeteers who did not fall in line with his views.)

Puppeteer Alice Dinnean, who also worked on the ABC show, says: "I don't know what the issue was that caused that cataclysmic disruption in our community. That was hard on everyone and was a little bit mysterious. Steve was Kermit — and Kermit is a movie star."

The Muppets and Disney have always made for uneasy bedfellows. On Oct. 17, 1989, eight months before he died of untreated bacterial pneumonia, Jim Henson wrote an uncharacteristically pointed letter to Michael Eisner and Jeffrey Katzenberg. He had for months been locked in bitter negotiations with the then-Disney chiefs, who wanted to buy his Jim Henson Co. for $150 million (about $315 million today). It was meant to be a happily-ever-after scenario for Henson, freeing him to focus on new creative endeavors. But as Disney's army of lawyers nickel-and-dimed him into submission, it was quickly turning into a nightmare.

"We are getting started in a way that is not going to work for me in the future," Henson said, questioning how Disney could have the gall to balk at the modest $1.2 million budget he'd requested for their first major collaboration — Muppet*Vision 3D, a Captain EO-inspired short-film attraction for Walt Disney World. That figure included his directing fee of $200,000, a number Eisner and Katzenberg rejected as "too high and precedent breaking." Fumed Henson, "I really don't intend to do battle with you guys for the next 15 years."

Tragically, he wouldn't live long enough to have to. But he would prove prescient about the timeline: Save for some specific deal points (domestic rights to Henson theme park attractions, theatrical and home video distribution of movies like 1992's The Muppet Christmas Carol and 1996's Muppet Treasure Island), the actual sale of the Muppets to Disney did not happen until Feb. 17, 2004. It was then that the beloved (and highly merchandisable) suite of Muppets characters — Kermit the Frog, Miss Piggy, Fozzie and the rest — became the sole property of Disney, as did classic films like 1979's The Muppet Movie and 1981's The Great Muppet Caper, as well as The Muppet Show, which aired in syndication from 1976 to 1981. (With the exception of Kermit, Sesame Street Muppets like Big Bird and Cookie Monster were not included in the deal and remain property of the nonprofit Sesame Workshop, now a third-party content provider to HBO Max.) Disney paid $75 million for the company — half the originally proposed sum. "They wanted to pay less money because Jim wasn't part of it anymore," says a contemporary of Henson's. "It just really soured the [Henson] family, I know that."

Fifteen years later, the Muppets are relatively minor cogs in the Disney machine. Henson's dreams of vast Muppet Lands inside Disney theme parks never came to fruition. (The original, 30-year-old Muppet*Vision 3D still screens at Walt Disney World, near a Miss Piggy fountain.) In 2020, nowhere is the brand's redheaded-stepchild status more evident than on the Walt Disney Co. website itself, which features the logos of dozens of Disney holdings including Pixar, Marvel Studios and Lucasfilm — but bears no mention of the Muppets.

Any of Henson's creations that did not involve the Muppets — including popular fantasy properties like The Dark Crystal and Fraggle Rock — remained with the Jim Henson Co., which has been run by Brian Henson and Lisa Henson since their father's death. (Brian, 56, serves as chairman of the company, while his sister, Lisa, 60, is CEO.) What quickly became apparent to those who worked with him was that Brian was not his legendary father — nor did he want to be. "He has hated puppeteers for his entire life," says one longtime collaborator. "He had this thing that these people were siphoning from his father like vampires — Jerry Nelson, Dave Goelz, Frank Oz," the source continues, citing Henson's original core team. (Of them, only Goelz still performs; Nelson died in 2012 and Oz went on to direct feature comedies like What About Bob? and In & Out.)

According to sources, Brian Henson's aversion to the Muppets persists. At a 2017 live performance at the Hollywood Bowl, after the Muppets led a 17,000-person crowd in an emotional rendition of the Oscar-nominated Muppet Movie ballad "The Rainbow Connection," Henson was overheard backstage, according to witnesses, saying, "I hate that fucking song!" His last directorial effort, 2018's The Happytime Murders, was meant to be a repudiation of the Muppets' feel-good legacy: a raunchy film noir starring Melissa McCarthy and a cast of puppets that ejaculated Silly String and said things like, "For 50 cents, I'll suck your dick." The film bombed and earned six Razzie nominations, winning one for McCarthy. Brian Henson declined to comment.

Still, his Jim Henson Co. has an exemplary track record when it comes to employing women, thanks in large part to Lisa's push, especially during the past five years, to bring more female artists into the mix. The Disney-owned Muppets, on the other hand, still remain white and male — something that was baked into its beginnings. "Jim Henson and Frank Oz were an amazing double act," says Barclay. "I think that's really one of the fundamental reasons The Muppet Show worked so well. It's like Abbott and Costello or Laurel and Hardy." Adds Whitmire: "When Jim was alive, his core team started out as a fairly male-dominated company. There was no prejudice. I mean, Jim was just about the most liberal, accepting person I ever knew." Nevertheless, the company leaned into "masculine humor — a lot of guys being silly in a room," he says. "And I think oftentimes it took a very special woman to be in that room." As a result, whenever female Muppets characters broke out — like Miss Piggy (originally played by Oz) and Janice (originated by Richard Hunt) — they were invariably performed by men.

To be sure, a handful of influential female puppeteers have worked on Henson projects and with the Muppets over the years, including Fran Brill and Louise Gold (both hired by Jim Henson himself). These days, however, only two women still actively perform with the Muppets: Buescher and Dinnean. Speaking with THR, Dinnean, who also works with the Jim Henson Co. and its affiliated Henson Creature Workshop (she was one of the stars of the Netflix series The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance), is forgiving of the lack of female Muppeteers: "The Muppets are like Monty Python. Miss Piggy is a wonderful drag role. She's got that over-the-top, diva feel. That's the tradition. She's never going to be played by a woman, nor should she be. She will be played by a series of gentlemen through history."

As for her one female counterpart, Dinnean says Buescher "has some lovely smaller but regular characters like Yolanda the Rat. She's a virtuoso and is amazing. But in order to be one of the central performers, you need to have five or six classic characters." Still, Dinnean points out, the group is "really good about bringing [women] in" to support the core. "Not only because we deserve it. But because they want a little more representation."

Jim Henson always saw the Muppets as an ensemble and encouraged the development of hundreds of characters. There are an estimated 3,300 individual Muppets characters in existence, across all Disney and Jim Henson Co. properties. Yolanda the Rat and Beverly Plume might not be considered marginal if Disney took a more holistic approach to the world. But from the start, Disney, not illogically, focused on the Muppets that could generate the most money. "It was based on data they got from all over the world," says Whitmire. "Who are the five characters people responded to the most? And it was Kermit, Piggy, Fozzie, Animal and Gonzo. And so it was very hard for new, female-performed characters to penetrate."

Disney also veered from Jim Henson's philosophy by choosing to "multicast" the Muppets — meaning assigning multiple performers to the same characters. "It's an animators' approach, where they have the number one Mickey voice, the number two, three, four, depending on how important the product is," explains Barclay. "They've seen Muppets in that same sort of way. But the real soul of the character comes from the original puppeteer — and when you take that away, then you lose the identity of the character."

When he played Kermit, Whitmire agreed. So much so, in fact, that when he learned that Disney was holding an audition for backup performers (it was hastily organized in 2005 after the voice of Winnie the Pooh's Piglet, John Fiedler, died without anyone lined up to take his place), Whitmire, still at the company, allegedly blacklisted anyone who showed up to the audition. Says a puppeteer: "I don't want to make Steve sound like he's the bad guy. But in a sense, he kind of was — in that he was protecting his role as Kermit, and because of that, he kind of threw some people under the bus." Among the blacklisted puppeteers were Artie Esposito, who auditioned to understudy Kermit, and Allan Trautman, a veteran who'd gotten his start working with legendary puppeteers Sid and Marty Krofft. (Esposito and Trautman declined to comment.)

The existence of the Muppets blacklist was certainly known to Disney executives — but Whitmire's sway over the Muppets was such at the time that the studio was powerless to stop him, according to several sources. "It was a big part of why they found a way to dismiss him," says an insider. "Disney wanted understudies. Period. If Kermit's in New York and also has to be on a cruise ship, you might need a couple of performers if you want this franchise to have a rebirth. Because it hasn't happened so far."

Whitmire rejects the narrative. "In nearly four decades of involvement with the Muppets, I never had any 'supervisory capacity,' meaning decisions over who was hired or not hired were never mine, so I could not 'blacklist' anyone," he says. "Artie Esposito was, in fact, hired to be Kermit for appearances four years [after the audition], when I was asked to work nonunion. Also, others who were a part of that 2005 audition to multicast the characters worked with me on subsequent Disney projects."

Whitmire was fired in summer 2017 during a phone call with the two executives overseeing Muppets Studio at the time, Debbie McClellan and Kyle Laughlin. "They told me that, after my 37-year career, 'Sorry, we've decided to recast all your characters.' It was handled so disrespectfully, and I was reeling. I went through incredible depression about this and just sadness and desperation to try to sort it out." In early 2019, McClellan and Laughlin also were forced out for unspecified reasons. (Neither would speak for this article.)

Now Muppets Studio is led by vice president Leigh Slaughter, an Australian who formerly headed the character and puppetry studio at Disney Imagineering, where she reported to Chapek. Slaughter is reputed to be a highly talented creative executive and, among the insular and gossipy world of the Muppets, has so far made a good impression, having served as executive producer on Muppets Now.

In a July interview with The New York Times, Slaughter hinted at Muppets content in the pipeline. "We definitely have ambitions for the Muppets to be doing more," she said. "But there's nothing that we're ready to reveal." Disney in the future hopefully will address adjustments that need to happen on both sides of the camera — which may end up costing more money and ruffling some old-guard feathers, but which ultimately will result in Muppets that feel truly modern and relevant. If it does that, then this revival might actually have some legs — even if the Muppets themselves do not.

 

Article by: Seth Abramovitch for the Hollywood Reporter.

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"I was one of the four, so we were together a lot. His sense of humor was always prevalent. He had a very dry, sort of sarcastic, observational humor that I very much appreciated," the actor tells The Hollywood Reporter.

One of the main reasons I was inspired to become an actor was because of Sean Connery. Growing up in the ’60s in Miami Beach, his early work made such an impression: Dr. No and Goldfinger in the Bond series. He was the hero of our times. I was a young man, and I was really enamored with Sean. I would go to the theater and sit and watch two and three screenings in a row when one of his movies came out. I’d spend the whole day in there. Start with the matinee, come home to dinner and then take in the evening show. I didn’t know that I wanted to be an actor at the time, but I was enthralled with what I was seeing. I would say Sean along with Steve McQueen and James Coburn and Peter Sellers in the comedic world [inspired me].

It was destiny that I got to work with him in The Untouchables. God works in mysterious ways. It was a great privilege for me. It was one of those things you think that someone will put a hand on your shoulder and say, “Wake up. It's all been a dream.”

We rehearsed for a week or so before we started [shooting] in Chicago. I remember during rehearsal, he was jabbing me with a clipboard that he had in his hands with the little metal part right in my ribs. And I remember knocking it out of his hand. And then he was like, “I like that. Let's do that in the movie.” So that's why it's in the movie like that, because Sean was provoking me to get a reaction. Once I did, he said, “Good. I like this kid.”

We were doing a scene where I had to go down the hallway. The camera was looking down the hallway, and he was off camera. It was me answering the phone and having a conversation with him. But he was ready to go play golf right after the scene would be over. So I went in there to answer the phone, and Brian De Palma said, “Cut.” And I walked back to where they were, and Brian said, “Andy, we didn't see your face.” And then there was a discussion about how I’d answer the phone. I didn’t want it to look corny. And Sean looked up to me and said, “Come on, kid, it's not Hamlet: Just answer the phone, turn around; let's get out of here.” So. I did another take. Brian says “Cut. Andy, we only saw one eye.” And Sean, with his great sense of humor, said, “You saw two eyes. They’re just very close together.”

His sense of humor was so quick, and you could be the butt of his humor very easily. And he would take it as well as he could give it. I would riff with him and try to hold my ground. And that was my relationship with him in the movie as well. I had to always come back with something. He wanted you to come back. He didn't want you to lay down. I made him laugh, and he treated me very warmly. He loved kids. He loved the fact that my kids were around on the set, and he would play with them. That showed the warmth of his character.

Sean took his work very seriously. He was a consummate actor, and he was highly prepared, so he set the bar very high. As soon as he walked into the room, he was ready, and you had to be ready around him. You had to show up ready to go. He had this masterful touch, imaginative, a sense of interpretation that he had with all of his parts going back to the early Bond.

The last time I saw Sean was at a tribute that we did at the AFI [in 2009], and I was honored to speak about him. After the event, we went together to an afterparty and sat together. We had a cocktail or two, and it was a beautiful thing. I never saw him after that. He lived in the Bahamas. He said, “Come to Nassau. We’ll play some golf.” I thought to myself, “Yeah, I gotta go do that.” I never did. It's a regret I have.

Raise your glass for him. It's never too early to toast Sean Connery.

 

Article by: Andy Garcia and Tatiana Siegel for the Hollywood Reporter.

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The seventh annual 'Docs to Watch' panel on Oct. 25 brought together the helmers of 'Boys State,' 'Crip Camp,' 'Dick Johnson Is Dead,' 'The Dissident,' 'The Human Factor,' 'MLK/FBI,' 'Time,' 'The Truffle Hunters,' 'The Way I See It' and 'Welcome to Chechnya.'

Even a pandemic couldn't keep the SCAD Savannah Film Festival from proceeding with its seventh annual 'Docs to Watch' Panel — albeit virtually, given the circumstances.

As in the past, the panel was presented by The Hollywood Reporter, moderated by yours truly and brought together the directors of 10 of the year's top documentary features to discuss what led them to their films' subjects; how they confronted unexpected challenges along the way; and what sort of impact they hope their work will have as it goes out to the world.

2020's panelists were Amanda McBaine, co-director, with Jesse Moss, of Boys State (A24 and Apple TV+), a film about teens competing in a mock government program in Texas; Nicole Newnham, co-director, with James Lebrecht, of Crip Camp (Netflix), a film about a generation of disability activists who emerged from a 1970s summer camp; Kirsten Johnson, director of Dick Johnson Is Dead (Netflix), a film about the director and her elderly father confronting the inevitability of his death; Icarus Oscar winner Bryan Fogel, director of The Dissident (Briarcliff), a film about the life and murder of a Saudi-born Washington Post journalist; The Gatekeepers Oscar nominee Dror Moreh, director of The Human Factor (Sony Classics), a film about the American negotiators who have tried to broker peace in the Middle East; 4 Little Girls Oscar nominee Sam Pollard, director of MLK/FBI (IFC), a film about the leader of the American civil rights movement and the FBI’s efforts to smear him; Garrett Bradley, director of Time (Amazon), a film about the impact of a harsh prison sentence on one African-American family over more than two decades; Michael Dweck, co-director, with Gregory Kershaw, of The Truffle Hunters (Sony Classics), a film about the old men and their dogs who pursue rare white truffles in the forests of Italy; Dawn Porter, director of The Way I See It (Focus), a film about the career and political activation of a former White House photographer; and How to Survive a Plague Oscar nominee David France, director of Welcome to Chechnya (HBO), a film about a network of activists helping LGBTQ citizens escape persecution in a closed Russian republic.

The SCAD Savannah Film Festival, which is usually held in Georgia on the campus of the Savannah College of Art and Design, is the nation's largest university-run film fest. In recent years, under the oversight of artistic director Christina Routhier, the event, long known for its beautiful setting and Southern hospitality, has become an important stop on the awards circuit.

 

Article by: the Hollywood Reporter Editorial team.

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Japan's flagship festival is kicking off amid a resurgence of the local box office, where local animation hit 'Demon Slayer' earned more than $100 million in 10 days.

The Tokyo International Film Festival kicked off its 33rd edition Saturday with an abbreviated red carpet and a series of photo ops featuring Japanese stars separated by plexiglass dividers. Representatives of the global film community, meanwhile, including Robert De Niro, Christopher Nolan and Cannes Film Festival director Thierry Frémaux, beamed into the event via a series of video messages wishing the festival well amid the challenges of COVID-19.

Local film figures turned out in force for the opening ceremony, reflecting organizers' determination to forge ahead with a grandly staged physical event despite the myriad health and safety restrictions that have made the 2020 festival a downsized, mostly domestic occasion.

“Since spring, we’ve been contemplating whether or not to hold the festival due to the pandemic," said Tokyo's festival chairman Hiroyasu Ando. "I'm deeply moved to see so many of you here today for our opening ceremony.”

Said Nolan, via video: "The fact that in these challenging times you’ve found a way to honor and enjoy watching films on the big screen is a source of inspiration to myself and other filmmakers around the world."

Japan's relative containment of COVID-19 has allowed organizers to carry on with an in-person program that would be unthinkable in much of the West at the present moment. On Sunday, Japan reported just 614 new cases of novel coronavirus infection, while the United States logged over 84,000 and England began preparations for another nationwide lockdown.

The Tokyo festival will screen 138 films this year, down from 180 in 2019. The selection also has been streamlined, with the new "Tokyo Premiere" section replacing the usual competition section and two other strands. For the first time in its history, the festival will award just one prize — an audience award — a response to the infeasibility of assembling an international jury within Japan.

Just three foreign filmmakers whose works are premiering at the festival — Lim Kah Wai (Come and Go) and Edmund Yeo (Malu), both of Malaysia, and Singaporean director Liao Jiekai (Light of a Burning Moth) — were willing to make the trip to Japan and submit to the government's mandatory two-week quarantine to be present for their film's screenings.

The Tokyo festival's kickoff has been made possible by the Japanese public's growing comfort and willingness to return to cinemas. After a collective shut down in April and May, when Japan experienced its first wave of coronavirus infection, the exhibition industry has mounted a strong comeback. The recovery culminated on Oct. 16 with the release of blockbuster anime Demon Slayer, which has soared past $100 million over just two weekends — a record pace not only for the troubled year of 2020 but the fastest start of any film in Japanese box-office history. Many analysts believe the film could climb as high as $250 million in domestic earnings, which would place it among the top five top titles in Japan ever.

Following the Tokyo government's guidance, which allowed cinemas nationwide to resume operating at full capacity on Sept. 19, the Tokyo festival will screen its selection with no reductions on seating capacity. Festivalgoers' temperatures will be taken at the door, masks will be required and food will be banned in the theater — but drinks are allowed. The event says it is expecting many, if not most, screenings to sell out.

Aya Umezu, CEO of Tokyo-based movie marketing and data analysis firm Gem Partners, believes that the Japanese cinema industry's rebound has hit the vital turning point where enough consumers feel comfortable returning to theaters that distributors feel confident in releasing their top films, which in turn draws more consumers back to theaters. Based on a consumer survey Gem Partners conducted on Oct. 10, over 80 percent of people who went to a cinema to see a movie said that they felt "safe" — "very safe" or "somewhat safe" — during their visit.

The only thing holding Japan's exhibition sector back from a full recovery at this stage is the deleterious public health situation in North America, which has resulted in Hollywood postponing the global release of nearly all of its tentpoles for the remainder of 2020. "Half of the Japanese film market is also the 'foreign film market,' says Umezu, noting the huge slice of the Japan box office taken by U.S. films. "No matter how successful Japanese live-action films and animations are, if Hollywood films are not released, there will never be a real recovery," she adds.

Tokyo's festival chairman Ando put the local industry's struggles in a stark historical light at the opening ceremony by invoking the legacy of Japanese master filmmaker Sadao Yamanaka, whose three surviving works from the 1930s the festival will be showing in lush 4K remastered versions. “Mr. Yamanaka was drafted into WWII, but he remained passionate about cinema until the moment he died on the battlefield. His work went on to inspire the likes of Yasujiro Ozu. We believe in the power of films, even in this difficult time, and we wanted to keep the beacon of cinema alight by holding this festival physically.”

Added acclaimed actor and festival ambassador, Koji Yakusho (Babel, The Third Murder): "I know that this festival will be quite different from usual, and we must all take precaution. But we can still have a really good time together. It’s wonderful to be able to see these films on the big screen."

The festival opened with Masaharu Take's boxing drama Underdog, starring Mirai Moriyama, Takumi Kitamura and Ryo Katsuji, and it will close Nov. 9 with the world premiere of director Hajime Hashimoto's Hokusai, a biopic of the great Japanese ukiyo-e painter and printmaker.

 

Article by: Patrick Brzeski and Gavin J Blair for the Hollywood Reporter.

 

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Laurie Strode, the teen-babysitter-turned-avenging-grandmother portrayed by Jamie Lee Curtis, is back with a vengeance in “Halloween Kills,” the latest sequel in the slasher franchise.

In a new clip released Thursday, Strode is seen battling Michael Myers as her family is forced to confront the psychotic and murderous masked serial killer yet again. John Carpenter’s original 1978 movie introduced audiences to Michael Myers, a lethal mental patient who wrecks havoc on the fictional town of Haddonfield, Ill., after escaping from prison on Halloween night.

“Next Halloween, when the sun sets and someone is alone, he kills,” Strode ominously says over footage of Michael picking up his infamous white mask.

“Halloween Kills” picks up following the events of 2018’s “Halloween,” which saw Laurie dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder 40 years after surviving Michael Myers’ original murder spree. “Halloween,” the 11th movie in the franchise, was a huge box office hit in 2018, earning $255 million globally and solidifying its place as the highest-grossing installment in the series. The movie also ranks as the highest-grossing slasher film, not adjusted for inflation. The franchise has collectively generated $640 million in worldwide ticket sales.

David Gordon Green directed “Halloween Kills,” having previously directed “Halloween.” Nick Castle is returning as Michael Myers, while Judy Greer, Andi Matichak, Kyle Richards, Nancy Stephens and Charles Cyphers are reprising their roles from previous franchise entries. Anthony Michael Hall and Robert Longstreet are joining the cast.

“Halloween Kills” is slated to release in theaters Oct. 15, 2021. A direct follow-up, “Halloween Ends,” is scheduled to debut a year later on Oct. 14, 2022.

 

Article by: Rebecca Rubin for Variety.

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A mutated strand of coronavirus called COVID-23 wreaks havoc on the world in “Songbird,” produced by Michael Bay.

On Thursday, the first trailer for the pandemic thriller showed a world trapped in lockdown for four years, reaching 8.4 million deaths in a single year. The movie takes place in 2024 and stars K.J. Apa and Sofia Carson, who play a couple separated by the pandemic and living under martial law. Apa’s character claims to be immune from the virus, which may help him as he searches for his girlfriend, who is forced to evacuate her apartment after her neighbor contracts the virus.

“It’s a dystopian, scary world, but it’s a romantic movie about two people who want to be together, but they can’t,” director Adam Mason told Entertainment Weekly. “It’s ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ but they’re separated by her front door and by the virus.”

On shooting the film about a pandemic during a pandemic, Mason said the limitations set by COVID-19 guidelines reminded him of prior sets he had worked on. “I normally do the lighting and the camera work myself,” he said. “So, I’m used to being very close to the actors and filming in this very intimate way that was perfectly suited to filming during the rules and regulations of the lockdown. I found it incredibly liberating because everyone was just so happy to be involved.”

Mason wrote the script alongside Simon Boyes. Fellow cast members include Craig Robinson, Bradley Whitford, Alexandra Daddario, Demi Moore, Peter Stormare and Paul Walter Hauser. Adam Goodman, Invisible Narratives, Catchlight Films and Michael Bay produce the film. Watch its new trailer below.

 

Article by:Eli Countryman for Variety.

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The hour-long show features recreations of Starcourt Mall and the Upside Down, with live performances of scenes from across the hit series' three seasons.

Hawkins, Indiana has come to Los Angeles.

Stranger Things: The Drive-Into Experience debuted in downtown L.A. on Wednesday, kicking off a drive-thru live entertainment show inspired by the hit Netflix series that will run through Spring 2021. The event, which spans 400,000 square feet at Skylight ROW DTLA, features an hour-long performance transporting guests to 1985 Hawkins — where the adventures of Mike (played in the series by Finn Wolfhard), Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo), Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin), Will (Noah Schnapp) and Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) take place —  from the safety of their own cars, with plenty of supernatural elements in play.

Upon arrival, guests (who are encouraged to dress up in '80s garb and required to wear masks whenever car windows are opened) are welcomed to the 1985 Hawkins High School reunion and quickly are taken 35 years back in time when guided to a parking lot revamped as the Starcourt Mall. The mall, of course, is home to Scoops Ahoy, the ice cream shop that employed Steve Harrington (Joe Keery) and Robin (Maya Hawke), and served as the town hangout during the show's third season. In its real-life recreation, visitors drive through an old-school photo booth before parking in front of the mall and ordering from a variety of Starcourt Food Court menu items, including pizza, corn dogs, falafel, popcorn, candy and signature Scoops Ahoy frozen treats.

With vehicles parked at the mall, an actor in character as Stranger Things science teacher Scott Clarke (Randall P. Havens) takes the stage to DJ classic '80s tunes and run trivia, which the audience can participate in from their cars; actors playing Mike, Will and Lucas run around the lot, helping with the game and quietly reenacting moments from the series.

The cheery retro vibe quickly comes to an end, though, as the show gets underway and vehicles are moved away from the mall, where a message from investigative reporter Murray Bauman (Brett Gelman) is delivered via FM radio: "Hawkins is in trouble, we've got to tear down the curtain of deception and reveal the enemy lurking beneath."

"Your priest, your postman, your teacher, the world at large, they won't believe any of this so this is what you're going to do," he continues. "This nice shiny tour of this nice shiny mall is canceled. You're not going in through the front door, you're going in through the back door. Your friends need you."

From there, guests are immersed in a three-part show inside the ROW DTLA parking structure, covering key moments from across the three seasons of Stranger Things, including the Russian labs and Upside Down. Dozens of (mostly masked) actors take part in the performance, interacting with the audience through car windows — encompassing lots of waving, knocking, flashlight shining and sharp glares. Guests cannot exit their vehicles or lower their windows at any time; the entire show is listed to via car radio. Series composers Kyle Dixon and Michael Stein also wrote new music for the event, which provides a track for the scenes.

While much of the drive-thru features live-action performances, screens are also placed throughout to incorporate video clips from the show. Cars are guided up and down the levels of the parking garage for the various show components, and are stopped and parked for three 15-minute sections as the performances play out around them; after a theatrical finale, guests are led out to drive-thru souvenir shop. Specific scenes performed during the show have been kept private to maintain the experience.

Co-produced by Netflix and event platform Fever, with creative direction by Secret Cinema, the drive-thru will welcome thousands over the next few months; tickets are currently sold out until early February and start at $59 for two people. It will run Wednesdays to Sundays from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. going forward, with dates currently scheduled through March.

The event also coincides with Stranger Things 4 resuming filming amid the coronavirus pandemic; a release date has not yet been set.

 

Article by: Kirsten Chuba for the Hollywood Reporter.

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Due out in 2021, the movies— 'The Manor,' 'Black as Night,' 'Madres' and 'Bingo' — will all be released on the Prime video service.

Following the release of the first four titles in their Welcome to the Blumhouse film series, Amazon Studios and Jason Blum's Blumhouse Television have announced the next four titles in the series.

Due out in 2021, the movies— The Manor, Black as Night, Madres and Bingo — will all be released on the Prime Video service.

While the first four films in the series, released at the beginning of this month, focused on family and love, the next four center around themes of institutional horrors and personal phobias. Descriptions of the final four features are below.

The Manor, written and directed by Axelle Carolyn,  follows Judith Albright who moves into a historic nursing home after a stroke. She begins to suspect something supernatural is preying on the residents. In order to escape, she’ll need to convince everyone around her that she doesn’t actually belong there after all. Barbara Hershey, Bruce Davison, Nicholas Alexander, Jill Larsen, Fran Bennett and Katie Amanda Keane star.

Black as Night is directed by Maritte Lee Go and written by Sherman Payne. The film follows a teenage girl with self-esteem issues that finds confidence in the most unlikely way, by spending her summer battling vampires that prey on New Orleans’ disenfranchised with the help of her best friend, the boy she’s always pined for, and a peculiar rich girl. The cast inlcudes Asjha Cooper, Fabrizio Guido, Craig Tate, Keith David, Mason Beauchamp, Abbie Gayle and Frankie Smith.

Madres from first-time feature director Ryan Zaragoza, was written by Marcella Ochoa and Mario Miscione and centers on a Mexican-American couple expecting their first child. They relocate to a migrant farming community in 1970's California, when the wife begins to experience strange symptoms and terrifying visions, she tries to determine if it’s related to a legendary curse or something more nefarious. It stars Tenoch Huerta, Ariana Guerra, Evelyn Gonzalez, Kerry Cahill, and Elpidia Carrillo.

Bingo, from director Gigi Saul Guerrero who wrote the film with Shane McKenzie and Perry Blackshear, takes place in the Barrio of Oak Springs live a strong and follows a group of elderly friends who refuse to be gentrified. Their leader, Lupita, keeps them together as a community, a family. But little did they know,  their beloved Bingo hall is about to be sold to a much more powerful force than money itself.

"Coming off the successful launch of the first four films of the program, which has surpassed our expectations, we are excited to reveal the next chapter coming in 2021,” said Jennifer Salke, head of Amazon Studios. “The spine-tingling, edge of your seat thrills continues in this next collection of titles that will surely entertain, surprise and shock our global customers.”

"We couldn’t be prouder of the work of these talented filmmakers, cast and crew on all the movies,” said Jeremy Gold, president Blumhouse Television. "And we’re excited to introduce the next wave of films and the incredible filmmakers at their helm.”

 

Article by: Mia Galuppo for the Hollywood Reporter.

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