Nicole Groskreutz's Posts (38)

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Disney+ has set Thursday, September 8 for the premiere of Pinocchio, Robert Zemeckis’ live-action adaptation starring Tom Hanks as Gepetto. The release is timed for Disney+ Day, a lead-in to the D23 Expo in Anaheim CA. The streamer also released the first footage in a teaser trailer below, along with key art.

Zemeckis directs the live-action retelling of the beloved tale of a wooden puppet who embarks on a thrilling adventure to become a real boy. Hanks stars as Geppetto, the woodcarver who builds and treats Pinocchio (Benjamin Evan Ainsworth) as if he were his own son. Joseph Gordon-Levitt is Jiminy Cricket, who serves as Pinocchio’s guide as well as his “conscience”; Academy Award® nominee Cynthia Erivo is the Blue Fairy; Keegan-Michael Key is “Honest” John; Academy Award® nominee Lorraine Bracco is Sofia the Seagull, a new character, and Luke Evans is The Coachman. Also in the cast are Kyanne Lamaya as Fabiana (and her marionette Sabina), Giuseppe Battiston as Señor Stromboli and Lewin Lloyd as Lampwick.

Zemeckis penned the script for his adaptation with Chris Weitz, with the pair producing alongside Derek Hogue, Andrew Miano. Chris Weitz and Paul Weitz. Jackie Levine, Jack Rapke, Alexandra Derbyshire and Jeremy Johns served as executive producers.

Written By Denise Petski for Deadline

 

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Harrison Ford appeared Thursday at the Lucasfilm panel at Star Wars Celebration to announce that Indiana Jones 5 will hit theaters on June 30, 2023.


Ford returns to star in the latest installment of the franchise. He told the crowd today that the film is almost done, and will again feature the music of John Williams.

Williams joined the event to conduct the live orchestra in his Indiana Jones theme before Ford was introduced. The Star Wars music master also led the group in the first live performance of the Obi-Wan Kenobi theme. That series, starring Ewan McGregor and Hayden Christensen, drops its first two episodes on Disney+ on Friday.

James Mangold is directing Indiana Jones 5 taking over from Steven Spielberg, with Jez Butterworth, John-Henry Butterworth, and Mangold co-writing the script. No plot details have been revealed and none were mentioned during today’s confab, though Ford, Mangold, and executive producers Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall did reveal a first photo from the movie

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Indy 5 had originally received a July 10, 2020 release date and later July 29 of this year, but pandemic delays and Spielberg’s work completing West Side Story sidelined production.

The film’s ensemble cast also includes Antonia Banderas, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Mads Mikkelsen, Boyd Holbrook, Shaunette Renée Wilson, Thomas Kretschmann, and Toby Jones.

Spielberg, Kathleen Kennedy, Frank Marshall, and Simon Emanuel are producers.

Through four movies, the Indiana Jones franchise has racked up close to $2 billion worldwide.

The Star Wars Celebration panel today rolled out a combo of Lucasfilm news and fan red meat. The Obi-Wan Kenobi series on Disney+ started the panel, with info on the Diego Luna-led Andor and Season 3 of The Mandalorian following. There was a new trailer for the Willow series and confirmation that Jude Law has joined Jon Watts and Christopher Ford in the news Star Wars series Skeleton Crew.

Written By Patrick Hipes, Dominic Patten for Deadline

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Vertical Entertainment and Roadside Attractions today unveiled the trailer for their thriller The Forgiven, starring Jessica Chastain (Armageddon Time) and Ralph Fiennes (The Menu), which is slated for release in theaters on July 1st.

The film written and directed by John Michael McDonagh (The Calvary) is based on the novel of the same name by Lawrence Osborne. It centers on wealthy Londoners David (Ralph Fiennes) and Jo Henninger (Jessica Chastain), who are involved in a tragic accident with a local teenage boy, after speeding through the Moroccan desert to attend an old friend’s lavish weekend party. Arriving late at the grand villa with the debauched party raging, the couple attempts to cover up the incident with the collusion of the local police. But when the boy’s father arrives seeking justice, the stage is set for a tension-filled culture clash in which David and Jo must come to terms with their fateful act and its shattering consequences.

The Forgiven premiered at the 2021 Toronto Film Festival. Matt Smith (Last Night in Soho), Saïd Taghmaoui (G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra), Abbey Lee (The Neon Demon), Mourad Zaoui (The Spy), Caleb Landry Jones (Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri), Ismael Kanater (Queen of the Desert) and Christopher Abbott (Possessor) also star in the film, which Elizabeth Eves and McDonagh produced via their House of Un-American Activities label, alongside Trevor Matthews and Nick Gordon of Brookstreet Pictures. Brookstreet Pictures financed with LipSync Productions, Film4, BFI, Head Gear, Metrol Technology, and Assemble Media, with Norman Merry exec producing for LipSync, alongside Daniel Battsek and Ollie Madden for Film4, Phil Hunt and Compton Ross for Head Gear, and Jack Heller and Scott Veltri for Assemble Media. Vertical is handling the film’s digital release, with Focus Features and Universal Pictures International distributing it in international territories, and Film4 bringing it to UK television.

Written By Matt Grobar for Deadline

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Pixar has dropped the concept art for its next feature, Elemental, which will hit theaters on June 16 (see it below). Disney already had the Father’s Day weekend date reserved for an untitled Pixar film.

Directed by Peter Sohn (The Good Dinosaur, Partly Cloudy short) and produced by Denise Ream (The Good Dinosaur, Cars 2), Elemental journeys alongside an unlikely pair, Ember and Wade, in a city where fire, water, land and air-residents live together. The fiery young woman and the go-with-the-flow guy are about to discover something elemental: how much they actually have in common.

The movie was inspired by Sohn’s childhood in New York.

“My parents emigrated from Korea in the early 1970s and built a bustling grocery store in the Bronx,” said the director. “We were among many families who ventured to a new land with hopes and dreams—all of us mixing into one big salad bowl of cultures, languages and beautiful little neighborhoods. That’s what led me to Elemental.”

“Our story is based on the classic elements — fire, water, land and air,” the director added. “Some elements mix with each other, and some don’t. What if these elements were alive?”

Pixar, after being sidelined to Disney+ with Turning Red and Soul during the pandemic, returns to theaters this Father’s Day weekend, June 17-19, with the Toy Story origins story Lightyear. The studio showed off the pic’s first half hour to great response at CinemaCon last month.

Written By Anthony D'Alessandro for Deadline

 

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Brian Austin Green Plays Burned-Out Teacher, Stalks Students In Pandemic Thriller ‘Pacerville’
by Caitlin Crowther in Culture | February 18, 2022


Brian Austin Green is best known for his role as David Silver in the teen soap opera series Beverly Hills, 90210 with Tori Spelling. Now the 48-year-old actor is taking on a variety of roles. In the upcoming horror film Pacerville, Green plays burned-out high school history teacher John Dunbar.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, “on the verge of a breakdown,” John Dunbar “overhears his students making fun of him in a zoom class and vows revenge.” During the zoom, one male student says of Dunbar: “The dude’s a psycho,” while a female student threatens to lie and say Dunbar touched her “if he makes me feel uncomfortable.”

An enraged and well-armed Dunbar stalks the bored and unexpected teens and tracks them down at their empty school where they’re hanging out during the pandemic lockdown.

Get ready to see more of Brian: he stars in the comedy film Bootyology. It’s about a documentary crew who, while researching the correlation between artificial intelligence and pop music, “stumble across a mystery involving the disappearance of infamous rap duo, The Booty Boys.” BAG plays himself.

Written By Caitlin Crowther in Culture for 2Paragraphs

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In the early 1980’s, the third installment of the wildly popular Star Wars franchise was in production, and creator George Lucas was looking to create a forested moon named Endor for his action-packed movie. Lucas found the perfect location just north of where he grew up in Modesto, California, in a beautiful place called the Redwood National Park.

In April of 1982, the Star Wars filming crew descended on the northwest corner of California to create a world in which the Star Wars fans had never experienced for Return of the Jedi. The NorCal redwoods would provide the stage for the home of the Ewoks, an epic speeder bike chase and a battle that would spark the end of the Empire.

The battle scene and much of the Ewok scenes were filmed on the private property owned by a logging company in the town of Smith River, near the Avenue of the Giants. Unfortunately, much of the area you see in the film was eventually clearcut.

But there is an area that remains full intact since the shooting of the film, and that is located in the Chetham Grove section of Grizzly Creek Redwoods State Park, where the speed chaser scene was filmed. 

It’s no surprise that Lucas chose to film the forested Endor moon in the beautiful redwood forest of NorCal. When you look at the scenes, the trees look so big that it’s hard to imagine they could grow on planet Earth. But they can, and for anyone lucky enough to visit the Redwood National and State Parks, it’s like traveling to another world. Maybe a Star Wars world?

May the Force be with you, NorCal.

Written By Active NorCal

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Walt Disney Co. platforms and studios — Disney Television Studios, FX, Hulu, Disney+ and ABC — are joining forces in June to reach Emmy voters. From June 3-15, Disney FYC Fest will invite Emmy voters to the El Capitan Theater on Hollywood Boulevard to screen shows and listen to panels.

Among the shows set to screen are Abbott Elementary (20th TV & ABC), black-ish (ABC Sig & ABC), The Book of Boba Fett (Lucasfilm & Disney+), Dopesick (Hulu), The Dropout (Hulu), The Great (Hulu), Impeachment: American Crime Story (20th TV and FX), The Kardashians (Hulu), Live in Front of a Studio Audience (ABC), Moon Knight (Marvel Studios & Disney+), Only Murders in the Building (20th TV & Hulu), Pam and Tommy (Hulu), Pistol (FX), Reservation Dogs (FX) Under the Banner of Heaven (FX), What We Do In The Shadows (FX), and Women of the Movement (ABC). Each event will be followed by receptions at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel.

Specific panelists, moderators and event information for the Disney FYC Fest will be announced in the coming weeks.

In the summer of 2020, the pandemic and subsequent industry shutdown prompted Disney to create an FYC “From Your Car” Drive-In experience at the Rose Bowl. The studio expanded its offerings the following year and included in-person appearances by Anthony Anderson, Tracee Ellis Ross, Billy Porter, MJ Rodriguez and Sir Elton John.

Written By Lynette Rice for Deadline

 

 

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Greta Gerwig proved herself a formidable talent behind the camera with her first solo outing as a director, 2018’s poignant and charming comedic drama Lady Bird. The movie garnered five Oscar nominations including Best Director, making Gerwig the fifth woman ever nominated in that category and inspiring conversations about the two-steps-forward, one-step-back state of progress for women in Hollywood.

Lady Bird, with its semi-autobiographical narrative and love letter to Gerwig’s hometown of Sacramento, was certainly a passion project. But before she’d even called “action” on that set, she had her heart set on another passion project with roots that go even further back than her high school years: Gerwig long dreamed of adapting Louisa May Alcott’s iconic novel Little Women. Following the success of Lady Bird, she was given the keys to Alcott’s 19th-century Massachusetts kingdom, and license to put her spin on characters that have inspired readers, women and girls in particular, since the book’s first installment was published in 1868.

The movie, out Christmas Day, marks a transition for Gerwig from the world of low-budget indies, where she’s spent so much of her career as a performer and filmmaker, to studio movies (with a turn by Meryl St

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reep). It also sees her reuniting with several members of her cast from Lady Bird—Timothée Chalamet, Tracy Letts, and most notably Saoirse Ronan as the fiercely independent literary heroine Jo March. Gerwig’s adaptation, the latest in a long line that includes George Cukor’s 1933 film starring Katharine Hepburn and Gillian Armstrong’s 1994 version with Winona Ryder, emphasizes the aspects of the novel which feel especially relevant today, and in particular the themes of “women, ambition, art and money.”

Gerwig talked to TIME about Little Women‘s astonishing modernity, her own childhood heroines and how women behind the camera fared in 2019.

TIME: Do you remember when you first encountered Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women?

Greta Gerwig: It must have been read to me, because I don’t remember a time when I didn’t know who Jo March was. I don’t know if I wanted to be a writer, which is why I liked Jo March, or Jo March was a writer so I wanted to be a writer too. But I did the thing you can only do with books as a child, where your own autobiography and the contents of a book merge.

It’s been adapted many times. What made you want to adapt it now?

When I heard they were interested in making it, I said to my agent, “You have to get me a meeting because I have to make this movie.” I had not made Lady Bird yet. And he said, “I don’t think they’re ever going to hire you for this.” And I said “Well, they have to.” Then I was able to go talk with them about my ideas, and they did hire me to write it, and it was after Lady Bird had come out that I heard that they would like me to direct it, and did I want to do it? And I kind of had that—”Would I? I’ve been waiting 30 years!”

 I reread the book as an adult, and I was bowled over by how modern it was, how much it was about women, ambition, art and money. There were lines that could have been written yesterday. It was a chance to address things that were so personal, and also to do something radical with it. I think you have license with material that is beloved, because you can start with a common language.

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Speaking of modern, there’s a scene in the movie when Laura Dern’s Marmee says, “I am angry nearly every day of my life.” It sounds like a nod to female rage in 2019. But that was in the book?

 

I am having them say the dialogue with such controlled chaos and choreographed cacophony that it comes across as having just been written by me, when in fact every word is either from the book or Alcott’s journals, letters or another book she’s written. If you strip away this pre-Victorian morality, what you have is ambitious, passionate, angry, sexual, interesting women who don’t fit into the boxes the world has given them.

Did Alcott have amazing foresight?

I think she was one of the people the future spoke through. I don’t think she necessarily knew what she was accomplishing by telling the lives of girls and women as if they were important, because they are important. I think narratively we are still figuring out how to tell stories about women that involve more than marriage or death.

Of all the sisters, Jo is the one most readers’ choose as their heroine. How did you approach some of the other sisters who might be harder for girls today to idolize?

Meg’s story does not end when she gets married. She wants to be married and have children, but she is feeling like maybe she has made the wrong choice. That’s just as real a journey as anybody else’s. So I got to explore the most interesting part of Meg, which is what do you do after you get the happily ever after? I found Amy to be utterly compelling and modern. From the time she’s a little girl, she’s able to stand inside of her own desires: I want to be the best painter in the whole world and I want to marry rich and I want a mansion. For so many female characters, and for women in general, the idea that desire and ambition are shameful is everywhere.

 The book offered new models of what girls could be in the 1860s. Were there texts or films that gave you models?

Truly, Jo March was a model for me. At some point she says, “I don’t know what I’m going to be, but I mean to astonish you all some day.” I know how that feels, that sense of, I can’t wait to get out into the thick of the world of makers and doers. But I had my own collection of women that excited me. Twyla Tharp was one. She had written a book about choreography, about creativity, that I pored over. There was a section where she describes her and her father used to go out to this desert when she was a child and shoot rattlesnakes to blow off steam. I thought, that’s a great hobby. But no one would do that with me.

When you became the fifth woman nominated for an Oscar for Best Director, for Lady Bird in 2018, you were held up as an example of how far women behind the camera have come and still have to go. What was that like?

I live really close to the New School and New York University, and these younger women come up to me and say, “I saw your film and I want to make my own films.” Being recognized by my peers in the Academy, and then having that translate to young women directly—it’s the reason I do it.

There are many great films by women in contention this awards season, and they tend to be discussed as a group. Is that helpful or harmful?

It’s a banner year, and we should feel good about that and try to repeat it. I personally know and have friendships with a lot of these directors. [A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood director] Marielle [Heller] and I both live in New York, and she showed me an early cut of her movie and we’ve talked about everything, I’ve asked her how she does it with a child. I’m friends with her and Lorene [Scafaria, director of Hustlers]. She was making movies before I was making movies. Her success is amazing.

It feels that there is both a sisterhood, which is wonderful because nobody wants to be at the dance party on their own, and also that their films are being put alongside great male filmmakers’ without an asterisk. I’m happy for it to be special and not special at the same time.

You filmed Little Women while secretly pregnant. Some people are amazed when they hear of a woman accomplishing something great while pregnant. Others say it treats it as a condition to be overcome. What do you think?

I feel very lucky that I was able to direct this movie while pregnant. I don’t want anything to be used as another way that women can feel bad. I’m amazed at women who have kids, who don’t have kids, who keep working, who step back. We are just figuring out how to have this conversation—for directors, for doctors, for all kinds of women. We’re just at the beginning of it.

You’re reportedly attached to direct a Barbie movie starring Margot Robbie. Anything you can tell us about that?

All I can say is I love Margot Robbie and the reason that I was psyched is Margot. I wish I had more to tell you. That’s the problem with things being reported on and then they become a thing before they’re a thing. I mean it’s not not a thing. It doesn’t exist yet. It could be 10 years before we could actually look at anything. But maybe in 10 years we’ll be talking.

Written BY ELIZA BERMAN for Time

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Gold House rings in Asian & Pacific Islander Heritage Month launching its 2022 A100 List featuring a number of impactful names including Michelle Yeoh, Dwayne Johnson and Mindy Kaling.

On Monday, Gold House revealed its annual A100 List, which seeks to recognize the 100 APIs (Asians and Pacific Islanders) who have most significantly impacted American culture and society in the last year across various industries.

Yeoh, Kaling and Johnson are this year’s A100 Legends, while Gemma Chan and Kelly Marie Tran are among the A100 Hall of Fame Inductees for 2022.

Additional honorees in the Entertainment section of the list Simu Liu, Chloé Zhao, Bowen Yang, Turning Red helmer Domee Shi, the creative teams and stars of Pachinko and Squid Game, Jimmy O. Yang, Destin Daniel Cretton, Riz Ahmed and Ryuske Hamaguchi.

The annual lists’ honorees are selected by a selection committee. Among this year’s judges are Lea Salonga, Daniel Dae Kim, Lisa Link, Janet Yang and Janice Min

Gold House will celebrate the notable APIs at its inaugural in-person Gold Gala on May 21 in downtown Los Angeles. assembled in collaboration with Meta and Procter & Gamble. The event, which boasts the theme “The New Gold Age,” will also mark the launch of a collaborative campaign between Gold House and Procter & Gamble to shift the perceptions of belonging in America. The campaign seeks to not only empower APIs to embrace their identity with pride, but also encourage others to learn, understand, and correctly pronounce API names.

The annual list launch also supports We Can Do This, a public education campaign that empowers individuals through accessible knowledge about COVID-19 vaccines and boosters, for adults and children, as communities reopen.

Written By Alexandra Del Rosario for Deadline

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Typically studios will only show off their current-year wares at CinemaCon, but Warner Bros went deep in the calendar to show off the first fresh footage from Paul King’s Wonka, the feature musical about the candymeister. The movie doesn’t come out until Christmas 2023.

Think Fantastic Beasts in regards to period (early 20th century), but so much more fun: More leg-kicking, twirling dancing, chocolate fountains and a giraffe running through a church. The visuals plump with purples and browns. We see Willy Wonka (Timothée Chalamet) arriving in a mid-European city (the pic was shot in London) and slowly rising to his candy impresario fame, the pic being an origins story.

 

One of the musical numbers played was “You’ve Never Had Chocolate Like This,” sung by an array of characters. Sally Hawkins plays his mother.

CinemaCon 2022: Deadline’s Full Coverage

A chocolate wrapper that Chalamet’s Wonka reads seen at the end of the clip says, “It’s not the chocolate that matters,” then on the other side: “It’s the people you share it with.” Hawkins’ character digs it.
Also seen in the trailer were Rowan Atkinson and Jim Carter.

Written By Anthony D'Alessandro, Nancy Tartaglione for Deadline

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Jon Watts has withdrawn as the director of Fantastic Four, the reinvention of the venerable Marvel Comics series at Marvel Studios and Disney. Watts just directed Spider-Man: No Way Home, the Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios film that grossed $1.89 billion to become the sixth highest-grossing film of all time.

Nothing sinister here; Watts just needs a break from the superhero realm after completing the Spidey trilogy with Tom Holland and Zendaya. He had expected to make Fantastic Four his next film, the third feature iteration of that franchise and first since Disney acquired Fox, which controlled the franchise. Watts has spent the better part of the last decade directing and promoting the Spider-Man films, after being hired off Cop Car, a small-budget indie thriller that premiered at 2015 Sundance. He needs a breather.

Both Watts and Marvel confirmed his exit, and said that it is amicable.

Said Kevin Feige, president, Marvel Studios and Louis D’Esposito, co-president, Marvel Studios: “Collaborating with Jon on the Spider-Man films has been a true pleasure. We were looking forward to continuing our work with him to bring the Fantastic Four into the MCU but understand and are supportive of his reasons for stepping away. We are optimistic that we will have the opportunity to work together again at some point down the road.”

Watts said that “Making three Spider-Man films was an incredible and life-changing experience for me. I’m eternally grateful to have been a part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe for seven years. I’m hopeful we’ll work together again and I can’t wait to see the amazing vision for Fantastic Four brought to life.”

Sony and its Spider-Man producers have made it clear they expect to reunite Watts with Holland and Zendaya to continue the series. Watts hasn’t officially dropped out of that franchise, but if it were to happen, it does sound like it would be down the road.

Watts has another strong project that might become his next outing as a director. Last September, Apple Studios won a brisk auction for an untitled film Watts will write and direct, with George Clooney and Brad Pitt playing rival “fixers” who find themselves simultaneously hired for the same job. That film’s deal calls for Apple to give the film a robust theatrical release before it hits Apple TV+. Watts is producing that film with Clooney’s Smokehouse Pictures and Pitt’s Plan B Entertainment.

Watts is repped by CAA and attorney Gregory Slewett.

Written By Mike Fleming Jr for Deadline

 

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BRAHMASTRA Pt. 1 SHIVA RELEASES IN NORTH AMERICA

Disney has added director-writer Ayan Mukerji’s upcoming Brahmastra Part One: Shiva to its domestic box office slate, giving it a September 9 release in the U.S. and Canada. The film marks the beginning of a trilogy as well as what’s billed as India’s first original cinematic universe. Ranbir Kapoor, Amitabh Bachchan, Alia Bhatt, Mouni Roy and Nagarjuna Akkineni star.

Produced by Fox Star Studios, Dharma Productions, Prime Focus and Starlight Pictures, Brahmāstra was already set to be released globally by Disney with a September 9 date lined up in India where it will play in Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada. It’s one of the most expensive Bollywood productions of all time.

 
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Mukerji is perhaps best known internationally for 2013 musical romance Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, a big hit at home and abroad. This new universe, dubbed the Astraverse, is inspired by ancient India and spiritual Indian mythology. The setup involves a secret society, the Brahmānsh, who, generation after generation, have protected many divine “Astras” (weapons) that were created in ancient India and safe-guarded from the eyes of the world. The most powerful and the most deadly amongst these divine weapons, the Brahmāstra, is now waking up and threatens to destroy the universe we know today.

Part one of the planned trilogy centers on Shiva (Kapoor), a young man on the brink of an epic love story with Isha (Bhatt). But their world is turned upside down when Shiva learns he has a mysterious connection to the Brahmāstra, and a great power within him that he doesn’t understand just yet — the power of fire. The story follows Shiva as he journeys into the world of Astras and discovers his destiny as the Divine Hero of the universe.

 

Written By Nancy Tartaglione for Deadline

 

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Tom Cruise’s new M:I movie set for 2023 now has a title: Mission: Impossible Dead Reckoning – Part 1.

Cruise appeared in a pre-recorded message with the news during Paramount’s CinemaCon session Thursday morning, filming from the South Africa set of Mission: Impossible 8 from atop a biplane (hinting at the pic’s next big stunt).

CinemaCon 2022: Deadline’s Full Coverage

All of this preceded the drop of Part 7‘s trailer. And let us tell ya something, boy, is it chilling. It begins with Cruise’s Ethan Hunt getting a dress-down by his former ops boss Kittridge played by Henry Czerny from the 1996 movie.

“Your days of fighting for the greater good are over,” says Kittridge.

“This is our chance to control the truth…the concepts of right and wrong for everyone for centuries to come,” continues Kittridge. “You’ve been fighting to save an ideal that doesn’t exist, never did. You need to pick a side.”

There’s shots of Venice, the Vatican, Cruise in the desert and lots of fisticuffs: On trains by The White Widow (Vanessa Kirby), headbutting by Ilsa (Rebecca Ferguson), and an intense scene of an office getting gassed.

The trailer ends with Cruise’s signature stunt for Part 7, which was revealed extensively at CinemaCon last August.

CinemaCon Photos: Stars And Sneak Peeks, Including Olivia Wilde, Dwayne Johnson, ‘Avatar 2’ And More

Intro-ing the trailer, Cruise, standing on the biplane flying high above the mountains, said, “Sorry for the extra noise, as you can see, we are filming the latest installment of Mission: Impossible… Making this film for the big screen in your wonderful theaters.”

Director Chris McQuarrie sidled up in his own twin-engine telling Cruise, “We gotta go, we’re losing the light.” With that, Cruise bid CinemaCon farewell, “Let’s all have a great summer,” McQuarrie called “action” and the planes both rolled and dived — with the indefatigable star still atop his own.

Paramount has set a July 14, 2023 U.S. release for Mission: Impossible Dead Reckoning – Part I. M:I 8 is currently slated for June 28, 2024.

 

Written By Anthony D'Alessandro, Nancy Tartaglione for Deadline

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‘Barbie’ Comes Summer 2023

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Barbie, Warner Bros.’ Greta Gerwig-directed Mattel movie, will hit theaters July 21, 2023, the studio said today during its CinemaCon session in Las Vegas. The pic will take over the date previously occupied by Warners’ hybrid live-action/animation title, Coyote vs. Acme.

That Dave Green-directed pic is currently undated as production continues. John Cena, Will Forte and Lana Condor star.

The plot is under wraps.

Barbie has been in development for quite some time, initially at Sony with Anne Hathaway and Amy Schumer circling the titular role before the project segued to Warner Bros. Ryan Gosling stars as Barbie’s b.f. Ken, with Will Ferrell, Simu Liu, America Ferrera, Kate McKinnon, Michael Cera, Issa Rae also starring. Gerwig and Noah Baumback co-wrote the screenplay.

Written By Anthony D'Alessandro for Deadline

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Those clamoring for more middle-adult fare in movie theaters will have their fill with Olivia Wilde’s upcoming 1950s thriller, Don’t Worry Darling.

Warner Bros.’ CinemaCon session showed off the first trailer for the New Line movie starring Florence Pugh as Alice, a housewife living with her hubby Jack (Harry Styles), who’s employed by an enigmatic operation known as the Victory Project — which is expected to change the world as we know it.

CinemaCon 2022: Deadline’s Full Coverage

The women in town are told to stay indoors, but Alice has her suspicions as she begins to observe violent acts.

However, besides the suspense in Alice’s mind, there’s a lot of hanky panky in Don’t Worry Darling, and in places such as the dining room table, against a sink, um, with Chris Pine’s character hanging around them. Don’t take mom to this film when it opens on September 23.

 Even more mysterious and abuzz during today’s trailer drop at CinemaCon is that as the pic’s director and star Wilde was introducing the film and being interviewed by host Aisha Tyler, the multihyphenate was handed a random manila envelope by a CinemaCon attendee. Social media went nuts wondering what was in it. Deadline reached out to Wilde’s reps and the studio but received no response. Sources believe it was simply an unsolicited script that was handed to Wilde onstage. Nothing more.

Onstage, Wilde said Don’t Worry Darling is reminiscent of “Inception, The Matrix, Truman Show. It’s my love letter to the movies that pushed boundaries of ambition.” She then asked the audience to “imagine a life where you could have anything you ever wanted, not just the tangible things … but also the things that really matter — true love with the perfect partner, real trusted friendships. What would it take for you to give up that perfect life? What are you willing to sacrifice to do what’s right? Are you willing to dismantle the system that is designed to serve you?”

Things to think about, indeed.

Written By Anthony D'Alessandro, Nancy Tartaglione for Deadline

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SPOILER ALERT: This story contains details about the first 30 minutes of Pixar’s Lightyear.

Forget about whatever Disney did with its theatrical day-and-date experiment with Disney+ during the pandemic, and its sundry titles sent directly to the streaming service. The studio returned to CinemaCon in Las Vegas about why they’re still about the big screen.

After showing off the first 20 minutes of their summer box office firestarter Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, Disney Theatrical Distribution boss Tony Chambers had more to show during the studio’s presentation: that being the first 30 minutes of Pixar’s Lightyear due out on Father’s Day weekend, June 17-19.

Pixar had their previous two titles sent to Disney+: Soul and Turning Red.

Star Chris Evans introduced Lightyear in to an enthusiastic crowd in a quick video cameo: “I can’t wait for my new movie to land in your theaters this summer. You’ll finally know the story behind Buzz Lightyear. This is an epic thematic experience that has to be seen on the big screen. Thank you so much for your support.”

The footage launched with Buzz’s spaceship taking a detour after detecting life forms on an uncharted planet and heading down to investigate. Buzz and two companions explore, come under attack and make a run for the ship, which ends up marooned without fuel. Fast-forward a year and after fixes for a test fight, Buzz launches. The ship veers off-course into deep space and returns four years later.

He feels responsible and keeps trying, losing four years each time, until higher-ups decide no more missions — they’re staying put. He disagrees. When they try to decommission his robot companion cat Socks, he steals a ship and is off … to we know where.

The clip Includes a shout-out to his iconic suit. “Respect the suit,” he tells a rookie, “It’s not just protecting the body, it’s protecting the universe.”

Written By Jill Goldsmith, Anthony D'Alessandro for Deadline

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As Netflix continues its push into potential franchise fare, we’re getting our first look at the Russo Brothers’ big-budget espionage thriller The Gray Man, starring Ryan Gosling, Chris Evans and Ana de Armas. The film based on Mark Greaney’s 10-book series will hit theaters on July 15 and start streaming on Netflix a week later. Check out the first-look photos above and below.

A 007-type actioner that cost costing upward of $200 million — Netflix’s biggest-budget film ever — it stars Gosling as Court Gentry, aka the Gray Man, a freelance assassin and former CIA operative who is hunted across the globe by Lloyd Hansen (Evans), a former cohort at the CIA.

Jessica Henwick, Wagner Moura, Dhanush, Billy Bob Thornton, Alfre Woodard, Regé-Jean Page, Julia Butters, Eme Ikwuakor and Scott Haze also star in the pic written by Avengers: Endgame‘s Joe and Anthony Russo, who also direct along with Stephen McFeely.

Netflix 2022 Film Slate Touts 86 Titles Including Star-Studded Fare ‘Knives Out 2’, ‘The Gray Man’, ‘The School For Good And Evil’ & More

Joe Roth, Jeffrey Kirschenbaum, Anthony Russo, Joe Russo, Mike Larocca and Chris Castaldi produced The Gray Man, with Patrick Newall, Christopher Markus, Stephen McFeely, Jake Aust, Angela Russo-Otstot, Geoff Haley, Zack Roth, and Palak Patel serving as exec producers.

The pic scored California production tax credits in August 2020 but had to delay production four months later amid a Covid surge. But now it’s ready for action.

Written By Erik Pedersen for Deadline

 

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Here’s something that hasn’t been done with a musical before: Universal will release its feature take on the smash Broadway musical Wicked in two parts on December 25, 2024 and December 25, 2025. It’s a bold swing for a musical, which of late have been risky onscreen. However, this one is based on a legacy crowd-pleaser.

Jon M. Chu is directing the untold story of the Witches of Oz, starring Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo. The pic is based on the bestselling novel by Gregory Maguire and adapted for the screen by the stage production’s book writer Winne Holzman and Oscar-winning composer and lyricist Stephen Schwartz.

Typically those movies getting broken into two parts have been blockbuster-level YA films based on books, i.e. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows and The Hunger Games: Mockingjay. While those were huge successes, the plan faltered with Lionsgate’s third Divergent movie, Allegiant, which tanked at the box office with $66M domestic and $179M global. The second half of that Shailene Woodley movie never was made, given how that pic fell apart, but the situation there was that the third Veronica Roth Divergent novel divided fans greatly.

Knock on wood, but working to Wicked’s advantage is that it’s a near $3 billion-grossing Broadway musical seen by more than 30 million people worldwide.

Written By By Anthony D'Alessandro for Deadline

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Heat director Michael Mann is getting closer to the start line on Ferrari and is in Italy this week as part of pre-production. Filming is due to commence in mid-July and members of the crew are on the payroll.

As we revealed in February, the big-budget biopic of racing mogul Enzo Ferrari is set to star Adam Driver, Penélope Cruz and Shailene Woodley.
The long-gestating pic has been a stop-start for the best part of two decades. The movie again faced uncertainty in recent months due to the precarious financial position of STX, the U.S. studio currently behind the project. The plan earlier this year had been to begin filming in May. But with STX’s immediate future now looking safe thanks to last Friday’s sale to the Najafi Companies, Ferrari once again inches towards the start line.
The feature is set during the summer of 1957. Ex-racecar driver, Ferrari, is in crisis. Bankruptcy stalks the company he and his wife, Laura, built from nothing ten years earlier. Their tempestuous marriage struggles with the mourning for one son and the acknowledgment of another. He decides to counter his losses by rolling the dice on one race – 1,000 miles across Italy, the iconic Mille Miglia.

Star Wars and House Of Gucci actor Driver replaced Hugh Jackman in the title role while Parallel Mothers star Cruz will play Enzo’s wife Laura. Big Little Lies star Woodley will play mistress Lina Lardi.
STX committed to the domestic distribution of the project during the EFM but as part of the recent sale had to cut a number of staff from its distribution team. Now that the sale has gone through we understand there will be more hires to make sure movies can be properly released.
STX also handles international rights. As we revealed in the previous reporting on the project, Amazon is aboard in a handful of international markets. Leone is released in Italy.
Mann will direct from a script by Troy Kennedy Martin (The Italian Job) and Mann based on Brock Yates’ book Enzo Ferrari – The Man and the Machine. The filmmaker is also producing via his Moto Productions banner alongside P.J. van Sandwijk and Birdman producer John Lesher, as well as Lars Sylvest, Thorsten Schumacher, and Gareth West with Niels Juul executive-producing.

Written By Andreas Wiseman for Deadline

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HBO is making major changes to its upcoming music-industry drama series from The Weeknd and Sam Levinson.

The network said Monday it was “evolving” its creative vision for the show, which was set to feature the “Blinding Lights” singer, otherwise known as Abel Tesfaye, in his first major on-screen acting role, as well as Lily Rose Depp’s first lead TV role.

“The Idol’s creative team continues to build, refine, and evolve their vision for the show and they have aligned on a new creative direction. The production will be adjusting its cast and crew accordingly to best serve this new approach to the series. We look forward to sharing more information soon,” an HBO spokeswoman told Deadline.

The news is emerging in real-time so we’ll return when we hear who is being adjusted on the cast and crew. The series, which the WarnerMedia network says is not being scrapped, has been in production for the last few months. It’s a particularly unusual move for the network.

The pop star was originally set to co-write and exec produce the series, which he co-created with Euphoria creator Levinson and Reza Fahim. It follows a female pop singer who starts a romance with an enigmatic L.A. club owner who is the leader of a secret cult.

Red Rocket star Suzanna Son was also set to star in the series, which was handed a series order in November.

Joseph Epstein (Health and Wellness) was set to serve as showrunner and writer on the project. Levinson, Tesfaye, Fahim, Epstein, Ashley Levinson, Kevin Turen and Bron Studios’ Aaron L. Gilbert were exec producing.

Mary Laws, who has written on Succession and Preacher, was also planned to write and co-exec produce with The Weeknd’s manager Wassim “SAL” Slaiby and creative director La Mar C. Taylor also co-exec producing.

Amy Seimetz, who has directed episodes of Atlanta and The Girlfriend Experience, was on board to direct all six episodes.

 

Written By Peter White for Deadline

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