Sarai Argueta's Posts (162)

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In the new Netflix adaptation of “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” it’s a sweat-slicked summer day in Chicago 1927 and everybody wants something. White music-industry bigwigs want a new recording from the indomitable Ma Rainey (Viola Davis), a Southern singer dubbed the “Mother of the Blues,” and they want it fast. Her ambitious trumpeter, Levee (Chadwick Boseman), is desperate to put a contemporary spin on Ma’s old-fashioned songs, hoping it will launch his own career.

And what does Ma want, after she’s arrived late to her recording session, caused a commotion on the street and sized up the pleading music men who now swarm her like gnats?

Well, for starters, she wants a Coke. So where the hell is it?

Adapted from the 1984 August Wilson play by the director George C. Wolfe and the screenwriter Ruben Santiago-Hudson, this new take on “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” will arrive Dec. 18 on Netflix, though much has changed since the film was shot last year. In August, the 43-year-old Boseman died after a private battle with colon cancer; Levee is his final role.

“He did a brilliant job, and he’s gone,” said Denzel Washington, a producer on the film. “I still can’t believe it.”

Moreover, after a summer of racial reckoning for the country, Wilson’s tragic story of Black Americans navigating a rigged system has become only more relevant. “How can you move forward,” Wolfe said, “when you’re still haunted by the past?”

“Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” is the second film adaptation of a Wilson play produced since 2015, when Washington was entrusted by the Pulitzer Prize winner’s estate with bringing his work to the screen. The first, “Fences,” was directed by Washington and won Davis a supporting-actress Oscar; next, Washington hopes to assemble his son John David Washington, Samuel L. Jackson and the director Barry Jenkins for an adaptation of Wilson’s 1987 play, “The Piano Lesson.

“The greatest part of what’s left of my career is making sure that August is taken care of,” Washington said.

But when Washington and Wolfe first went to Davis to play Ma Rainey, the actress was hesitant. Though she was a two-time Tony winner — for her 2001 performance in Wilson’s drama “King Hedley II” and her role in the 2010 Broadway revival of “Fences” — Davis had never played a diva quite like the real-life blues singer Ma Rainey, and wondered if she even could.

“I thought of 50 other actresses before I thought of myself,” Davis said. “She’s unapologetic, and that extends to her body and the way that she dresses. And trust me — as Viola, in my life, I don’t do that.”

With her eyes caked in black makeup, her teeth encased in gold, and her breasts often spilling out of her dress, Ma cuts a striking figure. “It’s Black Southern Kabuki,” said Wolfe, who drew inspiration from the chorus girls at the Apollo Theater who used to shadow their faces with watered-down shoe polish. “I was just fascinated by how Black performers of a certain period invented a kind of style and look and glamour.”

It’s meant to be a lot, and for Davis, it really was. “It was work to just own all of it,” she admitted.

Still, once she committed to the role and left all her inhibitions at the door, embodying Ma Rainey was “fan-friggin-fantastic,” she said. “I reveled in her, I swished my hips every day. There was such joy in that freedom of expression.” And her character’s self-confidence also taught Davis another valuable lesson: “I have to remember that I don’t have to barter for my worth. I was just born with it.”

Fittingly, the production was engineered around Davis’s busy schedule: it was shot in Pittsburgh last year during the summer hiatus of her ABC series, “How to Get Away With Murder,” and all of Davis’s scenes were filmed first so she could return to production on the show’s final season. Though the second-billed Boseman was then at the peak of his fame, having just come off a Triple Crown of box-office blockbusters in “Black Panther,” “Avengers: Infinity War,” and “Avengers: Endgame,” Davis described her late co-star as the ultimate collaborator.

“A lot of actors mistake their presence for the event,” Davis said. “An actor of Chadwick’s status usually comes on and it’s their ego who comes on before them: This is what they want, this is what they’re not going to do. That was absolutely, 150 percent off the table with Chadwick. He could completely discard whatever ego he had, whatever vanity he had, and welcome Levee in.”

The role will be a revelation for fans who know Boseman only as the stoic superhero T’Challa. He brings an electrifying physicality to Levee, whether he’s wrestling with a past full of trauma, seducing Ma’s girlfriend, Dussie Mae (Taylour Paige), or tearing into a pair of monologues that culminate in Levee raging at God. Shot through with movie-star charisma and practically assured of Oscar recognition, it is Boseman’s finest screen performance.

Davis said she had no idea what Boseman was struggling with while he shot the film. “I’m looking back at how tired he always seemed,” she said. “I look at his beautiful, unbelievable team that was meditating over him and massaging him, and I now realize everything they were trying to infuse in him to keep him going and working at his optimal level. And he received it.”

But though Levee’s thwarted ambitions will probably take on an even more tragic grandeur after Boseman’s death, Davis encourages the actor’s fans to focus more on the cultural truths Boseman meant to convey.

“I think a lot of times, people look at someone’s life backwards,” she said. “Now we have the unfortunate knowledge that Chadwick succumbed to cancer at 43, but really, Levee represents so many Black men living in America. What we’re constantly navigating on a day-to-day basis is the trauma of our past — we’re trying to heal from it, we’re even trying to understand that it’s there, and we’re negotiating that with our dreams and who we want to become.”

To Davis, that is what remains so meaningful about Wilson’s work, where everyday Black people were finally afforded the scale and specificity to become the sort of tragic heroes who were long embodied by white men in theater.

“Now we know that the role mirrors Chadwick’s life, but if that were omitted, it still mirrors his life in a way,” Davis said. “Because it mirrors the life of every Black person grieving, and especially the life of a Black man.”

 

Article by: Kyle Buchanan for NY Times 

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It’s October and what better way to kick off one of everyone's favorite month than an exclusive trailer for a freaky – and blood-soaked – horror puppet movie?

The movie, described as a gothic horror adventure, is premiering as part of  Nightstream, the newly created film festival that runs from Oct. 8-11. The fest is the combined digital edition of five acclaimed genre film festivals: Boston Underground Film Festival, Brooklyn Horror Film Festival, North Bend Film Festival, Overlook Film Festival, and Popcorn Frights Film Festival.

It took Blanchard, whose main gig is running a boutique video agency and selling a 3D camera system, seven years to make the movie, working nights and weekends until two Kickstarter campaigns in 2015 and 2017 allowed him to devote more time to his growing project. It was shot in 4K in Blanchard’s garage and a nearby studio and required the creation of 40 handmade puppets, miniatures, practical cloud tank effects, and actual fire.

“I’ve been on this journey for the past seven years,” Blanchard tells The Hollywood Reporter. “That’s 20% of my life. I know the world I’ve created is all an illusion, that none of it’s real. And yet, Frank and Zed have somehow become my dear friends. I’ve been blessed with an incredible team and the resources to tell my unique story, and I could not be more proud of the final result. This film is my own personal dream world, brought to life. And now, thanks to the incredible programmers at Nightstream, others will finally be able to share in that dream.”

Frank and Zed was produced by Evan Baily (Sonic BoomTurok: Son of Stone) and executive produced by Jane E. McGregor (Sonic Boom). Associate producers are Cody Klewin, Cameron Harrison, and filmmaker Ted Geoghegan (We Are Still HereMohawk). The film does not currently have distribution.

 

Article by: Borys Kit for The Hollywood Reporter

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he next Spider-Man movie is getting a major jolt.

Jamie Foxx, who played classic Spidey villain Electro in the Andrew Garfield-starring The Amazing Spider-Man 2, is in final talks to reprise the role for the latest Spider-Man installment, starring Tom Holland and being made by Marvel Studios and Sony Pictures.

Jon Watts, the filmmaker behind Homecoming and last year's Spider-Man: Far From Home, is in the director's chair for the third installment, which Sony has dated for Nov. 5, 2021 — although moviegoers have now come to expect release dates to change amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Most of the supporting cast from the previous movies — including Zendaya, Marisa Tomei, Jacob Batalon and Tony Revolori  — are expected to be on the call sheet when cameras roll in Atlanta this fall. Kevin Feige and Amy Pascal are producing.

Marvel had no comment.

Story details are being kept under the mask, but having Foxx return is a stunner as it shows a further melding of the previous Spider-Man movies into the current Holland series, which is the first one that has Marvel running point on production.

Far From Home began that idea by bringing back J.K. Simmons as J. Jonah Jameson, the character he played in the Tobey Maguire-starring Spider-Man trilogy, a move that tickled audiences with glee.

Foxx played Electro in 2014's The Amazing Spider-Man 2, which starred Garfield as Spider-Man. The film failed to impress critics and underperformed at the box office with $708.9 million globally. Those muted box-office returns — along with the 2014 Sony hack — paved the way for Sony to do the unthinkable and strike a deal with Marvel Studios to share the character, leading to Holland starring as the webslinger in the Avengers movies and Marvel talent such as Robert Downey Jr. appearing in Sony's solo Spider-Man films.

Despite the performance of Amazing 2, Foxx remains one of the most in-demand players in Hollywood and his casting is certain to jazz up excitement amongst fans.  The actor is currently starring in Project Power, a Netflix superhero drama, and is one of the voice stars in Pixar’s upcoming feature, Soul. He is repped by CAA, LBI Entertainment, and Ziffren Brittenham

—Aaron Couch contributed to this story.

Article by: Borys Kit for Hollywood Reporter

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Another drive-in theater is coming to San Francisco — and some of the city’s most beloved movie houses are behind it.

The Balboa, the Roxie as well as the Vogue are joining forces with the historic Pier 70 site to develop a new outdoor cinema series, “Dinner and a Drive-in,” which is slated to begin Oct. 17 and benefits nonprofit organization La Cocina. Tickets are $65 per car and include dinner for two (though meal packages can be purchased for up to 5 people) and the space holds up to 46 vehicles, which will be marked in socially distanced spots.

The lineup begins with “Blade Runner: The Final Cut." Producer Corey Tong, who advised Pier 70 on the series in partnership with Dominic Phillips, says the sci-fi cult classic admittedly falls outside of the otherwise Bay Area-centric programming, but was “especially suitable for the site itself,” given Pier 70’s industrial landscape as well as the dystopian skies recently experienced by the city.

“It actually pulls and draws upon a lot of the film’s futuristic ideas of what the future would be like. In many ways, the physical site is almost the embodiment of what is described or portrayed in ‘Blade Runner,’” Tong told SFGATE over the phone on Wednesday afternoon. “It is sandwiched between a slice of a hill as well as several buildings under renovation, restoration or construction, and it has the feel of a vast, urban dense space. We all thought it was a really, really dramatic way to open the series.”

Located on the waterfront, the 28-acre site has been under active construction during the shelter-in-place order. In the middle of it is a stretch of pavement that typically serves as a parking lot for construction workers during the week. Now, it will be converted into a drive-in theater for at least three weekends.

“Having that much open space in San Francisco is really rare, and thinking about what was happening during COVID, we wanted to find a way to utilize it,” said Pier 70’s creative director, Marcy Coburn. “Everything will come in and go out at the end of the weekend so we can make sure we have things cleared for construction by Monday morning.”

Family-run food truck Mi Morena will be serving meals as part of the program, dishing out Mexican street tacos and guisados in collaboration with La Cocina. Since March, more than 85 percent of the nonprofit’s partner restaurants were forced to furlough nearly all of their staff.

"Since traditional ways of doing business have disappeared, combining resources and our collective creativity as a community to support each other defines this event,” La Cocina’s Consuelo Reyes Lopez said in a statement.

The series will continue with the popular Oakland-set drama “Blindspotting” on Oct. 24, as well as the 1978 remake of the landmark San Francisco horror film “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” on Halloween. They'll be projected onto a pop-up screen that’s 90 times brighter than a standard film projector, according to Coburn. Sound will be played through FM car stereos, but portable rental radios can be purchased for an additional $12. Walk-in guests, bikes and dogs won’t be permitted entry, though the organizers of the series are developing future plans to accommodate guests without a car.“I think San Francisco still lends itself to a lot of potential outdoor areas,” said Tong, who is a local filmmaker and the former director of CAAMFest. “There are plenty of opportunities for drive-ins or outdoor screenings in parks, or urban spaces, or alleyways. I believe that as the pandemic becomes more manageable, there’s going to be a lot of hunger for this. This drive-in is one of several that could really unfold. We have to be as nimble and innovative as we can at bringing in these great cultural assets and keeping them alive in the bay.”

 

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Saban Films has acquired distribution rights to numerous global territories on “Wildcat,” a thriller starring “Black Mirror” actor and BAFTA winner Georgina Campbell.

The distributor will roll out the film in North America, Variety has learned, as well as the U.K. and Ireland where Saban has recently expanded its presence.

Jonathan W. Stokes (“El Gringo”) wrote and directed the piece about an ambitious reporter (Campbell) stationed in the Middle East who is taken captive after her convoy is ambushed. She is confronted by the trauma of her past and must find a way to bring down the militants who incarcerated her.

Campbell won the best actress BAFTA TV award in 2015 for the BBC original “Murdered by My Boyfriend.” She also broke out in the “Black Mirror” episode “Hang the DJ,” about futuristic courtship system, and starred in “King Arthur: Legend of the Sword.”

 

 

 

 

 

Article by: Matt Donnelly for Variety

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Idris Elba will star in Beast, a survival thriller that Baltasar Kormakur will direct for Universal Pictures.

Based on an original idea by Jaime Primak-Sullivan, the script was written by Ryan Engle, who worked on the Dwayne Johnson movie Rampage.

While the story details are being kept hidden in the savanna, it is described as being tonally similar to The Shallows, the survival thriller featuring Blake Lively as a surfer stalked by a shark. Beast, however, features a lion as the predatory antagonist.

Will Packer and James Lopez will produce through their Will Packer Productions. Kormakur will produce through his RVK Studios. Primak-Sullivan will executive produce.

This marks the second reteam of Packer, Lopez, Primak-Sullivan and Engle after working together on the 2018 thriller Breaking In that starred Gabrielle Union.

Universal’s executive vp production Matt Reilly and creative executive Tony Ducret will oversee the project on behalf of the studio.

Kormakur made a name for himself directing gritty thrillers in his home country of Iceland before taking on survival thrillers such as 2015’s Everest and, more recently, Adrift, a waterlogged drama that starred Shailene Woodley and Sam Claflin. He is repped by WME, Range Media, and Nelson Davis.

Elba, who starred in Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs and Shaw for Universal, is coming off the Toronto Film Festival debut of drama Concrete Cowboy and next year stars as Bloodshot in James Gunn’s DC movie The Suicide Squad. He is repped by WME, The Artists Partnership, M8 and Ziffren Brittenham.

Article by: Borys Kit for The Hollywood Reporter

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Leaders of the nation’s movie theater business, which has been hammered by the COVID-19 pandemic, are urging Congress to provide bailout funds so the industry can survive.

The letter urges Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, and House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy to redirect unallocated funds from the CARES Act to proposals that help businesses that have suffered the steepest revenue drops due to the pandemic. The National Association of Theatre Owners, the Directors Guild of America, the Motion Picture Association and more than 70 directors, producers, and writers signed the letter.

Signers include Wes Anderson, Judd Apatow, James Cameron, Alfonso Cuarón, Clint Eastwood, Paul Feig, Greta Gerwig,
Evan Goldberg, Barry Jenkins, Patty Jenkins, Ang Lee, Sam Mendes, Steve McQueen, Christopher Nolan, David O. Russell,
Martin Scorsese, M. Night Shyamalan, Zack Snyder, Steven Soderbergh, Denis Villeneuve, Taika Waititi, James Wan and Lulu Wang.

“Thank you for your leadership at this challenging time for our country,” the letter begins. “As you consider forthcoming
COVID-19 relief legislation, we ask you to prioritize assistance for the hardest-hit industries, like our country’s beloved movie theaters.”

“No doubt you are hearing from many, many businesses that need relief. Movie theaters are in dire straits, and we urge you to redirect unallocated funds from the CARES Act to proposals that help businesses that have suffered the steepest revenue drops due to the pandemic, or to enact new proposals such as the RESTART Act (S. 3814/H.R. 7481). Absent a solution designed for their circumstances, theaters may not survive the impact of the pandemic.”

“The pandemic has been a devastating financial blow to cinemas. 93% of movie theater companies had over 75% in losses in the second quarter of 2020. If the status quo continues, 69% of small and mid-sized movie theater companies will be forced to file for bankruptcy or to close permanently, and 66% of theater jobs will be lost. Our country cannot afford to lose the social, economic, and cultural value that theaters provide.”

“The moviegoing experience is central to American life. 268 million people in North America went to the movies last year to laugh, cry, dream, and be moved together. Theaters are great unifiers where our nation’s most talented storytellers showcase their cinematic accomplishments. Every aspiring filmmaker, actor, and producer dreams of bringing their art to the silver screen, an irreplaceable experience that represents the pinnacle of filmmaking achievement.”

Currently, about 75% of U.S. theater markets are open, but the key Los Angeles and New York markets remain closed along with most of California, North Carolina, Michigan, New Mexico, Seattle-Tacoma and Portland, except for drive-ins. Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst with Comscore, estimated that only 58% of theaters are currently open in North America.

As a result, Hollywood studios have been postponing releases of high-profile titles out of concern that many moviegoers remain uncomfortable with returning to multiplexes — even with social-distancing restrictions. Warner Bros. gambled with its Christopher Nolan thriller, “Tenet,” and has seen underwhelming results with $41 million domestically in four weeks and only $3.4 million in its most recent weekend.

 

Article by:Dave McNary for Variety 

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Netflix's New Releases Coming in October

Netflix has unveiled its slate of movies and TV shows arriving on the streaming service this October.

A brand new round of Netflix original films will hit the platform this month, including the Armie Hammer and Lily James-led mystery romance Rebecca, animated adventure Over the Moon starring John Cho and Sandra Oh, as well as Adam Sandler's Halloween comedy Hubie Halloween and the Lorne Michaels-produced teen comedy-horror Vampires vs. The Bronx. Other movies arriving on Netflix in September include Stranger than Fiction, Basic Instinct, Hunt for the Wilderpeople, The Longest Yard (1974), Superman Returns, and WarGames

Netflix original series hitting the streamer this month include Haunting of Hill House sequel The Haunting of Bly Manor; Lily Collins-led Emily in Paris from Sex and the City creator Darren Star; Gallaudet University docuseries Deaf U; and the third season of My Next Guest Needs No Introduction With David Letterman. Other small-screen titles include the first seasons of CBS series Evil and The Unicorn and all five seasons of Moesha spin-off The Parkers

Original Netflix documentaries added this month include BLACKPINK: Light Up the Sky, about the record-shattering Korean girl band, with Sarah Cooper: Everything's Fine among October's original comedy specials. 

Missed what came to Netflix last month? Check out September’s new additions here.

 

 

Acrticle from: The Hollywood Reporter

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Independent Filmmakers Sidelined by COVID-19

San Francisco hasn’t traditionally been known for its film scene. But in recent years, Bay Area filmmakers like Boots Riley, whose Oakland-based 2018 surrealist comedy, Sorry to Bother You, was a critical and box office success, and Joe Talbot, who won the Directing Award at Sundance for his 2019 drama, The Last Black Man in San Francisco, have helped establish the Bay as a major character within the indie festival circuit. And San Francisco has always been home to a community of indie filmmakers, who pass through local incubators and residency programs like the SFFilm Filmhouse.

Anne Lai, the newly appointed director of SFFilm — which in addition to its residency program hosts the long-running SFFilm Festival and runs a variety of programs for artists and audiences — says that right now, those filmmakers are “biding their time.”

“It’s the interim — that is the question mark that everyone is sort of having — that’s affecting sports, that’s affecting live music, that’s affecting all sorts of arts,” Lai says. “There’s a hiccup in the way that the work can be executed, and at what point can you overcome it or circumvent that?”

It’s quite a hiccup. In 2019, the San Francisco Film Commission — a municipal office that helps develop and promote local filmmaking projects — granted permits to 252 productions between mid-March and the end of August, ranging from student projects to commercials to feature films. During that same time period in 2020, the Film Commission permitted only 42 productions. Those totalled up to just 85 scheduled shoot days in the city, compared to 426 days the previous year. And the total estimated budgets of all productions in San Francisco since the pandemic hit is about $3 million — 10 times less than it was in 2019.

The most obvious obstacle to filmmaking right now is, of course, that films require people — lots of them. A major studio production could have hundreds of crew members in addition to their cast; even an indie project, with a much leaner budget, will typically have around 25 to 50 people on set.

Currently, the San Francisco Film Commission is issuing permits to new productions, but only if there are no more than 12 people on set, total. That rule, on its own, is enough to kill plenty of projects.

“We have a courtroom scene that has 12 jurors, so right there that’s 12 people automatically,” de Araújo says. “And with a story like this, unless I fundamentally completely change what the story is, we can’t shoot it under those restrictions. So we have to wait.”

The shortage of local productions has put many in the San Francisco film industry out of work. Most of the filmmakers who spoke to SF Weekly for this story have filed for unemployment. Film industry workers often operate as independent contractors, and lack a safety net. Many work second jobs to pay the bills — but those, of course, may have been impacted as well.

Taylor Whitehouse is a Bay Area-based location scout; when a production launches, she’s one of the first people brought onto the team. In March, Whitehouse got a call from a producer looking for a warehouse space to shoot in. Then the county went into lockdown.

“And then it was kind of like, no one really knew what was going to be happening,” Whitehouse says. “And so [the producer] was like, ‘Well, I’ll get back in touch with you when we figure out what we can do.’ And then he kind of fell off the map… That was really the only thing that had come my way in terms of locations.”

Whitehouse, who’s relatively new to scouting and previously worked as a production assistant, says she imagines better established scouts have probably been receiving more calls. Those who are just getting their start in the industry, she worries, are being hit the hardest — and are the easiest to exploit. Her roommate, a recent graduate hungry for work as a production assistant, has taken to hunting down job listings on Facebook.

“People are just so desperate to work right now that I think that they’re willing to do a lot, even if it means putting themselves at risk on unsafe sets,” Whitehouse says.

That calculation — weighing work against health — is one that director and photographer Pete Lee has found himself making this summer. Job opportunities started trickling back in for Lee in July, which he knows puts him in the minority, but the better paying offers are coming from out of state, mainly because the risk associated with flying brings a higher rate. He flew to the Midwest for a directing job in the middle of the summer, but says he’d rather work lower paying local jobs than fly again.

“Not everyone is working,” Lee says. “So I had a few people when I was deliberating who were envious of the opportunity. And so I’ve been working a few of those; I’ve been trying to be selective about the risk that each job comes from.”

Lee is also considering saving up money as quickly as possible, so he can go stay with his family in Taiwan, where the coronavirus has been almost entirely contained. As he weighs the risks of taking a gig, he also has to consider what the future looks like, and whether things are likely to take a turn for the worse.

“Is this the safest that we’re gonna be for a while?” Lee wonders. “And am I not even gonna have the opportunity to take these risks in the near future?”

Article by:Roxy Bonafont for SF Weekly

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Event Pick: Beyond Fest- The "Fuck Covid" Edition

Every year Beyond Fest presents the best dark genre filmmaking, screening big horror premieres, double features and themed selections of strange visionary cinema. It’s one of L.A.’s most anticipated annual events, and part of its appeal has always been the kitschy Old Hollywood landmark it’s called home- The Egyptian Theater. While the organizers can’t do it there this year due to pandemic theater restrictions, they’ve opted for an equally fun -and safe- gathering space: The Mission Tiki Drive-In, where its American Cinematheque events were held all Summer.

The decision not to go digital makes the event one of the first all-physical festivals in the Covid era, and the line-up sounds more than worthy of the drive out to Tiki’s home in Claremont.  “We covet the theatrical experience above all and following the overwhelming success of our drive-in program we never hesitated in keeping Beyond Fest a physical experience” said Beyond Fest co-founder, Christian Parkes explains in press materials for the event. “We specifically wanted to give COVID-19 a resilient middle finger and provide a safe, communal respite for filmmakers and film fans to celebrate the best genre cinema on the biggest screens possible.”

Highlights run the gamut from gothic horror to weirdo headtrips, and include: a David Lynch tribute triple bill with Blue Velvet, Lost Highway, and Mulholland Drive; a double-bill curated by director Jim Cummings with world premiere of his Werewolf Tale the Wolf of Snow Hollow shown with Joe Dante’s The Burbs; a premiere of the new Blumhouse Christopher Landon slasher Freaky with an episode of director’s Tucker & Dale vs. Evil. other premieres include Adam Egypt Mortimer’s Archenemy, Steven Kostanski’s Psycho Goreman and Bryan Bertino’s The Dark and the Wicked, Moorhead and Benson’s Synchronic, Justin Simien’s Bad Hair, Neil Marshall’s The Reckoning and Rose Glass’ Saint Maud (shown alongside Rob Reiner’s Misery).

 

Article by: LINA LECARO for LA Weekly

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Only a month after beginning to reopen where allowed, struggling U.S. movie theaters are retreating and reducing their hours of operation as Hollywood studios continue to delay tentpoles including Wonder Woman 1984 and Black Widow because of the ongoing pandemic.

That means the next big event pic isn't until Nov. 20, when both James Bond installment No Time to Die and Pixar's Soul are scheduled to unfurl over the Thanksgiving corridor. Hopes are high that both films will restart the box office recovery.

Many circuits, including AMC Theatres, Regal Cinemas and Cinemark — the country's three largest chains — are beginning to limit the number of showtimes, as are scores of other chains and independent houses in order to reduce costs, sources say.

Some, including Cinemark and Marcus Theatres, are going further and closing a small number of their cinemas on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. About 15 or so Marcus theaters and a dozen or so Cinemark sites in smaller or relatively quiet markets have been impacted. Whether other companies follow suit remains to be seen.

In a comment to The Hollywood Reporter, a Cinemark spokesman said that approximately 75 percent of the circuit is open.

"Cinemark's reopening plan was thoughtfully and strategically designed with multiple contingencies in place to ensure we are able to be nimble and react as needed to the ever-changing environment," the circuit said in the statement. "That said, we will evaluate opportunities to align with demand, including reducing operating hours while we await new studio content to encourage theatrical moviegoing."

The lack of Hollywood studio product poses a serious dilemma for cinemas, which have spent millions on new safety and social distancing protocols in the campaign to lure consumers back to to theaters in the COVID-19 era, including reduced capacity.

"It's going to be a horrible October," says one studio distributor.

Theaters reopened where they were allowed in time for Christopher Nolan's Tenet, which unfurled over Labor Day weekend. However, without New York and Los Angeles in play, the $200 million tentpole has struggled, grossing $41 million domestically through Sept. 27. Exhibitors had hoped that Tenet would be followed by Mulan, but that tentpole was sent straight to Disney+ at a premium price in the U.S. over the Labor Day frame.

Wonder Woman 1984 had been set to open Oct. 2, but Warners pushed the sequel to Dec. 25 days after Tenet debuted. That was followed by Disney moving Black Widow from Nov. 6 of this year to May 2021. The impact of the shifts was immediate.

According to Comscore, there were 3,453 out of roughly 6,o00 North American theaters back in operation over the weekend of Sept. 18-20, as more jurisdictions allowed moviegoing. As of now, that number has been reduced to 3,350.

New indie studio Solstice Studios, founded by Mark Gill, provided the first new wide release when opening the Russell Crowe road-rage thriller Unhinged on Aug. 21.The film has earned $17.1 million to date domestically.

On Sunday, Solstice warned in a box office note that October would be challenged because of reduced showtimes and closures. The indie studio said it will make every effort to run promotions and help incentivize cinemas to stay open.

Some in the film industry are optimistic that cinemas in Los Angeles may be allowed to reopen in the coming weeks. Ditto for New York City. The two cities are the biggest moviegoing markets in the country.

Article by: Pamela McClintock for Hollywood Reporter

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The American Black FIlm Festival has announced that on October 3 and 4, they will be dedicating plans for a Remembering Chadwick Boseman Retrospective on the streaming platform ABFF play. 

The tribute for this star will be showing three Boseman movies about African American icons such as: 42, Get On Up and Marshall. They will be streaming free for the courtesy of the three Hollywood studios behind titles: Warner Bros., Universal Pictures, and Open Road Films.

Boseman left a legacy for playing such historical roles like Jackie Robinson in 42, James Brown a soulful music legend in Get On Up, and The African American Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall in the Marshall biopic.

“We truly appreciate WarnerBros, Universal Pictures, and Open Road Films for providing these three films in support of the Chadwick Boseman retrospective. We’re grateful to be able to offer the ABFF community and other fans a platform to see and celebrate his incredible talent and groundbreaking work portraying important Black figures,” said ABFF Ventures president Nicole Friday in a state

His death with colon cancer came amid a national reckoning with racial injustice adding to the grief of his fans and tributes from Hollywood. 

 

 

 

By: Etan Vlessingfor the Hollywood Reporter

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Perfect timing or is it fate? 

SZA will perform her hit track "Drew Barrymore" on the actors new daytime talk show on October 1. Following the performance, the artist will sit down with the host for an internview on the "The Drew Barrymore Show" on CBS.

The music video for the song in SZA's 2017 Album "Ctrl" even features a brief cameo from the actor. 

SZA's first studio album includes 14 songs that depart from traditional R&B leanings. With all tracks co-written by SZA there are guest appearances from Travis Scott, Kendrick Lamar, James Fauntleroy and Isaiah Rashad. 

SZA recently released her new single "Hit Different" featuring Ty Dolla $ign with a self-directed music video including choreography performed in a junkyard on haystacks.

The show laucned September 14th, and Barrymore states "It's a giant undertaking...Everyone kept telling me that if you want to get it right, you have to apply yourself to everything all the time. And I do care about the details."

 

 

 

 

Article written by Janet W. Lee for Variety

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Disney + on Friday revealed that a drive-in film festival will open in Santa Monica next month. 

Beginning October 5th, the series will kick off with a world premiere of The Right Stuff, after whcih the film will debut on the website on October 9th.

Then, the films will include six nights of movies including Tangled, Coco, Star Wars: The Emperor Strikes Back, Hocus Pocus, Captain Marvel, The Sound of Music Sing-A-Long and the Disney + film clouds. 

Additionally, Disney + decided to incorporate a short, popular episode of The Simpsons or a trailer for an upcoming Disney+ Originals project. 

The festival will operate under social distancing guidelines to protect guests and staff and face coverings will be required for patrons when intereacting attendants or exiting vehicles. 

Starring September 28, DisneyFans can register for complimentary tickets via the Disney+ Drive in Festival website.

 

 

 

 

Article by: Trilby Beresford for The Hollywood Reporter

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At the moment, one can't dine in or watch movies at an indoor theater in Sacramento.

But if you're willing to drive 40 minutes or so in the right direction, you can do both. 

California unveiled its new color-coded system breaking down counties risk levels into four tiers.

From Least to most restrictive: yellow, orange, red and purple.

In purple, no indoor theaters are permitted to open at all, while in red it is only 100, orange is 200 and yellow is more than 200/maximum usual capacity. 

El Dorado County: Now Playing

About 25 miles east of Sacramento along highway 50, neighboring el dorado county is one stage better than the rest of the capital region being in the red tier. 

Moviegoers must wear face coverings while in the lobby and in the auditoriums-unless eating or drinking according to the regal website. Concession stands will remain open with a number of modifications including every toher cash register closed. No refills allowed.

Two-seat social gaps are required for solo ticket buyers and if in groups there is only one empty seat. 

A customer who buys a ticket and then experienes covid symptoms "may request a refund online" the policy posted to Regal's website continues. 

Placer Country: Coming soon to a theater near you?

Placer Country is preparing to open soon as it found itself in the purple group until numbers had recently been improving. The state plans to update the tier list weekly on tuesdays, but says counties can't advance to the next tier until they remain at the current level for at least 3 weeks. 

Sacramento, Yolo, Yuba, Sutter: Curtains Closed

The rest of Sacramento's six country region are in purple tier with no immediate indication that they will advance to red. None of the century-branded locations have an estimated reopening on the company's website.

All further news awaits. 

BY MICHAEL MCGOUGH for the Sacbee

 

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Tenet was either going to be a make or break hit, but unfortunately not many people have seen it yet because the movie theaters and Covid-19. 

That's why it is perfect timing for Tenet to finally come home on VOD, due to these 5 reasons...

 

1. It's been Dropping Steadily At The Box Office Ever Since It Released In the U.S. 

Tenet is actually a massive box office hit interantionally so go Tenet. But when it comes to performance stateside, it's been a little underwhelming. In fact, in only its second week, Tenet made only $6.7 million at the box office. There is no denying that it's caused enough people to stay home and not go see Tenet in theaters.

2. Many People Who Have Seen It Say It's the Kind Of Movie That You Need To Watch Multiple Times

I’ve asked a number of people who have seen Tenet what they thought about it, and I’ve heard two major responses. 1) It’s great and the kind of movie that you have to watch multiple times to fully understand it, and 2) It’s really cool, but it’s needlessly complicated." There could be another kind of audience that will watch a movie a million times if they have to just catch every little detail. 

3. Overexposure of Ads Might Be Creating Tenet Fatigue

"The marketing team has been a little annoying, I understand that the movie is trying to drum up excitement but it's actually had the inverse effect on me..

But the fact that several Americans still don’t have that comfort level to go to the movies, just makes all the marketing seem a little bit icky. Like, do you really want us to risk our health just to see this movie? If it was just brought home, then this wouldn’t even be an issue."

4. Robert Pattison Is Hotter Than Ever Right Now

It has Robert Pattison in it and the future-Batman star has a whole new look and a big fan base since the Twilight Days.

5. It Could Get A Second Wind And Open The Door For Other Big Budget Blockbusters At Home

The Blockbuster is supposedly back with the new film, but with the box office performance it seems to not be the case. He got the intention of the movie coming out in theaters, but now VOD? If it released in VOD, it could pave the way for massively budgeted films in the future to come home to.

What do you think?

By: RICH KNIGHT for Cinema Blend

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While auditioning for a family Christmas commercial in Los Angeles, actors Elizabeth Bemis and Gabriel Villanueva made a bold choice.

After hitting their marks and delivering their lines as a married couple, the pair leaned in for a quick peck on the lips. The sweet, unscripted moment lasted less than a second, but elicited quite a reaction.

“What was that?!” exclaimed the casting director from behind his mask and face shield.

“Can’t do that unless you’re quarantining together!” quipped the camera operator from several feet away.

Actually, Bemis and Villanueva couldn’t have auditioned at all — let alone kissed — unless they were quarantining together. It wasn’t the first time the Central L.A. residents, who have been dating for more than six years, had auditioned as a couple amid the COVID-19 pandemic, which has forced the entertainment industry to adapt to stricter health and safety protocols.

Often that involves auditioning remotely via Zoom or self-tapes, which actors film from their homes and submit online. In this case, it meant auditioning in person — with a quarantine buddy — for characters required to come within (gasp!) six feet of each other.“It’s interesting because before the pandemic, we would get an audition together maybe, like, once a month?” Bemis told The Times last month, speaking through a floral cloth mask in the empty waiting room of the 200 South casting studio on La Brea Avenue. “Maybe even less. ... And now we’re getting them way more than we’re getting individuals.”

“With the production rules in California ... even the way actors interact on set — there’s a protocol for that now, so people can’t kiss unless you’re quarantining together,” Villanueva said through a blue surgical mask. “So we kissed.”

As Hollywood begins to resume production, actors and casting directors are navigating a whole new world for auditions: Socially distanced studio layouts, elaborate self-tape setups and awkward Zoom meetings.

The Times recently observed the audition process at 200 South, speaking with actors about their experiences auditioning both in-person and at home during the pandemic. Via phone, casting directors also shared their thoughts on how the public health emergency has altered casting in TV, film and beyond.

America’s craftiest home videos

The self-tape has long been a staple of the Hollywood casting process, but the recent dearth of in-person opportunities has pushed actors to step up their home video skills — acquiring ring lights, iPhone tripods, backdrops and other accessories to keep up with their remote competition.

“Self-taping at home, I find to be more anxiety-provoking, stressful, cumbersome than coming here and doing it in person,” said Villanueva — who described one of his and Bemis’ home setups as “a very sophisticated stacking of cardboard boxes.” “You would think it’d be more convenient to just do it at home, but it’s really not.”

In addition to the role for which they’re auditioning, actors must now also play the part of producers, editors, readers, camera operators and directors when shooting from home.

“We live in a very cramped, small apartment, so anytime we have to do a self-tape, we have to move a table out of the way. We have to take things off the walls. We’ve gotta set up the light. We’ve gotta set up the camera,” agreed actress Jocelyn Hall of Los Feliz.

“It’s a whole sweaty process — ’cause it’s also like a million degrees in California right now ... So when we do get a chance to go in person, I love it because I don’t have to think about any of the technical aspects. I don’t have to make sure the lighting is right. I don’t have to make sure the camera is at the right angle.”

Actors Matt Grossman and Jocelyn Hall receive instructions from camera operator Dave Reifsnyder
Musician Matt Grossman, left, and actress Jocelyn Hall receive instructions from camera operator Dave Reifsnyder before a commercial audition at 200 South. Grossman and Hall were able to safely audition together because they are a real couple living together in quarantine. The former is not an actor but has been joining his girlfriend for couples auditions amid the pandemic.
(Josie Norris / Los Angeles Times)

One major upside, of course, of filming your own audition is the number of do-overs you get to land the material — a luxury not afforded in the high-stakes realm of in-person auditions, which typically offer limited time to make an impression.

“Now that self-tapes are the new normal, you can deliver your best tape,” said casting director Julia Kim, who recently worked on the Sundance Film Festival breakout “Minari.” “You could practice as much as you want behind the scenes and settle on the tape that you want to deliver to us. So right there, you have the advantage.”

For casting veterans like Kim, reviewing self-tapes is nothing new, but the extra effort from actors definitely is. Casting Society of America board member Zora DeHorter has been particularly impressed by performers repurposing their home environments as makeshift sets — shooting a forest scene in a nearby park, for example, or a hitchhiking sequence on a road with a real car.

“During the normal time, because you’re running around so much, it’s usually just a white wall. They do it quickly, and they send it to you — which is fine,” said the casting director, who recently worked on the 2019 action thriller “Shadow Wolves.”

“I’m not knocking that at all. ... But now I feel like there are more actors going above and beyond and going to a location and setting it up and dressing a certain way and getting into it and adding music. I’m blown away now by some of the stuff I’ve seen.”

Sisters Chloe and Brooke Bowling at a commercial audition
Sisters Chloe Bowling, 12, and Brooke Bowling, 6, receive instruction during a commercial audition at 200 South. The siblings were able to audition together because they are living together in quarantine.
(Josie Norris / Los Angeles Times)

While auditioning for family projects from their Woodland Hills home, actress Colleen Bowling, her husband and their four children have gotten especially creative with self-tapes — browsing Target for toy commercial props, building a fire in their backyard for a summer-camp sequence and even sprinkling in voiceover effects to convey inner thoughts.

“I feel like it’s challenging us,” Bowling said. “[It has provided] opportunity for newer actors, and it’s just allowed us to get really smart about the industry quickly — forcing us to do our own technology and editing. We’ve really become pros on iMovie.”

Actors, they’re just like us — on Zoom

Out of the pandemic, a new strain of audition horror stories has emerged: the botched Zoom call.

“There’s that awkwardness that happens quite often,” DeHorter said, “where they’re not grasping the technology part of how to unmute and then, sometimes, even leave the meeting.”

Crowded audition waiting rooms have been replaced with virtual ones on Zoom, where actors have no choice but to stare blankly at their competition through muted, “Brady Bunch"-style boxes at all times — lest they miss their visual cue to enter the online audition room. (Full disclosure: Times owner Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong is an investor in Zoom.)

“Normally if you come in [to the studio], sometimes you’ll chat with another actor, or even if you don’t, it’s not weird,” Bemis said. “But for some reason, there’s something about being on Zoom that makes it kind of uncomfortable because you’re just, like, staring at each other.”

For the most part, actors and casting directors agree that video chatting is an effective alternative to live auditions — especially in the callback stages, where filmmakers, producers and other creatives can join the virtual meeting to review the finalists.

As long as everyone’s internet connection is intact.

“There’s been fun, happy accidents — whether a pet crawls into the frame or just unexpected things that bring us all on the same page that we’re all in this together,” Kim said. “But ... sometimes [the audio will] drop out while they’re in the middle of something intense, and I hate that I have to say ... ‘You just poured your heart and soul into that, but I’m gonna have to ask you to do it again because I need a clean take.’”

Zoom has also allowed casting professionals like Kim, who is on the CSA’s Equity in Entertainment committee, to connect with and counsel actors from marginalized groups trying to break into Hollywood.

Before the pandemic, Kim and her colleagues launched a project aimed at creating more opportunities in the industry for actors of color, as well as performers from LGBTQ and disability communities.

“A lot of the downtime has been getting acquainted with actors that we wouldn’t ordinarily have the time to always meet, because we really need to meet actors that are appropriate for a project that we’re working on,” Kim said. “But since projects are few and far between, it gives us more flexibility to just meet somebody because they’re interesting and keep them under our hat for the future.”

Casting director Carla Hool, who often works with international talent, is used to interacting with actors remotely through a screen. Still, certain advanced aspects of the process, like chemistry reads typically staged with multiple actors in proximity, are near “impossible to have right now without breaking the rules.”

“I do miss getting to know the actor’s personality. They come in and talk, and I get to see another part of them — not just that take of that scene. So that is lost,” said Hool, who recently resumed work on Netflix’s “Selena: The Series.”

“At least right now with Zoom, you can see them. It’s easier, but it’s still not the same as being in the room and seeing the actor in person.”

Back in the (casting) studio

One loophole some agents and casting professionals have used to screen actors in a shared space is the quarantine package: small groups of talent who are already living together and can therefore safely audition together.

An August commercial casting call at 200 South invited real-life couples and sisters to play a father, mother and two daughters celebrating the holidays during the COVID-19 lockdown. Actors were required to wait outside before their audition time, wear face coverings until they were on camera and bring their own props — Christmas ornaments — to avoid contamination.

“The first thing is to err on the side of safety,” said Ross Lacy, casting director and owner of 200 South. “You have to really respect the rules.”

 

Actress Elizabeth Bemis applies hand sanitizer
Actress Elizabeth Bemis applies hand sanitizer after a commercial audition at 200 South.
(Josie Norris / Los Angeles Times)

To encourage social distancing between actors, the vast waiting room was covered in masking-tape X marks, spaced six feet apart and color-coded according to audition room.

Printed guidelines posted throughout the mostly vacant, 13,000-square-foot facility reminded visitors to utilize the ubiquitous hand-sanitizing stations, maintain a six-feet distance from camera operators and assistants — who wore shields and face coverings at all times — and “cancel without fear” of retribution should they feel uncomfortable auditioning in person.

“There’s no grudge held by us if someone can’t come in or doesn’t feel comfortable coming in,” Lacy said. “I totally, totally, totally get that. To the actors, I would say, ‘Don’t do anything that you don’t feel safe doing. If you get to an audition and it’s crowded, speak up and say something.’”

 

Casting director Ross Lacy wears a mask as he prepares for in-person auditions.
Casting director and 200 South casting studio owner Ross Lacy prepares for in-person auditions.
(Josie Norris / Los Angeles Times)

Comfort didn’t seem to be an issue for the talent auditioning that day, all of whom appreciated the extra precautions taken by 200 South to keep everyone safe. Many preferred acting alongside their real loved ones, as opposed to being paired on the spot with a stranger.

At least right now with Zoom, you can see them. It’s easier, but it’s still not the same as being in the room and seeing the actor in person.

CARLA HOOL, CASTING DIRECTOR

“I do like doing auditions with my sisters,” said 12-year-old Chloe Bowling, speaking through a hot-pink face mask. “I hope that stays [after the pandemic] because it’s easy. I feel like I can relate more to them instead of getting another person to pretend to be my sister — which I’m fine with — but it’s been fun because then we can practice together before, and we can really relate to the script.”

Other elements of the new casting normal that directors and actors would like to continue post-pandemic are spacious waiting rooms, more productive Zoom meetings and less commuting — as well as a newfound sense of “camaraderie,” as Bemis put it, between all the filmmakers, casting professionals and performers just doing their best under unprecedented circumstances.

“It’s crazy how, in every single department — every single aspect of our lives — it’s just not going to be back to the way it was,” Hool said. “I don’t think things are ever going to go back to exactly the way they used to be.”

 

 

By: CHRISTI CARRAS for the Los Angeles Times

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Apple Original Films has decided to pick up Anthony and Joe Russo's latest addiction and crime drama movie Cherry. 

Based on Nico Walker's debut novel, Cherry portrays a former Army Medic who returns from Iraq with extreme undiagnosed PTSD, falling into an addiciton with opioid and begins robbing banks. 

An early 2021 debut on Apple Tv + is planned to star with Tom Holland and Ciara Bravo. 

The producer credits are shared by Anthony Russo and Joe Russo, Mike Larocca, Chris Castaldi, Jonathan Gray and Matthew Rhodes. Executive Produvers are Todd Makurath, Jake Aust, Kristy Maurer Grisham and Judd Payne. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Article by: Etan Vlessing for The Hollywood Reporter

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Disney has announced that they wiil be doing a live-action Peter Pan redo. 

As preproduction begins, Yara Shahidi will be set to play as Tinkerbell along with Jude Law who will play as Captain Hook. Joining them, Alexander Molony and Ever Anderson will play Peter and Wendy respectively. 

Shahidi, repped by CAa Principal and the Nord Group, was a breakout castmember of ABC series Black-ish and spin off. She also was apart of the adaptation of the Y novel The Sun Is Also a Star. 

David Lowery who directed Pete's Dragon for the studio is on board to base the script with Tony Halbrooks off of Disney's 1953 animated movie.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Article Written by: Mia GaluppoThe Hollywood Reporter

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An Announcement for Season 2 of Disney +'s live action television series The Mandalorian has been announced to come out October 30th and Fans are going crazy over the new trailer.

Being that the show came out last year, "there was no doubt that Disney and Lucasfilm would waste no expense in their first true live-action television venture (not to mention a flagship Disney+ streamer) being top notch. Hell, even the Emmys noticed, nominating the show for Best Drama". 

For those who don't know, the show "follows an unnamed bounty hunter on his adventures across the galaxy. Last season, the Mandalorian (Pedro Pascal) came across The Child (affectionately known as Baby Yoda), and opted to become its protector". Baby Yoda especially gained lots of media attention from audiences, favoring them to show him more in season 2. Disney states: “The Mandalorian and the Child continue their journey, facing enemies and rallying allies as they make their way through a dangerous galaxy in the tumultuous era after the collapse of the Galactic Empire.

New Directors for the second season have been announced including: Jon Favreau, Dave Filoni, Bryce Dallas Howard, Rick Famuyiwa, Carl Weathers, Peyton Reed and Robert Rodriguez. Showrunner Jon Favreau serves as executive producer along with Dave Filoni, Kathleen Kennedy and Colin Wilson, with Karen Gilchrist serving as co-executive producer.

"Continuing the look and feel of last season, this Trailer ups the ante. The stakes appear raised, with new locations, big risks, and what seems like an even bigger sense of fun. Folks will undoubtedly still fawn over The Child, but watching the western vibes of the show evolve may well prove to be an even bigger selling point. October 30th is a month and a half away, so get ready"!

 

 

 

 

By: Joey Magidson Hollywood News

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