Paramount now has the perfect pairing to tackle one of history’s most compelling characters. Wonder Woman and Wonder Woman 1984 director Patty Jenkins and her star Gal Gadot are joining forces once again to tackle a biopic about the legendary Queen of Egypt for the studio, The Hollywood Reporter confirms.
Jenkins will direct off a script written by Laeta Kalogridis, with Gadot playing Cleopatra, of course, in a role that was immortalized by Elizabeth Taylor in director Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s 1963 classic.
Gadot took to Twitter to share her excitement at getting to play one of the most iconic women who has ever lived:
The Cleopatra project was initiated by Gadot’s Pilot Wave Motion Pictures, ultimately landing with Paramount Pictures after a studio auction. While this intriguing project begins its life, we’re still waiting to see Jenkins and Gadot’s Wonder Woman 1984, which is currently slated for a theatrical release on December 25, 2020. Their follow-up to the smashing Wonder Woman has been delayed three times already due to the pandemic. Here’s to hoping we all get to see it this year.
For more on Wonder Woman 1984, check out these stories:
Another big release will debut on Disney+. Pixar’s latest original animated film Soulwill be premiering on the streaming service on Christmas Day, yet unlike their release of Niki Caro’s Mulan, subscribers won’t have to pay a penny more to see it.
For international viewers who don’t currently have access to Disney+, Soul will still be released theatrically, with those release dates to be announced soon.
Soul looks like another must-see from Pixar, with Inside Out and Up director Pete Docter at the helm, featuring the voice talent of Jamie Foxx, Tina Fey, Phylicia Rashad, Ahmir Questlove Thompson, Daveed Diggs, and Angela Bassett. Soul also boasts original jazz music from the great Jon Batiste and a score from the also great duo (and longtime David Fincher collaborators) Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross.
Soul is centered on middle school band teacher and jazz lover Joe Gardner (Jamie Foxx) who dreams of becoming a proper jazz musician. Then one day Gardner gets his big break—he’s been asked to play at a swanky jazz club after an audition, and he leaves the place on cloud nine. Unfortunately, soon he’s in the metaphysical clouds after he takes one wrong step and finds himself in the vast, fluffy precincts of the afterlife. It appears his dreams of becoming a jazz musician are put on hold; possibly for eternity.
Here’s the official synopsis and details from Pixar:
Directed by two-time Academy Award®-winner Pete Docter, co-directed by Kemp Powers and produced by Academy Award®-nominee Dana Murray. According to Docter, the idea for the story is 23 years in the making. “It started with my son—he’s 23 now—but the instant he was born, he already had a personality,” says Docter. “Where did that come from? I thought your personality developed through your interaction with the world. And yet, it was pretty clear that we’re all born with a very unique, specific sense of who we are.”
“Soul” introduces Joe Gardner, a middle-school band teacher whose true passion is playing jazz. “I think Joe is having that crisis that all artists have,” says Powers. “He’s increasingly feeling like his lifelong dream of being a jazz musician is not going to pan out and he’s asking himself ‘Why am I here? What am I meant to be doing?’ Joe personifies those questions.”
In the film, just when Joe thinks his dream might be in reach, a single unexpected step sends him to a fantastical place where he’s is forced to think again about what it truly means to have soul. That’s where he meets and ultimately teams up with 22, a soul who doesn’t think life on Earth is all it’s cracked up to be. Jamie Foxx lends his voice to Joe, while Tina Fey voices 22. “The comedy comes naturally,” says Murray. “But the subtle emotion that reveals the truth to the characters is really something special.”
Well, this is intriguing. Benedict Cumberbatch’s Doctor Strange will be joining Tom Holland’s Peter Parker in Spider-Man 3. Strange will ostensibly be filling the mentor role that Robert Downey Jr.’s Tony Stark and Samuel L. Jackson’s Nick Fury previously held for the young web-slinger. The Hollywood Reporterrevealed the news yesterday, promising another tasty crossover between Marvel Studios and Sony Pictures.
Downey Jr.’s Tony Stark was Peter Parker’s original mentor, beginning with 2016’s Captain America: Civil War (Tony rather selfishly recruited Spidey to help him battle Captain America in Germany), and continuing through Spider-Man: Homecoming, Avengers: Infinity War, and briefly, in that potent third act reunion in Avengers: Endgame. Once Tony sacrificed himself at the end of Endgame, the mentor role was picked up by Jackson’s Nick Fury in Spider-Man: Far From Home. Granted, Fury wasn’t quite as doting as Stark, but he still looked out for the kid—kind of.
Cumberbatch’s Doctor Strange is another prickly character, but, a brilliant and powerful figure who will make for a very interesting father figure for Parker. Cumberbatch joins another surprise addition—Jamie Foxx, who is reprising his role as Electro from 2014’s The Amazing Spider-Man 2, which starred Andrew Garfield as Spider-Man.
As for the Doctor Strange franchise, Doctor Strange Into the Multiverse of Madness has another Spider-Man connection; the great Sam Raimi is directing, the man who elevated the superhero film genre with his excellent Tobey Maguire-led Spider-Man (2002) and Spider-Man 2 (2004). Considering Raimi’s film will explore Strange’s ability to tap into alternate realities and dimensions, there’s speculation that this might be how Foxx’s Electro gets pulled into the fray for Spider-Man 3.
Into the Multiverse of Madness is expected to start filming this month in London. Spider-Man 3 is due to start filming later this month in Atlanta. Jon Watts returns to direct Spider-Man 3, having helmed the first two installments of the Tom Holland Spider-Man era. Returning cast members include Zendaya, Marisa Tomei, Tony Revolori, and Jacob Batalon.
The first trailer for David Fincher’s Mank—his first feature film since 2014’s Gone Girl—looks ravishing. Fincher’s film is based on a script from his father, Jack Fincher, about the screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz (Gary Oldman), a talented but tortured soul battling alcoholism, a gambling addiction, and the pressure of trying to script what will become one of the most groundbreaking films ever made. That film is Orson Welles’ 1941 masterpiece Citizen Kane. The making of that film is the stuff of legend, and now that legend has a phenomenal director, cast, and crew to dramatize it.
The talent Fincher has assembled to turn that script into a feature film is, unsurprisingly, immense. Behind the camera, Fincher’s Mindhunter DP Erik Messerschmidt, his longtime production designer Donald Graham Burt, and his trusty composing duo of Trent Reznor and Atticus Finch are just a few of his collaborators. On-screen, Oldman is joined by a cast that includes Tom Burke as Orson Welles, Amanda Seyfried as Marion Davies, and Charles Dance as William Randolph Hearst, the newspaper magnate who inspired the titular character of Charles Foster Kane. Hearst was one of the most powerful, formidable figures of his day, and the making of Citizen Kane so infuriated him that, upon its release, he forbid any of his newspaper from mentioning the film’s existence.
The trailer shows off how Fincher and his collaborators have created a look that mimics Welles’s legendary film, a lush black and white heavy with shadow. This is period noir, and it’s hard to imagine another director more perfectly suited to it. With a central character that’s in the throes of alcoholism, battling with not only a tempestuous upstart director but also a ruthless titan of industry in Hearst, Mank looks and feels almost like an adaptation of a Raymond Chandler novel. In real life, Mankiewicz knew Hearst socially—that relationship was over once Citizen Kane was released. One of the things Hearst was most furious about was the character of Susan Alexander Kane, who was based on Marion Davies (Hearst’s mistress).
There’s a lot to savor here. Mank is due to be released in select theaters sometime in November and will be released on Netflix on December 4. Check out the trailer below:
Here’s the official synopsis from Netflix:
1930s Hollywood is re-evaluated through the eyes of scathing social critic and alcoholic screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz as he races to finish the screenplay of Citizen Kane for Orson Welles.
Featured image: Featured image: Amanda Seyfried is Marion Davies in Mank. Courtesy Netflix.
One of the most intriguing bits of news to come out of San Diego Comic-Con way (way) back in July 2019, was that Natalie Portman would be playing Mighty Thor in Taika Waititi’s Thor: Ragnarok follow-up Thor: Love and Thunder. The specifics of Portman’s role have been—and will continue to be—closely guarded secrets, yet Portman did confirm one piece of her character’s storyline that is really intriguing.
Waititi teased only the broadest outline of his Love and Thunder script this past April during an Instagram Live viewing party of Ragnarok. “It’s so over-the-top now in the very best way,” Waititi said. “It makes Ragnarok seem like a really run of the mill, very safe film…this new film feels like we asked a bunch of 10-year-olds what should be in a movie and just said yes to everything.” Despite this promise of this being a script 10-year-olds would approve of, Waititi had previously said he was thinking of adapting “The Mighty Thor” comic run, which involved some pretty serious stuff for Jane Foster (the character Portman is playing).
Portman has now revealed that to be the case. Speaking with Yahoo!, Portman said that Waititi has lifted a storyline from “The Mighty Thor” comics run in which Jane Foster is battling cancer.
“I can’t tell you that much. I’m really excited. I’m starting to train, to get muscles. If there can be all these female superheroes, the more of them there are, the better it is. I’m trying to think — it’s based on the graphic novel of The Mighty Thor. She’s going through cancer treatment and is a superhero on the side,” Portman told Yahoo!
Waititi is an excellent screenwriter, as evidenced by not only Ragnarok but his Oscar-winning script for Jojo Rabbit. He’s more than capable of interweaving this kind of serious storyline into what will no doubt be a bonkers film.
Thor: Love and Thunder is expected to start filming sometime in 2021, and is due in theaters on February 11, 2022. Joining Portman are Chris Hemsworth (obviously), Tessa Thompson (also obviously), and newcomer Christian Bale.
Featured image: SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA – JULY 20: (L-R) President of Marvel Studios Kevin Feige, Director Taika Waititi, Natalie Portman and Chris Hemsworth of Marvel Studios’ ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ at the San Diego Comic-Con International 2019 Marvel Studios Panel in Hall H on July 20, 2019 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images for Disney)
In some ways, it’s a story that director Angel Manuel Soto knows little about. But it’s also one he knows only too well. Centered around the urban dirt bike culture in Baltimore, Maryland, Charm City Kings, making its debut on HBO Max, is a raw, coming-of-age drama based in a culture where respect is earned through stunt riding.
Take the bikes out of the equation, and it is remarkably similar to how Soto felt growing up in Puerto Rico.
“One of the things that I noticed was the fact that Puerto Rico and Baltimore are not that different when it comes to struggles and marginalization,” says Soto during a Zoom conversation. “I really saw a lot of the things that Mouse goes through as almost the same thing that we went through in Puerto Rico. The main changes were the language and the architecture and maybe the extreme subculture of the bike life. Our stuff was boxing or baseball – that kind of thing.”
Charm City Kings is based on filmmaker Lofty Nathan’s 2013 documentary 12 O’Clock Boys. It followed the three-year quest of 13-year-old Pug to become a member of the title group, a gang of Baltimore dirt bikers so named for their ability to ride with their front wheels straight up as if they were pointing to the twelve at the top of a clock.
L-r: Director Angel Manuel Soto and Meek Mill. Courtesy HBO Max.
Oscar-winner Barry Jenkins took the idea and crafted it into Charm City Kings and the story of Mouse (Jahi Di’Allo Winston), a teen living with a single mom (Teyonah Parris) as he deals with the death of his older brother Stro. Though Mouse has a natural gift for caring for animals and a path to becoming a veterinarian, he’s willing to throw it away for a chance for urban bike glory. His opportunity comes in the form of Blax (Meek Mill), a recent parolee who leads the Midnight Clique, the baddest of bad biker gangs. Blax also runs a repair shop and is willing to take Mouse and his best friends Lamont (Donielle T. Hansley Jr.) and Sweartagawd (Kezii Curtis) under his wing to teach them how to build their own bikes. As Mouse becomes entrenched in the street life of the Clique, both his mom and his mentor, Baltimore detective Rivers (William Catlett), realize that Mouse is in danger of meeting the same fate as Stro, who died during a drug deal Blax orchestrated.
“I already had seen the documentary, so when I got the script that said 12 O’clock Boys written by Barry Jenkins, it was, ‘Okay, I gotta read this,’” Soto continues. “It was the first draft. And even though a lot of work was done to it later by Sherman Payne (Payne is credited as screenwriter from a story by Jenkins, Kirk Sullivan, and Christopher M. Boyd), it was really a good foundation for the story, a very exciting journey of a character that the documentary didn’t really have. Barry’s starting point provided space for Sherman to put in a lot of the heart and the banter and the energy of the kids and what happens toward the end.”
Though he feels Charm City Kings has a much different tone, Soto likens it to the themes of Stand By Me,Boyz n the Hood, and Menace II Society. “It’s like being able to say, ‘Oh, I remember how I felt watching those movies,’” he continues. “What I love about its energy is the funny banter and the innocence — all the stuff that we focused on as teenagers, meeting the girl and how innocence can be easily destroyed by a pivotal moment.”
Charm City Kings – Angel Manuel Soto with stunt coordinator Kevin Rogers and Jahi Di’Allo, who plays Mouse. Courtesy HBO Max.
Staying true to Baltimore meant shooting in Baltimore. Reminding us that Jada Pinkett Smith, one of the film’s executive producers, hails from there,Soto said there was never any discussion about filming Charm City Kings elsewhere. “I couldn’t think of any other way of doing it, to be honest. It’s very hard to mimic Baltimore,” he adds. “There is bike life in other cities, but Baltimore is pretty much the epicenter of this movement. I studied architecture and one of the things that’s very hard to replicate is the row houses. You can have row houses in different parts of the states, but Baltimore’s are very unique. Even East Baltimore architecture is different from West Baltimore architecture in the way the steps are designed.”
Knowing how the events of recent years have tainted the city’s image, Soto also hopes the story will help shine a light on its energy and positive elements. “It is a love letter to Baltimore,” he says. “That was what we really wanted to do. So that’s why the whole film is 100% shot in Baltimore.”
Filming entirely in Baltimore for ‘Charm City Kings.’ Courtesy HBO Max.
The director gives a lot of credit for the film’s sense of optimism and joy to his young cast. To keep it real, it was decided that Mouse, Lamont, and Sweartagawd should be played by actors in their teens. Having featured child actors in his early work, Soto was very comfortable directing performers in this age range.
That innocence, the very spark in the eyes is very hard to replicate,” explains Soto. “There’s something about not being stained with life. It is very hard to have an adult or a kid that’s older who has gone through a lot of issues to realistically play younger.”
Not to say that Winston, Hansley Jr., and Curtis were novices at their crafts. Winston, for example, had already been featured in such films as Queen & Slim, The Dead Don’t Die, and Proud Mary. Soto was amazed at their on-camera chemistry. “They really became the characters to the point that it felt like they’ve been best friends forever — and they had just met,” he adds. “It was a delight to see. They made my job very easy.”
Equally as impressive were the riders featured in the urban bike sequences. Realizing the key role they play in Charm City Kings, Soto spent seven weeks prior to filming immersing himself in the culture. He described what he saw as crazy, but in a good way. It turned out to be time well spent.
“These guys, they know their bikes better than their own girlfriends,” says Soto. “I’ve never seen this type of talent before. Being able to trust them to be who they are really helped us get intimate with those scenes. I felt comfortable that I could get close to the action because they have such control but also such freedom.”
And it only stands to reason that having delved so deeply into the urban bike culture that, at some point, Soto would get on a bike himself. And he did. But wisely, he waited until Charm City Kings had wrapped to take his turn at the wheel. “When we finished shooting and I knew it was safe, I stayed a couple more days and that’s when I went on the bike,” Soto says with a laugh. “I knew if I rode during shooting, I was gonna get in trouble. But after shooting, I was like, ‘If I break a leg, I can work with that.’”
Featured image: Charm City Kings – Angel Manuel Soto with the three teenage performers – Jahi Di’Allo (on bike), Kezii Curtis (with glasses) and Donielle T. Hansley Jr. Courtesy HBO Max.
As we wrote earlier today, we’re taking any good news we can get on the film release front. While we’re duty-bound to share some of the bummer news, we’re thrilled to report that David Fincher’s first feature film in six years will be released on Netflix this December 4. And Mank is not only loaded with talent on camera and off, but it also looks, at least from the images we’ve seen, to be dizzyingly gorgeous. As it should—the film follows screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz’s (Gary Oldman) volatile, ultimately groundbreaking collaboration with Orson Welles (Tom Burke) in creating Welles’ 1941 masterpiece Citizen Kane, one of the greatest films ever made. Mank was shot in black and white and looks frankly stunning.
Joining Oldman and Burke are Amanda Seyfried as Marion Davies—a romantic partner to newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, the inspiration for Welles’ film and its titular character, Charles Foster Kane. Hearst is played by the great Charles Dance, whose commanding presence as Tywin Lannister was so key to Game of Thrones. Fincher’s Mank will track the screenwriter’s battles with Welles over the script, including who deserves the credit for it (they both eventually won Oscars for Best Original Screenplay). The making of Citizen Kane was legendarily difficult, and who better to unpack it than one of our greatest directors?
Featured image: Amanda Seyfried is Marion Davies in Mank. Courtesy Netflix.
Mank‘s script from Fincher’s father, Jack Fincher, which makes an already intriguing project that much more enticing. Fincher’s Mindhunter DP Erik Messerschmidt and his trusty composing duo of Trent Reznor and Atticus Finch are on board as well.
Honestly, folks, we cannot wait for this film.
Here’s the synopsis from Netflix:
1930s Hollywood is re-evaluated through the eyes of scathing social critic and alcoholic screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz as he races to finish the screenplay of Citizen Kane for Orson Welles.
For more on what’s coming to Netflix, check out these stories:
While we keep having to share the bummer news of film releases being pushed back, from The Batmanand Dune to the latest big change, Jurassic World: Dominion (moved from summer 2021 to a 2022 release), there is still good news in the entertainment world to share. One bit of it is this—a brand new Godzilla anime series is coming to Netflix. The new show will be called Godzilla Singular Point and will be a brand new thing. Meaning, it won’t have any narrative connection to previous anime films about the legendary monster like Godzilla: The Planet Eater, Godzilla: Planet of Monsters, and Godzilla: City on the Edge of Battle. Folks, the simple fact is people love Godzilla (what’s not to love?), and as wonderful as the feature films about him can be, anime is a natural home for him.
The series hails from a talented group—Atsushi Takahashi (Doraemon: Great Adventure in the Antarctic Kachi Kochi) will direct from completely original material from writer Tô Enjo (The Empire ofCorpses). Takahashi, it needs to be noted, was the cinematographer on one of the greatest anime films of all time, Hayao Miyazaki’s Spirited Away. Colliderreports that Godzilla Singular Point will combine hand-drawn animation and CG. They’ll have animator Eiji Yamamori from Studio Ghibli on hand, another Spirited Away alum (he also worked on Miyazaki’s classic Princess Mononoke). Having an ace animator like Yamamori around to create the Kaiju, the colossal monsters who will highlight the new series, is excellent news.
Details are fairly slim at this point, but it’s exciting news that Netflix is leaning into a series like this. Anime is a gorgeous filmmaking form with a rich history and tons of fans. We’ll be keeping an eye on this project. Godzilla Singular Point is due to Netflix sometime in 2021.
For more on what’s coming to Netflix, check out these stories:
Featured images: Caption: GODZILLA in Warner Bros. Pictures’ and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure “GODZILLA: KING OF THE MONSTERS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
The first trailer for Katie Cappiello’s new Netflix series Grand Army is a gripping glimpse at a promising new show. Set in Brooklyn’s largest public school (a fictional behemoth called Grand Army High), and set against a backdrop of America’s many flashpoints, Grand Army looks like the kind of high school drama built for both high school-aged viewers and adults alike. Centered on five students at the school, the trailer is short on plot details but rich with teenage atmospherics and New York-specifics (including great shots of Grand Army Plaza at the northern corner of Prospect Park, in Brooklyn). High school is a dramatic time—high school in New York City is dramatic in a specific, sped-up adulthood kind of way.
The kids are a diverse group struggling with the highs and lows of high school life and the pressures of our current American moment. In one emblematic moment, Leila Kwan (Amalia Yoo) is told by a counselor that she appears happier than the last time they met. “Yeah, well,” Leila smiles painfully, “it’s a disguise.” We hear you, Leila.
Yoo stars alongside Odessa A’zion, Odley Jean, Maliq Johnson, Amir Bageria, Alphonso Jones, Brittany Adebumola, Crystal Nelson, Naiya Ortiz, Brian Altemus, Thelonius “Monk” Serrel-Freed, Anthony Ippolito, Jaden Jordan, Ashley Ganger, Sydney Meyer, Marcela Avelina, August Rosenstein, David Iacono, Lola Blackman, and Keara Graves. Grand Army is based on Cappiello’s 2013 play “Slut.”
Grand Army premieres on October 16. Check out the trailer below:
Here’s the official synopsis from Netflix:
Grand Army tunnels into a generation that’s raging and rising. Five students at the largest public high school in Brooklyn take on our chaotic world as they fight to succeed, survive, wild out, break free and seize the future.
Netflix has revealed the first trailer for director Hiromi Kamata’s Selena: The Series starring Christian Serratos (The Walking Dead) as Selena Quintanilla, the Texas-born Tejano music star who went from being a beloved but little known singer to a star with chart-topping albums. Selena is considered one of the most famous Mexican American entertainers of all time, with her album “Selena Live!” winning a Grammy in 1994. The last time her story was told was in Gregory Nava’s 1997 film Selena, starring a young Jennifer Lopez in the lead role. This first trailer from Netflix reveals a pitch-perfect Serratos as the young star, whose life was tragically cut short when she was shot and killed on March 31, 1995, a few days before her 24th birthday. Her posthumous album, “Dreaming of You” debuted on top of the Billboard 200 chart, making her the first Latin artist to do so.
Selena: The Series will have a larger palette to paint the picture of Selena Quintanilla’s life, including a more fulsome look at her family. In the teaser, we see Selena on stage singing “Como La Flor” while her father, Abraham Quintanilla (Ricardo Chavira), promises her that if she keeps practicing, all her hard work will pay off. “And when I see you on that stage, I still see the six-year-old girl singing in our backyard.”
Joining Serratos and Chavira are Madison Taylor Baez as the young Selena, Gabriel Cavarria as her brother A.B. Quintanilla, Seidy Lopez as her mother Marcella, and Noemi Gonzalez as her sister Suzette. Rounding out the cast are Julio Macias, Jesse Posey, Hunter Reese Pena, Carlos Alfredo Jr., Paul Rodriguez, Erika Buenfil, and David Fernandez Jr.
“Selena will always have a lasting place in music history and we feel a great responsibility to do justice to her memory,” Suzette Quintanilla said when the series was first announced in 2018. “With this series, viewers will finally get the full history of Selena, our family, and the impact she has had on all of our lives. We are excited to partner with Campanario and Netflix to give fans a never-before-seen glimpse at our story and highlight why Selena will remain a legend for generations to come.”
Selena: The Series comes to Netflix on December 4, 2020.
Here’s the super-brief synopsis from Netflix:
As Mexican-American Tejano singer Selena comes of age and realizes her dreams, she and her family make tough choices to hold on to love and music.
Featured image: Christian Serratos is Selena in “Selena: The Series.” Courtesy Netflix.
Well, we can’t say we didn’t see this coming. Warner Bros. is moving Matt Reeves’ hotly-anticipated The Batman from October 2021 to March 4, 2022. The news follows the recent reshuffling of Denis Villeneuve’s equally eagerly anticipated Dunefrom December 2020 to October 2021. It makes sense that the studio wouldn’t be eager to release both The Batman and Dune in the same month, so now we’ll have to wait that much longer to see Robert Pattinson as Bruce Wayne.
These aren’t the only moves Warner Bros. has made, so let’s have a look at their upcoming slate:
Dune moves from December 2020 to October 2021.
The Batman moves from October 1, 2021, to March 4, 2022
The Matrix 4 moves from April 1, 2022, to December 22, 2021. (This is the only film on the schedule that has moved up, so let’s take the good news where we can.)
The Flash moves from June 3, 2022, to November 4, 2022
Shazam! 2 moves from November 4, 2022, to June 2, 2023
Black Adam moves from December 22, 2021, and now has an unspecified date.
Such is the reality we live in, with COVID-19 still raging and productions, and life as we know it, utterly altered. Film and television productions have done an admirable job becoming pandemic safety specialists on the fly, but the production shutdowns, slow-downs, and pauses have wreaked havoc on the 2020 release schedule.
The most important thing is that these films are being handled from a cast and crew safety standpoint first and foremost. While all of us are eager to see these movies, waiting is, in the end, a small price to pay for the health and safety of creators and viewers alike. The way we look at these delays is just another sacrifice on the pile of sacrifices we’ve had to make since this pandemic started. Everyone’s health is paramount, so when we finally do get to see these films, we’ll hopefully be living in a world in which the pandemic has been handled and our futures don’t feel so murky and, let’s face it, scary.
For more on all things DC Films, check out these stories:
Co-writer and director Simon Kinberg has assembled an A-list cast to lead his original espionage thriller The 355. The premise is simple and potent—a multi-national team from America, Germany, England, and Colombia have to team up to take down some seriously bad dudes and their top-secret new weapon. Your heroes are CIA agent Mason Brown (Jessica Chastain), German agent Marie (Diane Kruger), former MI6 agent and computer specialist Khadijah (Lupita Nyong’o), and Colombian psychologist Graciela (Penelope Cruz). Their mission is dangerous enough, but when a mysterious woman named Lin Mi Sheng (Fan Bingbing) gets involved, the stakes rise even higher. The first trailer reveals Kinberg and co-writer Theresa Rebeck’s globe-trotting thriller, which remixes a bit of Jason Bourne and Mission: Impossiblewith an incredible cast of women.
The 355 is Kinberg’s second directorial effort after X-Men: Dark Phoenix. He’s nothing if not ambitious, throwing his A-list cast into a genre dominated by Universal Pictures’ own Bourne franchise, the aforementioned Mission: Impossible franchise and, of course, the venerable international shenanigans of James Bond. This first glimpse is promising, and with a cast this good and the welcome focus on a team of highly skilled women plying their trade, The 355 is an intriguing addition to the genre.
Check out the trailer below. The 355 is set for release on January 15, 2021.
Here’s the official synopsis from Universal Pictures:
A dream team of formidable female stars comes together in a hard-driving original approach to the globe-trotting espionage genre in The 355.
When a top-secret weapon falls into mercenary hands, wild card CIA agent Mason “Mace” Brown (Oscar®-nominated actress Jessica Chastain) will need to join forces with rival badass German agent Marie (Diane Kruger, In the Fade), former MI6 ally and cutting-edge computer specialist Khadijah (Oscar® winner Lupita Nyong’o), and skilled Colombian psychologist Graciela (Oscar® winner Penélope Cruz) on a lethal, breakneck mission to retrieve it, while also staying one step ahead of a mysterious woman, Lin Mi Sheng (Bingbing Fan, X-Men: Days of Future Past), who is tracking their every move.
As the action rockets around the globe from the cafes of Paris to the markets of Morocco to the wealth and glamour of Shanghai, the quartet of women will forge a tenuous loyalty that could protect the world—or get them killed.
The film also stars Édgar Ramirez (The Girl on the Train) and Sebastian Stan (Avengers: Endgame).
The 355 is directed by genre-defying filmmaker Simon Kinberg (writer-director-producer of Dark Phoenix, producer of Deadpool and The Martian and writer-producer of the X-Men films), from a script by Theresa Rebeck (NBC’s Smash, Trouble) and Kinberg, and is produced by Chastain and Kelly Carmichael for Chastain’s Freckle Films and by Kinberg for his Genre Films. The film is executive produced by Richard Hewitt (Bohemian Rhapsody).
Featured image: (from left) Graciela (Penélope Cruz), Mason “Mace” Brown (Jessica Chastain), Marie (Diane Kruger) and Khadijah (Lupita Nyong’o) in The 355, co-written and directed by Simon Kinberg. Photo Credit: Robert Viglasky/Universal Pictures
It was a little less than a month ago when we shared the news that Mission: Impossible 7 had returned to filming. Now writer/director Christopher McQuarrie has shared a new photo from set, and wouldn’t you know, it reveals Tom Cruise in stunt mode (one of his favorite modes!). The image shows Cruise on top of a train (McQuarrie’s up there, too) filming one of the franchise’s signature sequences—the epic stunt.
“Norway’s scale and beauty have left an indelible and defining imprint on our film and reminded us that anything’s possible,” McQuarrie wrote in his Instagram caption. He goes on to thank the country, the Norway Film Incentive, the Norwegian Railway Museum, and more. Then he cryptically thanks “The Mountain.” Who wants to guess that Cruise’s Ethan Hunt gets flung off a mountain?
In a previous image, McQuarrie teased what appeared to be the most insane motorcycle jump of all time, which led whoever would be insane enough to use the jump right off the edge of a mountain. Yup, probably “The Mountain” he was referring to in his above post. Tom Cruise and McQuarrie love pushing the envelope with the franchise’s stunts, and one of the (many) joys about watching a new Mission: Impossible installment is to see how in the world they were going to top what they did in the last film. The last film in the franchise, Mission: Impossible – Fallout(2018) managed to one-up the previously bonkers Rogue Nation (2015), which itself somehow bested the Burj Khalifa tower-scaling Ghost Protocol (2011). Cruise himself is so committed to delivering bigger and better stunts, even when he’s not doing a Mission: Impossible movie, he’s trying to raise the bar—by leaving the planet.
Mission: Impossible 7 is due in theaters on November 19, 2021. The plot details are being kept under wraps.
Featured image: Tom Cruise on the set of MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – FALLOUT, from Paramount Pictures and Skydance. Courtesy Paramount Pictures.
Henry Cavill took to Instagram today to try and disrupt our lunatic news cycle with something plainly good—a look at himself as The Witcher‘s Geralt in full armor. This monster-slayer is ready to roll for season two, revealing that Geralt will be rocking some brand new armor for the upcoming trials and tribulations he’s sure to face. We get one shot of Cavill’s Geralt facing us in his armor, a second from the back. Both show that the White Wolf favors dark armor. The man looks ready for business.
The Witcher—like just about every other production that was underway this past spring—shut down due to COVID-19. It was also one of the first big productions to get back up and running with new safety protocols. While the plot of season two is being kept secret, one piece of information that has been offered is that the second season will give us more of Geralt’s backstory. It will also, apparently, have a less complicated timeline than season one.
If you haven’t yet dug into The Witcher season one, now might be a perfect time. And no, you don’t need to be a hardcore fantasy fan or know a thing about Andrezj Sapkowski’s books from which the series is based. Starring Cavill and two potent female leads in Freya Allan and Anya Chalotra, The Witcher is a compulsively watchable and gleefully gritty fantasia. There are monsters. There are sorceresses. There are battles. The production design, costume, and both practical and special effects are excellent. And finally, the performances are stellar, from the three leads through the whole, sprawling cast.
Here’s the official synopsis for The Witcher season 2:
Convinced Yennefer’s life was lost at the Battle of Sodden, Geralt of Rivia brings Princess Cirilla to the safest place he knows, his childhood home of Kaer Morhen. While the Continent’s kings, elves, humans and demons strive for supremacy outside its walls, he must protect the girl from something far more dangerous: the mysterious power she possesses inside.
Rampaging through “Bloody Kansas” in 1856, abolitionist John Brown and his hardy band of followers lived in the wilderness foraging for food and killing pro-slavery “Red Shirts.” As dramatized in seven-episode miniseries The Good Lord Bird, produced by Blumhouse Television and premiering on Showtime this past Sunday [October 4], the tiny army led by Ethan Hawke‘s vainglorious John Brown rarely had the money for food or store-bought clothing. But as they trekked east on their ill-fated mission to attack the U.S. Army’s Harper’s Ferry armory, Brown and company managed to look sharp, even at their most raggedy.
Credit for the show’s vivid Americana couture goes to costume designer Amy Andrews Harrell. An expert in period dramas, Harrell earned an Emmy for outfitting Revolutionary War saga John Adams. Before immersing herself The Good Lord Bird, filmed over 80 days in Virginia, she’d become something of a specialist in stories set just before or during the Civil War, including Killing Lincoln, Lincoln, Mercy Street, and Emperor.
She says, “I wanted the viewer to feel that if they patted Ethan on the shoulder, dust would come wafting out. I took inspiration from [Paul Thomas Anderson]’s There Will Be Blood of how dirty I wanted the men to be.”
Speaking via Zoom from her home in Richmond, Virginia, Harrell took a deep dive into period hats, feed-bag dresses, John Brown’s signature greatcoat, and the jewel-toned vests worn by Daveed Diggs in his portrayal of Black abolitionist Frederick Douglass.
Ethan Hawke’s larger than life portrayal of John Brown benefits from the grandeur of that greatcoat you designed for him. How did you conceptualize that cloak?
In the first scene, John Brown has to conceal a rifle so that automatically meant he had to have on a pretty formidable coat. We had to give him all these interior pockets to hold a map, a journal, a spyglass. And our John Brown would have wanted to present himself as if he’s a general, so I gave the coat these wonderful buttons down the front. But he wouldn’t have been able to keep all those buttons on because of all the crazy situations they get into. Maybe he melted one down to make a bullet, so the buttons are mismatched.
Ethan Hawke as John Brown in THE GOOD LORD BIRD, “Mister Fred”. Photo Credit: William Gray/SHOWTIME.
Did you work directly with Ethan on the costume?
Ethan and I collaborated a lot at the beginning. He wanted me to make his sleeves very heavy so we put lengths of chain on the inside of his cuffs in the hem of his sleeve.
Why?
He wanted to feel weight in his arms so that when he gestured, it made him move in a different way. Ethan’s said he wanted to feel like an elk when he moved around as John Brown.
The Great Lord Bird is based on James McBride’s novel of the same name. Did you use that as a reference for John Brown and the other characters?
Yes. James writes amazing descriptions of people and what they’re wearing. It just exploded in my head. For example, the novel says John Brown’s boots were completely worn out to the point where his toes stuck out. So we carefully marked Ethan’s boots to make the perfect hole showing where his toe poked through. In later episodes, he’s sewn a patch where that hole used to be. A lot of the characters go through different stages, so we had different levels of aging for each costume.
“Onion,” the black boy adopted by John Brown and portrayed by Joshua Caleb Johnson, wears a dress for most of the series to disguise himself as a girl. What’s the story behind that mix-up?
When John Brown first meets him, Onion’s wearing this feed sack with a hole where the head would go and armholes. The silhouette is not unlike a dress, and that’s why John Brown thinks Joshua’s character is a girl.
(L-R): Joshua Caleb Johnson as Onion and Ethan Hawke as John Brown in THE GOOD LORD BIRD, “Mister Fred”. Photo Credit: William Gray/SHOWTIME.
Slaves wore burlap sacks as clothes?
A lot of poor people did that. There’s this whole history of feed sacks being used as clothes.
John Brown gives Onion a yellow dress and matching bonnet.
That’s a prairie dress made of rough, lightweight cotton. The silhouette and cut of the neck are very typical of the time. I imagined that John Brown’s late daughter was bigger than Henry/Onion/Josh so I looked at old photos of myself dressing up as a little girl to see “How does the dress hang off of someone who’s playing dress-up?” Onion calls the dress “this flea-bitten thing” because he’s repulsed by it.
(L-R): Joshua Caleb Johnson as Onion and Ethan Hawke as John Brown in THE GOOD LORD BIRD. Photo Credit: Kevin Lynch/SHOWTIME.
Onion’s a fictional creation but Good Lord Bird includes real-life historical figures like the great Black abolitionist Frederick Douglass, played by Daveed Diggs of Hamilton fame. He makes quite an entrance, in top hat and frock coat. What inspired that look?
Frederick Douglas was one of the most photographed public figures of his time. There’s a book that describes many of these photos and where they were taken, so I extracted elements of his costume from these old photographs and then pumped it up a little bit.
Daveed Diggs as Frederick Douglass in THE GOOD LORD BIRD, “Mister Fred”. Photo Credit: William Gray/SHOWTIME.
What are the key pieces of Frederick Douglass’s outfit?
Well, Daveed’s got a lot of hair, so we put him in this very nice top hat. He wears a frock coat and matching pants, made by Jennifer Love Costumes in New York. We made probably eight vests for Daveed, which were fun to design because Frederick Douglass was well to do and could afford lovely brocades and silks. He was a pretty snappy dresser.
Daveed Diggs as Frederick Douglass in THE GOOD LORD BIRD, “Mister Fred”. Photo Credit: William Gray/SHOWTIME.
Given that 19th-century photographs were black and white, how did you devise the color palettes for your characters’ wardrobes?
With Frederick Douglas, I felt it should be jewel tones because he’s a jewel. We put Daveed in a lot of purple, emerald green, and burgundy.
In contrast to Frederick Douglas, the Underground Railroad activist Harriet Tubman (Zainab Jah) wears plain, oatmeal-colored clothes.
James McBride’s novel describes her very precisely as being someone who dressed simply, so I took my cues from that.
Hats playing a starring role in this show. Virtually every man wears a hat, each one different from the next. How did you approach the question of headgear?
I’m so glad you appreciate that because I love hats. I have a dear friend Ignatius Creegan, of Ignatius Hats, and we’ve collaborated on all my period pieces. We had fittings with each actor and spent a lot of time sussing out practical things like sun protection and wind protection. He then makes each hat specific to the person, tailoring it with the nuances of a crease or the roll of a brim. You have to be very diligent about making sure that the hat comes into the world that the actor is creating for his character. I love that part of costume design.
(L-R): Ellar Coltrane as Salmon Brown, Beau Knapp as Owen Brown, Duke Davis Roberts as Fred Brown and Ethan Hawke as John Brown in THE GOOD LORD BIRD, “Meet the Lord”. Photo Credit: William Gray/SHOWTIME.
Wyatt Russell’s General J.E.B. Stuart literally has a feather in his hat when he shows up on horseback to challenge John Brown. Did military officers actually wear feathered caps?
James’ book noted that Onion was very impressed with Jeb Stuart’s big feather, so we made it even bigger than it would normally be on a hat like that, which is called a Hardy Hat. It’s very hard to make one that doesn’t look like a pilgrim hat or something you could buy at a Civil War store. Ignatius and I worked hard with Wyatt to make it look like this was really his hat.
Wyatt Russell as Jeb Stuart in THE GOOD LORD BIRD, “Mister Fred”. Photo Credit: William Gray/SHOWTIME.
For all its zany humor, Good Lord Bird tackles the profoundly serious issue of racism that continues to haunt this country 161 years after the Harper’s Ferry debacle. How do you see this story connecting with the Black Lives Matter movement?
We’re still struggling with [racism]. It’s absolutely necessary to do everything possible to get it done this time. What is it that John Brown says in the show? “I am on the side of justice and you are on the side of chains.” He was out to start a revolution. He got this band of people to follow him. It didn’t work out the way he wanted it to but crazily enough, it almost worked. And certainly, John Brown put the spotlight on the horrible crime of slavery.
Featured image: Ethan Hawke as John Brown in THE GOOD LORD BIRD. Photo Credit: Kevin Lynch/SHOWTIME.
This is the kind of surprise we needed today. HBO Max has revealed the trailer for The Witches, directed and co-written by Robert Zemeckis, adapted from Roald Dahl’s iconic story. The Witches was originally scheduled for a theatrical release, but, you know, 2020. So instead, it’ll be hitting HBO Max on October 22. This trailer is our first good glimpse at it, and hoo boy is this cast great. The story is set in 1960s Alabama and follows a young boy (Jahzir Bruno) and his grandmother (Octavia Spencer) as they come upon a coven of witches while on vacation. This essentially turns into a battle—grandma and grandson vs. the witches—as the witches have a diabolical plan to turn all children into mice.
The Witches was adapted once before, by director Nicholas Roeg, in 1990. Zemeckis, however, is taking his adaptation and aiming it squarely at families, with a much lighter, brighter tone. The director knows his way around material that’s fun for the whole family—Back to the Future and Who Framed Roger Rabbit are both classics, and both his.
The talented involved is also no joke. The script comes from Zemeckis, Kenya Barris (black-ish), and Guillermo del Toro, with Alfonso Cuaron (Roma) on board as a producer. Joining Spencer and Burno in the cast are Anne Hathaway, Stanley Tucci, Kristin Chenoweth, and Chris Rock. There’s a lot to like here, friends!
The Witches trailer is below for your viewing pleasure.
Here’s the synopsis from HBO Max:
Reimagining Dahl’s beloved story for a modern audience, Robert Zemeckis’s visually innovative film tells the darkly humorous and heartwarming tale of a young orphaned boy who, in late 1967, goes to live with his loving Grandma in the rural Alabama town of Demopolis. As the boy and his grandmother encounter some deceptively glamorous but thoroughly diabolical witches, she wisely whisks our young hero away to an opulent seaside resort. Regrettably, they arrive at precisely the same time that the world’s Grand High Witch has gathered her fellow cronies from around the globe—undercover—to carry out her nefarious plans.
The film stars Oscar winners Anne Hathaway (“Les Misérable,” “Ocean’s 8”) and Octavia Spencer (“The Help,” “The Shape of Water”), Oscar nominee Stanley Tucci (“The Hunger Games” films, “The Lovely Bones”), with Kristin Chenoweth (TV’s “Glee” and “BoJack Horseman”) and award-winning comedy legend Chris Rock. Newcomer Jahzir Kadeem Bruno (TV’s “Atlanta”) also stars, alongside Codie-Lei Eastick (“Holmes & Watson”).
Featured image: Anne Hathaway. Photograph by HBO Max
It’s that time again, folks—we’ve got another Film School Friday event for you today, and it’s a really, really good one. Today’s event features a conversation with documentarian Sonia Lowman about her new documentary Black Boys, which came out on Peacock on August 16. Lowman and her Black Boys producer Jon-Thomas Royston will be in conversation with former Executive Director of My Brother’s KeeperConan Harris and the Motion Picture Association’s Vice President of External and Multicultural Affairs John Gibson. The event will kick off with an introduction from MPA Chairman and CEO Charles Rivkin.
The timely Black Boys aims to reveal the full spectrum of humanity for Black boys and men in America, weaving their stories through an intergenerational conversation at the intersection of education, sports, and criminal justice. It’s an intimate, dynamic portrait of Black boys and men, and one that is not only timely but necessary. This conversation promises to be insightful and illuminating—join us!
Here are the details you need to know:
Date/Time: Friday, October 2, at 4:00 p.m. ET (1:00 p.m. PT).
Join us at FilmSchoolFriday.com for the conversation.
Take part in the conversation: #FilmSchoolFriday | @MotionPictures on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram
To watch Black Boys, you can stream it for free via Peacock here.
Here’s the full synopsis for Black Boys:
Marking 400 years since enslaved Africans arrived in Jamestown, “Black Boys” illuminates the full spectrum of Black male humanity in America through an intimate, intergenerational conversation at the intersection of sports, education, and criminal justice. The film elevates an urgent and timely reckoning on identity, opportunity, and equity to reimagine success for Black males in America while also touching on their vulnerability and resilience in the face of dehumanization.
These are likely the most bittersweet images you’ll see today. Or this week. Netflix has revealed the first look at Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, which features Chadwick Boseman in his final role. Boseman stars alongside Viola Davis in director George C. Wolfe’s adaptation of August Wilson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 1982 play. The film focuses on racial tension in Chicago in 1927 and follows a single, volatile afternoon recording session with the trailblazing performer Ma Rainey (Viola Davis), her ambitious trumpeter Levee (Boseman), and her white management team.
As we all know, Boseman died of colon cancer on August 23, at 43. We’re still reeling from his death, although the tributes and love that have poured in since the day he passed have made clear what kind of man he was and what kind of life he led. (Recently, the news broke that Boseman gave up a portion of his salary on 21 Bridges to his co-star Sienna Miller). Seeing these images from Netflix reminds us what a stellar performer he was, too.
“Working with Chadwick on Ma Rainey was a glorious experience,” said Wolfe in a statement at the time. “Every day we all got to witness the ferocity of his talent and the gentleness of his heart. A truly blessed, loving, gifted, and giving human being.”
Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom also stars Colman Domingo, Glynn Turman, and Taylor Paige. The film is set to premiere on Netflix on December 18.
Here’s that tweet from Netflix:
Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman star in Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, a new film based on August Wilson’s award-winning play from director George C. Wolfe and producer Denzel Washington. @MaRaineyFilm premieres December 18. pic.twitter.com/ErhrQAW4nU
Tensions and temperatures rise over the course of an afternoon recording session in 1920s Chicago as a band of musicians await trailblazing performer, the legendary “Mother of the Blues,” Ma Rainey (Academy Award® winner Viola Davis). Late to the session, the fearless, fiery Ma engages in a battle of wills with her white manager and producer over control of her music. As the band waits in the studio’s claustrophobic rehearsal room, ambitious trumpeter Levee (Chadwick Boseman) — who has an eye for Ma’s girlfriend and is determined to stake his own claim on the music industry — spurs his fellow musicians into an eruption of stories revealing truths that will forever change the course of their lives.
Adapted from two-time Pulitzer Prize winner August Wilson’s play, MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM celebrates the transformative power of the blues and the artists who refuse to let society’s prejudices dictate their worth. Directed by George C. Wolfe and adapted for the screen by Ruben Santiago-Hudson, the film is produced by Fences Oscar® nominees Denzel Washington and Todd Black. Colman Domingo, Glynn Turman, Michael Potts, Taylour Paige and Dusan Brown co-star alongside Grammy® winner Branford Marsalis’ score.
Featured image: L-r: Michael Potts, Chadwick Boseman, and Colman Domingo. Courtesy Netflix.
When we first learned that Barry Jenkins would be adapting Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel “The Underground Railroad” back in 2017, we were enthused. The immensely gifted writer/director was coming off his groundbreaking, career-making film Moonlight, and the thought of Jenkins taking Whitehead’s gorgeous, haunting novel and adapting it into a series was thrilling. Then Jenkins went on to direct If Beale Street Could Talk, another brilliant film (adapted from another brilliant writer’s novel, in this case, James Baldwin), and talk of The Underground Railroad was quiet. Now, thanks to a tweet from Amazon Studios, we’ve got our first look at Jenkins’ upcoming series. The Underground Railroad will follow Cora (Thuso Mbedu) as she flees her enslavement in the deep south and discovers, to her amazement, a literal underground railroad that shepherds escaped slaves north to freedom.
Jenkins is once again working with his Moonlight and Beale Street collaborators, including DP James Laxton and composer Nicholas Britell. Jenkins revealed on twitter that they wrapped photography a little more than a week ago. The images are beautiful (be warned, however, that Whitehead’s book has plenty of horror, as any story about slavery must), and we’re probably as excited about this series as we are any other that is in development. How will Jenkins and his team tackle the mysterious, mystical railroad that actually transports escaped slaves? What will it be like to see Cora, her fellow runaway slave Caesar (Aaron Pierre) and the rest of the cast take on Whitehead’s potent material? Considering Jenkins so nimbly handled Baldwin’s “If Beale Street Could Talk” and delivered a stunning feature, we’re really intrigued to see what he’ll do with the larger canvass of a television series.
And ICYMI, On Monday the news broke that Jenkins would be directing a brand new The Lion King sequel. So yeah, the man’s been busy.
We’ve got TheUnderground Railroad images in full below. We’re still waiting on a release date from Amazon.
If you’ve been hankering for some more James Bond in your life (and who hasn’t?), you can now get your fix, podcast style. A new No Time To Diepodcast featuring the film’s director, stars, producers, and more is now available. No Time To Die: The Official James Bond Podcast includes stars Daniel Craig, Rami Malek, Léa Seydoux, Lashana Lynch, Jeffrey Wright, Ana de Armas, and Naomie Harris, as well as writer/director Cary Joji Fukunaga and recording artist superstar and No Time To Die theme song creator Billie Eilish.
You can listen to episode one, “Bond in Context,” here. The series is available weekly starting today, September 30, on Apple, Spotify, Acast, and all podcast providers.
Here are the pertinent details:
Hosted by film critic James King, the six-part series features interviews with Daniel Craig, Rami Malek, Léa Seydoux, Lashana Lynch, Jeffrey Wright, Naomie Harris, Ana de Armas, Rory Kinnear, Billy Magnussen, director Cary Joji Fukunaga, producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell and a host of key behind the scenes crew from casting director to special effects supervisor. Each episode focuses on a different aspect of the James Bond legacy, from music to gadgets and costumes to cars. The podcast series will also reveal how the amazing locations are chosen and spectacular stunts are created.
Listeners will also get a chance to hear the exclusive score from composer Hans Zimmer, as well as brand-new recordings from the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.
Here’s the episode guide for the remaining episodes:
Episode Two: Bond Around the World
Episode Three: A Name to Die For: Allies and Enemies of Bond
Episode Four: The Craft of Bond
Episode Five: Clothes, Tech and Cars
Episode Six: Being 007
No Time To Die: The Official James Bond Podcast is produced by Somethin’ Else in association with Metro Goldwyn Mayer Studios, Universal Pictures International, United Artists Releasing, and EON Productions.
We’re still holding out hope that No Time To Die will hit theaters this November 20 (thus far, no new changes to the release date have been announced).