“Everything Everywhere All at Once” Producer Jonathan Wang on Making an Oscar Juggernaut

It might seem as if Everything Everywhere All at Once came out of nowhere to dominate this year’s Oscar voting with 11 nominations, including Best Picture, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor, and two Best Supporting Actress nods for Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan, Stephanie Hsu, and Jamie Lee Curtis respectively. But in fact, producer Jonathan Wang has been working with writer-directors Dan Kwan and Daniel Scheinert since 2011. The trio started off making music videos and broke into features with their 2016 black comedy Swiss Army Man.

Then came Everything. Since making its debut at SXSW last March, the sci-fi action dramedy has grossed $104 million at the global box office en route to its Academy Awards triumph. By tracking the multiverse adventures of Yeoh’s downtrodden Chinese-American laundromat owner Evelyn Wang as she ricochets between alternate versions of reality, Everything Everywhere All at Once became 2022’s most spectacular indie film success story.

Wang, who splits his time between Los Angeles and New York, talks about the importance of good vibes, details the filmmakers’ takeover of an abandoned bank, and recalls how the Daniels maverick choices helped catapult a former child actor into the Academy Awards race.

L-r: Directors Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert on the set of "Everything Everywhere All At Once." Courtesy A24
L-r: Directors Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert on the set of “Everything Everywhere All At Once.” Courtesy A24

You’ve obviously forged a fruitful relationship with Dan Kwan and Daniel Scheinert. What makes your collaboration work?

I’m in a cultural meld with the Daniels. Whether it’s global warming or the attention economy, I read the same books and we speak the same language. When it’s time to make a movie like Everything, we’re in lockstep on how to make it, and we do it with kindness and love. Daniel Scheinert likes to joke that we’re summer camp counselors and I’m the vibes police, so it’s my job to make the set feel very free, playful, kind, and open.

How does that translate to practical situations?

I do whatever it takes to help them. On Everything, I’d pick up a second camera to set up a shot and rehearse it with the actors, then one of the Daniels would come over and shoot it. I’m like a third leg. I know how to separate the wheat from the chaff. The Daniels don’t need to see everything 360 if we’re going to shoot one set at a specific angle. We can put up some other set directly behind us, turn around and shoot that set two minutes later. This is how we pulled off the movie.

 

The pandemic affected virtually every movie that came out last year. How did Covid impact Everything Everywhere All at Once?

The biggest bummer is that we still haven’t had a wrap party! We had two more shoot days to go on Friday before the pandemic shut down the world. The beauty of it is that we had more time to edit the movie. [Studio] A24 kept the coffers open, and we edited for essentially a year until the movie finally sang at a fever pitch.

Everything has earned Oscar nominations for Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan, Stephanie Hsu, and Jamie Lee Curtis. How did The Daniels go about assembling this phenomenal cast?

We always wanted Michelle in the movie as Evelyn, but originally she was going to play the [supportive spouse] role that Ke played. Then they got gender-swapped and Michelle became the lead. The whole movie blossomed because Michelle’s character is loosely based on Dan Kwan’s mom, who’s very similar to Evelyn. Dan was able to write from a much deeper place of truth and unlock the mother-daughter relationship.

Michelle Yeoh is Evelyn Wang in “Everything Everywhere All At Once.” Courtesy A24.

The other person in that mother-daughter relationship, Joy, is portrayed in such a dynamic way by Stephanie Hsu. Where did you find her?

Originally Awkwafina was supposed to play the daughter. We met Stephanie on an episode of Awkwafina Is Nora From Queens that the Daniels were directing. Stephanie had a supporting part, and they fell in love with her. When Awkwafina fell out due to scheduling conflicts, Sarah Finn, our casting director, called Stephanie. She understood the movie we wanted to make, and Stephanie knew how to bring this chaotic, terrifying energy to the role. Daniel said it was like watching Jim Carrey in “The Mask.”

Stephanie Hsu is Joy Wang/Jobu Tupaki in “Everything Everywhere All At Once.”

You guys went off the beaten path to cast former child star Ke Huy Quan as Evelyn’s seemingly mild-mannered husband Waymond. How did that happen?

Ke was the most inspired bit of casting. I remember walking into Dan Kwan’s apartment. He had a photo on his screen of an adult Ke and asked me, “Do you know who this is?” Then he pulled up a photo of Data from Goonies and said that’s who this is. Then he pulled up a third video of Ke as a teenager when he couldn’t find work in the U.S. and went to Hong Kong. It shows him doing incredible martial arts, kicking, and throwing sand in the other guy’s face, and I went, “Whoa.” Because this whole time, we’d been looking for somebody who could do martial arts but wasn’t an alpha male with big muscles. We wanted someone who could be tender, a beta male. And I said, “Before we get too excited, I’m not sure if Ke’s still acting — let’s see if he has an agent.” I came to find out that only a week earlier, Ke had gotten his agent back. Had I reached out a week or two sooner, we probably would have had to look in a different direction.

Ke Huy Quan is Waymond Wang. Courtesy A24.

Jamie Lee Curtis kills it as the initially hard-nosed IRS agent Deirdre.

Jamie works off intuition and gut feelings. She makes snap decisions with such confidence. Jamie read the script, saw Michelle was attached, and just jumped in the deep end. At SXSW, with tears streaming down her face, Jamie walked up to us and said, “Now I get it.'”

Jamie Lee Curtis is Deirdre Beaubeidre. Courtesy A24.
Jamie Lee Curtis is Deirdre Beaubeidre. Courtesy A24.

The chemistry between actors translates really well on screen.

Whatever we had going with Michelle, Stephanie, Ke, and Jamie, that kindness and love were felt by the audience because it was so real on set.

Everything presents a lot of multiverse environments. Where did you film the movie?

In Simi Valley [outside of Los Angeles], we found Founders Bank, which collapsed during the 2008 financial crisis. It became a call center. Now it’s an Amazon fulfillment center. During this window of time when it was available, we turned it into our mini-studio lot. So it was five weeks in Simi Valley and one week bouncing around different locations. We did the movie star universe at the Los Angeles Theatre. We went to a hibachi restaurant to do the raccoon universe. We shot Evelyn’s coin laundry in a San Fernando mall. And then, during the peak of the pandemic, we went out to Borrego Springs and filmed the rock universe in 115-degree weather. We were a $14 million indie movie, so we had to stretch the dollar so we could get the ambition of the movie out there.

Michelle Yeoh is Evelyn Wang in “Everything Everywhere All At Once.” Courtesy A24.

On the business end of things, can you talk a bit more about making this budget work in terms of agents and studio execs?

When you talk to an agent about fees on a movie of this size where nobody’s going to get rich, it’s about explaining the vision and how important it will be for their actors to be a part of this. And with the studio, it’s about working together to solve a problem. It’s like I have a big shield on my back that encapsulates the set, and then all the agency and studio relationships hit me, but I don’t view them as being adversarial.

Everything Everywhere All at Once struck a chord within the culture. When did you first have a feeling that this movie might be something special?

I was in Romania making a film with William Dafoe when the trailer came out. I started reading the responses, and they were all positive. There was kindness on YouTube for the first time in the history of YouTube! I was like, wow, I think this is going to hit.

Why do you think Everything landed in such a big way with audiences?

If you think about the premise of the multiverse, you can use it as a foil for action and fun and absurdity, as we do, but if you also think about it as psychology, it’s almost like cognitive behavioral therapy: the structure of the movie allows people to ask themselves “What if I had a healthy relationship with my mom? What if I had a healthy relationship with my husband?” People have come up to us and said, “I’m a gay boy who wanted to come out to father. I brought my parents to this film.” People use this movie to find healing with their parents or loved ones.

Everything Everywhere All At Once is available for streaming on Hulu and elsewhere.

Featured image: Michelle Yeoh is Evelyn Wang in “Everything Everywhere All At Once.” Courtesy A24.

 

Marvel’s “Thunderbolts” Gets Boost With Addition of “The Bear” Star Ayo Edebiri

Marvel Studios just added an ace actor to their ever-expanding universe. Ayo Edebiri, who broke out with her fantastic performance in Hulu’s critically acclaimed The Bear, is now entering the Marvel Cinematic Universe in one of the biggest and most mysterious of their upcoming films.

The Hollywood Reporter confirmed that Edebiri will join Florence Pugh, Sebastian Stan, and more in Thunderbolts, which is centered on a team of antiheroes and otherwise less-than-noble Marvel characters as they’re tasked with facing down a grave threat. The cast includes Pugh as Yelena Belova, Stan as Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier, David Harbour as the Red Guardian, Wyatt Russell as the disgraced former Captain America, Hannah John-Kamen as Ghost, Old Kurylenko as Task Master, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Valentina Allegra de Fontaine. The film will be directed by Jake Schreier from a script by Black Widow and Thor: Ragnarok screenwriter Eric Pearson.

Thunderbolts could be considered a Marvel version of The Suicide Squad. In the latter, some of the most offbeat and bizarre DC antiheroes teamed up at the behest of the United States government to save the world. In Marvel’s version, as Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige joked at D23 in 2022 when the film was introduced, the team must be pretty rough around the edges when “beloved Winter Soldier is the most stable among them.” Why they’re teaming up and what they’re up against is still a state secret. Thunderbolts will be the final film in Phase 5 and is due in theaters on July 26, 2024.

Edebiri is a great addition to any cast. She was phenomenal as Sydney Adamu in The Bear, working in a surprisingly chaotic and hard-charging Chicago sandwich shop. It’s not known what role she’ll play in Thunderbolts, but we’ll let you know when we do.

For more stories on all things Marvel, check these out:

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What a Marvel: Angela Bassett Makes MCU History With “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” Oscar Nom

New “Ant-Man and The Wasp: Quantumania” Teaser Shows Scott Lang Outmatched by Kang

New “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania” Photos Reveal the MCU’s New Boss Villain & More

Featured image: LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JANUARY 13: Ayo Edebiri attends the AFI Awards Luncheon at Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills on January 13, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

“Succession” Season 4 Trailer Finds the Roy Children United Against Logan

Oh, the Roy family. You have to wonder what they’d do if they all got everything they wanted. Then again, there is no conceivable outcome in which every member of the Roy family is satisfied; their very natures preclude them from contentment, a statement you could probably make about most people, but in their case, seems like a genuinely pathological affliction. The first teaser for Succession season four finds the Roy kids ready and willing to go to war with their father, which, well, is not a new stance, but now it seems they’re finally united against them. Can they take down the old man at last?

Logan (Brian Cox) is once again a man on an island, only in this case, he owns the island and has a huge staff and a legion of lawyers and fixers and, hilariously, Tom (Matthew Macfayden), who turned on his own wife Shiv (Sarah Snook) at the end of season three to sidle up to the man he believes can’t lose.

Season three found Logan’s company, Waystay Royco, inching ever close to a sale to Lukas Matsson (Alexander Skarsgård) and his tech company GoJo. Logan had outmaneuvered the children and their attempted coup at the end of season three. Now, Kendall (Jeremy Strong), Shiv, and Roman (Kieran Culkin) are a united front as they try to stop the sale to GoJo. They’re going to need to figure out a way to get one step ahead of Logan, a challenge they’ve not yet successfully met.

Also, in the teaser, we learn that Connor (Alan Ruck) finally ties the knot with Willa (Justine Lupe). Good for them!

Caught up in all of this are old friends like Gerri (J. Smith Cameron ), Greg (Nicholas Braun),  Stewy (Arian Moayed), Lady Caroline Collingwood (Harriet Walter ), Ewan Roy (James Cromwell), Rava Roy (Natalie Gold) and more.

Season four will welcome new cast members, including Eili Harboe, Annabeth Gish, Adam Godley, and Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson.

The teaser also revealed that Succession returns on March 26.

Check out the first look at Succession season 4 below.

For more on Succession, check out these stories:

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Featured image: Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook, Kieran Culkin. Photograph by Claudette Barius/HBO

“Shazam! Fury of the Gods” Second Trailer Reveals Greek Goddesses Gone Berserk

The second trailer for Shazam! Fury of the Gods is steeped in Greek mythology and the potency of some seriously charismatic new foes. Within the first few seconds, we’re introduced to Lucy Lui’s Kalypso and Helen Mirren’s Hespera, two heavyweight goddesses from the Greek pantheon who have arrived to hunt down Billy Batson (Asher Angel) and his superhero alter ego Shazam (Zachary Levi) and their super-powered friends.

“Children stole the power of the gods,” Hespera seethes, as she and Kalypso aim to retrieve those powers from Billy and his gang at all costs. The trailer has a slew of Greek mythology Easter Eggs. It opens with a shot of what appears to be a very dark version of Mount Olympus, and includes Kalypso plunging a Golden Apple into a baseball field. In case you’ve forgotten your Greek Myth 101, there are several Golden Apples seeded throughout various myths, including one that helped start the Trojan War. This Golden Apple, we’re guessing, is connected to a myth having to do with Hesperides (another name for Helen Mirren’s Hespera), who guarded a golden apple tree, with help from the dragon Ladon, that was a wedding gift for the goddess Hera. One of Hercules’ twelve labors was to steal an apple from that very tree.

Granted, Shazam! Fury of the Gods won’t be taking us back to our mythology classes, but, the presence of Hespera and Kalypso and the horrors they can conjure definitely ratchet up the mayhem from the original Shazam! The second trailer is more somber in tone than previous peeks at Shazam! Fury of the Gods or the previous film, with Shazam offering to give up his powers at one point to save the world.

Yet what made David F. Sandberg’s original film so buoyant, and what will no doubt be lost here, is the sense of fun, even goofiness, that Zachary Levi brings to the title role. Shazam! Fury of the Gods will be bigger and meaner than the original, but it’s still a story about a teenage foster kid and his friends who were granted superpowers and find themselves suddenly tasked with saving the world. Teens are gonna teen, even in such a dire situation.

Check out the new trailer below. Shazam! Fury of the Gods hits theaters on March 17.

Here’s the official synopsis for Shazam! Fury of the Gods:

“Shazam! Fury of the Gods,” which continues the story of teenage Billy Batson who, upon reciting the magic word “SHAZAM!,” is transformed into his adult Super Hero alter ego, Shazam.

Bestowed with the powers of the gods, Billy Batson and his fellow foster kids are still learning how to juggle teenage life with having adult Super Hero alter-egos. But when the Daughters of Atlas, a vengeful trio of ancient gods, arrive on Earth in search of the magic stolen from them long ago, Billy—aka Shazam—and his family are thrust into a battle for their superpowers, their lives, and the fate of their world.

“Shazam! Fury of the Gods” stars returning cast members Zachary Levi (“Thor: Ragnarok”) as Shazam; Asher Angel (“Andi Mack”) as Billy Batson; Jack Dylan Grazer (“It Chapter Two”) as Freddy Freeman; Adam Brody (“Promising Young Woman”) as Super Hero Freddy; Ross Butler (“Raya and the Last Dragon”) as Super Hero Eugene; Meagan Good (“Day Shift”) as Super Hero Darla; D.J. Cotrona (“G.I. Joe: Retaliation”) as Super Hero Pedro; Grace Caroline Currey (“Annabelle: Creation”) as Mary Bromfield / Super Hero Mary; Faithe Herman (“This Is Us”) as Darla Dudley; Ian Chen (“A Dog’s Journey”) as Eugene Choi; Jovan Armand (“Second Chances”) as Pedro Pena; Marta Milans (“White Lines”) as Rosa Vasquez; Cooper Andrews (“The Walking Dead”) as Victor Vasquez; with Djimon Hounsou (“A Quiet Place Part II”) as Wizard.

Joining the cast are Rachel Zegler (“West Side Story”), with Lucy Liu (“Kung Fu Panda” franchise) and Helen Mirren (“F9: The Fast Saga”).

For more on Warner Bros., HBO, and HBO Max, check out these stories:

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Featured image: Caption: LUCY LIU as Kalypso in New Line Cinema’s action adventure “SHAZAM! FURY OF THE GODS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

“Alice, Darling” Director Mary Nighy on Her Chilling, Emotionally Resonant Feature Debut

Alice, Darling, Mary Nighy’s feature film directorial debut explores an insidious form of emotional and psychological abuse: coercive control. In its stirring portrait of Alice, a young woman in denial about her partner’s manipulative and oppressive behavior — played with dazzling depth by Anna Kendrick — the film takes an honest look at the unsettling impact of such abuse. When Alice spends a few days away with her two best friends, she is forced to face her reality and make a life-altering choice.

Nighy, who has directed British television shows including Traces and Industry Season 1, shot the film in just three weeks during the pandemic, primarily at a lakeside cabin in Canada. In addition to Kendrick, her cast includes Charlie Carrick, Wunmi Mosaku, and Kaniehtiio Horn. Alice, Darling premiered at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival and is a Lionsgate release. 

The Credits spoke with Nighy about tackling a subject not often dramatized, getting Kendrick on board, and keeping the focus on Alice’s experience rather than her tormentor. The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.

 

How did this project come to you? Had you been considering directing a feature for a while, and if so, why was this the one?

When I made the film, I’d already been directing TV shows in the U.K., and I was looking for a feature project. I met producer Christina Piovesan in Canada through another project that I was developing, and she said, I really think you should meet Katie Bird Nolan and Lindsay Tapscott, who are young producers in Toronto who have a production company. We looked for a long time for the right project to work on together. They produced [screenwriter] Alanna Francis’s first feature with another director, and that did well, so they then came to me with Alanna’s second feature, Alice, Darling. When I read it, I felt immediately that this was a story that I could really do something with, and above all, what really spoke to me was how internal the world of Alice is and how difficult that is to dramatize and how that would really be an exciting challenge.   

Anna Kendrick in "Alice, Darling." Courtesy Lionsgate
Anna Kendrick in “Alice, Darling.” Courtesy Lionsgate

Was there an inspiration for Alanna to write this story?

Yes, she had been thinking a lot about the subject and had become very interested in coercive control. Before I spoke to her, I spent a long time just talking to the producers and reading the script, and I did my own research on coercive control. It actually became a crime in the U.K. fairly recently after some very high-profile cases of women, who’d been married for many years killing their husbands, and it emerged in the course of their court cases that they had been completely controlled for the whole of their marriages, and sometimes even their adult children were not aware of how bad it had been for them.

You don’t really meet Alice’s boyfriend, Simon, until well into the film, nor do you really see the abuse outright. The nuances in her behavior throughout the story are a very interesting way to depict this type of abuse.

I’m glad you found that. Yes, we definitely wanted to talk about a kind of abuse that, as you say, isn’t very often dramatized and to try to do it in a way that really focused on Alice. Because I think sometimes the difficulty with filming something, whether that’s something that’s controversial or difficult, like abuse or rape or even at the more titillating end of the spectrum, filming drug use, strip shows, anything you’re trying to shine a light on and in some ways critique, I think sometimes you enter territory where you can end up glamorizing or perpetuating the subject matter that you’re trying to critique. And so one way that we tried to handle that with Alice, Darling is to really focus on the experience of it for the person who is being controlled and being manipulated rather than focusing on how it’s done, to try to show the feeling of it.

L-r: Mary Nighy, Wunmi Mosaku, Kaniehtiio Horn, and Anna Kendrick. Courtesy Lionsgate.
L-r: Mary Nighy, Wunmi Mosaku, Kaniehtiio Horn, and Anna Kendrick. Courtesy Lionsgate.

What’s also interesting is the film’s other theme: female friendship and how important it is for women going through this ordeal.

I think that’s right. All of the people involved in making the film had strong friendships, and a lot of the people making the film were women, and we all felt that sometimes when you see female friendship portrayed, whether in film or TV, it can be quite a reductive picture, where the women are always giggling or, I don’t know, shopping or getting drunk or talking about boys. Some female friendship is actually dealing with the confrontation or the jealousy and the passion that can exist within it. It’s not a completely rosy picture, and it’s not completely a rivalrous picture, either. It’s complex, and I think Alice finds in the end that she’s reminded of who she is by those friendships, which pre-exist her relationship with Simon. So they also, in some ways, allow her to retrieve her identity.

 

How did Anna Kendrick come to be cast?

Anna Kendrick was somebody that I’ve always admired. I loved her work across the board really, but I was always really struck by Up in the Air and A Simple Favor as well. I brought on a casting director who I think is hugely talented named Alice Searby, and we both spoke about Anna Kendrick as an extremely clever actress. And so we felt very excited about her doing it. I sent her a letter, and we sent her the script and the imagery and how we wanted to shoot it. And then, once her agents received the script, they very quickly said we’d love to send this to Anna, and she very quickly responded and got on a Zoom with me. We spoke for two hours, and it became very clear that this was subject matter that had a very special connection for her, which we didn’t know when we approached her. She wanted to be very sure that we were going to handle the material with delicacy and the idea of Simon more as an absence than a presence. I think that reassured Anna that we shared a vision for the film, and so she came aboard and I was blown away on set by the subtlety and the nuance of what she did. It was also really exciting to see the chemistry with Wunmi Mosaku and Kaniehtiio Horn and to see it with Charlie as well and how much how they trusted each other.

Featured image: Anna Kendrick in “Alice, Darling.” Courtesy Lionsgate

Rian Johnson’s New Mystery Series “Poker Face” With Natasha Lyonne is a Royal Flush With Critics

Who better to revive the mystery-of-the-week concept than Mr. Knives Out himself, Rian Johnson, and Ms. Russian Doll herself, Natasha Lyonne? The pairing is too perfect, and the conceit of their new mystery series is too delicious, so you’d be forgiven for assuming that Poker Face (Peacock) would merely deliver a pleasing new diversion, a pair of Jacks if you will. Instead, critics are calling Poker Face a royal flush.

Here’s the conceit; Lyonne plays Charlie Cale, a woman with the incredible ability to determine whether someone is lying. Right there, imagining a performer with Lyonne’s truly singular gifts playing a human lie detector test is comedic gold, yet Johnson puts her on the road in her Plymouth Barracuda and sends her on a series of mysteries, plunging her into new scenes with new characters committing fresh crimes. Due to her incredible ability, Charlie can’t help but solve the crimes as she merrily rolls along.

Lyonne’s charisma is enough to carry any series, but like her own series, Russian Doll, Poker Face surrounds her with great actors working with richly conceived material. Here, Lyonne becomes a modern-day Columbo, an ace sleuth carrying the burden of living in a world of lies and deceit she can see from a mile away. Yet her Charlie isn’t some hard-charging wannabe detective; she’s a self-described “dumbass” (as she calls herself in the first episode), and it’s only because she has no other choice that Charlie hits the road and starts solving crimes.

Lyonne is joined by a starry cast including Adrien Brody, Benjamin Bratt, Judith Light, Hong Chau, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Chloë Sevigny, Ron Perlman, Ellen Barkin, Nick Nolte, Lil Rey Howery, Tim Blake Nelson, and more.

So now that you’ve gotten this barebones sketch of what Johnson and Lyonne are up to, let’s take a quick stroll through some of what the critics are saying. Poker Face is now streaming on Peacock (four episodes worth!), with new episodes appearing on Thursdays.

Featured image:

New “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania” Video is a Trip to The Quantum Realm

We’re now just a few weeks away from the official start of Marvel Studio’s Phase 5 with the premiere of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantamnia. To that end, Marvel has released this behind-the-scenes look at director Peyton Reed’s upcoming film, which finds Scott Land (Paul Rudd), his daughter Cassie (Kathryn Newton), Hope Van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly), Janet Van Dyne (Michelle Pfeiffer), and Hank Pym (Michael Douglas) venturing into the Quantum Realm. It’s there they’ll find an Avengers-level threat in Kang the Conqueror (Jonathan Majors), the MCU’s newest supervillain.

The new video clues us into how Marvel approached Quantumania and this larger-than-usual challenge Ant-Man and his friends will be facing. It’s not as if Scott hasn’t faced great odds before; it’s just that the stand-alone Ant-Man films have usually been less “the world will end if we don’t defeat this person” and more geared towards more scaled-down fights with villains who are certainly dangerous but rarely an Avengers-level threat. Until now.

“We always love doing the unexpected with Scott Lang,” says Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige in the video. “Ant-Man is arguably the character that is the most underestimated.” Yet as Feige points out, Ant-Man was the key to saving the universe in Avengers: Endgame. “So carrying that tradition, we thought, let’s use this film to kick off Phase 5.”

Paul Rudd discusses how he’s now been playing Scott Land for almost a decade and how even after all this time, he’s still not used to working with legends like Michelle Pfeiffer and Michael Douglas. The video pinpoints the moment the troubles begin for Scott and his family when Janet Van Dyne realizes they’ve been sending a signal down to the Quantum Realm. Janet, more so than any other character, knows the dangers that lurk there.

“Janet has been very quiet about her time in the Quantum Realm,” Michelle Pfeiffer explains. And one of the scariest things down there is Kang the Conqueror.

“Kang the Conqueror is terrifying,” Evangeline Lilly says. “And if there ever was a maniac loose in the Quantum Realm, it’s him.”

“Playing Kang the Conqueror is such a gift,” Majors says. “This is the beginning. And he cannot be contained.”

Majors tells no lies about just how uncontainable Kang is. After Ant-Man, the Wasp, and their friends fight him in Quantumania, a rematch has already been scheduled. The fourth Avengers film? Yeah, it’s titled Avengers: The Kang Dynasty. 

Check out the new behind-the-scenes video below. Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantuamnia hits theaters on February 17.

For more on Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantamania, check out these stories:

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Featured image: (L-R): Paul Rudd as Scott Lang/Ant-Man and Kathryn Newton as Cassandra “Cassie” Lang in Marvel Studios’ ANT-MAN AND THE WASP: QUANTUMANIA. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. © 2022 MARVEL.

Trailer for Netflix’s “Bill Russell: Legend” Reveals First Look at the Icon’s Life & Legacy

Netflix has revealed the first trailer for Bill Russell: Legend, filmmaker Sam Pollard‘s doc about the life and legacy of the most dominant NBA player of all time, and, a major force for good off the court. Pollard is the perfect person to lead this effort (past films include Black Art: In the Absence of Light, MLK/FBIAtlanta Missing and Murdered: The Lost Children), turning his keen eye on Russell’s life, with access to Russell’s archives, the last interview the icon ever granted, and covers not only his unprecedented career — back-to-back NCAA titles, a gold medal at the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games, and an astonishing 11 championship titles in his thirteen-year career as a Boston Celtic, the last two of which as the first Black head coach in NBA history — but also his work on behalf of the Civil Rights movement.

“Unapologetically himself.” “A stand-up man.” “The smartest player that ever played the game.” “The Big Bang,” “We’re never going to see a winner like that again.” These are some of the thoughts of legends like Chris Paul, Larry Bird, and Isaiah Thomas as the trailer begins, and the big names just keep piling up from there. Steph Curry, Julius Irving, and current Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum are all on hand to talk about a man they admired in full, a brilliant athlete and passionate defender of human rights. Russell was also a mentor to younger players coming up in the league, a role he seemed to relish. Then there was that laugh, infectious and open, coming from someone who loved life as much as he defended it.

“More than any other athlete of his era, Bill Russell came to define the word ‘winner,'” President Barack Obama said when bestowing the Presidential Medal of Freedom on Russell in 2011. “Bill Russell the man is someone who stood up for the rights and dignity of all men.”

Bill Russell: Legend will offer fans of Russell and the NBA a chance to find out how the most effective, most successful NBA player ever honed his game. For documentary fans, and those interested in how Russell fought for human rights and fought against the NBA itself over racist policies, you couldn’t have a better guide than director Sam Pollard.

Check out the trailer below. Bill Russell: Legend arrives on Netflix on February 8.

Here’s the official synopsis for Bill Russell: Legend:

The remarkable life and legacy of an NBA superstar and civil rights icon is captured in the documentary Bill Russell: Legend. This two-part film from award-winning director Sam Pollard (MLK/FBI, Lowndes County and the Road to Black Power) features the last interview with Bill prior to his passing in 2022, as well as access to his sprawling personal archives. On the court, Russell went on to lead each and every one of his basketball teams to championships — two back-to-back NCAA titles, a gold medal at the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games, and 11 championship titles in his thirteen-year career as a Boston Celtic (his last two as the first Black head coach in NBA history). Off the court Russell was a force in the fight for human rights — marching with Martin Luther King Jr., leading boycotts in the NBA over racist practices and speaking out against segregation — efforts which earned him the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Narrated by actors Jeffrey Wright and Corey Stoll and featuring exclusive interviews with the icon’s family and friends as well as Steph Curry, Chris Paul, “Magic” Johnson, Larry Bird, Jim Brown and more, Bill Russell: Legend illuminates the ways in which Russell stood tall in every sense of the word.

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Featured image: Bill Russell: Legend. (L) Bill Russell in Bill Russell: Legend. Cr. Library of Congress/Courtesy of Netflix

Sundance 2023: Netflix Nabs Buzzy Psychological Thriller “Fair Play”

Netflix has made its play.

The streamer has bought one of the buzziest films at this year’s Sundance, writer/director Chloe Domont’s psychological thriller Fair Play, for $20 million, Deadline reports. The film is already getting great reviews after its Sundance premiere, with Dumont’s debut film depicting the brutally cutthroat world of a New York investment firm. Netflix ultimately won the film’s rights after a bidding war with a few other competitors.

The film stars Bridgerton breakout star Phoebe Dynevor as Emily and Solo star Alden Ehrenreich as Luke, a newly engaged couple who have to keep their relationship a secret from their employer, the hedge fund Crest Capital, where they are both in entry-level positions. Things begin to go pear-shaped when Emily gets promoted over Luke, and the power dynamic between them is irrevocably altered.

“I thought [finance] was a great backdrop because the high stakes are ripe for drama,” Domont told Variety after Fair Play‘s Sundance premiere. “It feeds into the toxicity of the relationship, and vice-versa.”

It’s an auspicious feature debut for Domont, who has directed television episodes of Ballers, Suits, and Billions. Fair Play had some big named executive producers, including Rian Johnson and Ram Bergman.

Here’s the official synopsis for Fair Play:

Hot off the heels of their new engagement, thriving New York couple Emily (Phoebe Dynevor) and Luke (Alden Ehrenreich) can’t get enough of each other. When a coveted promotion at a cutthroat financial firm arises, supportive exchanges between the lovers begin to sour into something more sinister. As the power dynamics irrevocably shift in their relationship, Luke and Emily must face the true price of success and the unnerving limits of ambition.

For more from Sundance, check out these stories:

Sundance 2023: Jonathan Majors Astonishing Transformation for “Magazine Dreams”

Sundance 2023: Filmmaker Razelle Benally on Her Showtime Doc Series “Murder in Big Horn”

Sundance 2023: A24 Grabs Australian Horror Film “Talk to Me”

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First Teaser for Zack Snyder’s “Rebel Moon” Gives a Glimpse of his Sci-Fi Epic

Netflix Reveals Full Slate of 2023 Films

Featured image: Phoebe Dynevor and Alden Ehrenreich appear in Fair Play by Chloe Domont, an official selection of the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute

Sundance 2023: A24 Grabs Australian Horror Film “Talk to Me”

A24 has nabbed the buzzy Australian horror film Talk to Me after the film’s debut at the Sundance Film Festival. Variety had the scoop and The Hollywood Reporter confirmed that the studio, always so deft at delivering chilling, interesting horror films, bought the film after its screening in the Midnight Selections lineup in a deal reported to be in the high seven figures.

Talk to Me stars Sophia Wilde as a grieving teenager named Mia, who gathers her friends for a seance on the eve of her mother’s death. You can imagine how well things go from there. The seance ends up opening up the portals between worlds, and Mia finds herself subject to supernatural visions. Joining Wilde in the cast are Alexandra Jensen, Joe Bird, Miranda Otto, Otis Dhanji, and Zoe Terakes.

The film comes from twin brothers Michael and Danny Philippou, with a script from Danny and Bill Hinzman. Talk to Me falls in the same horror category as films like Paranormal Activity, Saw, and Insidious.

A24 has made itself a top-tier studio, and its commitment to compelling horror has been a major reason why. Some of the horror films A24 has released have become modern classics, including Hereditary, The Witch, Under the Skin (also a sci-fi film), The Lighthouse, Midsommar, and last year’s and Pearl, which A24 released last year and which both starred Mia Goth.

A24 isn’t only a horror studio, of course—the studio garnered 18 Oscar nominations this year, with Everything Everywhere All at Once scooping up 11 of them.

Here’s the official synopsis for Talk to Me:

Conjuring spirits has become the latest local party craze, and looking for a distraction on the anniversary of her mother’s death, teenage Mia (Sophie Wilde) is determined to get a piece of the otherworldly action. When her group of friends gathers for another unruly séance with the mysterious embalmed hand that promises a direct line to the spirits, they’re unprepared for the consequences of bending the rules through prolonged contact. As the boundary between worlds collapses and disturbing supernatural visions increasingly haunt Mia, she rushes to undo the horrific damage before it’s irreversible.

For more from Sundance 2023, check out these stories:

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Sundance 2023: Filmmaker Razelle Benally on Her Showtime Doc Series “Murder in Big Horn”

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Featured image: A still from Talk to Me by Danny Philippou and Michael Philippou, an official selection of the Midnight section at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute. 

What a Marvel: Angela Bassett Makes MCU History With “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” Oscar Nom

All hail the Queen.

Angela Bassett has made history as the first actor to nab an Oscar nomination for their performance in a Marvel film. Bassett is nominated for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for her moving work as Queen Ramonda in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. 

This is Bassett’s second Oscar nomination, which makes her only the fourth Black Woman in history to earn multiple Oscar nominations (her first nomination, for Best Actress in a Leading Role, came in 1993 for her sensational performance in What’s Love Got To Do With It.) Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter this morning, Bassett said she wasn’t thinking about making Marvel history heading into filming the emotional Black Panther sequel, which required all involved to channel their grief over the passing of Black Panther star Chadwick Boseman into their work.

“I certainly didn’t think about that going into the first day of filming — I began to hear about that a couple of weeks ago,” says Bassett told THR about breaking new territory for Marvel performers. “Others have pondered that reality, but it certainly wasn’t me. I’m grateful for the role and the opportunity to work with the incredible artists, the amazing crew and artisans behind the scenes.”

Bassett told THR that everyone on the Wakanda Forever team went through an emotional journey coming together in the wake of the tragic loss of Boseman.

“We’ve been through so much — as much as you can go through in life together, with the passing of our king. That really served to bring us together all the more.”

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever nabbed five Oscar nominations in total, including costume design, visual effects, best song, and makeup and hairstyling. The film managed the seemingly impossible feat of being both a proper comic book movie with all the thrills and colossal action set pieces you’d expect, as well as a moving, at times heartbreaking meditation on grief and loss. While the film’s focus was centered most closely on Letitia Wright’s Shuri (who was excellent, too), Bassett’s performance was the film’s beating heart. Making Marvel history seems fitting for a performer of her ability.

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Featured image: Angela Bassett as Ramonda in Marvel Studios’ BLACK PANTHER: WAKANDA FOREVER. Photo by Annette Brown. © 2022 MARVEL.

Your 2023 Oscars Nominations Are Here

Your 2023 Oscar nominations are in.

The Best Picture category includes war epics historical (All Quiet on the Western Front), imagined (Top Gun: Maverick), alien (Avatar: The Way of Water), and one between friends (The Banshees of Inisherin). The category also includes one Spielberg (The Fablemans), a couple of directing Daniels (Everything Everywhere All At Once), two incredible female-focused films (Tár and Women Talking), a fantastic satire (Triangle of Sadness), and a bio-pic that’ll make you shake your hips (Elvis).

For Best Actress in a Leading Role, you have some repeat customers like Cate Blanchett (for Tár) and Michelle Williams (The Fablemans), newcomers like Ana de Armas (Blonde) and Andrea Riseborough (To Leslie), and long-deserving legends like Michelle Yeoh (Everything Everywhere All At Once). The Best Actor category includes Brendan Fraser (The Whale), Paul Mescal (Aftersun), Bill Nighy (Living), Colin Farrell (The Banshees of Inisherin), and Austin Butler (Elvis).

Everything Everywhere All At Once ultimately leads the pack with 11 total nominations, while All Quiet on the Western Front and The Banshees of Inisherin are close behind with 9 nominations each.

But let’s get to the list, shall well? Below you’ll find the nominees in 13 of the 24 categories, with the full list available here.

Best Picture

All Quiet on the Western Front (Netflix)

Avatar: The Way of Water (Walt Disney)

The Banshees of Inisherin (Searchlight)

Elvis (Warner Bros.)

Everything Everywhere All at Once (A24)

The Fabelmans (Universal/Amblin Partners)

Tár (Focus Features)

Top Gun: Maverick (Paramount)

Triangle of Sadness (Neon)

Women Talking (Orion Pictures/United Artists Releasing)

Directing

Martin McDonagh, The Banshees of Inisherin

Daniel Kwan & Daniel Scheinert, Everything Everywhere All At Once

Steven Spielberg, The Fablemans

Todd Field, Tár

Ruben Östlund, Triangle of Sadness

Actress in a Leading Role

Cate Blanchett, Tár

Ana de Armas, Blonde

Andrea Riseborough, To Leslie

Michelle Williams, The Fablemans

Michelle Yeoh, Everything Everywhere All At Once

Actor in a Leading Role

Austin Butler, Elvis

Colin Farrell, The Banshees of Inisherin

Brendan Fraser, The Whale

Paul Mescal, Aftersun

Bill Nighy, Living

Best Actress in a Supporting Role

Angela Bassett, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

Hong Chau, The Whale

Kerry Condon, The Banshees of Inisherin

Jamie Lee Curtis, Everything Everywhere All at Once

Stephanie Hsu, Everything Everywhere All at Once

Best Supporting Actor

Brendan Gleeson, The Banshees of Inisherin

Brian Tyree Henry, Causeway 

Judd Hirsch, The Fabelmans

Barry Keoghan, The Banshees of Inisherin 

Ke Huy Quan, Everything Everywhere All at Once 

Best Costume Design

Babylon

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

Elvis

Everything Everywhere

Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris

Best Adapted Screenplay

All Quiet on the Western Front (Netflix)   

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery (Netflix)  

Living (Sony Pictures Classics) 

Top Gun: Maverick (Paramount Pictures) 

Women Talking (MGM/United Artists Releasing) 

Best Original Screenplay

The Banshees of Inisherin (Searchlight Pictures)  

Everything Everywhere All at Once (A24)  

The Fabelmans (Universal Pictures)  

Tár (Focus Features)  

Triangle of Sadness (Neon)  “An Irish Goodbye” (Floodlight Pictures) 

Best Animated Feature Film 

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (Netflix) 

Marcel the Shell With Shoes On (A24) 

Puss in Boots: The Last Wish (DreamWorks Animation) 

The Sea Beast (Netflix) 

Turning Red (Pixar) 

Best Animated Short Film

The Boy, the Mole, the Fox, and the Horse (Apple TV+) 

The Flying Sailor

Ice Merchants

My Year of Dicks 

An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It

Documentary Feature Film

All That Breathes

All The Beauty and the Bloodshed

Fire of Love

A House Made of Splinters

Navalny

International Feature Film

All Quiet on the Western Front

Argentina, 1985

Close

EO

The Quiet Girl

For the full list, check out the official Academy Awards sites here.

Featured image: HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA – FEBRUARY 09: In this handout photo provided by A.M.P.A.S. Oscars statuettes are on display backstage during the 92nd Annual Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre on February 09, 2020 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Matt Petit – Handout/A.M.P.A.S. via Getty Images)

Sundance 2023: Filmmaker Razelle Benally on Her Showtime Doc Series “Murder in Big Horn”

The Sundance staff and execs have always believed it essential to honor Indigenous people as part of their film festival and institute, as exampled by their Native Lab and Indigenous Program. This year, there is an even greater focus on Native cultures, both inside and outside the cinemas, with 11 Indigenous films as part of the program. 2023 also marked the inaugural year for The Indigenous House, which provided a gathering space for community members and allies, and featured events and conversations with Native creatives and leaders. 

One of the panels, Storytelling Beyond the News, included Oglala Lakota/Diné filmmaker Razelle Benally, co-director and producer of Showtime’s upcoming 3-part documentary series, Murder in Big Horn. The show premiered at Sundance and streams on Showtime starting February 3rd. Benally, who partnered on the project with Showtime directing alum Matthew Galkin, was a Sundance Native Lab Fellow and recently wrote for the Navajo tribal police drama series Dark Winds

Murder in Big Horn considers the epidemic of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) through specific cases in and around Big Horn County, Montana. Within the past decade, dozens of women and girls have disappeared or have been murdered in the area. The docuseries focuses on three such cases, 14-year-old Henny Scott, 18-year-old Kaysera Stops Pretty Places, and 16-year-old Selena Not Afraid. Their stories galvanized the media and public attention for the first time about an issue that has been prevalent since colonization and has been plaguing Native communities around the country for decades. 

The Credits spoke to Murder in Big Horn’s Benally about the MMIW epidemic. She shares how the portrait she and Galkin crafted about three lost girls represents a microcosm of a larger issue that requires far more attention and major changes in policies that have been putting Indigenous women and girls at risk for centuries. 

 

How did you get involved with this project?

Showtime brought the project to Matthew Galkin, my directing partner and executive producer of the series. He had a good prior relationship with Showtime, having worked with them before. Showtime didn’t know much about the MMIW epidemic that was happening, though they had learned about it through their own news sources.  They brought the idea of a docuseries to Matthew, and Matthew, as a heteronormative cis white male, very quickly learned that he might not be the best person to do this all himself, but he did see the story and wanted to get behind helping create awareness for this issue. So he brought me on, and as an Oglala Lakota/Diné woman, unfortunately, I grew up through my own lived experience as a Native woman very much knowing and learning and understanding what the MMIW issue is ever since I could remember, so we were able to collaborate. I believe we provide a broader perspective by having somebody who doesn’t know much about the issue and somebody who grew up and lived with this issue. 

Razelle Benally and Matthew Galkin. Courtesy Showtime.
Razelle Benally and Matthew Galkin. Courtesy Showtime.

What kinds of discussions were there around the investigative true-crime aspect of the story and the issue itself? 

We knew we needed to make sure that the human story was there and that the stories were coming from the community members and the surviving relatives of the victims. We wanted to give them a platform to voice their truth, and we wanted to ensure that they were going to be heard. Even though Murder in Big Horn does encompass many things, including a true crime element, we’re able to sort of bait and switch the viewer and talk about this issue. The mystery that would make it a true crime, where you unravel the cases, you’re given clues, and you’re finding answers, doesn’t exist in this story. The bait and switch is that if you, as a viewer, think you’re going to watch that, unfortunately, there are no answers because the answers lie in history. Violence against Native women exists today because it started with colonization. You cannot talk about MMIW without talking about the history of Native peoples. 

Finding a way to tell that story, that history, requires so much nuance and balance. 

We had to ensure that those different perceptions of European settlers versus our traditional Indigenous men were juxtaposed in the series because even though there may have been violence in our tribes, in our communities pre-contact, we did have systems of addressing violence, and what would be deemed as crimes, and they rarely occurred. When settlers started moving west, that’s when we started truly seeing, in my particular tribes, this onslaught of violence, not only against all of our people but particularly targeting our women as well.

Still frame from MURDER IN BIG HORN. Photo credit: Jeff Hutchens/Courtesy of SHOWTIME.
Still frame from MURDER IN BIG HORN. Photo credit: Jeff Hutchens/Courtesy of SHOWTIME.

Can you speak to why you chose the specific women that were highlighted in this series?

Within the community of Big Horn in Montana and just throughout the Midwest, because my homelands are in Pine Ridge, South Dakota, as well as Arizona, within that area, these cases were actually well-known. The reason why is that there was something about the combination of Henny, Kaysera, and Selena, unfortunately with what happened with their disappearances and their turning up as deceased, there was a groundswell of movement within the communities that occurred and a buildup of media coverage. Also, unfortunately, in Big Horn County, the concentration of cases is so high we found that area to be a microcosm of what’s happening not only there but in a lot of different Indigenous communities. Their families were super helpful and vocal about their loved ones, so we also took that into consideration. But there are so many other cases everywhere that we couldn’t cover each one. Just because we focus on these cases doesn’t mean that all the other cases aren’t equally as important, because they are.

You have an Indigenous female artist as the composer for the show’s score.  What was your partnership like with Laura Ortman?

I’m really grateful to call Laura a friend of mine. She’s an amazing violinist, an amazing composer, and a great artist in general. When the conversation came up regarding music and the score, I immediately thought of Laura because I know how sensitive of a human being she is, and she has done work with films before. I’m very familiar with her music, and when Matthew heard her for the first time, it was a no-brainer for both of us.  In terms of working together, it was very much a back-and-forth but a great collaboration. It was important for us to give her a lot of room for creative experimentation and a lot of space to use her own voice as an artist. 

At the end of the series, there is a list included of over 70 names of other missing or murdered Indigenous girls and women in the greater Big Horn community. Can you talk about that? 

The list of names we include is based on documented and reported cases. There are so many more cases that haven’t been documented or, by legal standards, don’t have what it takes to be a missing persons case, so it was really important for us, and for the production and the series, that people can understand how vast and wide this issue is, not only in Big Horn County but everywhere. Our series isn’t meant to represent all communities. The series serves as a microcosm for a widespread issue. It’s just a sad and heartbreaking reality. I hope that by the end, part of what the audience takes away is that this is a national issue for Indigenous communities in the United States. It’s also an issue in Canada, Mexico, and all Indigenous communities across the world.  

 

Murder in Big Horn streams on Showtime starting on February 3rd. 

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Featured image: Still frame from MURDER IN BIG HORN. Photo credit: Jeff Hutchens/Courtesy of SHOWTIME. 

HBO’s “The Last Of Us” Delivers Astonishing Second Ep For Largest-Ever Viewership Growth

If you watched the riveting second episode of HBO’s The Last Of Us, you were a part of history. The series delivered the largest-ever viewership growth for a drama from a premiere episode to its second, according to measurements by Nielsen. Episode two bested the premiere’s gangbusters numbers by bringing in 5.7 million viewers across linear airings across HBO and HBO Max. That’s a 22% jump from last week’s record-breaking 4.7 million haul.

The second episode found our protagonists, the emotionally closed-off and hardened Joel (Pedro Pascal), his equally resilient and gruff partner Tess (Anna Torv), and their charge, the 14-year-old Ellie (Bella Ramsey), venturing out of the Quarantine Zone into the “open city” of Boston, which is overrun with what are essentially zombies. Their mission is to deliver Ellie to a group of rebels (so to speak) and, in exchange, get a trunk battery and some other equipment so they can go search for Joel’s missing cousin, Tommy (Gabriel Luna). The problem is that the population at large outside the QZ, long since infected with the fungal parasite cordyceps, controls pretty much the entire country. A single step on one of the long fungal filaments that can stretch a mile beneath the surface of a road can call dozens or more of these ravenous, murderous former humans. The second episode delivered a terrifying sequence involving a variation of the infected called “clickers,” whose skulls have been cracked open by their fungal parasite into a mushroom-like nightmare. The clickers track and try to kill our survivors through a Boston museum. Spoiler alert — not all of them make it.

In order to make sure the clickers looked appropriately terrifying and that they matched what gamers saw when they played the video game upon which the HBO series is adapted, co-creators Neil Druckmann, the man behind the video game, and Craig Mazin (Chernobyl) brought in Mazin’s Chernobyl collaborator Barry Gower, an ace prosthetics designer. Not only did they obsess over the look of the clickers, but they brought in performers who could match the deeply creepy movements of the infected zombies (the performers were also fans of the game) to deliver one of the most unsettling and dramatically satisfying sequences you’ll see on a screen all year.

Want to go inside the episode and learn more? Fear not, HBO Max has you covered:

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Featured image: Samuel Hoeksema in “The Last Of Us.” Photograph by Liane Hentscher/HBO

A New “Knock at the Cabin” Video Takes You Inside M. Night Shyamalan’s Latest Thriller

When you’re watching an M. Night Shyamalan movie, even the most common sounds are terrifying. And nothing, it turns out, is scarier than the sound of a knock at the door, especially when you’re renting a cabin in the woods for a weekend and not expecting any company. What’s even worse is when the person doing the knocking is Dave Bautista’s Leonard.

In a new behind-the-scenes look at Shyamalan’s latest released by Universal Pictures, Bautista sets up the film’s conceit; we have a family of three made up of Wen (Kristen Cui) and her dads Andrew (Jonathan Groff) and Eric (Ben Aldridge) whose weekend idyll is obliterated by the arrival of Leonard and his accomplices (played by Nikki Amuka-Bird, Abby Quinn, and Rupert Grint). The reason for Leonard’s arrival is dire; here’s there with news of the end of the world, and the only way to keep the apocalypse from coming is for one of the three members of the family to sacrifice themselves. Talk about a buzzkill.

“I believe in this type of storytelling that when you come to the movie theater, you want to see something incredibly powerful,” says Shyamalan, “incredibly emotional, experiential, but you want it to be bigger than life.”

“There is no place to run, no place to hide,” says Bautista, “so I think it’s like layers of nightmares in this film.”

Shyamalan explains that, as he’s done so evocatively in his past work in contained thrillers like The Sixth Sense and Signs, Knock at the Cabin tells a larger-than-life story through a very suffocating, confined space.

“I’m very drawn to stories of confinement and telling very large stories through a small window,” he says. “That constriction, that balance, the juxtaposition of the size of the story and the way we’re telling is very exciting to me.”

Leonard and his accomplice’s mission seems nearly as hard on them as it is on the family. With brief sequences showcasing visions of the apocalypse that Leonard promises is nigh if they don’t choose—planes falling out of the sky, a terrifying tidal wave—Shyamalan seems to have built his very favorite kind of film, a puzzle box that opens out into a vast nightmare.

Check out the behind-the-scenes look below. Knock at the Cabin Door arrives in theaters on February 3.

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Featured image: From left: Dave Bautista, Abby Quinn, and Nikki Amuka-Bird in KNOCK AT THE CABIN, directed and co-written by M. Night Shyamalan

New “Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves” Trailer Delights in Derring-do

We’ve got a fresh look at Paramount’s long-awaited Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, and the vibes are groovy. The star-studded epic from directors John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein (the pair behind Game Night) is led by Chris Pine as Edgin, a rakish sort who teams up with Regé-Jean Page’s Xenx, Justice Smith’s Simon, and Michelle Rodriguez’s Holga on an adventure that’ll pack in plenty of action, hijinx, and danger.

Our merry band of thieves has joined forces to retrieve a lost relic that they let slip into the wrong hands, but they’ll learn in short order that in order to survive and succeed, they’re going to have to learn to trust each other and lean on each other’s specific skills. Some of those skills are useful (like Holga’s fighting ability), some, like Edgin’s wit, will at least offer a distraction as they court death again and again.

The new trailer opens with  Edgin (Pine) and Holga (Rodriguez) in a spot of trouble—they’re captives and are about to have their heads separated from their necks. The comedic tone in the scene, with Holga doing the rescuing and Edgin doing the quipping, speaks to the vibe this adaptation of the iconic role-playing game aims to strike. Our thieves are fun and funny, and while the stakes couldn’t be higher for them (wanton death and destruction via the greatest evil the world has ever known, etc.), Honor Among Thieves promises to be a joyous romp.

The new trailer, like the last, is set to Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love” and once again includes some impressive creatures, huge fight sequences, and a cast that seems to be enjoying themselves immensely. In short, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves looks fun, which is the first thing you want from an adaptation of the most iconic role-playing game of all time.

Joining Pine, Rodriguez, Page, and Smith are Hugh Grant, Sophia Lillis, Chloe Coleman, and Daisy Head.

Check out the trailer below. Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves opens on March 31:

 

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Featured image: Justice Smith plays Simon, Sophia Lillis plays Doric, Chris Pine plays Edgin and Michelle Rodriguez plays Holga in Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves from Paramount Pictures.

Sundance 2023: Jonathan Majors’ Astonishing Transformation for “Magazine Dreams”

Jonathan Majors is turning heads and earning major buzz for his astonishing transformation in Magazine Dreams. Granted, Majors’ star has been rising for a while now, and the man was already in extremely good shape, but what he did to prepare for the role of amateur bodybuilder Killian Maddox is astonishing.

Majors revealed at the Variety Studio at the Sundance Film Festival that his training regimen to transform his already ripped physique into a bodybuilder’s hulking frame included eating more than 6,000 calories a day and working out three times daily.

“I’m 6 feet tall. I’m 202 pounds,” Majors told Variety. “In order to sustain that and to grow that you have to eat as much protein that you weigh. I ate 6,100 calories a day for about four months. That included the pre-work and the post-work of Creed III.”

Again, Majors was already in incredible shape. He was in great shape when he filmed Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantamania, he’s in impeccable shape in Creed IIIand he was in amazing shape when he starred in HBO’s Lovecraft Country. But with Magazine Dreams focused on the kind of pathological commitment to every single muscle of a man’s body, and with Majors shirtless and the camera on him for so much of the film, he went above and beyond in his preparation and workout routine.

“The normal bodybuilder works out two times a day,” Majors said to Variety. “I’m playing Killian Maddox… Playing him, you don’t f**k around. What ended up happening is I would train two hours, two times a day for the movie and a third time after wrap. Meanwhile, you eat six times a day. Lots of chicken. Lots of elk. That’s just for me. I like it.”

That commitment has paid off. The Lost Angeles Times critic Justin Chang writes that Magazine Dreams is “a brutal study of physical extremity and psychological meltdown built around an entirely astonishing lead performance from Jonathan Majors.” Variety‘s Owen Gleiberman writes that Majors “creates a character haunting in his extremity. But his dream becomes ours, as does the heartbreaking prospect of it being snuffed before our eyes.” And Carlos Aguilar at The Wrap writes, “What Majors does is the kind of earth-shattering showcase that turns an actor into a legend. His unclassifiable potency leaves us, the audience, to grapple with the fearlessness on display.”

While Majors won’t be continuing at quite this pace, both in caloric consumption and thrice daily workouts, he’s not exactly planning on becoming a couch potato, either.

“I played football in Texas. I got an appetite,” Majors told Variety. “I really like being physical. I like hiking and running. I’ve got dogs. I’m only 33… I got to do something to stay with it. I don’t work out three times a day anymore. Just once a day.”

Featured image: Jonathan Majors appears in Magazine Dreams by Elijah Bynum, an official selection of the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Glen Wilson

Writer/Director Elegance Bratton on His Breakout Film “The Inspection”

Writer/director Elegance Bratton’s autobiographical The Inspection is one of the year’s breakout films. Bratton stuck with the project for years because it most reflected who he is: a gay Black man who was homeless as a teenager, a Marine Corps veteran, and a Columbia University and NYU-educated filmmaker.

Bratton’s struggles began practically at birth with that unusual, magnificent name. “My mother named me Elegance but had a problem with me being gay,” Bratton said over the phone from his home in Baltimore. “She was the first person who loved me and who rejected me. She was a complicated woman. You cant give people things you have not been given, and no one ever gave my mom unconditional love.”

Writer/director Elegance Bratton on the set of "The Inspection." Courtesy A24.
Writer/director Elegance Bratton on the set of “The Inspection.” Courtesy A24.

As Inez French in The Inspection, Gabrielle Union gives a fierce performance as Bratton’s religious but homophobic single mother who throws her 16-year-old gay son out of their New Jersey home. After 10 years of living in shelters and on the streets, Bratton stand-in Ellis French (played by Jeremy Pope in a star-making turn) joins the Marine Corps in 2005 during the dont ask, dont tell” era. He survives grueling boot camp and endures constant physical and verbal harassment by a drill sergeant and by many of his fellow recruits. Ellis may have joined the Marines to win back his mothers love, but it is his own self-respect that he earns.

L-r: Gabrielle Union, Jeremy Pope. Courtesy A24.
L-r: Gabrielle Union, Jeremy Pope. Courtesy A24.

The Inspection has garnered critical acclaim and award nominations, including Golden Globes, Gothams, and Film Independent Spirit Awards. Bratton was named one of Varietys 10 Directors to Watch for 2023, and he is the inaugural recipient of Boston’s Coolidge Breakthrough Artist Award. He will attend the event on January 27 at the Coolidge Corner Theater.

But the success has been bittersweet. “My mom was killed three days after the film was green-lit [by A24 in early 2020]. I’ve been grieving my mom since I was 16 since it all happened. It made me question, ‘Am I doing this just for her?’ Of course, I wasn’t, but there was a lot of emotion happening with me [during production],” he said. “Seeing Gabby on set — she wore my mother’s jewelry, she used my mother’s bible. I finished those days as a wreck and had to learn how to work through those emotions. I could not be in a corner crying. I am grateful to Gabby for helping to bring my mom back to life and for this film and the reaction to it. There’s been a lot of healing from this project.”

 

Bratton is currently “deep into post-production” on the feature documentary Hellfighters about James Reese Europe, “another Black veteran and the first to serve as a uniformed officer during World War I,” he said. A lieutenant in the 369th Infantry Regiment known as the Harlem Hellfighters, Europe was a Jazz pioneer and music mogul and “the first black man to conduct a show at Carnegie Hall,” said Bratton. “There will be animation and an expansive approach to the archival because there’s not much footage.”

After Bratton made his television debut as the creator and executive producer of the Viceland series My House, which chronicled underground competitive ballroom dancing, he finally had some money in the bank. For the first time in his life, he said, he could concentrate solely on writing scripts.

By 2017, he’d written three scripts, including The Inspection. Bratton said he “asked Chester [Chester Algernal Gordon], who is my husband and producer, creative partner, and love of my life,” which one he should pursue. Gordon advised him to “bring the audience to a place they can’t go without you. Let them know you. You are a Black gay storyteller. So I committed to making The Inspection.”

Writer/director Elegance Bratton on the set of "The Inspection." Courtesy A24.
Writer/director Elegance Bratton on the set of “The Inspection.” Courtesy A24.

But most studios, including A24, initially passed on the project. Bratton was undaunted. “When I hear ‘no,’ I look at what they are responding to. I am encouraged by the slightest bit of response. They liked the shower scene, so OK, how do I make it really land? I’m listening for feedback to make it better.”

Besides watching films including Full Metal Jacket, Jarhead, Beau Travail, and Rocky, Bratton prepared for shooting his film by studying photography and cites William Eggleston as influential for “how to use the environment” and Nan Goldin, “who is important to me in every film I make.”

Jeremy Pope. Courtesy A24.
Jeremy Pope. Courtesy A24.

 “It takes a long time for a first feature to get made, but once it’s agreed to, it all goes by so fast,” he said. “It took four years to get the film [approved], but then it was shot, edited, played festivals, and was released. We shot it in 19 days in Mississippi, and we lost a week because of a COVID shutdown, so that was time- crunched as well.”

Bratton “had to fight to the mat to make sure” that Pope was cast as Ellis. “I don’t believe that only gay actors should play gay characters. That being said, this is based on my life; every fear, every hope, and every desire is autobiographical. As a gay person, you don’t get to see examples of yourself as a hero in film. People pay to see movies because they’re aspirational versions of themselves. So with this film, I wanted an out queer actor,” he said.

To watch Pope “come into his own and become a big name is all the sweeter,” Bratton added. “Two years ago, nobody wanted to make [The Inspection], and now anything is possible.”

The Inspection is streaming now Apple, Amazon, AMC on Demand, and more.

For more recent interviews with filmmakers, check out these stories:

“Babylon” Composer Justin Hurwitz Deconstructs His Oscar-Shortlisted Score

“Emancipation” Hair Department Head Andrea Bowman on Her Oscar-Shortlisted Work

Why Every Digital Costume in “Avatar: The Way of Water” Really Exists

Featured image: THE INSPECTION. Credit: Patti Perret/A24 Films

Jason Momoa’s Future in the DC Universe Sounds Very Bright

For those of you wondering— and worrying—about Jason Momoa’s future with DC in light of all the recent news and shakeups, the man himself is here to put you at ease.

As you’re no doubt aware by now, the new co-chairs of DC Studios are Guardians of the Galaxy and The Suicide Squad writer/director James Gunn and producer Peter Safran. They took over the studio with the goal of getting all of the stories that DC tells across film, television, and even video games, into a single, cohesive universe. That has meant some tough decisions and major changes, including going in a new direction with a younger Superman (so no more Henry Cavill) and putting the brakes on Wonder Woman 3. So, it was reasonable to wonder where this left Jason Momoa, who has his Aquaman sequel, Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, due out this Christmas. Would Gunn and Safran decide to move away from Aquaman, and Momoa, and go in a new direction? Would Momoa be recast in a new role (like Lobo)? Or would Momoa’s time as Aquaman continue?

Well, Momoa seems to feel very good about his future at DC, as he shared some news after leaving Warner Bros. with One Media. In a video, Momoa talks about how it was four years ago when he left Warner Bros. feeling on top of the world (about Aquaman, presumably), and here he is, leaving the studio, feeling on top of the world again. Momoa says he has “great news” to share about his future in the DC universe and even lets loose a joyous scream.

If you’re hoping Momoa goes into detail on what, exactly, that news is, well, you’re outta luck. But, from the sound of it, Jason Momoa isn’t leaving DC, and whatever his specific future is, he’s excited about it. Check out the video below:

While we wait to hear more details on Momoa’s future in the DC Universe, we’ll be seeing him soon enough in Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, which hits theaters on December 25.

For more on Warner Bros., HBO, and HBO Max, check out these stories:

HBO’s “The Last Of Us” Has Massive Debut

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Matt Reeves Suggests “The Batman” Sequel is Alive & Well

Reviews for HBO’s “The Last Of Us” Call it an Astonishing Adaptation on Every Level

Featured image: Aquaman (Jason Momoa) in his new steal suit. Courtesy Jason Momoa/Warner Bros.

“Tron 3” in the Works With Jared Leto

The Tron train might be finally leaving the station.

After years of potential sequels going nowhere, Tron 3 is moving forward at Disney, with Jared Leto set to star. Leto has been championing the project for half a decade and will now lead the feature, with director Joachim Ronning (Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, Maleficent: Mistress of Evil) potentially helming the film. The script comes from Jesse Wigutow and will follow the events in 2010’s Tron: Legacy. The title of the third film? Tron: Ares.

The third film would arrive more than four decades after the original Tron, which bowed in 1982 and starred Jeff Bridges as the video game designer Kevin Flynn who gets morphed inside of his own game and must team up with the titular Tron (Bruce Boxleitner), a security program, to survive the ordeal. While the original Tron wasn’t a smash hit, it was hailed as a visually stunning glimpse at a potential near future and had a cultural impact that was larger than its $33 million box office haul.

Tron: Legacy, which was directed by Top Gun: Maverick helmer Joseph Kosinski, starred Bridges, Olivia Wilde, and Garrett Hedlund, and though it pulled in $400 million at the box office, a sequel was not immediately greenlit. A potential third film with Kosinski and his stars was officially nixed in 2015 and repeated attempts to revive a Tron 3 came to naught. Until now.

Ronning has a long-standing relationship with Disney after directing the fifth Pirates of the Caribbean film and the Maleficent sequel. He’s recently finished helming Young Woman and the Sea for Disney+, which stars Daisy Ridley as Trudy Ederle, the first woman to ever swim across the English Channel, who achieved the feat in 1926.

Leto has his own Disney project coming up—Haunted Mansion—in which he stars with a stacked cast that includes LaKeith Stanfield, Rosario Dawson, Winona Ryder, Owen Wilson, and Jamie Lee Curtis. He’s also starring in Darren Aronofsky’s next film, Adrift, about a deckhand taking lone control of a ghost ship while it’s towed to port, with sinister implications.

For more stories on Century Studios, Searchlight Pictures, Marvel Studios and what’s streaming or coming to Disney+, check these out:

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“The Mandalorian” Season 3 Trailer Finds Din Djarin & Grogu Attempting a Dangerous Homecoming

James Cameron is Feeling Very Good About his “Avatar” Sequels

New “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania” Photos Reveal the MCU’s New Boss Villain & More

Featured image: LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 17: Jared Leto attends the global premiere of Apple TV+’s “WeCrashed” at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on March 17, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)