It’s a Wonderful Life has stood the test of time to become a perennial holiday classic for audiences of all ages. This year, Paramount unveiled a 4K UHD Steelbook copy of the film and to celebrate, ComingSoon.net sat down with two of the film’s stars, Jimmy Hawkins and Karolyn Grimes, who played Tommy and Zuzu Bailey, respectively, and discussed the impact and legacy Frank Capra’s film continues to have in pop culture nearly 75 years later.
It’s a Wonderful Life was released on December 20, 1946 and grossed a modest $3.3 million against a $3.18 million budget (RKO recorded a $525,000 loss). Critical reaction was mixed at the time and the film drifted out of the public psyche until networks began airing it on TV in the late 70s/early 80s. In 1990, the film was added to the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress and is now regarded as one of the finest films ever made.
Here’s the synopsis, via IMDB: An angel is sent from Heaven to help a desperately frustrated businessman by showing him what life would have been like if he had never existed.
It’s a Wonderful Life stars James Stewart, Donna Reed, Lionel Barrymore and Henry Travers and was directed by Frank Capra from a screenplay by Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett and Capra.
Jimmy Hawkins starred as little Tommy in the film when he was just four years old and later went on to appear in 68 films and TV shows, including The Donna Reed Show, Leave it to Beaver and Annie Oakley; and also serves as producer on films such as Evel Knievel (1971) and TV movies such as A Time for Miracles (1980) and Smart Cookies (2012).
Purchase It’s a Wonderful Life on 4K UHD Steelbook (4K UHD + Blu-ray + Digital)!
ComingSoon.net: It’s a Wonderful Life is almost 75 years old. You were only four and a half at the time. But I’ve read interviews where you said that you have detailed memories of the filming. So what are your most vivid memories about the set?
Jimmy Hawkins: Well, just walking on the set every day. It took 12 days to shoot all the stuff with the Bailey kids in it. And so, I’d get up real early in the morning. It was dark outside and you’d take street cars and buses to Culver City. And then walk onto this beautiful stage 14. And when you walk into that living room, it’s all lit up and lighting for the first take of the day. The Christmas tree is there. And it’s just all the commotion going on and the front of the house, the facade for the outside of the house, too. And they had real snow outside, you know? And that was kind of interesting to see. It’s 90 degrees outside when we were shooting the film, the exteriors, but it was just terrific. I remember Frank Capra and how he improvised a lot. I would go over the script the night before with my mom, and that would always change the next morning when we got on the set because Frank Capra had business. He always had actors doing little business. And so, he would explain to me what he wanted me to do in the scene, sitting on this man’s lap and putting a pencil on his head. And then this lady over here will say something, and then when she finishes saying that, you say this line, you know that? I’d say, “Oh yes sir, I know that.”
And then, when we came out of the living room scene going into the kitchen, he had me do that, “Excuse me” line. And then I end up — well, he had me say it a few times on the way to the kitchen and he’d stop all the action and then he’d squat down and talk to me one-on-one face-to-face and tell me exactly when you get to this spot right here, say excuse me, keep pulling on this man’s tailcoat. Okay. Go there. And so, he was always doing stuff like that, improvising. And so, those are the kind of memories I have. And you know, I don’t remember anything at four and a half. Like you’d be surprised of how much you remember when it comes down to it. And then, all these things come past your mind and you go, “Ah, I remember doing that. Yeah, oh wow.” And I would chew bubblegum all the time. So he didn’t mind. You would just chew the gum in the picture. That’s all right. He didn’t care. That’s more natural, he said.
So, and then all the stories that you learn along the lines when I started writing books about it and talking to cast members and how their experience was with Capra; and Dimitri Tiompkin’s estate and talking to Mrs. Tiompkin and just all the different things that it took to make the picture — the set decorator, you know, [told] me what the town looked like. It’s just a great experience to talk to everybody and get us all back together again after so many years. And it’s been quite a thrill, and working with Paramount on their different projects. But what I like about it is they keep up to date with the movie, and you know how they have a Blu-ray 4K in special packaging, what they call the SteelBook. And I mean, when you see the movie like that, I mean, you feel like you’re right there. I mean, you just step into it. It’s so crisp and just like better than it ever was when it showed in theaters.
So you know, people, they want to see it best as it can and streaming never does that. Streaming can’t be — 4K, Blu-ray, nothing. It just is a nice, clean copy. But they want that film. They seem to want that disc they can play whenever they want to, and a lot of people, I see them, and they ask me, because I guess this SteelBook has caught on and people like to have that as part of their collection, whether they ever open it up and play it, they like this idea of having it. And they ask us, you know, the different appearances we’ve made in Seneca Falls at the “It’s a Wonderful Life” Museum. And they said, “Oh are they going to come out with SteelBook?” And I said, “Oh I didn’t even know if they do SteelBook.” But they know more than we do. It’s really something. They bring up stuff with the movie and [I’m like] oh really? No, it’s great talking to them and they bring their children to our appearances and explain that when they were that age, they watched the film with their parents, and they’re passing this movie onto their children. And the kids, they love the film. They don’t understand at 6 or 7 the whole Bailey Building and Loans and stuff like that, but they know they like the movie; and they don’t mind sitting and watching it with their parents.
So it’s a great experience to see the enthusiasm that the parents have and they’re passing it onto their kids. It’s been quite a thrill, the different places that It’s a Wonderful Life has taken us. I rang the bell at the Stock Exchange in New York. I showed it to the prisoners of Attica two years ago at Christmas, and Karolyn Grimes — Zuzu — and I went there for a two-hour Q&A. And these guys were incredible. It’s just an experience. This movie has taken us everywhere. It’s great to talk about it, getting the opportunity to talk to you about it, and like I said, you’re a part of the legacy now and you can carry on, write about it and tell other people about it. It just keeps growing and getting bigger and bigger. When it’s on NBC at Christmas time, that’s the most popular show on TV that night. It’s going to be 75 years old next year and it’s bigger and better than it ever was.
CS: Like you said, you were four years old at the time. And obviously, you probably weren’t aware of Jimmy Stewart, Frank Capra and Donna Reed, or at least the impact that they had in pop culture at the time. At what point did you start to realize: Wow! I was in a movie with Jimmy Stewart, Donna Reed and Frank Capra?
Hawkins: Well, of course, I stayed in the business. I did over 400 TV shows and co-starred with Elvis in pictures. I was eight years on the Donna Reed Show, so I got to know her through all that time, and then we stayed friends after the show, had lunches. And I was with her right before she passed away and was at her house and brought her an ornament to put on the tree. But the first time I guess, what you’re asking, is when did I realize It’s a Wonderful Life was big, or that it was growing? Because when it went out [on it’s initial release], it was just a day — well, for us, 12 days working. And you went to another movie. And the same way in talking to all the other characters from the film, it was just another movie to do. The hope was to be good and be popular, but nobody ever expected it to be what it became. Nobody. It was just work and you were hoping Capra and Stewart after World War II would make a success of it and then continue on with their lives. But nobody thought it would ever do what it’s done now. So 1992 is when I first realized that everybody was watching it. They got to see it because it fell into public domain and people all over TV stations everywhere could show it for free. And they took advantage of that. And so, television made It’s a Wonderful Life what it is today. I talked to Sheldon Leonard about the film — he played Nick the Bartender — and asked him myself, what do you think, after all those years, it became popular? He said, remember one thing, Jimmy, the movie never changed, not a frame changed. The people changed. They needed that message more than ever. They didn’t need it in 1946. They were onto other things. But when the 70’s came in and it fell into public domain, it started showing up every Christmas getting bigger and bigger. And the audience needed that message. They needed to know that they’re all important, and each man’s life touches so many others. They are important. That’s when George Bailey got to see. He didn’t think anything he did was important. But everything. He went to work, helped somebody, did something, touched somebody’s life and went on to do this. And he got to see all that and he saw that sort of way life was the wrong thing to do because we can make a difference in everybody’s life. That’s what the audience found out. I’m important. I make a difference.
CS: You talked about working with Donna Reed and the relationship that you had with her. Did you ever bump into Capra Stewart again?
Hawkins: Oh no, no. I would bump into Capra at the Academy. I’m a member of the Motion Picture Academy and they were having a director’s choice. And great directors would come and show what they thought was their best movie. Well, he was there, and so, I talked to him while we were out in the foyer, ready to go on. And learned more about him. And Jimmy Stewart, I did Winchester ’73 with him. But I’d met him at parties, and then they brought me in to play his son in law in a TV series that they were putting together at Warner Brothers and NBC or one of the networks. And they brought me in and they tested me to play his son in law in the series. And I was producing movies then. I was doing a picture called Evel Knievel that I raised the money towards and was a producer on with George Hamilton. And I came back from Butte, Montana, where we were shooting up a day earlier to do this test. And they were testing this guy, that guy, and I always thought my career — whatever I did, always thought of Jimmy Stewart when I did things. And because I was just a guy in a situation, always looked at, how would you say that line if he were in that movie? And I wasn’t a great actor, but I was great at doing that. And it never stopped. It never stopped, whether it was the Annie Oakley series or The Ruggles back in 1949; and then I did Petticoat Junction for three or four years, Ozzie and Harriet for three or four years, and just kept working — Leave it to Beaver — just all this stuff. And I never, ever stopped. But you got Evel Knievel, and I said, I like this and I enjoy this. So, very lucky. A great career. I really have a wonderful life.
CS: You stopped acting around about the mid-70’s. How had Hollywood changed by that point?
Hawkins: Well, it really had changed. Especially now, I’m producing a film now on the life of Mary Edwards Walker. She’s the only woman to ever win the Congressional Medal of Honor. And she was a surgeon in the Civil War. A great story. I’d like to do stories that are uplifting, positive. Ones that make you go: If that woman went through that and came out like she did, well maybe my life actually may get better. And I did the Satchel Paige Story with Lou Gossett … and I’ve done a lot of uplifting movies because I like that theme. I like that people see something and then they can do something like that. If that person did something, they could overcome their obstacles. It was a great time. But it’s not like that anymore. Too much greed and I don’t like it anymore. It’s just not fun. It’s different, just different.
I’d have been lucky to be in that Golden era, no doubt about it. I worked with every major star in the 40’s. And then, when it came to television, whether it’s Fred McMurray or Donna Reed or you name them all, I got a chance to work with them as more of an adult, and it was very rewarding. The people were as nice as you saw them on the screen. 90 percent of the time, they were just real nice people. Frederick Burns, very nice person. I’m just very lucky to be with nice people doing nice shows.
Karolyn Grimes starred in It’s a Wonderful Life as Zuzu, who delivered the film’s most memorable line, “Every time a bell rings an angel gets his wings.” Grimes worked as an actress until 1954, starring in films such as The Bishop’s Wife and Rio Grande.
ComingSoon.net: I read a story a while ago where you recalled seeing It’s a Wonderful Life for the first time in 1980 and suddenly remembering that you were in the film Can you tell us more about that moment? Is that something that really happened?
Karolyn Grimes: What happened was, I started getting people knocking on my door wanting interviews. And they asked me if I was in that movie and I said, well, yeah. And so, they said, “Could we have an interview?” And I said, “Well, sure.” So I dragged all my stuff up from the basement and showed them my memorabilia and over the years the same thing kept happening, and I was pretty shocked. I thought, my goodness, what’s going on here? And then, I started getting fan mail. And so, I thought, well, I better watch this movie. So I sat down and I watched the movie. I was 40, but you know, my life has been very busy. And I was raising seven kids. I lived in the car, in the laundry room and kitchen and all of that. I didn’t have time to really watch the movie, so I never did. I had seen bits and pieces of my part in the movie, but I never really sat down and got the whole content — and oh, what a joy! I mean, it was an experience I’ll never forget my whole life. I cried and cried and cried. And it just touched my life so much that I realized that I had to be a part of the message from this film. So that’s what I made up my mind to do back in 1980. And I was still raising kids, so I didn’t do too much until 1993. The Target Company reunited the Bailey kids and sent us on a tour around the United States. And that’s when I kind of hooked on the road because I really met the people. And they tell me stories of how this movie had affected their lives in such a positive way. Well, I just got hooked. And so, I’ve been on the road ever since.
CS: Do you remember how you first got involved with the production?
Grimes: Well, I had an agent. I had already done four movies before I did that one. I started when I was four years old. And I was just one of those little starlets in Hollywood. And it was just another interview. It wasn’t any big deal. And I actually had an experience that wasn’t too cool because when I was waiting to be interviewed — there were five of us little girls — a mother accidentally spilled some coffee on my dress — accidentally, we’re not sure. [Laughs] Anyway, it didn’t bother me one bit. I walked in there with a soiled dress and talked to Frank Capra because it was a one-on-one thing. He handpicked every single person in that movie, even the extras. He handpicked them all. He was that particular. He was a perfectionist. And so, I mean, I just acted like myself and I got the part.
CS: Were you aware that you were in a movie with greats like Jimmy Stewart, Donna Reed, directed by Frank Capra?
Grimes: I never knew a thing like that. I had worked with Bing Crosby, Randolph Scott. I mean, all these movie stars. And fortunately, my parents never really let me think that I was special in any way and that these weren’t real movie stars. [Laughs.] I didn’t even think I knew what a movie star was. These were just my friends and I was raised like that. So yeah, I never really knew that these were special people and that they were real stars. I had no clue. And Jimmy Stewart contacted me in 1980, actually, and that was another reason I watched the film, because a lot of people had been asking him whatever happened to that little girl? And he had his secretary call me in the middle of Kansas, and there I was. And so, he called me out of the blue. It was really kind of incredible. And so, we kind of developed a friendship after that and it was really good.
CS: That’s a cool story. That could make its own movie right there.
Grimes: Well, it could.
CS: And speaking of Jimmy Stewart, you share some of the film’s most iconic scenes with him — do you recall filming those scenes? Did you have to do numerous takes?
Grimes: Well, yes, we had to do numerous takes. Sometimes we’d spend days just on doing a segment. But it was the fourth, fifth movie I had done. And it was just normal, everyday stuff. But being up tall in his arms and kind of towering over everything, I remember all of the people in the last scene. I remember so many things about that movie that I had so many wonderful experiences on, because, for one thing, there were kids, other kids, and I could play with other kids. You worked for three minutes and then you sit for an hour. And then you work for three minutes and you sit for an hour. And for a kid that’s six years old, that’s tough. So to me, having other kids there to play with and to interact with, it was pretty great. So that, I remember very well, just having other kids, Jimmy Hawkins and Carol [Coombs]. And it was great just to have kids around. So I do remember a lot of things about the film.
CS: When was it that you really knew that you had been a part of something truly special?
Grimes: I didn’t know until 1980. When I started getting fan mail, it blew me away. I mean, this was for a life 40 years — 35 years ago, you know, and all of a sudden I’m getting fan mail for playing this little girl in the movie? I was blown away. I had no idea that the movie was so like, well received and that people loved it and it was an American tradition and in their homes every year at Christmas. I didn’t know. So I mean, it was a great, big shock to me. And that’s when I really found out what a wonderful film it was. And after I sat down and watched it, I vowed that I would definitely promote that film and I would try to be a part of it from now on. And once I started meeting the people, the fans did my appearances, I mean, they share with me stories of how this movie has affected their lives. It’s incredible.
I mean, everyone — happiness, sadness, maybe a gal’s mother had started her watching the movie years and years ago, when she was a child, and the mother is now gone, but she would never miss out on watching that movie every year at Christmas because it brought her back to that time when she was with her mom. You know, those kind of things you can’t buy, the memories in your heart. And It’s a Wonderful Life just gives you those over and over again.
CS: You were in a number of projects after It’s a Wonderful Life, including The Bishop’s Wife and Rio Grande. Why did you ultimately decide to step away from acting?
Grimes: My mother started getting sick when I was eight, and she died when I was 14. And then my father got killed in a car wreck a year later when I was 15. So I was orphaned and the court in Hollywood decided that my best interest was to send me to live with my father’s brother and his mean wife in Missouri. So that’s what happened. I got out of Hollywood. That was the end. You know, I was all alone. I never went back. I went to college and lived like a normal person.
CS: Oh wow! And then suddenly you’re thrust back into this world you left behind …
Grimes: It was unlocking great memories I had in the past. I had been so busy that I never relived those moments. But once I started to relive those wonderful times as a child, it became such a huge part of my life because I meet people and they tell me these wonderful stories about how that movie’s affected their lives. So it became kind of a champion for me. And I wanted to be part of that. I wanted to be able to touch people’s lives and then to be able to share with them how much the movie meant to me as well, because I had just discovered it. So, I don’t know. It’s a wonderful opportunity for people to come together and share values and share love. And see, that’s what I think the movie gives to people. And I think it’s so great that Paramount brings out a new DVD every year to celebrate that. I just think it’s wonderful because it gets better and better. It’s sharper and it’s just great. It’s so wonderful, it’s like, right there. You feel like you’re a part of that film.
CS: There was talk of a sequel that was set to release back in 2015 that would’ve ultimately focused on your character. What ultimately happened to that project?
Grimes: Well, I don’t know. It was a great project and I think it would’ve been a great story. It was a follow-up — a rest of the story sort of thing. And I thought that was great. I thought it was well done. But you know, legal things and all kinds of things tied things up, so some things never happen. But there’s still hope. They’re still hoping that it will happen. You never know.
CS: When you watch It’s a Wonderful Life, what is the one thing that that film does that resonates with you personally?
Grimes: Well, I tend to get all caught up in the world and daily activities and the traumas and everything that happens in life. And I need to refocus and I know that. And It’s a Wonderful Life brings my feet back and kind of brings all that scattered energy that’s all around. It’s the one force that makes me feel more positive and gives me more energy to face whatever we have to face as human beings right now. It’s a wonderful medication for that because it heals the spirit. It heals the soul and it gives us hope. And I definitely recommend that as medicine for 2020.
CS: We need this movie more than ever. That’s for sure.
Grimes: Yes, we do.
CS: You talked about having a friendship with Jimmy Stewart. What was he like off-screen?
Grimes: He was George Bailey in real life. He was a man who did things for his fellow men, and he didn’t need to be patted on the back. He didn’t need to have publicity for that. He was a gentle soul. He had morals. He had values. And you know, he didn’t get married until he was 38 and he stayed with Gloria and he loved her to the very end. He was a man … I had a fan — you got a minute? — who I met in New York at a fun thing we were doing with Jimmy, and he had made it possible for her to come to New York from upper New York. And she was kind of blue collared. She came down to New York City and she was so excited to meet him for the first time in her whole life. And she had been a fan of his since before he was famous. And he had done some things for her. Over the years, her husband was dying of Parkinson’s disease and they were getting ready to lose their home. And she called Jimmy and told him about it. The next day, the veteran’s hospital took him in so they didn’t have to lose their home. She knows that he was a part of that happening. And she ended up getting breast cancer. And so, she went to visit her daughter in San Francisco. This was after I had met her and she wrote me letters afterwards. And he arranged for her to come down to his house to see his rose garden. So he was in his rose garden with her. I mean, she was a devout fan. She just worshiped him. And she was in his rose garden with him. And that was in November. And in January, she got her wings. So he gave her a wonderful gift, but no one ever knows things like that. No one knew then what he did for people and how he helped them personally. He just was a great guy. And I have to say, he grew up in Indiana, Pennsylvania, this little town, and his father owned a hardware store there. And his father taught him a lot of wonderful things about morals. And I just think he was a great guy.
The post CS Interviews: Jimmy Hawkins and Karolyn Grimes Discuss It’s a Wonderful Life appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
7/10
William Friedkin
Written and directed by Alexandre O. Philippe
Click here to watch Leap of Faith!
Fans of The Exorcist should check out the new documentary Leap of Faith: William Friedkin on The Exorcist, which offers plenty of unique insight into the crazy production of everyone’s favorite demon-possesses-a-child gore fest straight from the mouth of the film’s Oscar-winning director. That is, unless you’ve already tuned in for Friedkin’s previous commentary recorded for the 25th Anniversary Special Edition DVD way back in the late 90s or watched the hundreds of documentaries, featurettes and fan videos that have floated around the internet over the last few decades.
Honestly, there’s not much more to say about The Exorcist; and yet, in Leap of Faith, Friedkin spends a good 90-minutes gleefully regurgitating oft-told stories about the contentious production, namely his intense dealings with composer Bernard Herman over the film’s score — “I think I can save this piece of shit!” — criticisms over the much maligned opening sequence in Iraq and some of the film’s more controversial moments involving child actress Linda Blair.
Chances are, you’ve heard all of this before; and while Friedkin’s energy is infectious — it’s clear he still carries a fondness for his picture even after nearly 50 years and 38 additional directing credits, including the classic cop drama The French Connection — particularly for a man who just turned 85, his conversational style at times feels more pompous than informative.
It doesn’t help that he sidesteps topics such as his abusive directing style that left stars Ellen Burstyn and Linda Blair with injuries they deal with even to this day; and blames any and all contentious interactions with individuals such as composer Lalo Schifrin, whose sprawling score was rejected on the spot in favor of Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells, on creative differences rather than his own abrasive personality.
At times, Friedkin is a little too revealing about his directing process to the point of unintentional hilarity. Take, for example, the scene in The Exorcist when a clock behind Father Merrin suddenly stops working. What does it mean? Is it foreshadowing? Is it symbolic? No, says, Friedkin, it just seemed like the right thing to do at the time.
“I don’t think there’s any conscious meaning behind my choices, but really I was just following my instinct,” the man explains. That’s great! But think of all the people who spent the last 45+ years debating the meaning behind that goddamned clock!
William Friedkin: accidental genius or brilliant man of intuition? You be the judge.
Though, it is telling that, in some weird way, Friedkin seems to believe The Exorcist’s production incurred divine intervention due to the importance of its story, which is clearly the only way to explain how and why everything came together at the right time to form a perfect blockbuster — one that continues to resonate in the public psyche despite its numerous sequels, remakes and rip-offs.
Is there such a thing as too much information ruining a classic film? Debatable. Regardless, someone should probably pull Friedkin aside and explain that a good magician never reveals his secrets.
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According to Deadline, Bob’s Burgers executive producing and writing duo Wendy Molyneux and Lizzie Molyneux-Loeglin, also known as The Molyneux Sisters have been tapped to pen Marvel Studios’ highly-anticipated third installment to the Ryan Reynolds-led Deadpool films.
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— Deadpool Movie (@deadpoolmovie) November 20, 2020
Kevin Feige and Disney Executive Chairman Bob Iger have both previously expressed an interest for future Deadpool films to maintain the R-rated content present in the first two films during their Fox tenure and sources report that Marvel Studios is looking to keep this intact, which would establish the third Reynolds-led outing as the first R-rated film from the Disney-owned studio. Meetings with writers have been ongoing for months, with the star and creative head finding he liked the pitch from the Great North co-creators the most and will work hand in hand with Feige and the duo to develop the script.
It’s currently unclear as to whether director David Leitch will return to helm the third installment in the franchise, with sources reporting that given his busy schedule through 2021, it’s unlikely but that the door remains open should he become available, though no word has been given as to why Deadpool 1 and 2 writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick are not returning to pen the latest outing.
Deadpool 2 premiered in May of 2018, and became the second highest grossing R-rated film with $743.8 million worldwide, sitting behind just the first Deadpool movie. Directed by David Leitch, Deadpool 2 finds Ryan Reynolds reprises his role as the Merc with a Mouth alongside Zazie Beetz (Atlanta) as the luck-manipulating mutant Domino and Josh Brolin as Cable, the time-traveling son of the X-Men’s Cyclops. Jack Kesy (The Strain, Baywatch) stars as Black Tom, with Japanese actress Shioli Kutsuna and Julian Dennison (Hunt for the Wilderpeople) playing Yukio and Firefist.
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Add Deadpool 2 to your 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray and DVD collection today and buy your copy by clicking here!
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After landing Golden Globe winner Awkwafina to join the cast, Apple’s upcoming sci-fi drama Swan Song has expanded its ensemble roster with the addition of seven-time Oscar nominee Glenn Close (Damages, Fatal Attraction), according to The Hollywood Reporter.
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Swan Song is set in the near future and explores how far someone will go, and how much they’ll sacrifice, to make a happier life for the people they love. Awkwafina (Crazy Rich Asians) is set to portray Kate, a close friend and confidant to Mahershala Ali’s Cameron in the film, while the Hillbilly Elegy star will appear as a scientist named Dr. Scott and Naomie Harris (No Time to Die) set for the role of Poppy, Cameron’s wife.
Oscar-winner Benjamin Cleary (Stutterer) will write and direct the project. Production on the feature is expected to begin in the spring. The movie will receive a theatrical release in addition to streaming on Apple TV+.
“Benjamin’s script for ‘Swan Song’ immediately connected with us,” Matt Dentler, Apple’s head of feature development and acquisitions, previously said in a statement. “We cannot wait to bring Benjamin’s vision together with Mahershala’s undeniable talent to deliver this powerfully layered story to audiences around the world.”
Cleary previously said in a statement, “I’ve been developing ‘Swan Song’ for a while and when I sat down with Apple it was immediately clear they completely understood my vision. Once Mahershala agreed to join us I knew we had something really special. To be making this movie with Mahershala and Anonymous at Apple is an absolute dream.”
“Benjamin Cleary is a rare talent who deftly weaves human emotion into his filmmaking in a way that harkens to many of the great films that began at Anonymous Content such as ‘Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind’ and ‘Being John Malkovich,’” Anonymous Content’s Adam Shulman and Jacob Perlin previously said in a statement. “We are tremendously grateful to be working with Mahershala Ali and Ben on this thought-provoking project, that we’re sure will be a conversation starter.”
Adam Shulman (Defending Jacob) and Jacob Perlin (The Amazing Johnathan Documentary) are set to produce Swan Song for Anonymous Content along with Ali.
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Ali’s upcoming projects include the sci-fi thriller Sovereign, the animated TV series adaptation Invincible, and, of course, starring as the new Blade in Marvel’s upcoming reboot.
(Photo Credit: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic)
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While fans eagerly await Daniel Craig’s final outing as the iconic MI6 agent and the game developer’s final installment in their latest Hitman trilogy, IO Interactive has surprised fans with the announcement of a James Bond video game in development exploring the origin story of Ian Fleming’s super spy. The announcement teaser can be viewed below!
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Project @007 (working title) is a brand new James Bond video game with a wholly original story.
Earn your 00 status in the very first James Bond origin story, to be developed and published by @IOInteractive.
More details: https://t.co/x2QeO2VKZB pic.twitter.com/d9aDhAbe90
— IO Interactive (@IOInteractive) November 19, 2020
The game, featuring the work title Project 007, will feature a wholly original James Bond story and allow players to step into the shoes of the world’s favorite secret agent to earn their 00 status in the very first origin story of Fleming’s fictional British MI6 spy.
IO Interactive, the studio behind the long-running Hitman franchise and the Kane & Lynch titles, are currently recruiting elite talent from around the world to join the team that will build out this exciting and unique gaming title. The gaming rights for the Bond franchise has exchanged hands multiple times over the years, with Rare delivering the fan-favorite GoldenEye 007 in 1995, while Electronic Arts delivered everything from Tomorrow Never Dies to James Bond 007: From Russia With Love during their run. Activision was the last publisher to release titles under the spy banner, with some projects including 007: Quantum of Solace, James Bond 007: Blood Stone and 007 Legends, all of which used the likeness of current film star Daniel Craig.
RELATED: No Time to Die: Watch the Music Video for Billie Eilish’s James Bond Theme
Craig is currently awaiting for the debut of his fifth and final outing in the central role, No Time to Die, which is currently slated for an April 2, 2021 release worldwide.
The post IO Interactive Reveals James Bond Origin Story Game in Development appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
At the rate David Leitch is building the cast for his upcoming action thriller Bullet Train, it could be one of the biggest ensemble casts in ages as Oscar winner Lady Gaga (A Star is Born) has joined the star-studded roster led by Brad Pitt, according to Collider.
RELATED: Brad Pitt-Led Bullet Train Lands Oscar Nominee Michael Shannon
Bullet Train will mark the eighth collaboration between Leitch (Hobbs & Shaw) and Pitt, who first worked together in 1999 on Fight Club on which Leitch worked as an uncredited stunt double for Pitt, followed by 2001’s The Mexican, Ocean’s Eleven and Spy Game, the latter two in which he doubled again for Pitt and helped coordinate the martial arts stunts on the Tony Scott-helmed film. Leitch would once again double for Pitt in 2004’s Troy and 2005’s Mr. & Mrs. Smith and would later reunite with the star in 2018’s Deadpool 2, in which Pitt cameoed as Vanisher and Leitch directed.
On top of directing, Leitch will supervise the script written by Zak Olkewicz (Fear Street). Plot details for the film are currently being kept under wraps, but it is based on the Japanese novel Maria Beetle by Isaka Kotaro. The cast for the film, led by Pitt, already includes Aaron Taylor-Johnson (Kick-Ass), Andrew Koji (Warrior), Joey King (The Lie), Brian Tyree Henry (Atlanta), Zazie Beetz (Deadpool 2), Michael Shannon (The Shape of Water) and Masi Oka (Spies in Disguise).
Leitch and Kelly McCormick will produce the project via their company 87North along with Antoine Fuqua (The Magnificent Seven, Training Day, The Equalizer) and Kat Samick (The Equalizer, Southpaw, Infinite). Brittany Morrissey is the executive overseeing the film for Sony Pictures.
RELATED: Joey King in Talks for Brad Pitt-Starring Bullet Train
Leitch and McCormick recently signed a first-look deal at Universal and produced the action film Nobody, starring Better Call Saul’s Bob Odenkirk, which is expected to release in February 2021. The duo is also developing a biopic of Jutta Kleinschmidt, the first and only woman to win the brutal off-road endurance race known as The Dakar Rally, as well as the rights to her book My Victory at Dakar.
(Photo Credit: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)
The post David Leitch-Helmed Bullet Train Adds Lady Gaga to Cast appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
The schedule for the movie and TV titles coming to Amazon Prime Video in December has been revealed, which you can view below! This includes the world premieres of new Amazon originals such as: Sound of Metal starring Riz Ahmed and Olivia Cooke; the crime drama film I’m Your Woman starring Golden Globe winner Rachel Brosnahan; and the romance drama film Sylvie’s Love led by MCU star Tessa Thompson.
RELATED: The Wilds Trailer: Teen Girls Get Stuck on an Island in New Amazon Series
Available December 1
12 Disasters (2012) (Moviesphere)
2012 (2009)
Air Force One (1997)
A League Of Their Own (1992)
Anaconda (1997)
Angels & Demons (2009)
Assassin Of Youth (1938)
Body Of Evidence (1993)
Cake (2006)
Christmas Chalet (2019) (Up Faith & Family)
Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs (2009)
Diary Of A Mad Black Woman (2005)
Dr. No (1963)
Euphoria (2019)
Full Moon High (1981)
Gandhi (1982)
Ghost Town (1936)
Goldeneye (1995)
Goldfinger (1965)
Gringo: The Dangerous Life of John McAfee (2016) (Showtime)
Gun Brothers (1956)
Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (2008)
Harold & Kumar Go To White Castle (2004)
Hemingway’s Garden Of Eden (2010)
Hot Air (2019)
Into the Blue (2005)
Letters to Juliet (2010)
Los Rodriguez el más allá (2019) (Pantaya)
Love at the Christmas Table (2012) (Lifetime Movie Club)
Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist (2008)
Outlaw’s Son (1957)
Priest (2011)
Snowbound for Christmas (2019) (Up Faith & Family)
Spanglish (2004)
Thank You For Smoking (2006)
The Chumscrubber (2005)
The Hurt Locker (2009)
The King’s Speech (2010)
The Kingmaker (2019) (Showtime)
The Natural (1984)
The People Vs. Larry Flynt (1996)
The Pursuit Of Happyness (2006)
The Spy Who Loved Me (1997)
Tombstone (1993)
True Confessions (1981)
True Lies (1994)
Why Did I Get Married? (2007)
Year One (2009)
A House Divided: Season 1 (Urban Movie Channel)
City On A Hill: Season 1 (Showtime)
Enterprice: Season 1 (Topic)
George Gently: Season 1 (Acorn TV)
How the States Got Their Shapes: Season 1 (History Vault)
Idiomatic: Season 1 (Sundance Now)
Lidia Celebrates America Home for the Holidays: Season 1 (PBS Living)
L Word Generation Q: Season 1 (Showtime)
Mr. Selfridge: Season 1 (PBS Masterpiece)
Murder in the Bayou: Season 1 (Showtime)
My Crazy Ex: Season 1 (A&E Crime Central)
No Passport Required: Season 1 (PBS Living)
NOVA: The Planets: Season 1 (PBS Documentaries)
Ray Donovan: Season 1 (Showtime)
Roadkill: Season 1 (MotorTrend)
Spanish Princess: Season 1 (STARZ)
The Affair: Season 1 (Showtime)
The Berlin Dance School: Season 1 (PBS Masterpiece)
Tom & Jerry Tales: Season 1 (Boomerang)
Wild Kratts: China Adventure: Season 1 (PBS Kids)
Work in Progress: Season 1 (Showtime)
RELATED: New to Hulu December 2020: All the Movies & Shows Coming & Going
Available December 4
Sound of Metal – Amazon Original Movie (2020)
Available December 7
Valley Girl (2020)
Available December 8
The Bernie Mac Show: Seasons 1-5
Mad About You: Seasons 1-8
Available December 11
I’m Your Woman – Amazon Original Movie (2020)
Clifford the Big Red Dog – Amazon Original Series: Season 3A
The Wilds – Amazon Original Series: Season 1
Victoria Small (Pequeña Victoria): Season 1
Available December 16
The Expanse – Amazon Original Series: Season 5
Available December 17
La Pachanga (1958)
Available December 18
Blackbird (2020)
The Grand Tour Presents: A Massive Hunt – Amazon Original Special
Available December 23
Pawn Sacrifice (2015)
Someone Marry Barry (2017)
The Little Hours (2017)
Available December 25
Sylvie’s Love – Amazon Original Movie (2020)
Soldiers Of Fortune (2012)
RELATED: Disney+ Movies and TV Titles for December 2020 Revealed!
Available December 27
The House Sitter (2016)
Available December 28
Hope Gap (2020)
Available December 30
Yearly Departed – Amazon Original Special
Available December 31
Supervized (2019)
The post Amazon Prime Video December 2020 Movie and TV Titles Announced appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
After finding his first critical and commercial success with last year’s disaster monster pic Crawl, Alexandre Aja has lined up another new project with Searchlight Pictures’ horror pic Elijah as the now-Disney-owned label looks to continue their genre streak following Ready or Not and Antlers, according to Deadline.
RELATED: Alexandre Aja to Direct Interactive Haunted House Film for Amblin
The film, which is being penned by The Last Witch Hunter scribe Cory Goodman and rewrites by frequent Aja collaborator Gregory Levasseur (Mirrors), will center on a young boy who invites a mysterious man into his home in hopes he will be the key to saving his ailing mother, but as increasingly disturbing things begin to occur around the home, he soon realizes the stranger may not be who he says he is.
The project will be produced by Adam Goldworm of Aperture Entertainment (The Last Witch Hunter, My Friend Dahmer) alongside David Goyer (Terminator: Dark Fate, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice) and Keith Levine (The Night House) via their Phantom Four Films production banner, while Searchlight’s SVP of Production DanTram Nguyen will oversee the film with Manager Apolline Berty.
Alongside Elijah, Goodman recently sold his sci-fi thriller script Oberlin Incident and holiday adventure comedy pitch Merry Little Christmas to Paramount Pictures, the Dwayne Johnson-led Lore to Warner Bros. for seven figures and Hood to Sony, the latter two which he co-wrote with Jeremy Lott.
RELATED: Scream 5 Gets a Title, Plus Wrap Photos From the Set!
The horror film also marks a reunion between Aja and Searchlight Pictures, with the 42-year-old French filmmaker having previously worked with the former Fox studio on the 2006 remake of Wes Craven’s cult classic horror-thriller The Hills Have Eyes.
(Photo Credit: Marc Piasecki/WireImage)
The post Searchlight Pictures Taps Alexandre Aja for Horror Pic Elijah appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
The schedule for the new movie and TV titles coming to Hulu in December has been revealed, which you can view below along with the titles that are set to leave from the streaming service next month. This includes the series debut of new Hulu original, The Hardy Boys which is based on long-running mystery novel series of the same name.
RELATED: The Princess: 20th Century Studios & Hulu Nabs Joey King-Led Spec
2020 films such as: MGM’s Valley Girl remake starring Jessica Rothe, STXfilms’ adaptation of The Secret Garden starring Colin Firth, and NEON’s thriller film She Dies Tomorrow will also be available for streaming next month.
Available December 1
CMA Country Christmas: Special (ABC)
Disney Holiday Singalong: Special (ABC)
Lupin the 3rd Part 5: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed & Subbed) (TMS)
30 Days of Night (2007)
50 First Dates (2004)
About Last Night (1986)
Angels & Demons (2009)
Any Given Sunday (1999)
Black Dynamite (2009)
Body of Evidence (1993)
Cake (2006)
Charlotte’s Web (1973)
Cliffhanger (1993)
Con Air (1997)
Diary Of A Mad Black Woman (2005)
Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist (2005)
Dr. No (1962)
Dragonball: Evolution (2009)
Euphoria (2018)
Eyes Wide Shut (1999)
Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties (2006)
Goldeneye (1995)
Goldfinger (1964)
Hemingway’s Garden of Eden (2010)
Here On Earth (1999)
Hot Air (2018)
Into the Blue (2005)
Love Potion No. 9 (1992)
Our Family Wedding (2009)
Sands of Iwo Jima (1950)
Shrink (2009)
Sleeping with the Enemy (1991)
Southside With You (2016)
Strategic Air Command (1955)
Sunshine (2007)
The 6th Day (2000)
The Chumscrubber (2005)
The Client (1994)
The Color of Money (1986)
The Da Vinci Code (2006)
The Fifth Element (1997)
The Hand that Rocks the Cradle (1992)
The Hulk (2003)
The Hurt Locker (2008)
The January Man (1989)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (2001)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King (2003)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers (2002)
The Mummy: Tomb of The Dragon Emperor (2008)
The November Man (2014)
The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)
The Young Victoria (2009)
True Confessions (1981)
Two Weeks (2006)
Under the Tuscan Sun (2003)
Why Did I Get Married? (2007)
Available December 4
The Hardy Boys: Complete Season 1 (Hulu Original)
Brassic: Complete Season 2 (ITV)
Deutschland 89: Complete Season 1 (Sundance)
My Hero Academia: Complete Season 4 (Dubbed) (Funimation)
She Dies Tomorrow (2020)
Available December 5
Black Ops (2020)
God’s Own Country (2017)
It Had To Be You (2015)
Mr. Jones (2020)
Waiting For The Barbarians (2020)
Available December 6
How To Fake A War (2019)
The Secret Garden (2020)
Available December 7
Valley Girl (2020)
Available December 8
Nurses: Series Premiere (NBC)
The Fairy Princess and the Unicorn (2020)
Available December 10
Dr. Seuss’ The Grinch Musical! (NBC)
Out Stealing Horses (2019)
Available December 11
Madagascar: A Little Wild: Complete Season 2 (Hulu Original)
Rent-A-Pal (2020)
Spy Cat (2020)
Available December 12
Endless (2020)
Available December 15
Dirt Music (2019)
Hitman: Agent 47 (2015)
Available December 16
Amy Winehouse: A Final Goodbye (2016)
RELATED: Lamorne Morris’ Woke Renewed for a Second Season at Hulu
Available December 18
The Hero (2017)
Available December 21
NOS4A2: Complete Season 2 (AMC)
Available December 22
You Cannot Kill David Arquette (2020)
Available December 23
Someone Marry Barry (2014)
The Little Hours (2017)
Available December 25
Soldiers of Fortune (2012)
Available December 26
Letterkenny: Complete Season 9 (Hulu Original)
Available December 27
The Masked Singer: Season 5 Premiere (FOX)
American Animals (2018)
Available December 28
Hope Gap (2020)
Our Idiot Brother (2011)
Available December 31
Bayou Caviar (2018)
Supervized (2019)
RELATED: The Hardy Boys Trailer Previews Hulu’s Newest TV Adaptation of Mystery Novel Series
Leaving December 8
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)
The Rocky Horror Picture Show: Let’s Do The Time Warp Again (2016)
Leaving December 14
Baby…Secret Of The Lost Legend (1985)
Leaving December 16
The Good Shepherd (2006)
Leaving December 31
30 Days of Night (2007)
A Beautiful Mind (2001)
A Nanny For Christmas (2010)
A View to a Kill (1985)
About Last Night (1986)
Aeon Flux (2005)
Alien Nation (1988)
Anti-Trust (2001)
Antwone Fisher (2002)
Any Given Sunday (1999)
Back to School (1986)
Barbershop (2002)
Black Dynamite (2009)
Blood Ties (2014)
Broadcast News (1987)
Cliffhanger (1993)
Crimson Tide (1995)
Diamonds Are Forever (1971)
Diary Of A Mad Black Woman (2005)
Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist (2005)
Dr. No (1962)
Drugstore Cowboy (1989)
Flashback (1990)
For Your Eyes Only (1981)
From Russia with Love (1964)
Goldeneye (1995)
Goldfinger (1964)
Good Hair (2009)
Grizzly Man (2005)
House Of 1000 Corpses (2003)
I Spy (2002)
Ice Age: The Meltdown (2006)
Interview With the Vampire (1994)
Into the Blue (2005)
Joe (2014)
Justin Bieber: Never Say Never (2011)
Kicking & Screaming (2005)
Kiss the Girls (1997)
Knocked Up (2007)
Licence to Kill (1989)
Little Giants (1994)
Live and Let Die (1973)
Lord of War (2005)
Lost in Space (1998)
Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985)
March of the Penguins (2005)
Moonraker (1979)
Mr. Majestyk (1974)
Mud (2013)
My Bloody Valentine (1981)
Not Another Teen Movie (2001)
Nurse 3D (2014)
Octopussy (1983)
On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969)
Pacific Heights (1990)
Platoon (1986)
Raging Bull (1980)
Ronin (1998)
Senorita Justice (2004)
Sleeping with the Enemy (1991)
Slow Burn (2007)
Some Kind of Wonderful (1987)
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982)
Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984)
Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)
Star Trek: Insurrection (1998)
Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street (2007)
Thanks for Sharing (2013)
The 6th Day (2000)
The Bourne Identity (2002)
The Bourne Supremacy (2004)
The Bourne Ultimatum (2007)
The Client (1994)
The Color of Money (1986)
The Do-Deca-Pentathlon (2011)
The End of Violence (1997)
The Express (2008)
The Hand that Rocks the Cradle (1992)
The Hulk (2003)
The Kingdom Of Heaven (2005)
The Living Daylights (1987)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (2001)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King (2003)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Two Towers (2002)
The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)
The Mummy: Tomb of The Dragon Emperor (2008)
The Net (1995)
The Saint (1997)
The Spy Who Loved Me (1977)
The Weather Man (2005)
The World is Not Enough (1999)
The Young Victoria (2009)
This Christmas (2007)
Thunderball (1965)
Tomorrow Never Dies (1997)
Under the Tuscan Sun (2003)
Wanted (2008)
Why Did I Get Married? (2007)
Wild Hogs (2007)
Wild Things (1998)
William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet (1996)
Working Girl (1988)
You Only Live Twice (1967)
The post New to Hulu December 2020: All the Movies & Shows Coming & Going appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
Co-writer/director Zack Snyder has continually given fans new exciting looks at the infamous new cut of Justice League but now star Joe Manganiello has taken to Twitter to unveil a new look at his portrayal of iconic DC Comics villain Deathstroke to raise awareness for the Autumn Snyder Tribute Fund. The new look can be viewed below!
RELATED: Zack Snyder’s Justice League Previews New Design of Steppenwolf
Heroes & Villains can put their differences aside for an important cause… https://t.co/bu2ldmhUUq#UsUnited #AFSP
Photo: @ZackSnyder pic.twitter.com/0WO6ixaWHd
— JOE MANGANIELLO (@JoeManganiello) November 19, 2020
Zack Snyder’s Justice League will reportedly cost around $70 million in order to properly finish the editing and visual effects of the director’s original vision, as well as the additional photography. The original post-production crew is also expected to return along with the cast members to record additional dialogue for the cut.
It was revealed at DC FanDome that the movie will release on HBO Max in 2021 by being broken up into four one-hour parts that will also be released as one four-hour film.
Fueled by the hero’s restored faith in humanity and inspired by Superman’s selfless act, Justice League sees Bruce Wayne enlist the help of his newfound ally, Diana Prince, to face an even greater enemy. Together, Batman and Wonder Woman work quickly to find and recruit a team of metahumans to stand against this newly awakened threat. But despite the formation of this unprecedented league of heroes—Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, Cyborg, and The Flash—it may already be too late to save the planet from an assault of catastrophic proportions.
Justice League, which features a screenplay from Chris Terrio from a story by Snyder and Terrio, stars Ben Affleck as Batman, Henry Cavill as Superman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Ezra Miller as The Flash, Ray Fisher as Cyborg, Willem Dafoe as Nuidis Vulko, Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor, Jeremy Irons as Alfred Pennyworth, Diane Lane as Martha Kent, Connie Nielsen as Queen Hippolyta, with J.K. Simmons as Commissioner Gordon, and Amy Adams as Lois Lane.
RELATED: CS Soapbox: How Jared Leto’s Joker Fits Into Zack Snyder’s Justice League
Released in November 2017, the film earned mixed reviews from critics and audiences alike, praising the action and performances from Gadot and Miller while criticizing every other aspect of the film, namely the inconsistent tone that many fault Joss Whedon (The Avengers) for after taking over directorial duties from Snyder. With a large budget of $300 million and a break-even point of $750 million, the film is considered a box office bomb having grossed only $658 million.
The post Joe Manganiello Reveals New Look at Justice League’s Deathstroke appeared first on ComingSoon.net.