After swimming its way to over $530 million worldwide in 2018, Warner Bros. announced early development on a follow-up to its monster shark movie The Meg and now the studio is getting the wheels turning as they’ve landed Ben Wheatley (Rebecca) to helm the sequel, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
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Most of the talent from the box office smash original are expected to return for the sequel, including star Jason Statham (Hobbs & Shaw), who sources report is involved in the creative development of the film, as well as scribes Jon and Erich Hoeber and Dean Georgaris, the duo having written the most recent draft while all three received credit on the first film.
The sequel, reportedly being based off the second novel in Steven Alten’s best-selling series of the same name The Meg: The Trench, will once again be produced by Lorenzo di Bonaventura and Belle Avery, with Catherine Ying, Li Ruigang, E. Bennett Walsh, Gerald Molen and Randy Greenberg attached to executive produce.
Click here to purchase the 2018 blockbuster action pic!
In the first film, a deep-sea submersible—part of an international undersea observation program—has been attacked by a massive creature, previously thought to be extinct, and now lies disabled at the bottom of the deepest trench in the Pacific…with its crew trapped inside. With time running out, expert deep-sea rescue diver Jonas Taylor (Jason Statham) is recruited by a visionary Chinese oceanographer (Winston Chao), against the wishes of his daughter Suyin (Li Bingbing), to save the crew—and the ocean itself—from this unstoppable threat: a pre-historic 75-foot-long shark known as the Megalodon.
What no one could have imagined is that years before, Taylor had encountered this same terrifying creature. Now, teamed with Suyin, he must confront his fears and risk his own life to save everyone trapped below…bringing him face to face once more with the greatest and largest predator of all time.
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John Turteltaub (National Treasure) directed the film from a screenplay by Dean Georgaris and Jon Hoeber & Erich Hoeber, based on the New York Times best-selling book by Steve Alten.
(Photo Credit: Barry King/Getty Images)
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After getting the chance to catch the mind-bending sci-fi pic at Beyond Fest, ComingSoon.net got the opportunity to chat with co-directors/writer Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead to discuss their latest project Synchronic, which is now available in select theaters! Our interview can be viewed in the player below!
RELATED: [Beyond Fest] Synchronic Review: A Mesmerizing Albeit Heavy-Handed Trip
In Synchronic, when New Orleans paramedics and longtime best friends Steve and Dennis are called to a series of bizarre, gruesome accidents, they chalk it up to the mysterious new party drug found at the scene. But after Dennis’s oldest daughter suddenly disappears, Steve stumbles upon a terrifying truth about the supposed psychedelic that will challenge everything he knows about reality—and the flow of time itself.
The film stars Anthony Mackie (Altered Carbon, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier) as Steve, Jamie Dornan (The Fall, Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy) as Dennis, Ally Ioannides (Parenthood) as Brianna, and Katie Aselton (Legion) as Tara.
RELATED: CS Interview: Writer/Director/Star Jim Cummings on The Wolf of Snow Hollow
Synchronic is co-directed by Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead (The Endless, Spring) from a screenplay written by Benson. The mind-bending, time-traveling sci-fi thriller is now available in select theaters from Well Go USA Entertainment.
The post CS Video: Synchronic Interview With Justin Benson & Aaron Moorhead appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
ComingSoon.net recently got the opportunity to chat with writer/director Ryan Spindell (50 States of Fright) and Clancy Brown (Promising Young Woman) to discuss their work on the horror-comedy anthology The Mortuary Collection, which is now available to stream on Shudder! Our interview can be viewed in the player below!
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The Mortuary Collection is the feature debut from writer/director Spindell, who also contributed to Quibi and Sam Raimi’s celebrated 50 States of Fright, and stars beloved character actor Clancy Brown, widely recognized as one of the most prolific and versatile performers in Hollywood, and best known for his roles in Highlander, The Shawshank Redemption, Starship Troopers as well as Brother Justin Crowe on HBO’s Carnivàle, Kelvin Inman on ABC’s Lost and as the voice of Mr. Krabs in SpongeBob SquarePants.
Click here to watch the horror-comedy anthology!
In the town of Raven’s End, nothing is as it seems… Desperate for work, a young drifter (Caitlin Fisher) applies for a job at the local mortuary on the outskirts of town. There she meets Montgomery Dark, (Brown) an eccentric mortician with more than a few skeletons in his closet. Montgomery chronicles the strange history of the town through a series of twisted tales, each more terrifying than the last. But the drifter’s world becomes unhinged when she discovers that the final story is her own!
The film also stars Fisher (Teen Wolf), Jacob Elordi (Euphoria), Barak Hardley (Spell), Sarah Hey (Braid) and Christine Kilmer. The Mortuary Collection is produced by Spindell, Allison Friedman and T. Justin Ross with special effects from the Academy Award Winning company Amalgamated Dynamics, Inc., who worked on Tremors, Death Becomes Her, Starship Troopers and many more!
RELATED: CS Video: Scare Me Interview With Writer/Director/Star Josh Ruben
The Mortuary Collection is now available to stream on Shudder!
The post CS Interview: Ryan Spindell & Clancy Brown on The Mortuary Collection appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
ComingSoon.net got the opportunity to chat with acclaimed director Ben Wheatley (Free Fire) to discuss his work adapting Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca starring Armie Hammer (Death on the Nile) and Lily James (Baby Driver), which is now available to stream on Netflix!
RELATED: Rebecca Trailer: Lily James & Armie Hammer in Netflix’s Gothic Drama
ComingSoon.net: Rebecca is such an iconic novel and obviously Hitchcock made it into a film as well. But what about it drove you to want to try your own hand at it?
Ben Wheatley: I think it was — I read the Jane Goldman script and really enjoyed it, and I fell for all the twists in the script. I was surprised by that because I thought I knew it inside and out and I kind of didn’t. I’d seen the film and read the book, so that confused me, you know? I figured that — what’s happened with Rebecca is that it’s become like a kind of, this cultural touchstone and it casts such a long shadow that it’s kind of become part of the furniture, almost. There’s elements of it that are just completely misremembered, and I figured that if I’d misremembered it, then that’s something maybe that a modern audience would have a similar reaction. I talked to a few people about it, and everyone was going, “Oh yeah, I remember Rebecca, it’s just slightly, such a beautiful romance, you know?” And you’re like, “Yeah, kind of. Not really, though. For a little bit.” I think that’s the thing, and when I re-read it, what I really loved about it was that thing of like, du Maurier had this scheme of it felt to me like she had this idea that she was basically trolling, and she was just going to, oh, I’m going to do this romance novel and then ruin all other romance novels for all time for everybody, you know? Like taking the perfect guy who’s like this widower in this amazing house with loads of money, and then turning him into absolute swine, you know? And now on top of that, I’m going to then implicate the audience in on this as well, so that by the time you get to the end of the book, you’re kind of cheering and going, oh yeah, that’s brilliant. You’ve never loved Rebecca anyway and she’s dead and they can be together.
Then, you know, depending, the other shoe drops you go, “Oh Christ. But their whole happiness is like, basically built on a dead woman’s corpse, you know?” We’ve only got Maxim de Winter’s word for how it happened or for any of the reasons of the circumstances of it, which are all kind of very dubious, you know? So that kind of drew me into it, and the fact that it’s like the blueprint for kind of all thrillers. Yet, it’s still bolder than a lot of thrillers that come out, that are done today, in the fact that at the heart of it, there is this kind of moral kind of conundrum of how far are you prepared to go for your partner. How much is love worth? It’s a thriller that will take characters who are morally repugnant and not punish them. You know, most things don’t have the balls to do that, and Rebecca does.
CS: So then in building your cast, I mean, you have such a nice blend of both American and English actors, albeit the Americans are playing English characters. What was it like for you seeking out everybody for their specific roles?
BW: I mean, obviously there’s a long history of British actors playing American, and I’m always surprised about it. You know, I remember when I didn’t realize that Idris Elba was English until I looked him up on IMDb when I was watching The Wire and went, “Whoa? What’s that?” [laughs]. You know, and that’s always really fascinating to me, that. To step back the other way for Armie Hammer to come and play an Englishman was great, and also, he’s got massive stones to do that, because I don’t think there’s anything more snooty than a British crew for listening to accents, you know? But he pulled it off. I mean, for me, what I loved about Armie, or what I do love about Armie is that he’s this kind of man out of time, you know? He’s like a 1940s matinee idol, almost the last of the matinee idols. So we needed that for the beginning of the film, to make it make sense in terms of like, the romance of the story. Basically, the structure of the film is what I’m characterizing as the other one falls, you know? So, as Lily James has to play becoming stronger, Armie Hammer has to kind of crumble into dust, effectively, you know? So with Lily, it was, yeah, that was the main thing of like, I mean, one of the great things about Lily is that she’s so likable. So the audience will follow her to the end of the world, which is fantastic. But she also then has a kind of complicated craft, challenge of playing this role, which is very kind of paranoid and nervous and kind of — but then not playing it too nervous because it becomes irritating or not playing it too strong because then it breaks the story. So there’s a lot of work that went into that. With Kristin Scott Thomas it was more that we were looking at a kind of more rounded Danvers, and so, it needed someone who could play the authority and kind of sternness of Danvers, but also like the vulnerability and the kind of emotion of this new version of her. So you know, with someone as skilled as Kristin, it was that you had to be someone of that kind of caliber to pull it off, I think.
CS: So you’ve done plenty of period pieces before, but what was it like building the immaculate period setting for this one?
BW: Yeah, I mean, the toy box of filmmaking, when you get to do period stuff and you get to be on large sets with large amounts of extras in costume is magic. It’s a great privilege and you get to look around and you feel like you’ve almost time traveled, and it feels like filmmaking, in a way, and that’s a big buzz. It’s not everything, but it is a big buzz and you kind of go — for me it’s when they get the period cars out. I’m like, “Yeah, come on. That’s great to see them.” Also that level of filmmaking is the control over the image that you have, right down to every tiny prop and everything means something, everything is structured in a certain way. So it’s kind of — yeah, it’s a great pleasure.
CS: What would you say were some of your biggest creative challenges, bringing this story to life for a new audience?
BW: I mean, finding Manderley itself was tricky because we felt that it was something that de Maurier had imagined. When you read the biographies about de Maurier, the house itself is a memory of a house that she visited as a child. So when it’s described in the book, it feels like it’s much bigger than a normal house would be. And I think that’s because it’s from a child’s perspective. So that meant that the house itself was very — we were never going to find that house because it didn’t exist. You know, it couldn’t exist. So it was made from the best bits of many, many British houses. And then that became — so that was at the center of it, at the beginning of the whole hunt for the making of the film was to find Manderley, and then we quickly realized we were going to have to make it out of lots of parts. And then the knock on that was a lot of complicated production challenges to get that right. But I guess the rest of it is kind of, is how you bring to screen a novel which is in the first person effectively. Do you slavishly translate the novel directly to screen? Or I mean, and what we found was there seems to be a gap between what the main character is saying and what she’s doing that suggests that what she’s saying to us isn’t necessarily true. So that gives you a license to change the books to a degree, but to try to chase the essence of the book, rather than if you absolutely translate what she said on the page, then you might miss the action point of the book. Do you see what I mean? So finding that level was complicated.
CS: Well, it comes across very well on the screen. So, I mean, since you mentioned the mansion, it’s such a beautifully shot location. Where was that exactly?
BW: Well, it was like, six different places. Hatfield House is one of them, and Loseley House, there was about four or five places across the UK. So the front of the house was somewhere else and some of the bedroom was one place. Rebecca’s bedroom was a set, that was a build and the boathouse itself was a build as well. So it was a mixture of lots of different places.
CS: Which would you say was your favorite to film amongst all the locations?
BW: Well, the curse of filmmaking is that you go to places that are really beautiful and then you have to be under a massive amount of stress and misery as you make stuff there, so you don’t really get to enjoy any of it. So because we shot the first 20 minutes of the film in the south of France, which you think would be amazing and all the catering was incredible and blah, blah, blah, which is true. But then you’re there and they say “it’s location not vacation.” So you’re there in the beautiful weather just terrified that you’re not going to shoot all the stuff that you need to shoot. So I think I probably would enjoy it, if I wasn’t filming now. I’d have to go back and kind of sit in a sun lounger, you know?
CS: What was it also like working with Netflix for this one? I mean, you’ve worked with a lot of indie studios, but this is really your first time with streaming services, off the top of my head.
BW: Well, kind of. I mean, A Field in England was done with Film4, that was the one that had the kind of multi-release, so it was in the cinema and free on TV at the same time, like an all-platform release. The last film, Colin Burstead, was done through BBC. So again, it was like a limited release and then straight onto the screen. So it’s not that unusual to me to have done it like this. What’s different is the scale of it, you know, like Netflix being massive and it’s the first experience of kind of a Hollywood studio style kind of production and the layers of executives and that whole kind of way of working, and I really enjoyed it. One of the main things that attracted me to the whole project was to get to that bigger audience, and as much as it’s brilliant fun making indie films and talking to the indie audience, to get to the big mainstream audience is a big treat.
CS: So how do you feel about it coming to audiences in both select theaters and on Netflix with everything that’s kind of going on right now with people still at home and such?
BW: Yeah, I mean, it’s a miserable time, and it would be awful of me to say anything that’s meant I had an advantage from this terrible time, you know what I mean? But the fact that it’s not a compromise for us that it’s going straight onto Netflix. That’s how it was always designed. If there’d been no COVID, that’s what would’ve happened, and the limited release, there would’ve been more expectation for it, but it wouldn’t have been any bigger than it is going to be for the way we’re doing at the moment. So you know, I think that side of it is — I mean, personally, I’m starved for content. I want to see stuff. I’m looking at it and going, “What’s dropping?” There’s nothing dropping. The VOD stuff ran out six months ago, didn’t it? And it’s really just kind of very vague stuff that’s just once in a blue moon, you know?
CS: So now that you’ve got another film in the can and coming to audiences, do you have anything in the works for when everything starts getting back to normal?
BW: Yeah, I wrote a film during lockdown and then shot it. So we shot a feature a couple of months ago, which was more like a back to basics in the woods kind of horror movie. So that was brilliant. You know, it’s great to get out of the house. Great to do some work. Very excited about that film. But I think that’ll be the patent of how I work from going forward, hopefully from larger projects back to smaller projects, backwards and forwards, because I enjoy low budget as much as I enjoy doing the big budget stuff. And you know, just to be making films is an incredible treat. So that’s kind of where it’s at. And I think there’s something weird about — it’s going to be a very odd time coming up for cinema, and it’s not just about the cinema chains and the exhibition and all that stuff. It’s more about what the actual content of the stories is going to be and how films, stories that made sense seven months ago maybe won’t make any sense anymore, and what our appetites are for what kind of narratives we want to see. I certainly had stuff in development that was about zombies and stuff, and that’s all just gone. No one wants to know about that. I think you should pack the zombie film away for a good decade after what we’ve just been through.
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The film co-stars Kristin Scott Thomas, Keeley Hawes, Ann Dowd, Sam Riley, Tom Goodman-Hill, Mark Lewis Jones, John Hollingworth and Bill Paterson.
After a whirlwind romance in Monte Carlo with handsome widower Maxim de Winter (Armie Hammer), a newly married young woman (Lily James) arrives at Manderley, her new husband’s imposing family estate on a windswept English coast. Naive and inexperienced, she begins to settle into the trappings of her new life, but finds herself battling the shadow of Maxim’s first wife, the elegant and urbane Rebecca, whose haunting legacy is kept alive by Manderley’s sinister housekeeper Mrs. Danvers (Kristin Scott Thomas).
Directed by Wheatley (High Rise, Free Fire) and produced by Eric Fellner, Tim Bevan and Nira Park of Working Title Films (Emma, Darkest Hour), Rebecca features a screenplay by Jane Goldman and Joe Shrapnel & Anna Waterhouse.
Rebecca is now available to stream on Netflix!
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Following Jared Leto’s surprising return as Joker in Zack Snyder’s Justice League, Collider brings word that another casting addition has been made for the long-awaited Snyder Cut with Joe Manganiello set to reprise his role as Slade Wilson a.k.a. Deathstroke. His return for the reshoots might potentially indicate that Deathstroke will now have a much longer screen time, compared to his brief appearance during the post-credits scene in 2017’s Justice League. Manganiello and Leto will reportedly be joining Ben Affleck, Ray Fisher, and Amber Heard for the four-episode HBO Max miniseries’ reshoots that are currently underway.
RELATED: Kevin Costner Will Neither Confirm Nor Deny Appearance in the Snyder Cut
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: Joe Manganiello Talks Original Deathstroke Post Credit Scene
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 Zack Snyder’s Justice League: Joe Manganiello Reprising Deathstroke for Reshoots appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
ComingSoon.net has received an exclusive video from Lakeshore Records and Orion Pictures offering a deep dive into the development of the musical score for Jim Cummings’ acclaimed horror-comedy The Wolf of Snow Hollow, which can be viewed in the player below!
RELATED: CS Interview: Writer/Director/Star Jim Cummings on The Wolf of Snow Hollow
Composed by Ben Lovett (The Ritual, The Wind), the album is a strikingly orchestrated, multi-faceted work inspired by old school Bernard Herrmann-era suspense thrillers reflecting all the dimensions of the offbeat horror film — from darkly comedic to tension-fueled terror to oddball mystery caper. The album includes the newly reimagined cover version of “Little Red Riding Hood” originally performed by Sam the Sham & the Pharaohs in 1966, and given a seductive and thoroughly haunting treatment by Lovett and indie artist Valen. The album follows the release of the EP Little Red Riding Hood which includes four versions of Lovett’s adaption including a full Acapella arrangement of Valen’s vocal parts.
Click here to digitally purchase The Wolf of Snow Hollow!
Click here to purchase the soundtrack from Lakeshore Records!
Written and directed by Jim Cummings, the film follows a small-town sheriff struggling with a failed marriage, a rebellious daughter, and a lackluster department, as he is tasked with solving a series of brutal murders that are occurring on the full moon. As he’s consumed by the hunt for the killer, he struggles to remind himself that there’s no such thing as werewolves.
Alongside Forster, the cast for the film includes Riki Lindhome (Knives Out, Under the Silver Lake), Jimmy Tatro (American Vandal, The King of Staten Island) and Chloe East (Kevin (Probably) Saves the World, Next Level).
RELATED: [Beyond Fest] The Wolf of Snow Hollow Review: Subversive, Offbeat & Quietly Thrilling
The Wolf of Snow Hollow is now available in select theaters and on digital platforms and VOD just in time for the Halloween season!
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Following a halt in production after a few crew members tested positive for COVID-19, filmmaker Colin Trevorrow revealed they have resumed filming Jurassic World: Dominion in the UK by sharing a new behind-the-scenes photo featuring original franchise stars Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and Jeff Goldblum, which you can check out below!
Back. pic.twitter.com/OC9f5Z0k6H
— Colin Trevorrow (@colintrevorrow) October 23, 2020
RELATED: CS Video: Laura Dern Talks Return for Jurassic World: Dominion
“The ‘Jurassic World’ cast and crew are back to work, with the spirit of a legend watching over them while they create together,” said production company Amblin (via Variety).
According to the outlet, key cast members were still shooting during the brief hiatus, filming secondary sequences. Production resumed “shooting main scenes again last Friday.”
Steven Spielberg and Colin Trevorrow return to executive produce Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment’s Dominion, with Trevorrow once again directing the next chapter in one of the biggest franchises in the history of cinema. Producers Frank Marshall and Pat Crowley once again partner with Spielberg and Trevorrow in leading the filmmakers for this installment.
The upcoming threequel will be starring returning cast members from the first two Jurassic World films include Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Jake Johnson, Omar Sy Daniella Pineda, Justice Smith as well as original Jurassic Park stars Laura Dern, Sam Neill, Jeff Goldblum, and Campbell Scott. It will also feature Mamoudou Athie (Sorry for You Loss), DeWanda Wise (She’s Gotta Have It), Dichen Lachman (Animal Kingdom, Altered Carbon), Scott Haze (Venom, Antlers).
Joining the Jurassic team for the first time is Emily Carmichael (Pacific Rim Uprising, The Black Hole), who has crafted the screenplay with Trevorrow. They will work off a story by Derek Connolly and Trevorrow, who together co-wrote Jurassic World and Fallen Kingdom.
RELATED: Jeff Goldblum Recreates Jurassic Park Shot to Encourage Fans Vote
Jurassic World: Dominion is currently set to debut in theaters on June 10, 2022.
The post Colin Trevorrow Shares Behind-the-Scenes Photo as Jurassic World: Dominion Resumes Production appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
After two months since we finally got our first look at James Gunn’s The Suicide Squad during the DC FanDome event back in August, Empire Magazine took to Twitter to reveal the two covers for their upcoming exclusive issue for Warner Bros. Pictures’ highly-anticipated DC film. Featuring a new look at the dysfunctional team of DC villains including Margot Robbie’s Harley Quinn, John Cena’s Peacemaker, Idris Elba’s Bloodsport and more, you can check out the full The Suicide Squad covers below!
This month’s exclusive subscriber cover features James Gunn and the rest of #TheSuicideSquad – only available to existing Empire subscribers. READ MORE: https://t.co/vEL3A5RfuY pic.twitter.com/5q7I7v7rVT
— Empire Magazine (@empiremagazine) October 23, 2020
RELATED: First The Suicide Squad Footage Promises a Wild Action Adventure!
The Suicide Squad cast includes: John Cena, Jai Courtney, Joaquín Cosío, Joel Kinnaman, Maylin Ng, Flula Borg, Juan Deigo Botto, Storm Reid, Pete Davidson, Taika Waititi, Alice Brage, Tinashe Kajese, Daniela Melchior, Peter Capaldi, Julio Ruiz, Jennifer Holland, Viola Davis, Idris Elba, and Margot Robbie.
As we already know, Davis, Robbie, Courtney, and Kinnaman will all play the same roles they had in the 2016 film, reprising as Amanda Waller, Harley Quinn, Captain Boomerang, and Rick Flag, respectively. Michael Rooker will play Savant, Flula Borg will play Javelin, David Dastmalchian will play Polka Dot Man, Daniela Melchior will play Ratcatcher 2, Idris Elba will play Bloodsport, Mayling NG will play Mongal, Peter Capaldi will play Thinker, Alice Braga will play Solsoria, Pete Davidson will play Blackguard, Natha Fillion will play TDK, Sean Gunn will play Weasel, John Cena will play Peace Maker and Steve Agee will play King Shark.
RELATED: Wonder Woman 1984 DC FanDome Trailer Reveals Cheetah!
The movie is written and directed by Gunn. Charles Roven and Peter Safran will serve as producers. Nik Korda is executive producing the movie.
The Suicide Squad will hit theaters on August 6, 2021.
The post New Look at James Gunn’s The Suicide Squad Revealed! appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
Saban Films has released the official trailer for their upcoming thriller drama film titled Wander, featuring Golden Globe nominee Aaron Eckhart as his character uncovers an illegal human trafficking ring that’s connected to the death of his daughter. Also starring Oscar winner Tommy Lee Jones, the film will arrive in theaters, on VOD and digital on December 4. Check out the video in the player below!
RELATED: Dreamland Trailer: Margot Robbie Stars in New Thriller Drama
After getting hired to probe a suspicious death in the small town of Wander, a mentally unstable private investigator becomes convinced the case is linked to the same ‘conspiracy cover up’ that caused the death of his daughter. The film is directed by April Mullen from a screenplay she co-written with Tim Doiron.
Wander stars Aaron Eckhart (Erin Brockovich, The Dark Knight), Tommy Lee Jones (The Fugitive, Men in Black films), Heather Graham (Boogie Nights, The Hangover trilogy), Katheryn Winnick (Bones, Vikings), Raymond Cruz (The Closer) and Brendan Fehr (Roswell).
RELATED: Mel Gibson is a Deadly Santa Claus in Fatman Trailer
Wander is produced by Doiron, Mullen, Andre Relis, Chad A. Verdi, Douglas Falconer and Mary Aloe.
The post Wander Trailer Starring Aaron Eckhart & Tommy Lee Jones appeared first on ComingSoon.net.
Even as the month of October nears a close and the streaming platform’s 61 Days of Halloween block is about to end, Shudder is looking to keep the terror going for horror fans and has unveiled its roster of programming for the month of November including the documentary Leap of Faith: William Friedkin on The Exorcist and more!
RELATED: Leap of Faith Trailer: Shudder Nabs William Friedkin-led The Exorcist Doc
New Movies for August
November 2
Emelie (Director: Michael Thelin)
As their parents head out for a date in the city, the three young Thompson children – Jacob, Christopher and Sally – immediately take to their new babysitter Anna, who seems like a dream come true: she’s sweet, fun, and lets them do things that break all of their parents’ rules. But as the night creeps along and Anna’s interactions with them take on a more sinister tone, the kids slowly realize that their caretaker may not be who she claims to be. Soon it’s up to big brother Jacob to protect his siblings from the increasingly nefarious intentions of a very disturbed woman whose weapon is trust, and whose target is innocence. Starring Sarah Bolger, Joshua Rush, Carly Adams.
Salem’s Lot (Director: Tobe Hooper)
Driven by inner forces even he cannot understand, novelist Ben Mears returns to his hometown to write about a mysterious mansion that has intrigued him since childhood. But he discovers a horrifying secret: The community is slowly becoming a village of vampires. Starring David Soul, James Mason, Bonnie Bedelia.
Urban Legend (Director: Jamie Blanks)
Dr. Wexler, professor of American Folklore, states that urban legends exist only to convey hidden moral lessons for all who hear them. But the students at New England’s Pendleton College are finding out just how fatal these stories can really be. When a series of murders occurs at the school, student Natalie begins to notice a bizarre link between the killings. Starring Jared Leto, Alicia Witt, Rebecca Gayheart, Robert Englund.
November 5
Blood Vessel (Director: Justin Dix)
Somewhere in the North Atlantic, late 1945, a life raft adrift at sea, and in it, the survivors of a torpedoed hospital ship. With no food, water, or shelter, all seems lost until a seemingly abandoned German minesweeper drifts ominously towards them, giving them one last chance at survival—if they can survive the bloodthirsty monsters on board. Starring Nathan Phillips (Wolf Creek), Alyssa Sutherland (Vikings), Robert Taylor (Longmire).
November 9
Blood & Flesh: The Reel Life and Ghastly Death of Al Adamson (Director: David Gregory)
“Horror Film Director Found Slain, Buried Under Floor,” screamed the 1995 headlines read ‘round the world. But the truth behind the wild life of Al Adamson—including the making of his low budget classics and his grisly death—reveals perhaps the most bizarre career in Hollywood history, as retold in this captivating documentary. Featuring Al Adamson, John ‘Bud’ Cardos, Robert Dix, Marilyn Joi, Gary Kent.
Cherry Tree (Director: David Keating)
After learning dad’s leukemia has advanced, Faith is stunned when her teacher approaches her with a devilish deal. If Faith gets pregnant and hands the baby over for a sacrifice, the sorceress will heal poor papa. But there’s always a catch, and when Faith realizes what she’s actually agreed to, the sweet deal goes sour very fast. David Keating’s follow-up to Shudder favorite Wake Wood. Starring Anna Walton, Naomi Battrick, Sam Hazeldine.
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November 12
Lingering (a.k.a. Hotel Lake) (Director: Yoon Eun-kyoung)
Seeking support as the guardian of her younger brother, Yoo-mi returns to a small hotel run by a family friend. As bizarre incidents creep up in her mother’s old room, Yoo-mi will have to unravel the supernatural mystery and discover the truth before it’s too late. Starring Lee Se-young (Memorist), Park ji-young (The Concubine).
November 14
Saturday the 14th (Director: Howard R. Cohen)
In this horror comedy, John and Mary can’t believe their good fortune when they inherit the vast estate of John’s recently departed uncle. Sure, it’s a fixer-upper. But there’s nothing that can’t be taken care of with a fresh coat of paint, a little dusting … and maybe an exorcist! Monsters, mayhem, and mirth descend upon the house and only a mysterious book can save this everyday normal family from Saturday’s paranormal activity. Starring Richard Benjamin, Paula Prentiss, Jeffrey Tambor.
November 16
Are We Not Cats? (Director: Xander Robin)
After losing his job, girlfriend, and home in a single day, a desperate thirty-something accepts a delivery job upstate. There he stumbles upon Anya, a beguiling and mysterious young artist who shares his proclivity for eating human hair. While their shared obsession bonds these two loners together, it also takes them on a perverse and disturbing journey in one of the most exciting and singular American indies of recent years. Starring Michael Nicholson, Chelsea Lopez, Michael Godere.
Blood of Wolves (Director: Kazuya Shiraishi)
Rookie detective Shuichi Hioka is assigned to the East Kurehara precinct’s Second Investigation Division, which boasts the best arrest rate in the Hiroshima Prefectural Police. He and his new partner Shogo Ogami, a veteran detective rumored to be in cahoots with the mob, are tasked with investigating the disappearance of an employee of Kurehara Finance, a front company for the Kakomura-gumi organized crime group. Starring Koji Yakusho, Tori Matsuzaka.
Coherence (Director: James Ward Byrkit)
On the night of an astronomical anomaly, eight friends at a dinner party experience a troubling chain of reality bending events. Part cerebral sci-fi and part relationship drama, Coherence is a tightly focused, intimately shot film that quickly ratchets up with tension and mystery. Starring Emily Baldoni, Maury Sterling, Nicholas Brendon
Let the Corpses Tan (Director: Helene Cattet, Bruno Forzani)
Belgian filmmakers Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani trade in the crushed velvet and creeping shadows of their giallo-worshiping first two films (Amer, The Strange Color of Your Body’s Tears) for blistering sun, creaking leather and raining bullets in this glorious homage to 1970s Italian crime films. Based on a classic pulp novel by Jean-Patrick Manchette and featuring vintage music cues by Ennio Morricone, Let the Corpses Tan is a deliriously stylish, cinematic fever dream that will slamfire your senses like buckshot to the brain. Starring Elina Lowensohn, Stephane Ferrara, Bernie Bonvoisin.
November 19
Leap of Faith: William Friedkin on The Exorcist (Director: Alexandre O. Philippe)
A lyrical and spiritual cinematic essay on The Exorcist, Leap of Faith explores the uncharted depths of William Friedkin’s mind’s eye, the nuances of his filmmaking process, and the mysteries of faith and fate that have shaped his life and filmography. The film marks the sixth feature documentary from Philippe (78/52, Memory: The Origins of Alien), continuing his thoughtful analysis of iconic genre films. Starring William Friedkin.
RELATED: Shudder Orders Animated Creepshow Special With Sutherland & King!
November 23
The Mario Bava Collection:
A master of Gothic, a genius of giallo and a Godfather of Italian Horror—Shudder celebrates the legacy and influence of Mario Bava with a collection spanning his first foray into fright, Black Sunday to his final gem, Shock. Featuring: A Bay of Blood, Black Sabbath, Black Sunday, The Girl Who Knew Too Much, KIll Baby Kill, Lisa and the Devil, Shock and The Whip and The Body
November 24
Porno (Director: Keola Racela)
When five repressed teen employees at a local movie theatre in a small Christian town discover a mysterious old film hidden in its basement, they unleash an alluring demon that is determined to give them a sex education…written in blood. Starring Robbie Tann, Katelyn Pearce, Evan Daves, Larry Saperstein (High School Musical: The Musical Series), Jillian Mueller (The Last O.G.), Glen Stott (The Good Fight).
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