Since his involvement was announced, there has been a fair amount of secrecy surrounding and speculation regarding who, exactly, Julian Dennison, star of Hunt for the Wilderpeople, will be playing in the upcoming Deadpool sequel. Fan theories have the young New Zealander portraying a variation of Hope Summers, Kid Apocalypse, or Firefist, on account of his pyrokinetic abilities. Well, thanks to a brand-new trailer denoting that advance tickets for Deadpool 2 are now on sale, there’s been a significant break in the case.
Jerad Marantz, who served as a costume concept illustrator on Zack Snyder's Justice League, shared an alternate look at Ciaran Hinds' Steppenwolf, which is said to be one of many.
Speculation about Solo: A Star Wars Story has been disconcertingly negative ever since Lucasfilm, and original co-directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller parted ways over “creative differences,” which resulted in the Disney subsidiary bringing aboard two-time Academy Award winner Ron Howard to see the picture through its remaining production schedule. That being said, the situation regarding Solo’s success didn’t become dire until it was reported that a source close to the film was criticizing Alden Ehrenreich’s portrayal of the titular protagonist.
In a recent sit-down, Benedict Cumberbatch discussed the possibility of his character, Doctor Strange, being killed off by Thanos in the forthcoming Avengers: Infinity War.
Earlier this week, Warner Bros. uncaged the first trailer for Jon Turteltaub’s The Meg. Scheduled for release towards the end of the blockbuster season, the very thought of watching Jason Statham go toe-to-toe with a prehistoric super-shark on a blistering summer night is enough to get a cinephile perspiring.
Avengers: Infinity War co-directors Anthony and Joe Russo confirmed in a recent sit-down that they distributed fake pages of the film's screenplay to cast members.
Last week, it was revealed that Solo: A Star Wars Story would have its world premiere at the 71st Cannes Film Festival, joining 2002’s Attack of the Clones and 2005’s Revenge of the Sith as the only Star Wars movies to have screened during the festivities. The announcement was a pleasant change from the negatively-spun bulletins that've hounded Ron Howard’s space opera ever since he took over the production and has fans feeling cautiously optimistic about the pic.
Rian Johnson's Star Wars: The Last Jedi easily climbed atop Blu-ray and DVD sales charts following a theatrical run that ended with $1.3 billion worldwide.