Lemony Snicket's delightfully miserable YA book series finally gets the visually sublime and wickedly inspired TV adaptation it deserves with A Series of Unfortunate Events on Netflix.
There's going to be a new sequel to The Ring, but you'd be forgiven if you forgot. Rings was originally set for release on November 23, 2015, but then it got bumped to April 1, 2016, before being moved to October 28, 2016, before getting another delay to February 3, 2017. Man, it should be bedfellows with the equally-unloved Amityville: The Awakenings. In any case, we're less than one month away from its newest release date, and Paramount might keep it this time around. They just unveiled a new poster for the upcoming horror sequel.
We're in the thick of it with awards season right now, as Moonlight, La La Land, Manchester by the Sea, Arrival, Hidden Figures, Silence and more vie for the top prizes of the year. But Ryan Reynolds is already looking ahead, as he believes Logan will do gangbusters during the next awards season. In fact, the actor/producer behind Deadpool thinks it might even end up as a future Oscar contender.
Back in 1995, both Michael Keaton and Tim Burton stepped away from the Batman franchise after 1992's darker, grittier sequel Batman Returns. Val Kilmer replaced Keaton while Joel Schumacher filled Burton's director's chair for the mediocre Batman Forever, but it was never made clear why exactly Keaton left. That is, until now.
Cliff Martinez is one of our most outstanding working composers. Most recently, his score in The Neon Demon and Steven Soderbergh's Cinemax series The Knick are among the richest, most expressive music compositions of the past few years. As such, it was exciting to hear what he would do with Logan, but alas, we'll never know. For reasons unknown, Martinez has been replaced by Marco Beltrami, director James Mangold's regular composer, who also worked on 2013's The Wolverine.
It's a brand new year, and Fox's A Cure For Wellness is ready to get freaky with it. In a collection of five New Year's Day-themed promos, the horror film from director Gore Verbinski (Pirates of the Caribbean 1-3, Rango) promises an unsettling, demented psychological scarefest to ring in 2017.
When you're the fastest man alive, you're already a bit of a superhero. Nevertheless, Olympian Usain Bolt wants to go toe-to-toe with the Scarlet Speedster himself in his upcoming solo movie The Flash, which will see Ezra Miller in the superspeed suit after this year's Justice League.
Details don't come easily whenever Terrence Malick makes a new movie. Between their secretive free-wielding productions from their notoriously media-scared writer/director to their extensive post-production schedules where actors can find their entire performances left on the cutting room floor, you never know what you're gonna get with Malick until the film plays before you. Well, that's more-or-less the case with his newest, Austin-set romantic drama Weightless as well. A few months before its anticipated new release, Malick's latest comes with a new title, Song to Song, and its first official synopsis, which gives us a brief understanding of what's to come.
As many viewers may already know, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story went through a bit of an identity crisis before making its way into theaters. Extensive reshoots were done back in the summer to clean up some story issues and add a few additional scenes, but the results weren't quite as noticeable as they were in, say, 2015's Fantastic Four or even this past summer's Suicide Squad, both of which also went through their fair share of re-shooting as well.
Amazon's The Man in the High Castle went from speculative to eerily persistent between seasons 1 and 2, and the streaming site seems to feel the same way. The Philip K. Dick adaptation, which sees the world as if the Nazis won World War II, has been renewed for a third season, just after its second aired in late November. But that's not the only development. We've also learned that Eric Overmeyer, a veteran TV writer/producer behind Law & Order, The Wire, Treme and Amazon's brother series Bosch, will be stepping up as showrunner for the 2017 season.