vendredi 28 février 2020

James Gunn Announces That The Suicide Squad Has Wrapped Filming

James Gunn Will Not Be Rehired For Guardians of the Galaxy 3 

James Gunn Announces That The Suicide Squad Has Wrapped Filming

For James Gunn, production on The Suicide Squad was a period marked by countless highs and lows. But today, his work on the upcoming sequel/reboot has hit a new milestone. Gunn took to Instagram to share that the film has completed principal photography. He also took some time to reflect on the last few months.

Gunn’s experience on The Suicide Squad was bookended by two significant losses in his life. Regardless, he admitted that in spite of everything, it was “the most fulfilling time [he’s] ever had making a movie.” You can check out his full statement below.

RELATED: Nathan Fillion Talks About His Role in The Suicide Squad

The Suicide Squad began filming back in September. Warner Bros. memorably hired Gunn to direct the follow-up to David Ayer’s original Suicide Squad shortly after Disney and Marvel fired him from Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 over lewd tweets he posted several years ago. Gunn was subsequently rehired for Guardians 3, and he will begin working on that film once post-production for The Suicide Squad is finished.

The Suicide Squad opens in theaters on August 6, 2021.

Are you more excited to see the movie now that filming has wrapped? Let us know in the comment section below!

Recommended Reading: Justice League vs. Suicide Squad

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Ben Schnetzer is the New Star of FX’s Y: The Last Man Adaptation

Ben Schnetzer is the New Star of FX’s Y: The Last Man Adaptation

Earlier this month, FX’s long gestating adaptation of Brian K. Vaughan and Pia Guerra’s acclaimed comic book series, Y: The Last Man, took a hit when Barry Keoghan left the project after two years. However, FX has already lined someone new to step into the role of escape artist Yorick Brown. Via Variety, Ben Schnetzer will portray Yorick on the series.

Schnetzer is perhaps best known for his roles in The Book Thief, Snowden, The Riot Club, and Pride. He also starred in the ABC series, Happy Town, as well as FX’s pilot for Gone Hollywood.

Within the original comic, Yorick and his helper monkey, Ampersand, were the lone male mammals to survive an apocalyptic plague. As women inherit the Earth, the secret of Yorick’s survival may give humanity a second chance for survival.

RELATED: Barry Keoghan Drops Out of FX’s Y: The Last Man

Diane Lane costars in the series as Senator Jennifer Brown, Yorick’s mother. Imogen Poots will portray Hero, Yorick’s sister, while No Time To Die‘s Lashana Lynch plays Agent 355; the woman assigned to protect Yorick. Additionally, Juliana Canfield, Marin Ireland, and Amber Tamblyn have roles in the series.

Eliza Clark is the showrunner for Y: The Last Man, which will be executive produced by Melina Matsoukas. FX has also signed Matsoukas to direct the pilot episode, but the network has yet to set a date for the series.

What do you think about Ben Schnetzer as the new Yorick Brown? Let us know in the comment section below!

Recommended Reading: Y: The Last Man Book One

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. This affiliate advertising program also provides a means to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

The post Ben Schnetzer is the New Star of FX’s Y: The Last Man Adaptation appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

Chris Bremner Will Write Paramount’s M.A.S.K. Film

Chris Bremner Will Write Paramount’s M.A.S.K. Film

Paramount has finally taken another step toward getting its long-gestating M.A.S.K. film off the ground. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the studio has just recruited writer Chris Bremner to tackle the movie’s screenplay.

Bremner most recently co-wrote Bad Boys for Life, which was a surprise critical and financial hit when it opened earlier this year. Sony also hired him to write a fourth installment in that franchise even before the film was released. The sequel’s success also convinced Disney to hire him to write National Treasure 3.

M.A.S.K. hit the action figure scene in 1985. The name is an acronym for Mobile Armored Strike Kommand, and its team members are an underground strike force tasked with fighting terrorists, including their enemies in V.E.N.O.M. (or Vicious Evil Network of Mayhem). The classic Hasbro toy line also eventually spawned comic books, video games, and a beloved animated series.

RELATED: Paramount and F. Gary Gray to Bring Hasbro’s MASK to the Big Screen

F. Gary Gray has been attached to direct the M.A.S.K. film since 2018. He’s also producing the movie through his Fenix Studios banner alongside Hasbro’s Allspark Pictures. M.A.S.K. is only the latest Hasbro line that Paramount intends to bring to the big screen. Aside from their G.I. Joe and Transformers films, the studio is also producing adaptations of Micronauts, ROM, and Visionaries. The original plan was for all of these films to inhabit the same shared universe à la the MCU. However, it’s not clear if this is still Paramount’s intention.

M.A.S.K. is still without a release date.

Are you excited to see what Chris Bremner does with M.A.S.K.? Tell us what you think in the comment section below!

Recommended Reading: M.A.S.K.: Mobile Armored Strike Kommand: Riding V.E.N.O.M.’s Trail

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

The post Chris Bremner Will Write Paramount’s M.A.S.K. Film appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

Hawaii Five-O Ending After Current Season

Hawaii Five-O Ending After Current Season

Hawaii Five-O ending after current season

It’s been a troublesome few years for CBS’ Hawaii Five-O led by Alex O’Loughlin (Whiteout), with stars leaving over parity issues with their white co-stars and a steady decline in ratings in the following seasons, and now the network has announced that it will come to an end after its current tenth season, according to Variety.

RELATED: Grace Park and Daniel Dae Kim Leave Hawaii Five-O Before Season 8

It’s never easy to say goodbye to a hit franchise that carried on the legacy of the original with such distinction while establishing its own signature style,” Kelly Kahl, president of CBS Entertainment, said. “From episode one, Hawaii Five-0 has been a huge success for us. Thanks to the amazing talents of the producers, writers, cast and crew, it has played a key role for a decade on our schedule and helped establish our powerhouse Friday night. We cannot be prouder of its quality, longevity and are thankful for the passionate fan-devotion it inspired.

The reboot, which began in 2010, was developed by Peter M. Lenkov (Magnum P.I.), Alex Kurtzman (The Mummy) and Roberto Orci (Fringe), with Lenkov acting as showrunner, and was executive produced by the trio alongside David Wolkove and Matt Wheeler.

Based on the 1968-80 series of the same name, the story focuses on a specialized police task force headquartered in Honolulu, Hawaii, led by Lt. Commander Steven “Steve” McGarett and Detective Sergeant Danny “Danno” Williams as they investigate various crimes ranging from terrorism, murders, robberies and kidnappings.

RELATED: Rebecca Breeds to Play Clarice Starling in CBS Sequel Series

The network will air a two-hour proper finale for the series on April 3, with episodes currently airing on Friday nights at 8 p.m. PST, with previous seasons currently available for streaming on Netflix and CBS All Access, while other episodes air syndicated on TNT.

The post Hawaii Five-O Ending After Current Season appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

CS Unboxed: DC Collectibles Cover Girls Batgirl Statue by Frank Cho

CS Unboxed: DC Collectibles Cover Girls Batgirl Statue by Frank Cho

CS Unboxed: DC Collectibles Cover Girls Batgirl Statue by Frank Cho

Welcome to the latest installment of CS Unboxed — our series of premium collectible unboxing videos — in which DC Collectibles has provided ComingSoon.net with the chance to unbox the new Cover Girls Batgirl Statue by Frank Cho. Check out our review of this gorgeous statue in the video below! Click here to order the Cover Girls Batgirl Statue!

RELATED: Check Out Our DC Direct Toy Fair Gallery!

Kicking off the newest series of DC Collectibles’ Famous DC cover girls line is Batgirl, designed by popular cover artist Frank Cho. Cho’s clever take on Barbara Gordon gives a touch of humor to the piece. Any fan of Cho’s covers and art will not want to miss this statue, which introduces him as the new artist for the line. Limited to 5,000 pieces and individually numbered, the statue sculpted by Jonathan Matthews measures 9.16″ Tall.

Later this year DC Direct will unveil three more Cover Girls statues that will get the Frank Cho treatment: Supergirl, Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy.

RELATED: CS Unboxed: Dark Knight Returns Designer Series Statue

What do you think of the Cover Girls Batgirl Statue? Let us know in the comments below!

The post CS Unboxed: DC Collectibles Cover Girls Batgirl Statue by Frank Cho appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

CS Interview: Beasts of the Southern Wild’s Benh Zeitlin on Wendy

CS Interview: Co-Writer/Direct Ben Zeitlin on Peter Pan Reimagining Wendy

CS Interview: Co-writer/director Benh Zeitlin on Peter Pan reimagining Wendy

ComingSoon.net got the opportunity to chat with Oscar-nominated writer/director Benh Zeitlin (Beasts of the Southern Wild) about his latest project, Wendy, a reimagining of J.M. Barrie’s iconic fantasy-adventure play and novel Peter Pan, which is in select theaters now!

In this wildly reimagined ragtag epic, Wendy is lost on a mysterious island where aging and time have come unglued. She must fight to save her family, her freedom, and the joyous spirit of youth from the deadly peril of growing up.

The movie stars Shay Walker, Tommie Lynn Milazzo, and Stephanie Lynn Wilson. Zeitlin also co-wrote the script alongside Eliza Zeitlin (Glory at Sea). The movie is produced by Becky Glupczynski, Dan Janvey, Paul Mezey, and Josh Penn.

RELATED: Wendy Trailer & Poster Reimagines Classic Peter Pan Story

ComingSoon.net: So I guess starting off, despite the fact that Beasts obviously made some coin and got a lot of awards attention, you didn’t go for the big budget for this one. You kept it pretty small and I wanted to know kind of why you chose to continue down that route as opposed to going for the big dollar.

Ben Zeitlin: You know, it’s always been kind of like my interest as a filmmaker, and I never really saw directing as like, a job that I was going to get. It was always an escape from having a job. And so, I wanted to really protect creative freedom. I wanted to keep our team intact. I wanted to really like–I felt there was something really beautiful about how Beasts was made and really how the short that I made before that, Glory at Sea was made. It was like a real continuum of a process and a community. And I felt that you know, what I loved about being a director had everything to do with that community and that process, and that knowing that that could never exist within the framework of like, how Hollywood films are done, it wasn’t a lot of–I wasn’t torn up about the choice or anything like that or particularly tempted. For us, the opportunity was to take this process and take it to the next level and tell the next story and do so with an extraordinary like, opportunity to kind of challenge like, what was possible with different parts of the process in terms of like, I’d never seen a film that had a pack of non-actor children in it performing. You’d seen it in Goonies, but that was very Hollywood. Stand By Me, those are all like, River Phoenix and I’ve never seen that.

CS: You might have seen it in some foreign movies like Small Change and things like that.

Zeitlin: Right, but that were very verité. So that I wanted to like, tell like a real adventure story with real sort of constructed characters with a pack of non-actor children. We wanted to build this 35-foot underwater sea creature that lit up, that was operated by divers. There was no precedent for building an underwater puppet, anything like that ever in any context that we could find. So it was like, we wanted to take on impossible challenges. And to me, the opportunity coming out of Beasts was that we could do that. And we could get people to sign up for that because Beasts was made completely outside of any sort of Hollywood structure. It was financed by a non-profit. We completely invented how the film was made, and we had this chance where we were going to be able to have more resources and more time to sort of take that and try to accomplish things that were unprecedented. And so, that was what I was excited about. And the idea of sort of leaving that and working for hire, like just telling a story I didn’t believe in was never something that I considered really.

RELATED: CS Interview: Haley Bennett Talks Psychological Thriller Swallow

CS: Right. And the Peter Pan story, that’s been a huge magnet for a lot of different filmmakers. What was it specifically about the Barrie mythology that appeals to you.

Zeitlin: I think it means a lot of things. It was always a dream film for me and my sister, particularly, who I wrote the film with, Eliza. Since we were little kids, it was like, this was our–this character, more than any of the versions or even the book, it was like the character had this huge place in our lives, in our personal mythology, and we’d invented like a thousand different stories that he was a part of. And so, it was like a dream to make that movie. And then, it also was very much like, at the point where we’d had this opportunity to make the film, we were thinking a lot about this sort of sense of like the tension between like, freedom and care, and sort of like, wildness and responsibility. And a lot of that was really palpable kind of coming out of Beasts and there suddenly being these expectations of like, well, what would we do? That exact question, feeling like there was this whole sort of outside, more grown-up, more responsible, more strategic world that was going to come into our process. And how were we going to navigate that and sort of stay free and stay wild and also sort of just knowing that we were growing up and going to grow up during the time that it would take to make this film and wanting to figure out how to like, not feel like it was a choice between being free and having like, love and family in your life. And like, how could we find one within the other? And those themes were like, questions that I couldn’t articulate an answer for, and that to me is kind of what launches me into a film project, is wanting to explore some sort of paradox or perceived paradox that I know can be resolved, but I don’t know how. And the process of making the film was that.

CS: And it’s a tricky tone, too, because if you push it too far towards the contemporary, and then you’re in like Hook territory with Lost Boys on skateboards and stuff, and then you push it too far towards the grounded, then all of a sudden it becomes like Lord of the Flies. So where did you try to sort of land?

Zeitlin: I mean, our thinking about it had a lot to do with like, we wanted to express magic through nature and not through kind of like, pure fantasy and take the emotional ideas and express them through reality, not in like any sort of like, constructed aesthetic way, but we really wanted to not build this movie. We didn’t want to build it inside of a computer. We didn’t want to build sets. We wanted to find this story that we dreamed of on earth in a way that felt tangible and possible. And so, like a lot of places in this film–and the way that we did that was by keeping our script incredibly flexible and going really on this exploration, going to the Island of Monserrat that sort of formed the basis for Neverland, exploring in this volcanic exclusion zone, where two thirds of the island is basically you know, abandoned and where you could go find these sort of untouched, surreal spaces that felt like they expressed sort of fundamental emotional ideas from the original text, and then sort of wrap our story and our script around what we could find, as opposed to what we could build.

CS: That touches up on something that always kind of boggles me, because you see in bigger and bigger fantasy movies now, something like Avatar, where it’s like they’re literally recreating earth-like flora and fauna in a computer. Was this film almost like a reaction to that, where you’re like, hey guys, look. It’s all right here. No polygons necessary.

Zeitlin: Yeah, yeah, I mean, and I love Avatar, but I do think there’s a broader thing about our increasingly digital experience of life, of disconnecting from the planet in ways that are both emotionally dangerous and like, actually dangerous to us as a species, you know? And we wanted to make a film that really reconnects with the experience of viscerally being in nature, particularly for children. I mean, this film came out long after we were making the film, but I went to see like, one of my favorite films is the original Sabu Jungle Book, which is like, the most viscerally in-nature movie you’ll ever see. And then, to see that re-made and have the main character probably never went outside, to make a film about the jungle where there’s absolutely no engagement with the actual world–

CS: They’re all in a studio in Van Nuys.

Zeitlin: Yeah, exactly. And like, that feels really bad. And to me, it feels really bad, and I had this experience casting the film, just talking to so many children and finding so few people that really even imagined things in the natural world, like in my imagination as a kid was so in–I mean, I was in Queens. It wasn’t like I was living in the forest, but like, cracks in the sidewalk where ants lived, were like, vast wonderlands to me. And I think that that visceral connection of being a little animal when you’re a kid and sort of never forgetting that you are an animal is something that we wanted to express. And to do that, we went to great length just to shoot this film in truly natural locations that were basically unmodified.

CS: Well, piggybacking off of that, to a certain extent is your fascination with the sort of natural world, does that come with the fact that you grew up in the urban environment, so to you, it feels like escapism?

Zeitlin: I don’t know. I once had a split life because my mom is from the country in South Carolina and I spent a ton of time down there. And we’d go down there and it’s like you’re chasing chickens and chasing pigs and you are out. And so, I never felt like, I don’t know, probably not. Like I never felt like so urban that I had to like, run away from that or something like that. I think to me, it’s just, I don’t know, it’s just like something fundamental. It’s something fundamental that I think we lose as we grow up or we’re told to. I viscerally remember like being a kid and coming home like, covered in like, dirt, sand and blood, and like, having no idea. My mom looking at me and being like, what did you do? And I was like, oh no.

CS: Because you had just had that adrenaline rush.

Zeitlin: Or just like you don’t feel disconnected from those things, and then you grow up and you’re like, ew. Mud. Like don’t touch a bug. Gross. Like there are germs and you were told as kids to like, disengage with the natural world. And to me, that’s like a real loss that we experience.

CS: Yeah, life becomes kind of sterile.

Zeitlin: Yeah, exactly. And I think a lot of the film is digging at the sort of ways that grown-ups force things out of children. And I don’t know why they do. You know, it’s some way of coping with ourselves that we then continue to sort of inflict these disconnects on children between nature, between their imagination, between their dreams, and like, these losses with things that we wanted to really dig into in the film in ways that were very visceral.

CS: Yeah, well, and you’re really good at capturing the exhilaration of children running wild and letting their imaginations run. And you have these sort of great sequences of manic excitement and wonder. But then, you also, you have the crashes. You have the lows. Like, how did you and Eliza kind of chart the emotional ride you wanted to take the audience on?

Zeitlin: Yeah, I mean, you always try to track an emotional spine to the film that isn’t necessarily like the plot or the events, which can be quite simple. But you know, I think we also wanted to get at when you play like that, when you’re wild and dangerous and mischievous and free like that, bad stuff happens eventually. You know what I mean? That’s the adage I remember as a kid of whatever, like it’s all fun and games until someone loses an eye. That’s the ultimate experience of being a kid. So, we wanted to go through the losing an eye and find a way to defy that, you know, because a lot of what we talked about, too, and this also came from a lot of casting and interviews, we would always ask grown-ups like, what do you remember a moment in your life where you felt like you grew up or where your life changed forever because of something that happened. And a lot of that was around tragedy or getting hurt themselves. They dreamed of being a horseback rider. They got bucked off one time, broke their back, and then that dream just died right there. Or when they lost a brother or when they lost a mother and they just never felt like they could connect to–it shakes your faith or something, and they never could quite feel the same after a loss. And so, one thing we wanted to explore was like, how do you overcome a loss or getting hurt like that? And there’s some characters in the film that do, and there’s some that don’t based on how they sort of process their faith after something terrible happens to them. And so, that idea is one that we wanted to explore, especially through the character of James, obviously.

CS: Yeah, and you talked a little bit about building that amazing animatronic. That is such a beautiful piece of work. It feels so visceral, so real and so like, tangible. Are the effects just sort of something that you see in your toolbox? Or is it something that you’d like to build on in future films? Because in a lot of ways it feels like an extension of what you did like, with the warthogs in Beasts. It feels like you’re sort of building upon that.

Zeitlin: Yeah, I don’t know. I mean, I think it’s film to film. I mean, this was a radically different challenge. On Beasts, we really used real animals and that was that challenge. This one was about building a puppet. And we couldn’t really do it animatronically, which we wanted it to be reactive to water in this way that was completely–there was no way to like, program that. You know, the way that something flows through water is so chaotic. And so, yeah, this challenge was about really pushing the limits of what could be done underwater with practical materials, you know, and with human operation. The full-scale puppet was operated by underwater divers, who it was like a very–we had to rehearse this like, flow of a breath, and it had this human–or just organic quality to it, that if anything robotic–

CS: So the divers were off-camera?

Zeitlin: Yeah, they’re inside the head. They’re like, hidden inside oftentimes. And then, we also had a miniature that was operated from above the water, but also, like, we had to build it with enough flexibility that we felt all this sort of movement that was just random essentially. And so, but yeah, I mean, it certainly comes from a lot of this movie is inspired by me and my sister in the basement with like, the six VHS tapes that we had as kids. And so, like Willow was a huge inspiration for Beasts, and then this one, some of the creatures in Neverending Story. We have like, a real love for that kind of lost era of film, where things were larger than life were built by artisans, each with their own skill set and personality. And I really miss that in sort of fantasy because when things become digital, they have a way of homogenizing, sort of the feel of what you’re looking at. And we really brought together some amazing artists, some people who worked on the mother had been on Ghostbusters, were that sort of last generation. Part of the mother was made in LA, which is where Bill Brian, who was like the plastic man of 1980s and 90s Hollywood, was located. The team brought him in, and he like figured out all these techniques to utilize plastic, to creature creatures and they’re just beautiful techniques that are just very quickly going extinct.

CS: I mean, when I see something like that, I can see you doing your own kind of Dark Crystal. I can see you doing a whole movie just like that, like totally out of your imagination, totally practical, sort of fantasy world. Is that something you could ever see? Or would you always want there to be like, the more chaotic element?

Zeitlin: I mean, I don’t know. I think I’ve gone–probably the more films I make, I’ve kind of actually gone–like, I started off as an animator. I made stop motion animated films that were purely imagined, that were all puppets, and I just spent months and months alone in dark rooms animating puppets, and I think that my imagination oftentimes comes from that in a way that I’m sort of doing things that defy the laws of physics as if I was animating, and anything could happen. But I do more and more want to tell human stories. And for me, being realistic doesn’t mean that nothing like a 35-foot underwater scene, that to me, that is still existing in the realm of realism, but I don’t know that I’d ever want to make something that’s purely fantastical. I think that I am always interested in ways that things that are larger than life touch like, real life. So I think increasingly, that’s where my mind goes.

CS: Yeah, well, it’s interesting because I remember actually, I remember even before Beasts, I remember tracking Glory at Sea and some of the other Court 13 projects and stuff. And I remember when Beasts broke out I sort of thought, oh okay, now all the Court 13 guys are going to become the new crew, sort of like David Gordon Green and Jody Hill and Danny McBride and all those guys became like, the North Carolina crew. This is going to be the Wesleyan crew is going to come in and Hollywood’s going to gobble them up and they’re all going to have a million projects. Why didn’t that happen?

Zeitlin: Because I don’t know. The way that we made films was really fun. It was really fun. And it’s fun, it’s meaningful. The process enriches your life in incredible ways. There’s like a real positivity to when we make a film in a place, it has a really powerful impact. And anybody from our crew that goes back to the Island of Monserrat, just is like, we all have a world there now and it’s like an incredible way to live. And the filmmakers that have sort of come out of it, like Jonas Carpingnano, who is in Southern Italy like, with his own version, his own process, but also very much like, working in that community making incredible films.

CS: Yeah, or like Ray Tintori.

Zeitlin: Yeah, and I think that we are sort of inspired by an approach that isn’t one that could ever be executed in like, the factory of Hollywood, the culture of that would totally dismantle all the things that I think made Beasts really good. And so, I think that–

CS: It’s just anathema to your guys’ process.

Zeitlin: Yeah, the Hollywood process has everything to do with things being controlled and predictable. That’s how movies get made. There are strict timelines and there’s processes that are not out of touch. The other reason, when you get on a real film set it’s like, no one who’s not a grip touches a light. You know what I mean? That seems unimportant, but it works against collaboration in real ways and it works against an organic approach, where the film really dictates timelines and how things are done. Everything kind of has to fit into the same sort of stratified system. And I think that there’s a lot of knowledge that came from our early work, which in some ways was just ignorant of how those things should work. But where we sort of, there’s qualities to the films that I think are impossible to create in that context. And so, we continue to sort of try to work down these roads and find ways to get films made, even though it’s a much more circuitous, unpredictable, dangerous, risky approach to making a film.

RELATED: Nightmare Alley: Willem Dafoe Cast in Guillermo del Toro Thriller

CS: Yeah. I mean, that makes sense to me because I remember David Gordon Green came to my school right after he did George Washington and he talked about the process of making that movie. And he got these great performances out of these kids because everybody in the crew and the cast lived in the same house.

Zeitlin: Exactly.

CS: The guy who’s the grip made them breakfast, that kind of thing.

Zeitlin: It’s a family. You create a family. Yeah.

CS: And I’m sure now every one of those kids would be in a trailer, you know? Yeah.

Zeitlin: It wasn’t like that. We all had to hike to set, no matter where you were, like take the same two and a half hour hike to our location. And by the time you get there, it’s like, you’ve all sort of bonded on like, holy shit, that as hard. Now we’re going to shoot a movie. It’s an equalizing thing to make films in a way that kind of doesn’t fit into that system that exists.

Wendy is in theaters now!

The post CS Interview: Beasts of the Southern Wild’s Benh Zeitlin on Wendy appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

Exclusive Blood on Her Name Clip for Matthew Pope’s Crime Thriller

Exclusive Blood on Her Name Clip for Matthew Pope's Crime Thriller

Exclusive Blood on Her Name Clip for Matthew Pope’s Crime Thriller

ComingSoon.net has an exclusive clip for Matthew Pope’s (The Echo Construct) crime drama thriller Blood on Her Name. The movie opened today in select theaters and is currently available on VOD. You can check out the clip now in the player below!

RELATED: Exclusive Bombshell Clip Takes You Behind-the-Scenes of the Docudrama

Directed by Pope who co-wrote the screenplay with Don M. Thompson (The Echo Construct), Blood on Her Name follows a woman whose panicked decision to cover up an accidental killing spins out of control when her conscience demands she return the dead man’s body to his family.

The movie stars Bethany Anne Lind (Ozark), Will Patton (Halloween), Elisabeth Röhm (American Hustle), Jared Ivers (The Prayer Box), Jimmy Gonzales (Mayans M.C.), Jack Andrews (Your Worst Nightmare), and Tony Vaughn (Ambitions).

RELATED: Exclusive The Twilight Zone Blu-ray Clip: The Wunderkind

The dark noir is a Vertical Entertainment release of a Yellow Vail Pictures presentation of a Rising Creek production. Pope and Thompson both serve as producers.

The post Exclusive Blood on Her Name Clip for Matthew Pope’s Crime Thriller appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

Pixar’s Onward Set to Feature The Simpsons Short Ahead of Film

Pixar's Onward Set to Feature The Simpsons Short Ahead of Film

Pixar’s Onward set to feature The Simpsons short ahead of film

While Pixar films normally feature original shorts ahead of new releases, Disney’s recent acquisition of Fox has created a new universe of connections as they have revealed that Onward is set to feature a short from The Simpsons centered on the youngest member of the iconic animated family, Maggie!

RELATED: Onward Clip: Ian and Barley Meets Octavia Spencer’s The Manticore


Set in a suburban fantasy world, Disney•Pixar’s Onward introduces two teenage elf brothers who embark on an extraordinary quest to discover if there is still a little magic left out there.

The cast will feature the voices of MCU stars Chris Pratt (Avengers: Infinity War), and Tom Holland (Spider-Man: Far From Home), portraying the roles of elf brothers Barley Lighfoot and Ian Lightfoot, respectively. The film will also star Julia Louis-Dreyfus (Veep) as Laurel Lightfoot, Octavia Spencer (The Shape of Water) as the Manticore, Mel Rodriguez, as Officer Colt Bronco, Lena Waithe as Officer Specter; and Ali Wong as Officer Gore.

Get the Pixar Short Films Collection, Vol. 1

RELATED: Onward Trailer: The Quest Beginneth in the New Pixar Movie

The feature will be directed by Dan Scanlon (Monsters University) and produced by Kori Rae. Scanlon said that Onward was inspired by his own relationship with his brother.

Onward will arrive in theaters on March 6, 2020.

The post Pixar’s Onward Set to Feature The Simpsons Short Ahead of Film appeared first on ComingSoon.net.

Killing Eve’s Kim Bodnia Joins The Witcher Season 2

Killing Eve's Kim Bodnia Joins The Witcher Season 2

Killing Eve’s Kim Bodnia joins The Witcher season 2

A week after landing Game of Thrones alum Kristofer Hivju for the second season of Netflix’s The Witcher adaptation, the cast has expanded with the addition of Killing Eve‘s Kim Bodnia in the iconic role of the oldest and most experienced witcher Vesemir, according to Deadline.

RELATED: Game of Thrones’ Kristofer Hivju Joins The Witcher Season 2

Six other actors have also been cast for Season 2 including Paul Bullion (Peaky Blinders) as the witcher Lambert; Yasen Atour (Young Wallender) as Coën, a witcher from Poviss; Agnes Bjorn as Vereena, a powerful bruxa; Thue Ersted Rasmussen (Fast and Furious 9) as Eskel, Geralt’s friend from his youth; Aisha Fabienne Ross (The Danish Girl) as Lydia, a sorceress; and Mecia Simson (Britain and Ireland’s Next Top Model) as the preternaturally beautiful elf Francesca.

Vesemir is described as “a charming relic of the witcher Golden Age” and is the most experienced in the series, as well as acting as a father figure to Geralt, being protective fo the few remaining witchers in the world after the Massacre at Kaer Morhen.

I am so thrilled to welcome Kim Bodnia to the cast of The Witcher,” EP and showrunner Lauren Schmidt Hissrich said. “I have admired his unique talents in shows like Killing Eve and The Bridge, and cannot wait for him to bring strength, tenacity, and warmth to the character of Vesemir, who is such an integral part of our upcoming season.

Based on the best-selling fantasy series, The Witcher is an epic tale of fate and family. Geralt of Rivia, a solitary monster hunter, struggles to find his place in a world where people often prove more wicked than beasts. But when destiny hurtles him toward a powerful sorceress, and a young princess with a dangerous secret, the three must learn to navigate the increasingly volatile Continent together.

The series stars Henry Cavill as Geralt of Rivia, Freya Allan as Princess Ciri, Anya Chalotra as Yennefer of Vengerberg, MyAnna Buring as Tissaia, and Joey Batey as Jaskier. Season 2 will also feature the return of Tom Canton as Filavandrel, Lilly Cooper as Murta, Jeremy Crawford as Yarpin Zigrin, Eamon Farren as Cahir, Mahesh Jadu as Vilgefortz, Terence Maynard as Artorius, Lars Mikkelson as Stregobor, Mimi Ndiweni as Fringilla Vigo, Royce Pierrseson as Istredd, Wilson Radjou-Pujalte as Dara, Anna Shaffer as Triss Merigold, and Therica Wilson Read as Sabrina.

RELATED: Nightmare of the Wolf: The Witcher Anime Film in the Works at Netflix

The Witcher series for Netflix is based on the stories and novels by Andrzej Sapkowski, of which there are eight, which themselves formulated the popular Witcher games franchise which has since spawned a comic book series and a tabletop game. The book series was previously adapted for television in Poland.

Schmidt Hissrich serves as executive producer and showrunner for The Witcher. She’s known for her work (writing and co-executive producing) on The DefendersDaredevil, and Power. Sean Daniel is set to executive produce under the Sean Daniel Company with his partner Jason Brown. Tomek Baginski and Jarek Sawko of Platige Image are also executive producers as well.

All eight episodes of the first season are already available for streaming on Netflix.

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Netflix-Warner Bros. Negotiations for Lucifer Season 6 Are Looking Good

Netflix-Warner Bros. Negotiations for Lucifer Season 6 Are Looking Good

Netflix-Warner Bros. Negotiations for Lucifer Season 6 Are Looking Good

Well, it seems that the upcoming fifth season of Lucifer won’t be the last one, after all. Netflix originally planned to close out the show’s five-year run with a 16-episode final season, but the streaming service has changed its mind somewhere along the way. According to a report by TV Line, Netflix and Warner Bros. Television and Netflix are still in talks and “both sides appear optimistic that a renewal deal will come to fruition.”

Should Warner Bros. Television and Netflix find a deal, Lucifer Season 6 will feature “between 10 and 13 episodes.” There will be more than enough time to give the right enclosure to the adventures of Lucifer Morningstar.

RELATED – Dennis Haysbert Cast as God in Lucifer Season 5

Based very loosely on the Vertigo character, Lucifer tells the story of the original fallen angel. Bored and unhappy as the Lord of Hell, Lucifer Morningstar abandoned his throne. He then retired to Los Angeles, where he teamed up with LAPD detective Chloe Decker to take down criminals. Fox abruptly canceled the show after its third season, but it was saved by Netflix last June.

Warner Bros. Television produces Lucifer in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Television and Aggressive Mediocrity. The series is vaguely based on characters created by Neil Gaiman, Sam Kieth and Mike Dringenberg for Vertigo, from DC Entertainment. Additionally, Jerry Bruckheimer, Jonathan Littman, Ildy Modrovich and Joe Henderson are the executive producers. Len Wiseman serves as director and executive producer, while Kapinos serves as an executive consultant on the series.

Season 5 of Lucifer is still without a premiere date but it will hit Netflix somewhere in 2020. Are you happy that Netflix wants another season of Lucifer? Would you like to see Lucifer Season 6? Let us know in the comments section below.

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CS Video: Justice Smith & Elle Fanning for Netflix’s All the Bright Places!

CS Video: Justice Smith & Elle Fanning for Netflix's All the Bright Places!

CS Video: Justice Smith & Elle Fanning for Netflix’s All the Bright Places!

ComingSoon.net got the opportunity to sit down with Justice Smith (Detective Pikachu) and Elle Fanning (Maleficent: Mistresses of Evil) to discuss the new Netflix romantic drama All the Bright Places, which has just debuted on the streaming service. Our interview can be viewed in the player below!

RELATED: Exclusive: Justice Smith Hopeful for Detective Pikachu Return

All the Bright Places tells the story of Violet Markey and Theodore Finch, who meet and change each other’s lives forever. As they struggle with the emotional and physical scars of their past, they come together, discovering that even the smallest places and moments can mean something. This compelling drama provides a refreshing and human take on the experience of mental illness, its impact on relationships, as well as the beauty and lasting impact of young love.

Pick up a copy of the book here!

The film stars Elle Fanning (I Think We’re Alone Now) as Violet and Justice Smith (Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom) as Finch. The movie also stars Keegan-Michael Key (The Predator), Alexandra Shipp (Dark Phoenix), Kelli O’ Hara (13 Reasons Why), Lamar Johnson (The Hate U Give), Felix Mallard, Sofia Hasmik, Luke Wilson (The Goldfinch), and Virginia Gardner (Marvel’s Runaways).

RELATED: Spotify Untold Series Adaptation Gets Limited Series Order at Netflix

All the Bright Places is directed by Brett Haley (Hearts Beat Loud) from a script by Niven and Liz Hannah (The Post). It is being produced by Mazur/Kaplan Company and Echo Lake Entertainment, and is available for streaming now!

Paula Mazur and Mitchell Kaplan of Mazur Kaplan along with Echo Lake’s Andrew Spaulding, Doug Mankoff, and Brittany Kahan are set to produce. Fanning will also serve as producer with Hannah Salerno, Robert Salerno, and Kimi Armstrong Stein as executive producers.

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Diamond Select Toys Gallery With DC, Star Wars & More!

http://www.diamondselecttoys.com/2020/02/new-york-toy-fair-sneak-peek-black-widow-it-predator-and-more/

Diamond Select Toys gallery with DC, Star Wars & more!

Diamond Select Toys invited ComingSoon.net to their showfloor at the New York Toy Fair, in which we got sneak peeks at new statues and figures from their new lines from DC, Marvel, Star Wars and many more! Check out our first looks in the gallery below!

RELATED: CS Interview: Todd McFarlane Talks Toy Fair Reveals!

Diamond Select Toys was founded in 1999 by sister company Diamond Comics Distributors and has created collectibles for various properties over the years from DC, Marvel, Star WarsGhostbusters24Buffy the Vampire SlayerBack to the FutureBattlestar Galactica and Indiana Jones. The company has also begun developing resin statues for their licenses, including ones for Batman: The Animated Series, a few of which debuted at this year’s Toy Fair.

This year also saw the announcement of formerly GameStop exclusive figures becoming available wide at comic book shops and online, including a PVC diorama of Batman in his Tenth Metal armor from the Dark Nights: Metal storyline and Pamela Isley from the DC Gallery Diorama line, both designed by Shawn Knapp, with the former being sculpted by Rocco Tartamella and the latter by James Marsano.

Diamond Select also had plenty of merchandise for horror fans as they debuted a PVC diorama from the 1990 miniseries adaptation of Stephen King’s It starring Tim Curry as the iconic Pennywise the Clown, highlighting him in mid-transformation into his true form, as well as Stylized D-Formz PVC figurines for The Conjuring Universe’s The Nun and Annabelle, as well as Regan from the classic The Exorcist and Bill Skarsgård’s iteration of King’s clown from the 2017 and 2019 films.

RELATED: Hasbro Marvel Toy Fair Gallery with Black Widow & More!

The Toy Fair also saw the unveiling of a secretive Taskmaster 7-inch figure from the highly-anticipated Black Widow movie, which also includes multiple accessories and 16 points of articulation and comes packaged on display-ready Select action figure packaging. The figure was designed by Eamon O’Donoghue and sculpted by Gentle Giant Studios.

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Check Out Our DC Direct Toy Fair Gallery!

Check Out Our DC Direct Toy Fair Gallery!

Check out our DC Direct Toy Fair gallery!

The newly renamed DC Direct (formally DC Collectibles) invited ComingSoon.net to take a look at their new figures and statues at the New York Toy Fair, which included a new line based on The Joker, a revamped Artist Alley line and more! Check out some fo the new images in the gallery below!

RELATED: CS Interview: Todd McFarlane Talks Toy Fair Reveals!

“Returning to the name DC Direct just makes sense,” Jim Fletcher, Creative Director, DC Direct, said in a statement. “The name lets our fans know that we have unparalleled and direct access to DC editorial and the industry’s premier talent, which in turn allows us to create an extensive offering of unique and high-end product lines that are truly authentic to DC.”

With the success of the Batman Black & White and Harley Quinn Red, White & Black statue series lines it is only fitting that The Joker get his own statue line to be based on the iconic images of the Super-Villain from the DC Comics pages. The series will appropriately be named The Joker Clown Prince of Crime.  Fans and collectors won’t want to miss the inaugural figure in the series based on an iconic comic image of The Joker by Brian Bolland. This piece really emphasizes the drama and the mania that makes The Joker one of the best foes of all time. Following Bolland, will be statues by Jim Lee with a classic comic Joker design that really portrays how creepy the jokester is with oversized features such as hands and feet and Lee Bermejo, perhaps one of the most popular comic illustrators associated with The Joker. Bermejo has designed a statue that will look amazing on any shelf as its displayed in hues of purple and green.

RELATED: Hasbro Ghostbusters: Afterlife Toy Fair Gallery!

The highly collectable DC Artists Alley line will also undergo a revamping, fans will notice more premium format designs and figures. First out of the gate, The Joker by Brandt Peters. Peters uses his design talents to bring The Joker to life by combining his antique, Victorian style for a truly unique take on the villain. Additional artists joining the DC Artists Alley line include, Brittney Lee, a popular artist who used her talent in paper-craft-style art to create a new take on the famous villainess Catwoman, Patrick Ballesteros, who uses childlike nostalgia and imagination, to bring one back to their younger years will provide his take on the Bat Family including Deathstroke and Robin, and Zach Heffelfinger will provide his take on the Dark Knight. As a character designer for Nickelodeon on SpongeBob SquarePants, Heffelfinger brings about a sense of nostalgia with his stylistic art.

Additional statues and figures that debuted at the show included Deadshot, the last character in the Batman Rogues Gallery Multi-Part Statue; A DC Bombshells: Poison Ivy Holiday Variant; new Batman Black & White and Harley Quinn Red, White & Black statues and DC Essentials and Batman The Adventures Continue action figures.

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Paramount Pictures Announces A Quiet Place Double Feature Fan Event!

Paramount Pictures Announces Quiet Place Double Feature Fan Event!

Paramount Pictures announces A Quiet Place Double Feature Fan Event!

Fans better be ready to embrace their full silence as Paramount Pictures have announced a double feature fan event for John Krasinski’s acclaimed 2018 sci-fi horror film A Quiet Place and its highly-anticipated follow-up, as tickets are on sale for the sequel, that will let fans travel through the terrifying world a couple days ahead of its release!

RELATED: A Quiet Place Part II Tracking a Projected Opening of $60 Million

In A Quiet Place: Part II, following the deadly events at home, the Abbott family (Emily Blunt, Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe) must now face the terrors of the outside world as they continue their fight for survival in silence. Forced to venture into the unknown, they quickly realize that the creatures that hunt by sound are not the only threats that lurk beyond the sand path.

Emily Blunt is returning for A Quiet Place Part II alongside cast members Noah Jupe (SuburbiconWonder) and Millicent Simmonds (Wonderstruck), with John Krasinski set to write, and direct again. It was recently revealed in the film’s Super Bowl spot that Krasinski will reprise his role as Lee in the flashback scenes. Golden Globe nominee Cillian Murphy (Breakfast on Pluto) and Djimon Hounsou will also star in the sequel.

A Quiet Place was from a spec script by Bryan Woods & Scott Beck which was rewritten by Krasinski. It opened in theaters in April of 2018 and grossed over $334 million worldwide on a $17 million dollar budget.

RELATED: There Are People Worth Saving in A Quiet Place Part II Super Bowl Spot

A Quiet Place: Part II is produced by Krasinski and Michael Bay (Transformers) along with Bay’s Platinum Dunes partners Andrew Form and Brad Fuller (OuijaThe PurgeTexas Chainsaw Massacre). The sequel is executive produced by Allyson Seeger, Joann Perritano, Aaron Janus.

The sequel is slated to hit the theaters on March 20, while the double feature will debut on Wednesday, March 18! Tickets for the double feature and sequel can be purchased here!

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CS Soapbox: Do We Really Want Lethal Weapon 5 to Happen?

CS Soapbox: Do We Really Want Lethal Weapon 5 to Happen?

CS Soapbox: Do We Really Want Lethal Weapon 5 to Happen?

There’s been talk of a fifth entry in the Lethal Weapon franchise, which originally began in 1987. Two Popes producer, Dan Lin spoke about a potential fifth Lethal Weapon film at a recent edition of The Hollywood Reporter’s Producers Roundtable: We’re trying to make the last ‘Lethal Weapon’ movie. And Dick Donner’s coming back,” said Lin. The original cast is coming back. And it’s just amazing. The story itself is very personal to him. Mel and Danny are ready to go, so it’s about the script.

The last time we heard anything substantial about a Lethal Weapon 5 was back in 2018 when Lethal Weapon director, Richard Donner said he was ready to make the very dark, then entitled Lethal Finale.

In 1987, Ronald Reagan was president and Roger Murtaugh (Danny Glover) was “too old for this shit.” The first Lethal Weapon movie introduced us to one of the most sympathetic, over-the-hill homicide detective ever portrayed on screen. Having just turned 50, Murtaugh found himself contemplating retirement, only to be partnered with the unhinged “lethal weapon,” Martin Riggs (Mel Gibson).

RELATED: Is Lethal Weapon 5 Actually Happening?

Due to the chemistry of its leads and Shane Black’s damn near perfect script, Lethal Weapon became the pioneering buddy cop film, forever changing (if not inventing) the genre: two mismatched badge wielders solving crime. Lethal Weapon 2 was one of the most successful sequels of its kind, and then, of course, a 3rd and 4th film were made, all, while Murtaugh slid back down his hill and Riggs, became more and more hinged. With each entry the franchise became less inventive and dark, ultimately, resembling more of a sitcom than its suicide-jumper origins.

It’s been over 20 years since Lethal Weapon 4. For the most part, those outside of Generation Z (and are old enough to drive) hold the first Lethal Weapon near and dear to their cinematic hearts and look back fondly on its popcorn-worthy sequels. We haven’t seen Danny Glover grumble or Mel Gibson run in quite some time and that’s okay, those days are behind us; we’re too old for that shit. Apparently not.

Do We Really Want This to Happen?

Gibson was perfect for the role of Riggs prior to 2006. Since then, Gibson’s reputation for questionable behavior has had an adverse effect on the way audiences perceive him. When the Lethal Weapon franchise was in his prime, Gibson’s signature brand of crazy was cool. In the ’80s and ’90s, we cheered on his wild-eyed antics, whether it be in Lethal Weapon or Braveheart, you didn’t mess with Mel Gibson. His characters used their crazy for good, not evil. Riggs takes down a bunch of white supremacists in Lethal Weapon 2 and William Wallace fought for the freedom of his people. Given Gibson’s infamous antisemitic remarks (among other things), it seems strange that Gibson would even want to re-align himself with a character well known for losing his cool. His contemporary portrayal of Riggs would inevitably be different, less organic and more restrained—that sounds boring. I mean, look at those eyes; that’s million-dollar madness.

Gibson’s precarious reputation isn’t the only reason Lethal Weapon 5 is a crazy idea. It’s a bad idea for everyone, especially Murtaugh. Danny Glover is 73 years old and definitely too old for this shit. The Lethal Weapon franchise ended on a mediocre note in 1998 with Lethal Weapon 4. The only character not over-the-hill in that movie was Chris Rock’s Lee Butters, a fellow detective who courted, slipped one past the goalie and married Murtaugh’s daughter. Today, Chris Rock is 54 years old and has no intention of doing Lethal Weapon 5 (probably). Without resorting back to that over-quoted phrase, Lethal Weapon’s premise is played out—in what way could Murtaugh and Riggs come back without it being nonsensical?

RELATED: Spiral Trailer for the Saw Movie Starring Chris Rock!

As previously mentioned, the Lethal Weapon movies have gotten historically worse with each installment; none of the sequels even compare to the original movie. Feel free to disagree with that statement but there’s no denying the series’ tonal shift or plummeting critical reception. This is not to say that Lethal Weapon 5 can’t buck that trend. If the fifth movie’s script really is as dark and emotional as everyone says and doesn’t fall into the trap of making Riggs and Murtaugh seem like ageless superheroes (I’m looking at you A Good Day to Die Hard) then it won’t be limited by the restraints of that universe, Lethal Weapon 4 having ended in a Christmas card kind of way.

How It Could Work

It would be genuinely surprising to see Glover and Gibson’s fall back into their Lethal Weapon roles organically. To find Riggs and Murtaugh in a place that feels consistent with the ending of Lethal Weapon 4 just isn’t something that should be attempted. Lethal Weapon is a pioneering action franchise starring two fantastic leads and that’s what fans remember it for. However, similar to how characters change, those leads have changed. Jumping right back into another installment would feel like a desperate attempt to reignite nostalgia and feed the Hollywood machine. A machine that loves to tarnish the memory of classics by milking characters, plot, titles, and careers for all they are worth.

Perhaps the epitome of that previous statement can be derived from what is now known as “The Fast Saga.” A franchise so shameless, that it has produced 10 films (a whole article needs to and will be written about why they should’ve ended with 7). However, you can’t really knock studios for making Fast and Furious movies because they continue to make millions at the box office. That said, franchises like The Fast Saga and Lethal Weapon before it, have opened the flood gates for as many sequels as a studio can muster. This is why Bad Boys For Life was made and worked; ironically, the 3rd installment in the Bad Boys franchise (which exists within the genre Lethal Weapon defined) has paved the way for Lethal Weapon 5.

The thing is, Lethal Weapon 5 can’t be Bad Boys For Life; the Bad Boys franchise has Will Smith’s stagnate popularity going for it, which basically allowed it to pick up where it left off, focusing on its leads more than the action even though Smith and Martin Lawrence are still young enough to move quickly. Lethal Weapon has always focused on the chemistry of its leads, often at the expense of story; because of its aging protagonists, Lethal Weapon 5 needs a good story. Hopefully, a factory reset is exactly what Donner and company have in mind.

Donner has said that the script for Lethal Weapon 5 is very emotional. If the fifth film focuses on the vulnerability of the characters, it could work. Think the present-day storyline of True Detective‘s third season: two retired detectives, one with Alzheimer’s, who have no business going door to door for answers but are compelled to do so. Riggs and Murtaugh shouldn’t be running around in Lethal Weapon 5—having Gibson play a Kung Fu-ready Riggs makes as much sense as him replacing Tom Hardy in Mad Max 5If it turns into some action-heavy film, it’ll feel ridiculous—no amount of The Dark Knight Rises-eque magic knee braces could prevent that. 

RELATED: CS Soapbox: Do We Really Want/Need a Joker Sequel?

The original Lethal Weapon was the beginning of an action franchise; Lethal Weapon 5 would be the end of one and its pace should reflect that. Riggs’ origin is a tragic one, having lost his wife of 11 years, he finds himself suicidal and revved up. The plot and the characters worked because of their motives and the way they played off each other. Without sounding like a downer, something bad must motivate Riggs and Murtaugh’s return. They’ll be revved up emotionally but unable to use that adrenaline to participate in the kind of action seen in the series’ earlier installments. If Lethal Weapon 5 takes the easy route and makes Fast 25, it’ll just be recycling a format that has already been exhausted/jinxed on television.

Not only are there already too many sequels/reboots out there but Lethal Weapon has already been revived via Fox’s recently canceled Lethal Weapon series. In all honesty, Fox’s Lethal Weapon is the best-case scenario for any R-rated franchise that wants to make the transition to network television. It worked. The chemistry of its Riggs (Clayne Crawford) and Murtaugh (Damon Wayans) was there, that is until Crawford got fired for a slew of behind the scenes melodrama. Unable to be action-heavy, the television show took everything about Riggs and Murtaugh’s characters and elaborated on it. Also, Crawford revived the role of Riggs in 2016 without an arduous pedigree, making the series a fun distraction. Lethal Weapon 5 is at serious risk of buckling under the weight of franchise fatigue, ultimately becoming a parody of itself.

Always Sunny’s Foresight

Always Sunny in Philadelphia saw this coming and proactively mocked it. Season 6’s episode, “Dee Reynolds: Shaping America’s Youth” saw the gang screen their version of Lethal Weapon 5 for a group of high school students. The footage is so terrible that it works; it even has a sex scene taken that seems like it’s taken directly from The Room (one of the best bad films of all time) and a widely offensive attempt at a blackface Murtaugh. The Lethal Weapon parody became so beloved by fans that Always Sunny brought it back in the Season 9 episode “The Gang Makes Lethal Weapon 6,” further exemplifying how Hollywood abuses nostalgia.

It’s 2020, Donald Trump is president and we’re definitely too old for this shit. Lethal Weapon 5 doesn’t need to be made; if Warner Bros really wants to tap back into Gibson and Murtaugh’s yesteryear magic, put them in a new movie—a spiritual successor to the Lethal Weapon franchise. That would at least be more original than doing what the Die Hard and Rambo franchises have done. Our sympathy for Roger Murtaugh is dwindling, if he comes back doing the same old chicken dance and delivers the same old quote, he’s officially just a glutton for punishment. Unfortunately, so are we—a ‘Lethal Finale’ will get made and we will go see it.

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