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'Maleficent 2': Angelina Jolie Is In, 'Pirates of the Caribbean' Director in Talks

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It's finally happening, my little Beasties!

Disney has been talking about a "Maleficent" sequel for years, but now things are truly moving forward. Angelina Jolie already confirmed to Deadline that she'd be returning, and now the site says "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales" director Joachim Rønning is in talks for "Maleficent 2" (or whatever they call it).

The sequel is moving relatively fast now -- considering "Maleficent" came out in 2014 -- with filming expected to start in early 2018.

"Maleficent," directed by Robert Stromberg, was a hit with fans, earning $758,539,785 off a reported $180 million budget. Meanwhile, "Pirates 5," directed by Rønning and Espen Sandberg, has earned $794,611,287 globally off its reported $230 million budget, after its May 2017 release.

According to Deadline, Jez Butterworth and Linda Woolverton had been working on the "Maleficent" sequel script for producer Joe Roth. Back in 2015, Deadline had reported that Disney hired Linda Woolverton to write the script, but at that point Angelina Jolie wasn't confirmed to be returning.

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Watch John Krasinski as 'Jack Ryan' in Amazon's Tense First Teaser

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Alec Baldwin. Harrison Ford. Ben Affleck. Chris Pine. And now John Krasinski.

"The Office" alum is the latest star to take on author "Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan" in a new Amazon Original Series of that name.

The series will debut on Prime Video in 2018.

The stars will make their first appearance at New York Comic-Con this Saturday, Oct. 7, and that's also when we'll get the first full trailer.

For now, fans can check out Amazon's first-look footage, just giving a glimpse of Krasinski in the lead role of Tom Clancy hero Jack Ryan.

Check out the first teaser:Here's more from Amazon:

"The one-hour, eight-episode dramatic series follows an up-and-coming CIA analyst thrust into a dangerous field assignment for the first time. The series follows Ryan as he uncovers a pattern in terrorist communication that launches him into the center of a dangerous gambit with a new breed of terrorism that threatens destruction on a global scale.

Amazon will debut Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan, from Paramount Television and Skydance Television, in 2018 on Prime Video. The series also stars Wendell Pierce (Ray Donovan, The Wire) and Abbie Cornish (Limitless). It is executive produced by Carlton Cuse (Lost, Bates Motel) who also serves as the showrunner, Krasinski, Michael Bay's Platinum Dunes, and Graham Roland (Almost Human), who wrote the pilot based on a story he and Cuse developed."

The role of Jack Ryan was previously played in five films. First Alec Baldwin was Jack Ryan in "The Hunt for Red October" (1990), then Harrison Ford in both "Patriot Games" (1992) and "Clear and Present Danger" (1994). Years later, Ben Affleck had the role for "The Sum of All Fears" (2002), and then Chris Pine for his own movie, "Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit" (2014).

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Kate Winslet Joins 'Avatar' Sequels for 'Titanic' Reunion With James Cameron

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Director James Cameron(C) and actress Kate WinsletNow please sign Leonardo DiCaprio so our '90s hearts can go on and on.

Kate Winslet is following her "Titanic" director James Cameron into the "Avatar" world, Deadline reports, despite Winslet and Cameron maybe not having the best relationship when they made that other top-grossing film. No matter. It's been since 1997 so time probably healed any wounds.

Winslet will star as someone called Ronal in the "Avatar" sequels -- it's not clear how many.

"Kate and I have been looking for something to do together for 20 years, since our collaboration on 'Titanic,' which was one of the most rewarding of my career," Cameron said, via Deadline. "I can't wait to see her bring the character of Ronal to life."

The first "Avatar" film came out in 2009 and became the highest-grossing movie of all time. There are four "Avatar" movies now in production, at a cost of $1 billion. Fans recently got a first look at the young "Avatar 2" stars who'll be playing Jake Sully's (Sam Worthington) and Neytiri's (Zoe Saldana) children, along with kids from another Na'vi clan.

"Avatar 2" is scheduled for release on Dec. 18, 2020. "Avatar 3" will come out in 2021, followed by "Avatar 4" in 2024, and "Avatar 5" in 2025. Let's hope the world survives that long!

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8 Things You Never Knew About Tim Burton's Ties to Walt Disney Animation

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It seems like this time of year everyone is watching a Tim Burton animated film. Whether it's "The Corpse Bride," "Frankenweenie," or "The Nightmare Before Christmas" (which takes over the Haunted Mansion at Disneyland each yet and remains a merchandising juggernaut), his forays into animation are perfect for family-friendly frights. In fact, animation is such a key part of Burton's larger filmography, whether it's the stop-motion-animated snakes from "Beetlejuice" or the wholly imagined CGI worlds of "Alice in Wonderland," that it's not hard to imagine that when Burton began his filmmaking career, he was animating cutesy animals for Disney. Because that's exactly how he began his filmmaking career, morosely scribbling in the background of features like "The Fox and the Hound" (made in the post-Walt, pre-Eisner doldrums).

In fact, his history with Walt Disney Animation Studios is long and fascinating -- and a relationship that continues to this day.

1. His Art Rarely Made it Into the Final Films

When Disney Animation hired Burton in the early 1980's, it was in the role of an apprentice. He would do odd artistic jobs, before working on films such as the aforementioned "The Fox and the Hound," the disastrous (but more thematically in-sync) "The Black Cauldron," and "TRON" (with Walt Disney Animation assisting with the complex visual effects). The only problem was that most of his pre-production artwork (storyboards, concepts and character designs) never made it into the final films. They were too idiosyncratic and expressive in weird and different ways than the studio was comfortable with -- especially at that incredibly conservative time. After directing several shorter projects, including a bizarre, Japanese-inspired "Hansel and Gretel" adaptation that aired on the Disney Channel once, on Halloween Night, Burton was quietly fired.

2. He Worked Alongside Some of the Greats...

While he worked at Disney Animation, he was alongside many of his classmates at CalArts. These artists would go on to shape modern animation in profound and impactful ways, folks like Ron Clements and John Musker (directors of "The Little Mermaid" and "Moana"), Don Bluth (who would go on to create "An American Tale"), Brad Bird (director of "The Incredibles") and John Lasseter (a founding member of Pixar and head of the creative side of Disney). Clearly this was a very talented bunch.

3. ...Including His Longtime Collaborator Rick Heinrichs

Also at Walt Disney Animation at the time was Rick Heinrichs. Heinrichs helped on projects like 1980's "Watcher in the Woods," and would produce many of Burton's early efforts. He would go on to work on nearly all of Burton's films in some capacity, from doing visual effects on his episode of "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" to working as a production designer on "Dark Shadows" and "Sleepy Hollow." For "Nightmare Before Christmas," he was credited as a visual consultant although his work began long before the film was actually produced.

4. 'The Nightmare Before Christmas' Was Written During His Time at Disney

And speaking of "Nightmare Before Christmas," while the finished movie seems fully formed and birthed from Burton's imagination, it actually took a long time to make it to the big screen and actually began during his time at Disney Animation. That's when Burton wrote a poem and, later, a treatment for the project, which he hoped would be narrated by his friend and mentor Vincent Price. Even Heinrichs created models for characters and helped with storyboards. Eventually the project stalled, Burton left the company, and it seemed like all was lost. Until, years later, Burton realized that Disney still owned the rights. They were emboldened by both the success of "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," which had involved an outside animation studio, and the progress they were making with Pixar and Burton's old classmate and colleague John Lasseter on what would become "Toy Story," and so started developing the project, in earnest, once again. Pixar ultimately provide computer effects for the project, which is a bonus fact! They returned to Henry Selick, a Disney animator at the time Burton conceived the idea, to helm the project.

5. When He Finally Wanted to Make It, He Envisioned 'Nightmare Before Christmas' as a Holiday Special

When the project was revived, Burton held on to the idea that it would be a half-hour television special like the Christmas specials that had inspired him initially. But Disney thought bigger -- this was going to be a feature. One of the ways the filmmakers expanded the story was by making it a really-for-real musical featuring original songs by close Burton confederate Danny Elfman. The music became one of the key aspects of the film and one of its most beloved components.

6. A 'Nightmare' Sequel Was Proposed

While not initially seen as a success, the cache of "The Nightmare Before Christmas" steadily rose over the years, with merchandising being made (and selling out), the overlay of Haunted Mansion becoming a yearly sensation, and appropriations of Jack and Oogie Boogie into other sectors of the company (videogames, etc.) In 2008 Selick admitted that Disney had approached Burton about making a sequel, although instead of utilizing the painstaking artform of stop-motion, they'd want to make it using computer animation. Burton said no. Years later Selick would set up a stop motion division of Pixar, only to see it crash and burn before the first feature was produced, leading to an $80 million write-down for the company and bad blood between the filmmaker and studio.

7. 'Frankenweenie' is Based on a Short he Made at Disney

Another more recent animated feature, "Frankenweenie," was based off of something Burton had made back when he was at Disney (around the same time he came up with the "Nightmare Before Christmas" idea). Back then it was a live action short about a young boy who brings his beloved pet dog back from the dead. Its macabre sense of humor and darkly-tinged visuals were part of what got him fired from the studio. But after the success of "Alice in Wonderland" (in part based off of a Walt Disney Animation Studios film), Disney made a new deal with Burton and part of that deal was an animated remake of "Frankenweenie," produced in black-and-white and using the same stop-motion techniques as "The Nightmare Before Christmas."

8. His Next Feature is a Remake of a Walt Disney Animation Studios Classic

And Burton's relationship with Disney Animation continues! Burton's next feature, due out in 2019, is a remake of "Dumbo," the animated classic. It will continue in the footsteps of his previous work, by taking a whimsical, somewhat malevolent approach to the material. We cannot wait!

Kim Cattrall: Sarah Jessica Parker 'Could Have Been Nicer' About 'Sex and the City 3'

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Sex and the City 2 UK Film Premiere - LondonKim Cattrall is not holding back about her "Sex and the City" co-star Sarah Jessica Parker. Cattrall just shared her side after the back-and-forth news on a third movie, saying of SJP, "I don't know what her issue is. I never have."

As you probably read, SJP recently told Extra she was "disappointed" that they wouldn't be filming "Sex and the City 3," adding, "We had this beautiful, funny, heartbreaking, joyful, very relatable script and story. It's not just disappointing that we don't get to tell the story and have that experience, but more so for that audience that has been so vocal in wanting another movie."

Rumors came out that it was Cattrall who was holding them back, with one Daily Mail report saying she made "diva" demands about having her other films promoted, causing production to shut down right before it was meant to start. Cattrall took to Twitter to express shock at those rumors, saying she had said last year that she didn't want to do a third movie.

Cattrall continued to explain her side in a talk with Piers Morgan for his ITV show "Life Stories." Morgan tweeted out a link to a Daily Mail report with excerpts from that interview.


Here's one quote from Cattrall on the SATC3 misunderstanding:

"At this very moment it's quite extraordinary to get any kind of negative press about something that I've been saying for almost a year of 'no' that I'm demanding or a diva. And this is really where I take to task the people from 'Sex and the City' and specifically Sarah Jessica Parker, in that I think she could have been nicer."


She said it again later:

"I really think she could have been nicer." She also added of SJP, in another part of her talk, "I don't know what her issue is. I never have."

Cattrall said she remembers very clearly making her decision last December 2016, when getting a phone call about a third movie. She said her answer was simply a respectful but firm "no." She said it wasn't about money or other projects or anything. "This is about a clear decision, an empowered decision in my life to end one chapter and start another. I'm 61. It's now."

Sex and the City: The Movie - World Premiere - LondonCattrall said she still has "genuine affection" for her SATC co-stars, even though they are all in different places in their lives -- they are a bit younger with children, and she spends most of her time away from New York City. "The common ground that we had was the series, and the series is over."

However, she said she wants them to make the movie without her, even if it means replacing her as Samantha:

"It's a great part. I played it past the finish line and then some and I loved it, and another actress should play it. Maybe they could make it an African-American Samantha Jones or a Hispanic Samantha Jones? Or bring in another character. It can be another character. This is what I really believe that this franchise needs another point of view and this could be it."

That does sound like a fair solution, if fans and the rest of the SATC cast really want another movie.

[via: Huffington Post]

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'Bob's Burgers' Getting Made Into Movie Set For 2020

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"Bob's Burgers" is going big.

Fox animated comedy series is getting made into a movie, with a release date of July 17, 2020. The show recently won an Emmy for best animated series and just premiered its eight season this past Sunday.

The movie will continue the wacky adventures of the Belcher family: dad Bob, who runs a hamburger joint; eternally sunny mom Linda; awkward teen Tina; goofball Gene; and precocious firecracker Louise.

Creator Loren Bouchard said. "We know the movie has to scratch every itch the fans of the show have ever had, but it also has to work for all the good people who've never seen the show. We also know it has to fill every inch of the screen with the colors and the sounds and the ever so slightly greasy texture of the world of Bob's — but most of all it has to take our characters on an epic adventure. In other words, it has to be the best movie ever made. But no pressure, right?!"

This isn't the first Fox animated series to make the leap to the big screen; "The Simpsons" did it in 2007.

'Fast and Furious 9' Pushed Back to April 2020

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The "Fast and Furious" franchise is slowing down.

The next movie, "Fast and Furious 9," has been delayed a year, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Instead of opening in April 2019, the sequel will open April 10, 2020.

The mega franchise has earned more than $5 billion worldwide; the most recent movie, "Fate of the Furious," earned over $1.2 billion at the global box office.

So, naturally, Universal wants to pump out more films. Of course, "Fast 9" is in the earliest stages of development, with no director announced. Vin Diesel and other cast members seem to be on board, though Dwayne Johnson's involvement is up in the air.

There was a bit of a brouhaha earlier this month when star Tyrese Gibson threw shade at Johnson for possibly making a "Fast" spinoff. Rumors indicated that Johnson and Jason Statham were in talks for a spinoff around their two characters. Perhaps that will fill the 2019 slot?

'Justice League' Character Posters Star Wonder Woman and More Ahead of New Trailer

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The whole of "Justice League" might be greater than the sum of its parts, but even so, its stars got a chance to shine independently in the film's new character posters.

Teasing a trailer set to be released on Sunday, Warner Bros. unveiled five new posters on Wednesday. They each feature one of the movie's superheroes, including Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot), Batman (Ben Affleck), Cyborg (Ray Fisher), The Flash (Ezra Miller), and Aquaman (Jason Momoa). Unfortunately, a poster centering on Superman (Henry Cavill) wasn't among the group. Still, the posters that were revealed carried the message "all in" and highlighted the forthcoming trailer in accompanying tweets.

As you likely know by now, the upcoming superhero flick stars numerous DCEU superheroes who team up to take on a global threat. We'll see them have to learn to work together after Diana Prince (Wonder Woman) and Bruce Wayne (Batman) convince them to join forces. Their adventure will be the first of at least two "Justice League" movies.

We're ready to go "all in" when the film hits theaters on Nov. 17.


21 Things You Never Knew About 'Boogie Nights'

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In the age of HBO's "The Deuce," "Boogie Nights" looks like a time-honored masterpiece, but when the sprawling period epic about the golden age of porn filmmaking opened 20 years ago this week (on October 10, 1997), moviegoers didn't exactly embrace it.

The subject matter was still too skeevy to draw mainstream or even art-house audiences, yet not nearly explicit enough to draw the trench coat crowd. "Most people don't share my moral sense," writer/director Paul Thomas Anderson explained in 1999, "which is, 'I'll masturbate, but I have to clean it up very quickly afterwards.'" No wonder "Boogie Nights" wasn't exactly a hit.

Nonetheless, it earned three Oscar nominations, made a serious leading man out of Mark Wahlberg, gave Burt Reynolds his best role of the last 35 years, put Anderson on the map, and gave early career boosts to Philip Seymour Hoffman, John C. Reilly, Don Cheadle, and Thomas Jane.

These days, "Boogie Nights" evokes double nostalgia, both for the disco 1970s, lovingly recreated in the movie's costumes and soundtrack, and for the 1990s, when Hollywood studios still nurtured indie directors and let them realize their visions instead of plucking them fresh from Sundance and assigning them to direct CGI blockbuster franchise sequels.

"Boogie Nights" had a famously fraught production history, including some life-imitates-porn moments and a near-fistfight between Reynolds and Anderson. Here are some of the things that, uh, went down.
1. Anderson (above, right) grew up in the Valley and was, as a teen, obsessed with the porn industry existing all around him. He was still in high school when he made his first movie, a 32-minute short called "The Dirk Diggler Story," a "Zelig"-like mockumentary about a fallen porn star. In addition to the protagonist, several other characters and much of the dialogue would find their way into "Boogie Nights" a decade later.

2. The Dirk Diggler of Anderson's "Boogie Nights" screenplay bears a strong resemblance to legendary porn actor John Holmes, and not just in terms of length. There's Holmes' rise to fame via the series of "Johnny Wadd" thrillers (echoed in Dirk's "Brock Landers" movies), his biographical documentary directed by a colleague ("Exhausted," the inspiration for the movie that Julianne Moore's Amber makes about Dirk), and his alleged involvement in the Wonderland drug murder case (the inspiration for the whole nightmarish sequence involving Alfred Molina's Rahad Jackson).
3. New Line wanted to be the next Miramax, and they needed their own Quentin Tarantino. After seeing Anderson's first film, "Hard Eight," they thought he might be it. They decided the director's phone-book-sized script about a guy with a 13-inch penis was edgy enough, as long as he agreed to keep it under three hours and keep the rating down to an R.

4. Anderson initially wanted Leonardo DiCaprio to star as Dirk Diggler, but the actor begged off, citing his commitment to star in "Titanic." But he recommended his "Basketball Diaries" co-star Wahlberg. "You know," Anderson joked, "Mark came to me and said, 'I've got an inch on Leo.' I said, 'Really?' And he showed it to me. And then I hired him." Years later, DiCaprio would cite turning down "Boogie Nights" as his "biggest regret."
5. The role of Jack Horner, the porn filmmaker who becomes a surrogate father to Dirk and an ad hoc family of cast and crew members, was hard to cast. Before hiring Burt Reynolds, Anderson considered actors as diverse as Albert Brooks, Harvey Keitel, Bill Murray, Jack Nicholson and Sydney Pollack.

6. Warren Beatty expressed interest, but he ultimately acknowledged he just wanted to be associated with the project because the 59-year-old star saw himself more as Dirk. ("I think he was joking and not joking," Anderson mused.)7. Samuel L. Jackson, who'd played the villain in "Hard Eight," turned down the role of Buck Swope, the porn actor who dreams of selling stereos. His response to the script, Anderson recalled, was "What the hell is this?" After Moore vouched for the young director, Cheadle took the part and turned it into a career-boosting showcase.

8. There were a number of real-life porn actors in the cast, mostly as extras, though Nina Hartley had the biggest part as the emasculating wife of Little Bill (William H. Macy). Anderson hired them to help make sure he was depicting the porn world accurately, but sometimes, things got a little too much like the real thing. Hartley would often walk around the set in the nude because that's what she was used to doing on porn sets, even though it unnerved Anderson's cast and crew. She also wondered aloud why she couldn't just have sex in her sex scenes, since she found simulating sex much more complicated. During one scene, some of the actors and crew claimed she and her partner really were having sex, but she insisted later that his penis wasn't venturing where everyone thought it was going; it just wasn't taped to his thigh like it should have been.
9. Like her character, Heather Graham (Rollergirl) seldom took off her skates, even when cameras weren't rolling.

10. Speaking of penises, the movie's most famous special effect was the prosthetic Diggler that Wahlberg shows off in the final scene. The first one that the make-up team built was John Holmes-sized, but it just looked too huge to seem real, so they built a shorter one, still large enough for Marky Mark to hide his actual funky bunch inside.
11. In fact, the make-up artists built several, in case of breakage. Wahlberg also whipped it out during the sequence where Dirk and Amber are shooting a sex scene; it doesn't appear on camera then, but Wahlberg wanted to get a rise out of Moore. Most of the time, however, the package shown straining against the confines of Dirk's bellbottoms is just a woman's stocking filled with birdseed. The propmakers left the stocking in a warm trunk, where its seeds started to sprout, so they had to make another one.

12. During one scene where Little Bill grumbles about having caught his wife being sodomized by another man, Macy repeatedly muffed his line and said it backwards: "My f**king wife has an ass in her c**k." Anderson decided he preferred the mistake and kept it in the film.
13. While Anderson allowed Macy and others to ad lib, he insisted that Reynolds stay on script. Reynolds became irked and felt that the relatively inexperienced director wasn't giving him the respect he deserved as a veteran movie star. The two men argued loudly, and Reynolds swung a fist that might have hit Anderson in the face had a crew member not held back his arm.

14. Why is Molina the only actor in his scene not distracted by the firecrackers going off at random intervals? Because he's wearing a hidden earpiece piping in "Sister Christian" on a continuous loop.
15. If the song "You Got the Touch," which Dirk records during his dubious effort to branch out into music, sounds familiar, it's because it originally appeared on the soundtrack of the first "Transformers" movie -- the 1986 cartoon, that is. Dirk's other song, "Feel the Heat," was composed by Anderson and Reilly.

16. Avant-garde satirical film director Robert Downey Sr. (yep, Iron Man's real-life dad) shows up in a cameo as the record label executive. With Downey's permission, Anderson cribbed the kid setting off firecrackers from Downey's 1969 movie "Putney Swope," as well as Buck Swope's last name.
17. Anderson had to submit the film to the MPAA 18 times, cutting a few frames each time from scenes the ratings board found too risqué, in order to avoid an NC-17 rating and earn the R rating he was contractually obliged to deliver. In the end, the difference between NC-17 and R turned out to be only 45 seconds worth of film. "I don't miss it at all," Anderson said of the snipped footage.

18. Still, Anderson's cut was over three hours long, making both test audiences and executives at New Line restless. Studio co-founder Bob Shaye made his own two-hour cut of the film and screened it for a test audience in Pasadena. Before the screening, the then-unknown director walked among the viewers in line and bad-mouthed his own film, saying, "This movie sucks. You're gonna hate it. This movie sucks," so that Shaye's cut would earn even lower test scores than his own. Eventually, both sides reached a compromise, resulting in a 155-minute release. Among the lost scenes: Dirk learns his parents have been killed in a gruesome car crash, which is then briefly shown on screen.
19. "Boogie Nights" reportedly cost $15.5 million to make. It earned back $26.4 million in North America and another $16.7 million overseas.

20. The Academy nominated "Boogie Nights" for three Oscars: Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress (Moore), and Best Supporting Actor (Reynolds). It was shut out of all three categories.
21. In 2015, Reynolds said that, to this day, he still hasn't ever watched "Boogie Nights" all the way through, and that he turned down an offer to appear in Anderson's follow-up, "Magnolia." "I'd done my picture with Paul Thomas Anderson, that was enough for me," he said. Wahlberg, who recalled Reynolds trying an Irish accent for his role in rehearsals, said in 2014 that he believed Reynolds' evident ill will toward what could have been his career comeback role had consequences. "He would have won the Oscar," Wahlberg said, "had he not dug such a hole for himself."

Host Gal Gadot Destroys the 'Saturday Night Live' Studio in Stunning Promo

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New Wonder Woman film"Wonder Woman" goddess Gal Gadot is a little TOO used to breaking down barriers.

Gadot is hosting "Saturday Night Live" for the first time this Saturday, Oct. 7, with Sam Smith as musical guest. As usual, NBC posted a promo for the episode, with SNL-ers Leslie Jones, Mikey Day, and Beck Bennett in the studio, waiting for the host to arrive. Bennett asks if they think Gadot is anything like Wonder Woman in real life ... and on that note, Gadot busts through the wall in a gorgeous red dress.

Watch the promo:Yeah, she probably should've used the door. The real question is how we're supposed to pronounce her name. She has said Gal (like gal vs guy) GuhDOTTTT (hard T), but everyone seems to say it a dozen different ways, so maybe she'll set the record straight once and for all on SNL.


Earlier today, SNL's official Twitter account shared their take on "Justice League":

Hopefully we'll see more of that crew on Oct. 7.

SNL Season 43 airs Saturdays at 11:29 p.m. on NBC.

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Netflix Is Raising Streaming Prices on 2 Plans in November 2017

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*Someone* has to pay for all of the Eggos Eleven stole.

Netflix is raising prices on its top two streaming plans in the U.S. starting in November 2017. According to Mashable, the basic one-screen plan is staying at $7.99 a month. However, the two-screen plus HD middle plan is going from $9.99 to $10.99; and the four-screens plus Ultra HD premium plan is jumping from $11.99 to $13.99. Netflix will reportedly start notifying current subscribers on October 19; the price hikes will go into effect in November, but the date will vary depending on customers' billing cycles. According to Fortune, anyone signing up today for Netflix will see the new higher prices.

Here's a statement from Netflix on the price hike, via Mashable:

"From time to time, Netflix plans and pricing are adjusted as we add more exclusive TV shows and movies, introduce new product features and improve the overall Netflix experience to help members find something great to watch even faster."

The last Netflix pricing change came in 2014. This new change comes two months after reports that Netflix is deeply in debt. The new prices are only for U.S. subscribers, and there was no mention of price changes for the DVD/disc plans.

No one likes when prices go up, even slightly, but at least this increase comes after "Stranger Things" Season 2 premieres on October 27. Also, Netflix is still cheaper than HBO's streaming service HBO Now, which is $15 a month. Hulu's commercial-free plan, on the other hand, is now slightly cheaper than Netflix's top-tier plan at $11.99 a month. Hulu gets the Emmys and now maybe more subscribers?

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Harvey Weinstein Accused of Decades of Sexual Harassment, Ashley Judd Among Alleged Victims

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Brooks Brothers With The Cinema Society Host The Premiere Of 'House Of Z'The New York Times published a searing expose on film executive Harvey Weinstein on Thursday, accusing the head of The Weinstein Company of a decades-long pattern of sexual harassment.

According to the Times, Weinstein allegedly used his sway as a powerful movie mogul to pressure young women -- many of them employees at his company, or fresh-faced models and actresses -- into engaging in sexual activity in exchange for furthering their careers, in addition to other bizarre behavior. Over a nearly three-decade span, the Times uncovered that Weinstein had paid out at least eight settlements to women, some of whom had accused the executive of "appearing nearly or fully naked in front of them, requiring them to be present while he bathed or repeatedly asking for a massage or initiating one himself."

Actress Ashley Judd went on record with the Times to describe similar behavior from Weinstein, including a bizarre string of incidents around the time she was shooting "Kiss the Girls" for Weinstein's former company, Miramax, back in 1997.

From the Times:

... [H]e appeared in a bathrobe and asked if he could give her a massage or she could watch him shower, she recalled in an interview.

...

Mr. Weinstein soon issued invitation after invitation, she said. Could he give her a massage? When she refused, he suggested a shoulder rub. She rejected that too, she recalled. He steered her toward a closet, asking her to help pick out his clothing for the day, and then toward the bathroom. Would she watch him take a shower? she remembered him saying.

"I said no, a lot of ways, a lot of times, and he always came back at me with some new ask," Ms. Judd said. "It was all this bargaining, this coercive bargaining."

To get out of the room, she said, she quipped that if Mr. Weinstein wanted to touch her, she would first have to win an Oscar in one of his movies. She recalled feeling "panicky, trapped," she said in the interview. "There's a lot on the line, the cachet that came with Miramax."

Lisa Bloom, a lawyer advising Weinstein, told the Times that the executive "denies many of the accusations as patently false," though Weinstein did acknowledge some past poor behavior. In a lengthy statement to the Times, he apologized, and said he would be taking a leave of absence from The Weinstein Company to focus on bettering himself.

His statement said in part:

I came of age in the 60's and 70's, when all the rules about behavior and workplaces were different. That was the culture then.

I have since learned it's not an excuse, in the office - or out of it. To anyone.

I realized some time ago that I needed to be a better person and my interactions with the people I work with have changed.

I appreciate the way I've behaved with colleagues in the past has caused a lot of pain, and I sincerely apologize for it.

...

I want a second chance in the community but I know I've got work to do to earn it. I have goals that are now priorities. ... I cannot be more remorseful about the people I hurt and I plan to do right by all of them.

For more, read the entire, blistering report at The New York Times. Weinstein's entire statement can be found here.

Tyrese Blasts Dwayne Johnson After 'Fast and Furious 9' Delay

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Premiere Of Universal Pictures' 'Furious 7' - Red CarpetTyrese Gibson is still furious with Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson for allegedly messing up the release schedule for "Fast and Furious 9," and has once again taken to Instagram to vent his frustrations.

In yet another post aimed at his costar, Tyrese took a fresh swipe at Johnson, who he's called out publicly before over the rumored standalone flick for Johnson's "Fast" character, Luke Hobbs. While no such film has been officially announced yet, Tyrese -- and many fans and critics -- has assumed it's all but a done deal, especially now that "Fast 9" has been pushed back from its original April 2019 release date to April of 2020, likely to accommodate the spinoff's own release.

On Instagram, Gibson posted a screen shot of the new "Fast 9" release date with a searing caption addressed directly at his costar.

"Congratulations to @TheRock ... for making the fast and the furious franchise about YOU," Gibson wrote. " ... #FastFamily right? Nah..... it's about #TeamDewayne."

The actor went on to take yet another shot at Johnson's poorly received 2017 comedy "Baywatch" (a recent favorite pastime of Gibson's that's as petty as it is hilarious), wondering if the Hobbs flick "will ... be another #BayWatch?"

The Rock has yet to respond, but we have a feeling this Fast Family drama is nowhere near over.

[via: Tyrese/Instagram]

Watch Julia Roberts Reenact Career Highlights With James Corden

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Julia Roberts has found quite the co-star in late-night host James Corden.

While appearing on "The Late Late Show" on Wednesday night, the Academy Award-winning actress revisited the highlights of her prolific career. To accomplish that feat, all she needed was Corden, a green screen, and some clever, if perfectly ridiculous, props. Their reenactments aren't necessarily up to Roberts's Oscar-worthy standards, but they're definitely fun.

In less than 10 minutes, the two manage to get through more than two dozen of her movies. Their selection spans the decades, ranging from 1988's "Mystic Pizza" all the way through present day. Hidden in the middle is a scene from her upcoming film "Wonder," and they oh-so-subtly plug it and its release date.

Watch the hilarious video below -- even Roberts can't keep a straight face.

Catch Roberts in "Wonder" starting on Nov. 17.

"The Late Late Show with James Corden" airs weeknights at 12:37 a.m. ET/PT.

Dwayne Johnson, Jason Statham 'Fast & Furious' Spin-Off Is Happening

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"Fast & Furious 9" won't be here until April 2020, but a spin-off with Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham will tide us over. Universal just announced the untitled spin-off for July 26, 2019.

Diplomatic Security Service agent Luke Hobbs (Johnson) and Deckard Shaw (Statham) have had their differences, but, like all the rest of the "F&F" crew, are finally fighting on the same side. No word yet on if other regulars will be part of the film, or if we'll see more of Shaw's mum, played by Helen Mirren.

We're guessing Tyrese Gibson won't be part of it.

The Wrap reports that a short scene of Hobbs and Shaw teasing the spin-off was cut from the last film at Vin Diesel's request. Or, according to another source, execs decided to cut it since it would "make for a better opportunity somewhere else."

Regardless, the "F&F" films will keep on coming, despite the various behind-the-scenes feuds.


Bruce Willis 'Death Wish' Remake Delayed Until Next Year

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Sorry, no "Death Wish" for you this Thanksgiving.

Eli Roth's remake starring Bruce Willis as a gun-toting vigilante won't come out this year after all. The reboot of the 1974 Charles Bronson film has been bumped from November 22 to March 2, 2018.

The official reason for the date bump: MGM tells EW that Roth and Willis won't be free until then to promote the film.

The new release date means Willis will be going up against the Jennifer Lawrence spy thriller "Red Sparrow," the "guy teams up with a wolf" action-drama "Alpha," and the Jason Bateman comedy "Game Night."

It would have been opening opposite the Pixar film "Coco;" the Aaron Sokin-directed crime drama "Molly's Game" with Jessica Chastain; and "Chappaquiddick," starring Jason Clarke as Ted Kennedy.

[Via EW, Variety, IGN]

Tom Cruise Back on 'Mission: Impossible 6' After Breaking His Ankle

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Tom Cruise on the Set of Mission : Impossible 6 Gemini - in ParisSeven weeks after breaking his ankle during a stunt gone wrong, Tom Cruise was spotted back on set filming "Mission: Impossible 6."

That's ahead of schedule, as THR initially reported that he was going to take off eight or nine weeks to heal.

The Daily Mail reports that the actor "did not go easy" on his first day and was seen flying a helicopter and driving a large truck around the set.

The film costars Henry Cavill, Rebecca Ferguson, Simon Pegg, Michelle Monaghan, Sean Harris, Ving Rhames, Alec Baldwin and Angela Bassett.

Despite the hiatus, the release date hasn't moved: It's still set for July 27, 2018.

'Bride of Frankenstein' Remake Pulled From Universal's Schedule

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Don't hold your breath for that "Bride of Frankenstein" remake. The update on the classic horror film isn't happening any time soon.

Universal just released a statement announcing they are "postponing" the planned installment of their Dark Universe series.

"After thoughtful consideration, Universal Pictures and director Bill Condon have decided to postpone Bride of Frankenstein," the statement reads. "None of us want to move too quickly to meet a release date when we know this special movie needs more time to come together. Bill is a director whose enormous talent has been proven time and again, and we all look forward to continuing to work on this film together."

No mention of the fact that everyone hated the first film in the Dark Universe series, "The Mummy."

"Bride of Frankenstein" was set to open February 14, 2019 with Condon (who just helmed the live-action "Beauty and the Beast") behind the camera. Javier Bardem was slated to play Frankenstein's monster, with Angelina Jolie in talks to play his bride.

This update on the 1935 classic, in which the bride (Elsa Lanchester) appears only briefly at the end of the film, was going to be a very different take. As Condon told Collider in an interview that ran just a few days ago, we would have seen a lot more of the bride. "This is Eve before Adam; the bride comes first," he said.

No word on whether Johnny Depp's Invisible Man movie or Russell Crowe's Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde film will also be pulled. They are, at last report, still in development.

[Via THR, Collider]

Ryan Gosling Honors His Late Dog George In the Sweetest Way

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Ryan Gosling, Ellen DeGeneresIn a moving segment on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show," Ryan Gosling paid tribute to his dog, George, who sadly passed away in December.

After sharing a series of photos of George, who lived to be 17, Gosling revealed he was wearing George's dog tag around his neck. And, as fans may have already noticed, he was wearing a T-shirt with George's picture on it when he hosted "Saturday Night Live" last week.

Gosling managed to keep it together when talking about George, but good luck not shedding a tear as he talks about how George thought being a dog was "beneath him" and refused to do tricks. And how, towards the end, the dog looked like "an aging rock star... he was sort of skinny-fat, had big hair and no teeth, open sores — but still sexy," jokes Gosling.

This puppy photo from 2001 kills us!

Ryan Gosling, dog

Sending all the hugs to Gosling, whose new movie "Blade Runner 2049," opens today.

[via EW]

'Pacific Rim Uprising' Trailer Deploys John Boyega to Fight Kaiju Monsters

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Monsters ... giant robots ... big battles, take 2!

The first trailer for "Pacific Rim Uprising" debuted at New York Con today. The follow-up to Guillermo del Toro's 2013 movie brings back the monster Kaiju, who begin an all-out assault on humanity. "The war we thought we finished is just beginning," says John Boyega. And the only thing to stop them are the huge robots, Jaegers, that were built to fight back.

The actor plays Jake Pentecost, a promising Jaeger pilot and the son of Idris Elba's Stacker Pentecost, the hero who sacrificed himself in the first movie. He has big shoes to fill, and helping him is his adopted sister Mako Mori (Rinko Kikuchi).

Stephen S. DeKnight ("Daredevil") takes over directing duties for the sequel. He brings on board new cast members, including Scott Eastwood as a talented rival pilot and newcomer Cailie Spaeny as a young Jaeger hacker.

"Pacific Rim Uprising" opens in theaters March 23, 2018.

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