Tag: alan-ruck

  • Matthew Broderick & Alan Ruck on for ‘The Best Is Yet To Come’

    (Right) Matthew Broderick in 'Only Murders in the Building' season 3. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu. (Left) Alan Ruck in 'Succession' season 3. Photo: Macall B. Polay/ HBO.
    (Right) Matthew Broderick in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 3. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu. (Left) Alan Ruck in ‘Succession’ season 3. Photo: Macall B. Polay/ HBO.

    Preview:

    • Matthew Broderick and Alan Ruck are starring in ‘The Best Is Yet to Come.’
    • It’s a new comedy from director Jon Turteltaub.
    • Allan Loeb adapted the script from a French movie.

    Next year will mark 40 years since the release of John Hughes’ classic road trip comedy ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.’

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    If you greet that news with, “what’s ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off?’ then we applaud your youth, but castigate your taste in movies. If you know exactly what we’re talking about, then congratulations, and that sound you hear is your mortal form slowly turning to dust.

    The movie starred Matthew Broderick, Mia Sara and Alan Ruck in the story of cheeky, scheming high schooler Ferris (Broderick) who tires of finding ways to skip school only to stay home, and instead hatches a plan for a wild day of adventure and fun, bringing along girlfriend Sloane (Sara) and nervous best pal Cameron (Ruck).

    Hughes’ movie has long been seen as among the best of its genre, and includes a variety of memorable scenes, soundtrack cues and even the sort of post-credits gag that predates Marvel and co. by decades.

    Now two of the stars of that movie –– Broderick and Ruck –– are, per Deadline, reuniting to share the screen once more, albeit in very different roles.

    Assuming their deals work out, the two will star in ‘The Best Is Yet to Come,’ a new comedy in the works from ‘National Treasure’ and ‘The Meg’s Jon Turteltaub.

    Related Article: ‘Ferris Bueller’ Spin-Off ‘Sam and Victor’s Day Off’ in the Works

    What’s the story of ‘The Best Is Yet to Come’?

    (L to R) Alan Ruck and Matthew Broderick in 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Alan Ruck and Matthew Broderick in ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    We say “new” comedy, though to put it strictly, this is a remake of a 2019 French comedy of the same name (though in French it’s ‘Le meilleur reste à venir’). That original movie was directed by Alexandre de La Patelliere  and Matthieu Delaporte, and has already been remade once for German audiences.

    Allan Loeb, who wrote ‘Collateral Beauty’ and ‘Just Go with It’ among others, is at work on an adaptation which would find Broderick and Ruck playing best friends who, through a colossal misunderstanding that creates a ticking clock, hop in a car to find the estranged son of one of them and also try to do all the things that life has prevented them from doing.

    It’s a heady mix of terminal illness mistakes, old pals bonding and a road trip, so not a million miles away from Ferris and co., though tackling it through a very different lens.

    Where else can we see Matthew Broderick?

    Matthew Broderick in 'Only Murders in the Building' season 3. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.
    Matthew Broderick in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 3. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    While Ferris was far from his first role (Broderick had already appeared in the likes of ‘WarGames’ and ‘Ladyhawke’), it was certainly a big break for him.

    He’s since gone on to a lengthy career on screens big and small and stage, finding particular success with the theatre adaptation of Mel Brooks’ ‘The Producers.’

    Other notable movies include ‘The Lion King’ (the animated original, where he voiced Simba), ‘The Cable Guy,’ 1996’s take on ‘Godzilla,’ ‘Election,’ ‘Deck the Halls’ and more recently, Jennifer Lawrence comedy ‘No Hard Feelings.’

    On TV, his recent resume includes appearances on ‘Elsbeth’ and as a heightened version of himself in the third season of ‘Only Murders in the Building.’

    Coming up, he has one of the main roles in director Simon Bird’s new comedy drama ‘Pretend I’m Not Here,’ which sees a couple in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands during World War II sheltering a Jewish perfume salesman.

    What else has Alan Ruck worked on?

    Alan Ruck in 'Succession' season 3. Photo: Macall B. Polay/ HBO.
    Alan Ruck in ‘Succession’ season 3. Photo: Macall B. Polay/ HBO.

    Like his co-star, Ruck had been working before ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,’ but his part as the rich, panicky Cameron Frye certainly helped bring him wider attention.

    He went on to appear in movies including ‘Speed,’ ‘Star Trek: Generations’ (where he played the harried, starstruck captain of the U.S.S. Enterprise-B), ‘Twister,’ ‘Cheaper by the Dozen,’ ‘War Machine,’ ‘Freaky’ and last year’s ‘Crust.’

    Yet it can be argued that it’s on TV where Ruck has really shined, with notable roles in ‘Spin City’ and as privileged, misguided older sibling Connor Roy in ‘Succession.’

    Ruck has a couple of movies on the way, including ‘People We Meet on Vacation’ and ‘Wind River: Rising.’

    When will ‘The Best Is Yet to Come’ be in theaters?

    All we know right now on this one is that the two stars are making deals and Turteltaub hopes to have the cameras rolling in the summer.

    Lionsgate is in talks to pick up the film, so a release date will likely be set when that contract is signed.

    (L to R) Mia Sara, Matthew Broderick and Alan Ruck in 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Mia Sara, Matthew Broderick and Alan Ruck in ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    List of Matthew Broderick Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Matthew Broderick Movies On Amazon

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  • Glen Powell joins ‘Twisters’

    Glen Powell plays "Hangman" in 'Top Gun: Maverick' from Paramount Pictures, Skydance and Jerry Bruckheimer Films.
    Glen Powell plays “Hangman” in ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ from Paramount Pictures, Skydance and Jerry Bruckheimer Films.

    Though he’s been working solidly for a few years now, Glen Powell is certainly having a moment thanks to his breakout role as Lt. Jake ‘Hangman’ Seresin in ‘Top Gun: Maverick’. He’s in demand and is now apparently in talks for another big gig.

    As first reported on The Hot Mic Podcast, Powell has his eye on a role in ‘Twisters’, the follow-up to Jan de Bont’s 1996 heavy weather thriller, which starred Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt.

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    Fresh’ actor Daisy Edgar-Jones is already aboard to star, and we could certainly see her and Powell as a charismatic lead duo.

    Daisy Edgar-Jones in 'Where the Crawdads Sing.'
    Daisy Edgar-Jones in ‘Where the Crawdads Sing.’ Photo courtesy of Sony Pictures.

    Related Article: A Sequel to 1996’s ‘Twister’ is Spinning Up at Universal, and Helen Hunt Could Return

    Tell me about ‘Twister’

    The original movie, which also featured the likes of Cary Elwes, Jami Gertz, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Alan Ruck and Todd Field (yes, the director of ‘Little Children’ and ‘TAR’) told the story of the Hardings (Hunt and Paxton) who must deal with their collapsing marriage even as they reunite to create an advanced weather warning system.

    ‘Twister’ was a success, earning $494 million worldwide, and lauded for its state-of-the-art effects. Yet no sequel was developed until much more recently.

    Mark L. Smith, who wrote ‘The Revenant’ and George Clooney’s ‘The Midnight Sky’, has crafted a script that reportedly focus on the now-grown daughter of Jo and Bill Harding, who is a chip off the old storm-chasing block.

    Steven Spielberg (who was a producer on the 1996 movie) is said to be thrilled by the new screenplay and eager for the movie to be made. And all involved are hoping that they can tempt Hunt back in some capacity, even if just for a cameo. Paxton, of course, sadly died in 2017.

    Despite early work kicking off on this one back in 2020, you can certainly point to ‘Maverick’ being a spur for fresh development on this front. And in fact, that movie’s director Joseph Kosinski was attached to what was then being described as a reboot.

    Though Kosinski ended up leaving to focus on the Formula One racing movie he has in development at Apple with Brad Pitt starring, the behind-the-scenes team is still being led by producer Frank Marshall (his wife and fellow powerhouse producer Kathleen Kennedy worked on the original with Spielberg).

    Now, ‘Minari’s Lee Isaac Chung is in the director’s chair and Edgar-Jones is most likely playing the daughter character. We’ll have to wait and see how Powell fits in.

    Daveed Diggs in 'Extrapolations,' premiering March 17, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Daveed Diggs in ‘Extrapolations,’ premiering March 17, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    In related ‘Twister’ sequel news, Daveed Diggs has spoken to Insider about another potential follow-up with which he was involved. Hunt stars in the ‘Blindspotting’ TV series that Diggs and Rafael Casal spun off from their indie movie. In 2021 they pitched the idea of Hunt directing a new take on ‘Twister’. But it didn’t happen, and Diggs has his suspicions as to why.

    Here’s what he said,

    “Oh man, I’m not going to get into it mostly because I’m probably going to misremember things. But all I’ll say is there was an opportunity where we were talking about that, and it didn’t happen, and the reasons that it didn’t happen are potentially shady. But shady in the way that we know the industry is shady.”

    The answer, my friends, is probably blowing in the wind.

    Bill Paxton as Dr. William "Bill/The Extreme" Harding in 1996's 'Twister.'
    Bill Paxton as Dr. William “Bill/The Extreme” Harding in 1996’s ‘Twister.’

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Twisters:’

    Buy ‘Twister’ On Amazon

     

  • ‘Succession’ to End with Season 4

    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by David Russell/HBO.

    If you’re a fan of the squabbling siblings and cranky patriarch of the Roy family –– AKA the main characters of successful HBO series ‘Succession’, then bad news is on the way.

    Creator/showrunner Jesse Armstrong has told The New Yorker that the show will end with the incoming fourth season.

    Commenting on the reasons for the end, Armstrong said the following,

    “Who knows about the psychological reasons, but the creative ones were that it felt really useful to not make the final, final decision for ages. You know, there’s a promise in the title of ‘Succession.’ I’ve never thought this could go on forever. The end has always been kind of present in my mind. From Season 2, I’ve been trying to think: Is it the next one, or the one after that, or is it the one after that?”

    And as for his decision to tip viewers off about the end of the show, Armstrong said,

    “There are a few different aspects. One, we could have said it as soon as I sort of decided, almost when we were writing it, which I think would be weird and perverse. We could have said it at the end of the season. I quite like that idea, creatively, because then the audience is just able to enjoy everything as it comes, without trying to figure things out, or perceiving things in a certain way once they know it’s the final season. But, also, the countervailing thought is that we don’t hide the ball very much on the show. I feel a responsibility to the viewership, and I personally wouldn’t like the feeling of, ‘Oh, that’s it, guys. That was the end.’ I wouldn’t like that in a show. I think I would like to know it is coming to an end. And, also, there’s a bunch of prosaic things, like it might be weird for me and the cast as we do interviews. It’s pretty definitively the end, so then it just might be uncomfortable having to sort of dissemble like a politician for ages about it. Hopefully, the show is against bullshit, and I wouldn’t like to be bullshitting anyone when I was talking about it.”

     

    Jeremy Strong, Alan Ruck, Kieran Culkin, Brian Cox, and Sarah Snook in HBO's 'Succession.'
    (L to R) Jeremy Strong, Alan Ruck, Kieran Culkin, Brian Cox, and Sarah Snook in HBO’s ‘Succession.’

    Related Article: ‘Succession’ Season 4 Teaser

    Who stars in ‘Succession’?

    ‘Succession’ is the story of the Roy family, headed by Logan Roy (Brian Cox), an elderly but stubborn patriarch and billionaire who is deciding which of his children to hand his giant Waystar Royco business off to. Or whether he wants to at all…

    The competition between the siblings is strong –– there’s driven Kendall (Jeremy Strong), who is plotting to overthrow his father, ambitious Shiv (Sarah Snook) who wants to succeed him, snarky Roman (Kieran Culkin) who is more about having a good time than business but thinks he could do the job. Oldest son Connor, meanwhile, is focused on politics over profits.

    Around this core orbits a group of related family members, staff and advisors, including Shiv’s nervy husband Tom (Matthew MacFadyen), Cousin Greg (Nicholas Braun), and dedicated Roy employee Gerri Kellerman.

    Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook, and Kieran Culkin in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    (L to R) Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook, and Kieran Culkin in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by Claudette Barius/HBO.

    What happens in ‘Succession’ Season 4?

    In Season 4, the sale of media conglomerate Waystar Royco to tech visionary Lukas Matsson (Alexander Skarsgård) moves ever closer. The prospect of this seismic sale provokes existential angst and familial division among the Roys as they anticipate what their lives will look like once the deal is complete. A power struggle ensues as the family weighs up a future where their cultural and political weight is severely curtailed.

    ‘Succession’ Season 4 will start on HBO on Sunday, March 26th.

    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by Macall Polay/HBO.

    Movies Similar to ‘Succession:’

    Buy ‘Succession’ on Amazon

  • ‘Succession’ Season 4 Teaser

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    If ‘Succession’ aired on commercially sponsored network TV, the show might be brought to you by backstabbing and infighting. Because both are key elements of the scathing and supremely entertaining drama.

    Created by Jesse Armstrong and produced by Adam McKay, ‘Succession’ introduced us to the Roys, led by patriarch Logan (Brian Cox). Modeled (loosely… but perhaps not that loosely) on the Murdochs, the show saw the jockeying for position in a family that controls a media empire.

    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by Macall Polay/HBO.

    Logan is a billionaire overseeing things, but when his health starts to falter, the scramble begins to see how among his offspring will succeed him. There’s ambitious but troubled Kendall (Jeremy Strong), who would seem to be the heir apparent since oldest sibling Connor (Alan Ruck) has more political interests in mind. Clever Shiv (Sarah Snook) is also looking to grab power, dragging along wannabe business boss husband Tom Wambsgans (Matthew MacFadyen). And then we have smart/foul-mouthed Roman (Kieran Culkin) who doesn’t seem to have what it takes to run a business, but that doesn’t stop him from trying to inveigle his way in.

    When we last saw the Roy family––and the third season wrapped up in December 2021, so it’s possible some might need a refresher––it was, as always, all kicking off. Shiv was planning to team up with Roman and Kendall to turn against Logan but Tom betrayed her by siding with Logan first, clueing him in on the Roy kids’ incoming revolt. Logan, as is his wont, was not pleased. Cue more of the usual infighting.

    Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook, and Kieran Culkin in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    (L to R) Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook, and Kieran Culkin in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by Claudette Barius/HBO.

    Season 4 will continue that story, and this new teaser promises everything you could want from one of the best shows on TV right now––childish chess-moves via phone call, luxurious locations, Roman’s witty retorts, Tom’s nervous, needy disposition, and the highest of reputational stakes. Plus, we see Connor finally tying the knot with long-suffering partner Willa (Justine Lupe), and the return of Alexander Skarsgård as quirky, unbearable tech CEO Lukas Matsson, who is looking to strike a deal with the Roys. When he’s not being weird.

    “We’re going to make it a musical in Season 4, hopefully,” director Mark Mylod laughed to Variety last year. “I’ll tell you about my experience with Season 4 so far. We’re a good chunk into shooting it, and I had the same experience after Season 2, as well as with Season 3, where it was really well received. So Jesse (Armstrong) and I and the whole team go into the next season just so paranoid, trepidatious about not wanting the bar to lower.”

    And though there has been talk of this as a potential final season, the fact that HBO isn’t flagging it as such means we can likely expect at least one more.

    ‘Succession’ returns to HBO Max on March 26th.

    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by David Russell/HBO.
    Nicholas Braun and Matthew Macfadyen on season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.'
    (L to R) Nicholas Braun and Matthew Macfadyen on season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by Macall B. Polay/HBO.

     

  • ‘Twister’ Sequel in the Works

    Helen Hunt as Dr. Joanne "Jo" Harding and Bill Paxton as Dr. William "Bill/The Extreme" Harding in 1996's 'Twister.'
    (L to R) Helen Hunt as Dr. Joanne “Jo” Harding and Bill Paxton as Dr. William “Bill/The Extreme” Harding in 1996’s ‘Twister.’

    If you’re seeing the sky change around you and hearing the distant rush of a wind vortex, that could be because the long-in-development follow-up to 1996’s ‘Twister’ is once more moving forward at Universal. We’ll let you guess what it’s called. Find out at the end of the story!

    According to Deadline, Universal is working with Warner Bros. (though the latter is only providing financing and will get a cut of any profits) to crank up the wind machines again, 26 years since Jan de Bont had Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton leading a team of storm chasers into the path of giant, swirly twisters, all in the name of science.

    The original movie, which also featured the likes of Cary Elwes, Jami Gertz, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Alan Ruck and Todd Field (yes, the director of new Cate Blanchett drama ‘TAR’) in the story of the Hardings (Hunt and Paxton) who must deal with their collapsing marriage even as they reunite to create an advanced weather warning system.

    ‘Twister’ was a success, earning $494 million worldwide, and lauded for its state-of-the-art effects. Yet no sequel was developed until much more recently.

    Mark L. Smith, who wrote ‘The Revenant’ and George Clooney’s ‘The Midnight Sky’, has crafted a script that reportedly focus on the now-grown daughter of Jo and Bill Harding, who is a chip off the old storm-chasing block.

    Helen Hunt as Dr. Joanne "Jo" Harding and Bill Paxton as Dr. William "Bill/The Extreme" Harding in 1996's 'Twister.'
    (L to R) Helen Hunt as Dr. Joanne “Jo” Harding and Bill Paxton as Dr. William “Bill/The Extreme” Harding in 1996’s ‘Twister.’

    Steven Spielberg (who was a producer on the 1996 movie) is said to be thrilled by the new screenplay and eager for the movie to be made. And all involved are hoping that they can tempt Hunt back in some capacity, even if just for a cameo. Paxton, of course, sadly died in 2017.

    Despite early work kicking off on this one back in 2020, you can certainly point to ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ being a spur for fresh development on this front. And in fact, that movie’s director Joseph Kosinski was attached to what was then being described as a reboot.

    Though Kosinski ended up leaving to focus on the Formula One racing movie he has in development at Apple with Brad Pitt starring, the behind-the-scenes team is still being led by producer Frank Marshall (his wife and fellow powerhouse producer Kathleen Kennedy worked on the original with Spielberg).

    Universal and Kennedy are looking for the right director, and names mentioned so far include ‘Free Solo’ duo Jimmy Chin & Elizabeth Chai Vaserhelyi, ‘Prey’s Dan Trachtenberg and Laika animation boss Travis Knight, who in addition to the stop-motion likes of ‘Kubo and the Two Strings’, found success with live-action ‘Transformers’ prequel ‘Bumblebee’.

    Other candidates are apparently in the mix, but the studio is hoping that the right person or team can be locked in quickly enough to start shooting in the spring. And that proposed title we teased at the start? ‘Twisters’. Yup, bet you’re glad you waited to read that. Will it change? That answer is blowin’ in the wind.

    Bill Paxton as Dr. William "Bill/The Extreme" Harding in 1996's 'Twister.'
    Bill Paxton as Dr. William “Bill/The Extreme” Harding in 1996’s ‘Twister.’
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  • Paramount Plans ‘Ferris Bueller’ Spin-Off Movie

    Mia Sara, Alan Ruck, and Matthew Broderick in 1986's 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off.'
    (L to R) Mia Sara, Alan Ruck, and Matthew Broderick in 1986’s ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.’

    While you might think that classic movies might be safe from remakes and other treatments, recent history (and even the likes of Gus Van Sant’s ‘Psycho’ years ago) has proved that’s not the case.

    But while John Hughes’ ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ has passed into pop culture legend, referenced in a hundred different other movies and shows, no-one has seriously dared suggest a remake. And, indeed, that’s still the case – but Deadline reports that Paramount instead has plans for a spin-off.

    For those who are somehow unaware of the 1986 original, it starred Matthew Broderick as the canny, cheeky Ferris, who hatches a plan to skip school for the day and have fun hanging out with girlfriend Sloane (Mia Sara) and reluctant best pal Cameron (Alan Ruck).

    Faking illness, Ferris gets to spend the day driving Cameron’s father’s Ferrarri, dancing in a parade and visiting a Chicago art gallery. Yet, his day doesn’t go completely to plan.

    Ferris is an iconic character who breaks the fourth wall to address in the audience, and Hughes’ movie features a post-credit scene of Ferris telling the audience that it’s over and they should go home.

    Considered one of Hughes’ best works, it was also a success, it earned $70.7 million on a $5 million budget. And it even inspired a short-lived sitcom version, which ran for one 13-episode season between 1990 and 1991. It starred Charlie Schlatter as Ferris Bueller and a young Jennifer Aniston as his nemesis sister, Jeanie Bueller.

    Ami Dolenz, Charlie Schlatter, and Jennifer Aniston in the 1990's TV series 'Ferris Bueller.'
    (L to R) Ami Dolenz, Charlie Schlatter, and Jennifer Aniston in the 1990’s TV series ‘Ferris Bueller.’

    The new movie would focus on the valets who Ferris hands the Ferrarri over to at one point in the movie, and who proceed to take it on their own joyride.

    Though the characters were not named in the original movie, they were played by Richard Edson and the late Larry “Flash” Jenkins (who died in 2019).

    ‘Sam and Victor’s Day Off’ will give them names and a story to go along with their brief pop-up in the 1986 movie.

    Paramount has ‘Cobra Kai’ creators/show-runners Jon Hurwitz, Hayden Schlossberg and Josh Heald producing the movie, while the script will be by Bill Posley, who worked on the show as a writer and made his directorial debut with this year’s festival release ‘Bitch Ass’.

    ‘Cobra Kai’ has proved that the producers know what it takes to faithfully bring new angles to classic movies, as the series stands both as a sequel to the original ‘Karate Kid’ trilogy and an expansion of its world.

    Originally created for YouTube’s short-lived scripted original strand, it then moved to Netflix where it is about to launch its fifth season.

    Hurwitz, Heald and Schlossberg are also behind a new show for the streaming service, called ‘Obliterated,’ and are attached to produce a movie version of the History Channel’s ‘Ancient Aliens’ show, with Heald on to direct that one.

    ‘Sam and Victor’s Day Off’ doesn’t have a director attached yet, but we’ll see if it gets to that stage.

    Alan Ruck, Mia Sara, and Matthew Broderick in 1986's 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off.'
    (L to R) Alan Ruck, Mia Sara, and Matthew Broderick in 1986’s ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.’
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  • HBO Renews ‘Succession’ for Season 3

    HBO Renews ‘Succession’ for Season 3

    HBO

    It didn’t take long for HBO realize it had a hit on its hands, with the premium cable outlet renewing family drama “Succession” for a third season only two episodes into its second.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, the show has built an impressive audience of loyal viewers, averaging 4.3 million viewers per episode across all platforms in season one, which premiered in 2018. Season two, which debuted on August 11, has already notched more than 1 million viewers each for its first two installments — and counting.

    In a statement announcing the renewal, Francesca Orsi, executive vice president of HBO drama programming, specifically cited the show’s ability to connect with viewers as a key to its, uh, success.

    “We are elated that ‘Succession’ and its exploration of wealth, power and family has resonated so powerfully with audiences,” Orsi’s statement said. “We cannot wait to see how the complex characters that Jesse Armstrong has created continue to navigate this captivating, ruthless world of the uber-rich. In today’s world where the intersection of politics and media is increasingly prevalent, ‘Succession’ presents an especially piercing look behind the curtain of this elite, influential, and cutthroat community.”

    “Succession” follows the wealthy Roy family (a not-so-thinly-veiled fictional version of the Murdochs), whose dysfunctional members are vying to take control of its vast media empire. Brian Cox stars as family patriarch Logan Roy, and the series also features Jeremy Strong, Hiam Abbass, Sarah Snook, Kieran Culkin, Alan Ruck, Nicholas Braun, Matthew Macfadyen, and J. Smith-Cameron.

    Season two is currently airing on HBO on Sundays, and will run for 10 episodes. Season three is expected to debut sometime in 2020.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

  • ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’: 10 Things You (Probably) Didn’t Know About This ’80s Classic

    Alan Ruck, who played Cameron Frye in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” once had an idea for a sequel that would have been set decades later, with an ancient Ferris breaking Cameron out of the rest home for one last day of fun. It doesn’t seem that far-fetched anymore, given that 30 years have already passed since the teen comedy’s release on June 11, 1986.

    The John Hughes classic continues to have an outsized impact on pop culture; even this year’s superhero hit “Deadpool” featured a “Ferris” shout-out. Yet there are still things you may not know about Ferris, Sloane, and Cameron’s epic day of hooky in Chicago — who almost starred in it, what was left out, and its various life-imitates-art moments. So fire up your friend’s father’s Ferrari as we fly through these forgotten Ferris factoids.
    1. Hughes (pictured left) wrote the script in a week, trying to get it done before the onset of a Writers Guild strike.

    2. Matthew Broderick was Hughes’s first choice for Ferris; nonetheless, the filmmakers considered John Cusack, Michael J. Fox, Tom Cruise, and the then-little-known Jim Carrey.
    3. Hughes refused to cast his regular leading lady Molly Ringwald as Sloane, arguing the part was too small for her. He was impressed, however, with Mia Sara‘s air of maturity, even though she was just 18.

    4. Alan Ruck was 29 when cast as high school senior Cameron. He remains grateful to Hughes’s “Breakfast Club” star Emilio Estevez for turning down the role that made Ruck’s career.
    5. Ferris and Cameron’s camaraderie came easily to Broderick and Ruck, who had co-starred on Broadway in “Biloxi Blues.” Ruck’s pushy, authoritative telephone voice when he’s imitating Sloane’s father is actually his impression of “Biloxi” director Gene Saks.

    6. Cameron’s Detroit Red Wings jersey with Gordie Howe’s No. 9 on the back was Hughes’s tribute to the hockey icon of his youth. In fact, he got Howe himself to send him the jersey used in the film.
    7. Some of the parade scenes were staged for the film, but the close-ups of Ferris performing “Twist and Shout” required Broderick to crash an actual parade, Ferris-style.

    8. Left on the cutting room floor were all the scenes of Ferris and Jeanie’s (Jennifer Grey) kid brother and sister. Never filmed was a scene that would have had the three school-ditching teens visit a strip club.
    9. The film cost a mere $5.8 million to make. It earned back $70.1 million to become the 10th-biggest hit of 1986.

    10. Lyman Ward and Cindy Pickett, who played Ferris and Jeanie’s parents, met on the “Ferris” set, fell in love, and got married in real life. They played a couple again in the 1992 horror movie “Sleepwalkers.”

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  • Mireille Enos on Her ‘Big, Glam’ Show ‘The Catch’ and the ‘World War Z’ Sequel

    Mireille Enos at the 2015 ABC UpfrontWe’ll soon be seeing The Killing,” in a far more glamorous light: She stars in the upcoming The Catch,” which will air on ABC in early 2016.

    “It’s a thriller. It’s about con artists and a kind of cat-and-mouse end game. It’s classy and exciting. I’m a forensic accountant, so I’m hunting for con artists,” Enos told Moviefone on June 7th at a Tony Awards viewing party. “And then I get conned. And also, it turns out, I have something to hide as well. So there’s many levels of conning going on.”

    Chimed in husband Alan Ruck, “She’s sneaky!” The “Spin City” star ruled out appearing on the series. “No, it’s a big, glam show. That’s not my wheelhouse. I don’t go there too much.”

    Enos says she’ll “spank it up” in the wardrobe department. Say goodbye to those mousy, oversized sweaters she wore for so much of “The Killing.” The chunky sweaters were, of course, a way to hide her then-pregnancy.

    As for the upcoming “World War Z” sequel, Enos said it “would be fun” if her character was allowed to kick some zombie ass this time around. As Ruck pointed out, “Mireille’s got a black belt in Tae Kwon Do, so I think we ought to do that. Let’s call Brad [Pitt].”

    “I did kick a zombie in the head in the car,” Enos noted of the first film. She said she hasn’t seen a script yet for the film, which has a June 2017 release date. Juan Antonio Bayona (“The Orphanage,” “The Impossible”) will direct.
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  • Why Alan Ruck ‘Hated’ ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’

    alan ruck and cameron fryeHow does Alan Ruck feel about his most famous movie, “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off“?

    “There was a short period in my life where I hated that movie. I couldn’t get any other work. People would be like, ‘Heyyy!’ and I was like, ‘Yeah, one-trick pony,’” the actor, who played Ferris’s depressive best friend, Cameron Frye, revealed to Moviefone at a June 7th Tony Awards viewing party.

    But, fortunately, he’s come to appreciate the 1986 John Hughes film, “Now I’m happy that people still love it,” he said. As for all the tributes to the movie on its “30th anniversary,” he said. “Yeah, it’s nice. I’m really happy that it’s touched a lot of people.”

    He did dispute it being the 30th anniversary of the movie however: A baseball-loving movie fan determined that the actual date of the famous ball game that Ferris, Cameron, and Sloane attend was June 5, 1985, more than a year before the film hit theaters on June 11, 1986. “So will we be celebrating the 31st anniversary next year?” Ruck quipped.

    He said it doesn’t feel like it’s been 30 years: “It’s kind of brain-numbing. I know I’m older, but I feel fine. I don’t feel like I’m going anywhere anytime soon.”

    He also admitted it’s been “a while” since he’s watched the movie. “I actually don’t like to watch myself. I don’t believe me. There’s a suspension of disbelief thing that just doesn’t happen.”

    And has he ever heard the fan theory that Ferris doesn’t exist, he’s just a figment of Cameron’s imagination? “Like ‘Fight Club?’” Ruck smiled. “Yeah. I hope someone got their doctorate doing that. That’s very clever.”

    Ruck went on to star in “Spin City” and can now be seen playing FBI director Alex Myers on the ABC series “The Whispers.”
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