Tag: amazon

  • Julia Roberts-Starrer ‘Homecoming’ Gets 2-Season Order at Amazon

    FRANCE-CANNES-FILM-FESTIVAL-ENTERTAINMENTAmerica’s Sweetheart doesn’t have to wait around for TV renewals like most actors do.

    Amazon has snatched up Julia Roberts‘s upcoming TV drama “Homecoming” and picked up the series for two seasons, Deadline reports. Who needs a pilot when you’ve got an Oscar winner on board, right?

    The project drew a lot of interest in early June after it was reported that the movie star was in talks to headline the series. She ultimately signed on, creating what Deadline says was “a very competitive situation” before Amazon got the rights to the project. “Homecoming” is just her second major TV role, coming after she signed on for her first — HBO’s upcoming limited series “Today Will Be Different” — late last year.

    Roberts isn’t the only thing “Homecoming” has going for it. The series comes from “Mr. Robot” creator Sam Esmail, who will serve as director and executive producer. On top of that, it is based on the Peabody Award-winning podcast of the same name and written by its creators, Eli Horowitz and Micah Bloomberg.

    Is it too early to start betting on future Emmy nominations?

    [via: Deadline]

  • What the World Needs Now Is the First ‘The Tick’ Trailer

    Destiny’s on the line — and “The Tick” is ready to accept the charges.

    Amazon unveiled the first full-length trailer for its new series about the cult fave comic book character. Peter Serafinowicz plays the blue-suited titular character, who solves crimes with the help of somewhat hapless sidekick Arthur (Griffin Newman).

    The tongue-in-cheek tone and dry humor is reminiscent of Fox’s short-lived 2001 live-action series, which starred Patrick Warburton as the Tick. “Murder … it’s just not cool,” Serafinowicz deadpans in the trailer.

    Here’s the official synopsis of the show:

    In a world where superheroes have been real for decades, an underdog accountant with zero powers comes to realize his city is owned by a global super villain long-thought dead. As he struggles to uncover this conspiracy, he falls in league with a strange blue superhero.

    Season 1 of “The Tick” will be released in two parts on Amazon. The first six episodes begin streaming August 25, while part 2 will be available in 2018.

  • Glenn Close to Star in Zombie Comedy Pilot for Amazon

    2017 Tony Awards - ArrivalsForget boiling bunnies — Glenn Close wants to eat brains.

    The Emmy-winning actress is returning to series television for the first time since “Damages.” According to the Hollywood Reporter, she’ll star in Amazon’s comedy pilot “Sea Oak,” about a woman who turns into a zombie after dying in a home invasion.

    In life, Aunt Bernie was a meek, unmarried wallflower in Rust Belt City. But in death, she taps into her rage and is determined to get the life she never had. Aunt Bernie proceeds to inflict demands on her quasi-stripper nephew and two nieces, who live in a low-end subsidized housing project called Sea Oak.

    Close won two Emmys as a lead drama actress for her performance as take-no-prisoners lawyer Patty Hewes in “Damages.” Since the show concluded in 2012, Close has mostly been doing films, including “Guardians of the Galaxy” and “The Great Gilly Hopkins.”

  • Director Doug Liman on ‘The Wall,’ Guerrilla Filmmaking, and Revisiting ‘Mr. & Mrs. Smith’

    Director Doug Liman has had an unlikely career path, starting out in the world of micro-budget indies (films like “Swingers” and “Go“) and moving steadily through the studio ranks, kicking off the long-running “Bourne” franchise with “The Bourne Identity” and moving into things like “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” and the totally awesome sci-fi spectacle “Edge of Tomorrow.” Each film he makes seems to get bigger and bigger, with greater stars and more complicated visual effects.

    But this week, with the release of “The Wall,” Liman purposefully scaled things back. It’s the story of an American soldier (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) who, along with his squad mate (John Cena), are pinned against a crumbling stone wall by an unseen Iraqi sniper. It’s elegant, confident storytelling, anchored by a fine performance by Taylor-Johnson (further proof that he’s only boring when working with a filmmaker who doesn’t know what to do with him) and complete with a darkly twisted bummer ending that will stay with you long after the credits have rolled.

    I got to sit down with Liman recently, and we talked about his decision to scale down to a movie of this size, what it’s like working for Amazon Studios, and how John Cena is the hardest working man in Hollywood.

    Moviefone: What precipitated this decision to do a smaller movie? Were you burned out from the scale of these giant Hollywood movies at all?

    Doug Liman: Well, first off I fell in love with the script. I just couldn’t put it down. I had actually read the script as a writing sample. It wasn’t submitted to me as something for me to direct. I just said, “Well who’s directing this one?” And they said, “We don’t have a director.” For me, “The Wall” is a really big idea. So it didn’t feel like a small movie to me at all.

    In terms of the scale of the production, I believe in adjusting the size of the production so that I do my best work. And I learned that hard way. Like with “Swingers,” I was trying to raise a lot more money than we were eventually able to raise and I look back on that movie and I thought, Wow I was really lucky that we weren’t able to raise more money because it’s a better movie because of the decisions I had to make because we didn’t have more money. With “The Wall” I wanted it to be a certain type of story and be really intense and personal and feel like you were trapped behind that wall with Aaron Taylor-Johnson. And that’s a certain scale of movie that would best convey that and that’s the budget that we made it for.

    Like on “Mr. & Mrs. Smith,” that was a case of sometimes having too much money. I squandered a lot of it early on and shot things we were never going to use. After I used up all that money my back was finally against the wall and I had to make the movie that ended up on screen. So now I just skip that step and think, Let me get right to the meat — what do I really need to make the movie? And I make independent films within the studio system. Which means that the kinds of movies I make are a little more independent thinking and independent minded than traditional studio fare. Also the way I make the movies, some aspect of it is always of the scale of “The Wall,” if not smaller. Even “Edge of Tomorrow,” there are scenes in that movie with Tom Cruise alone where it’s just the two of us. He’s doing his own hair and make-up. Even on “The Wall,” Aaron Taylor-Johnson had somebody doing his hair and make-up.

    So when you talk about, am I burned out from the scale? No matter how big the movie is, you’ll find moments where I just went off with the actor and shot something. I think the smallest I’ve ever been is on “Go,” where I snuck into Santa Monica Airport with just one actor for a scene at night where I have the camera on the shoulder and a light in my other hand, so I don’t have a free hand. The actor had to turn the light on, roll my camera for me, step back to their mark because I had to film them, and then turn the camera off and turn the light off.

    So I wasn’t far from that on “Edge of Tomorrow” and the style of “Bourne Identity,” people talk about the shaky camerawork, a lot of that was because Matt Damon and I were sneaking into locations to film scenes where we didn’t have permission to shoot, either because the location wouldn’t give us permission or the studio told us we couldn’t shoot it. So that shakiness is someone is chasing us while we’re trying to shoot the scene, for real. It’s either the French police or an angry producer. I was probably more scared of the angry producer than the French police.Do the studios know that you’re going to get up to these shenanigans?

    I think they know now. They didn’t know back on “Bourne Identity.” They know that’s part of what you get. I don’t take “no” easily. If there’s a better idea, I’m going to chase it.

    What about the script for “The Wall” appealed to you? It’s interesting how uninterested the movie is in politics.

    I wasn’t trying to make a political movie at all. Part of what I loved about Dwain {Worrell]’s script is that there’s no morality in it at all. It’s a story of survival, which is a lot of the experience of a solider in combat is like. We can sit here in Hollywood and debate the morality of war but if you’re a solider in combat you don’t have that luxury. I love World War II movies and pretty much, across the board, they never talk about morality of the war. The Germans are bad, they have to be stopped, the Japanese are bad, they have to be stopped. There’s no morality at all, there’s just a job to be done. Part of what drew me to “Edge of Tomorrow” was that it was Tom Cruise battling aliens. They’re evil and they have to be stopped.

    And I was really drawn to the fact that you could do a movie set in Iraq that wasn’t about the morality at all. It wasn’t should we be there/should we not be there. These soldiers don’t have the luxury of that. They are there. And somebody’s trying to kill them and they have to survive. I loved the idea of checking my politics at the door.

    How did you decide when to look through the eyes of the sniper’s scope? Was there ever a time when you didn’t see that at all?

    No, I was always going to see a little bit from the sniper’s point of view. But we had endless intellectual debates about it because it was hard. When you’re in the trenches making the movie you’ll cut it together but you’ll never have the experience of an audience, because you’re the one making the movie. So there were a lot of intellectual conversations about whether you hear the sniper, what we allow you to hear or not hear about the sniper. But there’s kind of a “High Noon” quality of the film for me so that required seeing the sniper’s point of view.Can you talk about working with John Cena?

    I mean, I always thought Tom Cruise was the hardest working man in Hollywood until I met John Cena. First of all, those guys wrestle 52 weeks a year and he’s wrestling while he’s making our film. We’re shooting in the Mojave desert and he’s wrestling in Asia, he’s wrestling in the Midwest, he’s hosting the ESPYs, all while we’re shooting our movie, and we only shot for three weeks. Luckily for the character, the physical ordeal of him having to fly in and go right to set, is a teeny taste of the actual experience the character he’s playing has, since he’s been out in the desert for 24 hours when the film starts. And it’s not like these soldiers are getting a good night’s rest in these sweat boxes in these foreign operating bases. We used all of that.

    And I believe in using the stuff you naturally inherit and try to get it on screen. The opening of “Mr. & Mrs. Smith,” where Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are in a psychiatrist’s office, I shot that on the very first day of the shoot. When I cast Angelina Jolie, she was in Thailand. So she and Brad had never actually met. And I was like, I’m going to use the awkwardness of that first day of shooting and I’m going to just roll camera on it.

    And then there’s a scene with them in the same psychiatrist’s office at the end of the movie and I shot that at the last day of the shoot, which was a year later, when there’s obviously a level of comfort. I mean, in that case who could have known but I knew they would be more comfortable with each other at the end of the movie than they were going to be at the beginning of the movie. I didn’t know how comfortable but I used that awkwardness of the first day and it’s on screen in a way that, no matter how good the actor is, there’s that extra thing that can’t be acted, because it’s real.

    So the fact that John Cena has such a hectic schedule and is traveling all over the place, I think that just adds to the fatigue and pushing through the fatigue that these soldiers have to deal with and he’s such a can-do guy. He’s just like, “Tell me what you need me to do and I’ll try to do it.” And [he’s] so appreciative of the opportunity, when obviously I feel extremely fortunate that he’s choosing to be in my film. Tom Cruise has the same graciousness, where he’s just excited to be on set every day and the guy has done like 50 movies. You expect it more from John Cena since it’s still new for him. And it’s not an easy role; a lot of lying in the dirt.

    What was it like making a movie for Amazon?

    Well, Amazon is making movies for the theater, so it’s not quite like making a movie for Netflix where it never even goes. Amazon wants you to make it for a big screen. They’ll put it on Amazon later but they want you to make it as a big cinematic experience. And it’s run by two filmmakers, Ted Hope and Bob Berney, which is great. I’m not sure I can point to another filmmaker who has had studio executives who were as courageous as I’ve had. When you think about Universal saying “yes” to me making “Bourne Identity” after I’ve made two independent movies, one for $200,000 and one for $3 million. So I’ve experience with courageous studio heads. Bob Berney and Ted Hope are in a league of their own.

    I don’t want to spoil the end of the film, but the end of the film is not what we originally shot. It was a more traditional ending and it was a happier ending and I tested the film, showed it to friends and family. And one of my friends who was there, John Freeman Gill, said, “I think there’s a cooler ending.” And he pitched the ending that I ultimately shot. I called Bob and Ted and said, “I want to change the ending. I know it’s going to scare you, so I’m not even going to ask you to pay for it. I’ll pay for it, just let me shoot it and show it to you.”

    Because I know that asking a studio to change an ending to something this dark and twisted is a bridge too far. So I said, “I’m not asking you. I’m just telling you I’m going to go do it.” And they said, “That’s a great idea. We love that ending. We recognize that it’s probably less commercial but it’s a better movie. So go shoot and we’ll pay for it.” Honestly, I thought they were going to say “no,” but they’re filmmakers first and foremost. They realized there was a cooler ending. There were no metrics. It was just the gut instinct of a fellow filmmaker, which is what you get at Amazon.

    “The Wall” is in theaters now (and on Amazon much later).

  • Kathryn Hahn Pretty Much Loved ‘I Love Dick’ Immediately

    TheWrap Presents A Screening Of 'I Love Dick' And Q&A With Kathryn HahnI Love Dick” pretty much had her by the title alone.

    Of course, the major selling point that lured Hahn to her new, provocatively titled streaming series on Amazon was the fresh opportunity to work again with executive producer Transparent.”

    Drawing from Chris Kraus’s bestselling pseudo-memoir/novel of the same name chronicling a married woman’s increasingly obsessive and consuming sexual fixation on a guru-like artist and media theorist (Kevin Bacon) who has offered her philosopher husband (Griffin Dunne) a berth in his organization, “I Love Dick” casts Hahn as Krause — or a version thereof — and gives her some of the most unique and challenging opportunities of her career, while flipping the usual male-gaze oriented narrative in terms of psycho-sexual objectification.

    Hahn joined Moviefone for a look at why she felt drawn to the material, how she navigated some of its more risqué elements, and working with an all-too-rare female-led team behind the scenes.

    Moviefone: I want to know what made this role a must-do? What was that thing that you immediately grabbed on to and said, “This is going to test me.This is going to push me”?

    Kathryn Hahn: All of it! For one, it was because it was Jill Soloway, and I always know whatever world I dove into with her is going to stretch, and challenge, and push me, and it’s going to feel the most satisfying on the drive home for sure, creatively, and intellectually.

    I was not familiar with this book before Jill handed it to me as something to consider. There was a couple things that we were thinking about book-wise, and this was one of the titles. Of course I gravitated towards just the title alone! I was very curious.

    Then I was just like flabbergasted by the material. I loved Chris Kraus’s voice so much. I just loved how loud, and fearless, and vulnerable, and hilarious, and messy, and complicated, and just relentless she was as a character, and messy. I could not wait to get in there.

    How deep into research did you go with this? Did you meet Chris? Did you try to get a little bit more info than what was in the book, or did you just work with what was available on the page?

    Sure. I did a little bit, because I knew whatever the series, how it was going to develop, after reading the pilot, the amazing pilot that our producer Sarah Gubbins wrote, I knew that it was going to depart significantly from the source material. But I also knew that I just had brilliant, literal diaries, basically, of this woman’s life.

    So “I Love Dick” is kind of what Chris Kraus would consider one of a trilogy. The other two books, there’s a book called “Aliens & Anorexia,” and another one called “Torpor.” So I read all three, which kind of just, in varying ways, describe her relationship with her marriage. That was incredibly helpful. I met with Chris a couple times, and I fell madly in love. She’s just a phenomenal human being. She came to the set, which was incredible, and kind of told us how we were doing, kind of how it really, actually went down, which was very helpful.

    It was really trippy. There was a flashback scene in which Chris was there that day, I was there playing Chris, and then another young actress was playing my younger self. So to have the three of us together in a photograph was pretty trippy.

    Was there one sort of essential turnkey element that helped you unlock it all and get where you needed to go with this role? Was there something that made you truly get it and know what you needed to do to pull it off?

    Any one of these ventures is certainly a leap of faith. I’m trying to think what the one turnkey would be, because there’s so many things I had in my head! I think I described it as being like Richard Dreyfuss in “Close Encounters.”

    Then, when we met with all the women, it was an all-female writers’ room, which was incredible, and when we met to kind of talk about experience, we talked a lot about, even there’s so many writings of nuns’ kind of deep love devotion to Christ. So, many of those things just felt like whatever that kind of obsession feeling was, I just kind of tried to tap into that — that feeling of having the entire world before this person or thing that you’re obsessed with.

    It’s like when you become obsessed, the entire world is seen through that lens — the lens that you want to share it with or for that person. So yeah, kind of just to jump into that feeling.

    When you’re playing a role like this that has a considerable sexual element, and you know you’re going to be putting yourself out there, physically, how do you prepare yourself for that aspect of it all?

    Besides, like, a wax job? [Laughs] I would say, I think there is something about it, and I was talking about this last night with Kevin Bacon, that the emotional kind of reveal certainly feels scarier, sometimes — in most things — for me.

    I don’t know what that means, but there is something about it, especially in this environment, where you know that every eyeball looking at you behind the monitor, or behind the camera, is looking at you with love, and empathy, and not judgment, where you don’t feel, for a second, self-conscious, because you know that everybody in the room is there to support this journey, whether it be nude or not, it’s the same kind of feeling. I just trusted people so profoundly, that it really wasn’t that big of a deal.

    Also, I’ve had two children, so it’s like, “Who hasn’t seen it at this point?”

    Talk to me a little bit about finding those emotional spaces with Kevin and with Griffin. You’ve got two leading men here that you have some pretty intense work to do with.

    You never know, chemistry-wise, how things are going to land. I also think, as an actor, for me, I can do as much homework as I desire, or as I want, but it’s going to change, the alchemy is going to change whenever you meet whoever that person is. You are so much who you’re playing with, I think. I really found Chris through Griffin and through Kevin, for sure. I’m sure they would say the same thing about their characters, and any actor would say that, I’m sure, about their work. You can’t work or act in a vacuum, I don’t think, unless you’re like an ’80s comedy male movie star.

    I think, mostly, it’s more fun to find yourself with who you’re acting with. So I didn’t meet Griffin until the day of the first table read, and we immediately just felt like family. He’s a phenomenal bird, just an incredible brain, and so fast, and funny, and vulnerable, and game.

    Same with Kevin. I met Kevin, I knew Kevin a little bit more because we had met randomly at a party before, and we kind of went through the Sylvere audition process together, so we got to work together while we were auditioning, trying to find our Sylvere. We walked into that first table read having known each other, having sniffed each other creatively, for quite some time. But still, there was just enough mystery, I think, to make it work.

    I think we kind of just subconsciously withheld a lot from each other, because we knew that that bubble was so profound to making this work, that alchemy and that mystery. They’re both phenomenal, phenomenal performers. I learned so much from being in scenes with them, for sure, and they made me feel brave.

    Tell me what was pleasurable about this very female-driven production. It’s rare that you get to have that many women involved in telling a woman’s story.

    Which is insane to me, you know what I mean? It should all be the people who are telling their own stories, should be the ones that are making the decisions behind about the content of the stories. It’s just insane to me. It’s like, “Oh, it’s so rare for women to be behind a woman’s story.”

    I think it’s not as rare, certainly, as it was. It seems like a very galvanizing moment in our cultural history, for sure, and there are so many things I’m dying to see that women are in front and behind, not only making the decisions, but being the creative birds in front, and all of those things.

    We had an all-women writers’ room, which was pretty profound. I think it just added, when you know that you are the subject, and not the object, it makes the kind of work that we were being asked to do just that much safer, because you just know that there’s empathy and agency from behind the camera. You just don’t feel that weird handwringing judgement, or just someone that doesn’t quite know, or thinks knows. It just felt that much safer.

    They’re all really funny humans, too. All of them are deeply funny, which I was very buoyed by. Even in the reading of the book, I remember thinking, God, this is hilarious. It’s so hilarious because it’s so cringe-worthy. You’re just so embarrassed for this person who has no embarrassment herself. I feel like the women in that writers’ room are very giddy to dig into that.

    I was talking to your friend Kristen Bell about the genius of setting the second “Bad Moms” film at Christmas time. Tell me what you responded to when that idea was floated your way.

    We’d been all kind of sniffing about a sequel for a while, because we were like, “Come on!” because we were so excited about the success of the first one. Then, when we heard that it was going to be holiday theme, I was so excited. There’s no other time of the year that I feel like a mom would deserve and need to get the hell out of the house. There’s so much!

    I remember as a kid tearing open the Christmas presents so fast. We barely opened the presents from Santa, and my mom was already sweating in the kitchen trying to put bacon and eggs on. There’s no moment to savor the magic you’re creating for everybody else. So I’m really excited for the moms to get a chance to go out and have some mulled wine and enjoy a night out.

    “I Love Dick” streams on Amazon May 12th.

  • Amazon’s ‘The Tick’ Revival Gets Release Date

    Fear not citizens, the Tick is on his way.

    Amazon announced the release date for its revival of the superhero parody via a brief teaser video. The 10-episode season will begin streaming August 25.

    The short-lived original “Tick” series aired on Fox in 2001, but developed a cult following in later years. The revival stars Peter Serafinowicz as the titular blue superhero and Griffin Newman as sidekick Arthur Everest, and is produced by original series creator Ben Edlund.

    The new “Tick” will be more dramatic than the 2001 version, as Edlund told Polygon. There are no puns, and the show focuses more on the relationships between the characters. It’s also somewhat darker.

    I don’t think we ever had someone die in The Tick,” Edlund said. “In the pilot, someone dies and it leaves a couple of people reeling. It’s a difficult scene, but it’s the kind of change that needed to happen.”

    The “Tick” pilot is still available to watch on Amazon

  • ‘Moonlight’ Oscar-winner Barry Jenkins to Write, Direct ‘Underground Railroad’ Amazon Series

    2017 Vanity Fair Oscar Party Hosted By Graydon Carter - ArrivalsFresh off of winning an Oscar for “Moonlight,” Barry Jenkins is moving to the small screen.

    Jenkins will write and direct a television adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s novel “The Underground Railroad” for Amazon. The project has been in development for some time, with “Moonlight” producers Plan B Entertainment on board, and Amazon won the sweepstakes.

    “Going back to ‘The Intuitionist,’ Colson’s writing has always defied convention, and ‘The Underground Railroad’ is no different. It’s a groundbreaking work that pays respect to our nation’s history while using the form to explore it in a thoughtful and original way,” Jenkins said.

    “Preserving the sweep and grandeur of a story like this requires bold, innovative thinking and in Amazon we’ve found a partner whose reverence for storytelling and freeness of form is wholly in line with our vision.”

    “The Underground Railroad” is a bestselling novel that follows a young slave named Cora who makes a desperate attempt at freedom from a cotton plantation in Georgia. As she travels on the railroad, state by state, she’s pursued by a notorious slave catcher.

    The real Underground Railroad is already the subject of a popular TV show, “Underground,” on WGN America.

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  • Colin Farrell to Play Oliver North for ‘Lobster’ Director

    Colin Farrell is reteaming with the director of his surreal indie hit “The Lobster,” but this time for the small screen.

    Farrell will star as Iran-Contra figure Oliver North in an Amazon limited series that Yorgos Lanthimos will direct, Variety reports.

    “I’m really excited to be working with Colin again on something quite different to what we have done so far,” Lanthimos said. “I look forward to joining forces with producers Ben [Stiller] and Nicky [Weinstock], who had an excellent casting idea and saw the potential of the material early on and Amazon, who has embraced the project with great enthusiasm. It makes me very confident and excited to be working on a script which, although based on relatively recent history, feels very fresh and relevant to our times.”

    It’ll be the third collaboration for Farrell and the Greek director: Their second film, “The Killing of a Sacred Deer,” which costars Nicole Kidman and Alicia Silverstone, may play Cannes this May if it’s finished in time, Indiewire reports.

    After seeing the bizarrely dystopic “The Lobster,” in which newly single people must find a new mate within 30 days or be turned into an animal, it’ll be interesting to see Lanthimos take on the real-life story of North, a U.S. Marine who was a central figure in the Reagan-era Iran-Contra weapons-for-hostages scandal. North is currently a political commentator and hosts “War Stories With Oliver North” on Fox News.

    David Keith (“An Officer and a Gentleman,” “U-571”) starred as North in a 1989 TV-movie called “Guts and Glory: The Rise and Fall of Oliver North.

    Earlier this year, Lanthimos signed on to directOn Becoming a God in Central Florida,” a dark comedy series for AMC set in the ’90s that will star Kirsten Dunst.

  • Hugh Hefner Revisits His Past in Amazon’s ‘American Playboy’ Trailer

    Amazon is ready to reveal what it calls “the story about the man behind the bunny.”

    The online retail giant-slash-streamer has released the official trailer for “American Playboy,” an upcoming docuseries about Hugh Hefner. As the trailer shows, the series explores the Playboy magazine founder’s past from his own perspective. To do so, it offers a mix of dramatic reenactments with Matt Whelan as a younger Hefner, interviews, and footage from his own archive.

    Not surprisingly, the trailer has its risqué moments. It flaunts all the stereotypes you probably have about Hefner’s lifestyle, from the massive mansion to the partying to the women, with plenty of provocative scenes. Still, the trailer promises that we “don’t know the half of it” and teases more insight to come.

    This certainly doesn’t look like a dry documentary; the series promises to be as attention-grabbing as its subject. See for yourself below.

    “American Playboy” begins streaming on Amazon Video on April 7.

  • ‘Catastrophe’ Season 3, Featuring Carrie Fisher, Sets Premiere Date

    “Catastrophe” season 3, featuring some of the last scenes filmed by the late Carrie Fisher, has set a premiere date.

    The romantic/parenting comedy starring Sharon Horgan and Rob Delaney returns April 28 on Amazon. The new season brings back Fisher as Rob’s super critical and dismissive mother, Mia. Fisher has a bigger role this season, as Horgan revealed at a London screening of the premiere.

    “We wrote this bigger, chunkier part for her in episode six and got to spend time with her,” Horgan said. “She was part of the gang and we really feel very privileged and honored. She was funny all the time and incredibly witty company and loved saying a**hole-y things to everyone but also was just a kind, lovely, supportive person.”Fisher was returning to Los Angeles from filming that episode in London when she suffered what would turn out to be a fatal heart attack. She died on Dec. 27, followed two days later by her mother, Debbie Reynolds.

    Horgan also said that she and Delaney have not yet decided how to write out Fisher in the already-greenlit season 4. “We haven’t thought about that yet,” she said. “Hopefully some time will pass and we’ll think of a fitting end to that story.”

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