Tag: american-assassin

  • What’s New on TV, Netflix, Digital, and DVD/Blu-ray This Week: December 4-10

    At a loss for what to watch this week? From new TV, we’ve got you covered.

    New on DVD and Blu-ray

    “Despicable Me 3”
    ‘Tis the season to start thinking of good holiday gifts, so here’s one for the Minion-lover in your life. “Despicable Me 3” is out on 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray, Blu-ray, and DVD this Tuesday, December 5. There’s a long list of bonus features, including the all-new mini movie “The Secret Life of Kyle,” plus Minion Moments, character profiles, a sing-along, and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the movie.

    Here’s an exclusive look at a bonus feature with Dana Gaier talking about her character Edith, and her growth over the course of the three films:“American Assassin”
    Dylan O’Brien plays CIA black-ops recruit Mitch Rapp in this action film costarring Michael Keaton as Cold War veteran Stan Hurley. The Blu-ray — out December 5 — includes several behind-the-scenes featurettes on the locations, training, stunts, casting, and creation of the movie.

    Watch this exclusive clip from the extras, focusing on the casting of Taylor Kitsch, who was approached years ago to play the Mitch Rapp role that ultimately went to Dylan O’Brien:“The Osiris Child: Science Fiction Volume One”
    This sci-fi film starring Kellan Lutz, Isabel Lucas, Daniel MacPherson, and Rachel Griffiths comes out on DVD/Blu-ray December 5. When a dangerous outbreak threatens to destroy everyone living on a newly colonized planet, Lt. Kane Sommerville (MacPherson) goes against orders and leaves his station to rescue his young daughter (Teagan Croft). Desperate to get to her before it’s too late, Kane enlists the help of an escaped prisoner (Lutz) as they battle their way through the chaos of a planet on the verge of annihilation. Bonus features include five featurettes on the making of the film, plus deleted scenes, music videos, a photo gallery, and a concept art gallery.

    Redbox: New titles coming to the big red box on Tuesday, Dec. 4 include “American Assassin,” “Logan Lucky,” “Better Watch Out,” “Singularity,” “Dementia 13,” “The Crucifiction,” “Ingrid Goes West,” “Notorious,” “The Osiris Child,” “Howard Lovecraft and the Undersea Kingdom,” “Pitch Perfect,” and “Pitch Perfect 2.”

    New Video on Demand, Rental Streaming, and Digital

    “Stronger”
    (062317) Jake Gyllenhaal in the movie about Jeff Bauman STRONGER. Photo credit: Scott Garfield; Courtesy of Lionsgate and Roadside AttractionsJake Gyllenhaal plays Boston Marathon bombing survivor Jeff Bauman in this powerful biodrama based on the 2013 attack. “Stronger” — costarring Tatiana Maslany and Miranda Richardson — arrives on Digital December 5 and Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand December 19.

    Here’s an exclusive sneak peek from the bonus featurette “Faith, Hope & Love: Becoming Stronger”; the filmmakers discuss how they worked with Boston city officials to make the film, and the work that went into recreating the bombing scene without being insensitive to the city and citizens who were affected by the tragedy:“Boston”
    This documentary on the Boston Marathon, narrated by hometown boy Matt Damon, would be well-paired with “Stronger.” “Boston,” out on Digital December 5 and On Demand December 19, chronicles the story of the iconic race from its humble 15-runner origins to the present day. Extras include the featurette “Boston Symphony Orchestra Behind the Scenes.”

    “F the Prom”
    Danielle Campbell, Joel Courtney, Madelaine Petsch, Ian Ziering, and Cheri Oteri star in this comedy arriving on EST and VOD December 5. “Former best friends Maddy and Cole exist on opposite ends of the high school social spectrum. When Maddy’s reign as most popular girl abruptly ends, the duo reconnects as they conspire to ruin the ultimate popularity contest: senior prom.”

    Check out this exclusive clip from the movie, featuring Danielle Campbell’s Maddy, and her parents, played by Cheri Oteri and Richard Karn:“Fits and Starts”
    This comedy starring Wyatt Cenac, Greta Lee, Maria Dizzia, and Alex Karpovsky follows a struggling young writer who can’t escape his wife’s literary success. When a road trip to a publisher’s housewarming party takes an unexpected turn, he has to face his own creative shortcomings and find a way to regain control of his life and work.

    Check out this exclusive clip from “Fits and Starts” — out on VOD and EST December 5 — with the husband and wife authors squabbling in the car:“mother!”
    Find out what all the fuss and controversy has been about when this Darren Aronofsky/Jennifer Lawrence film arrives on Digital HD December 5, then 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray and DVD December 19. The psychological thriller costars Javier Bardem, Ed Harris, Michelle Pfeiffer, Domhnall Gleeson, Brian Gleeson, and Jovan Adepo. Bonus content includes “mother! The Downward Spiral” and “The Makeup FX of mother!”

    New on Netflix

    “The Crown” Season 2 (Netflix Original)
    Lonely, isolated Queen Elizabeth II (Claire Foy), her “restless” husband Philip (Matt Smith), and her lovestruck sister Princess Margaret (Vanessa Kirby) are all back for Season 2, whose 10 episodes arrive on Netflix this Friday, Dec. 8. “With the world undergoing great changes, a damaged British monarchy must confront its past in order to have a future.” Here’s the trailer:“Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2”
    Marvel fans, get ready to stream Baby Groot’s big adventure. Before we see the Guardians join the Avengers for “Infinity War,” watch them in this blockbuster sequel, available on Netflix starting December 5.

    “DreamWorks Trolls Holiday “
    This 30-minute special, based on the animated movie “Trolls,” got high ratings in its recent airing on NBC. Now families can stream the DreamWorks special starting December 6

    TV Worth Watching

    “The Great American Baking Show” (Thursday on ABC at 9 p.m.)
    THE GREAT AMERICAN BAKING SHOW - Coverage. (ABC/Mark Bourdillion) PAUL HOLLYWOO, ANTHONY "SPICE" ADAMS, JOHNNY IUZZINI, AYESHA CURRYIt’s not quite “The Great British Baking Show,” but this American sister show will launch its holiday cheer this week with two episodes back-to-back episodes: Cake Week and Morning Treats Week. This time, Paul Hollywood is here to judge alongside Johnny Iuzzini. Somehow, we’re supposed to go on without the sweetness and spice of Mary Berry. Nia Vardalos and Ian Gomez are also out as hosts, with Ayesha Curry and Anthony “Spice” Adams stepping in.

    “Will & Grace” and “Superstore” Holiday Episodes (Tuesday on NBC at 9 p.m.)
    Two of NBC’s Thursday comedies are moving to Tuesday for one special week of Christmas episodes. First, “Will & Grace” will have “A Gay Olde Christmas” at 9 p.m.: “Will, Grace, Karen and Jack wish they could have experienced Christmas in old New York, but realize the past was not quite as romantic or open to diversity as they pictured it.” Then “Superstore” will celebrate “Christmas Eve” at 9:30 p.m.: “Trying to prove how wild she can be, Amy turns a boring Christmas Eve at Cloud 9 into a holiday adventure; Jonah and Garrett’s roommate issues boil over; Glenn tries to prove to Mateo that Christmas is better than fine.”

    “The Good Doctor” (Monday on ABC at 10 p.m.)
    The first season of Freddie Highmore’s medical drama is taking a midseason break after this week’s Episode 10, “Sacrifice”: “A charming young doctor puts a member of the surgical team in an awkward position at work; Dr. Glassman suggests that Dr. Shaun Murphy meet with a therapist.” Don’t forget this recent “Good Doctor” tease from TVLine: “I hear one of the rookie hit’s full-time docs will be checking out in the near future, and his/her controversial onscreen exit — which may or may not stick — will set the stage for a big midseason storyline.”

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  • Box Office: ‘It’ Slays the Competition Again, ‘mother!’ Flops

    By Seth Kelley

    LOS ANGELES, Sept. 17 (Variety.com) — “It” continues to post terrifyingly huge numbers.

    The Warner Bros. and New Line production expects to finish its second weekend with $60 million from 4,103 locations. That would make its domestic gross so far $218.7 million — a record for the highest earning September release ever. The old record-holder was 1984’s “Crocodile Dundee” with $174.8 million.

    Broken down by day this weekend, “It” earned $19.4 million on Friday and $26.2 million on Saturday. Sunday’s take is estimated to be about $14.5 million. 389 IMAX screens are expected to account for just over $3 million of the film’s take in North America this weekend.

    Overseas, “It” is pulling in an additional $60.3 million in 56 markets. That raises its international total to $152.6 million and the worldwide tally to $371.3 million. Based on Stephen King’s novel, “It” opened last weekend with an enormous domestic pull of $123.4 million.

    mother!” continues to struggle. The Paramount release, directed by Darren Aronofsky and starring Jennifer Lawrence, is expected to earn $7.5 million from 2,368 locations.

    Meanwhile “American Assassin,” a joint production between CBS Films and Lionsgate, is expecting an opening of $14.8 million from 3,154 locations — good enough for a second place finish. The audience breakdown was 55% Male and 29% under the age of 35. The film is an adaptation of Vince Flynn’s 2010 novel, and stars Dylan O’Brien as a CIA black ops recruit who is trained by a Cold War veteran (Michael Keaton). The film’s opening is comparable to 2014’s “John Wick,” which opened to $14.4 million on its way to launch a franchise with $43 million in domestic earnings.

    In limited release, Annapurna’s “Brad’s Status” is on tracking to earn $100,179 this weekend from four locations. Mike White wrote and directed the movie starring Ben Stiller as a man who is constantly comparing his life to those of his college friends. Austin Abrams, Jenna Fischer, Luke Wilson, and Michael Sheen also star in the flick, which has been generally well reviewed (83% on Rotten Tomatoes).

  • ‘American Assassin’ Star Dylan O’Brien Reveals His New Philosophy for Stunts

    Dylan O’Brien is going through some pretty seismic career shifts right now.

    His beloved MTV series “Teen Wolf” is coming to an end on September 24, after six highly rated seasons (he played Stiles, the character originated by Jerry Levine in the original film). And early next year, “The Maze Runner” trilogy closes with “The Death Cure,” a movie that was pushed back after O’Brien suffered a horrifying injury on set (more on that in a minute).

    But, as the saying goes, with every door that closes another one opens, and this week O’Brien headlines another potential franchise in “American Assassin.” Based on the series of Vince Flynn novels that center around spy Mitch Rapp, this film shows us the origin of the character, as he goes from a wounded young man to someone willing to face various terrorist threats head on.

    At a recent press day for the film, we got to sit down with O’Brien to talk about the injury, about “Teen Wolf” and “Maze Runner” wrapping up, and about what he learned from his “American Assassin” costar Michael Keaton.

    Moviefone: Along with “The Maze Runner,” this is your second film based on a hugely popular book series.

    O’Brien: Yep. I keep doing them.

    Is there any hesitation on your end before you sign on?

    No. Not for that reason. For me, the decision always comes down to if I want to dive into this role, if I want to be the guy to tell this story, if I feel that the script and story are strong, if I feel like the filmmaker is strong. It’s everything but, really. But then you start doing press and realize, wow, I hope people like this.

    The other thing, of course, is that you could be doing this for a while.

    Yeah. I’m not totally in jail. I think signing up for a Marvel contract is much worse. But there could be a few movies. But I have some control over it, too.

    Is there an aspect of fun, too? It seems almost like going back to school. Like, “Time to go do another ‘Maze Runner.’”

    Oh, totally. Getting to play a character over a lengthy period of time is always a pleasure, especially if you like the character. You grow attached to them in a certain way. I’ve felt that way with Stiles, the “Teen Wolf” character I play — and my “Maze Runner” character, too. It gets a little sentimental when you bid them farewell. It’s like, “Oh, wow — this is my last day on set as this guy.”You’re done with “Teen Wolf” now, right?

    And “Maze Runner.”

    Was it emotional?

    Oh, absolutely. It hits you. With “Teen Wolf,” I was always aware of it. Season to season, we wouldn’t even know if we were going again next year. So I got used to it. It was always, “Well, this could be it.” I couldn’t be happier with how long it lasted, the success the show had was really unbelievable. There were so many good people that I love dearly now that were a part of the process. It was such a great thing for everyone. And “Maze Runner,” too, is really close to my heart. I’m so glad I got to finish that, and on such a positive note. But it’s always sad.

    Even though you might not have been worried about the fans, once you got the role in “American Assassin,” did you read a bunch of the books? What was that process like for you?

    I went through the one that we’re doing, obviously. Because I kind of knew from the first ten books, where you’re following the character as a full-grown man, that he was a bruiser. I think he probably had a thicker neck than I do and a huskier build. I was really taken with playing with that aspect of him, but adjusting it more to what I see him doing, since it’s filtered through me, ultimately. What was really interesting to me was the emotional arc he goes through. But you don’t really see that, in a way. I liked that this guy’s thick skin and toughness came as a guard. It’s not a front, necessarily, but it’s his way of dealing with the pain that’s inside of him.

    This movie obviously has a lot of stunts. You were injured doing a stunt. And it’s so nice to see that you’re okay.

    Aw, thanks.

    And that seemed like a fairly serious injury.

    Yes, it was very serious.

    Was there any hesitation or resistance on your part in terms of signing up for something that would have this much action?

    Oh, absolutely. I shied away from the whole thing, at first. When you go through something like that, it was a really scary thing that I was lucky to come away from. Everything inside of me, for months, was telling me to run away from stuff. It was the hardest thing I’ve ever gone through in my life. So there was absolutely trepidation. And for the longest time, I was writing it off. I was dealing with other things and didn’t want to think about work. But at the same time, I didn’t want to let it go. And I also thought it’d be good for me to do it, despite innately inside screaming and being like “No, absolutely not.”

    Eventually, you do have to face that beast and that’s the only way you can properly process it. I’m very happy that I made the decision to stick with the movie. And we did it in the right way, particularly because of what I was coming off of. We had to be careful of certain things and I had certain restrictions.

    But, ultimately, it was a good thing because it motivated everybody to do it in the right way. When you’re dealing with things like this on a set — and I’ll always preach this for as long as I live after going through what I went through — but safety is paramount. I think sometimes that gets lost in the fold a little bit. People can get lost in that little world you’re in on a set, and you’re making believe and it’s all fake. But people can still get hurt — and you’re dealing with really serious things. I go about it all differently now. I’m very meticulous with the stunts that I am asked to do, and I feel like I don’t have to do anything I’m not comfortable with doing. It’s a good thing for people to be aware of, and have a really safe shoot, which is what we did.

    Were you able to use that experience for this character? Obviously, he’s injured early on in the movie and has to build himself back up.

    In a lot of ways there was a lot of parallels for me. A lot of the reason that I didn’t want to let it go, at the end of the day, was because I felt more connected to this guy than I ever could have. Obviously not dealing with the exact same thing, but I had a lot to draw on and was discovering things about this guy that I would never have discovered. There were things that I wanted to implement and even his whole look, that was all discovered myself in my post-accident recovery. There are so many things in the forefront of your mind that you’re not going out to get a haircut. Your daily functioning is disrupted and you realize that months go by and you haven’t shaved or cut your hair. I just felt like I understood this guy.

    Were you still able to enjoy yourself? Because it seems like fight training can be fun.

    Absolutely. And it’s actually really soothing, too. Training like that is good for your mind. I understand why people can become addicted to it. I get that it’s really good for you and not just physically. That’s probably what struck me most about the training — it was really good for me at a time I really needed it, too.

    Was part of the appeal of the character that physical transformation?

    Yes. I tried to make that transformation as much of a contrast as I could. I would love to do the Tom Hanks, take six months off for “Cast Away,” but that’s not how things are done anymore unfortunately. I started the movie in the best shape I could get into in two months, and tried to hold onto that for as long as I could. Then, at the end at some point, I stopped training in the last month, in preparation to do the beginning scene at the end. I had to lose as much as I could in that time. I wanted it to be a jump. Just as far as the authenticity of the film goes, and the story — if he wakes up 18 months later and sees the shape that he’s in and get an idea of what he’s been doing every day since that happened. I hope that comes across.

    What was it like working with Michael Keaton? Did you watch him and take cues?

    Yeah, I think why younger actors do that a lot is, for me, is it’s fascinating to see a guy who you’ve watched forever, and the amount of performances you’ve seen of his that you think are brilliant, it’s then really brilliant to see how they go about achieving that. You want to see what their process is like. It could be any version of it. Whenever I’ve gotten to work with guys who are pretty prominent, prolific actors, I always observe how they are. Keaton is funny. He’s been great for so many decades and he’s not a psychopath. You can achieve that greatness by being smart and having a good work ethic and can still be a good human. That’s the biggest thing I took away from watching him.This movie is pretty firmly planted in the spy genre. Do you have a favorite?

    True Lies.” That would have to be my favorite spy movie of all time. It’s a classic.

    Should this franchise continue, do you have say in the character or have you suggested the next book they develop?

    I have to give so much credit to Michael Cuesta. He allowed us to have so much input. I couldn’t think of another director who would have tolerated me coming to them with seven pages of notes. And listen and be opened eared to every single one of them. I couldn’t be more grateful. So, if we all sign up to do it again I would get to be a part of it, in terms of the development process.

    American Assassin” is everywhere this Friday.

  • Michael Keaton on Beating Up Dylan O’Brien in American Assassin

    Michael Keaton and Dylan O'Brien from American Assassin
    Michael Keaton and Dylan O’Brien from American Assassin

    Let’s do the math. Michael Keaton is 66 years old. Dylan O’Brien is 26. That’s 40 extra years Keaton has on his “American Assassin” costar. And yet the script calls for him to kick O’Brien around. How does he do it?

    It turns out Keaton had the same question.

    “You have to be realistic about it,” Keaton tells Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar. ” Realistically, look at the age difference, look at the condition this kid’s in. I know it’s a movie where you have to buy into a lot of things. But you have to believe that my character could actually do what he can do.”

    The key, says Keaton, was realizing that this same issue drives his character, Stan Hurley, a Cold War veteran who takes CIA black ops recruit Mitch Rapp (O’Brien) under his wing, only to have them battling each other.

    “I thought, obviously this guy has to stay in the game,” explains Keaton. “How many more good years does he have left? He has to stay in the game physically. But he’s smarter, because realistically he couldn’t physically probably do day to day what I do in the movie. So he’s like: How do I apply smarts to the physical aspect of taking a guy like this down?”

    This acting challenge, says Keaton, was critical, which is why Keaton does most of his own stunts, while always respecting his limitations.

    “If you can do them yourself, it’s kind of fun. I get bored sitting around,” he says. “But if someone can do them better than I can, let the stuntmen do them. They’re better than I am at it. So I don’t have a real macho thing about it.”

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  • Dylan O’Brien Breaks Silence on ‘Maze Runner’ Injury: ‘I Really Was in a Dark Place’

    For the first time since he was seriously injured on the set of “Maze Runner: The Death Cure” back in March of 2016, actor Dylan O’Brien is finally speaking out about his injuries, his long absence from the spotlight, and his difficult road to recovery.

    In a lengthy interview with Vulture, O’Brien gets candid about the traumatic experience, which left him with a concussion, facial fracture, and brain trauma, among other injuries. Though the actor declined to discuss the specifics of the stunt gone wrong (according to Vulture, O’Brien was “Pulled from one vehicle” then “reportedly struck by another”), the toll — both physical and psychological — that the accident took on him was brutal, and required months of behind the scenes recuperation to overcome.

    “I really was in a dark place there for a while and it wasn’t an easy journey back,” O’Brien told Vulture. “There was a time there where I didn’t know if I would ever [act] again … and that thought scared me, too.”

    As the actor explained, the “overwhelming” recovery consumed every aspect of his life.

    “I had lost a lot of function, just in my daily routine,” O’Brien told Vulture. “I wasn’t even at a point where I felt like I could handle social situations, let alone showing up and being responsible for work every day. Long hours on set, delivering a performance and carrying a movie … it just makes your palms sweat.”

    And then there was the issue of whether or not he could return to work on “The Maze Runner” — and whether he even wanted to. As he told Vulture, his initial thought was to walk away.

    “It took a lot of deep searching past those gut instincts that I was having just because of the trauma that I experienced to realize that I did want to finish it,” O’Brien said.

    Thankfully for the actor, he was able to complete the film (which is due for release in January 2018), as well as work on “American Assassin,” a hard-hitting action flick that he says was instrumental to his recovery. That film is due out on September 15.

    For more from the actor, check out the entire interview over at Vulture.

  • New Movies in Theaters: September 2017


    Welcome to New Release Rundown. I’m Tony Maccio from Moviefone, and we’re running down the most anticipated movies hitting theaters in September 2017. Let’s get to it…

    The month’s opening weekend sees the limited release of romantic drama “Tulip Fever,” as well as comedy “I Do…Until I Don’t” and hockey brawl fest “Goon: Last of the Enforcers.”

    September 8th gives us the wide release of “Home Again” starring Reese Witherspoon and the reimagining of Stephen King’s demonic clown Pennywise in “IT.”

    September 15th moves along with Darren Aronofsky thriller “mother!” and action-espionage flick “American Assassin” both going nationwide.

    The following weekend brings the heat with 6 notable films, including the limited run of “Woodshock” and the wide releases of indie comedy “Brad’s Status,” animated adventure “The LEGO Ninjago Movie,” “Stronger” starring Jake Gyllenhall, sports biopic “Battle of the Sexes,” and the highly anticipated action sequel “Kingsmen: The Golden Circle.”

    September finishes out on the 29th, which includes the limited release of “Mark Felt: The Man Who Brought Down The White House,” an expansion of biographical drama “Victoria and Abdul,” and the wide release of “American Made” starring Tom Cruise and reboot horror film “Flatliners.”

    Head over to Moviefone.com to watch the trailers for all the movies we mentioned, plus search showtimes and buy tickets for a theater near you!

  • Dylan O’Brien Resurfaces to Promote ‘American Assassin’ Trailer

    Hey, stranger! Dylan O’Brien just tweeted to his 4.6 million followers for the first time since October 2016, to promote the trailer for his upcoming movie “American Assassin.”

    You may recall how, last year around this time, O’Brien was recovering from serious injuries suffered on the set of “Maze Runner: The Death Cure.” In May 2016, it was reported that O’Brien was set to play Mitch Rapp in “American Assassin,” based on Vince Flynn’s bestselling series, with Michael Keaton as co-star.

    Fast-forward to today, and O’Brien broke his Twitter silence to tweet this teaser for the “American Assassin” trailer:

    Most of the replies are just fans expressing shock that he actually tweeted. As Teen Vogue noted, O’Brien has been “pretty MIA” since his “Maze Runner” accident, and he was nowhere to be found when the “Teen Wolf” cast got together to celebrate the show’s 100th episode milestone. However, it’s likely he just had a scheduling conflict with “Maze Runner,” which halted filming after O’Brien’s injury, but is now back in action and expected to be released January 12, 2018.

    Anyway, the full trailer for “American Assassin” is now out: Here’s the film’s synopsis, from CBS Films:

    “AMERICAN ASSASSIN follows the rise of Mitch Rapp (Dylan O’Brien), a CIA black ops recruit under the instruction of Cold War veteran Stan Hurley (Michael Keaton). The pair is then enlisted by CIA Deputy Director Irene Kennedy (Sanaa Lathan) to investigate a wave of apparently random attacks on both military and civilian targets. Together the three discover a pattern in the violence leading them to a joint mission with a lethal Turkish agent (Shiva Negar) to stop a mysterious operative (Taylor Kitsch) intent on starting a World War in the Middle East.”

    The movie, potentially the first of a series, is scheduled for release in theaters on September 15.

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  • Get Your First Look at Dylan O’Brien in ‘American Assassin’

    Dylan O’Brien is unstoppable. (Please don’t take that as a dare, Universe!) He was infamously injured earlier this year on the set of “Maze Runner: The Death Cure,” which will re-start production this February 2017 for a 2018 release, but now he’s hard at work on “American Assassin,” the start of a potential film franchise based on Vince Flynn’s bestselling novels.

    O’Brien was announced back in May for the “star-making role” of covert CIA operative Mich Rapp. Deadline said, at the time, that production would begin in the fall, working around O’Brien’s recovery from the “Maze Runner” injuries.

    Collider shared Lionsgate’s first photo of O’Brien as Rapp, and our boy looks pretty darn good:This is the first official shot we’ve seen of O’Brien since his injuries, although a fan snapped a photo of him with some healthy-looking scruff earlier this summer.

    Here’s the official synopsis for the movie:

    “AMERICAN ASSASSIN follows the rise of Mitch Rapp (Dylan O’Brien) a CIA black ops recruit under the instruction of Cold War veteran Stan Hurley (Michael Keaton). The pair is then enlisted by CIA Deputy Director Irene Kennedy (Sanaa Lathan) to investigate a wave of apparently random attacks on both military and civilian targets. Together the three discover a pattern in the violence leading them to a joint mission with a lethal Turkish agent (Shiva Negar) to stop a mysterious operative (Taylor Kitsch) intent on starting a World War in the Middle East.”

    There’s no release date yet for “American Assassin,” which is now filming in Europe, but you should be able to see O’Brien soon in “Teen Wolf” Season 6 (starts in November), and then in “The Death Cure,” which is now scheduled for January 2018.

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  • Dylan O’Brien to Star in ‘American Assassin,’ Working Around Injuries: Report

    MTV Teen Wolf Los Angeles Premiere Party - ArrivalsLast we heard, filming for “Maze Runner: The Death Cure” was put on hold indefinitely while star Dylan O’Brien recovered from his injuries. Initially, there was hope that he would return to filming that right about now, but a statement was issued in late April to say his injuries were “very serious” and he needed more time. But there’s hope on the horizon, at least for another movie, since Deadline said O’Brien is in negotiations to play Mitch Rapp in “American Assassin,” based on Vince Flynn’s bestselling series. Michael Keaton has already signed on to co-star as Stan Hurley, the Cold War veteran who mentors the young assassin.

    According to Deadline, O’Brien would not only play the title character in the “star-making role” as a covert CIA operative, he’d age in the role over time — starting as college-aged Mitch, and then maturing in what is hoped to be a film franchise. Since Mitch Rapp appears in 14 bestselling novels, there’s a lot of potential for the role.

    What about O’Brien’s injuries? Deadline said production on “American Assassin” begins in the fall, “and they will be working around O’Brien’s recovery from injuries.” Production doesn’t necessarily mean filming, there’s a lot to do before the actors show up, but this does suggest O’Brien is progressing in his recovery, especially since this sounds like another action-packed role.

    What about “Maze Runner”? No idea. Maybe O’Brien can finish filming that before starting “American Assassin” — if/when he’s even confirmed for Mitch Rapp, beyond these negotiations. Or perhaps they’ll have to push “Death Cure” back a year. Stay tuned.

    What do you think about Dylan O’Brien as Mitch Rapp?

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