Tag: cary-fukunaga

  • Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Tom Hardy Starring in ‘Blood on Snow’

    (Left) Aaron Taylor-Johnson in 'The Fall Guy,' directed by David Leitch. (Right) Tom Hardy stars as Johnny in director Jeff Nichols' 'The Bikeriders,' a Focus Features release. Credit: Kyle Kaplan/Focus Features. © 2024 Focus Features, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (Left) Aaron Taylor-Johnson in ‘The Fall Guy,’ directed by David Leitch. (Right) Tom Hardy stars as Johnny in director Jeff Nichols’ ‘The Bikeriders,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Kyle Kaplan/Focus Features. © 2024 Focus Features, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Preview:

    • Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Tom Hardy will appear in ‘Blood on Snow’.
    • It adapts Jo Nesbø’s 2015 novel.
    • ‘Beasts of No Nation’s Cary Joji Fukunaga is in the director’s chair.

    Novelist Jo Nesbø’s work has been a frequent source for movies and TV series during the last decade in particular. But even when utilizing his particular blend of frosty climes and dangerous crimes, the results haven’t always worked out the way the filmmakers intended –– witness the misfiring 2017 adaptation of serial killer thriller ‘The Snowman’.

    So Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Tom Hardy will be hoping that their new movie, ‘Blood on Snow,’ falls into a more positive category. According to Deadline, they’re attached to star in the new crime thriller, which has ‘No Time to Die’s Cary Joji Fukunaga on board to direct.

    Related Article: Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Ralph Fiennes on for ‘28 Years Later’

    What’s the story of ‘Blood on Snow’?

    Tom Hardy stars as Johnny in director Jeff Nichols' 'The Bikeriders,' a Focus Features release.
    Tom Hardy stars as Johnny in director Jeff Nichols’ ‘The Bikeriders,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Kyle Kaplan/Focus Features. © 2024 Focus Features, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    The ‘Blood on Snow’ narrative is set in 1970’s Oslo, where two rival gang leaders — Hoffman and the Fisherman (Hardy) —vie for control.

    Hoffman’s trusted hitman, Olav (Johnson), is a cold, efficient killer, perfect for the job. But beneath his ruthless exterior lies an unexpected intelligence and an unwavering moral code shaped by a complicated childhood.

    When Hoffman orders his own wife to be murdered, Olav’s principles clash with his loyalties. Instead of pulling the trigger, he hatches a scheme that makes him Hoffman’s next target and with nowhere safe to turn, Olav forms an uneasy alliance that places him at the heart of Oslo’s deadly gang war.

    Once a violent enforcer, Olav’s choice makes him an unlikely hero in a world where no good deed goes unpunished…

    Who else is working on the movie?

    Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven the Hunter in 'Kraven the Hunter.'
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven the Hunter in ‘Kraven the Hunter.’

    While Nesbø does write a fair amount of other projects (see below), he’s not usually found adapting his own books. Yet ‘Blood on Snow’ will see him doing exactly that, working alongside Ben Power to bring the novel’s story to screens.

    Hardy will also produce the movie via his company, Hardy Son & Baker, WME Independent and Range handling sales of the title at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival market, where it’s expected to be snapped up quickly given the talent involved.

    Taylor-Johnson, last seen in ‘The Fall Guy,’ steps up to lead Sony’s latest stab at a Marvel movie, starring in ‘Kraven the Hunter,’ which is due in theaters on December 13th. And before that, Hardy will be back in that Sony universe for ‘Venom: The Last Dance,’ which lands on October 25th.

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    What other Nesbø adaptations are in the works?

    There are a few Nesbø productions at different stages right now. The writer himself has created a new TV series based on his Harry Hole books, and that’s filming at the moment. He’s also written a series called ‘So Long, Marianne,’ which is in post-production.

    On the movie side, his short story ‘The Jealousy Man’ was adapted into a film called ‘Killer Heat’ and there are several other projects either written by him or based on his work in different stages of development.

    Venom in Columbia Pictures 'Venom: The Last Dance'. Photo Courtesy: Sony Pictures. ©2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Venom in Columbia Pictures ‘Venom: The Last Dance’. Photo Courtesy: Sony Pictures. ©2024 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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  • TV Review: ‘Masters of the Air’

    Callum Turner and Austin Butler in 'Masters of the Air,' premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Callum Turner and Austin Butler in ‘Masters of the Air,’ premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Launching on Apple TV+ on January 26th with two episodes (and then one weekly for seven weeks), ‘Masters of the Air’ represents the latest series from executive producers Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks, who have seen success with their previous two efforts, ‘The Pacific’ and ‘Band of Brothers’.

    But after two primarily land-based series, the team –– which also includes writers John Orloff and Graham Yost and directors Anna Boden, Ryan Fleck, Cary Joji Fukunaga, Dee Rees and Tim Van Patten –– have turned their attention to adapting Donald L. Miller’s non-fiction tome about one of the most famous bombing groups of the war.

    Related Article: Austin Butler and More Take to the Skies in the First Pictures from Apple TV+ World War II Drama ‘Masters of the Air’

    Does ‘Masters of the Air’ take flight successfully?

    Sawyer Spielberg and Austin Butler in 'Masters of the Air,' premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Sawyer Spielberg and Austin Butler in ‘Masters of the Air,’ premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Though the past two limited series were on HBO, you probably won’t notice much of a difference given the expansive budget Apple offers its prestige shows. Of course it looks slick and impressive (though the screeners we saw had the occasional odd visual effect that we can chalk up to the show being at an earlier stage of post-production) and the cast is fine blend of young rising stars who commit to their parts.

    There will, of course, be comparisons to its forerunners, and while it might not reach the heights of particularly ‘Band of Brothers’, it’s still a solid effort and worth watching if you’re a fan of the previous shows (or have a thing for based-on-truth World War II tales).

    Initially there is some concern that the show will fall into repetitive patterns of bombing runs (not that they aren’t tense/thrilling in their own way) but once it opens out the story to chronicle the crews’ downtime and what happens once some of them are shot down over enemy territory. A visit with the Tuskegee airmen feels welcome, if given slightly short shrift.

    ‘Masters of the Air’: Script and Direction

    'Masters of the Air' premieres globally January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    ‘Masters of the Air’ premieres globally January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    The team behind the show knows what they’re doing when it comes to this sort of series, the scripts weaving personal stories in with the overarching narrative of the bombing runs and beyond. It takes a little time to truly get off the air, but once the plot truly kicks in, it finds a healthy balance between the various characters (some are more compelling than others).

    On the directorial front, the style is very much what we’ve come to expect –– some beauty shots of planes lifting off against sunrises or sunsets, carefully crafted visuals than crawl around the inside of the aircraft and bombing sequences designed to help you feel the pressure the crews are under.

    ‘Masters of the Air’: Performances

    Austin Butler and Callum Turner in 'Masters of the Air,' premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Austin Butler and Callum Turner in ‘Masters of the Air,’ premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    While the initial focus is on the likes of Austin Butler’s Major Gale ‘Buck’ Cleven, Callum Turner’s Major John ‘Bucky’ Egan and Anthony Boyle’s Major Harry Crosby, the show expands out to follow several other characters who have their own experiences, both good and bad.

    Butler, mostly putting ‘Elvis’ in the rearview, is solid as Buck, who guides us through the early bombing runs, takes somewhat of a backseat in the mid-section and then returns to prominence later on. Likewise Turner (having something of a period drama moment between this and ‘The Boys in the Boat’) does good work as Egan, whose war experience takes a seriously dark turn at times.

    If there’s a true standout, though, it might be Boyle as Crosby, who evolves from nervy, airsick navigator to a crucial job on the ground planning sorties. It’s his character who narrates the show, and Boyle is excellent, keeping the character believable and watchable.

    And the show doesn’t neglect other characters, even though there isn’t the scope to give everyone as rounded a story as the main trio. Ncuti Gatwa (who just took over the lead role in ‘Doctor Who’ after years stealing scenes in ‘Sex Education’) is typically great here as 2nd Lieutenant. Robert H. Daniels, shining in a relatively smaller role.

    Ncuti Gatwa in 'Masters of the Air,' premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Ncuti Gatwa in ‘Masters of the Air,’ premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    There are also the more established likes of Oscar nominee Barry Keoghan as Lieutenant Curtis Biddick, a charming sort whose love of a good time on the ground is matched by his skill in the air. Keoghan is, as we’ve come to expect, excellent.

    As is natural in a story like this, female roles tend to take a backseat, though there is particularly sterling work from Bel Powley as British officer Alexandra Wingate, who becomes involved with one of the characters. Powley is charm incarnate, coloring far outside the lines of a character who has more limited screentime.

    As you might expect, you shouldn’t get too attached to every character; this is war and not everyone makes it out alive (as those who have read the book will know). But the well-rounded cast means you’ll care about every flyer and more, no matter their fate.

    ‘Masters of the Air’: Final Thoughts

    Barry Keoghan in 'Masters of the Air,' premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Barry Keoghan in ‘Masters of the Air,’ premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    It could have been a glossy, factory-tooled re-run of its predecessors, but the ‘Masters’ team has taken the care and time to make sure that while the series carries the hallmarks of what has gone before, it also feels like its own thing.

    It’s a fairly straightforward account of wartime heroism which won’t appeal to everyone, but for those who enjoy such chronicles, it’ll certainly fly.

    ‘Masters of the Air’ receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

    Austin Butler and Callum Turner in 'Masters of the Air,' premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Austin Butler and Callum Turner in ‘Masters of the Air,’ premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    What’s the story of ‘Masters of the Air’?

    Based on Donald L. Miller’s book of the same name, and scripted by John Orloff, ‘Masters of the Air’ follows the men of the 100th Bomb Group (the “Bloody Hundredth”) as they conduct perilous bombing raids over Nazi Germany and grapple with the frigid conditions, lack of oxygen and sheer terror of combat conducted at 25,000 feet in the air.

    Some were shot down and captured; some were wounded or killed. And some were lucky enough to make it home. Regardless of individual fate, a toll was exacted on them all.

    Who is in ‘Masters of the Air’?

    The series cast includes Austin Butler, Callum Turner, Anthony Boyle, Nate Mann, Barry Keoghan, Rafferty Law, Edward Ashley, Jonas Moore, Elliot Warren, Matt Gavan, Branden Cook, Josiah Cross, Ncuti Gatwa and Bel Powley.

    Austin Butler in 'Masters of the Air,' premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Austin Butler in ‘Masters of the Air,’ premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+.

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  • Bond 25 Release Date Bumped Back 2 Months

    Bond 25 Release Date Bumped Back 2 Months

    Spectre
    MGM

    You’ll have to wait a little longer for the next Bond film. The 25th film in the franchise has just been bumped back from a February 14, 2020 release to April 8, 2020.

    There go all your Bond-themed Valentine’s Day plans for next year.

    The delay might be due to the shuffling of directors: Cary Fukunaga (“Beasts of No Nation,” “True Detective”) stepped in to replace Danny Boyle in September.

    Daniel Craig will return as 007 in the film, as will Ralph Fiennes, Naomie Harris, Ben Whishaw and Léa Seydoux.

    The last few Bond films had had a November U.S. release, so a February date was a bit of a head-scratcher.

    [Via Deadline]

  • ’80s Movie ‘Explorers’ Is Becoming a TV Series

    ’80s Movie ‘Explorers’ Is Becoming a TV Series

    Paramount

    Explorers,” the 1985 Joe Dante movie where River Phoenix and Ethan Hawke build a spaceship and meet aliens, is getting the TV series treatment, just like fellow cult movie “Time Bandits.”

    And not just anyone is behind the project: Cary Fukunaga (“True Detective”) and David Lowery (“Pete’s Dragon,” “The Old Man and the Gun”) are teaming to write a pilot script for Paramount Television, Deadline reports.

    The two will write the script together and one of them might be directing the pilot.

    They’re both busy, busy guys: Fukunaga,  just directed and exec produced the first season “Maniac” for Netflix and then he’s tackling the 25th James Bond film.

    Lowery just signed on to direct the Arthurian fantasy epic “The Green Knight” and is in pre-production on a new live-action version of “Peter Pan.” He also directed the first two episodes of CBS All Access’ “Strange Angel.”

    Can we hope for an Ethan Hawke cameo if the TV series actually happens? (Today, by the way, is Hawke’s 48th birthday.)

    In a 2015 video interview, Hawke recalls that the movie was a massive failure when it came out. He thought it was going to be the “next E.T,” but instead it bombed: “I don’t think it got one good review and nobody went to see it,” he says. But, because he survived that, he said it “gave me the tools to survive ‘Dead Poets Society.’”

    So, it’s a good thing that “Explorers” flopped?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5c1dlrJiCM

    [Via Deadline]

  • Now There’s a Rumor Bond Producers Want Henry Cavill as Next 007

    Now There’s a Rumor Bond Producers Want Henry Cavill as Next 007

    Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Henry Cavill
    Paramount Pictures

    The name’s Kent, Clark Ke — er, Bond, James Bond.

    If Henry Cavill is done as Superman, maybe he can start as 007? Or not. You can’t trust a single rumor about the James Bond world. It’s a sea of speculation and then you turn around and Cary Fukunaga is suddenly director.

    But if “Bond 25” can still attract top name talent like Fukunaga, there’s clearly still life in that shaken martini.

    So now we return to the other rumors — who might replace Daniel Craig after “Bond 25.” Everyone under the sun has been mentioned at one time or another, including Henry Cavill.

    Now gossip site Crazy Days and Nights has revived the Cavill rumor with a revealed Blind Item:

    Blind Items Revealed #5
    The producers of this long running franchise don’t care at all about the cloud swirling around the head of this foreign born former superhero. They want to cast him as their next replacement.

    Henry Cavill/James Bond

    Do they? Maybe. But don’t take it from this rumor any more than you’d take the Idris Elba rumors that Idris Elba keeps trying to shoot down.

    It’s clear the producers are busy with the current movie, which just moved its release date to accommodate the new director. We can go back to serious speculation when “Bond 25” is finished; by then, the producers may even have an official announcement on the new person.

    They may want to surprise us, like they did with Danny Boyle and then Cary Fukunaga. Or we could indeed get Henry Cavill, or one of the other million names recycled over the past few years. No matter who is picked as the new James Bond, there will be complaints. There were complaints about Daniel Craig, too. (Remember the blond Bond dismay?)

    “Bond 25” now has a release date of February 14, 2020. Yes, Valentine’s Day. If Henry Cavill takes the producers to the premiere as his date, then maybe we’ll start to believe this rumor.

    [Via: ComicBook]

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  • New ‘Bond 25’ Director Cary Fukunaga Is Still in ‘Shock’

    New ‘Bond 25’ Director Cary Fukunaga Is Still in ‘Shock’

    Netflix

    Film fans are still buzzing over today’s exciting announcement that director Cary Fukunaga will be taking over the reins of the James Bond franchise, and now, the filmmaker himself has given his first public comments about his sweet new gig.

    In an interview with IndieWire, Fukunaga still seemed to be struggling to process the news. Though his remarks were brief, the new “Bond 25” director made it clear that this was a longtime goal that had been fulfilled — and now, he needs to get to work.

    “I’ve wanted to do one of these [Bond films] for a long time, so that’s not new,” Fukunaga told IndieWire. “So right now it’s just kind of dealing with the shock that it’s real and the honor obviously and now the responsibility.”

    Though Fukanaga has been working steadily for many years, and has directed a number of high-profile, well-received film and television projects (the celebrated first season of HBO’s “True Detective,”  2011’s adaptation of Jane Eyre,” 2015’s Idris Elba-starring war drama “Beasts of No Nation,” upcoming Netflix series “Maniac”), he’s still a bit of a left-field choice for the straight-laced Bond franchise. His name wasn’t among the rumored contenders after initial director Danny Boyle abruptly bowed out of the job (reportedly over disagreements with the studio), and he’s been known to clash with execs over creative control, too (see his own shocking exit from the “It” film).

    But the wildly inventive filmmaker is exactly the type of talent that the 007 franchise desperately needs. And with star Daniel Craig on his way out the door, the series is due for a martini-style shake-up anyway. We say, bring it on.

    The as-yet-untitled 25th outing of the James Bond franchise is set to hit theaters on February 14, 2020.

    [via: IndieWire]

  • ‘Bond 25’ Lands Cary Fukunaga as New Director, Sets New Release Date

    ‘Bond 25’ Lands Cary Fukunaga as New Director, Sets New Release Date

    Daniel Craig, Casino Royale, James Bond
    Sony Pictures Entertainment

    No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to THRIVE.

    Bond 25” fell into a bucket of crap, but it’s coming out smelling like a rose. Daniel Craig‘s (rumored) final round as James Bond lost director Danny Boyle, but it just gained Cary Fukunaga.

    Cary Fukunaga!

    He directed the 2011 “Jane Eyre,” the entire first season of HBO’s “True Detective,” the drama “Beasts of No Nation,” and the new Netflix series “Maniac,” which premieres September 21.

    He’s not the most obvious choice to direct a Bond movie. (Then again, you could argue the same of Danny Boyle, and Sam Mendes.) But that’s what the Bond franchise needs right now, especially in a world where “Mission: Impossible” is showing it can stay fresh, John Wick is coming back with his own badass skills, and everyone is competing with multiple Marvel movies a year.

    Plus, with Daniel Craig obviously being tired and conflicted about being there, it’s good to have some fresh-eyed vision.

    That said, Fukunaga is going to need time to right the ship. Production has been pushed back to March 2019 for a new worldwide release date of February 14, 2020. (It was previously scheduled for October 25, 2019.) There was talk that Danny Boyle clashed with production on the script, so we’ll have to see how that turns out with Fukunaga at the helm.

    Announcements:

     

    https://twitter.com/PhilNobileJr/status/1042715436108996610

     

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  • Jake Gyllenhaal Sings (Very Well) in Broadway Rehearsal Video, Confirming Perfection

    'Nocturnal Animals' Premiere - 73rd Venice Film FestivalHollywood, just give Jake Gyllenhaal his own “La La Land,” already. He’s ready.

    Every so often, the (still underappreciated) actor shows off his beautiful singing voice, and he did it again today, unexpectedly gracing Facebook with a video from the Broadway rehearsals of “Sunday in the Park With George.” The video — directed by “True Detective” and “Beasts of No Nation” director Cary Fukunaga — follows Gyllenhaal through an entire scene as he sings “Finishing the Hat.”

    Here’s the 4-minute video, shot February 1 (the good stuff comes middle-to-end, so don’t give up on it):Right? Come on. According to Entertainment Weekly, the musical starts previews Saturday and opens on February 23.

    This is not the first time Gyllenhaal has shown off his pipes. He starred in “Little Shop of Horrors” off Broadway in 2015, and you may recall him singing “A Whole New World” with Sean Hayes at the Tony Awards. MTV posted a bunch of videos of the actor singing in various roles. He’s crying for his own “City of Stars,” Hollywood. Don’t let him down.

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  • Upcoming TV Shows Based on Foreign Hits

    animal kingdom castYou’re home from work. You’ve officially de-pantsed, and you’ve got your sock-monkey slippers at the ready. The night is thoroughly mapped out: You’re going to microwave some leftover tikka masala, snuggle on your IKEA couch, watch a bit of the BBC’s “Doctor Who,” and partake in the Nintendo-flavored frenzy of “Mario Kart 8” with the S.O.

    Congratulations — you might be in your jammies, but you just had a cultural tour of India, Sweden, England, and Japan. That’s just one beautifully lazy night living in a connected world.

    Just like you, TV networks aren’t blind to what’s happening across those big ponds — if they see something that works overseas or over the border, they’re more than happy to try to make it work in the States. While you were busy doling out blue Koopa shells, they were busy getting these foreign hits ready for your TV screen.

    ‘No Tomorrow’ (The CW)

    Irony of ironies, the CW’s upcoming “No Tomorrow” had a yesterday, and it’s going to have a whole lot of tomorrows. That’s because it already had eight episodes as “Como Aproveitar o Fim do Mundo,” a Brazilian TV miniseries.

    Just like its Latin American mama, “No Tomorrow” examines the life of a realist quality-control professional romantically invaded by a conspiracy theorist who claims to know the date the world will end. Just think of it as “The X-Files” meets “This Is the End” meets a quirky rom-com, and you’ll do just fine.

    ‘Maniac’ (Netflix)

    Man, how many times did you think, “I wish this series director would give us a “True Detective”?

    Probably zero — but you’re going to get it anyway, when director Cary Fukunaga reboots Norway’s “Maniac” into an English-language show of the same title. If you really were hoping for that “Superbad” reunion, though, be prepared for a lot less underage drinking and wiener jokes, and a lot more psychiatric patients who inhabit complex fantasies they’ve built inside their heads. Close enough.

    ‘3%’ (Netflix)

    A few years ago, shows like “The Office” and “The IT Crowd” wound down, and so ended American TV’s British Invasion. Fast forward to 2016, and it seems like Brazil might be the new England — like “No Tomorrow,” “3%” has Brazilian roots, this time as a three-part web series from 2011. And though it’ll stream in the U.S., it’s staying true to its roots as a completely Brazilian production.

    Speaking of sticking to what you know, that’s exactly what director Cesar Charlone is doing — the “Blindness” cinematographer is heading up this equally dystopian tale, in which only 3 percent of the population makes it past the age of 20. You know, on account of those soul-shattering, government-mandated life-or-death trials they’re destined to endure. Just a tad different from the fake IDs and sophomore-year drama most people had to worry about.

    ‘Feed the Beast’ (AMC)

    For better or worse, “Feed the Beast” is not about the inevitable carbo-loading that happens after you binge “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives.” It does have plenty to with restaurants, it just has a little more to do with the seedy industry underbelly than it does with the corndog-fueled beer belly. When two desperate best friends risk everything to make their restaurateur dreams come true in this drama — inspired by the Danish series “Bankerot” — AMC promises a heaping helping of the two essential Bs: betrayal and backstabbing. Better make your reservations.

    ‘Animal Kingdom’ (TNT)

    “Animal Kingdom” isn’t actually mining an overseas TV series — don’t get the wrong idea. “Animal Kingdom” is mining “Animal Kingdom,” which was a feature-length Australian movie in 2010. Totally different thing. And you said Hollywood doesn’t have any new ideas.

    While the cast is a whole lot less Aussie-fied — Ben Mendelsohn and Joel Edgerton are out in favor of Ellen Barkin and Shawn Hatosy — and the story is moving from Melbourne to California, the movie’s core remains intact. Barkin steps into the role of “Smurf,” a crime-family matriarch who runs the gamut from coddling her sons to wreaking complete emotional havoc on their lives — Sundance critics compared the original movie to an Australian “Goodfellas.” Sounds smurfy.

    Sources

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  • Director Cary Fukunaga Opens Up on ‘It’ Split

    It came as a shock when director Cary Fukunaga left the “It” movie just weeks before the start of production. For once, the obvious answer — that he stood too close to a sewer one day and Pennywise took him out — is not what happened. The “True Detective” Season 1 director just talked to Entertainment Weekly about his (reluctant) departure from the two-part Stephen King adaptation.

    “It’s never easy,” Cary told EW. “Chase [Palmer] and I had been working on that script for probably three years. There was a lot of our childhood and our experience in it.” So why did he go? “Ultimately, we and New Line have to agree on the kind of movie we want to make, and we just wanted to make different movies,” Cary said. “It’s like a relationship: you can try to make the other person who you want them to be, but it’s impossible really to change. You just have to work.”

    That still doesn’t explain specifics, but since he’s not with the project anymore, he probably wants to remain respectful and discreet (and not complain about money, schedules, etc.). It’s never a good idea to burn bridges unless you have to! Andy Muschietti of “Mama” is said to be taking over as director, and EW said he’s reportedly keeping the two-part format and hiring a new writer to rework the script. “It” was supposed to start shooting in late June, so they still need a new start date. Will they need a new Pennywise or does Will Poulter still have the gig? That is not clear either, but at least “It” is still happening.

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