Tag: christopher-lloyd

  • ‘Clue’ 40th Anniversary: Lesley Ann Warren and Colleen Camp

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    Available to buy or rent now is the 4K Ultra-HD Digital release of the classic comedy ‘Clue’, which celebrates its 40th anniversary on December 13th.

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    Directed by Jonathan Lynn (‘My Cousin Vinny’) and based on the popular board game, ‘Clue’ features an all-star cast that includes Tm Curry (‘The Rocky Horror Picture Show’), Eileen Brennan (‘Private Benjamin’), Madeline Kahn (‘Blazing Saddles’), Christopher Lloyd (‘Back to the Future’), Michael McKean (‘This Is Spinal Tap’), Martin Mull (‘Mr. Mom’), Lesley Ann Warren (‘The Limey’), and Colleen Camp (‘Apocalypse Now’).

    (L to R) Lesley Ann Warren and Colleen Camp talk 1985's 'Clue'.
    (L to R) Lesley Ann Warren and Colleen Camp talk 1985’s ‘Clue’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with icons Lesley Ann Warren and Colleen Camp about the 40th anniversary of the classic film, their first reaction to the screenplay, their approach to their characters, working with the all-star cast and director Jonathan Lynn, and the film’s groundbreaking alternate endings.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews.

    Related Article: ‘Clue’ and ‘Arrested Development’ Actor Martin Mull Dies Aged 80

    Lesley Ann Warren in 1985's 'Clue'. Copyright © 2002 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    Lesley Ann Warren in 1985’s ‘Clue’. Copyright © 2002 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Lesley, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and what were your thoughts on adapting a board game into a movie, which is common now but very unusual in the 1980s?

    Lesley Ann Warren: Well, the good news in a strange way is that I read it as a script for a film. I had not ever played the board game. So, I was not familiar with the characters. I didn’t know anything about the story of Clue. I was also asked to play Mrs. White because Carrie Fisher was playing Miss Scarlet. The cast was beginning to come together, and I was excited, some of them were on board already. Then Carrie had to drop out because she had personal issues she had to deal with. They came back to me and said, would you like to play Miss Scarlet? Well, I’ve always thought I was better Miss Scarlet than Mrs. White. So, I was thrilled to be able to step into the very high heels of Miss Scarlett.

    MF: Just to follow up, the film’s multiple endings was also groundbreaking at the time, but again something that is quite common now. What was it like shooting the different endings and was that something that director Jonathan Lynn had to really fight for?

    LAW: I don’t know whether he did have to fight the studio, but we did not know that there were going to be multiple endings until about two thirds of the way through the script, which was kind of great because we didn’t know where the murderer was. So, we were able to play those scenes really having no clue. If we had known, we would have been playing it very differently. So, when it was revealed to us, then we were able to embrace whoever was the murderer, and I was glad I was one of them. But it was it was a surprise to us as well.

    Colleen Camp in 1985's 'Clue'. Copyright © 2002 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    Colleen Camp in 1985’s ‘Clue’. Copyright © 2002 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Colleen, Yvette was not a character in the board game, do you think that gave you a certain freedom in playing the character?

    Colleen Camp: I think it did, and I was a clue fanatic. I loved that board game. I thought it was such a phenomenal board game. I had so much reverence for the board game that I never even imagined who could play all these characters. When I was faced with these icons playing these characters, I thought, I’ve hit pay dirt. I always loved the game. Now if I go back and play that game, I really believe they should have a game with every one of their faces on the board. I think there should be a year of ‘Clue’ anniversary celebrations. I think we should have ‘Clue’ parties. That’s not easy, when you have a board game and then these characters in the movie are so brilliant. There is no one that could have played Miss Scarlett but Lesley Ann Warren. So, for me, being a character that was not part of that initial board game, in one sense, I was apart from the group. But then it also gave me an opportunity to have a depth that may not seem on the surface of this French maid. I’m there taking a big view of what’s going on, and I’m much more calculated than you would expect. That was exciting because it did give me more freedom. In terms of the endings, no, we did not know. So, for me, all a sudden, to find out that I’m one of Miss Scarlet’s girls and I’m being strangled by the pool table was very interesting. Because at the time, we weren’t sure about those endings. We thought it was a great idea, but they thought that maybe it impacted the box office, that people were confused and what version they were watching.

    MF: Lesley, the film features an all-star cast, what was it like working with them and was there anyone that you really bonded with?

    LAW: Colleen! No lie. We really did, bond. We were talking a lot about our relationships, but we just did, and we hung out in each other’s trailers. But the other person that I personally bonded with was Martin Mull. I adored him beyond. We were put together, Colonel Mustard and Miss Scarlett a lot. But then we went on to do four or five different movie and television projects together. We stayed very much in contact. I was devastated at his passing. You know, you hear this a lot, but this is really the truth, we were so compatible as a group, both artistically compatible and emotionally compatible. There was no drama, no acting out, we supported each other’s work and were rolling in the aisles when somebody would do something. It was an amazing experience. One of the things that I say a lot, and I really mean it is that each one of these actors had such a specific perspective on comedy and character, and yet, the work blended, which is very unusual. We were all very different, and unique in our way of creating these characters that are now indelible. But it never got in the way of the ensemble rhythm and just ability to bring these moments to life.

    The cast of 1985's 'Clue'. Copyright © 2002 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    The cast of 1985’s ‘Clue’. Copyright © 2002 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Colleen, what was your experience like working with the cast?

    CC: Amazing. And what she just said is that there was such a love and generosity from the actors as see great work. Somebody would do “The flames” like Madeline Kahn or Eileen Brennan with the feathers or any of the other actors. You were so thrilled and so excited that you were cheering them on. Fortunately for me, I worked with Michael McKeon, and then I worked with Christopher Lloyd four times. When I start to think about the movies that we all did together, that were different films, that we were in, that created a bonding as well. So, that’s what was also exciting.

    MF: Finally, Colleen, can you talk about collaborating with director Jonathan Lynn on set and his unique vision for this project?

    CC: He’s a genius. He had a theater background, and he was a genius at direction. He understood humor and he understood the nuance and the rhythm. Jonathan Lynn had a style, and he was very brilliant. He’s an intellectual. So, I think it was a very smart script and I was very fortunate to work with Jonathan again in ‘Greedy’. Jonathan always had a great casting sense. The casting was very interesting, and I think that that’s the genius of ‘Clue’ because it’s great acting and big stars, but stars on a level that are also character actors.

    'Clue' is now available to buy or rent on 4K Ultra-HD Digital in honor of the film's 40th anniversary.
    ‘Clue’ is now available to buy or rent on 4K Ultra-HD Digital in honor of the film’s 40th anniversary.

    What is the plot of ‘Clue’?

    ‘Clue’ finds six colorful dinner guests (Eileen Brennan, Madeline Kline, Christopher Lloyd, Michael McKean, Martin Mull and Lesley Ann Warren) gathered at the mansion of their host, Mr. Boddy (Lee Ving), who turns up dead after his secret is exposed: He was blackmailing all of them. With the killer among them, the guests and Boddy’s chatty butler (Tim Curry) must discover out the culprit before the body count rises.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Clue’?

    • Tim Curry as Wadsworth
    • Eileen Brennan as Mrs. Peacock
    • Madeline Kahn as Mrs. White
    • Christopher Lloyd as Professor Plum
    • Michael McKean as Mr. Green
    • Martin Mull as Colonel Mustard
    • Lesley Ann Warren as Miss Scarlet
    • Colleen Camp as Yvette
    • Lee Ving as Mr. Boddy
    • Bill Henderson as The Cop
    • Jane Wiedlin as The Singing Telegram Girl
    • Jeffrey Kramer as The Motorist
    • Kellye Nakahara as The Cook (Mrs. Ho)
    • Howard Hesseman as the Chief of Police
    Director Jonathan Lynn on the set of 1985's 'Clue'. Copyright © 2002 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    Director Jonathan Lynn on the set of 1985’s ‘Clue’. Copyright © 2002 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    List of Jonathan Lynn Movies:

    Buy ‘Clue’ Movies on Amazon

  • ‘Back to the Future’ 40th Anniversary Interview: Bob Gale

    Screenwriter and producer Bob Gale at the 40th anniversary screening of 'Back to the Future'.
    Screenwriter and producer Bob Gale at the 40th anniversary screening of ‘Back to the Future’.

    Are you ready to go “Back in Time”?

    2025 marks the 40th anniversary of one of the most beloved movies of all time, ‘Back to the Future’. Directed by Robert Zemeckis (‘Forrest Gump’) and based on a script he wrote with producer Bob Gale, the classic film stars Michael J. Fox (‘Family Ties’) as Marty McFly and Christopher Lloyd (‘Who Framed Roger Rabbit‘) as Doc Brown.

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    To celebrate the anniversary, the film is being re-released in theaters on October 31st in premium formats including IMAX, Dolby Cinema, 4DX and D-Box. To kick off the re-release, a special screening and event was held on October 21st, (which is also the date Marty went back in time), at the Universal Cinema at Universal CityWalk Hollywood.

    Moviefone attended the event and had a chance to speak with co-writer and producer Bob Gale about the 40th anniversary of ‘Back to the Future’, creating the rules of time travel, Michael J. Fox’s iconic performance, his instant chemistry with Christopher Lloyd, predicting elements of the future with ‘Back to the Future Part II’, and why there will never be another sequel, remake or reboot of the original.

    Related Article: Tom Hanks Features in First Pictures of Robert Zemeckis’ ‘Here’

    Screenwriter and producer Bob Gale at the 40th anniversary screening of 'Back to the Future'.
    Screenwriter and producer Bob Gale at the 40th anniversary screening of ‘Back to the Future’.

    Moviefone: To begin with, when you first came up with the idea for the film, did you have any idea that the movie would become a cultural phenomenon and that we would be celebrating the 40th anniversary all these years later?

    Bob Gale: Well, we must go back 45 years ago because that’s when I got the idea. So, if the me of today went back in time 45 years ago when Bob Zemeckis and I were struggling to write this script and said, “Guess what’s going to be going on in 2025?” Our younger selves would’ve called security and said, “There’s an old man lunatic in here. Get him out of here.”

    MF: In my opinion, ‘Back to the Future’ really created the rules for fictional time travel that are still used to this day in films, television and other mediums. Can you talk about creating those rules and do you see ‘Back to the Future’s influence in other media?

    BG: Well, we see the influence in other media. There’s no question about it. In fact, in ‘Avengers: Endgame’, they had to specifically say, “Well, that’s not how it works in ‘Back to the Future’.” Then of course they say, “Well, ours is different,” and then it’s the same. So yeah, we were inspired by the 1960 version of ‘The Time Machine’ movie in which you could travel through time but not through space, which is important because you’re always in the same place, whether that physically makes any sense and violates some rules, I don’t know. But that’s the way we decided to do it. We had no idea that the movie was even going to be a hit, much less that we were establishing the rules. But people would say to me, “Well Bob, do you think people are going to understand this?” And I said, “Well, if we can explain time travel so that a 10-year-old can understand it, we should be able to explain just about everything.”

    Michael J. Fox in 'Back to the Future'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Michael J. Fox in ‘Back to the Future’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    MF: It’s well documented that actor Eric Stoltz was originally cast as Marty McFly and eventually replaced by Michael J. Fox. Can you talk about the energy Fox brought to the set and why he was the right actor to play that role? There would be no ‘Back to the Future’ without Michael J. Fox, correct?

    BG: Absolutely. We certainly wouldn’t be here if we hadn’t made that casting change. I sincerely do believe that. People often ask me, “What’s your favorite memory of making ‘Back the Future’?” It was the first night that Michael J. Fox came to work because this was a crazy thing for us to do, to fire an actor five and a half weeks after we started shooting with him. I don’t think it’d ever been done before. Maybe in the case of somebody dying, but not like that. People said, “Do these guys know what they’re doing?” Then Michael comes to work, and he steps into the Twin Pines Mall scene. He starts doing the same stuff that we’d done the week before with Eric Stoltz and everybody just said, “Oh my God, that’s Marty McFly. Yeah, that’s the character I envisioned in the script.” So, my God, you’re right. We would not have ‘Back to the Future’ without Michael. The planets totally lined up.

    MF: Was his chemistry with Christopher Lloyd obvious from day one?

    BG: From day one with everybody. That’s what a great actor can bring to a part is that he can make the actors around him be better. So, he was able to create an interplay with every other character, every other actor. You see it on screen. You absolutely do.

    (L to R) Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd in 'Back to the Future'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd in ‘Back to the Future’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    MF: This is more of a question about ‘Back to the Future Part II’, but that film predicted a lot of things that have come true including flat screen TVs, video calls, and driverless cars. Is there anything you predicted that came true that surprised you, and do you take credit for any of these inventions?

    BG: A lot of things were sort of, “Okay, this is kind of obvious that we’re going this way,” like the flat screen televisions. One thing that I wish we had that we don’t, is food hydrators. How come we don’t have that? It seems like that should be something that we should have, but maybe the technology doesn’t work. Should we have hoverboards? Well, they would be cool, but the orthopedic surgeons would like it a lot. I don’t think we’re going to get those anytime soon. Same thing about flying cars. Every so often you hear, “Oh, we’ve got a new flying car.” But people have enough trouble driving in two dimensions, do we want to give them three? I don’t know.

    MF: Finally, is ‘Back to the Future’ untouchable? In the sense that we will never see another sequel, reboot or remake, correct? The film is perfect, and stands on its own, and there could never be another, is that right?

    BG: Exactly. We can’t do another. They’ll never be a part four, at least not while Bob and I are alive. We don’t want to do a reboot because how do you do that? People say, “Well, why don’t you do a part four?” “Well, do you want to see a ‘Back to the Future’ movie that doesn’t have Michael J. Fox in it?” Absolutely not. Nobody wants to see that. So that just takes it totally off the table. We’ll leave it the way that it is. We really want to be the guys that said, “Hey, we were able to say creatively, ‘We’ve told the story we want to tell. We’re done.’” People say, “Well, you could make a lot of money if you did another one.” Okay, we’ve already made a lot of money. That’s not a good enough reason to do it. Was there a story that we should tell? If there was, we would’ve told it back in the day. So, we’re going to leave well enough alone. Let the viewers enjoy the ‘Back to the Future’ trilogy for what it is and enjoy it.

    Fans can purchase ‘Back to the Future’ anniversary merchandise on Amazon.

    The 40th anniversary screening of 'Back to the Future'.
    The 40th anniversary screening of ‘Back to the Future’.

    What is the plot of ‘Back to the Future’?

    Eighties teenager Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) is accidentally sent back in time to 1955, inadvertently disrupting his parents’ first meeting and attracting his mother’s romantic interest. Marty must repair the damage to history by rekindling his parents’ romance and – with the help of his eccentric inventor friend Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) – return to 1985.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Back to the Future’?

    Michael J. Fox in 'Back to the Future'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Michael J. Fox in ‘Back to the Future’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Back to the Future’ Franchise:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Back to the Future’ Re-Release Movie Showtimes

    Buy ‘Back to the Future’ Movies On Amazon

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  • TV Review: ‘Wednesday’ Season 2, Part 2

    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in episode 205 of 'Wednesday'. Photo: Helen Sloan/Netflix © 2025.
    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in episode 205 of ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Helen Sloan/Netflix © 2025.

    Arriving on Netflix on September 3rd is the second part of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2, the four remaining episodes.

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    Jenna Ortega (‘Scream’)’s titular troublemaker has to recover from the events of the climactic first part before digging into yet another new mystery.

    The show also features Emma Myers (‘A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder’), Joy Sunday (‘Dear White People’) and, upgraded to regulars this year, fellow Addams family members Catherine Zeta-Jones (‘Chicago’), Luis Guzmán (‘Punch-Drunk Love’) and Isaac Ordonez (‘A Wrinkle in Time’).

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 Part 1

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Gwendoline Christie as Principal Weems, Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams in episode 205 of 'Wednesday'. Photo: Helen Sloan/Netflix © 2025.
    (L to R) Gwendoline Christie as Principal Weems, Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams in episode 205 of ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Helen Sloan/Netflix © 2025.

    The first part of ‘Wednesday’s second season left things on a cliffhanger with our heroine injured after her latest encounter with rampant “Hyde” creature Tyler Galpin (Hunter Doohan). It had a lot to live up to, and while the new batch of episodes certainly have their high points, there is a big issue at its heart.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Lady Gaga as Rosaline Rotwood, Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in episode 206 of 'Wednesday'. Photo: Netflix© 2025.
    (L to R) Lady Gaga as Rosaline Rotwood, Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in episode 206 of ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Netflix© 2025.

    While the producers, including showrunners Alfred Gough and Miles Millar could be forgiven for sticking to what they know, the endless use of the Hyde creature is a problem as things get repetitive. Also, the first few episodes feel like the tail end of Part One, before a new story randomly takes over, and the two plots fit somewhat uneasily.

    The show remains as stylish and fun as ever, but the Hyde creatures are a weak spot –– some effects are decent, others are so cartoony as to truly stand out like a sore thumb.

    Cast and Performances

    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in episode 206 of 'Wednesday'. Photo: Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2025.
    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in episode 206 of ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2025.

    As expected, Jenna Ortega remains the MVP of the show, her deadpan delivery as on point as always.

    But she shares the spotlight with Emma Myers, who shines in particular when she’s swapping bodies with Ortega’s character for a chunk of an episode. The two performers are a delight playing each other, and it’s easily the most fun the season has.

    Elsewhere, the Addams clan are used decently, though poor Luis Guzmán still gets the short end of the stick as Gomez. Gwendoline Christie gets to have more fun playing Principal Weems as a spirit guide than she ever truly did in the first season.

    And while Lady Gaga’s cameo is fun in the moment, she’s more plot device than character.

    Final Thoughts

    Joanna Lumley as Grandmama in episode 206 of 'Wednesday'. Photo:Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2025.
    Joanna Lumley as Grandmama in episode 206 of ‘Wednesday’. Photo:Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2025.

    Though the second part of the season doesn’t quite live up to the first (those confused storytelling approaches didn’t help), there is still entertainment to be derived from the watching Ortega do her thing.

    The producers did at least find a way to weave (most of) the other Addams family members into the story, and the return of Gwendoline Christie’s Weems was a welcome, useful one.

    ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 Part 2 receives 75 out of 100.

    Thing in episode 206 of 'Wednesday'. Photo: Netflix © 2025.
    Thing in episode 206 of ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Netflix © 2025.

    What’s the story of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2?

    Wednesday Addams (Jenna Ortega), returns to prowl the Gothic halls of Nevermore Academy, where fresh foes and woes await.

    This season, Wednesday must navigate family, friends and old adversaries, propelling her into another year of delightfully dark and kooky mayhem.

    Armed with her signature razor-sharp wit and deadpan charm, Wednesday is also plunged into a new bone-chilling supernatural mystery.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2?

    • Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams
    • Emma Myers as Enid Sinclair
    • Joy Sunday as Bianca Barclay
    • Hunter Doohan as Tyler Galpin
    • Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams
    • Luis Guzmán as Gomez Addams
    • Isaac Ordonez as Pugsley Addams
    • Steve Buscemi as Barry Dort
    • Gwendoline Christie as Larissa Weems
    • Lady Gaga as Rosaline Rotwood
    • Christopher Lloyd as Professor Orloff
    (L to R) Noah B. Taylor as Bruno, Emma Myers as Enid, Joy Sunday as Bianca, Oliver Watson as Kent, Georgie Farmer as Ajax in episode 205 of 'Wednesday'. Photo: Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2025.
    (L to R) Noah B. Taylor as Bruno, Emma Myers as Enid, Joy Sunday as Bianca, Oliver Watson as Kent, Georgie Farmer as Ajax in episode 205 of ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2025.

    Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Addams Family’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Addams Family’ Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Nobody 2’

    (L to R) Brady Mansell (Gage Munroe), Sammy Mansell (Paisley Cadorath), Hutch Mansell (Bob Odenkirk), David Mansell (Christopher Lloyd) and Becca Mansell (Connie Nielsen) in 'Nobody 2', directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Brady Mansell (Gage Munroe), Sammy Mansell (Paisley Cadorath), Hutch Mansell (Bob Odenkirk), David Mansell (Christopher Lloyd) and Becca Mansell (Connie Nielsen) in ‘Nobody 2’, directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    ‘Nobody 2’ receives 3.5 out of 10 stars.

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    Opening in theaters August 15 is ‘Nobody 2,’ directed by Timo Tjahjanto and starring Bob Odenkirk, Connie Nielsen, RZA, Colin Hanks, John Ortiz, Colin Salmon, Christopher Lloyd, and Sharon Stone.

    Related Article: Bob Odenkirk to Star for Director Ben Wheatley in Action Pic ‘Normal’

    Initial Thoughts

    Bob Odenkirk as Hutch Mansell in 'Nobody 2', directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Bob Odenkirk as Hutch Mansell in ‘Nobody 2’, directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    With the original ‘Nobody’ in 2021, writer Derek Kolstad, director Ilya Naishuller, and star Bob Odenkirk found a way to freshen up the action subgenre in which a seemingly ordinary guy turns out to be a deadly assassin who only reluctantly deploys his brutal skills. The key was Odenkirk, who managed to make Hutch Mansell’s transformation from dyspeptic husband and dad into lethal killer funny, believable, and even a little sad.

    A mild hit, ‘Nobody’ didn’t seem like it would be instant sequel fodder, but here we are. Except that four years later, with increasingly tired retreads of the same tropes like ‘Love Hurts,’ ‘A Working Man,’ and ‘Novocaine’ coming out in the last year alone, ‘Nobody 2’ simply offers up more of the same. Only it doesn’t even have the rudimentary character development of the first film; this one, directed by Indonesian action filmmaker Timo Tjahjanto, can’t find the same relatively successful blend of comedy and action and quickly turns silly, with the thin plot used mainly to stretch the film from one numbing action sequence to another. Odenkirk is watchable as always, but ‘Nobody 2’ is a sequel that fails to justify its existence.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Bob Odenkirk and director Timo Tjahjanto on the set of 'Nobody 2'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Bob Odenkirk and director Timo Tjahjanto on the set of ‘Nobody 2’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    The movie begins the same way as the first one: with an injured Hutch in an interrogation room, facing two FBI agents who want to know who he is (only this time he’s not alone). Cue the title card and a rewind to a few days earlier. Hutch is back to full-time assassination work to pay off the $30 million debt he owes the government for covering the Russian mob money he torched in the first movie. His nonstop schedule has distanced him from his kids and his wife Becca (Connie Nielsen, with a bit more to do this time), who is also feeling them drift apart.

    Hutch decides he needs a break and rounds up the family for a vacation to Plummerville, home of Wild Bill’s Majestic Midway and Waterpark, an amusement park which Hutch’s dad David (Christopher Lloyd) took him and his brother Harry (RZA) when they were kids. “Making memories” is the goal, and Hutch even brings his dad along to relive what he considered one of the happiest times of his life. But as his handler (Colin Salmon) warns: “The job is in your nature, and nature always wins.”

    Sure enough, they’re barely at the park for a day when Hutch’s son runs afoul of some bullies at the arcade, leading to a violent altercation between Hutch and some security guards. That puts him on the radar of the park’s owner, Wyatt Martin (John Ortiz) and the corrupt Sheriff Abel (Colin Hanks), both of whom work for the psychopathic crime queen Lendina (Sharon Stone). Plummerville has become a front for Lendina’s nefarious drug and gun-running operation, and Hutch is not welcome.

    Bob Odenkirk as Hutch Mansell in 'Nobody 2', directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Bob Odenkirk as Hutch Mansell in ‘Nobody 2’, directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    That’s about as far as the plot gets before it turns, as mentioned earlier, into just an excuse for escalating mayhem. Despite Odenkirk’s normal guy façade, Hutch is all but a superhero; he gets out of every scrape with a few dings (okay, and a missing fingertip) while leaving everyone else bashed to a pulp on the floor. No one in his family or his eventual team (which includes his dad, of course, as well as Harry – RZA showing up for a day’s work – and an ally one can see coming from a mile away) ever seems like they’re truly in danger, which makes the stakes for the characters almost non-existent.

    And that’s what ultimately lets the air out of this largely joyless affair. Tjahjanto, making his Hollywood debut here after films like ‘May the Devil Take You,’ can speed up or slow down the action all he wants, but he doesn’t really do anything creative or exciting with it. It’s just Odenkirk (or his fight double) pummeling generic bad guys over and over again in increasingly silly and frenetic ways. The characterizations are skin-deep, and even the big bad, Sharon Stone’s Lendina, feels like she’s barely in the movie (which runs about 82 minutes before credits).

    The film also utilizes the now customary gag of playing some upbeat pop standard underneath each scene of bone-crunching violence or destruction — as ironic counterpoint, we suppose — but it’s been done to death and isn’t amusing anymore. Then of course, there’s the montage where Hutch and friends prepare death traps in the amusement park in what seems like a full afternoon’s work, while Lendina and her army drive there at approximately two miles an hour. Meanwhile, the seeds of interesting ideas – mainly centering around Hutch’s influence on his kids and his relationship with Becca – are given lip service and then tossed aside without even bothering at a resolution.

    Cast and Performances

    Sharon Stone as Lendina in 'Nobody 2', directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Sharon Stone as Lendina in ‘Nobody 2’, directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    We’ll give credit where credit is due: Bob Odenkirk works hard to bring Hutch and the picture to life, and he commits to both the bit and the action in a way that at least seems honest. He’s the main reason one sticks with ‘Nobody 2,’ even if it sometimes feels like he’s alternating between two expressions – downtrodden and mad – the whole movie. As noted earlier, Connie Nielsen is kept a little busier this time around, but the simmering tension between Becca and Hutch never pays off.

    As for the rest of the cast, the work is mostly phoned in. Ortiz and Hanks handle their paper-thin bad guys as best they can, while Christopher Lloyd and RZA look happy to be getting paid just to show up and stand around (the latter especially is barely in the film). As for Sharon Stone, she vamps and screeches and gyrates and generally chews up all the scenery she can find, but the character is so underwritten than even Stone going full psycho can’t make her particularly interesting.

    Final Thoughts

    Bob Odenkirk as Hutch Mansell in 'Nobody 2', directed by Timo Tjahjanto. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Bob Odenkirk as Hutch Mansell in ‘Nobody 2’, directed by Timo Tjahjanto. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    If Timo Tjahjanto set out to bring any of the flavor of his work in Indonesia to a Hollywood action/comedy film, it doesn’t make an impression here. Aside from Odenkirk and Nielsen and a few sparsely funny moments sprinkled throughout, ‘Nobody 2’ is the definition of a sequel that no one in particular asked for.

    It doesn’t advance the character of Hutch the way that the first film did, and it doesn’t fully embrace either its campiness or the potential grittiness of the action. It feels as insubstantial as a cartoon or video game, is as unrealistic as either of those, and doesn’t have anything that’s particularly interesting to say. Like its rudimentary story, the joke in ‘Nobody 2’ wears out fast.

    What is the plot of ‘Nobody 2’?

    Four years after he took on the Russian mob, husband, father and workaholic assassin Hutch Mansell (Bob Odenkirk) is working off his debt to them with an unending string of hits on international thugs. But when Hutch and his wife Becca (Connie Nielsen) decide to take their kids on a short vacation, a minor encounter with town bullies yanks the family into the crosshairs of an unhinged, blood-thirsty crime boss (Sharon Stone).

    Who is in the cast of ‘Nobody 2’?

    • Bob Odenkirk as Hutch Mansell
    • Connie Nielsen as Becca Mansell
    • John Ortiz as Wyatt Martin
    • RZA as Harry Mansell
    • Colin Hanks as Sheriff Abel
    • Christopher Lloyd as David Mansell
    • Sharon Stone as Lendina
    • Colin Salmon as The Barber
    • Gage Munroe as Brady Mansell
    • Paisley Cadorath as Sammy Mansell
    Bob Odenkirk as Hutch Mansell in 'Nobody 2', directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Bob Odenkirk as Hutch Mansell in ‘Nobody 2’, directed by Timo Tjahjanto. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Nobody 2′:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Nobody 2’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Bob Odenkirk Movies on Amazon

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  • TV Review: ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 Part 1

    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in episode 203 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.
    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in episode 203 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.

    ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 Part 1 receives 8 out of 10 stars.

    Arriving on Netflix on August 5th is the first part of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2, (four episodes, followed by a further four making up Part 2 on September 3rd).

    With Jenna Ortega (‘Scream’) back as the titular troublemaker, here looking to hone her psychic abilities while digging into a new mystery, the show also features Emma Myers (‘A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder’), Joy Sunday (‘Dear White People’) and, upgraded to regulars this year, fellow Addams family members Catherine Zeta-Jones (‘Chicago’), Luis Guzmán (‘Punch-Drunk Love’) and Isaac Ordonez (‘A Wrinkle in Time’).

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘Wednesday’ Season 1

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams, Isaac Ordonez as Pugsley Addams, Luis Guzmán as Gomez Addams in episode 203 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.
    (L to R) Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams, Isaac Ordonez as Pugsley Addams, Luis Guzmán as Gomez Addams in episode 203 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.

    If all the reporting on it and promotion for the show wasn’t enough to convince you, ‘Wednesday’s return for a second season on Netflix proves that it’s a giant sensation from the off, since it sports a tailored introductory sting featuring everyone’s favorite disembodied hand, Thing, interacting with the steamer’s logo.

    ‘Wednesday’, though, ultimately has a lot more than the sprawling fanbase to live up to –– it must deliver what audiences enjoyed about the first season while expanding the world and finding some new mysteries for our morbid heroine to explore.

    On the evidence of the first part of the new season (split, as is the streamer’s custom, into two chunks premiering in this case roughly a month apart), ‘Wednesday’s child is still full of woe –– and mightily entertaining to boot.

    Script and Direction

    Evie Templeton as Agnes DeMille in episode 201 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Helen Sloan/Netflix © 2025.
    Evie Templeton as Agnes DeMille in episode 201 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Helen Sloan/Netflix © 2025.

    Returning showrunners Alfred Gough and Miles Millar know what makes ‘Wednesday’ tick: plenty of Ortega’s deadpan delivery, a deadly mystery enveloping her and her classmates, plenty for animated body part Thing to handle and some brightness to balance the dour central figure in the form of Emma Myers’ peppy werewolf roommate Enid.

    While the element of surprise is perhaps lacking this time, the focus is instead on easing us back into Nevermore Academy, with this year bringing the added notion of having Wednesday’s family –– that would be Morticia, Gomez, Pugsley and looming, groaning manservant Lurch (Joonas Suotamo) –– around on campus more than she would really prefer.

    The mystery is another beguiling one, and several of the new characters fit seamlessly into the story.

    Still, while the addition of the extended Addams family does draw a little too much focus, at least the writing team keeps the balance most satisfying, Gomez and Pugsley used sparingly while the fractured dynamic between Morticia and her daughter is pushed to the fore.

    Thing in episode 202 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.
    Thing in episode 202 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2025.

    On the directing front, Tim Burton is back, splitting episodes with Paco Cabezas, offers the requisite style and quirk we’ve come to expect from Wednesday. While not every effect is, er, effective (the Hyde remains some very plasticky CG work), others are still excellent (Thing in particular).

    And a move to Ireland for the new season hasn’t impacted the show’s gothic charms, with an episode set at a nearby camp bringing up memories of Wednesday’s memorable time at summer camp in 1993 movie ‘Addams Family Values’.

    Cast and Performances

    Emma Myers as Enid Sinclair in episode 203 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Jonathan Hession/Netflix © 2025.
    Emma Myers as Enid Sinclair in episode 203 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Jonathan Hession/Netflix © 2025.

    With Ortega front and center as always, Wednesday herself remains a wonderful creation, all dark moods, gloomy zingers and a wealth of skills. This is a near-perfect blend of actor and role, and Wednesday’s journey this season allows her to deepen without changing too much.

    Emma Myers also remains a delight as Enid, the perky werewolf roommate with the love of rainbow colors and, this year, a burgeoning love life. She balances well with Ortega and the two make a solid double act.

    The returning members of the Addams clan (now regular cast members) are more of a mixed bag. Catherine Zeta-Jones is ever slinky and superb as Morticia, here handed her own deeper emotional throughline with different generational issues and a more active role in present-day Nevermore.

    Luis Guzmán is similarly good as Gomez, though he has less to do (but does it all well). Isaac Ordonez is less convincing as Pugsley, but does at least have a fun plotline –– which also introduces some truly Burton-tastic animation for its backstory.

    Previously unseen is Grandmama Hester Frump, Morticia’s mother, brought to vibrant, emotionally distant life by UK sitcom and acting legend Joanna Lumley. She fits smoothly into the wider ensemble.

    Billie Piper as Isadora Capri in episode 205 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2025.
    Billie Piper as Isadora Capri in episode 205 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2025.

    Of the new recruits, Steve Buscemi makes for an appealing new principal, the goofy Barry Dort, a tireless campaigner for outcasts’ right who also has a hidden agenda, while Billie Piper works well as Isadora Capri, the new music teacher at the school.

    There’s a fun, small supporting role for Christopher Lloyd (who played Uncle Fester in the live-action ‘Addams’ movies) and Thandiwe Newton provides mystery and power as the head of a nearby asylum which will become key to the plot in this early chunk of the season.

    Final Thoughts

    Joanna Lumley as Grandmama in episode 204 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Owen Behan/Netflix © 2025.
    Joanna Lumley as Grandmama in episode 204 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Owen Behan/Netflix © 2025.

    If it’s tough to follow a hit, ‘Wednesday’s second season so far shows little sign of the strain, bringing back what fans like about the show while layering in new mysteries and some worthwhile fresh faces.

    Now it’s up the second batch of episodes to stick the landing…

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    What’s the story of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2?

    Wednesday Addams (Jenna Ortega), returns to prowl the Gothic halls of Nevermore Academy, where fresh foes and woes await.

    This season, Wednesday must navigate family, friends and old adversaries, propelling her into another year of delightfully dark and kooky mayhem.

    Armed with her signature razor-sharp wit and deadpan charm, Wednesday is also plunged into a new bone-chilling supernatural mystery.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2?

    • Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams
    • Emma Myers as Enid Sinclair
    • Joy Sunday as Bianca Barclay
    • Hunter Doohan as Tyler Galpin
    • Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams
    • Luis Guzmán as Gomez Addams
    • Isaac Ordonez as Pugsley Addams
    • Steve Buscemi as Barry Dort
    • Thandiwe Newton as Dr. Fairburn
    • Christopher Lloyd as Professor Orloff
    (L to R) Joonas Suotamo as Lurch, Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams, Jenna Ortega as Wednesday, Isaac Ordonez aș Pugsley Addams, Thing, Luis Guzmán as Gomez Addams in episode 201 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Helen Sloan/Netflix © 2025.
    (L to R) Joonas Suotamo as Lurch, Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams, Jenna Ortega as Wednesday, Isaac Ordonez aș Pugsley Addams, Thing, Luis Guzmán as Gomez Addams in episode 201 of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2. Photo: Helen Sloan/Netflix © 2025.

    Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Addams Family’ Franchise:

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  • ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV Spin-Off in Development

    Jack Nicholson in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'. Photo: United Artists.
    Jack Nicholson in ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’. Photo: United Artists.

    Preview:

    • A ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV adaptation is in development.
    • It’ll focus on the character of the Chief from the 1975 Oscar winner.
    • Producer Paul Zaentz, one of the rights holders, is behind the new project.

    There are always concerns when a spin-off of a classic movie is announced. Will it tarnish the legacy of the original? Will it go off in some random direction and end up far less entertaining than the movie from which it derives?

    In the case of 1975’s multiple Oscar-winning drama ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’, there is plenty of reason to worry. But with the rights in the hands of producer Paul Zaentz –– nephew of ‘Cuckoo’ producer Saul Zaentz –– it appears the forward movement on a TV take on the story is proceeding with all due caution and respect.

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    Talking on indie filmmaking podcast CK Café, Zaentz revealed that he’s made a deal to put a ‘Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV series into development.

    Related Article: Diane Kruger, Ray Nicholson and director Neil LaBute Talk ‘Out of the Blue’

    What was the story of ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’?

    Jack Nicholson in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'. Photo: United Artists.
    Jack Nicholson in ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’. Photo: United Artists.

    The movie, directed by Milos Forman, was written by Lawrence Hauben and Bo Goldman, and adapted both Ken Kesey’s book and the play created from it by Dale Wasserman.

    It follows a unruly convict Randle Patrick McMurphy (Jack Nicholson), who is sent to a psychiatric hospital for evaluation in 1963 Oregon, and encourages his docile companions to take more control of their lives and defy the tyrannical head nurse.

    Chief Bromden (played in the movie by Will Sampson) is the towering half-Native American patient who pretends to be deaf and mute. Over time, the antics of protagonist McMurphy coax him out of his disguise and he becomes a symbol of powerful resistance and emancipation. The book focuses more on Bromden.

    ‘Cuckoo’s cast also includes Danny DeVito, Scatman Crothers, Brad Dourif, Nathan George, Christopher Lloyd and Vincent Schiavelli, with Louise Fletcher memorably playing the tyrannical Nurse Ratched, who rules the wards with an iron grip.

    Kesey famously didn’t like the film, feeling that it deviated too far from the source.

    While he might not have approved of the adaptation, audiences and critics certainly did; it earned $109 million worldwide on a $3 million budget, and won five Academy Awards from eight nominations, including Best Picture, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Actor for Nicholson, Best Actress for Fletcher and Best Director for Forman.

    What will the ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV series focus on?

    (L to R) Will Sampson and Jack Nicholson in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'. Photo: United Artists.
    (L to R) Will Sampson and Jack Nicholson in ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’. Photo: United Artists.

    Here’s what Paul Zaentz told the podcast about the show:

    “I’ve signed an agreement with Ken Kesey’s widow to develop a TV series which we’ll make through the point of view of the Chief for the first season. Following the first season, we’ll see what happens to the Chief after he escapes [from the psychiatric hospital].”

    Beyond that, details are scarce on this one –– Zaentz has yet to reveal who might be writing the show, or whether he has a studio involved.

    And it’s not the first time someone has approached him and the other rights holders about a remake or spin-off.

    Michael Douglas, who was also among the producers on the original, told Deadline as part of a retrospective earlier this year, that the team has been careful in what they agree to:

    “[Paul] has been very selective and I think that was the only time they’ve done one, which is good because so much gets remade these days…as for the series, it was ok, just ok. I wasn’t very much involved, to be honest.”

    The “series” in question was 2020’s Ryan Murphy-produced Netflix series ‘Ratched,’ which charted the earlier days of the title character.

    With Sarah Paulson in the lead, ‘Ratched’ is set in in 1947, when Mildred Ratched begins working as a nurse at a leading psychiatric hospital. But beneath her stylish exterior lurks a growing darkness.

    The show received mixed-positive reviews but hasn’t progressed past its original season. Paul Zaentz was involved as a producer.

    In the podcast interview, he’s clear that he doesn’t think that targeting classic movies for remakes in the traditional theatrical sense is worth it, but that TV can be a place for more nuance and character development, offering the chance to do something fresh.

    When will the ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ TV series be on screens?

    With no creative team, cast or even production company/network or streamer involved yet, it’s far too early to guess when this might arrive.

    Still, Netflix –– which backed ‘Ratched’ and has also been behind TV adaptations of movies such as ‘Ripley’ –– might well be a leading candidate to take this on.

    (L to R) Jack Nicholson and Will Sampson in 'One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'. Photo: United Artists.
    (L to R) Jack Nicholson and Will Sampson in ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’. Photo: United Artists.

     

    List of TV Series Adapted from Movies:

    Buy ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ on Amazon

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  • First Photo From ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 Arrives

    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday in season 2 of 'Wednesday'. Photo: Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2024.
    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday in season 2 of ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Bernard Walsh/Netflix © 2024.

    Preview:

    • The first photo of Jenna Ortega in ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 is online.
    • Season 2 has just wrapped filming in Ireland.
    • The series will return to Netflix in 2025.

    Addams Family’-aligned series ‘Wednesday’ has been a massive hit for Netflix.

    The show, starring ‘Scream’s Jenna Ortega, ranks as the most-watched English language show that the streaming service has ever released and was nominated for 12 Emmys, winning four.

    So naturally, fans have been clamoring for any word of when it might be back on our screens. And while there is still no properly confirmed date (see below), we do at least know that the second season exists, albeit in raw form as Netflix has marked the end of production on the latest batch of episodes by posting a suitably spooky shot of Ortega.

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    She’s posing, in true Wednesday form, in what appears to be a graveyard, with a gothic gate and two robed statues carrying lanterns behind her. What were you expecting? Rainbows and kittens? Storm clouds and a pet cemetery are more her style.

    While this is the first official picture from the new season, we have had a previous first look behind-the-scenes clip released as part of Netflix’s Geeked Week celebrations…

    And the biggest recent news for the new season is the announcement that Lady Gaga will be appearing in a relatively small role.

    Related Article: Lady Gaga Will Make a Cameo in Season 2 of ‘Netflix’s ‘Wednesday’

    What has happened with ‘Wednesday’ Season behind the scenes?

    Cast and crew of Netflix's 'Wednesday'.
    Cast and crew of Netflix’s ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Netflix.

    Given the sheer level of excitement around the first season (Netflix took the rare step of releasing actual figures since it had something to crow about: ‘Wednesday’ notched up most hours viewed in a week with 341.2 million hours, tied the record with fellow genre powerhouse ‘Stranger Things’ fourth season for the most viewed show in 83 countries and stands as one of only three titles to cross 1 billion hours viewed on the service within one month, along with ‘Squid Game‘/ and the aforementioned ‘Stranger Things.’

    That prompted the company to spawn all manner of merchandising and real-world “experiences” and naturally to commission a second season.

    The production for Season 2 shifted (for budget and scheduling reasons) from Romania to Ireland, and it had to accommodate a few challenges, including a delayed start due to star Ortega’s schedule on Tim Burton’s ‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.’

    It’s worth noting that Burton is also involved in ‘Wednesday’ as an executive producer as well as directing several episodes.

    Alfred Gough and Miles Millar serve as the series’ showrunners, keeping things on track through the new season.

    Who else will appear in ‘Wednesday’ Season 2?

    (L to R) Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams, Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams, Luis Guzmán as Gomez Addams, and Isaac Ordonez as Pugsley Addams in Netflix's 'Wednesday.'
    (L to R) Catherine Zeta-Jones as Morticia Addams, Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams, Luis Guzmán as Gomez Addams, and Isaac Ordonez as Pugsley Addams in Netflix’s ‘Wednesday.’

    Ortega will once again star as mordant title character Wednesday Addams, while Catherine Zeta-Jones, Luis Guzmán, Isaac Ordonez, and Luyanda Unati Lewis-Nyawo are all now regulars for Season 2.

    Zeta-Jones plays Morticia (Wednesday’s mother), while Guzmán plays Gomez (her father) and Ordonez plays brother Pugsley.

    Emma Myers, Joy Sunday, Hunter Doohan, Victor Dorobantu, Moosa Mostafa, and Georgie Farmer will also be returning, as will Fred Armisen (Uncle Fester) and Jamie McShane (Sheriff Donovan Galpin) in guest roles.

    New series regulars include Steve Buscemi, Billie Piper, Evie Templeton, Owen Painter and Noah Taylor. Thandiwe Newton has a guest role, as do the likes of Christopher Lloyd (who played Fester in the two live-action ‘Addams Family’ movies) and Haley Joel Osment.

    Here’s what ‘Wednesday’ show-runners Al Gough and Miles Millar said about the new cast:

    “We are thrilled that the entire Addams family will be enrolling in Nevermore Academy this season along with a dream cast of icons and new faces.”

    Burton is back as the main director for the new season alongside Paco Cabezas and Angela Robins.

    What’s the story of ‘Wednesday’ Season 2?

    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in 'Wednesday.'
    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in ‘Wednesday.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2022.

    The first season told the tale of Wednesday’s enrollment at the Nevermore Academy, where she discovers she has inherited her mother’s psychic abilities, allowing her to solve a local murder mystery.

    Season 2 will pick up the threads of that, while plunging her into a new mystery, likely with fresh creatures to deal with. The expanded roles for her family members means we can expect more of the Addams clan this time around.

    And we predict potential dancing, given the viral TikTok “Wednesday dance” that spread across social media in 2022 following the release of Season 1.

    Will Netflix choose to go all ‘Stranger Things’/‘Cobra Kai’ and spread the new episodes out across different chunks? That remains to be seen, but you just know they’ve considered it.

    When will ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 land on Netflix?

    The streaming service has yet to confirm a formal date, but the show is confirmed to return in 2025.

    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in 'Wednesday.'
    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in ‘Wednesday.’ Photo: Vlad Cioplea/Netflix © 2022.

    Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Addams Family’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Addams Family’ Movies On Amazon

     

  • ‘Wednesday’ Starts Work on Season 2

    Cast and crew of Netflix's 'Wednesday'.
    Cast and crew of Netflix’s ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Netflix.

    Preview:

    • ‘Wednesday’ is now in production on Season 2.
    • Christopher Lloyd and Billie Piper are among the new cast additions.
    • The likes of Catherine Zeta-Jones and Luis Guzman are now series regulars.

    With such a big reaction to ‘Addams Family’ spin-off dramedy ‘Wednesday’s first season, you can imagine Netflix’s frustration on not being able to strike while the pop cultural iron is at its hottest, with the writers and actors’ strikes putting paid to a potential 2023 shoot.

    But, following a location switch to Ireland, the show has finally gotten back into the swing of things, and cameras are now rolling on Season 2, as a fun video featuring disembodied hand Thing delivering scripts reveals…

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    And the start of production is not the only piece of news to emerge from the show today, as, following on from word of Steve Buscemi joining the cast, a slew of actor announcements was revealed by the streaming service.

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    Who is back for ‘Wednesday’ Season 2?

    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in 'Wednesday.'
    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in ‘Wednesday.’ Photo: Vlad Cioplea/Netflix © 2022.

    Alongside the returning regular likes of Jenna Ortega, Emma Myers, Joy Sunday, Hunter Doohan, Victor Dorobantu and Moosa Mostafa, some of the first season cast have been upgraded to regular status, including Addams Family members Catherine Zeta-Jones (Morticia), Luis Guzmán (Gomez) and Isaac Ordonez (Pugsley).

    Luyanda Unati Lewis-Nyawo will also now be a regular as Deputy Ritchie Santiago.

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘Wednesday’

    Who are the new faces for ‘Wednesday’ Season 2?

    Billie Piper has been cast in season 2 of Netflix's 'Wednesday'.
    Billie Piper has been cast in season 2 of Netflix’s ‘Wednesday’. Photo: Netflix.

    The show has announced a host of new regulars, who join Buscemi in that cast strata.

    Billie Piper, Evie Templeton, Owen Painter and Noah Taylor are all aboard.

    And then we have the new guest stars, including the exciting likes of Christopher Lloyd, who has his own ‘Addams Family’ connection, having played Uncle Fester in the two ‘Addams’ movies. But with Fred Armisen already established as Fester in ‘Wednesday’, we’ll have to wait and see who he’s playing.

    Elsewhere, Joanna Lumley, Thandiwe Newton, Frances O’Connor, Haley Joel Osment and Heather Matarazzo are all aboard, along with Joonas Suotamo (whose face you may not be as familiar with, since he spends most of his time wearing a Wookiee costume for ‘Star Wars’ shows and movies.

    Here’s what ‘Wednesday’ show-runners Al Gough and Miles Millar said about the new cast:

    “We are thrilled that the entire Addams family will be enrolling in Nevermore Academy this season along with a dream cast of icons and new faces.”

    Tim Burton will be back as the main director for the new season alongside Paco Cabezas and Angela Robins.

    When will ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 be on Netflix?

    The streaming service has yet to reveal when the show will return to its servers, but we’re guessing as soon as (in)humanely possible, given that ‘Wednesday’ is the Most Popular English TV series on Netflix with 252.10 Million Season 1 views.

    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in 'Wednesday.'
    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in ‘Wednesday.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2022.

    Movies and TV Shows Similar to ‘Wednesday’:

    Buy ‘Addams Family’ Movies On Amazon

     

  • TV Review: ‘Hacks’ Season 3

    Hannah Einbinder and Jean Smart in 'Hacks' Season 3.
    (L to R) Hannah Einbinder and Jean Smart in ‘Hacks’ Season 3. Photograph: Beth Dubber/Max.

    Debuting on HBO and Max with the first two episodes of its third season on May 2nd, ‘Hacks’ returns to our screens with more outrageousness from Jean Smart’s Deborah Vance and more conflicted, panicky support from Hannah Einbinder’s Ava.

    While Smart continues to be the focus, Einbinder still proves she’s right there with her on the acting side of things, while the wider ensemble also brings fun elements to the story.

    Related Article: Oscar-winner Helen Hunt Talks Starz’s ‘Blindspotting’ Season 2

    Is ‘Hacks’ still a standup act?

    Jean Smart in 'Hacks' Season 3.
    Jean Smart in ‘Hacks’ Season 3. Photograph: Hilary Bronwyn Gayle/Max.

    If you were worried that ‘Hacks’ might be going off the boil in this third season, the new run of episodes (we’ve seen the whole season) proves that the creative team and cast still has what it takes to deliver consistent comedy.

    Though one or two storylines might be getting a little more tired at this point, the vast majority of the narrative is still great, with Smart in particular able to deliver the killer lines she’s handed with all the attitude she has brought previously. Deborah Vance remains a fascinating creation –– ferociously funny, but also overbearing and, at times, monstrous. This season, the story explores more of her human side and vulnerability.

    Hannah Einbinder’s Ava, meanwhile, continues to walk the line between sympathetic and annoying, her rekindled relationship with her ex-girlfriend a combination of grounded and frustrating.

    ‘Hacks’ Season 3: Script and Direction

    Jean Smart, Megan Stalter, and Paul W. Downs in 'Hacks' Season 3.
    (L to R) Jean Smart, Megan Stalter, and Paul W. Downs in ‘Hacks’ Season 3. Photograph: Jake Giles Netter/Max.

    Created by Lucia Aniello, Paul W. Downs (who also appears on screen as Deborah’s embattled manager trying to start his own company) and Jen Statsky, ‘Hacks’ third season maintains the quality level we’ve come to expect from this series, carefully basing its comedy on human reactions while also continuing a solid line in prodding at celebrity excess.

    This year’s major throughline includes a brand new potential opportunity for Deborah (one that we won’t spoil here), which allows her to show that even at her level, there are some things even she must truly fight for, especially as a female performer.

    There are also some fun moments featuring yet more chaos from her daughter, DJ (Kaitlin Olson), who has her own revelation to drop on her mother, another fertile source for both comedy and drama. As with other storylines, this is powered not just by finding what will make you laugh, but also what will make you feel for these people.

    The direction from the likes of Aniello, Downs and Michelle Ouellet continues to be perfectly fine –– unshowy and naturalistic, letting the script and the performances do the heavy lifting.

    ‘Hacks’ Season 3: Performances

    Megan Stalter, Paul W. Downs, Jean Smart, Mark Indelicato and Carl Clemons-Hopkins in 'Hacks' Season 3.
    (L to R) Megan Stalter, Paul W. Downs, Jean Smart, Mark Indelicato and Carl Clemons-Hopkins in ‘Hacks’ Season 3. Photograph: Eddy Chen/Max.

    You can almost always rely on Jean Smart when she’s given the right sort of material, and Deborah really is a gift to the actress, who deploys nuclear level sarcasm when the moment calls for it, is completely believable as a comedian with a long career behind her (and the chops to power it) and, despite outrageous privilege thanks to her wealth, a hard working person with her own neuroses and issues to deal with. She might have houses in Vegas, LA and elsewhere, and fly where she needs to go via private jet, but she’s also filled with concern about how she hasn’t done right by members of her family.

    And as Ava, Einbinder continues to be a human bag of nervy energy, worried about how her life is shaping up and, in the early going, seemingly happy to be out of Deborah’s circle. Their legal issues last season would seem to mean that she’s able to move on, but ‘Hacks’ wouldn’t really be ‘Hacks’ without their dynamic at its heart, so of course she’s back working for her before too long. And thank goodness, as the Ava storyline outside of Deborah, while it has some fun moments, is nowhere near as satisfying.

    Hannah Einbinder in 'Hacks' Season 3.
    Hannah Einbinder in ‘Hacks’ Season 3. Photograph: Eddy Chen/Max.

    Around the main pair orbits their various friends, family, colleagues and hangers-on. Prime among them is Downs’ Jimmy, aided (sometimes) by show breakout Megan Stalter as Kayla, the world’s worst assistant –– now his partner in his new company. While a little of Kayla goes a long way, the writers’ know when to deploy her. And Downs continues to bring Jimmy to life as a constantly frustrated nebbish.

    We would also be remiss if we didn’t shout out ‘Succession’ veteran J. Smith Cameron, who here plays Deborah’s long-estranged sister, a character a world away from Gerri Kellman. She’s superb in the role, twitchy and odd, but with clear regret towards what she did to Deborah.

    ‘Hacks’ Season 3: Final Thoughts

    Carl Clemons-Hopkins and Jean Smart in 'Hacks' Season 3.
    (L to R) Carl Clemons-Hopkins and Jean Smart in ‘Hacks’ Season 3. Photograph: Beth DubberMax.

    ‘Hacks’ is back, and that can only be a good thing. Though not everything continues to work as it once did, there is still much to recommend it, even without the Smart factor. It might not push the boundaries in terms of tone and character, but it’s not trying to be something along the lines of ‘Baby Reindeer’.

    Taken on its own terms, and thanks to its primary performances, ‘Hacks’ is still one of the best traditional comedies on TV.

    ‘Hacks Season 3’ receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the story of ‘Hacks’ Season 3?

    A year after parting, Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) is riding high off the success of her standup special while Ava (Hannah Einbinder) pursues new opportunities back in Los Angeles.

    But as Deborah pursues a new opportunity and Ava returns to her orbit, how will their strained relationship affect their lives?

    Who else is in ‘Hacks’ Season 3?

    ‘Hacks’ main cast also includes Paul W. Downs, Megan Stalter, Carl Clemons-Hopkins, Kaitlin Olson, Christopher McDonald, Mark Indelicato, Rose Abdoo and Lorenza Izzo.

    This year’s guest stars include J. Smith-Cameron, Helen Hunt, Christina Hendricks, Christopher Lloyd, Dan Bucatinsky, George Wallace and Tony Goldwyn.

    Carl Clemons-Hopkins and Jean Smart in 'Hacks' Season 3.
    (L to R) Carl Clemons-Hopkins and Jean Smart in ‘Hacks’ Season 3. Photograph: Beth DubberMax.

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  • ‘Knuckles’: Full Trailer for the ‘Sonic’ Spin-Off Series

    Preview:

    • The Paramount+ ‘Knuckles’ series has a new trailer.
    • The ‘Sonic the Hedgehog’ spin-off features Idris Elba as the voice of the title character.
    • ‘Knuckles’ starts streaming on April 26th.

    With the success of 2020’s ‘Sonic the Hedgehog’ and 2022 sequel ‘Sonic the Hedgehog 2’ (a combined box office haul of $725.2 million so far) Paramount is naturally looking to keep the speedy cash train running.

    A third ‘Sonic’ movie outing is due in theaters on December 20th (and recently confirmed the return of Jim Carrey as the scheming Dr. Robotnik), but for young fans of the franchise who don’t want to wait that long, there is another ‘Sonic’-based story on its way.

    ‘Knuckles’, a series for Paramount+ that focuses on the warrior echidna voiced by Idris Elba, has been in the works for a while and has a new trailer online, with a Super Bowl spot to follow at the weekend.

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    What’s the story of ‘Knuckles’?

    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.

    The new live-action event series follows Knuckles (Elba) on a hilarious and action-packed journey of self-discovery as he agrees to train Wade (Adam Pally) as his protégé and teach him the ways of the Echidna warrior.

    We can also see that Knuckles will come under threat from a new set of baddies, who seem bent on stealing his powers.

    ‘Knuckles’ will take place between the events of the second and third ‘Sonic’ movies.

    Related Article: Jim Carrey Will be Back as Dr. Robotnik for ‘Sonic the Hedgehog 3’

    Who else appears in ‘Knuckles’?

    Scott Mescudi as Agent Mason and Ellie Taylor as Agent Willoughby in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    (L to R) Scott Mescudi as Agent Mason and Ellie Taylor as Agent Willoughby in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.

    Alongside Elba and Pally, the ensemble cast includes guest stars Stockard Channing, Edi Patterson, Scott Mescudi, Ellie Taylor, Julian Barratt, Rory McCann, Cary Elwes, Christopher Lloyd, Paul Scheer and Rob Huebel.

    And returning from the movie cast are Ben Schwartz, who reprises his role as Sonic, as well as special guest star Tika Sumpter, as Maddie. Colleen O’Shaughnessey will also return as a special guest star in her role as Tails.

    Who is making ‘Knuckles’?

    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.

    The series’ creative team includes the movies’ director Jeff Fowler, who handled the pilot episode and helped transition the film’s signature cinematic animation style to television. Additional directors for the series include Ged Wright, Brandon Trost, Jorma Taccone and Carol Banker.

    The series was created for television by John Whittington and showrunner Toby Ascher. Whittington wrote the second movie, serves as head writer and wrote the pilot for the series. Additional writers include Brian Schacter and James Madejski.

    When will ‘Knuckles’ be on screens?

    All six episodes of ‘Knuckles’ will land on Paramount+ on April 26th.

    A still from 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    A still from ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in 'Knuckles' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in ‘Knuckles’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Mac (voiced by Christopher Lloyd) in 'Knuckles' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    Mac (voiced by Christopher Lloyd) in ‘Knuckles’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in 'Knuckles' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in ‘Knuckles’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    (L to R) Adam Pally as Wade Whipple and Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in 'Knuckles' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    (L to R) Adam Pally as Wade Whipple and Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) in ‘Knuckles’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    (L to R) Stockard Channing as Wendy Whipple, 'Knuckles' (voiced by Idris Elba) and Edi Patterson as Wanda Whipple in Knuckles streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    (L to R) Stockard Channing as Wendy Whipple, ‘Knuckles’ (voiced by Idris Elba) and Edi Patterson as Wanda Whipple in Knuckles streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Tika Sumpter as Maddie, Tails (voiced by Colleen O’Shaughnessey) and Sonic (voiced by Ben Schwartz) in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    (L to R) Tika Sumpter as Maddie, Tails (voiced by Colleen O’Shaughnessey) and Sonic (voiced by Ben Schwartz) in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) and Daniel Singh as Cattleprod Bounty Hunter in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    (L to R) Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) and Daniel Singh as Cattleprod Bounty Hunter in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) and Rory McCann as The Buyer in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    (L to R) Knuckles (voiced by Idris Elba) and Rory McCann as The Buyer in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Scott Mescudi as Agent Mason and Ellie Taylor as Agent Willoughby in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    (L to R) Scott Mescudi as Agent Mason and Ellie Taylor as Agent Willoughby in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Julian Barratt as Jack Sinclair in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    Julian Barratt as Jack Sinclair in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Adam Pally as Wade Whipple in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    Adam Pally as Wade Whipple in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Luke Varley/Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Adam Pally as Wade Whipple, Alice Tregonning as Susie, Cary Elwes as Pistol Pete Whipple and Owen Warren as Pete's Bowling Partner in 'Knuckles', streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    (L to R) Adam Pally as Wade Whipple, Alice Tregonning as Susie, Cary Elwes as Pistol Pete Whipple and Owen Warren as Pete’s Bowling Partner in ‘Knuckles’, streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Luke Varley/Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.
    Adam Pally as Wade Whipple in 'Knuckles,' streaming on Paramount+, 2024.
    Adam Pally as Wade Whipple in ‘Knuckles,’ streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures/Sega/Paramount+.

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