Tag: David Dastmalchian

  • First Teaser for Christopher Nolan’s ‘Oppenheimer’

    Having famously switched his filmmaking operations to Universal from longtime home Warner Bros. after dissatisfaction with the straight-to-HBO handling of some movies and its treatment of ‘Tenet’, Christopher Nolan has been working away on his next movie, ‘Oppenheimer’.

    Universal, naturally, is going all out to promote this one, including with this first, unusual teaser, which features fragments of footage from the film, some voice-over dialogue referring to its subject matter and an ominous countdown clock.

    Some have speculated that it’s to the release date – but not in America, as those figures don’t sync up. But with the movie opening in Singapore the day before its Stateside release, it makes more sense.

    Nolan here is adapting the Pulitzer Prize-winning book ‘American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer’ by Kai Bird and the late Martin J. Sherwin. It chronicles how he was part of the infamous Manhattan Project and played a key role in the creation of atomic weapons, yet later came to have complicated feelings about their deadly power. He lobbied for international control of nuclear power and opposed the creation of the even more destructive hydrogen bomb.

    Cillian Murphy, a Nolan regular, plays Oppenheimer, who is glimpsed briefly in this first footage.

    Cillian Murphy as J. Robert Oppenheimer in 'Oppenheimer' written and directed by Christopher Nolan.
    Cillian Murphy as J. Robert Oppenheimer in ‘Oppenheimer’ written and directed by Christopher Nolan.

    Emily Blunt is playing his wife, biologist, and botanist Katherine “Kitty” Oppenheimer, with Matt Damon as General Leslie Groves Jr., director of the Manhattan Project and Robert Downey, Jr. as Lewis Strauss, a founding commissioner of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.

    Florence Pugh will portray psychiatrist Jean Tatlock, who turns out to have a hidden agenda, while Benny Safdie plays theoretical physicist Edward Teller. Michael Angarano is physicist Robert Serber and Josh Hartnett plays pioneering American nuclear scientist Ernest Lawrence.

    Also among the cast? Kenneth Branagh, Rami Malek, Gary Oldman, Dane DeHaan, Jack Quaid, Scott Grimes, Dylan Arnold, Olivia Thirlby, Olli Haaskivi, Matthew Modine, Gustaf Skarsgård (yes, another son of Stellan, and aged between Alexander and Bill), Jason Clarke, David Dastmalchian, Alden Ehrenreich, Casey Affleck, Tony Goldwyn, Alex Wolff, Josh Peck, James D’Arcy, David Krumholtz

    Look, at this point it’s probably easier just to list the people who aren’t in Nolan’s latest. It might be the first end credits crawl in years where the cast runs for a longer time than the effects teams.

    ‘Oppenheimer’ sees Nolan tackling a historical subject again, and one that surely offers the opportunity for plenty of his terse dialogue and large-canvas visions. It won’t surprise you to learn that it has been shot and be and released on 65mm IMAX and large-format film. Providing the beautiful footage is another repeat Nolan colleague, director of photography Hoyte Van Hoytema, while composer Ludwig Göransson returns after scoring ‘Tenet’. A pulse-pounding biopic thriller with high stakes certainly feels like it could work well for Nolan.

    ‘Oppenheimer’ will be in theaters here from July 21st.

    Cillian Murphy as J. Robert Oppenheimer in 'Oppenheimer' written and directed by Christopher Nolan.
    Cillian Murphy as J. Robert Oppenheimer in ‘Oppenheimer’ written and directed by Christopher Nolan.
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  • David Dastmalchian, Chris Messina, and More Join ‘The Boogeyman’

    David Dastmalchian as Polka-Dot Man in 'Suicide Squad'
    David Dastmalchian as Polka-Dot Man in ‘Suicide Squad’

    As he starts the cameras rolling, director Rob Savage has announced the cast for his next movie. The man behind horror hit ‘Host’ will do his best to scare Chris Messina, Sophie Thatcher, Vivien Lyra Blair, David Dastmalchian, Marin Ireland and Madison Hu for ‘The Boogeyman’.

    It’ll mark a new adaptation of the Stephen King story, which originally appeared in a March 1973 issue of Cavalier magazine before it was collected in his 1978 collection “Night Shift.” One of the titles King has made available to filmmakers under the one-dollar rights agreement, it has been turned into a short and at least one other movie before.

    The tale follows a 16-year-old and her younger sister, still reeling from the death of their mother, who are targeted by a supernatural boogeyman after their father, a psychologist, has an encounter with a desperate patient in their house.

    We don’t yet know who will be playing which role, but Messina should be familiar from movies including ‘Argo’ and ‘Birds of Prey’. Thatcher has been burning up the small screen via work on ‘Yellowjackets’ and ‘The Book of Boba Fett’, while Blair is probably best known for Netflix’s ‘Bird Box’ opposite Sandra Bullock. Ireland was seen in ‘Hell or High Water’ and Martin Scorsese’s ‘The Irishman’, while Dastmalchian should be no stranger to genre fans given his work in last year’s ‘Dune’, the first two ‘Ant-Man’ movies and ‘The Dark Knight’. Hu, finally, was seen in sci-fi movie ‘Voyagers’.

    Chris Messina on HBO's 'Sharp Objects.'
    Chris Messina on HBO’s ‘Sharp Objects.’

    This movie has had to hack its way through the development thorns for a while before it ended up in Savage’s hands. The script’s passed through the likes of ‘Malignant‘s Akela Cooper and ‘A Quiet Place’ duo Scott Beck and Bryan Woods. The current draft is by ‘Black Swan’s Mark Heyman. And on board to produce is prolific filmmaker Shawn Levy, who is supporting the movie via his 21 Laps company.

    Savage is a great choice to direct this, as his previous work has been inventing and, more importantly, chilling. He broke out with 2020’s pandemic -set thriller ‘Host’, which saw a Zoom call go spectacularly, lethally wrong for its participants. It won plenty of acclaim and marked him as a director to watch.

    He’s since followed that up with another low-fi horror, ‘DASHCAM’, which has been playing to great impact at film festivals and will arrive in theaters via Momentum Pictures this summer. Produced by the Blumhouse team, the movie, stars Annie Hardy, Angela Enahoro and Amar Chadha-Patel in the story of a musician on her livestream as her night takes a dangerous turn when she agrees to help a frail elderly woman out of town.

    ‘The Boogeyman’, which arrives via Disney’s 21st Century Studios, will premiere on Hulu next year.

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  • ‘The Suicide Squad’ review: grisly, funny, & one of Gunn’s best

    ‘The Suicide Squad’ review: grisly, funny, & one of Gunn’s best

    (L to R) Margot Robbie, Daniela Melchior, Idris Elba, Sylvester Stallone, and David Dastmalchian in 'The Suicide Squad'
    (L to R) Margot Robbie, Daniela Melchior, Idris Elba, Sylvester Stallone, and David Dastmalchian in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    The Suicide Squad’ begins with our introduction to Savant (Michael Rooker), a criminal behind bars, with a talent for geometry and a mean streak when it comes to birds. He’s given the set-up for the story; he’s going to go on a black ops-type mission with a team of fellow convicts, and in return, ten years will get knocked off his prison sentence. This is explained to him by one Amanda Waller (Viola Davis), who also informs him that if he tries to escape, or ditch the operation, or double-cross her in any way, she’ll detonate the tiny bomb in his head.

    So if you never saw the 2016 ‘Suicide Squad,’ you’re pretty much caught up at this point – Waller uses incarcerated super villains for spy missions, and she’s not really concerned if they make it back alive. If you did see the previous film, you’ll recognize some returning faces, like military liaison Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman), Captain Boomerang (Jai Courtney), and the inimitable Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie), who says she’s back in the joint for “road rage… in a bank.” Savant and the rest of Task Force X are off to the (fictional) South American island nation of Corto Maltese to destroy a science lab called Jötunheim.

    James Gunn wrote and directed this latest entry in the DCEU, and he brings his own impressive stamp to the movie. I think it’s fair to say that Gunn’s ‘The Suicide Squad’ is closer to his films ‘Slither’ and ‘Super’ than it is to either of his Guardians of the Galaxy outings. Given the R-rating in play, it probably won’t be surprising to learn that this is a particularly grisly comic-book movie with more than a few risqué (if now downright dirty) jokes. But it is surprising how much emotion Gunn brings into this story.

    Being that this takes place in a comic-book world, the characters personalities are as extreme as their powers. Idris Elba’s Bloodshot is a violent mercenary who thinks the best parenting advice he can give his recently-arrested daughter is to make sure she has a lookout the next time she steals something. John Cena’s Peacemaker is a jingoistic meathead who will happily kill (among other things) to make peace. Margot Robbie’s Harley Quinn is… well, you’d have to have been living in a cave for the past few years not to know who she is. And King Shark (voiced by Sylvester Stallone) is simply the bestest boy.

    As expected, some of these characters don’t get along, and the rivalry between Bloodshot and Peacemaker is particularly well served by Elba’s tired sighs and Cena’s gung-ho cluelessness. But some of the other characters ground the movie with unexpected empathy. Daniela Melchior’s Ratcatcher at first seems like she’s in over her head, but she’s the first to show she’s willing to reach out to others in the group, and Melchior makes us believe it. And David Dastmalchian’s Polka-Dot Man is… I’ll put it this way; Polka-Dot Man is a terrible comic book character. He’s down there with Crazy Quilt, Clock King, and Condiment King in the DC Villains Hall of Lame. But between Gunn’s script and Dastmalchian’s pathos, Polka-Dot Man becomes a tragic figure (albeit a crazy one). At the same time, Gunn and Margot Robbie show us the continuing evolution of Harley Quinn, showing us that she’s learned from (some of) her mistakes, but she’s willing to make entirely new ones, too.

    Team movies can be tough, especially when team members have superpowers. But the movie doesn’t get bogged down in origin stories; at most, Davis’ Waller might give a rote description of someone’s role on the team, but not much more than that. She gives us the sense we’ll learn about what someone can do when we need to, and in that, she’s doing what Gunn does as a director. And it works. That lets him deftly balance the various character arcs, and make sure that they’re all relevant to the main story at hand. And you’d never think this movie is 132 minutes long; Gunn capitalizes on the abundance of characters to keep the story moving around, but never so much that we lose track of the overall plot. Henry Braham’s cinematography helps give us a sense of place, both in his long shots of pitched battles and giant monsters, or the mobile camera work in a nightclub and on rooftops.

    Ultimately, this is a great example of a director being given the freedom to bring their own style to a big-budget production. The cast is clearly having a good time making this movie, and that energy is infectious. I, for one, would watch another mission from this crew if Gunn is in charge again.

    4.5 stars out of 5.

    ‘The Suicide Squad’ is now in theaters and on HBO Max.

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  • Learn Who’s Who in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Learn Who’s Who in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    David Dastmalchian, John Cena, Idris Elba, and Daniela Melchior in 'The Suicide Squad'
    David Dastmalchian, John Cena, Idris Elba, and Daniela Melchior in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    James Gunn (of Guardians of the Galaxy fame) brings his high-stakes DC epic, ‘The Suicide Squad,’ to the big screen. Although we’ll see a handful of characters return from the 2016 ‘Suicide Squad,’ there are quite a few new faces. Don’t worry if you don’t know every new character that Gunn is bringing in, where here to introduce them all to you.


    Harley Quinn

    Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Harleen Quinzel
    Played By: Margot Robbie
    First Appearance: Batman the Animated Series
    One of the returning characters from the original film, Harley Quinn (psychologist Doctor Harleen Quinzel) was once the Joker’s girl, helping him to break out of prison and become his clown partner of crime. But Harley grew to realize the Joker’s love wasn’t love, but abuse, and ran away to become her own anti-hero, more recently getting her own film as well. Harley uses a multitude of weapons but is well-known for her mallet and use of multiple firearms. Her outfit in the film seems to be taking inspiration from the Batman Arkham games, a nice callback.


    Bloodsport

    Idris Elba as Bloodsport in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Idris Elba as Bloodsport in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Robert DuBois
    Played By: Idris Elba
    First Appearance: Superman Vol. 2 #4
    This is not Bloodsport’s first live-action appearance, that honor goes to ‘Supergirl’ on The CW. In the comics, DuBois was an ex-soldier who, after seeing his brother come home mortally wounded, took up contract killing to fight against those he claimed ‘had freedom’ when they didn’t. TIt doesn’t look like the film is using all of that backstory, but if the trailer is anything to go by, it is using the story where he had gone toe-to-toe with Superman (and has even gotten the upper hand!) The big question is, since he’s worked for Lex Luthor in the past, will that be mentioned?


    Rick Flag

    Joel Kinnaman as Rick Flag in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Joel Kinnaman as Rick Flag in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Anthony Miller.
    Played By: Joel Kinnaman
    First Appearance: The Brave and the Bold #25
    Another returning character (and actor!) from the original film, Rick Flag is as “government agent” as a character can get. Brought in by Amanda Waller to lead tThe Suicide Squad, he’s the team’s field commander and accompanies them on every mission, to make sure they stay in line. In the comics, he comes from a long line of military men, and maybe with the film diving deeper into comic book territory, we may see this come up? While he has no superpowers, his military history and firearms expertise makes him a very well-trained member of the team.


    Peacemaker

    John Cena as Peacemaker in 'The Suicide Squad'
    John Cena as Peacemaker in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Christopher Smith
    Played By: John Cena
    First Appearance: Fightin’ 5 #40
    One of the oldest characters on this list, Peacemaker originated in the 60s. A diplomat willing to get peace no matter what, Smith is willing to take down as many lives as possible to do so. Though it’s doubtful the film will use the ‘is haunted by the spirit of his father’ plotline, it seems to be taking the ‘peace at all cost’ very close to heart. Peacemaker is also the only character getting his own HBO Max show down the line.


    Amanda Waller

    Viola Davis as Amanda Waller in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Viola Davis as Amanda Waller in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Amanda Blake
    Played By: Viola Davis
    First Appearance: Legends #1
    Another returning character from ‘Suicide Squad,’ Amanda Waller is most likely the most well-traveled as well. Appearing in TV shows, games and other films, she is the head of the Suicide Squad, and chooses whether they live or die at the touch of a button. In the comics storylines, she’s been given the nickname of “The Wall” in reference to how steadfast she is. She revived the Suicide Squad from files found she came across while working, and if she has a “super power,” it’s that she holds the lives of the squad in her hands.


    King Shark

    Sylvester Stallone voices King Shark in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Sylvester Stallone voices King Shark in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Nanaue
    Played By: Sylvester Stallone
    First Appearance: Superboy #0
    One of two animal members of this Suicide Squad, but this isn’t his first on-screen appearance (he’s shown up in ‘The Flash’ and the animated Harley Quinn series). King Shark is the son of the king of sharks and a human mother. (Ahh, comics…) And he’s exactly what he sounds like; a shark. He has a history of eating people, capturing swimmers, etc. We wouldn’t be surprised if Superboy, his nemesis, is mentioned in the film, as Shark plays a big role in Superboy’s story.


    Polka-Dot Man

    David Dastmalchian as Polka-Dot Man in 'The Suicide Squad'
    David Dastmalchian as Polka-Dot Man in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Abner Krill
    Played By: David Dastmalchian
    First Appearance: Detective Comics #300
    One of the more outlandish members of the Squad (and that’s saying something with a team member like Weasel), Krill was a crook who, after witnessing Batman doing his crime-fighting thing, decided to just go around Gotham doing crime with polka-dots. (I swear that was it, no other reason was necessary.) His polka-dots get used for multiple purposes, and there have been hints that there is a biological component to powers of this version of the character.. Krill has never been a member of the Squad (save for an ‘Injustice 2’ prequel comic) so it’ll be interesting to see what he did that was so terrible that brings him with everyone else.


    Sol Soria

    Alice Braga as Sol Soria in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Alice Braga as Sol Soria in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Sol Soria
    Played By: Alice Braga
    First Appearance: The Suicide Squad
    Little is known about Braga’s character, because she hasn’t seemed to appear in any comics, and her debut is this movie. What we do know is she hails from the (fictional) country of Corto Maltese, and is the head of the country’s resistance group. The country has appeared in the comics as a place where metahumans are tested on and created. It’s possible she could be related to Juan Soria, a comic character who shares the same last name as Sol, a member of the Squad with cybernetic enhancements.


    Savant

    Michael Rooker as Savant in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Michael Rooker as Savant in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Brian Durlin
    Played By: Michael Rooker
    First Appearance: Birds of Prey #56
    A villain turned bad, all because Batman told him he shouldn’t do vigilante work, Savant is as smart as they come… but he might forget that due to his forgetfulness. Being a character that’s teetered on the line of villain and vigilante, it is unknown if the film will delve into his background with the Birds of Prey, and his partner/boyfriend Creote. It appears Rooker might be playing an older version of Savant, so maybe we see Creote in a flashback, perhaps? For us, the audience, but not Savant, who wouldn’t remember them in the first place!


    T.D.K.

    Nathan Fillion as T.D.K. in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Nathan Fillion as T.D.K. in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Cory Pitzner
    Played By: Nathan Fillion
    First Appearance: The Suicide Squad
    Little is known about T.D.K as he is a creation specifically from the mind of James Gunn himself, so if that tells you anything… All we do know is that he’s a metahuman who can detach his arms and legs, while having the ability to control them telepathically, and we’ve recently learned the initials T.D.K. stand for The Detachable Kid. Gunn has gone on record saying T.D.K “is from a Saturday morning cartoon,” which doesn’t speak highly of his abilities in the type of movie Gunn makes. Fillion himself has said his character is more annoying than a threat as well, so we can just take them for their word!


    Captain Boomerang

    Jai Courtney as Captain Boomerang in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Jai Courtney as Captain Boomerang in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: George “Digger” Harkness
    Played By: Jai Courtney
    First Appearance: The Flash #117
    The final returning character (and actor0 from the original film, Boomer started off as a Flash villain, and has appeared in both movies and the Flash TV series. Born in Australia, he grew up being very good at carving boomerangs and using them as weapons. He’s the other character in the movie (next to Harley) that’s been featured outside of the film universe on both TV and in video games, and the character will star alongside Harley in an upcoming Suicide Squad game.


    Blackguard

    Pete Davidson as Blackguard in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Pete Davidson as Blackguard in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Richard Hertz
    Played By: Pete Davidson
    First Appearance: Booster Gold #1
    Little is known about Blackguard’s comic book origins, other than he was hired by a group called ‘The 1,000’ and outfitted by them as well. His known powers are, interestingly, ergokinesis (the ability to manipulate energy) and use of multiple gadgets. We don’t know if the film will go into his metahuman abilities, but he is one of the characters to have a major costume change. We also don’t know if they will dive into his Booster Gold connection (which would mean Booster’s introduction into the DCEU). But Gunn could very well add that kind of surprise.


    Weasel

    Sean Gunn plays Weasel in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Sean Gunn plays Weasel in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: John Monroe
    Played By: Sean Gunn
    First Appearance: The Fury of Firestorm #35
    There’s a fun story about Weasel. In the movie, he looks like as an actual… weasel-like creature. But in the comic, he’s an actual man! Monroe was a student in the 1960s who was nicknamed ‘weasel’ by his peers as they bullied him. By day, he’s a college professor. By night, he’s a murderer, dressing in a costume (most likely where Gunn’s portrayal comes from) and calling himsef ‘Weasel’. We still don’t know how Gunn will justify making him an actual animal, but the DC’s “metahuman” concept will probably play a part.


    The Thinker

    Peter Capaldi as Thinker in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Peter Capaldi as The Thinker in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Clifford DeVoe (we think)
    Played By: Peter Capaldi
    First Appearance: All-Flash #12
    Again, like Weasel, we got a fun one. While most characters have been given their comic-connected names and villainious monikers, we do not know which version of Thinker that Capaldi is playing. So for clarity’s sake, I’ll be going into the DeVoe version, as he has also appeared in The Flash TV show. A failed lawyer, DeVoe used his smarts to be the brains behind many small-time thugs. He was able to use his smarts as a weapon, literally, with the help of his ‘thinker cap.’ which clearly plays a role in the film. Now we just have to see if Gunn will use Thinker as a master manipulator, too…


    Javelin

    Flula Borg as Javelin in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Flula Borg as Javelin in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Gunter Braun
    Played By: Flula Borg
    First Appearance: Green Lantern #173
    Javelin doesn’t seem to have a first name in the comics, so we’re using the name Gunn gives him in the film. While he’s not a metahuman, Braun is a talented Olympian! A former member of the German Olympic team, he turned to a life of crime, but it’s not clear why. The only ‘superpower’ he has? He’s incredibly good with javelin-based weapons. As seen in the film’s featurettes, Braun sees himself as the best-looking in the room and might be one of the most stuck-up members of the squad. Let’s hope that saves him!


    Mongal

    Mayling Ng as Mongal in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Mayling Ng as Mongal in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Mongal
    Played By: Mayling Ng
    First Appearance: Showcase ‘95
    The only otherworldly member of the squad seen so far, Mongal is the daughter of DC villain Mongul, born and raised on the planet Debstam IV. She’s taken on Superman, and was later killed by her own brother. She has superhuman strength and resiliance, and a long history of fighting to the death. But will that be enough to keep her alive?


    Ratcatcher (2)

    Daniela Melchior as Ratcatcher in 'The Suicide Squad'
    Daniela Melchior as Ratcatcher in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    Real Name: Cleo Cazo
    Played By: Daniela Melchior
    First Appearance: The Suicide Squad
    Last but not least, we have Ratcatcher. A new character to the DC canon, Cazo is the daughter of the original Ratcatcher, and like her father, controls rats using a device that puts them under her influence. Gunn has said that Cazo is the “heart of the film” and even describes her as being “completely out of her element” but goes ahead and tries to make friends with everyone around her. It should be interesting to see how she plays off everyone else, and how everyone else plays off her and her rats.

    The Suicide Squad‘ will be in theaters on August 6.
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  • James Gunn’s ‘The Suicide Squad’ Adds ‘Ant-Man’ Star David Dastmalchian

    James Gunn’s ‘The Suicide Squad’ Adds ‘Ant-Man’ Star David Dastmalchian

    Marvel Studios

    As he proved with his hit “Guardians of the Galaxy” franchise, writer-director James Gunn has a knack for taking obscure, quirky comic book characters and turning them into cinematic gold. So while the latest oddball addition to the filmmaker’s upcoming DC flick, “The Suicide Squad,” might seem strange on paper, we have high hopes for his introduction.

    The Hollywood Reporter has the scoop that actor David Dastmalchian (“Ant-Man,” “The Dark Knight“) has joined “The Suicide Squad,” playing one of several new characters joining the titular gang this time around. Dastmalchian will portray Polka-Dot Man, a villain who “was a low-level crook who tried to make a name for himself with spot-themed crimes and a costume that included some amazing gimmicks, such as spots that transformed into buzzsaws and flying saucers on command,” per THR.

    According to the trade, Polka-Dot Man is pretty self-aware, and “is said to lean into his embarrassment of his ‘lame’ abilities.” That type of meta commentary is right in Gunn’s wheelhouse, making the character’s inclusion a natural fit for the filmmaker. (Plus, he and Dastmalchian can swap war stories about working on both Marvel and DC projects.)

    Several other new characters that are expected to join the mix include Peacemaker (with Gunn reportedly eyeing his “Guardians” star Dave Bautista for the role), Ratcatcher, King Shark, and an undisclosed villain, who will be played by Idris Elba. Margot Robbie, Jai Courtney, and Viola Davis are all reprising their parts from 2016’s “Suicide Squad.”

    “The Suicide Squad” is due in theaters on August 6, 2021.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

  • Full ‘Dune’ Remake Cast Confirmed as Production Begins

    Full ‘Dune’ Remake Cast Confirmed as Production Begins

    Amazon Studios

    After months of exciting reports about the ever-expanding all-star cast of the upcoming “Dune” remake, Warner Bros. has officially confirmed the lineup, and announced that filming on the sci-fi epic has begun.

    The film, based on the classic novel by Frank Herbert, is being helmed by Denis Villeneuve, who also co-wrote the script with Eric Roth and Jon Spaihts. The filmmaker previously revealed that he plans on splitting the project into two separate movies.

    Leading the starry lineup of actors is Hollywood It Boy Timothée Chalamet, who will play the role of Paul Atreides. The rest of the impressive cast includes Jason Momoa, Rebecca Ferguson, Oscar Isaac, ZendayaJosh BrolinJavier Bardem, Stellan SkarsgardDave BautistaCharlotte Rampling, David Dastmalchian, Chang Chen, and Stephen Henderson.

    Here’s the film’s official synopsis:

    A mythic and emotionally charged hero’s journey, “Dune” tells the story of Paul Atreides, a brilliant and gifted young man born into a great destiny beyond his understanding, who must travel to the most dangerous planet in the universe to ensure the future of his family and his people. As malevolent forces explode into conflict over the planet’s exclusive supply of the most precious resource in existence—a commodity capable of unlocking humanity’s greatest potential—only those who can conquer their fear will survive.

    “Dune” is due in theaters on November 20, 2020.

    [via: The Playlist]

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