Tag: idris-elba

  • Idris Elba Joins ‘Cats’ Movie in His Second Feline Villain Role

    Idris Elba Joins ‘Cats’ Movie in His Second Feline Villain Role

    Idris Elba, Luther
    BBC

    One more and it’s officially a trend. Also possibly a concern.

    Idris Elba is in final negotiations to join the “Cats” movie, Variety reports.

    That film adaptation of the blockbuster musical already stars Jennifer Hudson, James CordenTaylor Swift, and Sir Ian McKellen,

    Deadline reports that Elba is playing Macavity.

    Who is that, you ask? Here’s a description from Deadline:

    “Macavity is the only real villain in the musical, who kidnaps Old Deuteronomy — the Jellicle leader — and attempts to abduct Demeter, one of two cats who sings about him. The character was originally portrayed by Richard Pettyfer in the original West End production, and by Kenneth Ard in the Broadway production. Macavity also has a hypnotic power. In Act II, there are two songs about him: “Macavity: The Mystery Cat’ sung by Demeter, Bombalurina, and female feline back-up; and “Macavity Fight’ performed by Macavity, Demeter, Munkustrap and Alonzo.”

    It’s a big role. And, as Variety noted, it will be Elba’s second feline role after voicing Shere Khan in “The Jungle Book” movie. Another villain.

    When he’s not meowing maliciously, Elba will next be seen in the “Hobbs and Shaw” movie, and also the upcoming Netflix comedy “Turn Up Charlie.”

    “Cats” is said to be in pre-production right now, for a release in theaters on December 20, 2019.

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  • ‘Hobbs and Shaw’ Star Idris Elba Wreaks Havoc in New Photo

    ‘Hobbs and Shaw’ Star Idris Elba Wreaks Havoc in New Photo

    Idris Elba in Molly's Game
    STXfilms

    The Fast and Furious spinoff “Hobbs and Shaw” is bringing “havoc, hell and mayhem,” according to Dawyne Johnson, and Idris Elba‘s character will be behind it.

    Johnson shared a first look at Elba in action via Instagram on Thursday. Thanks to Johnson’s post, we know that his new co-star plays a dangerous villain named Brixton.

    I learned a long time ago (when I was a very sinful eyebrow raising villainous man in the crazy world of pro wrestling;) that heroes are only as great as their greatest villains,” Johnson wrote in part. “A pleasure to introduce the man himself @idriselba we brought in to our Fast & Furious franchise to wreak havoc, hell and mayhem on our heroes HOBBS & SHAW.”

    The actor also promised the “showdown of all showdowns.”

    https://www.instagram.com/p/Bozq51Khw-6/

    Elba shared the same photo via his own Instagram account, and he added that it “feels amazing to be working with [Johnson] and [Jason Statham] and to be joining the Fast & Furious family.”

    Their characters have a high bar to clear as they follow a series of eight high-octane action flicks, but we’re excited to see how this “havoc, hell and mayhem” comes about.

    “Hobbs and Shaw” opens July 26.

    [via: Instagram; h/t: EW]

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

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

    Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Henry Cavill
    Paramount Pictures

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Henry Cavill/James Bond

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

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

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

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

    [Via: ComicBook]

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  • Idris Elba James Bond Rumors Are Back, But It Sounds Like a Game of Telephone

    Idris Elba James Bond Rumors Are Back, But It Sounds Like a Game of Telephone

    Idris Elba, Luther
    BBC

    We got our hopes up with so many others, thanks to that Esquire headline: “James Bond producers are reportedly leaning toward Idris Elba as the next 007.”

    Yes, please.

    But like so much news, you have to read past the headlines.

    Esquire’s source was a report from The Independent, and The Independent’s source was the U.K. tabloid The Daily Star. And in that original story, Bond producer Barbara Broccoli isn’t even reported as referencing Idris Elba’s name.

    The Equalizer 2” director Antoine Fuqua is the only one to bring up Idris Elba. Maybe Barbara Broccoli and the Bond producers are indeed leaning toward Idris Elba as the next James Bond, but that’s not actually what she’s reported as saying in the Daily Star tabloid story.

    Start with Esquire. Here’s their Elba section:

    Now, new reports indicate that James Bond producers are starting to lean toward the idea of Elba taking the role. As the Independent reports:

    “Director Antoine Fuqua revealed the details of a conversation with Bond producer Barbara Broccoli, in which she said “it is time” for a non-white actor to take on the iconic role. Fuqua discussed who might be next in the running with Broccoli, who’s certain the progressive move “will happen eventually”, with Idris Elba a reported frontrunner for the role.”

    Now head to The Independent, which ran the headline “James Bond boss says ‘door open’ to black 007 with Idris Elba hinted as frontrunner.”

    Here’s that section of their story:

    Bond franchise producer Barbara Broccoli has reportedly announced that the door is open for a black 007 in the future, once Daniel Craig completes his final outing as the spy.

    The Daily Star reports that director Antoine Fuqua revealed the details of a conversation with Broccoli, in which she said “it is time” for a non-white actor to take on the iconic role.

    Fuqua discussed who might be next in the running with Broccoli, who’s certain the progressive move “will happen eventually”, with Idris Elba a reported frontrunner for the role.

    Indeed, the director seemed to hint that the actor is currently being eyed as a strong candidate, adding: “Idris could do it if he was in shape. You need a guy with physically strong presence. Idris has that.”

    Now head to Daily Star, which ran the headline “Idris Elba the next 007? Movie boss says ‘door open for first black James Bond’”:

    MOVIE boss Barbara Broccoli has left the door open for Luther star Idris Elba to be the first black Bond.

    The Hollywood chief, 58, told an industry pal “it is time” for the famous spy to be played by a black actor.

    Director Antoine Fuqua chatted to Barbara about who will take over from Daniel Craig, 50, if he hangs up his gun after the next Bond film, due next year.

    Idris, 45, is in the running to take on the coveted role.

    Antoine, 52, revealed Barbara feels “it is time” for an ethnic minority actor to star as 007 and she is certain “it will happen eventually”.

    He added: “Idris could do it if he was in shape. You need a guy with physically strong presence. Idris has that.”

    Did Barbara Broccoli herself bring up Idris Elba and say he was in the running, or that they were leaning toward him? ‘Cause this sounds like she was talking to director Antoine Fuqua about Bond and said platitudes like “It is time” and “It will happen eventually” — eventually — and he told the Daily Star, adding Idris Elba’s name as a possible Bond, and that became Producers Leaning Toward Bond.

    Listen, not trying to be Debbie Downer, but point out where this is anything beyond new hype for the same old rumor?

    Since the Esquire story took off, maybe this will push the Bond producers to go for Idris Elba since there was strong interest from social media.

    Idris Elba himself said last year that he probably won’t be Bond. In 2016 he told GMA he thought he might be too old for the role. (He’s currently 45.) But we are in an age where guys in their 50s — Tom Cruise, Keanu Reeves, Robert Downey Jr. — are doing stunts and superhero stuff.

    He added to GMA, of his Bond chances:

    “I keep saying if it were to happen it would be the will of a nation, because there hasn’t been any talks between me and the studio about any of that. But everywhere I go people want that to happen.”

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  • ‘Hobbs and Shaw’ Casts Two Phenomenal Stars as Villain and Statham’s Sister

    ‘Hobbs and Shaw’ Casts Two Phenomenal Stars as Villain and Statham’s Sister

    Jason Statham and Dwayne Johnson
    Universal Pictures

    Hobbs and Shaw” — the “Fast and Furious” spinoff following Luke Hobbs (Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson) and Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham) — just got a thousand times more interesting.

    According to Variety, Idris Elba is in final negotiations to play the villain, with Hobbs and Shaw teaming up to go against Elba’s character.

    Also, “The Crown” breakout Vanessa Kirby (Princess Margaret) is in final negotiations to play an MI-5 agent who is also Shaw’s sister.

    Production is said to start this fall, with “Deadpool 2” director David Leitch as director.

    “Hobbs and Shaw” is currently scheduled for release in theaters on July 26, 2019.

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  • Idris Elba Just Got Engaged at a Film Screening & His Fans Can’t Cope

    Grab your popcorn for the reactions, ’cause they are hilarious.

    Actor Idris Elba is now engaged to Sabrina Dhowre. He popped the question before the screening of his directorial debut, “Yardie,” Friday night in London.

    The moment was captured by audience members:


    Sabrina, 29, shared a photo with her love on Instagram after the proposal:


    Fans had hilarious reactions to the proposal:

    According to People, the 45-year-old British actor (“The Wire,” “Luther,” “The Dark Tower”) and his American beauty queen fiancée met and fell in love while he was making the Kate Winslet romance “The Mountain Between Us.” They’ve been spotted at various events since fall 2017.

    Elba was married to makeup artist Hanne Norgaard from 1999 to 2003, and they share a daughter. He was also married to lawyer Sonya Hamlin for six months in 2006. He has a son with ex-girlfriend Naiyana Garth.

    Since he had already been married twice before, Elba told Essence in July 2017 that he didn’t think he’d get married again. “Yeah, I don’t think so. Marriage is an institution of sorts. And I’ve done it. It’s not for everybody. It’s not my life’s calling.”

    Never say never! Congrats to both of them, and condolences to fans.

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  • Kate Winslet: The Scene in Mountain Between Us with Idris Elba that Still Gives Her Nightmares

    Idris Elba and Kate Winslet from The Mountain Between Us
    Idris Elba and Kate Winslet from The Mountain Between Us

    Yes, it’s just acting. But when you add the snow, the ice, the high elevation, the cold and a tank full of water, things get very real, very fast.

    So found Kate Winslet and Idris Elba while shooting the survival drama “The Mountain Between Us,” about two strangers who must work together to save themselves after their plane crashes in a frigid wilderness.

    “When we went up onto the mountain, we were one of the crew. If you needed a place to sit down you had to … just find a patch of snow,” Winslet tells Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar. “We did everything. It was 10,000 feet. It was freezing-cold temperatures. It was very deep snow. And I would ask a lot of questions: Where’s the safety guys? I don’t like the look of that slope. That looks a bit avalanche-y. What can you tell me about the chances about that one going over there?”

    Elba says that while the location shooting in remote British Columbia was “well thought-out, well planned,” the experience “was like an expedition every day, all of us. We all got powered up and warmed and shot this thing.”

    It also meant a return to the water tank for Winslet, who shot the climactic scene of “Titanic” bobbing on the water. She still shudders when thinking about a “Mountain Between Us Scene” in which Elba has to rescue her from a plunge into icy waters.

    “It doesn’t look it, it was very hard for Idris,” she says. “I couldn’t help because I was doing dead-person acting. I couldn’t even like push with my foot or do any kind of shimmying or anything. I just had to be that dead weight. And I found that really, really hard, because I could hear him going ewwwaaahhh.”

    “Kate is my mate,” says Elba. “I just felt a real sense of responsibility pulling her out.”

    Winslet says, “I did have dreams about being trapped under ice afterwards.”

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  • Idris Elba Again Says He Probably Won’t Be James Bond, Breaks Our Hearts

    2017 Toronto International Film Festival - 'The Mountain Between Us' Premiere - ArrivalsIdris Elba, the guy the Internet wants to be the next James Bond, is once again saying: It’s not happening. Stop asking.

    The “Luther” star (next appearing opposite Kate Winslet in “The Mountain Between Us”) has shot down numerous rumors that he could be the next 007. But now, he’s taking our hopes, lighting them on fire, and stomping on the flames.

    “I think not,” he told Buzzfeed about playing the role. “

    But you really need to ask the producers. Like I can just, ”Hey, I’m gonna play Bond next! No, it’s Idris. Hello?’ No one wants it.”

    (Um, everybody wants it.)

    Instead, Elba wants to try something completely different: comedies, specifically a romantic comedy.

    “I think I should do some funnies next, just goof around a little bit,” he said. “I’m pretty goofy in real life.”

  • Jessica Chastain Builds Poker Empire in ‘Molly’s Game’ Trailer

    Jessica Chastain is going all in!

    The first trailer for “Molly’s Game,” Aaron Sorkin’s directorial debut, presents Chastain as Molly Bloom, a former Olympic-level skiier who ran a high-stakes, exclusive poker club for over a decade before getting caught by the FBI.

    Based on Bloom’s own tell-all memoir, the movie takes Molly from helping her boss run a poker room at the “Cobra Lounge” (really the Viper Room on the Sunset Strip) to creating a thriving business of her own. The money is flowing, players are happy — until Molly gets entangled with the Ruffian mob. Then, the FBI comes a-knocking and Molly hires a lawyer (Idris Elba), who advises her to name names.

    The dialogue is quick and snappy, just as we’re used to from Sorkin’s previous work in “The Social Network” and various TV shows (“The West Wing,” “Newsroom,” “Sports Night”). It’s interesting that Sorkin has never directed a movie before, though he was in line to helm “The Social Network” if David Fincher passed.

    “God knows I was scared going into it,” Sorkin told Entertainment Weekly of directing “Molly’s Game,” “but I just felt like if I was ever going to do it, it was going to be this.”

    “Molly’s Game” also stars Kevin Costner, Michael Cera, Chris O’Dowd, and Brian d’Arcy James and opens in theaters November 22.

  • Here’s How You Killed ‘The Dark Tower’ Franchise at the Box Office

    Is “The Dark Tower” a hit or a flop? Well, no one waited ten years to adapt it just to take home less than $20 million opening weekend, so it’s definitely a disappointment.

    The Stephen King adaptation debuted at No. 1 this weekend, ending “Dunkirk‘s” two-week reign. And it earned about as much as pundits predicted it would. On the other hand, that figure was just an estimated $19.5 million, not a promising number for a franchise launcher.

    Results for this weekend’s two other new wide releases were just as ambivalent. Halle Berry’s “Kidnap” debuted in fifth place with a slightly better-than-expected $10.2 million. Kathryn Bigelow‘s historical drama “Detroit” expanded wide from 30 theaters to 3,007 and earned an estimated $7.3 million, good for eighth place. That sounds strong for a period piece with no big-name stars, until you realize that it amounts to just $2,411 per screen. (And hopes were originally forecasted in the $13 million range.)

    How, then, to interpret this weekend’s box office results? Maybe with these five lessons in mind.

    1. Stop Blaming Rotten Tomatoes
    Hollywood’s spent all summer complaining that the review-aggregator site is hurting the box office because potential customers are paying attention to low review scores, especially when those scores are posted at advance-sale site Fandango. The industry’s solution, however, has not been to resolve to make better movies, but to try to game the system. That’s not hard to do; just withhold screenings from critics or embargo their reviews until right before the film opens.

    That’s what happened this weekend with “Dark Tower” and “Kidnap.” Both scored poorly at RT (18 and 40 percent, respectively), but viewers may not have been aware of the dismal reviews until they’d already bought tickets. So those films’ distributors can pat themselves on the back for releasing movies that opened in line with expectations despite grim RT scores.

    Still, word-of-mouth is weak for “Dark Tower” (audiences gave it just a B grade at CinemaScore), which suggests that the movie will see a steep drop next weekend. Meanwhile, “Detroit” had excellent word-of-mouth and reviews (88 percent “Fresh”), and it still struggled to find an audience. At best, then, the jury remains out on the influence of Rotten Tomatoes.

    2. Hollywood’s Diversity Issues Are More Complex Than They Seem
    Walter (Matthew McConaughey) and Roland (Idris Elba) in Columbia Pictures THE DARK TOWER.Do black stars sell tickets? Do female stars? What about female directors? This weekend’s box office posed all those questions, and the answers are not entirely clear.

    It’s remarkable that all three of this weekend’s new wide releases star black actors. When’s the last time that happened? (And how long before it happens again?) And for what its worth, African-American viewers came out in large numbers for all three movies. According to PostTrak, they made up 40 percent of “Detroit’s” audience, 25 percent of “Kidnap” viewers, and 23 percent of “Dark Tower” ticket buyers. Given the so-so returns of all three movies, the question is, will those stars get any credit for whatever success these films may claim, or will they be blamed for the movies’ not doing any better?

    And how does gender fit in? Consider Idris Elba, age 44. Critics like him, and the Internet swoons for him, but despite some high profile roles in ensemble casts of hit movies, he’s never opened a picture by himself. Even for the semi-success of “Dark Tower,” he has to share credit with the more established Matthew McConaughey.

    Now, look at Halle Berry, age 50. She’s been a star for 25 years, she won a historic Oscar, and she had a lead role in a successful superhero franchise. Yet, despite audience fascination with her personal life, she also doesn’t sell many tickets. Her last minor hit was “The Call” four years ago; her current movie, which has a similar premise, has been on the shelf for three years. Its modest success, however, can be credited entirely to her.

    Then there’s Kathryn Bigelow, an Oscar-winning director who routinely creates exciting, action-packed, visually appealing, substantive movies, and does so on a budget. How many doors will open for her after “Detroit”?

    According to PostTrak, women over 25 made up the largest fraction (more than 40 percent) of both “Kidnap” and “Detroit” viewers. That’s a feat worth noting; indeed, maybe the real lesson here is not to release two movies going after the same demographic group on the same weekend.

    3. Keep the Budgets Low
    If there’s any reason at all for Sony not to be disappointed by a potential franchise launcher’s failure to crack $20 million, it’s that “Dark Tower” cost just $60 million to make. (What’s more, Sony’s on the hook for only half of that; the rest came from another company, MRC.) That’s an absurdly low figure for an effects-heavy fantasy film with two reasonably big stars, and a decade’s worth of development costs.

    So far, the movie’s made only about $28 million worldwide, which means a long climb toward the $120 million (at least) it would need to become profitable. Still, the movie is cheap enough that Sony’s losses, if any, won’t be much, and the studio could eventually profit from the “Dark Tower” TV series that may follow, which would make the movie essentially just an expensive trailer.

    “Detroit” cost a reported $34 million, so its $7.8 million take so far means it also has a long way to go before profitability. Still, $34 million is chump change to Hollywood. If the “Detroit” can remain solid in theaters for the next month — pretty likely, since it has strong word-of-mouth (an A- at CinemaScore) and since its only competition in the thoughtful, awards-worthy historical action/drama space is “Dunkirk” — it could still break even.

    It’s not clear how much “Kidnap” cost to make, but Berry is a producer of the film, which means she probably took just a modest salary up front in return for a percentage of the profits. And new distributor Aviron picked up the film from Relativity’s bankruptcy sale for a song — just $3 million. So Aviron has to be ecstatic over the film’s $10.2 million weekend, and Berry will likely pocket some change, too.

    4. Fan Service Is Important
    The reason it took a decade to make “Dark Tower” is that there was no way to condense Stephen King’s multiple volumes into a single film. Back in 2011, producer Ron Howard had floated the idea of making a combination of several movies and a TV series, but even with a “Dark Tower” show in the works, it’s clear from the current 95-minute film that Howard’s had to scale down his ambitions. If anything, rather than tackle the totality of KIng’s complex mythology, the new movie punts it down the road for the series to address. So it’s no wonder fans were disappointed by what they saw as a thumbnail sketch of what they loved from the books.

    Give “Kidnap” credit, at least, for delivering what Berry fans have come to expect from her recent films: action sequences and Berry unleashing righteous-mom fury on bad guys. “Kidnap” was never going to earn Berry another Oscar, but it did earn her a B+ from audiences at CinemaScore.

    5. Leave August for Comic Book Movies
    This was the lowest-grossing weekend so far of an already lackluster summer. Not only are sales about 10 percent behind what they were by this time last summer, but this weekend’s total ticket take was just an estimated $111.5 million. A year ago this weekend, “Suicide Squad” opened and earned $22.2 million more by itself than all of this weekend’s movies combined.

    There’s been a lot of grumbling about franchise fatigue this summer, but this weekend saw the debut of a new franchise and two original screenplays, and the novelty didn’t really help. Meanwhile, superhero movies seem to be immune to franchise fatigue, judging by the successes so far of “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,” “Spider-Man: Homecoming,” and “Wonder Woman” (which this weekend came within $500,000 of crossing the $400 million mark in domestic sales).

    Elba’s Gunslinger may be the closest thing to a superhero in all of King’s writings, but unless he’s rubbing spandex-clad shoulders with Batman or Iron Man, he might as well be just another cowboy.