Tag: jeff-goldblum

  • Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard Talk ‘Jurassic World Dominion’

    Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill), Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern), Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), Owen Grady (Chris Pratt), Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) and Kayla Watts (DeWanda Wise) in 'Jurassic World Dominion.''
    (L to R) Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill), Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern), Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), Owen Grady (Chris Pratt), Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) and Kayla Watts (DeWanda Wise) in ‘Jurassic World Dominion,’ co-written and directed by Colin Trevorrow.

    Opening in theaters on June 10th is the latest chapter of the ‘Jurassic Park’ franchise entitled ‘Jurassic World Dominion.’

    The new film features Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Isabella Sermon, Justice Smith, and Omar Sy reprising their roles from the previous ‘Jurassic World’ movies, and Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and BD Wong reprising their roles from the original trilogy. While Campbell Scott joins the franchise as Dr. Lewis Dodgson, a character first seen in ‘Jurassic Park.’

    Directed by Colin Trevorrow, ‘Dominion’ takes place four years after the events of ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’ and the destruction of Isla Nublar. Dinosaurs now live and hunt alongside humans all over the world. This fragile balance will reshape the future and determine, once and for all, whether human beings are to remain the apex predators on a planet they now share with history’s most fearsome creatures.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard about their work on ‘Jurassic World Dominion.’

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    You can read our full interview with Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Pratt, Howard, Laura Dern, Isabella Sermon, DeWanda Wise, Mamoudou Athie, and director Colin Trevorrow.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how do you feel about ‘Jurassic World Dominion’ releasing in movie theaters on the big screen?

    Chris Pratt: It’s fantastic. I think the world is ready to get back to the movies and this is the perfect film to kick that off. It was made for the big screen. It is the epic grand finale of this beloved franchise. People love ‘Jurassic Park,’ people love ‘Jurassic World’ and the two franchises converge in a finale that’s really unlike anything that’s ever been filmed before. So, it’s perfect for the big screen.

    Bryce Dallas Howard: It’s a spectacle. It’s absolutely a spectacle and it’s a ride. I think when you go to the theater, it eventizes whatever you’re seeing. The fact that what you’re seeing here is ‘Jurassic World Dominion,’ like what Chris was saying, it’s the sixth movie in three decades. So, I think that if you’re going to go to the theaters this summer with your family, this is definitely the movie to see in a theater.

    CP: Especially since it’s like the farewell film, you know? You always want to catch the big act on their farewell tour, and I think that’s what this is. So, you definitely don’t want to miss it.

    MF: Finally, the movie also features the return of original cast members Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and Jeff Goldblum. What are your memories of watching the first ‘Jurassic Park’ back in 1993?

    CP: The whole world was waking up to this idea that, first of all, this Jurassic pandemonium, everybody loved it and loved the dinosaurs, but it was successful for many reasons. It was this merging of science, imagination and cinematic techniques that essentially allow us to see what we could have only up until that point imagined.

    There were bad Claymation versions of this that had been done. Bad stop motion animation versions of this that had been done. This is the first time that people looked and actually feasted their eyes on a living, breathing dinosaur. It was a promise to audiences like, “Hey, everything you could have possibly imagined, you will now be able to see.”

    It was a great story. Michael Crichton’s amazing book adapted by Steven Spielberg had an incredibly poignant themes about life, technology, corporate greed, hubris and nature. So, it was just the perfect storm of wonderful things. I remember it very clearly and the fact that we’re sitting here next to each other, talking about the finale and we’re a part of that, it’s surreal. We’re both very blessed.

    Bryce Dallas Howard and Chris Pratt.
    (L to R) Bryce Dallas Howard and Chris Pratt. Universal Pictures ‘Jurassic World Dominion,’ opens in theaters on June 10th.
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  • New ‘Jurassic World Dominion’ Trailer Stomps Online

    Chris Pratt in 'Jurassic World Dominion.'
    Chris Pratt as Owen Grady in ‘Jurassic World Dominion,’ © 2021 Universal Studios and Amblin Entertainment. All Rights Reserved.

    Wrapping up Universal’s sprawling presentation at CinemaCon yesterday, ‘Jurassic World Dominion’ is naturally a huge priority for the company. And now, to mark tickets going on sale for the latest dinosaur-filled movie, the latest full trailer is online.

    In keeping with the scale of other footage from the movie, this is suitably epic and sweeping, promising new vistas and settings as the story expands far beyond Isla Nublar or even the locations of ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’.

    And ‘Dominion’ also follows up the plotline of that move – with dinosaurs now on the loose in America and around the world, humanity is having to adapt to living among the giant reptiles.

    This naturally causes some major problems; as Jeff Goldblum’s Ian Malcolm says, “the doomsday clock might be about out of time” – and it’s partly been up to the likes of Owen Grady (Chris Pratt) and Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard) to help keep track of it all.

    One big story point here is that “trained” (you know, as far as raptors can be) velociraptor Blue has had a child, Beta. It’s not long before the kid is dino-napped, and Owen and Claire must team up with classic ‘Jurassic Park’ trio Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill), Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern) and Goldblum’s Malcolm to find it. Cue much mockery of Owen when he admits he “made a promise” to Blue that he’ll bring back the baby.

    There’s also plenty of nostalgia fuel besides the presence of Neill, Dern, and Goldblum – shots that offer callbacks to the ‘Jurassic’ movie that kicked off the entire franchise.

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    And if you, somewhat naturally, come to these movies expecting all the dinosaur encounters you can handle, ‘Dominion’ certainly appears to deliver, with the Mosasaurus snacking on ships in the ocean, Pratt trying to outrun Atrociraptors that are hunting him down as he speeds through the streets of Malta on a motorcycle.

    Among the other critters we can expect to see? The flying Quetzalcoatlus, the huge Dreadnoughtus, the feathered Pyroraptor and, of course the big new carnivore, the Giganotosaurus.

    On the human front, the cast also features the returning likes of Daniella Pineda, Justice Smith, and Omar Sy. Then there’s franchise veteran BD Wong as Dr. Henry Wu, who appears to be having some regrets about his part in all the genetic tinkering.

    Campbell Scott plays the scheming Dr. Lewis Dodgson, employee of rival company Biosyn, who was seen in ‘Jurassic Park’ assayed by someone else. DeWanda Wise and Mamoudou Athie are among the new faces here.

    Jurassic World’ director Colin Trevorrow returns for this trilogy capper, having written the script with Emily Carmichael and overcoming all manner of pandemic challenges to shoot the movie on several different continents.

    Running to a suitably dinosaur-sized two hours and 46 minutes, ‘Jurassic World Dominion’ crashes its way into theaters on June 10th.

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  • New ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’ Trailer

    Chris Pratt in Universal Pictures' ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’
    Chris Pratt in Universal Pictures’ ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’

    “Bigger… Why do they always have to go bigger?” whispers Jeff Goldblum’s Ian Malcolm in the new, full-length trailer for ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’. We suppose the answer would have to be “because they can!” Also, dinosaurs.

    Yes, the new look at the latest installment of the ‘Jurassic World’ movie series certainly appears to be going as big as possible as returning co-writer/director ups the stakes to wrap up the trilogy he started in 2015.

    Picking up the story from 2018’s ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’, the world is a very different, dinosaur-impacted place. With the terrible lizards (we’re sure some are very nice, but it’s hard to get past the teeth) stomping all over North America (and elsewhere), Chris Pratt‘s Owen Grady and Bryce Dallas Howard’s Claire Dearing are doing what they can to wrangle the beasts to prevent human casualties.

    The bigger selling point here, though – especially for fans of Steven Spielberg’s original ‘Jurassic Park’ – is the return of Sam Neill’s grumpy palaeontologist Alan Grant, Laura Dern’s palaeobotanist Ellie Sattler and, as mentioned, Goldblum’s chaos mathematician (and yes, we know he turned up in ‘Fallen Kingdom’, but that was only for one scene).

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    Seeing the old gang back together and interacting with the newer faces of the franchise is something of a thrill, and the movie makes no (dino) bones about throwing in some call-backs to Spielberg’s 1994 movie which kicked it all off, including borrowing voice-over from Park financier John Hammond (the late Richard Attenborough) talking about his aims for the original site.

    And the trio aren’t the only people back – B.D. Wong is of course here as fellow franchise veteran Dr. Henry Wu, while ‘World’s Omar Sy and ‘Fallen Kingdom’s Justice Smith and Daniella Pineda also show up. New to the story this time are Dichen Lachman, Kristoffer Polaha and DeWanda Wise. Finally, while Campbell Scott hasn’t appeared in any of the movies before now, he is playing someone we met way back in ’Jurassic Park’ – Lewis Dodgson, the scheming Biosyn executive whose plan to use tech nerd Dennis Nedry to steal dino embryos led to much of the trouble in that first movie. What he’ll be up to in this movie is anyone’s guess, but we doubt it’ll be good.

    Of course, the humans are only part of the equation – this is ‘Jurassic World’, after all, so there are plenty of new creatures to menace our heroes. And an old pal in the shape of Blue, the Velociraptor once trained by Owen. It appears she’s since become a mother – keeping her and her child safe will be part of the plot.

    Director Colin Trevorrow and his team have certainly crafted some epic visions here: dinosaurs being herded like horses, Blue stalking through a snowy tundra, Pratt’s Owen dodging Atrociraptors on a bike on Malta, a feathered example of the toothy terrors more in keeping with modern thinking of their biology, and, of course, Jeff Goldblum’s hair!

    Like life, ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’ finds a way into theaters on June 10.

    Bryce Dallas Howard in Universal Pictures' ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’
    Bryce Dallas Howard in Universal Pictures’ ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’
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  • ‘Jurassic World Dominion’ Prologue Goes All the Way Back to the Cretaceous

    Jurassic World Dominion

    Universal Pictures has released an online teaser for the upcoming ‘Jurassic World Dominion,’ entitled ‘The Prologue.’ The trailer, which was originally released on IMAX screens with ‘F9’ last summer does something no other ‘Jurassic Park’ movie has ever done, depict dinosaurs in their natural habitat over 65 million years ago, before jumping to present day to see a T. rex terrorizing a drive-in movie theater.

    Very little is known at this point about the plot of ‘Dominion,’ except that it will pick up where ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’ left off, with cloned dinosaurs running wild through our modern society. Filmmaker Colin Trevorrow, who directed 2015’s ‘Jurassic World,’ is set to return for ‘Dominion’ after sitting out ‘Fallen Kingdom.’

    The Prologue is five and a half minutes long and begins over 65 million years ago, showing several types of ancient species living together in peace… that is, until we see a T. rex attack another T. rex and kill it by biting its neck. We then see what appears to be a mosquito bite the dead T. rex and fly away, which is of course what led to the dinosaur cloning we see in the first film.

    The trailer then jumps ahead 65 million years, to what appears to be present day, as a helicopter chases a T. rex to a drive-in movie theater, which is playing a double feature of ‘American Graffiti’ and ‘Flash Gordon.’ The drive-in theaters’ double feature and the retro clothes on the theater patrons might lead some to believe that this scene takes place in the early 80s, before the events of the first ‘Jurassic Park, but that theory is shot down when Chris Pratt appears, indicating that this is present day. It’s also worth mentioning that the movies shown at the theater could be a nod to original ‘Jurassic Park’ director Steven Spielberg, who’s best friend, George Lucas, wrote and directed ‘American Graffiti’.’

    During the retro “Let’s all go to the lobby” animated commercial that used to play before movie screenings, terror erupts as the T. rex arrives. Most of the patrons beginning screaming and running for their life, while others don’t even notice the dinosaur because they’re focused on watching the movie screen. Then we see our hero, Chris Pratt’s Owen Grady, in the helicopter taking a shot at the T. rex with a rifle. The tranquilizer he shoots misses the dinosaur and hits the car of an unsuspecting driver trying to escape the dinosaur massacre before fading to black.

    The new teaser begins with the Universal Pictures logo, making one think that the footage from 65 million years ago might be the way the movie actually starts. However, the drive-in theater footage could appear later in the film, unless this scene is our first introduction to Owen Grady after the events of ‘Fallen Kingdom.’ Since ‘Dominion’ is set to feature a world dominated by dinosaurs and humans alike after the events of ‘Fallen Kingdom,’ it makes sense to begin the film like this, contrasting a world before humans to now, when humans and dinosaurs will be forced to live together.

    The teaser trailer also gives us our first look at seven new species of dinosaurs never before seen in a ‘Jurassic Park’ movie, which was recently confirmed by Trevorrow to Empire Magazine. “We have our first feathered dinosaur, the Oviraptor,” the director said to the British film publication. “I feel like that’s going to be a bit of a headline for those who care about paleontological accuracy. Another one, with feathers, is the Moros intrepidus. That one showed up maybe two years ago. It probably popped up into your feed, that people found a tiny, T-Rex-like feathered dinosaur. That was one of the quickest turnarounds that we’ve had, from discovery to putting it on screen.”

    ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’ is scheduled for release on June 10th, 2022 and will be the third film in the ‘Jurassic World’ sequel series, which began with Trevorrow’s ‘Jurassic World’ in 2015. That film was at one time the third highest grossing movie of all time, and currently is the sixth highest grossing film of all time following ‘Avatar,’ ‘Avengers: Endgame,’ ‘Titanic,’ ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens,’ and ‘Avengers: Infinity War.’ The series continued with director J.A. Bayona’s ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’ in 2018, which is currently the fifteenth highest grossing movie of all time. But ‘Dominion’ will also feature the return of Jeff Goldblum’s fan-favorite character Dr. Ian Malcolm, after a brief cameo in ‘Fallen Kingdom,’ as well as Sam Neill and Oscar winner Laura Dern reprising their roles as Dr. Alan Grant and Dr. Ellie Sattler, respectively, for the first time since ‘Jurassic Park III.’

    The original film series, which is based on author Michael Crichton’s 1990 novel of the same name, began in 1993 with ‘Jurassic Park,’ which was directed by Steven Spielberg. The film was a massive hit and went on to earn over a billion dollars at the box office and was selected in 2018 for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress for being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” Spielberg returned in 1997 to direct ‘The Lost World: Jurassic Park,’ which was based on Crichton’s sequel novel. Goldblum and Richard Attenborough, who played Dr. John Hammond, were the only original cast members to return, and were joined by Julianne Moore and Vince Vaughn. The original trilogy ended in 2001 with the third installment, ‘Jurassic Park III.’ There was no Goldblum this time around, but Neil and Dern did return, along with new cast members William H. Macy and Téa Leoni.

    In addition to Chris Pratt, Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill, and Laura Dern returning for ‘Jurassic Park: Dominion’, Bryce Dallas Howard and B.D. Wong are also set to reprise their franchise roles as Claire Dearing and Dr. Henry Wu, respectively, while Campbell Scott will join the series as Dr. Lewis Dodgson, a character briefly seen in the first ‘Jurassic Park’ portrayed by actor Cameron Thor. Actors Omar Sy (‘X-Men: Days of Future Past’), Scott Haze (‘Venom’), Daniella Pineda (‘Cowboy Bebop’), and Justice Smith (‘Detective Pikachu’) are also all scheduled to appear.

    You can watch ‘The Prologue’ teaser trailer for ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’ below:

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  • How Joan Micklin Silver Paved the Way for Chloé Zhao & Other Women Directors Today

    How Joan Micklin Silver Paved the Way for Chloé Zhao & Other Women Directors Today

    The films of the late Joan Micklin Silver
    The films of the late Joan Micklin Silver

    One of the first celebrity deaths to hit in 2021 was that of filmmaker Joan Micklin Silver. Not as well-remembered by the public today as she was at the height of her career – Silver was not included in the In Memoriam video that played at this year’s Oscars – she left a legacy that can be found in the careers of the women directors who came after her.

    This week Chloé Zhao’s third feature film ‘Nomadland’ was awarded three Oscars- including two for Zhao herself. She became the first woman of color, the first Asian woman, and only the second woman ever to win the award for Best Director. This success follows her previous critically-acclaimed features ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ (2015) and ‘The Rider’ (2017). Later this year Zhao’s highest-profile film – Marvel’s ‘Eternals’ – will finally make its debut after being pushed back from 2020 due to the ongoing pandemic.

    Zhao’s rise from the world of independent cinema to an Oscar-winning film to a big budget Marvel film like ‘Eternals’ recalls the similar rise to prominence from Ava DuVernay, whose feature film debut ‘I Will Follow’ she self-distributed, and whose third film ‘Selma’ made her only fifth woman nominated for Best Director at the Golden Globes (and first Black woman to be nominated), as well as the first Black female director to have her film nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture (though she was pointedly not nominated for Best Director at the Oscars that year). She followed that up with ‘A Wrinkle in Time’, which made her the first Black woman to direct a live-action film earning $100 million.

    But before both of these women smashed through the celluloid ceiling there was Joan Micklin Silver. In the 1970s, when there were so few women directors, women only made up 0.05% of all working directors (in 2020 they made up 12% of directors of the highest grossing films), and Silver fought like hell to forge a career in Hollywood.

    Like DuVernay, she self-financed her debut film, 1975’s ‘Hester Street’, which told the story of Jewish immigrants living on the titular Hester Street in the Lower East Side of New York City at the end of the 19th century. The film would go on to play at the Cannes Film Festival and its star Carol Kane received an Oscar nomination for Best Actress.

    Prior to making her directorial debut, Silver had worked as a writer in Hollywood, even selling a script called ‘Limbo’, a collaboration with Linda Gottlieb, to Universal Pictures in 1972. The film, directed by Mark Robson, follows the lives of women whose husbands are missing in action in Vietnam. Gottlieb would later write the screenplay that would become the basis for ‘Dirty Dancing.’ (The history of how her screenplay became the finished film is an entirely different story.)

    Silver reflected that she “had absolutely no chance of getting work as a director,” within the studio system and even after her success with ‘Hester Street’ she was told by a studio executive that, “feature films are very expensive to mount and distribute, and women directors are one more problem we don’t need.”

    She followed up ‘Hester Street’ with another self-financed film, 1977’s ‘Between The Lines,’ a prophetic look at the lives and loves of the staff at an alt-weekly that launched the careers of many actors including John Heard, Lindsay Crouse, Gwen Welles, Bruno Kirby, Joe Morton, Marilu Henner, Lane Smith, and Jeff Goldblum. Although the film played the Berlin International Film Festival and spawned a short-lived sitcom, it was largely hard to find until a recent restoration and revival from Cohen Media Group.

    Her next film ‘Chilly Scenes of Winter’, a biting romantic dramedy about an unfulfilled man named Charles (John Heard) whose infatuation with a woman named Laura (Mary Beth Hurt) becomes an unhealthy obsession, was produced in association with United Artists. Before the film’s release UA insisted Silver alter the film’s bleak ending to something happier and changed the name to ‘Head over Heels’. It bombed. In 1982 Silver convinced them to re-release the film with its original title and ending, to much better acclaim and box office success.

    Silver also found success working in television, like DuVernay’s ‘Queen Sugar’ and ‘When They See Us’. In 1976, she directed an adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s ‘Bernice Bobs Her Hair’ starring Shelley Duvall and in the 1980s she directed ‘How to Be a Perfect Person in Just Three Days’ for PBS and ‘Finnegan Begin Again’ for HBO.

    1987 saw Silver’s biggest hit to date: the romantic comedy ‘Crossing Delancey’ starring Amy Irving and Peter Reigert, an adaptation of the stage play by Susan Sandler. Irving plays Izzy Grossman, an independent 30-something who works at an upscale bookstore whose bubbe (Reizl Bozyk) hires a marriage broker (Sylvia Miles) to find a nice young Jewish man for her granddaughter. Izzy rebels against the match at first, but slowly finds herself falling for the most charming pickle salesman (Reigert) you’ll ever see on screen. The film had a rocky start as studios told Silver the film was “too ethnic,” which in an interview with the New York Times she said was a euphemism “for Jewish material that Hollywood executives distrust.” Eventually the film found its way to distribution by Warner Bros. thanks to a push from Irving’s husband at the time – Steven Spielberg.

    ‘Crossing Delancey’ received rave reviews and made more than four times its budget, but Silver’s next few films – 1989’s ‘Loverboy’ starring Patrick Dempsey, Kirstie Alley, Carrie Fisher, 1991’s ‘Big Girls Don’t Cry’ starring Hillary Wolf, Griffin Dunne, and Jenny Lewis, and ‘A Fish In The Bathtub’ starring Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara – received mostly mixed reviews and were box office disaster. She continued to direct films for television throughout the next decade; her last credit was 2003’s ‘Hunger Point’ starring Barbara Hershey and Christina Hendricks.

    Silver passed away at the age of 85 from vascular dementia on December 31, 2020.

    What was so remarkable about Silver’s career was her commitment to her vision and her voice, despite struggling against both sexism and anti-semitism within the industry. She paved the way for filmmakers like Zhao and DuVernay, who themselves have fierce voices and unique visions for what film can do. As more women break through in Hollywood and women helming multiple films becomes the rule rather than the exception, it’s important to remember the trailblazers like Joan Micklin Silver who paved the way.

  • Disney+ Is Already Our Favorite Streaming Service (And It Doesn’t Even Start Until November 12)

    Disney+ Is Already Our Favorite Streaming Service (And It Doesn’t Even Start Until November 12)

    Lucasfilm

    On Friday afternoon, at the D23 Expo in Anaheim, California, Disney publicly unveiled its plans for the launch of Disney+, its direct-to-consumer streaming platform that legitimately hopes to rival Netflix, Amazon, and the soon-to-launch Apple platform. There had been announcements before and operational tech demos, but this was the grand debut of Disney+ in living color – trailers were shown, stars beamed enthusiastically, and a case was made for why this isn’t just the newest streaming option or the flashiest, but the best and most substantial. And by the end of the two-hour presentation, as “+”-shaped confetti rained down from the ceiling, we were sold … and that was without showing anything from the recently acquired Fox portfolio (of which we already know they have aggressive plans). Disney+, just on the strength of what was shown on Friday, is already our favorite streaming service. And it doesn’t even launch until November 12th.

    Part of what made the presentation so strong was that the initial line-up of titles, on both the TV and movie side of things, mix the familiar with the fresh, sometimes within the same project (like the first live action “Star Wars” TV series, “The Mandalorian”). Right out of the gate, Disney+ seems to be committed to projects that will include well-known properties but also some things that are out of left field but at the same time positively essential (“Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made,” a kind of oddball kids detective story, looks fantastic). The fact that, as was revealed elsewhere during D23 Expo, the original series would be released week-by-week allows you to explore other aspects of Disney+ in between episodes and keeps everyone on the same page in terms of discussing the latest revelations and plot reveals. (Nothing like having something ruined on twitter by someone who’s swept through an entire season overnight.)

    And Disney+ has a very deep bench of preexisting material that will make its way onto the platform – during the panel they said that all of Pixar’s movies would be available on the service and, very soon, as of the “Star Wars” movies would be too. And while it wasn’t mentioned during the panel, we know from previous reports that every single episode of “The Simpsons” will be on the platform. That’s a lot of stuff to get through!

    One of the more surprising moments of the panel came when they briefly highlighted the documentary offerings that will be on Disney+. Sure, there’s “The World According to Jeff Goldblum,” a new National Geographic show that looks delightfully strange. Goldblum was on hand to coo and crow about the show, which has him investigating things that interest him, like tattoos, ice cream and sneakers. But there were also sneak peeks at equally engrossing nonfiction content, including a new Disneynature movie narrated by Natalie Portman called “Dolphin Reef” and a documentary series about seeing eye dogs. And there are announced projects that they didn’t even tease, like a documentary series about Walt Disney Imagineering (the division of the company responsible for all things parks and cruise lines) and another series about the women of the Ink & Paint department (inspired by Mindy Johnson’s terrific book).

    If things like “The Mandalorian” and “High School Musical: The Musical: The Series” (a kind of meta offshoot of the popular Disney Channel series done in the fashion of a Christopher Guest faux documentary) are the platform’s killer apps, then the library material and the documentary stuff are what will sustain it.

    Virtually everything that they previewed during the panel, from the return of beloved “Star Wars” animated series “The Clone Wars” (coming back February 2020!) to a series of Pixar animated shorts called “Forky Asks a Question” (the first episode had Forky questioning money, with some help from Ham), played incredibly well. Virtually everything was a home run, even original films like “Togo,” a period sled dog movie that was shot like a Terrence Malick film, that nobody knew anything about. “Togo” was the type of original project that Disney would have released theatrically, just a few months ago, one of their classy, non-franchise projects that does more for the brand than the box office but have been all but phased out. The fact that these movies can live and flourish on a platform like Disney+ is really, really exciting.

    Around the time of Disney+’s big debut this weekend, there was dissent online about how no R-rated content would be on the new streaming platform. Why anyone thought that there would be R-rated content on Disney+ is kind of beyond me, but with the announcements that came out of the panel (including Marvel Studio’s reveal that they are working on three additional television series, “Moon Knight,” “She-Hulk” and “Ms. Marvel”) left us with the sensation that Disney+ doesn’t even need that stuff to be exciting. Disney+ seems to be a platform that will contain everything you love about Disney, Star Wars, Marvel, Disney Animation, National Geographic and Pixar, tidily wrapped up in one package and festooned with all sorts of stuff you’re going to love, just as soon as you see it (seriously, “Timmy Failure” is going to be a smash). It feels fresh and exciting and innovative and yet still classically Disney. As soon as the presentation was over, I went and signed up for three years of the service for a reduced rate. After seeing that material, was there any other option?

  • ‘Jurassic World 3’ Director Colin Trevorrow Addresses Return of Original ‘Jurassic Park’ Stars

    ‘Jurassic World 3’ Director Colin Trevorrow Addresses Return of Original ‘Jurassic Park’ Stars

    Universal

    Is “Jurassic World 3” going back to where it started?

    The follow-up to the last year’s “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom” will start filming in spring 2020, but already, the rumor mill is churning that original “Jurassic Park” stars Laura Dern (Ellie Sattler) and Sam Neill (Alan Grant) will make an appearance. They would join Jeff Goldblum, who reprised his role as Dr. Ian Malcom in “Fallen Kingdom.”

    When asked about their possible involvement at the grand opening ceremony for “Jurassic World: The Ride” at Universal Studios, director Colin Trevorrow responded — in a typically vague manner.

    “I can confirm nothing,” he said. “But nothing would make me happier than to be able to work with any of those people.”

    The director was similarly cagey about talk that this will be the final film in the “Jurassic World” series. It would form a trilogy, just as the “Jurassic Park” movies did.

    “I’m kind of a ‘one movie at a time’ kind of guy, so my eyes are on this one,” Trevorrow noted. “And it’s a celebration of everything that has existed in the franchise up until now.”

    “Jurassic World 3” is slated to open in theaters June 11, 2021.

  • 22 Huge Stars You Won’t Believe Have Never Been Nominated for Oscars

    22 Huge Stars You Won’t Believe Have Never Been Nominated for Oscars

  • Hilarious ‘Thank U, Next’ Parody Honors Jeff Goldblum on ‘The Late Late Show’

    Hilarious ‘Thank U, Next’ Parody Honors Jeff Goldblum on ‘The Late Late Show’

    The Late Late Show still
    The Late Late Show with James Corden/YouTube

    “Thank U, Next” is the gift that keeps on giving.

    After the Ariana Grande song’s music video paid homage to several hit films, “The Late Late Show” host James Corden celebrated both the music video and his favorite guest, Jeff Goldblum. When the actor came on his show, Corden got him to join him in a hilarious parody video called “Thank U, Jeff.”

    It’s truly wonderful. “Thank U, Next” gets all new lyrics, and they are an over-the-top love letter to Goldblum and his career. The song references his memorable roles in films like 1991’s “The Fly,” 1996’s “Independence Day,” and 1993’s “Jurassic Park.” All the while, Corden sings it and channels his inner Grande.

    Watch below.

    So good, right? There are so many funny moments, with one of our favorites being the “Mean Girls”-esque talent show includes the “silver fox with black thick-rim glasses” imitating Amy Poehler‘s character. We didn’t know how much we needed that until we saw it.

    “The Late Late Show with James Corden” airs weeknights at 12:37 a.m. ET/PT on CBS.

  • Jeff Goldblum’s ‘Jurassic Park’ Pose Got Its Own Statue in London, and Fans Are All Over It

    Jeff Goldblum’s ‘Jurassic Park’ Pose Got Its Own Statue in London, and Fans Are All Over It

    Jeff Goldblum
    Universal Pictures

    The British were so preoccupied with whether they *could*, they didn’t stop to think if they *should* make a giant Jeff Goldblum statue.

    Of course, they made the right call.

    Now TV erected the tribute to celebrate the 25th anniversary of “Jurassic Park,” and the birth of the $4 billion “Jurassic” franchise.

    This homage to Dr. Ian Malcolm will give London its sexiest reclining pose until July 26.

    Fans have been paying homage to the 330-pound #JurassicJeff statue on London’s south bank. They held on to their butts well enough, but also decided to hold on to Jeff’s nips:

    https://twitter.com/Fearian/status/1019565195084156930

    https://twitter.com/reluctant_gent/status/1019528444877639680

    https://twitter.com/shazzah_harm/status/1019555081639907337

    https://twitter.com/DLucksEdition/status/1019567211109810177

    God bless us, every one. No one had better dare make a “That is one big pile of sh*t” joke, since this statue is clearly a glorious representation of the next stage of evolution.

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