Tag: kraven-the-huter

  • Movie Review: ‘Kraven The Hunter’

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

    Opening in theaters December 13th is ‘Kraven The Hunter,’ directed by J.C. Chandor and starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ariana DeBose, Fred Hechinger, Alessandro Nivola, Christopher Abbott, and Russell Crowe.

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Madame Web’

    Initial Thoughts

    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Are we finally done with of the Sony Universe of Spider-Man Movies Not Featuring Spider-Man for good? We can only hope, because 2024 has surely brought us the nadir of this cash-grabbing MCU-adjacent nonsense with ‘Madame Web’ and now ‘Kraven The Hunter.’ Yet another pointless origin story for a Spider-Man villain that really serves no purpose without Spider-Man to fight against, ‘Kraven The Hunter’ wastes a serviceable performance from Aaron Taylor-Johnson (playing his second Marvel character in less than 10 years following his appearance as Quicksilver in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’) and smashes any hope of a real Kraven-Spidey face-off in the foreseeable future.

    Like ‘Madame Web,’ ‘Morbius,’ and the ‘Venom’ movies, ‘Kraven The Hunter’ is dragged down by a laziness that infects every aspect of the production. A badly written script, lousy editing, miserable-looking CG, underwhelming acting, and even sloppy dialogue looping (yes, just like in ‘Madame Web’) hinder the film’s modest attributes, like Taylor-Johnson’s work and the occasional flash of electrifying violence. And it’s all directed by J.C. Chandor – who’s made some good movies, like ‘A Most Violent Year’ – with the energy of a weak wind blowing across a desolate Siberian plain (where much of the film takes place).

    Story and Direction

    'Kraven the Hunter' director J. C. Chandor.
    ‘Kraven the Hunter’ director J. C. Chandor.

    ‘Kraven The Hunter’ makes its points with such thudding heavy-handedness that the movie produces unintentional laughter almost from the start. Russian martial music blares over the opening scene to make sure we know we’re deep in the Russian countryside, as a transport brings the title character (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) to a prison that would make Rikers Island look like the Four Seasons.

    Kraven is there on purpose, however, to execute a Russian gangster operating within its walls, a plot point that will make more sense later as we first must endure an extended flashback from 16 years earlier. Here we meet the younger Kraven, real name Sergei Kravinoff (Levi Miller), who is pulled out of school along with his half-brother Dmitri by their brutish father Nikolai (Russell Crowe), who informs his sons that their mother has taken her own life because she was “weak.”

    Dad decides that accompanying him on a hunt is just what the grieving boys need, although the rather timid Dmitri prefers singing and doing uncanny vocal impressions of Nikolai and others (he’s a “real chameleon,” as he and others tell us two or three times, just in case we don’t get the hint). Sergei is gravely injured by a legendary lion his dad has been tracking, and although he nearly succumbs to his wounds, a combination of the lion’s blood with a mystical potion given to him by a young African girl named Calypso — who just happens to be there with her parents — brings the young man back from the brink and imbues him with a range of special powers (enhanced strength and speed, better hearing, and eyes that change color).

    Also bestowed somehow with a new moral code by that heady brew, Sergei decides he’s not going to join his father’s business and takes off for the Siberian wilderness, where he sets up house in a dome-like cabin left behind by his mother and protects the local animals from poachers. Now grown into the impressive shape of Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Kraven hunts bad guys as a sort of mercenary but is soon called back to help defend his estranged father, who’s being threatened by a man he once dismissed named Aleksei Sytsevich (Alessandro Nivola), whose bizarre skin condition and own monstrous powers have led him to be called the Rhino.

    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    “A man who kills a legend becomes a legend himself,” gravely intones Nikolai at one point, as ‘Kraven’ deploys all the usual cliches about fathers and sons and the definition of “real” masculinity. Perhaps J.C. Chandor envisions this all as some sort of operatic Russian crime epic, but he’s undercut every step of the way by a ludicrous, coincidence-filled script from Richard Wenk, Art Marcum, and Matt Holloway (the latter two are credited on the first ‘Iron Man’ for Marvel Studios). Kraven/Sergei steps out of his brother’s apartment for a nap just as a bunch of the Rhino’s thugs come to kidnap him; Kraven calls a now-grown Calypso (Ariana DeBose) to warn her that the Rhino is coming for her just as she happens to look outside her office and see those same thugs bursting in. Plot points are simply stacked atop each other without any real development just to clumsily get people from point A to point B.

    Speaking of Calypso, who works as a lawyer, why does Kraven need her help in tracing bad guys if he’s supposedly the world’s greatest hunter? Why does her one notable fighting skill happen to come in handy just when Kraven needs it most? Does she even need to be in the story? And why the hell is the Foreigner (Christopher Abbott), an assassin who can hypnotize people by staring at them and counting to three, necessary here when the plot is already weighed down with multiple villains?

    In the end, these questions don’t matter because the rest of the film is so haphazardly done. For starters, there’s a CG lion that looks like it was discarded on a zip drive by someone at Disney and found by somebody else working on ‘Kraven.’ In fact, all the animals look terribly fake, a common problem in CG that’s exacerbated here by the sheer amount of them. And let’s not get started on the final version of the Rhino, who looks like the VFX folks just digitally stuck a horn and some rough gray skin over the superstructure of Rhys Ifans’ Lizard and called it a day.

    We can harp on the film’s other problems – shockingly sloppy dialogue looping (especially when Chameleon, I mean Dmitri, sings in different voices), shockingly dumb dialogue, and unshockingly predictable plot turns like Sergei getting his powers from magic blood, an idea that goes back to the Andrew Garfield era of Spider-Man. But all these other issues pale next to the movie’s main drawback: it’s just dull. Chandor can’t wring anything resembling real energy out of these tired old tropes, and the movie just grinds along for better than two hours like a broken-down train groaning into its final station.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Aaron Taylor Johnson and Russell Crowe in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Aaron Taylor Johnson and Russell Crowe in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    If there is a saving grace to ‘Kraven The Hunter,’ it’s the title character himself. Aaron Taylor-Johnson does a very commendable job against the odds; even though this is a far cry from the Kraven of the comics in many ways, he does have a moral code, a sense of honor, and a thread of compassion that’s in conflict with his naturally violent tendencies. Taylor-Johnson is also quite physically suited for the role, even if the editing of the fight scenes leaves something to be desired (maybe he just said the hell with it and figured he’d use this for his James Bond audition tape). Kraven’s ultimate objectives are vague and kind of muddled, but that’s the script’s fault.

    Fred Hechinger (seen this fall as the mad emperor Caracalla in ‘Gladiator II’ and the sadistic Harper in ‘Nickel Boys’) also does a decent job as Dmitri, although his eventual transformation into the Chameleon at the end is rushed and jarringly handled. One great shame about this movie is that it wastes three classic members of Spidey’s rogues gallery – Rhino, Chameleon (the very first villain Spider-Man ever faced!), and Kraven himself – on a movie that does these illustrious villains little justice.

    The rest of the cast doesn’t fare very well. Alessandro Nivola ingests the scenery as the Rhino, camping it up and all but twirling his moustache, while Russell Crowe alternates between phoning it in and chewing the sets around him as well, his heavy Russian accent like something out of a Cold War movie. As for Ariana DeBose, there’s no nice way to say it: she’s just bad here, spouting every line in flatly declarative fashion as if she’s reading them for the first time. She seems lost at sea, but again, that may be a function of the script, which offers no real function for Calypso.

    Final Thoughts

    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    The sad part about ‘Kraven The Hunter’ is that Aaron Taylor-Johnson’s fur-clad killer might have made a formidable nemesis for the current Tom Holland iteration of Spider-Man (in fact, Kraven was allegedly the back-up plan for ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ if the multiversal thing didn’t work out). But this laughable movie all but ensures that this version of Kraven won’t cross over into Spidey’s corner of the MCU, despite the handful of painfully obvious Easter eggs scattered throughout the film.

    As we noted above, we can only hope that the seven-year excursion into mediocrity that was the Sony Spider-Man Universe Not Featuring Spider-Man, which began in 2018 with ‘Venom,’ ends here with Kraven’s first and last hunt. The whole idea – to create a universe of movies starring Spider-Man villains without having Spider-Man show up in them – was a misfire from the beginning, the brainchild of two producers (Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach) desperate to hang onto whatever piece of the Marvel pie they could. Nearly half a billion dollars in production costs and six films later, their slice of that pie is moldy and spoiled and needs to go into the trash.

    ‘Kraven The Hunter’ receives 2.5 out of 10 stars.

    IhJWggEGUlOpETHULj3r6

    What is the plot of ‘Kraven The Hunter’?

    The son (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) of a Russian crime lord (Russell Crowe) rejects his father’s empire and sets out to track down criminals on his own and enact justice upon them, using his enhanced powers to make himself a feared and powerful hunter of men.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Kraven The Hunter’?

    • Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven
    • Ariana DeBose as Calypso Ezili
    • Fred Hechinger as Dmitri Smerdyakov / The Chameleon
    • Alessandro Nivola as Aleksei Sytsevich / Rhino
    • Christopher Abbott as the Foreigner
    • Russell Crowe as Nikolai Kravinoff
    'Kraven the Hunter' opens in theaters in October.
    ‘Kraven the Hunter’ opens in theaters in October.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in Sony’s Spider-Man Universe:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Kraven the Hunter’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Aaron Taylor-Johnson Movies on Amazon

    Zb48SmxI
  • Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Tom Hardy Starring in ‘Blood on Snow’

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

    Preview:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Who else is working on the movie?

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

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

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

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

    De72hFALTbfeHu8G2o57k3

    What other Nesbø adaptations are in the works?

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

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

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

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Venom: The Last Dance’ and ‘Kraven the Hunter’:

    Buy ‘Venom’ Movies on Amazon

    a5r7Q87j
  • ‘Dune: Part Two’ Delayed to 2024

    Timothee Chalamet as Paul Atreides in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Two,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    Timothee Chalamet as Paul Atreides in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Two,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Niko Tavernise. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    The impact of the writers and actors’ strikes continue to be felt in Hollywood. As studio representatives and the Writers Guild/SAG-AFTRA (the latter of which represents performers) argue in the press and over social media about fair contracts, the big companies are facing the prospect of releasing expensive titles without name stars available to promote them.

    So, what are they doing? Delaying the movies, of course! The latest to push their plans back to next year is Warner Bros., which has just announced a big shift for ‘Dune: Part Two’ to March next year.

    XBfOVvaBHpE472vRjA6LC2

    What’s happening with ‘Dune: Part Two’?

    Director/Writer/Producer Denis Veilleneuve on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Two,' a Warner Bros. Pictures
    Director/Writer/Producer Denis Veilleneuve on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Two,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Niko Tavernise. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Director Denis Villeneuve’s giant science fiction action epic, the follow-up to 2021’s successful first entry, and the continued adaptation of Frank Herbert’s sprawling tome, had been set for a November 3rd theatrical release.

    That’s a prime spot, which would have allowed the movie a splashy festival launch with stars such as Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya, Florence Pugh, Austin Butler and Rebecca Ferguson, plus plenty of time for them to hit the press rounds to promote it (as a matter of some irony, big UK publication Empire has just launched its exclusive covers showcasing the movie).

    Florence Pugh as Princess Irulan in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Two,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    Florence Pugh as Princess Irulan in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Two,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Niko Tavernise. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    And it positions ‘Dune: Part Two’ as an awards player, hoping to replicate the success of the first part –– which scored 10 Oscar nominations and won six.

    With a shift to March 15th, 2024, it’s unlikely to qualify for next year’s Oscars (that, though, remains to be seen, since, like TV awards the Emmys, the Oscars could shift themselves if the strikes continue).

    Related Article: Next Monsterverse Movie is ‘Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire’

    What other movies are affected?

    ‘Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire’ is in production right now and will be in theaters on March 15th next year.
    ‘Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire’ is in production right now and will be in theaters on March 15th next year. Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures.

    And ‘Dune’s shift means some moving around for movies that had already claimed 2024 release slots on Warner Bros.’ calendar: ‘Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire’ had been sitting on the March 15th date but will now stomp off to April 12th.

    That in turn means that animated Tolkien movie ‘The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim’ is also on the move. It will now arrive on December 13th, 2024.

    Oddly, Warner Bros. is holding firm with three other movies on its schedule, all of which are set for just the month after ‘Dune’s release.

    Timothée Chalamet as Willy Wonka in 'Wonka.'
    Timothée Chalamet as Willy Wonka in ‘Wonka.’ Photo by Eric Charbonneau.

    So far, musical ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory‘ prequel ‘Wonka’ (which also stars Chalamet), is staying on December 15th, superhero sequel ‘Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom’ remains set for December 20th, while stage musical adaptation ‘The Color Purple’ will still –– for now –– come out on December 25th (that one at least has the advantage of media megastar Oprah Winfrey available to spread the word). But according to a report from Variety, it’s too early to count out delays for those movies also.

    The Warner Bros. titles join a long list of films that have seen their release dates moved –– Sony is shifting the strategy for based-on-truth GameStop stock comedy drama ‘Dumb Money’, going from a single wide release to a platform that ramps up starting in Los Aneles and New York on September 15th, while the likes of ‘Kraven the Hunter’ and animated sequel ‘Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse’ are also moving (though the latter is likely due more to its creators finessing the story and animation rather than strike concerns).

    Timothee Chalamet as Paul Atreides and Zendaya as Chani in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Two,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    (L to R) Timothee Chalamet as Paul Atreides and Zendaya as Chani in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Two,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Niko Tavernise. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Dune: Part Two:’

    Buy ‘Dune’ On Amazon

    u2byWMnP
  • Donald Glover Starring in ‘Spider-Man’ Spin-Off

    Donald Glover attends the 74th Annual Golden Globe Awards
    Donald Glover attends the 74th Annual Golden Globe Awards at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on January 8, 2017 in Beverly Hills, California. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images.

    Donald Glover is finally ready for his Spider close-up.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, the ‘Community’ veteran and ‘Atlanta’ creator/star is on board to star in and produce a currently untitled movie featuring obscure ‘Spider-Man’ villain the Hypno-Hustler.

    So who is this little-known baddie? Created by Bill Mantlo (who also created Rocket Racoon, who has gone on to be a key part of Marvel’s ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ movies), and artist Frank Springer, Hypno-Hustler was a disco-era character who first appeared in ‘Peter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man’ No. 24 in 1978. His real name was Antoine Delsoin, the leader of a band called the Mercy Killers and used hypnosis technology in his instruments on his audience in order to rob them.

    It doesn’t sound like the source material for the greatest cinematic villain, but in Glover’s hands it should be something fun––he’s not a creative type who sticks to the basics.

    The new Spider-Universe movie is at an early stage right now; it doesn’t have an announced title but we do know who hatched the idea to turn the character into a movie: Myles Murphy, the son of actor and comedian Eddie Murphy, is on board to write the project.

    Glover’s history with ‘Spider-Man’ stretches back at least a decade, though. His ‘Community’ character Troy was seen wearing Spider-Man pajamas in the episode “Anthropology 101”. Fans jumped on the idea that he could be ideal to play Miles Morales in a future Spidey films.

    Donald Glover and Tom Holland in 'Spider-Man: Homecoming.'
    (L to R) Donald Glover and Tom Holland in ‘Spider-Man: Homecoming.’

    Their hopes were not realized––at least, on the live-action front––as Andrew Garfield was cast as Peter Parker in 2012’s ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’.

    Still, Glover did get to play Miles, albeit in voice form, in TV series ‘Ultimate Spider-Man’ in 2015.

    And while the live-action cinematic Spider-universe stayed Parker-central with 2017’s ‘Spider-Man: Homecoming,’ Glover appeared briefly as a character named Aaron David, who Spidey encountered while the man was trying to by advanced weapons from the Vulture’s crew. A deleted scene from the movie suggested that Aaron was Miles Morales’ uncle (Mahershala Ali voiced the character more officially in ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’).

    This is the latest development in Sony’s ever-expanding batch of movies based in the world of the web-slinger, even if most of them won’t feature the (Spider) man himself.

    With two ‘Venom’ films and ‘Morbius’ already out in the world, the future for Sony is certainly entangled in a web. Movies on the way include ‘Kraven the Hunter’, due October 6th next year, followed by ‘Madame Web’ on February 16th, 2024. In development, meanwhile, are ‘El Muerto’, a third ‘Venom’ and a slate of TV series set in the same universe.

    Marvel Comics' Hypno-Hustler.
    Marvel Comics’ Hypno-Hustler. Photo courtesy of Marvel.com.
    HKpQu4utDF6mlYTOoPbk85 LpZPZQTO
  • Sony Plans New ‘Karate Kid’ Movie

    Ralph Macchio as Daniel LaRusso and Pat Morita as Mr. Miyagi in 1984's 'The Karate Kid.'
    (L to R) Ralph Macchio as Daniel LaRusso and Pat Morita as Mr. Miyagi in 1984’s ‘The Karate Kid.’

    In amongst a batch of release date announcements, Sony quietly confirmed something that has been rumored for a while now. The studio is ready to get back in the ring for some more martial arts action, as another ‘Karate Kid’ movie is in the works.

    Rather than focusing on Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio), Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka) or the more recent version of ‘Karate Kid’ in 2010 that starred Jaden Smith and Jackie Chan, this will be an entirely new story – though still focusing on Kung Fu as in the 2010.

    According to an August report from Murphy’s Multiverse, the new movie would focus on a teenager named Li who, after a tragedy, moves from Beijing to Brooklyn with his mother, a doctor.

    Dealing with a life that has suddenly been uprooted, Li tries to make it work in New York, and meets a student at his new school named Mia. He ends up training her father, Victor, in Kung Fu, much against the wishes of his mother, who abhors violence and fighting. It’s certainly a different dynamic from the usual older-mentor-younger-student style of the previous movies.

    All of this, of course, is only rumor for now, though that report mentioned ‘Peter Rabbit’s Rob Lieber writing the script.

    Disappointingly, the movie won’t involve the team or cast from ‘Cobra Kai’, which has been expanding the ‘Karate Kid’ franchise for several years now on TV screens, first on YouTube and then Netflix.

    A fifth season of the show just landed on the streaming service and while we can understand that creators Jon Hurwitz, Josh Heald and Hayden Schlossberg might be too busy on the next season (and the other projects they’ve set up in the wake of ‘Cobra Kai’s success), we can’t help but wonder what that team would have done with a new movie, ramping up the continuing story of Daniel, Johnny and their various students.

    Hurwitz confirmed as much on Twitter, answering a fan who asked if he and the team would be part of the new movie.

    Assuming it all comes together, the new ‘Karate Kid’ will be out on June 7th, 2024.

    And that’s not the only movie landing a release date – or seeing one shift. Among the other announcements are an untitled based-on-truth ghost story launching on January 6th next year, followed by the next installment of the ‘Searching’ franchise, called ‘Missing’, on February 24th.

    Adam Driver-sci-fi movie ‘65’ is shifting to March 10th, while Sony/Marvel movie ‘Kraven the Hunter’ is on the move to 6th October.

    Fellow Sony/Marvel title ‘Madame Web’, meanwhile, is headed out of 2023 altogether, moving to February 16, 2024. The new animated ‘Garfield’ movie will open May 24th, 2024, while an untitled Sony/Marvel title is scheduled for July 12th, 2024.

    William Zabka as Johnny Lawrence and Ralph Macchio as Daniel LaRusso in 1984's 'The Karate Kid.'
    (L to R) William Zabka as Johnny Lawrence and Ralph Macchio as Daniel LaRusso in 1984’s ‘The Karate Kid.’
    12355