(Left) Logan Lerman as Jonah Heidelbaum on Prime Video’s ‘Hunters’ Season 2. Photo Credit: Jason LaVeris/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon Studios. (Right) Emily Bader attends the Netflix ‘People We Meet on Vacation’ Premiere at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood on January 06, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix.
Preview:
A reboot of ’13 Going on 30’ is in the works.
Emily Bader and Logan Lerman will star.
Netflix is behind the new movie.
Netflix is no stranger to new takes on cult favorite movies –– witness ‘He’s All That’, the company’s 2021 take on the 1999 rom-com classic ‘She’s All That.’
Now, the streaming service is putting together the team for an even more direct reboot, an update of 2004 Jennifer Garner vehicle ‘13 Going on 30’.
(Center) Jennifer Garner in ’13 Going on 30′. Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing.
The 2004 incarnation focused on Jenna Rink (Christa B. Allen), a 13-year-old girl who magically wakes up as her 30-year-old self and must navigate adulthood while rediscovering who she really is.
Garner played the grown-up version of the character, acting opposite the likes of Mark Ruffalo and Judy Greer.
Deadline’s report offers no details on how the new film might switch things up, if at all. But the new script comes from Hannah Marks with revisions by Flora Greeson.
A new ‘13 Going on 30’: the director talks
(L to R) Mark Ruffalo and Jennifer Garner in ’13 Going on 30′. Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing.
Here’s what Haley had to say about the new movie:
“‘13 Going on 30’ is one of those rare, perfect films. Funny, emotional, deeply human, with unforgettable performances from Jennifer Garner, Mark Ruffalo and Judy Greer. I’m a longtime fan, so stepping into this reimagining comes with tremendous responsibility.”
Jennifer Garner in ’13 Going on 30′. Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing.
Selected Movies and TV Shows Featuring Jennifer Garner:
(L to R) Selena Gomez, Steve Martin and Martin Short in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
Launching on Hulu on September 9th with the first three episodes (seven more debut once weekly), ‘Only Murders in the Building’ returns for a fifth season of mysterious death, quirky characters and, this time at least, the intersection of old mob ways with New York’s modern powerbrokers.
Steve Martin in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
For the last few years, ‘Only Murders in the Building’ has been a reliable provider of murder mystery mixed with the vaudeville comedy of Steve Martin and Martin Short, plus a side of eye-rolling millennial reactions from Selena Gomez. The combination has worked extremely well, providing confounding cases and lots of laughs.
The question is, however, does the fifth season do enough to differentiate itself from what has gone before, or should we be happy that we’re getting more of the same if it’s still entertaining?
Script and Direction
Renée Zellweger in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
There remains a lot to like about ‘Only Murders’ –– the scripts remain witty and the central mystery thorny –– in this case, the death of longtime doorman Lester (Teddy Coluca).
Yet there are some problems with the season this time around –– it’s just not as fresh as it usually feels. The new characters are fine, but compared to previous examples of guest casting, they just don’t have the same amount of zing.
The show’s direction remains on point –– but with the focus on the Arconia once more (even given some new locations discovered), there’s only so much you can do to keep it interesting.
Cast and Performances
Christoph Waltz in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
Martin, Short and Gomez are still great in the lead roles; the issue is that much of what they get to do here is a variation on previous work.
Naturally, Martin has some funny physical business, Short gets to be extra in all ways, and Gomez is still the best at a blend of vulnerability and heart, plus her ability to side-eye her older companions.
Of the new faces this year, Logan Lerman makes the most impact as a young billionaire, while the likes of Christoph Waltz and Renée Zellweger don’t get as much to, but have fun with their roles.
Final Thoughts
(L to R) Selena Gomez and Logan Lerman in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
‘Only Murders in the Building’ is definitely starting to show its age –– the concept only has so much flexibility in it.
It’s still a very fun show to watch, but its best days may now be behind it.
‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5 receives 65 out of 100.
Tea Leoni in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5. Photo: Disney/Patrick Harbron.
What’s the plot of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5?
After their beloved doorman, Lester (Teddy Coluca), dies under suspicious circumstances, Charles (Steve Martin), Oliver (Martin Short), and Mabel (Selena Gomez) refuse to believe it was an accident. Their investigation plunges them into the shadowy corners of New York and beyond — where the trio uncovers a dangerous web of secrets connecting powerful billionaires, old-school mobsters, and the mysterious residents of the Arconia.
The trio discovers a deeper divide between their storied city they thought they knew and the new New York evolving around them — one where the old mob fights to hold on as newer, even more dangerous players emerge.
Who stars in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 5?
Premiering on Prime Video on January 13th is the second season of the popular series ‘Hunters,’ which was created by David Weil.
Set in 1977 New York City, the series follows a group of elite Nazi hunters led by Jonah Heidelbaum (Logan Lerman), who discover that several escaped Nazi officers are conspiring to create a Fourth Reich in the United States.
Season two picks up after the events of season one, where Jonah’s mentor Meyer Offerman (Al Pacino) betrayed the team, it was revealed that The Colonel (Lena Olin) is really Eva Braun, and that Hitler is still alive!
Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Logan Lerman and Josh Radnor about their work on ‘Hunters’ Season 2, reuniting with the cast, putting the team back together, and hunting Hitler.
(L to R) Josh Radnor as Lonny Flash, Jerrika Hinton as Millie Morris, and Logan Lerman as Jonah Heidelbaum in Prime Video’s ‘Hunters’ Season 2. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon Studios.
You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Lerman, Radnor, Tiffany Boone, Louis Ozawa, and Greg Austin.
Moviefone: To begin with, can you both talk about where we will find your characters when Season 2 begins?
Logan Lerman: Jonah is a very different character at the beginning of this season. He’s dealing with the trauma of past events that have changed him, he’s burdened with the responsibility of it, and he’s also leading a double life. He’s trying to be a person, and he’s seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.
He sees that the end is near and that he can just go back to, hopefully being a person again. Just a regular old guy and having love in his life, being in school, and just living. But then he gets sucked back in and he’s having to manage his responsibilities as a hunter with his desire to lead a normal life.
Josh Radnor: Season two does take place two years after season one, but there’s also been a couple of years gap between seasons one and two for the viewer. So, in those two years, the hunters went off on a mission to Europe that seemed to have gone disastrously poorly. Lonnie was sober in season one but he’s fallen off the wagon. We find him in really not a good spot. His demons have got a hold of him again. He’s heartsick over an ill-fated romance with one of the hunters.
It seems like his career is actually going well, which is not always the best thing to happen when someone’s in the grip of addiction. So, it’s kind of like a recipe for disaster for him. He’s starting in a really low place and the hunters have kind of disbanded. They’re all over the place. So, once the team gets reassembled and this mission takes place, he’s able to pull himself somewhat out of this nosedive. But he starts in a really tough place.
MF: Logan, can you talk about Jonah’s partnership with Millie (Jerrika Hinton) and putting the team back together for this new mission?
LL: Jonah and Millie really spearhead the mission, the movement to execute their mission given in the first episode. A big part of this show is that element of getting the team back together, which has been done in action films and things like that. It’s fun playing with that element of this story. At the end of the day, this is an action, entertainment adventure kind of show. Those things are so well executed by David Weil and the creative team that we just got to go in there and have fun with it as actors.
Josh Radnor as Lonny Flash on Prime Video’s ‘Hunters’ Season 2. Credit: Christopher Saunders. Copyright: Amazon Prime Video.
MF: Josh, as an actor yourself, is it fun playing another actor and having the opportunity to poke fun at your own profession?
JR: It’s the best. I’m from Ohio, I’m from the Midwest. We’re taught to be very modest. It’s also fun to play this kind of mix. He’s this great mix of narcissism and insecurity. He’s both self-loathing and self-aggrandizing. He is grandiose and he is filled with shame. So, there’s all these great kind of tense inner conflicts that he has going on, and it’s fun to poke fun at actors.
MF: Finally, what has it been like for both of you to return for season two and reunite with the rest of the cast?
LL: It was great. I love these actors. I love them as people, my teammates, my friends, and my family now. So, getting together with them and getting to play with these characters and their dynamics and relationships, it’s just a joy. We had a really good time, all of us.
JR: We had such a good time and we all missed each other. For such a dark show, the themes of it are so dark and what we have to do is so crazy and violent. We just have a great time and we really missed each other. It was great because we also got to go to Prague and shoot for a month. So, it’s great when you get a job that you’re thrilled to have, but a bonus is, I love everyone I’m working with and they’re flying us to Europe to shoot. There are a lot of great things about this season.
Logan Lerman as Jonah Heidelbaum on Prime Video’s ‘Hunters’ Season 2. Photo Credit: Jason LaVeris/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon Studios.Prime Video’s ‘Hunters’ Season 2 premieres January 13th.
(L to R) Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Brad Pitt in Sony Pictures’ ‘Bullet Train.’
‘Bullet Train’, which opens in theaters today, looks to add some violent fun to a summer movie season that hasn’t had too many original films on its schedule.
Which isn’t to say that the movie is completely original, as Zak Olkewicz’ script adapts Kôtarô Isaka’s novel ‘Maria Beetle’.
Anchored by a laconic but funny performance from Brad Pitt, ‘Bullet Train’ is the story of Ladybug, an assassin who got out of the game and sought out a therapist after bad luck seemed to haunt his every job. Now, he’s back and looking for a relatively easier job for his first new assignment.
(L to R) Brad Pitt and Sandra Bullock star in ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield. Copyright (C) 2022 CTMG. All Rights Reserved.
His handler, Maria (Sandra Bullock, who is primarily heard over a phone line) assures him that grabbing a briefcase from a bullet train and getting off at the next station should offer him no real challenge.
Of course, it doesn’t work out that way at all. Turns out, the briefcase has connections to the kidnapping of a lethal crime lord’s son (Michael Shannon is the boss known as “White Death”, while Logan Lerman is his slacker kid), and a variety of other assassins.
Prime among them are Lemon (Brian Tyree Henry) and Tangerine (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), adoptive siblings who are also two of the most notorious hitmen around, who have rescued Lerman’s character and retrieved the ransom money – which is in the briefcase Ladybug has been sent to grab.
Elsewhere on the train is Kimura (Andrew Koji), looking for revenge on the person who injured his son, The Prince (Joey King), a young woman who uses her youth as a weapon as much as any gun or knife, The Wolf (Benito A Martínez Ocasio), with his own vengeful quest and The Hornet (Zazie Beetz), with a specific target for her poisonous talents.
Brad Pitt stars in ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield. Copyright: (C) 2022 CTMG. All Rights Reserved.
With Leitch in charge of the chaos (it’s worth remembering that he, along with Chad Stahelski, helped turn Keanu Reeves into a badass assassin for the first ‘John Wick’ movie), ‘Bullet Train’ is naturally crammed with inventive action. Leitch has spent his career performing stunts, coordinating them and now directing them and he knows how to craft a fun sequence that in places has echoes of Jackie Chan’s use of props as weapons.
There has also clearly been a lot of training involved, so the cast (and their stunt teams) throw themselves into the various fights and plot turns. It’s diverting to see the likes of Brian Tyree Henry, not normally known for his action work, give it their all.
Leitch and co., meanwhile have built a slick-looking set that keeps the action condensed and focused, cinematographer Jonathan Sela’s camera roaming the aisles and, later in the movie, heading outside the train to follow the combat as characters
Where it all goes off the rails (literally, at one point) is in the characters. Though some are handed backgrounds (Taylor-Johnson and Henry in particular), mostly the movie lets fists fill in the details.
(L to R) Bryan Tyree Henry and Aaron Taylor-Johnson star in Sony’s ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield.
The problem with prioritizing fight scenes over story is that the latter can’t completely carry the former, and when you have an entire sequence explaining how a water bottle came to be crucial to the plot and yet seems to rely on coincidence to make it work, you’re in trouble.
This is a movie that is all surface and little substance, and while that’s not the sort of dilemma that troubles summer movie audiences too much, ‘Bullet Train’ starts to feel like a numbing collection of traits, quirks and insults, like a movie conceived by some teenagers who figured they could write the ultimate script with all the stabbing, shooting, punches and kicks they could put into one movie.
Cliches crop up all over the place, including the henchman who show up at every station to threaten Ladybug and co., snarling about handing over the briefcase (which serves as a McGuffin in more ways than one).
And given the Japanese setting, it leans heavily on cliched iconography and the movie is relatively light on Asian faces. When they do appear, they’re given stereotypical roles and dialogue, while the Westerners (there a few fake British accents here among the Americans) get the lion’s share of the screen time.
(L to R) Bryan Tyree Henry and Brad Pitt star Sony’s in ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield.
Everyone is clearly having a blast beating each other up or figuring out how to survive as the train speeds to its destination, but while that’s fun for a while, it doesn’t always translate to the whole journey of the movie.
Pitt makes a solid stab at breathing life into Ladybug, who is obsessed with fate and luck, and really would rather not get into scraps (but is very adept when he does). And his chemistry with old real-life friend Bullock overcomes the fact that she’s largely off screen.
Likewise Taylor-Johnson and Henry, who generate real squabbling sibling energy but can’t quite make their characters feel more than archetypes. And King (despite some accent issues) makes for a cold, calculating killer.
Shannon gets to parlay his steely menace effectively, making the most of a relatively brief screen time allotment.
Brad Pitt stars in ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield. Copyright:(C) 2022 CTMG. All Rights Reserved.
The likes of Ocasio (normally found performing in the music sphere as Bad Bunny) and Hiroyuki Sanada (who plays Koji’s character’s father) are largely wasted in nothing roles.
There are also a couple of big celebrity cameos that we won’t spoil here, and the reveal of Beetz’ character is at least entertaining.
Imagine a crossbreed of Guy Ritchie’s repartee-filled early gangster films with the sort of action-heavy titles for which Leitch has become known and you’ve got the idea for this movie. Some of the comedy works, and a lot of the fight scenes are great, but ‘Bullet Train’ runs out of steam.
‘Bullet Train’ receives 3 out of 5 stars.
Brad Pitt stars in ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield. Copyright: (C) 2022 CTMG. All Rights Reserved.
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Brad Pitt stars in ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield. Copyright: (C) 2022 CTMG. All Rights Reserved.
If you’re an assassin by trade, can you really claim that it’s bad luck that people keep dying around you? If you’re Brad Pitt’s character in upcoming action comedy thriller ‘Bullet Train’, you might actually have a point.
The latest trailer for the movie is now online and is full of all the Pitt vs. assassin action you could hope for. It opens with Pitt’s Ladybug – a title given to him by his handle, Maria Beetle (Sandra Bullock), in the hopes that it might mean good luck – ticking off the ways that previous gigs have gone badly wrong. And even times when he’s not actively trying to murder someone, the bodies keep piling up. He’s stressed and looking for a less death-laden life.
Dispatched on what would seem to be a routine, relatively harmless mission to pick up an important briefcase on a Bullet Train in Japan, Ladybug hopes for a quieter time of things. Fate, however, may have other plans, as this latest job puts him on a collision course with lethal adversaries from around the globe – all with connected, yet conflicting, objectives – on the world’s fastest train… And he’s got to figure out how to get off.
Cue fists flying, swords swinging and Pitt nailing Aaron Tylor-Johnson with a bottle of fizzy water. Taylor-Johnson plays Tangerine, one half of a deadly duo with Brian Tyree Henry’s Lemon, with the pair after the very same suitcase. And they are not the only dangerous passengers onboard.
With David Leitch, the stuntman-turned-filmmaker who kickstarted his directing career with ‘John Wick’ and has since made movies including ‘Atomic Blonde’ and ‘Deadpool 2’ in charge here, the movie looks stylish and slyly funny, especially that moment in the quiet car (and Pitt punching a mascot who refuses to give up the case).
And, because this is Leitch we’re talking about, you can naturally expect a lot of inventive action within the cramped confines of the train, as his 87 Eleven stunt team goes to work finding new ways to create chaos.
There’s also a hint that Pitt and some of others (those left standing by the time the train reaches its destination) might actually end up joining forces to combat Shannon’s murderous men. It’s certainly more dangerous than the threat of a cancelled train or a blocked toilet stinking up a whole carriage.
‘Bullet Train’ will pull into theaters on August 5th.
(L to R) Brad Pitt and Sandra Bullock star in ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield. Copyright (C) 2022 CTMG. All Rights Reserved.Brad Pitt stars in ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield. Copyright: (C) 2022 CTMG. All Rights Reserved.Brad Pitt stars in ‘Bullet Train.’ Photo: Scott Garfield. Copyright: (C) 2022 CTMG. All Rights Reserved.
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Logan Lerman is reportedly in talks to star in Jordan Peele‘s Amazon Nazi-hunting series “The Hunt.”
The series is set in the late ’70s: Lerman would star as Jonah Heidelbaum, who joins The Hunters, a covert group tracking down Nazis who now live in America under assumed identities — and who are plotting to build a Fourth Reich in the U.S.
The series is from David Weil, who’ll serve as showrunner with Nikki Toscano (“24: Legacy,” “Bates Motel” and ABC’s “Revenge”).
Per Collider, Alfonso Gomez-Rejon is expected to direct the first episode, which is slated to start production this February in New York. His films include the indie “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl” and the remake of “The Town That Dreaded Sundown.”
Lerman’s other upcoming projects: “Shirley,” a film about “The Haunting of Hill House” author Shirley Jackson starring Elisabeth Moss; and the father-son drama “End of Sentence” with John Hawkes.
And, of course, the ever-busy Peele is prepping his “Twilight Zone” series and “Us,” his follow-up to “Get Out.”