Tag: phoebe-dynevor

  • ‘Thrash’ Interview: Phoebe Dynevor, Djimon Hounsou and More

    G52XdI22

    Premiering on Netflix April 10th is the new survival thriller ‘Thrash’, which was directed by Tommy Wirkola (‘Violent Night’), and stars Phoebe Dynevor (‘Inheritance’), Djimon Hounsou (‘Guardians of the Galaxy’) and Whitney Peak (‘Trap House’).

    E2MAzUVyJI6qlNRkgbnQa3
    (L to R) Phoebe Dynevor, Whitney Peak and Djimon Hounsou star in 'Thrash'.
    (L to R) Phoebe Dynevor, Whitney Peak and Djimon Hounsou star in ‘Thrash’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Phoebe Dynevor, Djimon Hounsou and Whitney Peak about their work on ‘Thrash’, Hounsou’s first reaction to the screenplay, the relationship between Dynevor and Peak’s characters, and the challenges of filming in water.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews.

    Related Article: Director Neil Burger and Rhys Ifans Talk Action Thriller ‘Inheritance’

    (L to R) Djimon Hounsou as Dr. Dale Edwards and Whitney Peak as Dakota in 'Thrash'. Photo: Ben King/Netflix © 2026.
    (L to R) Djimon Hounsou as Dr. Dale Edwards and Whitney Peak as Dakota in ‘Thrash’. Photo: Ben King/Netflix © 2026.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Djimon, what was your first reaction to the screenplay and your character, and did you understand his motivations and how you wanted to play him immediately?

    Djimon Hounsou: Yes. My first reaction was a yes. My first reaction was, hopefully, we can bring some awareness about how we’re affecting climate change. That mixed with a bit of a fictional story and a dynamic that plays with these two young ladies. It made it a potentially fun movie and realistic in so many ways as well.

    Phoebe Dynevor as Lisa in 'Thrash'. Photo: Ben King/Netflix © 2026.
    Phoebe Dynevor as Lisa in ‘Thrash’. Photo: Ben King/Netflix © 2026.

    MF: Phoebe, can you talk about the urgency of the situation your character finds herself in at the beginning of the movie, and what she’s willing to do to protect herself and her unborn baby?

    Phoebe Dynevor: I think that was the magic of the character and the script for me was this idea of a mother’s instinct and doing whatever they can to save their child. We pictured that (famous) image of the woman holding up the car to save her child. Lisa has no choice but to go. But you can’t control labor, you can’t control when your child is going to be born. It happens and she must face it. So, it’s really about survival and her baby, their survival together. There’s a lot of challenges she must face. It’s like one thing after the next and then balancing the levels of childbirth and how the contractions get more intense, and her surroundings get more intense too. So that was fun to play.

    Whitney Peak as Dakota in 'Thrash'. Photo: Netflix © 2026.
    Whitney Peak as Dakota in ‘Thrash’. Photo: Netflix © 2026.

    MF: Whitney, can you talk about the friendship that forms between Lisa and Dakota, and what it was like creating that on screen with Phoebe?

    Whitney Peak: I think, in a weird way, yes, Dakota does bond with Lisa, but I think a big part of it is how much she relates to Lisa’s baby, in a weird way. Because there’s that scene where Lisa’s talking to her baby, and she’s saying, “It’s not safe yet. It’s not time to come out yet so stay inside.” I think that’s been Dakota’s internal monologue the entire time. I think that relationship really does help her heal herself in a lot of ways.

    Phoebe Dynevor as Lisa in 'Thrash'. Photo: Ben King/Netflix © 2026.
    Phoebe Dynevor as Lisa in ‘Thrash’. Photo: Ben King/Netflix © 2026.

    MF: Finally, Phoebe, what was it like for you to constantly film in water and how challenging was the production?

    PD: I was once told by an actor to never shoot in water and now I know why. It was a challenging experience, but it was in a great way. We shot in Melbourne in the middle of winter, so it was cold, but it was fun. The rain and the wind, that was all real, that was all happening. Those were machines that would pump that into our face, so we were acting against those challenges too. But for most of the shoot, we were in a tank with the whole crew. So, everyone was in their wetsuits. We were all in it together. It wasn’t like the actors were going through it and everyone else was just watching. It was very much a team effort.

    A scene from 'Thrash'. Photo: Netflix © 2026.
    A scene from ‘Thrash’. Photo: Netflix © 2026.

    What is the plot of ‘Thrash’?

    When a Category 5 hurricane decimates a coastal town, the storm surge brings devastation, chaos, and something far more frightening: hungry sharks.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Thrash’?

    • Phoebe Dynevor as Lisa Fields
    • Whitney Peak as Dakota Edwards
    • Djimon Hounsou as Dale Edwards
    • Alyla Browne as Dee Olsen
    • Stacy Clausen as Ron Olsen
    • Dante Ubaldi as Will Olsen
    Phoebe Dynevor as Lisa in 'Thrash'. Photo: Ben King/Netflix © 2026.
    Phoebe Dynevor as Lisa in ‘Thrash’. Photo: Ben King/Netflix © 2026.

    List of Movies Featuring Sharks:

    Buy Djimon Hounsou Movies On Amazon

  • ‘Inheritance’ Interview: Neil Burger and Rhys Ifans

    FvJL71lT

    Opening in theaters on January 24th is the new action thriller ‘Inheritance‘, which director Neil Burger (‘Limitless’ and ‘The Marsh King’s Daughter’) shot completely on an iPhone, and stars Phoebe Dynevor (‘Fair Play’ and ‘Bridgerton’) and Rhys Ifans (‘Venom: The Last Dance’ and ‘House of the Dragon’).

    Related Article: Neil Burger Talks ‘The Marsh King’s Daughter’ Starring Daisy Ridley

    (Left) 'Inheritance' director Neil Burger. Photo Credit: Chris Chapman. (Right) Rhys Ifans in Neil Burger’s 'Inheritance'. Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    (Left) ‘Inheritance’ director Neil Burger. Photo Credit: Chris Chapman. (Right) Rhys Ifans in Neil Burger’s ‘Inheritance’. Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Neil Burger and Rhys Ifans about their work on ‘Inheritance’, developing the screenplay, Burger’s shooting style, the challenges and benefits of filming on an iPhone, Ifans and Phoebe Dynevor’s characters’ estranged father and daughter relationship, and working with the actors on set.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews.

    Phoebe Dynevor in Neil Burger’s 'Inheritance'. Photo courtesy of Angelo Dominic Sesto. An IFC Films Release.
    Phoebe Dynevor in Neil Burger’s ‘Inheritance’. Photo courtesy of Angelo Dominic Sesto. An IFC Films Release.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Neil, can you talk about conceiving the idea for the film over COVID and the process of developing the screenplay?

    Neil Burger: Well, I’d read a New York Times article about a reporter early in COVID, like in April of 2020, going from Serbia all the way to France. The borders are supposed to be open. Suddenly there’s checkpoints with guards with guns. There’s nobody on the street. I was like, “I want to see that, and I don’t want to just do a documentary about it. I want to set a story in it.” So, I began crafting a story, and then the world changed, and the world opened again a little bit, but I still had this story, and I still had this desire to see the new world as it was. I felt like the story was still valid in that way. So that’s where it came from. Then the idea of shooting on an iPhone went hand in hand with that because when you go in with a film crew, you are disruptive. You’re big and you’re noisy and you draw attention to yourself. People are looking at you. I wanted the opposite. I wanted to see how the world was at that point in time. I wanted to see what the new normal were. To do that, we had to be completely under the radar. I thought, what better way, it looks like a friend filming another friend with their iPhone. Everybody’s doing that. So that was the idea. It wasn’t as a gimmick. It wasn’t merely as a substitution to a motion picture camera, but it was because it gave us access. It meant that we could walk through a crowded Cairo market, and nobody would look at us.

    MF: As a filmmaker, can you talk about the pros and cons of shooting a movie of this scale on an iPhone?

    NB: Well, the pros are that you do have access. You can go anywhere. You can also go right up against somebody’s face and then down to their hands. It’s so mobile. We didn’t use any kind of stabilization or lens or anything like that, and it still looks beautiful. We mucked a little bit with the insides of it. We did, however, shoot on one single lens, the middle lens of the (iPhone) 13. It’s a 26-millimeter lens because the other lenses did not have the resolution that we wanted but the middle lens really does. We’ve blown it up to 60-foot screens, and it looks beautiful. But the other lenses didn’t quite do it, and so then it was like, “Okay, well, we’re just going to embrace that. We’re going to shoot it on one lens.” So, when Rhys, who plays Sam, is talking to (Phoebe) on one side of the street, we don’t go to her on the other side of the street. She’s tiny in the background. That was just like, that’s what it is. That’s the way we’re going to do it. We sort of take that risk as filmmakers and do it that way. So, there were a little bit of lighting things that happened in certain kind of low-light situations, like little bright lights would bounce around in the lens, which we had to remove digitally. But in general, I loved it. I thought it was so refreshing and liberating. I’ve done big movies before and I’ve done big stuff since then, and it’s always like, “Could we move the camera into his hands?” It was like, “Well, the camera’s going to cast a shadow, and we’d have to take out the wall or move that desk.” Then with this, you could just put your hand in and do it. It’s so fast and so fun. It was great.

    Rhys Ifans in Neil Burger’s 'Inheritance'. Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    Rhys Ifans in Neil Burger’s ‘Inheritance’. Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    MF: Rhys, what was your first reaction to the screenplay and the idea of shooting this movie on an iPhone?

    Rhys Ifans: Well, I mean what excited me mostly was of course, the screenplay. But in this instance, the exciting thing for me was one, working with Neil of course, and working with Neil in this very new way for both me and for him, which was shooting it all on ostensibly an iPhone and just what that would do to the working creative process. Then it turned out we both thoroughly enjoyed it. It was very kinetic, immediate, exciting and quick. It took a bit of getting used to. I mean, I say a bit, it took a day or two to get used to and then it was a real thrill. Then coupled with worldwide travel and adventure. When you’re shooting on an iPhone, you get less respect from the public because they don’t think you’re making a film. They just think you’re one of them, which is fantastic. Constantly, there was a sense of this could all go wrong, which for me was fantastic because it gave the whole thing a danger and an edge. It felt like in some instances, a little bit like street theater with a minimal crew. I say minimal crew, I mean generally a crew can be up to 100 plus people, and we had 10, maybe. 10 very skilled technicians. It was great to work with this technology that of course we’re all using, but it was great to be involved with it, with it being in the hands of a great filmmaker like Neil, who knows his way around the grammar of cinema. Those two things, that was the appeal for me, certainly.

    MF: Rhys, did shooting the movie on an iPhone change your acting approach at all, or was it the same as other movies you’ve worked on with normal film or video cameras?

    RI: It’s funny. It doesn’t change your approach necessarily, but it does change your attitude. On a regular movie, you will come in, you’ll rehearse, then you’ll walk away, and they’ll light the scene and set up the cameras. There’s a lot of waiting time, which in some ways is a good thing. But in other ways it depletes any energy you might discover in rehearsal or during a take, and then they turn around for close-ups, and so it’s a longer process. This felt a lot more immediate in the sense that we could shoot the whole scene, cut and immediately shoot the whole scene again. So, you’re not dropping the ball. It felt a little bit in some ways like a rehearsal room in a theater where you run the scene and the director goes, “That was great. Okay, do that again”, and immediately you do that again. So, what it gave Neil, I guess, was a huge kind of palette in the edit that he could choose from in terms of takes that he liked and that he would ultimately think would serve the story he ends up telling in the edit. So yes, I mean very tiring and exhausting in the sense that you’re constantly feeding the beast, the beast being the film. But I found it very exciting, and a very exciting way to work and a method I’d really love to explore again, in terms of what it does to performance. Then I think the other thing that really helped was of course any crowds or extras you might see in your periphery in this film are real people. Real people in that context are the greatest actors in the world because they don’t know they’re acting and that’s what we all strive to arrive at. So that really fed in the fact that we were in these real situations, and somehow made the situation itself feel realer and more urgent.

    Phoebe Dynevor in Neil Burger’s 'Inheritance'. Photo courtesy of Angelo Dominic Sesto. An IFC Films Release.
    Phoebe Dynevor in Neil Burger’s ‘Inheritance’. Photo courtesy of Angelo Dominic Sesto. An IFC Films Release.

    MF: Neil, in addition to shooting on an iPhone, you also implemented an experimental shooting style with minimal rehearsals and minimal camera setups. What was it like for you as a filmmaker to work in that way?

    NB: Well, the story is very scripted. It’s a thriller, so it must have all its puzzle-pieces parts in order. So, there’s no improv, yet we were willing to kind of be in situations that were loose. We did rehearse beforehand, but then when we got there, we literally would get ready at a hotel and then we would walk down the street to where we were going to shoot. The crew would fall away. It was just me and the cameraman and then the sound man even staying further back, and then Phoebe or Phoebe and Rhys. I would walk to a place in the street, and we had discussed it, then I would walk away, and I’d get a block away and I would just go, “Come on,” and they would start walking and they would do their thing and they were so great. We didn’t do conventional film coverage. There was no wide shot and then an over-the-shoulder shot and the closeup. We didn’t have time for that because even on an iPhone, the more you stood in one place, you were going to eventually attract attention, and I didn’t want that attention. So, we came up with ways to do it in a very caught-live sort of feel and a stolen feel. So, it has a new visual language to it, which also changed how the actors acted, which was great. They had to always be in character because they had to be ready for anything that happened.

    MF: Rhys, can you talk about the estranged father-daughter relationship between Sam and Maya, and working with Phoebe Dynevor on that relationship?

    RI: Well, I mean Phoebe’s just a joy to work with. We didn’t know each other, but we’ve got friends in common and she’s just very available as an actor. Phoebe similarly just embraced the process. It’s not a process you can resist in any way, shape or form. You do have to kind of jump out of the airplane and hope the parachute will open at some point. She absolutely did that. I just got to watch the film a couple of days ago for the first time. Of course, my character isn’t present in India, and I was always very jealous that they all got to go to India. So, I mean, that’s the other thing with the film, it really does feel like a wonderfully exciting kind of travel log. But she was just a joy and a thrill and fun to work with. I think with a process like this, it’s important that it’s fun and comes from a place of fun, you’re relaxed and then you’re to make yourself available, fresh and playful with the other actor or character. We’ve found that I hope.

    Phoebe Dynevor in Neil Burger’s 'Inheritance'. Photo courtesy of Angelo Dominic Sesto. An IFC Films Release.
    Phoebe Dynevor in Neil Burger’s ‘Inheritance’. Photo courtesy of Angelo Dominic Sesto. An IFC Films Release.

    MF: Finally, Neil, can you talk about casting Phoebe and Rhys and what it was like working with them on set?

    NB: Well, Phoebe we had seen in ‘Bridgerton’, and she was already cast when ‘Fair Play’ came out, but she’s playing a more proper, kind of put-together, conservative character, and here she’s very badass. She’s troubled and she’s self-destructive, and she can do it. I think it’s a Phoebe that people haven’t seen before and they’re going to be knocked out when they see it. Rhys has a very affable quality to it, and I wanted somebody who you looked at and you’re like, “I like that guy,” even though it turns out he has secrets that she spends the rest of the movie unraveling. But what was great about Rhys also was that he loved this methodology, and he normalized it for everybody else, including her. I mean, she was game, but it was stressful and weird. It was like, “Wait, we’re going to just shoot on the airplane without permission?” It was like, “Yeah,” and he was like, “It’s great. We’re going to do it.” So, they had a great mentor-protege, father-daughter relationship and good chemistry in that way. I just do want to say one more thing, and it is that this movie, we sort of can’t believe what we did on this iPhone. We created this international thriller, that goes around the world, New York, Cairo, Delhi, Seoul, and back to New York. There’ve been other shows that have been shot on iPhones, but this is really the first international thriller that has that kind of scope, that has that kind of excitement of an international thriller but done on an iPhone. It’s unique, and we feel very proud that we’re the first ones to do it.

    What is the plot of ‘Inheritance’?

    A young woman (Phoebe Dynevor) is drawn into an international conspiracy after discovering her father (Rhys Ifans) is a spy.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Inheritance’?

    Director Neil Burger's 'Inheritance' opens in theaters on January 24th. Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    Director Neil Burger’s ‘Inheritance’ opens in theaters on January 24th. Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    List of Neil Burger Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Inheritance’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Neil Burger Movies on Amazon

  • Movie Review: ‘Fair Play’

    Alden Ehrenreich as Luke and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in 'Fair Play.'
    (L to R) Alden Ehrenreich as Luke and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in ‘Fair Play.’ Cr. Sergej Radovic / Courtesy of Netflix.

    Opening in theaters on September 29th before streaming on Netflix October 6th, ‘Fair Play’ pokes into the pressure on couples who work together, and what can happen to both of them when the level changes dramatically.

    The new dramatic thriller from writer/director Chloe Domont received strong notices out of this year’s Sundance Film Festival, and is all together very well made, but does somewhat lose the plot towards the end.

    D5IueCYbZ39ETkX5lp9iC1

    What’s the story of ‘Fair Play’?

    Alden Ehrenreich as Luke and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in 'Fair Play.'
    (L to R) Alden Ehrenreich as Luke and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in ‘Fair Play.’ Cr. Courtesy of Netflix.

    When a coveted promotion at a cutthroat financial firm arises, once supportive exchanges between lovers Emily (Phoebe Dynevor) and Luke (Alden Ehrenreich) begin to sour into something more sinister.

    As the power dynamics irrevocably shift in their relationship, the couple must face the true price of success and the unnerving limits of ambition.

    Soon, destructive gender dynamics are pitting partners against each other in a world that is transforming faster than the rules can keep up.

    Who else is in ‘Fair Play’?

    Eddie Marsan as Campbell in 'Fair Play.'
    Eddie Marsan as Campbell in ‘Fair Play.’ Cr. Sergej Radovic / Courtesy of Netflix.

    The movie’s cast also includes Eddie Marsan, Rich Sommer, Sebastian De Souza, Sia Alipour, Brandon Bassir, Jamie Wilkes, Geraldine Somerville and Patrick Fischler.

    Related Article: Alden Ehrenreich is the Latest Addition to Disney+ Series ‘Ironheart’

    What works about ‘Fair Play’?

    Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in 'Fair Play.'
    Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in ‘Fair Play.’ Cr. Sergej Radovic / Courtesy of Netflix.

    ‘Fair Play’ may represent Chloe Domont’s feature directorial debut, but she brings to the table a wealth of experience on shorts, writing other movies and TV work, including HBO’s ‘Ballers’ and, perhaps mostly fittingly for the new film’s tricky financial shark pool, ‘Billions’.

    For the vast majority of its running time, ‘Fair Play’ is a superbly crafted look at a couple whose relationship is tested to breaking point and beyond.

    As Emily, Dynevor (possibly best known for the first season of ‘Bridgerton’) is by turns fierce and fragile, driven and devastated, and her chemistry with Ehrenreich, who plays her partner, Luke, is impressive from the start.

    They work at the same financial firm, but because of the strict rules against fraternization, they haven’t told any of their colleagues they’ve been dating.

    Rich Sommer as Paul, Sia Alipour as Arjun and Sebastian De Souza as Rory in 'Fair Play.'
    (L to R) Rich Sommer as Paul, Sia Alipour as Arjun and Sebastian De Souza as Rory in ‘Fair Play.’ Cr. Slobodan Pikula / Courtesy of Netflix.

    We meet the pair at Luke’s brother’s wedding, in the full blush of love, sneaking off to a washroom to have lusty sex –– or at least start to, before realizing that Emily’s lipstick is smeared on Luke’s face, and therefore her clothes –– and sharing a laugh as they try to clean up.

    Then Emily finds an engagement ring and Luke proposes, this seemingly happy couple’s good news cemented when rumors spread that Luke will be promoted at the firm.

    Except that’s not what happens, as Emily turns out to be the chosen golden one of firm boss Campbell (an excellent Eddie Marsan, who often plays intense working-class types or sniveling underlings, here channeling the former as a tough corporate type).

    Domont, working with her cast, the sound team and composer Brian McOmber, slowly raise the temperature on the relationship, and not for the better. Despite his initial protestations of support, you can see in Ehrenreich’s eyes that Luke feels diminished and unhappy at the news that the woman he loves will now be his superior.

    The pair’s happy connection begins to wither quickly as Emily embraces her new status and Luke’s attitude congeals. Insulted by her promises to help him secure his own promotion, he turns to the work of a business guru (Patrick Fischler) whose advice runs dangerously close to those of “pick up artists” who claim men can convince women to sleep with them by changing their worldview.

    It’s through these concepts that Luke aims to turn around his fortunes, but it also unleashes seething jealousy from within –– and Emily is his primary target. At least until things go wrong on a trade…

    Alden Ehrenreich as Luke in 'Fair Play.'
    Alden Ehrenreich as Luke in ‘Fair Play.’ Cr. Courtesy of Netflix.

    It’s so perfectly pitched throughout most of the film, the tension rising as the soundtrack intensified, and the drama begins to heighten. The portrayal of the cutthroat world of finance is a keen one, without dipping too far into the tropes established by the likes of ‘Glengarry Glen Ross’, ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’ and ‘Boiler Room’.

    Outside of the office, the movie puts a fresh spin on such erotic-tinged thrillers as ‘Fatal Attraction’ and ‘Indecent Proposal’: Emily and Luke are under such believable pressure that you completely buy one or both of them cracking under it.

    It’s not hard to see how this movie scored a Grand Jury Prize nomination at this year’s Sundance Fest. Domont has delivered an impactful and penetrating look at a committed couple torn apart in mostly understandable fashion, and a painfully honest exploration at imbalance, assumed emasculation and ambition.

    What doesn’t work about ‘Fair Play’?

    Rich Sommer as Paul, Chloe Domont, writer and director and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily on the set of 'Fair Play.'
    (L to R) Rich Sommer as Paul, Chloe Domont, writer and director and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily on the set of ‘Fair Play.’ Cr. Slobodan Pikula / Courtesy of Netflix.

    For the most part, Domont keeps it all under control, steering the story in the right direction.

    Yet when it comes time to wrap it all up, it’s almost as if this pressure cooker of a movie, that has been rattling away successfully , suddenly explodes, splattering overwrought behavior across our central pair.

    In keeping with the more lurid and outrageous 1980s and 1990s thrillers, it reaches the sort of climax that, while not completely unwarranted, does push things beyond the realms of believability. We won’t spoil any of it here, but suffice to say, nobody comes out of it well.

    Alden Ehrenreich as Luke and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in 'Fair Play.'
    (Center L to R) Alden Ehrenreich as Luke and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in ‘Fair Play.’ Cr. Courtesy of Netflix.

    You do have to wonder why the pair’s respective families –– who at one point gather for a surprise engagement party that sees Emily and Luke spar in a way that would see most people calling the authorities –– don’t step in when they truly see how the issue is affecting their admittedly grown children.

    There is, thankfully, far more to recommend about ‘Fair Play’ than not, and if you’re after a tricky take on a modern relationship torn apart by primal and basic emotions, then this is definitely worth a watch.

    ‘Fair Play’ receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

    Alden Ehrenreich as Luke and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in 'Fair Play.'
    (L to R) Alden Ehrenreich as Luke and Phoebe Dynevor as Emily in ‘Fair Play.’ Cr. Sergej Radovic / Courtesy of Netflix.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Fair Play’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Fair Play’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Alden Ehrenreich Movies On Amazon

  • James Gunn Begins ‘Superman: Legacy’ Casting Process

    (Left) David Corenswet in Netflix's 'The Politician.' (Center Left) Nicholas Hoult in 'Renfield.' (Center Right) Emma Mackey in Netflix's 'Sex Education.' (Right) Rachel Brosnahan on Prime Video's 'The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.'
    (Left) David Corenswet in Netflix’s ‘The Politician.’ (Center Left) Nicholas Hoult in ‘Renfield.’ (Center Right) Emma Mackey in Netflix’s ‘Sex Education.’ (Right) Rachel Brosnahan on Prime Video’s ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.’

    With the movie set to properly show what DC Studios bosses James Gunn and Peter Safran have planned for the comic book adaptation world, all eyes are naturally on ‘Superman: Legacy’, which Gunn has been writing to direct.

    OT00arSyAacXCGscjvNND4

    And thanks to many of his duties regarding ‘Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3’ being complete now, the filmmaker is fully focused on his Superman film.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, the casting process is in full swing, with various candidates being considered.

    David Corenswet in Netflix's 'The Politician.'
    David Corenswet in Netflix’s ‘The Politician.’

    Who could be Gunn’s Superman?

    The Reporter’s story mentions ‘Pearl’s David Corenswet among the front-runners for the main character, a role that has been played in the past by the likes of Christopher Reeve, Brandon Routh and Henry Cavill and, on smaller screens, Dean Cain, Tom Welling and Tyler Hoechlin.

    Corenswet has apparently impressed Gunn enough that he’s moving forward to the screen test phase, though of course there is plenty of competition for that role in particular. Names such as ‘Euphoria’s Jacob Elordi and British actors Tom Brittney and Andrew Richardson have been in the mix, but it’s still very early days and none of those are apparently in serious contention.

    Rachel Brosnahan on Prime Video's 'The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.'
    Rachel Brosnahan on Prime Video’s ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.’

    Related Article: James Gunn Confirms He’ll Direct ‘Superman Legacy’ in Emotional New Message

    The search for Lois Lane

    Since the film takes place during Clark/Superman’s early days as reporter at the Daily Planet and how important star reporter Lois Lane is to his story, hers is naturally a vital role to find. Rachel Brosnahan, the Emmy-winning star of ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ reportedly rocked her audition but might be seen as too old at the grand age of 32! (The roles are apparently being targeted at 20-somethings).

    So, a more likely choice, at least give age-wise, is ‘Sex Education’s Emma Mackey, who will be seen this summer in ‘Barbie’.

    Also in consideration? ‘Bridgerton’ Season 1 star Phoebe Dynevor and ‘Ready or Not’s Samara Weaving, last seen in ‘Scream VI’.

    None of the actors for Lane have screen tested yet –– that’ll happen later this month and early in June.

    Nicholas Hoult and Joseph Mikel in 'Renfield,' directed by Chris McKay.
    (L to R) Nicholas Hoult and Joseph Mikel in ‘Renfield,’ directed by Chris McKay. © 2023 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Who else is involved?

    Then we have the villain, and from the sounds of it, ‘Legacy’ will feature the most famous Superman opponent, Lex Luthor. And if the Reporter’s story is to be believed, ‘Renfield’s Nicholas Hoult is currently the front-runner for the role. He’s nowhere near official yet, of course, but the word on him is positive.

    Hoult has comic book experience, of course, having starred in several ‘X-Men‘ movies. And he was in consideration for Batman in Matt Reeves’ ‘The Batman’ but lost that role to Robert Pattinson.

    There are also other classic DC characters involved, so expect a slew of casting stories once the actors are locked in.

    Gunn, in typically open –– but still private –– style, took to twitter to reiterate that he won’t be commenting on any casting rumors.

    ‘Superman: Legacy’ is scheduled to hit theaters on July 11th, 2025.

    Writer, director, co-chairmen and co-CEO of DC Studios, James Gunn and Superman.
    (Left) Writer, director, co-chairmen and co-CEO of DC Studios, James Gunn. Photo courtesy of James Gunn’s Twitter account. (Right) Superman. Photo courtesy of DC Comics.com.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Superman: Legacy:’

    Buy DC Movies On Amazon