Tag: rhett-reese

  • Sydney Sweeney to Star in ‘Split Fiction’ Movie

    (Left) Sydney Sweeney in 'Euphoria.' Photograph by Eddy Chen/HBO. (Right) Jon M. Chu arrives on the red carpet of the 97th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre at Ovation Hollywood on Sunday, March 2, 2025. Credit/Provider: Etienne Laurent / The Academy. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    (Left) Sydney Sweeney in ‘Euphoria.’ Photograph by Eddy Chen/HBO. (Right) Jon M. Chu arrives on the red carpet of the 97th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre at Ovation Hollywood on Sunday, March 2, 2025. Credit/Provider: Etienne Laurent / The Academy. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Preview:

    • Sydney Sweeney is aboard to star in ‘Split Fiction.’
    • ‘Wicked’ director Jon M. Chu will handle the game adaptation.
    • The duo is currently looking for a distributor for the project.

    There are, it appears, two things that Hollywood just can’t get enough of for its project: video game source material and Sydney Sweeney in a lead role.

    In the cinematic equivalent of “two great tastes that taste great together,” Sweeney is already on board for a film based on arcade and console classic ‘OutRun’ that also happens to have Michael Bay attached as its potential director.

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    Yet that’s clearly not enough for the actor, who is also now part of a package that has companies ready to open their wallets to score it: Variety reports that Sweeney’s on for an adaptation of Hazelight Studios and Electronic Arts’ ‘Split Fiction,’ with red-hot ‘Wicked’ director Jon M. Chu also involved.

    According to Variety, the package also includes script work from ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ duo Paul Wernick and Rhett Reese that already has big bids under way from companies such as Sony and Amazon MGM (which Deadline reports appears to be closer to a deal).

    Related Article: Sydney Sweeney and Michael Bay to Make a Movie Based on Sega’s ‘OutRun’

    What’s the story of ‘Split Fiction’?

    'Split Fiction'. Photo: Amazon.
    ‘Split Fiction’. Photo: Amazon.

    ‘Split Fiction’ blends fantasy and science fiction, following a pair of authors, Mio and Zoe, who become trapped in the worlds they wrote.

    Written by director and Hazelight studio chief Josef Fares and Sebastian Johansson, the title is a co-op adventure game that features gameplay mechanics involving split-screen combat, platforming challenges and differing abilities for each character.

    The game has been a rising star of the industry since its release in March. game quickly became a hit with players and critics alike, receiving positive reviews and massive sales. According to Hazelight, the game sold more than two million copies in the first week following its launch, and that number continues to rise at a rapid pace.

    Any new movie will be produced by Mike Goldberg and Dmitri M. Johnson’s Story Kitchen (formerly dj2 Entertainment), Chu’s Electric Somewhere. Sweeney is set to be an executive producer.

    What else is Sydney Sweeney working on?

    Sydney Sweeney in 'Euphoria.' Photograph by Eddy Chen/HBO.
    Sydney Sweeney in ‘Euphoria.’ Photograph by Eddy Chen/HBO.

    Sweeney’s current schedule is as packed as anyone’s in Hollywood.

    Her rise really kicked into high gear with  ‘Anyone But You’ opposite fellow star Glen Powell and Neon horror thriller ‘Immaculate.’

    She followed those up with one that she might wish to vanish from her resume, misfiring Spider-Man spin-off ‘Madame Web.’

    The actor also filmed the Ron Howard-directed thriller ‘Eden’ about a society of people who opt to start a new life in the Galapagos islands, only for things to wrong. That one should be in theaters this year.

    She has shot the Lionsgate adaptation of the novel ‘The Housemaid,’ which has Paul Feig in the director’s chair, and has worked on two other movies, ‘Echo Valley’ about a woman (played by Julianne Moore) whose life is turned upside down when her daughter (Sweeney) shows up covered in someone else’s blood, and a biopic of real-life boxer Christy Martin, with Sweeney in the lead role (not to mention it’s another movie she produced).

    Still to come is a starring role in Colman Domingo’s film ‘Scandalous!,’ which will see her playing Kim Novak in the story of the actor’s controversial relationship with Sammy Davis Jr. (played by ‘Alien: Romulus’ David Jonsson).

    And that list doesn’t even include the potential movies to which she is attached: that list includes a remake of sci-fi comedy ‘Barbarella,’ thriller ‘The Caretaker’ and a drama called ‘The Registration.’

    More recently, she was linked to the attempt to make a live-action ‘Gundam’ movie.

    Finally, we have HBO series ‘Euphoria,’ whose much-delayed third season which has at least been shot for a 2026 release.

    What else does Jon M. Chu have going on?

    'Wicked' director Jon M. Chu.
    ‘Wicked’ director Jon M. Chu.

    Right now, Chu is deep into the editing and fine-tuning process for ‘Wicked: For Good,’ the second film about the witches of Oz that serves as a prequel to what happens in ‘The Wizard of Oz.’

    ‘Wicked,’ based on both the stage musical and the Gregory Maguire novel it itself is sourced from, became one of the biggest box office hits of last year, with more than $755 million at the box office and two Oscars in its trophy cabinet.

    ‘For Good’ will be with us on November 21st.

    Beyond that, Chu is also a man in demand. He’s the director attached to an animated adaptation of Dr. Seuss tome ‘Oh! The Places You’ll Go!’ which has quite the team behind it –– J.J. Abrams and his Bad Robot team are aboard to co-produce, and the movie will boast song by no less a duo than ‘La La Land’ and ‘The Greatest Showman’ EGOT winners Benj Pasek and Justin Paul.

    Jon M. Chu accepts the award for Cinematic and Box Office Achievement at the 82nd Annual Golden Globe Awards, airing live from the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California on Sunday, January 5, 2025, at 8 PM ET/5 PM PT, on CBS and streaming on Paramount+. Photo: Sonja Flemming/CBS ©2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Jon M. Chu accepts the award for Cinematic and Box Office Achievement at the 82nd Annual Golden Globe Awards, airing live from the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California on Sunday, January 5, 2025, at 8 PM ET/5 PM PT, on CBS and streaming on Paramount+. Photo: Sonja Flemming/CBS ©2025 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Oh! The Places You’ll Go!,’ written in the author’s usual rhyming form, begins with the narrator, relating the decision of the unnamed protagonist (who represents the reader) to leave town.

    The protagonist travels through several geometrical and polychromatic landscapes and places, eventually encountering a place simply called “The Waiting Place,” which is ominously addressed as being a place where everyone is always waiting for something to happen.

    As the protagonist continues to explore, spurred on by the thoughts of places he will visit and things he will discover, the book cheerfully concludes with an open ending.

    And then there’s the new TV version of ‘Swiss Family Robinson,’ which he’s aboard as director and producer, and the small screen spin-off of ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ that now appears to be the way that story will continue after Chu’s successful 2018 movie.

    When will ‘Split Fiction’ arrive on screens?

    Without a studio home in place yet, it’s far too early to tell when this might get anywhere near theaters or any other screen.

    Sweeney, as we note above, has a variety of projects on the go, and Chu will be in ‘Wicked’ world at least until November when the second movie is released.

    Sydney Sweeney talks 'Immaculate.'
    Sydney Sweeney talks ‘Immaculate.’

    Sydney Sweeney Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Sydney Sweeney Movies on Amazon

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  • Netflix Plans ‘The Gray Man’ Sequel and Spin-Off

    A sequel to Netflix's 'The Gray Man,' is now in development with star Ryan Gosling and directors Joe and Anthony Russo set to return.
    A sequel to Netflix’s ‘The Gray Man,’ is now in development with star Ryan Gosling and directors Joe and Anthony Russo set to return.

    Even given its current subscriber and financial wobbles, Netflix is looking to splash the cash when it thinks it can spawn a franchise from a successful movie.

    And having brought Joe and Anthony Russo’s spy thriller ‘The Gray Man’ to theaters and, this past weekend, its streaming service, the company is looking to keep backing their ambitious plans to build out the adaptations of Mark Greaney’s novel series.

    Because we can’t just have a straight sequel, the world-building is going into high gear with both a direct follow-up and a spin-off.

    ‘The Gray Man’, which the Russos directed (and Joe Russo co-wrote with regular collaborators Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely), was the all-action story of Sierra Six (Ryan Gosling), a trained operative called Sierra Six, who works for a shadowy chunk of the CIA, dispatched to carry out seemingly impossible missions with plausible deniability on the agency’s part.

    But when he discovers digital evidence of a conspiracy, his handlers will do anything to keep the information from getting out. They send the cruel, psychopathic Lloyd Hansen (Chris Evans in a dodgy mustache) and a wealth of baddies to hunt down our hero.

    The sequel will pick up Six’s story (with Gosling attached to return) and follow another mission. The Russo brothers are once more planning to direct, and McFeely is at work on the script.

    Chris Evans, Anthony Russo, Joe Russo on the set of 'The Gray Man.'
    (L to R) Chris Evans, Anthony Russo (Director-Producer), Joe Russo (Director-Producer-Writer) on the set of ‘The Gray Man.’ Photo: Paul Abell/Netflix © 2022.

    As for the spin-off, that’s even less clear right now. The first movie was chock full of characters that could be used in their own story – such as Dhanush’s Avik San (AKA Lone Wolf) or Wagner Moura’s fixer Laszlo Sosa – but the team is keeping that quiet too for now.

    What we do know is that ‘Deadpool’ scripting duo Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick are busy writing that movie.

    “The audience reaction to ‘The Gray Man’ has been nothing short of phenomenal. We are so appreciative of the enthusiasm that fans across the world have had for this film,” Joe and Anthony say in a statement. “With so many amazing characters in the movie, we had always intended for the ‘Gray Man’ to be part of an expanded universe, and we are thrilled that Netflix is announcing a sequel with Ryan, as well as a second script that we’re excited to talk about soon.”

    “With ‘The Gray Man’, the Russos delivered an edge-of-your-seat spectacle that audiences around the world are loving,” says Netflix Head of Global Film Scott Stuber. “We’re excited to continue to partner with them and the team at AGBO as they build out ‘The Gray Man’ universe.”

    It’s not the first franchise the Russos have been building for the company either – there’s also ‘Extraction’ starring another old ‘Avengers’ colleague, Chris Hemsworth. That movie has already spawned a sequel, which will arrive on the service next year.

    Thus far, Netflix has not announced a date for either new ‘Gray Man’ movie, but it seems unlikely that either will be ready much before early 2024.

    A sequel to Netflix's 'The Gray Man,' is now in development with star Ryan Gosling and directors Joe and Anthony Russo set to return.
    A sequel to Netflix’s ‘The Gray Man,’ is now in development with star Ryan Gosling and directors Joe and Anthony Russo set to return.
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  • ‘Deadpool 3’ Writers Talk About the New Movie

    Zazie Beetz, Bill Skarsgård, Ryan Reynolds, Lewis Tan, and Terry Crews in 'Deadpool 2.'
    (L to R) Zazie Beetz, Bill Skarsgård, Ryan Reynolds, Lewis Tan, and Terry Crews in ‘Deadpool 2.’

    It has been four years since the release of ‘Deadpool 2’ and fans are eager to know when we might get more from Marvel’s Merc with a Mouth as brought to sarcastic, meta-referential life by Ryan Reynolds. Yet while more is definitely on the way, the purchase of Fox by Disney and the absorption of the character into the wider Marvel Cinematic Universe makes that more complicated on a number of levels.

    So, what might we expect from a third ‘Deadpool’ outing now that writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick, who have been working on the script alongside Reynolds, Wendy Molyneux and Lizzie Molyneux-Logelin.

    Describing putting Deadpool into a MCU is “a wonderful opportunity for a “fish-out-of-water,” Reese told the Post-Credit Pod. “Deadpool is a lunatic at the center of a movie, and to drop a lunatic in a very sane world, it’s straight butter. It’s going to be really fun.”

    There is an awful lot we don’t yet know about the next ‘Deadpool’ outing – including who else might be in it, and which of Marvel’s characters will be available to interact with Wade Wilson.

    So far, what is really known about the movie is that Shawn Levy, who has struck up a productive working relationship with Reynolds through ‘Free Guy’ and Netflix’s ‘The Adam Project’, is directing the new film.

    Reynolds fighting robots
    (L to R) Walker Scobell and Ryan Reynolds in Netflix’s ‘The Adam Project’

    But just what can we expect from the new movie? While they couldn’t go into details, Wernick and Reese have been at pains to explain that they want the ‘Deadpool’ winning streak to continue, especially given that the first two movies have earned a combined $1.5 billion at the global box office.

    “We want to make it great,” Reese earlier told The Playlist, explaining the delay a little. “We’re in the laboratory working on it with Ryan Reynolds all the time, and we’re very much entertaining ourselves. So, hopefully, that translates and ultimately will entertain the world. But you know, it’s a marriage between Fox and Disney and it’s two different universes and it’s not easy. But it’s also a wonderful challenge and, you know, high-class problems to be able to merge those, those worlds. So, we’re, we’re enjoying it.”

    Oh, and talking of entertaining themselves, they mention that while they’ve been too busy to pay much attention to ‘Morbius’ and the various memes around the Sony/Marvel vampire flop, they laugh that they’ll have to include a gag about it now – because poor old Michael Morbius hasn’t been through enough?

    And in case you’re worrying that being part of Disney’s Marvel arm means a sanitized, family-friendly Deadpool, we shouldn’t have to worry about that. “They’re not gonna mess with the tone,” Reese says. “I mean, I’d never say never, I guess there’s an outside chance, but we’ve always been told it can be R-rated, and we’re proceeding as if it’s R. We would like it to be R, we always have, so I don’t think that’ll change.”

    We don’t yet know when ‘Deadpool 3’ will be released, but it could potentially be ready for 2024.

    Reynolds as Deadpool
    Ryan Reynolds in 20th Century Fox’s ‘Deadpool.’
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  • ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ Reboot Loses ‘Deadpool’ Writers: Report

    ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ Reboot Loses ‘Deadpool’ Writers: Report

    Johnny Depp as Jack Sparrow
    Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

    The “Pirates of the Caribbean” reboot has been rocked. “Deadpool” writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick have left the project, sources tell Deadline.

    The two were reportedly hired for the “Pirates” franchise in October, following the success of 2016’s “Deadpool” and its 2018 sequel. At the time, Disney Production President Sean Bailey was very optimistic about the future of the franchise with the duo on board, according to Deadline’s sources. Now, however, the project will either need new writers or perhaps may never launch at all. Disney has not yet responded to a request for comment.

    Disney has ample reason to want to keep the franchise going. The first “Pirates of the Caribbean” film, “The Curse of the Black Pearl,” hit theaters in July 2003 to huge box office success. It grossed more than $654.26 million worldwide, making it the fourth-highest-grossing movie of the year. Its four sequels went on to earn even more in ticket sales, with two — 2006’s “Dead Man’s Chest” and 2011’s “On Stranger Tides” — each crossing the $1 billion-mark.

    Moving forward, we’ll have to see what happens to the franchise and whether or not it can stay afloat.

    [via: Deadline]

  • ‘Deadpool’ Writers in Talks for a ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ Reboot

    ‘Deadpool’ Writers in Talks for a ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ Reboot

    Johnny Depp, Pirates of the Caribbean, Captain Jack Sparrow
    Walt Disney

    Disney has invoked the right of parley with Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick.

    Those guys wrote “Zombieland” and the first two “Deadpool” movies (which were all rated R). Now they are in early talks to write a script for a reboot of Disney’s PG-13 “Pirates of the Caribbean” franchise.

    That’s the scoop from Deadline. The site added that Jerry Bruckheimer would continue to produce the films. That’s basically all the intel they had, but more drips and drabs will surely leak out as this moves forward.

    The billion dollar question is whether Johnny Depp would be involved. It’s a reboot, but who knows what that might mean in terms of cast or story.

    Would Disney be disinclined to acquiesce to fans’ request for more (Captain) Jack Sparrow?

    Yeah, he can be controversial — and the James Gunn situation showed how little Disney wants to be even semi-controversial — but Depp is also their “Pirates” cash cow. Does this franchise work (make $$$) without him?

    The most recent film with Depp’s Sparrow — the fifth film in the series, “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales” — was released in 2017 and made just under $800 million worldwide. That sounds damn good but it was the second-lowest grossing movie in the series. It was also panned by critics and only got lukewarm user reviews from viewers.

    Back in August, rumors spread — via The GWW — that Disney was still moving forward on “Pirates of the Caribbean 6.” They said “Dead Men Tell No Tales” co-director Joachim Rønning might return, with a script seeming to be in progress by writers Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio, and Jeff Nathanson.

    No idea what’s going on with that, or how it — if it happens — it could relate to this reboot idea. Just grab some rum (unless it’s gone again) and stay tuned.

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  • The ‘Life’ Writers Talk About the Movie’s Shocking Twist

    If you saw “Life” this weekend (and if you didn’t, well, you should), you know that the movie has some pretty big twists. In fact, it’s bookended with them. And we’re going to talk about them. So if you haven’t seen the movie, then shoo. We got this.

    Seriously, if you haven’t seen the movie please don’t read this. Come back afterwards; it’ll still be here.

    All right, so the movie opens with the crew of an international space station uncovering some Martian soil, which produces an honest-to-goodness Martian. Earth is alerted, everyone rejoices. Except that this Martian isn’t as cute and cuddly as it seems, and pretty soon it’s growing at an exponential rate and murdering crewmembers. You know, that old killer-space-beast chestnut.

    The shocking thing is who goes first, though. It’s Ryan Reynolds, a person so unnaturally handsome that you assume he’s going to make it until the end credits. (Maybe that “and Ryan Reynolds” distinction on the poster gave it away, though.) When we talked to director Daniel Espinosa about the twist, he said it was one of the things that drew him to the project, and referred to Reynolds’s death as his “Janet Leigh moment,” referencing the shocking death at the beginning of Alfred Hitchcock‘s “Psycho.”

    When I talked to the writers (Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick) about the movie, just before its world premiere at SXSW, I had to ask them about what it was like murdering Reynolds so early.

    “We tell people Ryan’s our muse,” Wernick said, sweetly. “We always have him in mind when we’re conceiving and writing projects, and it’s so great to continue our partnership with Ryan, which has lasted since 2009. We’ve worked hand-in-hand as one creative voice.” Reese then piped in: “They say kill your darlings. Well, we killed our darling.” There was a pause and Wernick added, “We can’t kill Ryan as Deadpool because he’s un-killable, but we can sure kill him in ‘Life.’”

    Sorry, Ryan. 🙁

  • ‘Life’ Writers Talk Technological Advances, That ‘Venom’ Rumor, and ‘Deadpool 2’

    This week’s terrifying sci-fi odyssey “Life,” which stars Jake Gyllenhaal, Ryan Reynolds, and Rebecca Ferguson as crewmembers aboard a doomed international space station that comes in contact with a very nasty Martian (they nickname the squid-like beast “Calvin”), began, like the monster, as a simple, single-celled idea in the minds of writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick. The screenwriters, who have penned wise-ass classics like “Zombieland” and “Deadpool,” take a surprisingly straightforward approach with “Life.” This is a singularly scary movie. Prepare to clutch your significant other’s hand until you hear bones break.

    I got a chance to chat with them ahead of the film’s world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival, and we talked about the inspiration for the movie, what it was like seeing their visions come to life (not only Calvin but the entire space station), the possibility of a sequel, and what’s going on with “Deadpool 2.”

    Moviefone: What’s interesting about this movie, especially coming from you guys, is how straightforward it is. Had you always wanted to do a straightforward sci-fi horror movie?

    Rhett Reese: Absolutely. It really is. I grew up with a very active imagination, and movies like “Alien” and “The Shining” absolutely terrified me. When I was younger, I wouldn’t even get to see them, but I’d see the commercials and they would absolutely terrify me. Deep down inside I always wanted to write something that was really scary. And this was the attempt to do that. We had fun. It was certainly not going for the same things we normally go for, so we got to flex a different writing muscle.

    Technology seems to have freed you up, too. Because if you had been writing this 30 years ago there would have been no way to visualize something like this creature.

    Paul Wernick: Absolutely. And not just the creature but the technology of the weightlessness and how that all visualized itself on screen and visual effects and wirework it’s just … We’ve been afforded so many gifts on this movie, with the ability to do stuff we couldn’t have done even five years ago at the price point that we wanted to do it. And as for Calvin, he’s a creature that we did extensive research on going into this. He’s one of the seven main characters and the primary villain in the piece. We visualized him in a way that we tapped into research we did on the deep-sea world with these translucent sea creatures and the octopus was a great inspiration of ours. And then Daniel and the visual effects guys and the creature design guys brought it to life in a way that far exceeded even our expectations.

    Was there ever a point where you guys said, “Screw it, let’s give him a face”?

    Reese: There was, at some point, because you’re so used to seeing faces. But everybody felt that to anthropomorphize it too much would be a mistake. Because it really is based on the idea that it’s all these interconnected cells that perform the bodily functions of all the differentiated tasks of a human body. So a cell that could be an eye cell and a muscle cell and a nerve cell all at once. It doesn’t look as much like the average creature on Earth, let’s say.

    What was it like seeing the set for the first time?

    Wernick: It was amazing. There’s such detail, and I don’t know if you know this, but it was shot on two soundstages at Shepperton in London, and they built basically the entire space station. The level of detail on everything, there was Russian on buttons that you’d never actually see on screen. The level and attention to detail was incredible and really awesome. It shows on screen. We could have shot this on the space station. It’s pretty astonishing. And they had to build it in such a way that it had to be open air so the wires could move above it. It was a technological and artistic thing of beauty.

    [Director] Daniel Espinosa said the film is loaded with references to other movies.

    Reese: I’m not sure what he’s talking about.

    Wernick: He might have put in some definite Easter eggs. There were some on “Deadpool” we didn’t know about either. Everyone likes to throw stuff in there. I’m sure there’s a bunch of stuff in this one. You know, “Alien” was definitely a huge inspiration of ours. It’s a great movie, and almost 40 years ago it came out. For us it was making the thing as current and relevant and up to date as we could.

    It also has such an international feel, which is really great in today’s climate, with all of these countries working together. Was that something that you guys were cognizant of?

    Reese: Yes, and that’s the way the space station is, with astronauts from different countries aboard it. We didn’t want to get into the divisiveness between nations or the divisiveness between characters in the sense that one character wants to bring the sample back to Earth to turn it into a weapon or something like that. We wanted a diverse but united crew that did their jobs well and had each other’s back. That was part of the realism factor, with these astronauts putting aside their country’s differences to come together on that space station to do work together.

    Have you guys thought about a sequel to “Life”? The ending is terrific and definitely leaves the possibility for another film open.

    Reese: Well, the sequel is going to be “Venom.” [Laughs] We would love a sequel but it depends on whether or not people buy tickets.

    Wernick: We always felt that an unconventional ending to a big tentpole movie would be cool, to us at least. We’re always left-of-center and it felt left-of-center to us. But studios do love franchises so that set up the potential should the movie succeed, we’d love to make another one on Earth. It brings a smile to our face.Let’s talk about “Deadpool 2.” The first film was such a surprise for so many people. How do you do that again?

    Reese: I think we’ll find some more rules to break hopefully. I think sequels should have the familiar and the new in them. They shouldn’t feel too similar to the previous movie otherwise people will get bored but I think they should also carryover in terms of tone and character so that people will still see what they know and love in the new movie. So we have similar elements, the tone will be the same, but the story is very different — it’ll have more characters, different characters, Deadpool is going to go on a new emotional journey so we want to keep it emotional. So it’s all about striking that balance.

    How did you guys feel about the movie hitting the way that it did?

    Reese: It was probably the most gratifying moment of our careers. Because we’ve certainly reached big audiences but never a massive international audience like that, and the passion people had with it was so intense. We meet people all the time and the second you mention “Deadpool” they just light up. That, for us, is why we do it. There’s that line in “Zombieland,” when Woody Harrelson is gushing at Bill Murray and Bill says, “Well that’s why we do it.” That’s what we say about “Deadpool.” It’s really fun.

    Was it also fun introducing that character to the world?

    Wernick: Well, there was always the fear that “Deadpool” was a one-quadrant movie. I think that’s why it took six years to get made. And the fact that it extended all over age ranges, including kids as young as 10, which I cringe at, all the way to grandparents, to hit all four quadrants in a movie that could have, if it had gone wrong, was astonishing to us and really gratifying. Because it was a passion of ours, it remains a passion of ours. And to see that passion come across on screen and relay that to audiences is amazing and awesome for us.

    Can you talk about working with new director David Leitch and what he brings?

    Wernick: He’s the best. His mind works in ways that others don’t in terms of visualizing the action. We were just in the production offices and saw the pre-viz on one of the action scenes that we’d written and it elevated it in such a way that’s jaw-dropping. So we’re playing to his strengths and we feel like audiences are going to be blown away.

    Reese: He also really gets the tone and the character. There was no learning curve. He came in and just got it.

    So is it going to have more action?

    Reese: I think it’ll be a little bigger, just by virtue of it being a sequel and wanting to top ourselves. But we’re not going to be lifting cities into the air or having alien invasions.

    Wernick: We’re saving that for the third one.

    Reese: The first film was an underdog movie, and we don’t want to feel like “The Avengers” — that big and bloated and huge. It will always have a scrappy, underdog feel to it.

    Life” comes to our galaxy tomorrow.

  • Fox Officially Confirms ‘Deadpool 2’ With Ryan Reynolds, Tim Miller

    Though Fox was reportedly developing a sequel to “Deadpool” months before the offbeat superhero flick even opened, the studio has now officially confirmed that plans for “Deadpool 2” are indeed a go, and the entire original creative team will return for the follow-up.

    Speaking at a panel at CinemaCon on Thursday, Fox brass revealed that titular star Ryan Reynolds would be back in his signature red and black suit, and director Tim Miller would once again call the shots behind the camera. “Deadpool” screenwriters Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick are also penning the script again.

    The move was a no-brainer for the studio, since “Deadpool” defied box office odds to become the highest-grossing R-rated movie of all time, and broke a bunch of other records along the way. It didn’t hurt that the flick was a critical and fan favorite, too, and Reynolds himself was front and center in a hands-on, goofy publicity campaign that engaged with audiences on a personal (and pretty hilarious) level. Fox is no doubt hoping for more of the same on the second go-round.

    Last fall, “Deadpool” producer Simon Kinberg teased that comic character Cable would feature prominently in a potential “Deadpool 2,” and that appears to still be the case. No other plot details have been revealed just yet, though, and there’s no official production timetable.

    Stay tuned for more intel as it becomes available.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

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