Tag: SONY

  • ‘Zombieland 2,’ ‘Little Women,’ ‘Bloodshot’ Now Have Official Release Dates

    ‘Zombieland 2,’ ‘Little Women,’ ‘Bloodshot’ Now Have Official Release Dates

    Zombieland
    Sony Pictures Entertainment

    Break out your handy dandy movie release calendar and start penciling in some new dates.

    Sony moved a bunch of stuff around last night, beyond inching “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” away from Sharon Tate’s murder anniversary.

    We also have an official premiere date for “Zombieland 2,” which is bringing back the original “Zombieland” cast. It was already announced for October 2019, and now we have a specific date — October 11. A perfect Halloween month treat.

    Greta Gerwig’s star-studded “Little Women” got a Christmas 2019 release date, otherwise known as GIVE US ALL THE OSCARS.

    Vin Diesel’s “Bloodshot” comic book movie got a February 2020 release date. Time was, February was a dead zone, but after “Deadpool” and “Black Panther,” February is the new July.

    Bloodshot
    Vin Diesel on Instagram

    Here’s the new list from Deadline, with some films moving from previously announced dates, and others getting brand new first dates that may be changed later because studios love to mess with us:

    • “Slender Man”: August 10, 2018 (from 8/24)

    • “Searching”: August 24, 2018 (limited, from 8/3; expands 8/31)

    • “White Boy Rick”: September 14, 2018 (wide instead of limited)

    • “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”: July 26, 2019 (from 8/9/19)

    • “Zombieland 2”: October 11, 2019

    • “Little Women”: December 25, 2019

    • “Bloodshot”: February 21, 2020

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  • Jared Leto to Star in Spider-Man Spinoff ‘Morbius’

    Celebrities Visit SiriusXM - September 27, 2017Jared Leto wants to play all the villains in all the superhero universes.

    The actor, who played the Joker in “Suicide Squad,” has signed on to star in “Morbius,” a spinoff in Sony’s “Spider-Man” universe that includes the upcoming “Venom.”

    The project comes from director Daniel Espinosa (“Life”) and writers Burk Sharpless and Matt Sazama (who created Netflix’s “Lost in Space”).

    Leto will play Dr. Michael Morbius, a biochemist who attempts to cure himself of a fatal blood disease with a serum derived from bats. The treatment has disastrous results, turning him into the anti-hero Morbius who has all the qualities of a vampire — including fangs, super strength, and a taste for human blood. In the comics, the character was often an an antagonist to Spider-Man, though he evolved into a heroic figure over time.

    Sony has been developing its Spidey-verse for some time. Along with “Venom,” they are working on “Silver and Black,” featuring Silver Sable and Black Cat. This universe does not overlap with the Spider-Man played by Tom Holland in the Marvel movies.

    Meanwhile, Leto will also appear as the Joker again in “Suicide Squad 2” and there has been talk of Joker solo movies.

  • Sony Adapting Marvel Comic ‘Silk,’ Giving Cindy Moon Her Own Movie

    Cindy Moon is almost ready for her superhero close-up.

    According to Deadline, Sony and producer Amy Pascal are in early development to adapt the Marvel comic “Silk” for the big screen.

    In the Marvel comic, Korean-American high school student Cindy gets bitten by the same radioactive spider as Peter Parker:

    “When Cindy Moon was a child, her parents found out that she had an eidetic memory. Her mother wanted Cindy to focus on her studies while Cindy would rather continue playing on her school hockey team with her secret boyfriend, Hector Cervantez. When her mother found out, she was forced to go to the school field trip to General Techtronics and Cin told her she hated her.

    When high school student Cindy Moon was attending a public exhibition demonstrating the safe handling of nuclear laboratory waste materials, sponsored by the General Techtronics Corporation, a spider irradiated by a particle accelerator used in the demonstration, bit Peter Parker on the hand and fell from his hand, it then bit Cindy in her ankle before dying. The first manifestation of her powers happened when her uncontrollable organic webbing accidentally caused her to web up her parents….”

    As Deadline noted, this standalone movie wouldn’t be the first on-screen appearance for the character of Cindy Moon. She’s already featured in “Spider-Man: Homecoming,” which was produced by Pascal and Sony. She’s part of the same decathlon team as Peter Parker. She also returns briefly in “Avengers: Infinity War,” on the bus with Peter and Ned.

    It’s not clear if actress Tiffany Espensen (who was actually born in China) would continue in the role in a “Silk” adaptation, but since she has now been featured in the background of two movies, it would make sense for this to be part of her slow introduction into the universe.

    Then again, this movie might stay exclusively with Sony and be separate from Tom Holland’s Peter Parker and the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The Wrap reports that “Silk” would be a part of Sony’s universe of Marvel-licensed characters along with “Venom” and such.

    Still…

    Stay tuned for details on this movie, since they emphasized that it’s early in development.

    Venom” is the next Spidey spinoff ahead, starring Tom Hardy, and opening in theaters October 5. “Silver and Black” was pulled from the 2019 release schedule, but is still happening. The sequel to “Spider-Man: Homecoming” is scheduled to start filming this July for release in theaters July 2019.

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  • ‘Sicario: Day of the Soldado’ Review: One of the Summer’s Best, Most Surprising Movies


    By just about any metric, 2015’s “Sicario” was a strange movie to beget a sequel, especially given that its seeming purpose was to chronicle the exasperating absence of change or progress made in the drug war. But what may be even stranger is just how good its improbable follow-up, “Sicario: Day of the Soldado,” actually is.

    This film tells a story that somehow pushes past its predecessor’s deliberate sense of pointlessness and futility to highlight the perhaps imperceptible, but essential, differences between good and evil — even if only on an individual level — in a political landscape increasingly obfuscated by shades of grey. Josh Brolin and Benicio del Toro do more excellent work fleshing out their provocatively mysterious characters from the first film, while director Stefano Sollima, taking over for Denis Villenueve, impressively wrangles some heavy-duty machinery for a series of bloody, brutal action scenes that add unpredictable edge to an engagingly contemplative narrative.

    Brolin once again plays CIA operative Matt Graver, who this time is enlisted to engineer a false flag operation to incite a turf war between Mexican cartels after the U.S. government discovers that terrorists are being smuggled across the southern border. Recruiting longtime “asset,” attorney-turned-assassin Alejandro Gillick (Del Toro), Graver and his team sneak into Mexico to kidnap Isabela Reyes (Isabela Moner), the daughter of a drug lord. Though the mission is by all accounts a success, their convoy to return the girl is intercepted by Mexican police; during the ensuing firefight, Alejandro and Isabela are separated from the group.

    Communicating in secret with Graver, Alejandro vows to protect his young charge and shepherd her to safety, but when the incident becomes national news, it quickly becomes a P.R. nightmare for both Graver’s superior, Cynthia Foards (Catherine Keener), and those above her who were promised absolute discretion. Before long, Foards instructs Graver to abandon rescue efforts, disband his team, and get rid of any loose ends, putting Alejandro not just in the crosshairs of the same people who hired him, but at direct odds with one of his oldest comrades.
    In the original “Sicario,” there was a jazzy energy to Brolin’s portrayal of Graver, an operative functioning within a world of absolute moral ambiguity but never once in doubt of his purpose, or his goals. The aggravating way his choices clashed with the ideals of Emily Blunt’s Kate Macer created an ethical dilemma that forced her character to reflect on the sacrifices required, and often invisible benchmarks, in fighting a war determined to endlessly perpetuate itself. Returning screenwriter Taylor Sheridan astutely chose not to simply replicate that quandary with another audience proxy as witness, instead challenging characters who have made peace with its unanswerability to actually question where the line exists within themselves between doing bad to accomplish good, and simply being bad.

    Graver is more than willing to trade one life for the success of a mission he believes is pursuing a just cause, but what if the life is one that’s important to him? “Day of the Soladado” yanks him out of the backroom deals and decisions easily made over expensive dinners and forces him to consider their consequences, and his culpability.

    Conversely, Alejandro is a man whose humanity was virtually eradicated by a tragic backstory whose details may almost justify his singular mission — to find and kill the evil people who indiscriminately target the good and innocent. Del Toro’s performance in the film showcases the toll that burden has exerted on his soul — halfway through the fake kidnapping, his vigilance is undercut by melancholic exhaustion — and paves the way for a redemptive journey that clarifies if, for him only, where that line exists between being a contract killer for “the good guys” and an amoral monster who’s lost all sense of value or respect for human life.

    Meanwhile, Sheridan’s choice in the script to put a preteen girl in the midst of so much of this amplifies the intensity, but Sollima never flinches away from how awful and disorienting it would be to witness — or be part of — events that frequently explode in bloodshed. (Moner is revelatory in her role, shifting from entitlement and self-possession to suitably traumatized, and eventually, dependent in earnest upon Del Toro’s Alejandro.)

    The director, who tackled a TV adaptation of “Gommorrah,” is largely unknown in the U.S., but he inherits the reins of this series with confidence, mounting action scenes involving car chases, shootouts, and helicopter showdowns that feels startlingly real. Given what’s going on with the public debate over the border wall, the movie’s subject matter is drenched in topicality, but Sollima never loses focus on the thematic underpinnings of his characters or fails to balance between those more philosophical notions and what otherwise amounts to a riveting, action-packed crime story.

    Additionally, the film harkens back to the era of “Heat” and the ’90s Jack Ryan adaptations — glossy, adult-oriented, not-quite-megabudget crime and political thrillers that echo relevant cultural topics but only to enhance their own original ideas. It certainly doesn’t hurt that so much of the action feels real and avoids a lot of stylistic trickery — or at least makes the trickery subtle enough to ignore.

    But ultimately, for a movie that no one was sure needed to exist, “Sicario: Day of the Soldado” not only justifies its existence but adds a worthy chapter to a story that already seemed complete, and further, makes the prospect of more in the future something audiences should eagerly welcome.

  • The ‘Jumanji’ Sequel Is ‘Officially Underway’ After a ‘Dynamite Pitch,’ Says Dwayne Johnson

    There’s more “Jumanji” fun to be had, and it’s happening already, according to Dwayne Johnson.

    The actor revealed Saturday that “Jumanji 2” is “officially underway.” He posted an update via Instagram Saturday, showing himself laughing as he met with key players involved with the movie. That laughter apparently came from an awesome story idea; in his post, Johnson had wonderful things to say about writer and director Jake Kasdan’s vision for the follow-up.

    “Ladies, gents and children of all ages.. The JUMANJI SEQUEL is officially underway,” he wrote in part. “Holy s–t what a dynamite pitch from our writer/director Jake Kasdan.”

    Johnson went on to explain what was so great about the pitch — namely, the fact that it had “heart” and they “couldn’t stop laughing.” He also confirmed that writers Jeff Pinkner and Scott Resenberg will be back to co-write the movie with Kasdan, plus named some of his cast mates.

    Back to both star in and produce the “Jumanji” sequel is Johnson himself. He’s joined by his co-stars Kevin Hart, Karen Gillan, Jack Black, and Nick Jonas. (If you take Johnson at his word, you may be disappointed to see that he claims Hart’s character will be killed off “in the first 15 seconds of the movie,” but that seems like a joke given his crack about how it will lead to a “HUGE standing ovation.”) We don’t know the details yet, but presumably they have more adventures ahead of them.

    Johnson is producing with Matt Tolmach, Dany Garcia, and Hiram Garcia, all of whom worked on the first. The movie is currently slated to hit theaters in late December 2019.

    [h/t: IGN]

  • Sony Pulls ‘Spider-Man’ Spinoff ‘Silver & Black’ From Calendar

    The expansion of Sony’s “Spider-Man”-centric universe may take longer than originally planned. The studio has pulled “Silver and Black” from its release date of Feb. 8, 2019.

    “Silver and Black” focuses on the characters Silver Sable, a mercenary who hunts war criminals, and Black Cat, an acrobatic burglar. The movie is to be directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood (“Beyond the Lights,” “Love and Basketball”), but no casting announcements have been made — a sure sign the project was not close to making that February date. Sony is looking for another date.

    In press for the Freeform Marvel series “Cloak and Dagger,” Prince-Bythewood hinted that the movie still needs work.

    “The update is just really pounding out the script,” she said. “It all starts with the script. You gotta have a great script so we want to make sure that’s right before we jump in.”

    “Silver and Black” was one of a number of projects Sony was developing within the Spidey-verse. The first of these is “Venom,” starring Tom Hardy, which opens October 5.

  • Spike Lee in Talks to Direct ‘Spider-Man’ Spinoff ‘Nightwatch’: Report

    2018 Vanity Fair Oscar Party Hosted By Radhika Jones - ArrivalsCould a superhero joint be Spike Lee’s next project?

    The director is on Sony’s radar for “Nightwatch,” a spinoff of “Spider-Man,” according to a report by The Hashtag Show. “Luke Cage” showrunner Cheo Hodari Coker developed the script, which follows an African-American scientist named Dr. Kevin Trench who turns superhero.

    Nightwatch was first introduced in Marvel comics in 1993. Dr. Trench discovers a dead body wearing a supersuit, only to realize it’s a future version of himself. The suit boosts his strength and endurance, responds to his thoughts, and repairs itself.

    Lee has been one of Hollywood’s most prominent black filmmakers since his debut with 1986’s “She’s Gotta Have It,” which he recently adapted that movie into a Netflix series. Now, he’s working on “Black Klansman,” based on a true story of an African-American detective who infiltrates the KKK.

    Sony has been developing a slew of “Spider-Man” offshoots. “Venom,” starring Tom Hardy, hits theaters this fall, while Gina Prince-Bythewood’s “Silver & Black” is set for next February. “Nightwatch” hasn’t been talked about much as a title, but perhaps the boffo success of “Black Panther” accelerated Sony’s desire for a black superhero movie.

  • ‘Men in Black’ Spinoff Eyes ‘Fate of the Furious’ Director F. Gary Gray

    The upcoming “Men in Black” spinoff is one step closer to happening, with director F. Gary Gray reportedly in talks to helm the flick.

    That’s the word from Deadline, which reports that the “Fate of the Furious” director is currently negotiating a deal to take on the project. According to the trade, Sony is eager to relaunch the hugely successful “MIB” series, and landing Gray is a big step toward securing the future of the franchise.

    While the studio has been looking for a way to get the “Men in Black” back in theaters for some time, the recent idea to take Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill’s “21 Jump Street” characters and place them in the “MIB” universe has taken a back seat (for now, anyway). Instead, this specific project will adhere closer to the original “MIB” source material (the comic book series written by Lowell Cunningham and Sandy Carruthers), and keep the focus squarely on “a covert force policing the alien population hiding in plain sight,” per Deadline.

    Deadline is comparing this spinoff to “Jurassic World,” keeping the spirit of the original film alive while essentially rebooting the series with a new cast for a new generation. Neither Will Smith nor Tommy Lee Jones — the original “Men” — are expected to return.

    We’re curious to see what Gray’s eclectic background can bring to this flick, and eager to see who Sony snags as its leads. The film — previously set for a May 2019 release date — is now scheduled to hit theaters on June 14, 2019.

    [via: Deadline]

  • Spider-Man Spinoff ‘Venom’ Marks ‘Day 1’ With Tom Hardy Set Photo

    BRITAIN-ENTERTAINMENT-CINEMA-DUNKIRKMove over, Underoos, ’cause Sony’s Marvel Universe is taking over.

    Tom Hardy and the cast and crew of the “Venom” movie just launched production. The Spider-Man spinoff is not part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe starring that other Tom, Tom Holland. Instead, it’s the first film in Sony’s Universe of Marvel Characters. However, Sony clarified that Marvel will be involved in these movies.

    Hardy’s role as Eddie Brock, and the scheduled release date of October 5, 2018, were revealed back in May. (Topher Grace played a version of Eddie Brock/Venom in Sam Raimi’s “Spider-Man 3” in 2007.)

    Sony’s official “Venom” account shared the first photo from set:

    Day 1. #Venom

    A post shared by Venom Movie (@venommovie) on

    According to Variety, in both the comic and this new standalone film, Venom is hatched after reporter Eddie Brock bonds with an alien symbiote, a union that gives him deadly powers.

    Director Ruben Fleischer (“Zombieland”) told Variety the movie will cover Venom’s origins and the Jekyll and Hyde relationship Brock has with the alien symbiote:

    “They become almost a third being, which is what Venom is. There’s a famous quote: ‘You’re Eddie Brock. I’m the symbiote. Together we are Venom.’ […] I’ve always been drawn to the more antihero superheroes. There’s a dark element to [Venom] and a wit that has always appealed to me.”

    In addition to “Venom,” Sony is also in preproduction on “Silver & Black,” which will reportedly pair jewel thief Black Cat with mercenary Silver Sable. In July, Variety reported that “Sony is circumspect about whether or not Spider-Man will make an appearance” in “Venom.” Columbia Pictures president Sanford Panitch said, “If we get lucky enough to make more than one [Venom film] and continue the franchise, there are lots of opportunities.”

    “Venom” — which will reportedly co-star Riz Ahmed and Michelle Williams — is currently scheduled for release October 5, 2018.

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  • Michelle Williams in Talks for ‘Venom’ Lead Opposite Tom Hardy: Report

    'Wonderstruck ' Photocall - The 70th Annual Cannes Film FestivalSony’s upcoming “Venom” standalone flick may have found its female lead, with Michelle Williams reportedly in talks for the secretive role.

    Variety has the scoop that Williams is currently negotiating to join the flick, which stars Tom Hardy as the titular villain from the “Spider-Man” universe. According to the trade, there’s no concrete details yet on her character, though she’s rumored to be playing “a district attorney and possibly Hardy’s love interest.”

    Sony declined to comment on Variety’s report, though the studio already has a connection to Williams, who stars in its upcoming release from director Ridley Scott, “All the Money in the World.” While Williams tends to favor smaller, arthouse flicks that garner awards attention (she’s a Golden Globe winner and four-time Oscar nominee, who’s also expected to earn some buzz for “All the Money”), this “Venom” flick isn’t expected to be typical superhero fare, either: Sony has already said that it would not be connected at all to the current “Spider-Man” (a.k.a. Marvel) cinematic universe.

    So far, Riz Ahmed (“Rogue One: A Star Wars Story”) is the only other star officially attached to “Venom.” Ruben Fleischer (“Zombieland”) is directing the spinoff, which is set to begin production next month.

    “Venom” is expected to hit theaters on October 5, 2018.

    [via: Variety]