Hit NBC family drama “This Is Us” has always had an ambitious approach to storytelling, weaving a sprawling tale that bounces between several different time periods. But according to creator Dan Fogelman, the end of that narrative is in sight, as the upcoming season three finale signals an important marker for the series.
In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Fogelman chatted about what fans can expect from this week’s finale episode. The “This Is Us” cast and crew have already teased that the installment will provide answers to many of fans’ burning questions from this season, and according to Fogelman, this episode also indicates how much more we’ll see of the Pearson clan.
“I think we’re roughly in the middle of where the television series is going to go,” the producer explained to THR. “We never set out to make a television series that was going to last 18 seasons, and so we have a very direct plan. I have script pages I have written and I’m writing that really are deep, deep, deep into the future. … [W]here you find the characters right now, you’re in the middle of their story.”
Fogelman went on to say that he thinks the series will run for a few more seasons — likely through season six — though its future isn’t entirely certain yet, since it still hasn’t been renewed for a fourth season. (THR reports that the hold-up is likely due to some behind the scenes restructuring, stemming from the recently completed merger of Disney and Fox. The former 20th Century Fox TV — now Disney 20th Century — produces the show.)
Star Susan Kelechi Watson (Beth) told THR that “something new is birthed in the finale,” adding that the episode is “a culmination of everything.”
“We get a glimpse into the future, we see the past, and certain things are resolved maybe in ways that we like, maybe in ways that we don’t like,” she continued.
Whether or not that spells doom for Randall (Sterling K. Brown) and Beth’s marriage remains to be seen (we’re dreading the D-word), but Fogelman said the episode would definitely deliver on the drama.
“Our characters are all finding themselves as we near what I like to consider kind of our midpoint of the TV series,” he told THR. “They’re at some real crossroads. And I think when you’re at a crossroads, your emotions tend to be most raw and your situations tend to be extreme.”
The “This Is Us” season three finale airs Tuesday, April 2 on NBC.
As NBC tearjerker “This Is Us” approaches its season three finale, fans are no doubt desperate for some resolution to several of the season’s biggest storylines. According to the show’s cast and crew, there is indeed some closure coming — but in true “This Is Us” fashion, viewers will need to prepare themselves for some serious drama.
At a panel at Paleyfest in Hollywood this weekend, the “This Is Us” gang gathered to dish about the upcoming end of the show’s third season, as well as offer a glimpse into season four. While creator Dan Fogelman said that the new season would “expand” the world of the show and offer some “ambitious” storytelling,” first, fans have to get through this season’s finale.
Fogelman promised that that episode will offer “a lot of answers” about the ongoing drama surrounding Kate (Chrissy Metz) and Toby’s (Chris Sullivan) premature son; Kevin’s (Justin Hartley) strained relationship with Zoe (Melanie Liburd); and, perhaps of most interest to “This Is Us” fans, the currently rocky marriage of Randall (Sterling K. Brown) and Beth (Susan Kelechi Watson). The latter duo will get a showcase episode this Tuesday, March 26, where they hash out their issues, including their clash over Randall’s demanding new city council job in Philadelphia, and Beth’s recent decision to pursue a career teaching dance.
“Obviously there’s a tremendous amount of attention on Randall and Beth’s storyline,” Fogelman told the Paleyfest crowd. “There will be an answer there in terms of the long-term health of their relationship.”
As that plot point comes to a head, so, too, will other major events of season three.
“We have all of our storylines building to that in the last episode,” the producer said. “It’s kind of gigantic. The last five minutes of the episode are sprawling.”
Also on deck for the finale is another glimpse into the flash forward timeline, which features an older Randall and his family getting ready to visit Rebecca (Mandy Moore). As for how all of this affects the Pearsons in season four, Hartley summed it up thusly: “Everyone is not okay.”
The “This Is Us” season three finale is set for Tuesday, April 2 at 9 p.m. EST on NBC.
Try not to stagger back from shock, but the “This Is Us” Season 3 premiere may hit you in the feels.
Season 3, Episode 1 is called “Ave Maria,” and it airs this coming Tuesday, September 25 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on NBC. Here’s the official synopsis:
“Randall, Kate and Kevin find themselves on new paths as they each celebrate their 38th birthday.”
Yeah, that doesn’t tell you too much.
Mandy Moore told a bit more to Entertainment Weekly. The site also shared a photo from the premiere, which shows Jack (Milo Ventimiglia) and Rebecca (Mandy Moore) on their first official date at a carnival.
Ron Batzdorff/NBC, via EW
Moore talked a lot about what’s ahead in the new season, but she raised our eyebrows during this Q&A segment:
What’s the moment from the episodes that you’ve already shot this season that you can’t wait for audiences to see? There’s something that doesn’t involve my character that’s a bit of a twist in the first episode that people are going to be like, “Whaaa…?”
Is it a good, “Whaaa…?” or a bad, “Whaaa…?” It’s a bad “Whaaa…?” It’s not heartwarming. People are going to be like, “Whaaa…? Why? How? What?” [Laughs.] At least I was, and I knew that it was coming, but still, when you read it, you’re like, “No. Whaaa…?” So that’s pretty interesting. I think Dan [Fogelman] has talked a lot about figuring out who [Randall] is talking about. I think that every episode is offering a more fully realized picture of who that is. It’s not being dragged for the sake of being cheeky. I think it’s just really brilliant storytelling and, Dan’s old favorite way of describing the show is the mixed up videotapes of home videos. This is exactly that, but we’re leaning a little bit into the future aspect of it.
It’s not clear if the “Whaaa…?” moment is directly connected to Randall (Sterling K. Brown) and the Season 2 flash forward scene or if that was just another example of something she can’t wait for audiences to see.
Is there such a thing as too muchShane Black in a Shane Black movie?
I wouldn’t have guessed it was possible — even in the late 1980s and ‘90s, when movies like the Black-scripted “The Last Boy Scout” were pilloried for being too brutal, aggressive and vulgar (and that was after “Lethal Weapon” and its sequel, the movies that made him such a hot property, were already considered wildly over the top). But “The Predator,” a combination sequel and soft reboot, feels like a throwback to that earlier, more simplistic era. The film is a hyper-masculine cocktail of breakneck storytelling, graphic violence and mean-spirited humor where the ingredients this time around seem either off or just wildly inconsistent. This is especially disappointing since it follows Black’s remarkable, measured comeback with “Iron Man 3” and “The Nice Guys.”
Simply bursting with too many ideas for what deliberately aims to be a small and self-contained story, the filmmaker’s latest is a muddled effort that never hits the highs of the (admittedly perfect) original film, though a terrific cast and more than a few clever surprises are sure to keep audiences on their toes (and on the edge of their seats).
Fox
Boyd Holbrook (“Logan”) plays Quinn McKenna, an Army sniper who encounters a sport-hunting alien while on a covert mission and absconds from the scene with a helmet and a handful of otherworldly trinkets that he inadvertently sends to his autistic son Rory (Jacob Tremblay, “Room”). Intercepted by Will Traeger (Sterling K. Brown, TV”s “This Is Us”), the head of a top secret organization investigating our extraterrestrial adversaries, McKenna is brought to a military facility and thrown in the stockade with a group of misfit soldiers while scientist Casey Brackett (Olivia Munn, “X-Men: Apocalypse”) studies the recovered materials for clues about where they came from and what they’re after.
When an alien Traeger has apprehended escapes from their lab and embarks on a killing spree, McKenna and his oddball cohorts escape during the melee to avoid further disciplinary actions — much less death at the hands of a Predator. But after realizing that the creature is heading directly for young Rory, whose behavioral issues have given him an unexpected advantage in activating the equipment, McKenna recruits his fellow prisoners to help kill it, rescue his son, and if possible collect enough evidence to present it to the world and prevent them all from becoming scapegoats for what is rapidly becoming a military mission gone wrong.
Black’s screenwriting conventions feel like traditional ones on adrenaline and “The Predator” unfolds with a lethal efficiency that both surpasses his previous efforts and undermines some of the elements that have traditionally made them work so well. There is simply an enormous amount of expository dialogue in the film, to the extent it sometimes feels like there’s nothing else, and as a result the actors feel like delivery systems for character and plot details rather than living, breathing people. Some of these characters work like gangbusters (Brown’s Traeger is cut from the same ice-cold, amoral, ruthlessly charming mold as Craig Bierko in “The Long Kiss Goodnight,” for example) while others, unfortunately including Holbrook’s McKenna, don’t leave an impression.
Fox
Holbrook, admittedly, was among the standouts in “Logan,” but teamed up with Trevante Rhodes (“Moonlight”) as a suicidal vet, and Munn as a wonderfully resourceful scientist-turned-Predator hunter, even his familial obligations to Rory don’t strike the deep dramatic impact the movie needs. At 107 minutes, the movie moves like lightning, so there are almost no moments to pause and explore these characters other than in relation to their “function” in the film. Meanwhile, folks like Keegan-Michael Key and Thomas Jane are clearly having a blast but exist on the periphery of the ensemble. They’re clearly enjoying their relative lack of responsibility but their presence only further undermines the cohesiveness of its momentum, and the consistency of its tone.
As a co-star and ghost writer on John McTiernan’s 1987 classic, Black long since established his firm grasp on the Predator universe, and he really embraces the established mythology of the creature and their technology. And all of those elements are a grisly blast: the body count is higher in this film than probably all of the others combined, including the jungle assault in the first, and the Predators (including the new Super Predator) dispatch their prey/victims with lethal efficiency. Paired with a score by Henry Jackman that liberally recreates Alan Silvestri’s iconic leitmotifs (from the jungle drums to the military-cadence Aaron Copland stuff), the action itself feels muscular and streamlined — a slightly less elegant Cliff’s Notes version of what McTiernan did some 31 years ago. But then again, with two direct and two more indirect sequels between then and now, it seems impossible to retell that story in form or content; the slow introduction of the creature in the first film gave audiences an opportunity to get to know the cast, and now it’s just trying to reinvent a Ten Little Indians scenario with new characters they want you to care about.
In which case, “The Predator” is a solid follow-up/ update that rights the franchise and diverts it from the “Alien Versus…” spinoff franchise, but it’s surprisingly not materially a much better film than “Predators,” which I probably mean more as a compliment to that underrated sequel than this one. Ultimately, one supposes that it isn’t that Black put too much of himself into this film, or somehow that a franchise stymied his voice; both challenges have paid handsome dividends for the filmmaker in the past. It’s just the proportions that are off. There’s something initially fun and undeniably cool about it (like tiny little Tremblay wearing a full-size Predator mask to go trick or treating) but it almost immediately proves unwieldy, and even bound together by fearless confidence and no small amount of elbow grease, in the end does more harm than good.
We’re only a few weeks away from the season three premiere of NBC tearjerker “This Is Us,” and to celebrate, the Pearson clan commissioned some very special family portraits.
Additional images snapped by Leibovitz were debuted simultaneously by E! News and “Today,” and feature each character separately, as well as another cozy family photo. And while everyone looks absolutely wonderful in each image, we can’t help but notice that all of the photos share a serious, almost somber tone, suggesting that there’s plenty of drama awaiting viewers this season. (Oddly, only Beth appears to be on the cusp of smiling in any of the pictures, though maybe that’s because Watson knows that her character won’t be dying.)
The f-bombs are flying in the final redband trailer for “The Predator.”
In one scene, Sterling K. Brown (“This is Us”) debates scientist Olivia Munn about what to call the aliens. She suggests they be called “sport hunters,” based on how they track their prey. He responds: “We took a vote. ‘Predator’s cool, right? F*** yeah.”
True. “The Sport Hunter” is not a movie we’re going to spend our money on.
The Shane Black-directed sequel features a crew of insubordinate soldiers — including Keegan-Michael Key and Thomas Jane — as the humans holding the line. And we assume, dying gruesomely one by one.
Oh, and this time, the aliens brought their dogs.
Also starring: Boyd Holbrook, Trevante Rhodes, Jacob Tremblay, Alfie Allen, Augusto Aguilera, Jake Busey, and Yvonne Strahovski.
Acclaimed NBC drama “This Is Us” doesn’t shy away from emotional moments or unconventional storytelling techniques, and according to the show’s creator, its upcoming third season will have plenty of both.
While chatting with Entertainment Weekly, Dan Fogelman discussed some of the plotlines that await fans of the series when it returns this fall. But of course, Fogelman couldn’t help but be a bit vague about exactly what will happen. Hey, this show is still part mystery, after all.
One key mystery that will be addressed, however, is whatever was happening with Randall (Sterling K. Brown) and a grown-up Tess in the flash-forward timeline from the season two finale. We already know that Beth (Susan Kelechi Watson) doesn’t die, but whatever tragedy does befall the Pearson clan (and the infamous “her”) will come into clearer focus.
The show will jump between that era and the present (and yes, will still include flashbacks to the past), in order to add context to each timeline.
“The question isn’t just who’s estranged, or who’s in prison, or any of the other theories that I’ve heard from people, it’s about where are all the other characters at that point in their lives,” Fogelman explained to EW.
And speaking of that point in their lives: The producer revealed that that future timeline would mark the “ending timeline” of the series, with no flash-forwards occurring after that era. Does that mean that Brown used some of that old age makeup to film some of the final scenes of the series?
Fogelman isn’t talking, though he did leave fans with this appropriately anguished tease about season three:
“There’s humor and love and levity after a very heavy season which I always like when we do. And then… some wallops. It’s our most ambitious season. It’s going to pack a great deal of emotion, and the story lines are going to surprise people.”
We’re both excited and nervous to see what’s in store for the Pearsons.
“This Is Us” returns for season three on NBC on September 25.
No word on what characters the stars of “Westworld” and “This is Us” might be voicing in the sequel to the 2013 smash hit.
But both have the acting and singing chops required. Proof includes that time Wood belted out Justin Bieber’s “Baby” for Jimmy Fallon. And when Brown served up a sweet Boyz II Men song with his “Marshall” costars Chadwick Boseman and Josh Gad.
Wood just received her second Emmy nomination for “Westworld.” Brown, last year’s Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series, is nominated again for NBC’s “This Is Us” as well as for a guest spot on Fox’s “Brooklyn Nine-Nine.”
Both actors have previously voiced characters on “Robot Chicken.” Wood also lent her voice to 2015’s “Strange Magic,” while Brown’s voicework includes the upcoming “The Angry Birds Movie 2.”
They’ll be joining returning stars Idina Menzel (Elsa), Kristen Bell (Anna), and Gad (Olaf) in “Frozen 2.” Co-directors Jennifer Lee and Chris Buck will also be back, with Lee writing the script. Lee was just named chief creative officer at Walt Disney Animation Studios, following John Lasseter’s exit. (Pete Docter will be overseeing Pixar Animation Studios.)
“Frozen 2” is scheduled for the primo holiday release date of November 27, 2019.
At last, “This Is Us” Season 3 is filming. Better still, the first day back, July 10, brought some fun photos and video from the cast.
Based on what we’ve seen on social media, the cast and crew were just as excited to get back to filming as fans are to see them do it. Leading up to their new beginning, star Chrissy Metz said it felt like “the night before the first day of school” and shared “gratitude for each one of you who are as excited as we are to share these new chapters together.”
And that was only the beginning. There were numerous posts from her co-stars and the crew on July 10. Let’s start with our favorite: a video tweeted by Sterling K. Brown that shows him making the most of Day 1 alongside his onscreen wife, Susan Kelechi Watson.
Brown and Watson doing the Shiggy? Yes, please. When the co-stars weren’t dancing around on set, though, they were hard at work. Both actors were in the first scene, which we know thanks to a photo from “This Is Us” creator Dan Fogelman.
Loved watching you guys back at work today my friend. It's a treat to watch you do your thing . My TV fam is world class. #ThisIsUshttps://t.co/SadeEjFzT0
Hey, remember that Blake Lively spy movie where she was transforming into different looks every week or so on set — bag lady, black pixie cut, etc.? It’s finally back in production.
Lively seriously injured her hand during a stunt in December. She had surgery, but it didn’t go as planned. So she had second surgery, and the movie shut down production so she could heal.
Well, The Hollywood Reporter was told she has made a full recovery, and production will resume in June in Spain. That was the plan back in January, so it sounds like things are back on the revised schedule.
In other good news, Sterling K. Brown has joined the cast. No clue what role the “This Is Us” star will be playing, but he does tend to make everything he’s in even better. So welcome aboard.
Blake Lively is going to shine in this lead role, which adapts the first of Mark Burnell’s Stephanie Patrick novels. She plays “a woman who assumes three different identities as she seeks to uncover the truth behind a plane crash that killed her family — a flight that she was meant to be on.”
Jude Law also stars in “The Rhythm Section,” which kept its February 22, 2019, release date through the hiatus.
Both Sterling K. Brown and the film’s director Reed Morano tweeted excitement about SKB joining the cast:
Meanwhile, when Blake Lively isn’t busy trolling around with Mr. Blake Lively, she’s promoting her upcoming movie “A Simple Favor,” which opens September 14th.