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  • ‘Cold Storage’ Interview: Screenwriter David Koepp

    (L to R) Joe Keery and Georgina Campbell in 'Cold Storage'. Photo: StudioCanal.
    (L to R) Joe Keery and Georgina Campbell in ‘Cold Storage’. Photo: StudioCanal.

    The new horror comedy ‘Cold Storage’, which is based on a novel by David Koepp (‘Jurassic Park’ and ‘Spider-Man’), who also wrote the screenplay, and directed by Jonny Campbell (‘Dracula’), opened in theaters on February 13th.

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    The film stars Joe Keery (‘Stranger Things‘), Georgina Campbell (‘Barbarian‘), Sosie Bacon (‘Smile‘), Vanessa Redgrave (‘Mission: Impossible’), Lesley Manville (‘Phantom Thread’), and Liam Neeson (‘The Naked Gun‘).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with legendary screenwriter David Koepp about his work on ‘Cold Storage’, the challenges of adapting his own novel, what he had to cut, his writing process, casting, and working with director Jonny Campbell, as well as reuniting with his longtime collaborator director Steven Spielberg on the upcoming ‘Disclosure Day’, and his memories of working with the late Robert Duvall on ‘The Paper’.

    Related Article: Joe Keery and Georgina Campbell Talk New Horror Comedy ‘Cold Storage’

    'Cold Storage' screenwriter David Koepp.
    ‘Cold Storage’ screenwriter David Koepp.

    Moviefone: To begin with, as a screenwriter, you have adapted other author’s books to the big screen before. But what are the challenges of adapting your own book into a screenplay?

    David Koepp: Well, it’s a little harder and it’s a little easier. It’s easier because I had 30 years of screenwriting instincts in the back of my head when I was writing the novel. So, I’d be lying if I didn’t say I was kind of sketching out the movie in my head as I wrote the book. But then it’s harder in that you must cut a lot of stuff. They’re very different mediums. Books are 350 pages long, movies are 120, double spaced. The rules of what you can do in each one is very different. But one thing’s for sure, a whole bunch of stuff must go when you make the movie. It’s one thing when you’re cutting someone else’s favorite parts. Who cares? Just get rid of it. But this time it was me cutting my favorite stuff because it just doesn’t work in a movie or there isn’t room for it or it’s wrong for the pacing or whatever. I found that a little bit harder than I had in the past.

    Joe Keery in 'Cold Storage'. Photo: StudioCanal.
    Joe Keery in ‘Cold Storage’. Photo: StudioCanal.

    MF: Was there anything you had to cut from the book that was particularly heartbreaking for you?

    DK: Probably the authorial voice, the person who’s telling the book, it’s not a character, but just the tone in which the book is told. The author is allowed to have a pretty heavy hand and he’s being a bit of a wise ass. I’m trying to be funny. I’m having a very good time with it. I made myself laugh. There’s no one to carry that in the film. A character can’t talk like that. You’re not going to have endless voiceover. So that must go. Since a lot of the book’s humor came from that, I felt like I really lost something there. It takes a few drafts then for the script to evolve, and that tone, maybe mischievous or playful that you wanted, now can be inhabited by some of the characters or in the storytelling itself, where you cut, when and how. So, that that took a few drafts.

    Georgina Campbell in 'Cold Storage'. Photo: StudioCanal.
    Georgina Campbell in ‘Cold Storage’. Photo: StudioCanal.

    MF: Both the book and the film introduce the concept of a rat king, which is a real phenomenon in nature. When you learn about new concepts like that that interest you, do you file them away somewhere and say, “Oh, this would be an interesting idea to incorporate into a story some day?”

    DK: Yeah, I have a very large story ideas file on my Mac. I use Mac Mail. So, I send myself a lot of emails or I’ll run across an article and I’m like, “Oh, that’s creepy. That’s got to go somewhere.” So, I just park it all there and review it from time to time. When something crystallizes into an idea, and this is really plumbers talking about their wrenches at this point, but I start moving old emails with fragments of stories into a new file, which bears the name of the whatever the project is. It becomes a dumping ground for stuff that I think might work. The great thing about researching on the internet as opposed to researching with a chatbot, is the chatbot will give you very specific answers about what you asked. When you have a broader Google search, weird things come up that you wouldn’t have thought were related. Then you might click a link in that, and you go somewhere else that you didn’t think of. I think that’s probably the way I came across a rat king. I knew I wanted rats. I was researching, “What are the grossest rats in the world?” I came across the story of a rat king and then I found out more about it. So, it’s following those weird little roads, but having somewhere to put all those ideas in the meantime, which is important. So, you figure out where they go.

    (L to R) Joe Keery, Liam Neeson and Georgina Campbell in 'Cold Storage'. Photo: StudioCanal.
    (L to R) Joe Keery, Liam Neeson and Georgina Campbell in ‘Cold Storage’. Photo: StudioCanal.

    MF: Can you talk about putting together the cast and did their final performances match your imagination when you were creating the characters?

    DK: Yeah. Because I was a producer, I was involved in casting. When the performers come in, there’s a natural tendency to rewrite a little bit to suit them. Obviously, they come in and they should be playing the role that’s written because that’s what they’re there to do. But they also have their own personalities, and they bring certain things, and you want to accentuate some things that they do well and maybe move away from things that aren’t natural for them. I remember in rehearsal; I wrote a whole new scene for Joe and Georgina because they had such a nice rapport. So, I wrote a new three or four page scene that I think helped them understand and get to know each other better. Only a few lines of it ended up in the film. I knew that it wasn’t ever going to be in the film because it didn’t fit in that part of the movie. But it very much fit in terms of helping them understand who they were. I think they have a great chemistry and that’s because they understood who they were very well.

    Liam Neeson in 'Cold Storage'. Photo: StudioCanal.
    Liam Neeson in ‘Cold Storage’. Photo: StudioCanal.

    MF: Can you talk about working with Jonny Campbell and why was he the right person to direct this movie?

    DK: Gavin Polone, my producing partner, and I, saw his series, ‘Dracula’ that he did for Netflix, which we really liked very much and thought, it looked great, it was funny, and it was funny within the context of a vampire movie, which is not so easy to do without being silly. Then we just had a great meeting and really saw things the same way. I knew I didn’t want to direct it because I’d spent so much time writing the book and so much time writing the script. I was like, “I can’t. I’m just going to want to record it the way it is. I need someone who can interpret it.” So, it seemed like the right thing to do.

    Emily Blunt in 'Disclosure Day', directed by Steven Spielberg. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Emily Blunt in ‘Disclosure Day’, directed by Steven Spielberg. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    MF: Speaking of directors, you’re re-teaming with Steven Spielberg for this summer’s ‘Disclosure Day’. What was it like working with him again?

    DK: Well, it’s always fun. This is our 5th movie that he’s directed. Probably the 10th or 12th overall, including things he’s produced that I’ve written. It’s great because he hasn’t really changed in 30 years. His favorite part is making it up, and he’s the original, “Hey, wouldn’t it be cool if guy?” The answer usually is, yes, it would. It would be very cool. Let’s try and figure that out. I will say on this one, I found him more the most intense that I’ve dealt with him. I think he felt a lot of pressure because he knew, “Hey, I’ve done movies with UFOs in them before, three times. If I’m going to do it again, it must be different and it must be perfect.” I think to his remarkable credit, if you look at the tone and the type of movie that ‘Close Encounters’ is versus ‘E.T.’ versus ‘War of the Worlds’, and now this, they’re very different movies. Each one of them is a different genre, they’re just exploring some similar subject matter.

    (L to R) Michael Keaton, Marisa Tomei, Robert Duvall, Glenn Close, and Randy Quaid in 'The Paper'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Michael Keaton, Marisa Tomei, Robert Duvall, Glenn Close, and Randy Quaid in ‘The Paper’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    MF: Finally, we recently lost legendary actor Robert Duvall, who you worked with on ‘The Paper’. What are your memories of working with him and what was it like watching him say the lines that you wrote?

    DK: Oh, man, Duvall’s great. He’s terrific in it. That whole cast is a dream. I mean, you got Glenn Close, Michael Keaton, Robert Duvall, then Marisa Tomei, and they’re all perfect for the part and they were all doing such a great job. I do remember one day on the set with Duvall, where it was one of the staff meetings, which are very funny, and they’re very hard because they were six or seven pages long and there’s ten characters in the scene. There’s a lot to coordinate and get right. He yells something at one point. I turned to Ron Howard, and I said, “Is he really mad or is the character mad?” He said, “I don’t know. I think both.” But it was completely indistinguishable, one from the other. It did create a little bit of distance because you don’t want to get in his eye line.

    (L to R) Georgina Campbell and Joe Keery in 'Cold Storage'. Photo: StudioCanal.
    (L to R) Georgina Campbell and Joe Keery in ‘Cold Storage’. Photo: StudioCanal.

    What is the plot of ‘Cold Storage’?

    The film follows Travis (Joe Keery) and Naomi (Georgina Campbell), two employees at a self-storage facility built atop a former military base, whose night shift transforms into a nightmare when a government-sealed parasitic fungus escapes from the underground levels. As temperatures rise, the microorganism unleashes its brain-controlling, body-bursting mayhem on anything in its path. The duo must join forces with a weathered bioterror operative to contain the threat before it triggers humanity’s extinction.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Cold Storage’?

    'Cold Storage' opens in theaters on February 13th.
    ‘Cold Storage’ opens in theaters on February 13th.

    List of David Koepp Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Cold Storage’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy David Koepp Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ Interview: Tim Roth and More

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    Opening in theaters on March 6th before premiering on Netflix March 20th is ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man‘, which is a continuation of the popular series, ‘Peaky Blinders’ and written by series creator Steven Knight.

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    Directed by Tom Harper (‘The Aeronauts’), the film stars returning cast members Cillian Murphy (‘Oppenheimer’) as Thomas Shelby, Stephen Graham (‘Adolescence’) as Hayden Stagg, Sophie Rundle (‘The Midnight Sky’) as Ada Thorne, Ned Dennehy (‘The Eagle’) as Charlie Strong, and Packy Lee (‘The Witcher’) as Curly, as well as new cast members Barry Keoghan (‘Saltburn’), Rebecca Ferguson (‘Dune’), and Tim Roth (‘Pulp Fiction’).

    (L to R) 'Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man' screenwriter Steven Knight and Tim Roth.
    (L to R) ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ screenwriter Steven Knight and Tim Roth.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Tim Roth and screenwriter Steven Knight about their work on ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’, developing the screenplay for the movie, how Roth got involved with the project, his take on his character, working with Cillian Murphy, how Thomas Shelby has changes since the series, and why Knight wants to thank the fans for their devotion.

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Roth and Knight, as well as director Tom Harper.

    Related Article: 5 Things We Learned At The ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ Press Conference

    Steven Knight attends the World Premiere of 'Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man' at Centenary Square on March 02, 2026 in Birmingham, England. Photo by Tristan Fewings/Getty Images for Netflix.
    Steven Knight attends the World Premiere of ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ at Centenary Square on March 02, 2026 in Birmingham, England. Photo by Tristan Fewings/Getty Images for Netflix.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Steven, can you talk about developing the screenplay and did you always know that this film would be how the ‘Peaky Blinders’ story would end?

    Steven Knight: Yeah, the actual details of the story were not set, but I always wanted it to end in the Second World War, and for it to end as a film. In fact, somebody showed me a clip of an interview I did just after the end of the first series, when it was a little BBC Two thing. For some reason, I’m very arrogantly saying, “What I want to do is take this all the way to World War II and I want it to be a feature film.” I’m thinking, “What are you going on about?” But here we are.

    Tim Roth attends the World Premiere of 'Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man' at Centenary Square on March 02, 2026 in Birmingham, England. Photo by Tristan Fewings/Getty Images for Netflix.
    Tim Roth attends the World Premiere of ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ at Centenary Square on March 02, 2026 in Birmingham, England. Photo by Tristan Fewings/Getty Images for Netflix.

    MF: Tim, were you a fan of the TV series and what was your first reaction to the screenplay for the movie?

    Tim Roth: I hadn’t watched the series at all. I’d worked with Cillian back in the day, and then I’d known him over the years, and we’d given him an award in Cannes and stuff like that. I mean, I was a fan and I loved him, but I hadn’t seen the show. I’d bumped into him when he was filming it over the years, because I’d be in Liverpool, or I’d been in Birmingham or whatever. There was a joy there. Also, the series had a reputation within the acting world of, “Oh, you want to work on that. It’s such fun. The characters are great to play,” and so on. So that happened. But what happened was I texted Cillian after he got his Oscar and told him, “Just keep your head down and run for the hills.” He said, “Doing it. Do you want to do a film?” That was how it happened. He did the same with Barry and I think he got Rebecca on. So, he’s causing some kind of furor in the casting world because he’s actually taking over as a casting director.

    Tim Roth as Beckett in 'Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man'. Photo: Robert Viglasky/Netflix © 2026.
    Tim Roth as Beckett in ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’. Photo: Robert Viglasky/Netflix © 2026.

    MF: What was your first reaction to your character? Did you understand his point of view right away?

    TR: I thought he was brilliant. When he was written, he had a different twist to him. He was in the upper classes. I asked these guys if I could flip it and make him more of a normal guy, because I felt If he’s coming out from what seems like a much more normal and regular place, when the mask comes off, its more terrifying. Also, he needs to be able to communicate with Peaky Blinders and they wouldn’t talk to a toff. They wouldn’t talk to an upper-class snob.

    Cillian Murphy in 'Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man'. Photo: Robert Viglasky/Netflix © 2026.
    Cillian Murphy in ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’. Photo: Robert Viglasky/Netflix © 2026.

    MF: Steven, can you talk about how Thomas Shelby has changed since the series and what it was like working Cillian Murphy again?

    SK: Always great to work with Cillian, because he’s not only just a brilliant actor, but he leads the line. He’s such a professional, all those things, et cetera, et cetera, but all true with him. I wanted the character to have done something, because Tommy Shelby’s done some bad things over the years, but I wanted to find him, and he’s done something that he cannot forgive himself for, and it’s to do with his family. That guilt is a new thing. Then, I wanted to offer him the opportunity of redemption, the opportunity to be forgiven for what he’s done by doing something good. It’s something good for his son, but it’s also something good for the country. Both acts, both things are done by the same action, which is how the film ends. When you’ve got actors like this that are so good, you can be quite bold in the scope of the emotional territory you’re going for.

    (L to R) Cillian Murphy and Steven Knight are reunited on set as production officially starts on the upcoming Netflix film.
    (L to R) Cillian Murphy and Steven Knight are reunited on set as production officially starts on the upcoming Netflix film.

    MF: Tim, what was your experience like working with Steven and director Tom Harper on this project?

    TR: They gave us the space, which is a rarity nowadays, especially. Usually, all screen time is taken up with people speaking, or the music, or both. Cillian was talking about this this morning. You never get moments of silence to play. It’s a very rare thing now. I mean, there’s a history of that in the show and in the film. It rears its head well. So, we could watch each other without it being cut. We could just take the time. I think that makes it more cinematic, and a more beautifully told story. I wish it was in the cinemas longer, I must say. But there’s a community out there and they got it now. So, they get paid back and it’s lovely.

    (L to R) Barry Keoghan and Cillian Murphy in 'Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man'. Photo: Robert Viglasky/Netflix © 2026.
    (L to R) Barry Keoghan and Cillian Murphy in ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’. Photo: Robert Viglasky/Netflix © 2026.

    MF: Finally, Steven, as you know, fans of the series are very excited for this movie to finally be released. Have you felt that fan anticipation since the series ended?

    SK: I mean, the fans have been the engine of this whole thing. They’ve been the energy behind it. It was not massively publicized when it first started. It wasn’t promoted heavily. Fans found it. I think when people find something for themselves, it increases the loyalty to it and people get evangelical about it. They want other people to know how good it is. So that’s what happened with this. We really wanted the energy of the fans to not diminish. So, we knew there was a timescale to this. We wanted to get the film out there. But what I have noticed is there was a lot of anticipation, people who wanted it. But something new has happened. There’s an increasing amount of energy and fandom going on with the film. Like back home in England, you can’t get a ticket. It’s sold out everywhere and in Birmingham, there’s a cinema that’s doing four shows a day, starting at 8:00 AM, and you still can’t get a ticket. So, what we wanted to do from the very beginning was reward the fans with a film that’s in theaters where people can go and watch it together. They can dress accordingly if they wish but share the emotion at the end. That’s what’s happening, so there’s a new level now.

    'Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man'. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix/Robert Viglasky © 2025.
    ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix/Robert Viglasky © 2025.

    What is the plot of ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’?

    After his estranged son (Barry Keoghan) gets embroiled in a Nazi plot, self-exiled gangster Tommy Shelby (Cillian Murphy) must return to Birmingham to save his family — and his nation.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’?

    • Cillian Murphy as Thomas Shelby
    • Rebecca Ferguson as Kaulo and Zelda
    • Barry Keoghan as Erasmus “Duke” Shelby
    • Tim Roth as John Beckett
    • Stephen Graham as Hayden Stagg
    • Sophie Rundle as Ada Thorne
    • Ned Dennehy as Charlie Strong
    • Packy Lee as Johnny Dogs
    • Ian Peck as Curly
    • Jay Lycurgo as Elijah
    Tim Roth as Beckett in 'Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man'. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix/Robert Viglasky © 2025.
    Tim Roth as Beckett in ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’. Photo: Courtesy of Netflix/Robert Viglasky © 2025.

    List of Tim Roth Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Tim Roth Movies On Amazon

     

  • Martial Artist and Actor Chuck Norris Dead at 86

    Chuck Norris in 'Walker, Texas Ranger'. Photo: Columbia Pictures Television.
    Chuck Norris in ‘Walker, Texas Ranger’. Photo: Columbia Pictures Television.

    Preview:

    • Chuck Norris has died at the age of 86.
    • He was best known for his starring role in Walker, Texas Ranger and for a string of action films that defined an era of tough, no-nonsense heroes.
    • Over a career spanning more than five decades, he became a global symbol of strength, discipline, and resilience.

    Chuck Norris, the martial artist and actor who rose to fame through high-octane action films and later became a household name as Cordell Walker in ‘Walker, Texas Ranger’, has died at the age of 86.

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    Norris’s family released a statement:

    “To the world, he was a martial artist, actor, and a symbol of strength. To us, he was a devoted husband, a loving father and grandfather, an incredible brother, and the heart of our family. He lived his life with faith, purpose, and an unwavering commitment to the people he loved. Through his work, discipline, and kindness, he inspired millions around the world and left a lasting impact on so many lives.”

    Related Article: ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ and ‘Euphoria’ Star Eric Dane Dead at 53

    Chuck Norris: Early Life and Breakthrough

    (L to R) Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris in 'The Way of the Dragon'. Photo: Golden Harvest.
    (L to R) Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris in ‘The Way of the Dragon’. Photo: Golden Harvest.

    Born March 10, 1940, in Ryan, Oklahoma, Carlos Ray Norris developed an early interest in martial arts while serving in the United States Air Force. After being stationed in South Korea, he began training intensively, eventually earning black belts in multiple disciplines and becoming a champion in competitive karate.

    His transition to Hollywood came in the late 1960s after meeting Bruce Lee, who cast him in the 1972 film ‘The Way of the Dragon’. Their iconic coliseum fight scene remains one of the most celebrated moments in martial arts cinema.

    Norris went on to establish himself as a leading action star in films such as ‘Good Guys Wear Black’ and ‘Missing in Action’, where his stoic demeanor and formidable physical presence resonated with audiences worldwide.

    Chuck Norris: A Career of Endurance

    (L to R) Sylvester Stallone and Chuck Norris in 'The Expendables 2'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Sylvester Stallone and Chuck Norris in ‘The Expendables 2’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    In 1993, Norris took on his most enduring role as Cordell Walker in ‘Walker, Texas Ranger.’ Blending crime drama with moral storytelling and martial arts action, the series ran for eight seasons and became a defining part of his legacy.

    Beyond acting, Norris became a cultural phenomenon. Internet humor transformed him into a larger-than-life figure through “Chuck Norris facts,” a viral trend that playfully exaggerated his toughness and invincibility. Rather than resist it, Norris embraced the joke, further endearing himself to fans across generations.

    He also authored books, supported charitable causes, and promoted martial arts education, emphasizing discipline, respect, and perseverance.

    Chuck Norris: Off Screen

    Chuck Norris in 'Missing in Action'. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
    Chuck Norris in ‘Missing in Action’. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

    Away from the spotlight, Norris was known for his deep religious faith, philanthropy, and devotion to family. He co-founded youth programs aimed at building character and opportunity through martial arts training, leaving a lasting impact beyond entertainment.

    He often spoke about the importance of integrity, humility, and inner strength — values that defined both his personal life and public persona.

    Norris leaves behind a legacy that transcends film and television — from martial arts dojos to pop culture mythology — and a life defined by discipline, resilience, and unmistakable presence.

    (L to R) Chuck Norris and Lee Marvin in 'The Delta Force'. Photo: The Cannon Group.
    (L to R) Chuck Norris and Lee Marvin in ‘The Delta Force’. Photo: The Cannon Group.

    Selected Movies and TV Shows Featuring Chuck Norris:

    Buy Chuck Norris Movies and TV on Amazon

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  • Bradley Cooper Potentially Directing ‘Oceans’ Prequel

    (Left) Bradley Cooper at the 'Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3' World Premiere. (Right) 'Ocean's Eleven' poster. Photo: Warner Bros.
    (Left) Bradley Cooper at the ‘Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3’ World Premiere. (Right) ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ poster. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Preview:

    • Bradley Cooper may write and direct the ‘Ocean’s prequel.
    • Margot Robbie is already aboard to star and produce.
    • If he signs, Cooper will replace Lee Isaac Chung.

    Back in October of last year, word arrived that ‘A Star is Born’ co-writer/director and star Bradley Cooper was potentially reuniting with studio Warner Bros. to appear alongside Margot Robbie in the long-gestating ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ prequel.

    Now, via Deadline, there is news that Cooper may also re-write and direct the new movie, in addition to his acting duties.

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    The news comes on the heels of ‘Twisters’ director Lee Isaac Chung stepped away from the movie, citing creative differences with the studio and star/producer Robbie.

    Yet Deadline also cautions that Cooper has signed no deals yet, so all this is still up in the air.

    Related Article: George Clooney Says ‘Ocean’s 14’ Budget is ‘Approved’; to Shoot in 2026

    What’s the story of the ‘Ocean’s Prequel’?

    The cast of 2001's 'Ocean's Eleven'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    The cast of 2001’s ‘Ocean’s Eleven’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    The script remains a secret, though previous stories hinted that it’ll be set in 1962, and focus on a pair of thieves who target expensive earrings during a mansion event followed by a plot to steal precious diamond in Monte Carlo.

    Seeking payback after something goes wrong, they recruit a team to sabotage his Monaco Grand Prix victory and swipe the gem. And, if the connection to the ‘Ocean’s franchise holds true, they might just be the parents of Danny Ocean, as played by George Clooney in the main movies.

    Carrie Solomon wrote the most recent draft of the screenplay, but Cooper, assuming he does actually end up working on the movie, may start afresh.

    When will the ‘Ocean’s’ prequel movie be on screens?

    We’ve yet to learn when the film will land in cinemas, and Deadline’s story mentions an attempt to have it shooting before the end of this year, so 2027 is still possible.

    Margot Robbie at the Los Angeles World Premiere of 'Wuthering Heights'. Photo Credit: David Jon Photography.
    Margot Robbie at the Los Angeles World Premiere of ‘Wuthering Heights’. Photo Credit: David Jon Photography.

    Other Movies in the ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Tow’ Interview: Rose Byrne and Dominic Sessa

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    Opening in theaters on March 20th is the new drama ‘Tow’, which was based on a true story and directed by Stephanie Laing (‘Physical’).

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    The film stars Academy Award nominees Rose Byrne (‘If I Had Legs I’d Kick You’) and Dominic Sessa (‘The Holdovers’), Demi Lovato (‘Smurfs: The Lost Village’), Simon Rex (‘Operation Taco Gary’s’), Corbin Bernsen (‘Major League’), and Academy Award winners Ariana DeBose (‘West Side Story’) and Octavia Spencer (‘The Help’).

    (L to R) Dominic Sessa and Rose Byrne star in 'Tow.'
    (L to R) Dominic Sessa and Rose Byrne star in ‘Tow.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Rose Byrne and Dominic Sessa about their work on ‘Tow’, the true story it is based on, their characters, the film’s unique tone, and working with director Stephanie Laing.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Byrne and Sessa, and director Stephanie Laing.

    Related Article: Simon Rex Talks Sci-Fi Comedy ‘Operation Taco Gary’s’ and Drama ‘Tow’

    Rose Byrne in 'Tow.' Photo: Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    Rose Byrne in ‘Tow.’ Photo: Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Rose, can you talk about your first reaction to learning of Amanda Ogle’s true story and why you wanted to play her and bring her story to the screen?

    Rose Byrne: I mean, I was so intrigued. It really confronted my own prejudices of what someone is who’s unhoused, what they typically behave like or look like or sound like and where they’re from. She really turned all those things on its head in that sense. That’s something that really speaks to Amanda about how people have so many prejudices around that. It’s a systemic problem in the country and how that can happen to anybody through a series of bad choices and bad luck. She also hates authority. She’s very hostile. She’s suspicious of people. She’s a fun character to play and to hopefully have the audience root for her as well because she’s going up against this horrendous company, this monolithic company who couldn’t care less about her and her situation. In the end, she’s not really fighting for the car. She’s fighting for something inside. She’s fighting for her own dignity and respect. Then this very unlikely lawyer, this double act that becomes Kevin and Amanda. That was also really appealing to me and a fun part of the story. That was so true. It really happened. It’s so funny to see them together because they’re such an unlikely pair.

    (L to R) Dominic Sessa and Rose Byrne in 'Tow.' Photo: Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    (L to R) Dominic Sessa and Rose Byrne in ‘Tow.’ Photo: Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    MF: Dominic, can you talk about why Kevin decides to help Amanda, and what it was like creating that relationship on screen with Rose?

    Dominic Sessa: It’s hard to understand. On paper, why would he commit himself to this journey? I mean, this huge commitment that it ended up becoming. But I think it does have a lot to do with his age. I’m close to that age that he was at the time now. I feel that sense of you wanting to prove things, especially for this character right out of law school, you have something to prove. This maybe initially presented itself as an opportunity to be like, “Oh, I graduated. I know what I can do. I passed the bar,” all of that. Then I think beautifully just turned into this very caring relationship where it didn’t become about himself. He really was doing it just for this other person to the point where he was making mistakes and felt bad about them and nervous to present that to her because he had felt such an obligation to her and this car.

    'Tow' director Stephanie Laing.
    ‘Tow’ director Stephanie Laing.

    MF: Rose, what was it like working with Stephanie again after ‘Physical’ and really collaborating with her to tell this specific story?

    RB: It was wonderful. We’ve done so many episodes of TV together and you just clock those hours, you really have a shorthand, which is wonderful. This film was made in 19 days. So, it was like an episode of TV. It was so fast and furious, and we had one take, maybe two. Stephanie is incredible that she keeps everything on track. There’s no drama. She’s very organized and she has wonderful visual instincts. She casts so well. It’s not everybody can do that, particularly in these circumstances. She’s a wonderful leader and there’s no ego to it. She’s very driven by material, by performance, and it just reflects on the set. So, it was very well run considering how tight it was.

    (L to R) Rose Byrne and Octavia Spencer star in 'Tow.' Photo: Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    (L to R) Rose Byrne and Octavia Spencer star in ‘Tow.’ Photo: Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    MF: Finally, Dominic, can you talk about the unusual tone of the movie and was Stephanie helpful with balancing the comedy and the drama on set?

    DS: I think that was what attracted me to the movie. A large part was the tone of it and how it has this parabolic trajectory where you are laughing and then something devastating can happen. I think Stephanie’s really had a good sense of the tone and that’s what she wanted the movie to be. I think those are the movies I like the most personally and to act in as well. So, the first time we met, I understood what she was trying to do, and I think it’s the perfect tone for this story.

    'Tow' opens in theaters on March 20th.
    ‘Tow’ opens in theaters on March 20th.

    What is the plot of ‘Tow’?

    Amanda Ogle (Rose Byrne), a homeless Seattle woman, fights her way out of tow-company hell to reclaim her life and the car that held it all together after receiving a tow bill for $21,634.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Tow’?

    • Rose Byrne as Amanda Ogle
    • Dominic Sessa as Kevin
    • Demi Lovato as Nova
    • Ariana DeBose as Denise
    • Octavia Spencer as Barb
    • Simon Rex as Cliff
    • Elsie Fisher as Avery
    • Lea DeLaria as Jocelyn
    • Corbin Bernsen as Martin La Rosa
    • Bree Elrod as Lorraine
    • Becky Ann Baker as Debbie
    Rose Byrne in 'Tow.' Photo: Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.
    Rose Byrne in ‘Tow.’ Photo: Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

    List of Rose Byrne Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Tow’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Rose Byrne Movies on Amazon

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’

    Samara Weaving in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    Samara Weaving in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters on March 20th is ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come‘, directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett (aka Radio Silence) and starring Samara Weaving,  Kathryn Newton, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Shawn Hatosy, Elijah Wood, Nestor Carbonell, and David Cronenberg.

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    Related Article: Samara Weaving and More Talk Sequel ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come’

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Sarah Michelle Gellar and Shawn Hatosy in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Sarah Michelle Gellar and Shawn Hatosy in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Ready or Not’ was a breath of fresh air when it came out in 2019: directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett (‘Scream’ and ‘Scream VI’), screenwriters Guy Busick and R. Christopher Murphy, and star Samara Weaving delivered a smart, subversive, often wickedly funny and unapologetically gory horror comedy that poked fun at wealth and marriage.

    ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come’ reunites the same team and adds some more ingredients, including a new cast and an expanded in-movie mythology, occasionally yielding the same results. The movie is fun, although it takes a long time to get going and a lot of what worked the first time already seems familiar now.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Samara Weaving and Kathryn Newton in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Samara Weaving and Kathryn Newton in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    The new film literally opens as the first one ends, with a bloodied Grace Le Domas (Weaving) stumbling out of her in-laws’ burning estate, having survived a brutal game on her wedding day in which her new family must sacrifice her to a demon or face ruination and death. Grace (who immediately starts using her maiden name of MacCaullay again) is whisked to the hospital, where she’s met by her estranged sister Faith (Kathryn Newton), who was called as her emergency contact.

    Before the siblings can barely start airing grievances, however, they’re attacked (in a too-brief appearance from Kevin Durand); it turns out that the Le Domas family were part of a council of wealthy, powerful families who secretly rule the world thanks to their worship of Satan, and now that one of the families has been wiped out, the others have one night to kill Grace lest the same misfortune befall them. This time, however, Faith is caught up in the hunt, and the two sisters must face a violent onslaught by not one but four families, including the all-powerful Danforth clan.

    (L to R) Directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett on the set of 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett on the set of ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Ready or Not 2’ gets off to a creaky start: the entire first act is almost all exposition, as first Grace explains the plot of the first film to Faith, and then a smug, subtly amused Elijah Wood – as the council’s unnamed lawyer – lays down the complicated rules of the new game once Grace and Faith are captured (those rules, by the way, are bent or disregarded more than once as we go along). All that throat-clearing takes a long time and slows the pace to a crawl, only punctuated by the first attack on the sisters in the hospital.

    Once the game’s afoot, the action picks up again and the first kill (death by industrial washing machine) is morbidly hilarious, thanks to Weaving and Newton’s reactions. Most of the would-be killers this time are barely sketched in as characters – save for the sinister brother-sister act of the Danforths, played by Shawn Hatosy (‘The Pitt’) and ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ icon Sarah Michelle Gellar – which is a bit of a letdown from the first film: the dynamic there, as the Le Domas clan picked at each other while hunting Grace, offered a scathing critique of family that is missing from the new story.

    (L to R): Kara Wooten, Shawn Hatosy, David Cronenberg, and Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Ready or Not 2: Here I Come.' Photo: Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R): Kara Wooten, Shawn Hatosy, David Cronenberg, and Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come.’ Photo: Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    In one funny/not funny early sequence, the Danforth patriarch, played by legendary director David Cronenberg, picks up a bedside phone and mutters ‘Approve the ceasefire,’ while watching footage of a war zone on his TV. No sooner does he hang up then a ‘Breaking News’ banner announces the ceasefire. The idea that a small coterie of very rich, well-connected oligarchs runs the world – a sort of cross between the Illuminati and the High Table of the ‘John Wick’ films – is a prescient and all too timely one, but ‘Ready or Not 2’ more or less pays it lip service and moves on.

    The film really shines brightest and comes fully alive when the MacCaullay sisters fight, claw, shoot, and kick their way through the vast new labyrinth of a Danforth-owned resort, although it begins to feel repetitive down the stretch. A more acidic layer of social critique is largely absent this time amidst all the hardcore violence and gore. Two movies in, ‘Ready or Not’ is still entertaining but has lost that fresh feeling.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Nestor Carbonell, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Shawn Hatosy, Elijah Wood, and Nadeem Umar-Khitab in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Nestor Carbonell, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Shawn Hatosy, Elijah Wood, and Nadeem Umar-Khitab in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    Although their relationship follows a shopworn narrative arc (the sisters greet each other coldly, fight, make up, fight, make up again, become besties), Weaving and Newton (‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’) make a great team and their interactions do keep ‘Ready or Not 2’ appealing. Weaving’s huge eyes and expressive features only emphasize her star presence, while Newton has undeniable charisma with a jaded undercurrent. Their chemistry makes the siblings’ relationship organic and well-earned.

    Gellar and Hatosy make a solid brother-sister act as well, the former working a few extra layers into her character and the latter proving effective as a truly vicious, misogynistic psychopath (with all the money and power in the world at his fingertips). It’s great to see Cronenberg in his extended cameo, and the best of the supporting cast is the ever-efficient lawyer played by Elijah Wood, who’s clearly having himself a grand old time and wants to share it with us.

    Final Thoughts

    Elijah Wood in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    Elijah Wood in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    Directors Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett have their strengths, including an eye for detail and a dark sense of humor, as well as their weaknesses, such as a tendency to edit their fight scenes a little too choppily. Their use of already tired tropes (such as scoring a violent confrontation with an incongruous pop ballad) is matched by their ability to concoct macabre but highly funny set pieces and some outrageous moments of gore.

    But while ‘Ready or Not 2’ is moderately entertaining (especially in its second half), this sequel doesn’t sizzle like its predecessor despite doubling down on its protagonists, its world-building, and its undeniably hateful (and rich) villains. If the box office gross leads to a third film, the rules of the game may have to be changed before we’re ready (or not) to return.

    ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’ receives a score of 70 out of 100.

    (L to R): Kathryn Newton and Samara Weaving in 'Ready or Not 2: Here I Come.' Photo: Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R): Kathryn Newton and Samara Weaving in ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I
    Come.’ Photo: Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’?

    After surviving a brutal ‘game’ that resulted in the deaths of her husband and in-laws, Grace MacCaullay learns that the wealthiest and most influential families on Earth have to kill her in a new game or risk losing their power and fortunes. Grace refuses to participate at first – until her younger sister, Faith, is also marked for death.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’?

    • Samara Weaving as Grace MacCaullay
    • Kathryn Newton as Faith MacCaullay
    • Sarah Michelle Gellar as Ursula Danforth
    • Shawn Hatosy as Titus Danforth
    • David Cronenberg as Chester Danforth
    • Elijah Wood as the Lawyer
    • Néstor Carbonell as Ignacio El Caido
    • Kevin Durand as Bill Wilkinson
    • Olivia Cheng as Wan Chen Xing
    • Varun Saranga as Madhu Rajan
    • Nadeem Umar-Khitab as Viraj Rajan
    • Juan Pablo Romero as Felipe El Caido
    • Masa Lizdek as Martina Rajan
    • Maia Jae as Francesca El Caido
    • Daniel Beirne as Kip Danforth
    • Antony Hall as Wan Cheng Fu
    'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come' opens in theaters on March 20th.
    ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’ opens in theaters on March 20th.

    List of Movies Directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Preschool’ Interview: Josh Duhamel and Michael Socha

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    Available digitally on March 17th is the new comedy ‘Preschool‘, which was directed by actor Josh Duhamel (‘Transformers’ and ‘Buddy Games’). In addition to Duhamel, the film stars Michael Socha (‘Papillon’), Antonia Thomas (‘Bagman’), Charity Wakefield (‘Scoop’), and Fenella Woolgar (‘Judy’).

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    Josh Duhamel attends the LA Special Screening of 'Preschool'. Photographer Credit: Jesse Grant.
    Josh Duhamel attends the LA Special Screening of ‘Preschool’. Photographer Credit: Jesse Grant.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with actor and director Josh Duhamel, as well as Michael Socha about their work on ‘Preschool’, the film’s tone, how Duhamel’s previous experience directing prepared him for this project, Socha’s character, what it was like being directed by Duhamel, and shooting the movie’s funniest scene.

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

    Related Article: Josh Duhamel and Director Allan Ungar Talk Action Comedy ‘London Calling’

    (Center) Josh Duhamel as “Alan” in Comedy, Family Film, 'Preschool'. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    (Center) Josh Duhamel as “Alan” in Comedy, Family Film, ‘Preschool’. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    Moviefone: To begin with, Josh, can you talk about how your previous experience as a director prepared you to make this movie?

    Josh Duhamel: Good question. I think that my previous experience gave me the confidence that I could do it. I think that first time out of the gates is very scary, but I knew enough to know that I didn’t have to know everything. You surround yourself with a great cast, a great crew, a strong editor, a strong production team, and strong department heads. There’s nothing more collaborative than making a movie or a TV show because all these super talented people from different walks of production must all come together. Part of the beauty of this is that it is all hands-on deck, and everyone’s here to make a great movie. We just had a fun time making the movie. Especially when you’re trying to make a comedy, you want it to feel creative, collaborative, and light because that transfers to the screen. So, this one was no different than the other two in that I knew that I just needed to surround myself with talented people.

    MF: Can you also talk about the specific tone you were going for and how you were able to achieve that?

    JD: It was originally scripted from Malibu, this preschool was sort of a new age, progressive preschool instead of this 400-year-old institution, which was kind of like Hogwarts. That changed the dynamic of what the film was going to be, but I thought for the better. There’s no shortage of tremendous talent in the UK and everybody, Michael, Anatonia (Thomas), Charity (Wakefield), James Cosmo, Fenella Woolgar, and all my day players, they are Shakespearean trained actors. These are very talented people. It was intimidating for me if I’m being honest. But tonally, it does change that. It became more of a collaboration of American comedy and British humor, and I love British humor. Thankfully, I had actors who really understood that and pulled it off.

    (Top to Bottom) Josh Duhamel as “Alan” and Michael Socha as “Brian” in the Comedy, Family film, 'Preschool'. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    (Top to Bottom) Josh Duhamel as “Alan” and Michael Socha as “Brian” in the Comedy, Family film, ‘Preschool’. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    MF: Michael, can you talk about what Brian is willing to do to protect his child’s education and could you relate to your character?

    Michael Socha: The thing is with Brian, I understand him. I get it. Do you know what I mean? I’m working class myself. I grew up working class and I understand, I suppose, the preconceived ideas of what not being working class is. I know that a lot of the people I grew up with, they were always fighting to get out of the rut that they were in, assuming if they’re not working class, then life’s going to be amazing and they’re going to have everything they want. But that’s just obviously not the case. This film, I suppose, makes that quite apparent.

    MF: Michael, what was it like working with Josh both as a director and a scene partner?

    MS: Josh was wicked. I can’t fault him, I really can’t. He was a kind director and gave me all the time I needed. He’s a great actor to work with, and a definite team player in every sense. Honestly, I’m not just saying it. I thoroughly enjoyed myself working with Josh. So, if he ever wants to cast me again in any future projects, I’m available for you, Josh.

    (L to R) Michael Socha as “Brian” and Director Josh Duhamel in the Comedy, Family film, 'Preschool'. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    (L to R) Michael Socha as “Brian” and Director Josh Duhamel in the Comedy, Family film, ‘Preschool’. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    MF: Josh, can you talk about shooting the scenes with the fictional children’s band ‘The Wild & Crazies’? Was that all scripted or was there improvisation involved?

    JD: It’s one of those things whereas you’re prepping for the movie, “Okay, we got ‘The Wild and Crazies’ coming here,” and then it’s like, “Wait a second, we have to actually create a kid’s show within the movie.” So, we really dove in on what drives me crazy about some of these kids shows, some of the creepiness, and the backstories of these characters. I decided that I wanted The Monkey to be sort of that Mick Jagger burnout who thought of himself as an actual rockstar and ended up accidentally in this kid’s band because he needed the money and then it turns into this giant thing. They’re smoking and drinking backstage, we don’t show it, but you can feel it. So, we really spent a lot of time, not only with their characters, especially The Monkey, but also their costumes. The kids think they’re funny, but the parents find them almost scary in a weird way because they’re so odd and strange. We had a lot of fun. This whole thing is just so weird.

    MF: Michael, your character has a huge fight scene with ‘The Wild & Crazies’, what was it like shooting that?

    MS: I remember just being knackered. I realized how unfit I was after probably by take two. I was like, “Oh no, I got to get back in the gym.” But it was great because they were stunt people in real life. Everybody except for Colin Carmichael, The Monkey, he was not a stunt person. So, they were just incredible and willing to take a couple of licks. Do you know what I mean? They took a couple of knocks. It was fun, but I realized how unfit I was.

    (L to R) Fenella Woolgar as “Mrs. Lawrence”, Charity Wakefield as “Lauren”, Josh Duhamel as “Alan”, Michael Socha as “Brian” and Antonia Thomas as “Sarah” in the Comedy, Family film, 'Preschool'. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    (L to R) Fenella Woolgar as “Mrs. Lawrence”, Charity Wakefield as “Lauren”, Josh Duhamel as “Alan”, Michael Socha as “Brian” and Antonia Thomas as “Sarah” in the Comedy, Family film, ‘Preschool’. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    MF: Finally, Josh, was it challenging directing the children on set?

    JD: It wasn’t so bad. The hardest part about directing kids is that you only have them for so many hours, so you really must be smart about how you schedule it. But they were both great kids and they were both willing to try all kinds of stuff. They were both also very athletic. The actor that plays Brian’s son was a Jiu-Jitsu artist, so we shaped a scene where he kicks my ass at their house and does the flip and the whole thing. This kid is an actual jiu-jitsu stud. He’s very good at it. Then the actress that plays my daughter in the movie is a gymnast, so I tried to incorporate as much of that as I could because the physicality makes it fun, but they’re also very good actors and actresses. They were both pros, thankfully, because that could have gone sideways quick.

    'Preschool' will be available digitally on March 17th.
    ‘Preschool’ will be available digitally on March 17th.

    What is the plot of ‘Preschool’?

    Two fathers (Josh Duhamel and Michael Socha) become engaged in a battle to try and enroll their children into a desirable preschool.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Preschool’?

    • Josh Duhamel as Alan
    • Michael Socha as Brian
    • Antonia Thomas as Sarah
    • Charity Wakefield as Lauren
    • Fenella Woolgar as Mrs. Lawrence
    • James Cosmo as Joe
    • Colin Carmichael as The Monkey
    (L to R) Josh Duhamel as “Alan”, Michael Socha as “Brian”, Antonia Thomas as “Sarah”, and Charity Wakefield as “Lauren” in the Comedy, Family film, 'Preschool'. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).
    (L to R) Josh Duhamel as “Alan”, Michael Socha as “Brian”, Antonia Thomas as “Sarah”, and Charity Wakefield as “Lauren” in the Comedy, Family film, ‘Preschool’. Photo courtesy of Republic Pictures (a Paramount Pictures label).

    List of Josh Duhamel Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Josh Duhamel Movies On Amazon

  • ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’ Interview: Nick Offerman and More

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    Opening in theaters on March 20th is the new animated family film ‘The Pout-Pout Fish‘, which was directed by Ricard Cussó and Rio Harrington, and stars Nick Offerman (‘Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning’), Nina Oyama (‘Utopia’), Miranda Otto (‘The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim’), Jordin Sparks (‘Merry Little Mystery’), and Amy Sedaris (‘Is This Thing On?’).

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    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Nick Offerman and Jordin Sparks about their work on ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’, the screenplay, their characters, and the message of the movie.

    (L to R) Nick Offerman and Jordin Sparks star in 'The Pout-Pout Fish'.
    (L to R) Nick Offerman and Jordin Sparks star in ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’.

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

    Related Article: Nick Offerman and Janet McTeer Added to ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part Two’

    (L to R) Nick Offerman and Nina Oyama star in 'The Pout-Pout Fish'. Photo: Viva Pictures.
    (L to R) Nick Offerman and Nina Oyama star in ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’. Photo: Viva Pictures.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Nick, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and why you wanted to play Mr. Fish?

    Nick Offerman: Well, it’s funny. It’s a very strange luck that Mother Nature created me with my face and my dour, slow talking voice that got me to a place in my career that the business would say, “Hey, we think you would be perfect to play this ugly depressed fish in this beloved series of children’s books.” So thankfully, I’m able to see the good in that and not take it as a personal slight. So, I read it, and I was immediately taken with the story like the rest of the world. Everybody I mentioned it to that was familiar with it just was over the moon and said, “Oh my God, I can’t believe you’re going to get to do this.” So, there wasn’t much about it that wasn’t a no-brainer. It was just being the lucky guy who had the right turned down face.

    MF: Jordin, what was your first reaction to this script and why did you want to be part of this project?

    Jordin Sparks: Honestly, I related to Shimmer a lot. I related to her on a personal level. She is kind of like this mythical creature, and everybody’s searching for her, and everybody has these ideas of who she is and what she can do. That’s a lot of pressure and expectation to have when nobody really knows who she is. So, for me, being in the spotlight from a very young age, I felt those kinds of pressures too. Obviously, different circumstances, but the pressure and the weight still feel the same of people having expectations of how I should be or what my art should be like or what I should talk like or how I should act. I think it was cool to be able to see the description of her, and I was like, “Wow, I really relate to that.” So, there’s an empathy that I feel like I have that I got to bring to it because even though Shimmer feels like there’s all these pressures on her, she still has the mind and the heart to be like, “How can I help?” I think that’s a beautiful trait to have, and I’m kind of the same way. Not kind of, I am the same way.

    A scene from 'The Pout-Pout Fish'. Photo: Viva Pictures.
    A scene from ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’. Photo: Viva Pictures.

    MF: Nick, did you give any suggestions to the animators as to how you thought your character should look?

    NO: Well, I don’t have anything to offer the genius of the animators, but they take my offerings. They always film you while you’re recording, and one of the things that’s fun about voice work is that I feel uninhibited by my physical body in a way that I obviously am inhibited on camera. I’m constrained by the natural world. I can’t do three back flips, or I can’t stick my thumb in my mouth and blow myself up into a balloon. So, when I’m doing an animated voice, I like to blow away the bounds of physical constraints so that I can sound like anything is happening. So, even though no one’s asked me for additional input, I like to try and inspire the animators with the noises that I make, and the faces that I make. It’s really fun because they really take cues from things that you do, and they work that into the animation. I mean, it’s so fun to watch the finished product because they’ve added so much magic and charm. They make me look a lot funnier and a lot more charming than I could ever be.

    MF: Jordin, how do you prepare for a voice role like this? Is it different than preparing for a live action role or going into a studio to cut a song?

    JS: That’s a good question. I think going in for a song, it’s kind of comparable to that because you do different takes, and then you try and figure out what it sounds like the best. When I’m on camera, there’s so many more details that must be considered like where my arm is, where I’m looking, or what the outfit looks like. With animation, you can kind of scale back a little bit on the pressure, but at the same time, whatever you’re saying must work and must be perfect because you are representing that character with just your voice. So, there is a little bit more nerves to that. But with this character, because I related so much, I was able to kind of drop into those feelings, and I was able to collaborate with the producers and the director. They were on Zoom because they were over in Australia. I was here in the States, and he’d be like, “Okay, try it this way,” and I would. Then, he said, “Okay, why don’t you try it the way that you think?” Then, we would come together and be like, “Okay, maybe here, it should sound a little bit more like what you were doing on this one.” So, it was a very collaborative process, but I think the thing that brought it all together was my ultimate mom voice. That really helped. With my eight-year-old, I say, “Okay, how do I calm him down?” So, I brought some of that into it as well.

    (Center) Nick Offerman stars in 'The Pout-Pout Fish'. Photo: Viva Pictures.
    (Center) Nick Offerman stars in ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’. Photo: Viva Pictures.

    MF: Nick, the film features some uplifting messages about community and working together. How important is it to you personally to work on a project that has something important to say about the world we live in?

    NO: Very much. I mean, whether it’s Shakespeare or something really timely, like this story that’s a lot more modern, I mean, that’s why I got into this business. It’s fun to be part of the medicinal side of storytelling. Human beings will always have weaknesses, we will always fail each other for reasons of selfishness or vulnerability or pain or fear. So, we will always need these stories to tell each other, to remind ourselves to choose love, to take care of each other instead of hurting each other, and to try and endeavor to hug one another rather than punch each other. So, a story like this that exemplifies the diversity of a neighborhood to say, we need to be open to each other’s different households, to rely on the strengths of that diversity to create a strong community rather than to shun one another. It’s great. I love being part of that kind of storytelling because we’ll always need it.

    MF: Finally, Jordin, the film teaches the lesson that you can be a self-reliant person, but you can also turn to other people for help if you need it. Was that a message that you responded to personally?

    JS: Yes, I relate on the one end of feeling like it’s so nice to have somebody to just lean on even if they might not understand exactly what you’re going through. But on the other side of being that person, you have one hand to help yourself and you have one hand to help others. Any way that I can do that, any way that I can help, any way that I can encourage the youth, kids, anybody is what I want to do. So, I have a lot of that intention in the art that I create in my music, in voiceovers, in acting different characters, in writing, so I’m always trying to leave people better than I found them. Whether it’s after three minutes of listening to a song or being able to see this movie, I want to make people feel and would hope that those things that I create or that I’m a part of can uplift them after they experience them.

    Editorial Note: Don Kaye conducted this interview and contributed to this article.

    A scene from 'The Pout-Pout Fish'. Photo: Viva Pictures.
    A scene from ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’. Photo: Viva Pictures.

    What is the plot of ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’?

    Living on a rundown shipwreck, Mr. Fish (Nick Offerman) one day discovers a hyperactive young sea dragon Pip (Nina Oyama) – who had mistaken his home for a junkyard – pilfering his belongings. The heated argument that ensues leaves both their houses in ruin. But there is hope! Embarking on a seemingly impossible quest in search of the mythical “Shimmer” (Jordin Sparks) to grant them a wish, there’s only one problem: someone else is on the hunt.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’?

    • Nick Offerman as Mr. Fish
    • Nina Oyama as Pip
    • Miranda Otto as Marin
    • Remy Hii as Benji
    • Jordin Sparks as Shimmer
    • Amy Sedaris as the pink Dolphins
    • Nazeem Hussain as Archie
    • Mark Coles Smith as Hector
    • Mel Buttle as Shaz
    'The Pout-Pout Fish' opens in theaters on March 20th.
    ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’ opens in theaters on March 20th.

    List of Jordin Sparks Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Pout-Pout Fish’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Jordin Sparks Movies on Amazon

     

  • ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come’ Cast Interviews

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    Opening in theaters on March 20th is ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come‘, which is a sequel to 2019’s ‘Ready or Not’ and was once again directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett (‘Abigail’), who are also known as Radio Silence.

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    Samara Weaving (‘Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins’) returns to her role as Grace MacCaullay and is joined by new cast members Kathryn Newton (‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’), Sarah Michelle Gellar (‘The Grudge’), Shawn Hatosy (‘The Pitt’), Elijah Wood (‘The Monkey’), Nestor Carbonell (‘The Dark Knight’), and David Cronenberg (‘The Fly’).

    (L to R) Kathryn Newton, Samara Weaving, Sarah Michelle Gellar and Elijah Wood star in 'Ready or Not 2: Here I Come'.
    (L to R) Kathryn Newton, Samara Weaving, Sarah Michelle Gellar and Elijah Wood star in ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Samara Weaving, Kathryn Newton, Sarah Michelle Gellar, and Elijah Wood about their work on ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come’, Weaving’s return to her character, what it was like for the other actors to join the franchise, the new characters, working with the directors, and what fans of the first movie can expect from the sequel.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Weaving, Newton, Gellar, and Wood, as well as directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett.

    Related Article: Sarah Michelle Gellar and Elijah Wood Board ‘Ready or Not: Here I Come’

    (L to R) Sarah Michelle Gellar and Shawn Hatosy in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Sarah Michelle Gellar and Shawn Hatosy in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Sarah Michelle, what would you say to fans sitting down right now in a movie theater to watch this sequel to prepare them for the theatrical experience they are about to have?

    Sarah Michelle Gellar: I think that if you love the first one, you’re guaranteed to love the second. But I think the most important thing is to consider that, as popular as the first movie was, they did not rush out a sequel. Radio Silence waited until they knew they had the story and the cast. They really did it right. I think what we do in this one is we really honor the legacy of the first one and just continue that. I would say unhinged is a good word. There’s no setup in this one. You are in it.

    Elijah Wood in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    Elijah Wood in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Elijah, what would you say to get people excited for this sequel?

    Elijah Wood: I mean, get ready for a ride. Like the first film, when that game of Hide and Seek begins, it’s a ride until the end of the film and this movie is no different. The stakes are bigger. It does not let up once it starts. The thing is, it literally starts seconds after the first movie ends. You’re kind of off to the races very quickly.

    Samara Weaving in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    Samara Weaving in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Samara, is there anything you would like to add to that?

    Samara Weaving: Just buckle up. Get ready. It’s going to get weird.

    MF: Kathryn, what would you say to prepare fans of the original for this sequel?

    Kathryn Newton: I would say have fun and scream. It would be so cool if people walked out of this and saw it again and had something to say every time there was a kill, like a ‘Rocky Horror Picture Show’ situation. Can we come up with some kind of drinking game or something?

    Kathryn Newton in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    Kathryn Newton in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Samara, what was it like for you to return to this franchise and play this character again?

    SW: It was a dream. I really didn’t think that I would be able to after the first one because it was such a weird movie and we didn’t know if people would like it or not, because we had such a great time making it. So, the fact that I got to do it again was just the best.

    MF: What was it like having Kathryn as a partner this time around?

    SW: Oh, so annoying. No, it was so great, because I would get a bit bored on the first one because it would just be me running around like a lunatic. So, it was great, I had a friend on set with this one.

    (L to R): Kathryn Newton and Samara Weaving in 'Ready or Not 2: Here I Come.' Photo: Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R): Kathryn Newton and Samara Weaving in ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come.’ Photo: Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Kathryn, were you a fan of the first film and what has it been like for you to join this series?

    KN: I was. I was really honored to be a part of it, and wanted to make the growing fan base, the cult fan base even happier, and hopefully they love it. Just to work with Matt and Tyler again was a dream. They’re the best.

    (L to R) Nestor Carbonell, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Shawn Hatosy, Elijah Wood, and Nadeem Umar-Khitab in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Nestor Carbonell, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Shawn Hatosy, Elijah Wood, and Nadeem Umar-Khitab in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Sarah Michelle, were you a fan of the first movie and what was it like for you to join the series and take on this role?

    SMG: I had seen the original. I was a big fan. I got a call one day, and they said, “Have you ever seen ‘Ready or Not’?” I said, “Yeah, of course.” They said, “Well, they’re making a sequel.” I first thought, “Really? It’s been five or six years, and they usually rush them out.” I read it, and I absolutely loved it. Just from reading it on the page, you see it. I said, “I want to meet the boys immediately.” I met the guys on a Zoom the next day, and I think I said yes about a minute into the meeting. I think that’s about how long it took.

    Elijah Wood in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    Elijah Wood in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Elijah, your character is very mysterious, and we don’t learn a lot about him during the movie. Did you create a backstory for yourself to understand where he comes from and his role in this world?

    EW: No, but I certainly thought about it. Matt, Tyler, and I would talk about who this guy is, and where he’s come from. Is he immortal? Has he been around for centuries? Has he been doing this for a long time? Things like that that certainly kind of were in the fabric of what I was thinking for the character. Then my task was to deliver those rules in as interesting a way as I could.

    (L to R) Samara Weaving and Kathryn Newton in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Samara Weaving and Kathryn Newton in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Kathryn, how would you describe the sibling relationship between Grace and Faith and where it stands when the movie starts?

    KN: They’re on the rocks. They’ve got things to talk about and they’re not talking, they’re running. There’s no time to be talking. I keep trying to talk and it’s just causing issues. She’s like, “Stop it,” and I’m like, “No.” It’s a little bit of that. There’s a bit of drama, some life and death situations, and we still talk about boys.

    MF: Elijah, can you talk about collaborating with directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett on set?

    EW: I mean, these guys are so lovely. They are such film fans, such fans of the creation of cinema, and have such enthusiasm that really extends to everybody on set, the cast included, and it is sort of an infectious feeling of we’re all in this thing creating together. It’s very collaborative. I love those guys. They’re lovely and it makes it fun. Listen, they’re very articulate as well, and very clear about what it is that they want. They barely looked stressed.

    (L to R) Directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett on the set of 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett on the set of ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Sarah Michelle, what was your experience like working with Matt and Tyler?

    SMG: They treated everyone with the same dignity from number one on the call sheet to every PA that was on the show. I think that it just makes for a really great experience. I mean, I don’t know how to describe it any better than that. There’s no guessing with them. They can always tell you what they want. You don’t have to drag it out of them. But more than anything, I would say that this was a hard shoot. We had very few days. It was a lot of nights. The weather was not cooperative. They never raised their voice, not once in the entire shoot, and that says a lot. Occasionally, at the end of the night, you could see them pacing, trying to figure out what shots they had to cut, but it was more their creative thought process.

    MF: Samara, what was it like for you to work with Matt and Tyler again?

    SM: They’re the greatest. They’ve become close friends of mine, so it was just any excuse to hang out with them. I’d take a bullet for them. They’re the best.

    (L to R) Directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett on the set of 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett on the set of ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Finally, Kathryn, you worked with Matt and Tyler on ‘Abigail’, but what do you love about working with them as filmmakers?

    KN: I think Matt and Tyler are the best audience. They love what they do, and I think they don’t ask much of you. Then when you give them something, they really see it and they really elevate it. I felt like on this movie, they really protected my performance because I did a lot of weird things that I didn’t know would work. Then the other thing they do, Matt specifically, I think because it was the second movie together, he knew things I was capable of that I didn’t. It was important to get the horror and the stakes of the movie. He had to make sure I was doing enough. He had to make sure I was being scared enough, or whatever it called for. So, he elevated my performance, and then they kept it together in the edit.

    (L to R) Juan Pablo Romero, Nestor Carbonell, Varun Saranga, Maša Lizdek, Shawn Hatosy, Samara Weaving, Nadeem Umar-Khitab, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Daniel Beirne, Kathryn Newton, Antony Hall, and Olivia Cheng in 'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come'. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Juan Pablo Romero, Nestor Carbonell, Varun Saranga, Maša Lizdek, Shawn Hatosy, Samara Weaving, Nadeem Umar-Khitab, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Daniel Beirne, Kathryn Newton, Antony Hall, and Olivia Cheng in ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’. Photo by Searchlight Pictures/Pief Weyman, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2026 Searchlight Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come’?

    Grace MacCaullay (Samara Weaving), the sole survivor of a brutal “game” that resulted in the deaths of her husband and in-laws, learns that her victory comes with a price. Now, the wealthiest and most influential families on Earth must kill her in a new game – or risk losing their power and fortunes. Grace refuses to participate at first but is left with no choice when she learns that her younger sister, Faith (Kathryn Newton), has also been marked for death and must protect her at all costs.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come’?

    • Samara Weaving as Grace MacCaullay
    • Kathryn Newton as Faith MacCaullay
    • Sarah Michelle Gellar as Ursula Danforth
    • Shawn Hatosy as Titus Danforth
    • David Cronenberg as Chester Danforth
    • Elijah Wood as The Lawyer
    • Néstor Carbonell as Ignacio El Caido
    • Kevin Durand as Bill Wilkinson
    • Olivia Cheng as Wan Chen Xing
    • Varun Saranga as Madhu Rajan
    • Nadeem Umar-Khitab as Viraj Rajan
    • Juan Pablo Romero as Felipe El Caido
    • Masa Lizdek as Martina Rajan
    • Maia Jae as Francesca El Caido
    • Daniel Beirne as Kip Danforth
    • Antony Hall as Wan Cheng Fu
    'Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come' opens in theaters on March 20th.
    ‘Ready Or Not 2: Here I Come’ opens in theaters on March 20th.

    List of Movies Directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett Movies on Amazon

  • ‘Dune: Part Three’ Trailer Debut and Press Conference

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    It’s time to return to Arrakis: Warner Bros. Pictures has unveiled the first teaser trailer for ‘Dune: Part Three,’ director Denis Villeneuve’s concluding chapter in the epic cinematic trilogy adapted from the landmark sci-fi novels by Frank Herbert.

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    As you can see from viewing the trailer, ‘Dune: Part Three’ – which is due out on Dec. 18, 2026 and is based on Herbert’s second novel, ‘Dune Messiah’ – is just as immense and immersive a film experience as 2021’s ‘Dune‘ and 2024’s ‘Dune: Part Two,‘ both of which were nominated for best picture at the Academy Awards.

    Just in these two minutes, the screen practically explodes with vast vistas of armies battling in the desert, spaceships rocketing through the void, and Paul ‘Muad’Dib’ Atreides (Timothée Chalamet), the leader of the Arrakis native people known as the Fremen and now emperor of the universe, facing not just the galactic war he has unleashed but the prospect of parenthood with the Fremen warrior Chani (Zendaya).

    (L to R) Robert Pattinson, Zendaya, director Denis Villeneuve, Anya Taylor-Joy, and Javier Bardem at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of 'Dune: Part Three' at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.
    (L to R) Robert Pattinson, Zendaya, director Denis Villeneuve, Anya Taylor-Joy, and Javier Bardem at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of ‘Dune: Part Three’ at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.

    In addition to Chalamet and Zendaya, cast members returning from the first two films include Josh Brolin (Gurney Halleck), Javier Bardem (Stilgar), Rebecca Ferguson (Lady Jessica), Florence Pugh (Princess Irulan), and Jason Momoa, who plays a somewhat different version of his deceased character, Duncan Idaho.

    New cast members include Anya Taylor-Joy as Paul’s mysterious and powerful sister Alia, Isaach de Bankolè as Paul’s former personal fedaykin (commando) Farok, and Robert Pattinson as Scytale, a member of a secretive society known as the Tlielaxu who can mimic any other human’s identity and leads a conspiracy to assassinate Paul.

    Moviefone was present as Denis Villeneuve, Zendaya, Pattinson, Bardem, and Taylor-Joy premiered the trailer for press at an event in Los Angeles, and here’s what we discovered from them about ‘Dune: Part Three.’

    Related Article: ‘Dune’s Denis Villeneuve to Direct the Next James Bond Movie for Amazon

    1) Director Denis Villeneuve Says ‘Dune: Part Three’ Is A Different Movie From The First Two.

    Director Denis Villeneuve at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of 'Dune: Part Three' at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.
    Director Denis Villeneuve at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of ‘Dune: Part Three’ at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.

    Just as the book ‘Dune Messiah’ is not in the same vein as the first novel, ‘Dune,’ Denis Villeneuve hints that ‘Dune: Part Three’ charts its own path.

    Denis Villeneuve: It happens many years later. It’s a very different movie from the first ones. I said to myself, it’s a good idea to come back to this world not by nostalgia, but by urgency, and to go there with a critical eye and not to be self-indulgent. I said to my team that it will be a very different film – a ‘Dune’ movie, but with a different tone, with a different rhythm, with a different base. If the first movie was more a contemplation of a boy exploring a new world, and the second one was a war movie, this one is a thriller. It’s more action-packed and more dense, more muscular than the others, I would say. It takes place many years after the first films — a bit like the book, ‘Dune Messiah’ – and gives us a new view of what has happened to Paul Atreides. It’s 17 years, and we see Paul dealing with the consequences of having too much power, and him trying to figure out how to get out of this cycle of violence. Of course, he’s an emperor who can see the future, so he’s kind of invincible, and we also follow people trying to overthrow him. It’s a quite intense story.

    2) Zendaya got a pre-recorded question from Florence Pugh played for her at the trailer debut event.

    Zendaya at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of 'Dune: Part Three' at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.
    Zendaya at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of ‘Dune: Part Three’ at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.

    Zendaya and Florence Pugh didn’t share the screen much in ‘Dune: Part Two,’ where Pugh’s Princess Irulan was introduced, but the ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ star hints that they have more interaction in ‘Part Three.’

    Zendaya: I love Florence Pugh. She’s so talented and so wonderful in this role. On the press tour the last time we were saying that we only got one scene together, and we were far away. So I was like, I hope we get more. I don’t want to tease anything, but she’s absolutely phenomenal and you guys will just have to see for yourself what happens, because it’s quite the journey. I’m so excited. I mean, these movies have meant so much to me over the years. I’ve literally been able to grow up in my entire 20s doing them, so they have such a special place in my heart, and all these people do as well. So I’m very excited and very grateful to be a part of it.

    3) Javier Bardem Says His Character Stilgar Must Face Reality In ‘Dune: Part Three.’

    Javier Bardem at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of 'Dune: Part Three' at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.
    Javier Bardem at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of ‘Dune: Part Three’ at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.

    Javier Bardem’s Fremen fighter Stilgar becomes one of Paul’s most loyal soldiers and believers in the first two ‘Dune’ movies, championing him as the prophesized messiah of his people. But in ‘Dune: Part Three,’ the actor says, Stilgar finds himself in a ‘be careful what you wish for’ situation.

    Javier Bardem: Well, I think it takes him to a place where he sees different realities of what being empowered means after so long. He’s in this contradiction between his loyalty to the idea that he strongly believed and fought for back in the day, and also the result of the idea becoming something that he feels may not be the thing that he dreamed about. It sounds complicated, but it’s also a complicated book, and it’s a great analogy about the idea of power and the reality of having that power, and Stilgar is there in that contradiction.

    4) Anya Taylor-Joy’s Alia Is A Major Character In The Movie.

    Anya Taylor-Joy at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of 'Dune: Part Three' at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.
    Anya Taylor-Joy at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of ‘Dune: Part Three’ at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.

    Glimpsed briefly in ‘Dune: Part Two’ as both a yet-to-be-born baby and a young woman in a vision from the future, Alia Atreides – who has powerful psychic gifts of her own — becomes one of her older brother Paul’s most important allies in ‘Part Three.’

    Anya Taylor-Joy: Alia has a very intense blessing/curse situation. She carries the weight and the wisdom of generations and generations in her head. She’s never in a singular conversation. It’s kind of everything everywhere, all at once. And the one thing that she really feels most strongly about is her love and devotion to her brother, because that is the only person who’s ever made her feel like she makes sense. He’s understood her from before she was even born, and she will do anything for him — to various degrees of insanity.

    5) Robert Pattinson Thinks He Got The Job in ‘Dune’ Thanks To Zendaya.

    (L to R) Robert Pattinson, Anya Taylor-Joy, Javier Bardem, Zendaya, and director Denis Villeneuve at the 'Dune: Part Three' trailer event. Photo: Jami Philbrick.
    (L to R) Robert Pattinson, Anya Taylor-Joy, Javier Bardem, Zendaya, and director Denis Villeneuve at the ‘Dune: Part Three’ trailer event. Photo: Jami Philbrick.

    ‘The Batman’ star Robert Pattinson is such a fan of the ‘Dune’ films that he asked Zendaya for advice on how to get involved. He ended up playing a shapeshifting, biologically mutated human called Scytale who is a central figure in a plot to overthrow Paul.

    Robert Pattinson: It’s incredible. I absolutely adored these movies. I saw them multiple times in the theaters, and I think I was talking to [Zendaya] on the set of ‘The Drama’ and I was like, ‘How do I get in one of those “Dune” movies?’ And then I got a very unexpected call a few months later, and I kind of think [Zendaya] had something to do with it. But I just think they’re such a towering achievement and the cast is so incredible. I just think everybody wants to work with Denis. He’s a master. When do you see the scope and scale and ambition of these movies on set, you get why they feel like this on the screen. It’s an amazing experience.

    Pattinson adds that his character, Scytale, was fascinating to play because his motivations and goals are ambiguous:

    Robert Pattinson: He’s an unusual character in the book. I mean, you can’t really tell whose side he’s on, which is kind of what makes him quite interesting. I want to say he’s not a conventional bad guy as such. He might even be a good guy. Who knows? I will find out when I see the movie (laughs). It’s an extremely fun character to play, and the look for it is extraordinary.

    (L to R) Robert Pattinson, Anya Taylor-Joy, Javier Bardem, Zendaya, and director Denis Villeneuve at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of 'Dune: Part Three' at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.
    (L to R) Robert Pattinson, Anya Taylor-Joy, Javier Bardem, Zendaya, and director Denis Villeneuve at the Warner Bros. Pictures, trailer launch event of ‘Dune: Part Three’ at the AMC Century City 15, in Los Angeles, California, March 16, 2026.

    What is the plot of ‘Dune: Part Three’?

    Defeating his enemies on Arrakis and becoming emperor of all known space, superhuman Fremen messiah Paul Atreides grapples with the consequences of unleashing a bloody galactic jihad, even as mysterious and powerful forces conspire to destroy him.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Dune: Part Three’?

    • Timothée Chalamet as Paul Atreides
    • Zendaya as Chani
    • Florence Pugh as Princess Irulan
    • Anya Taylor-Joy as Alia Atreides
    • Rebecca Ferguson as Lady Jessica
    • Robert Pattinson as Scytale
    • Jason Momoa as Duncan Idaho
    • Josh Brolin as Gurney Halleck
    • Javier Bardem as Stilgar
    • Isaach de Bankolé as Farok
    • Nakoa-Wolf Momoa as Leto II Atreides
    • Ida Brooke as Ghanima Atreides
    'Dune: Part Three' opens on December 18th. Photo: Warner Bros.
    ‘Dune: Part Three’ opens on December 18th. Photo: Warner Bros.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Dune’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Dune’ On Amazon

    Timothée Chalamet as Paul Atreides in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Three,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Timothée Chalamet as Paul Atreides in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Three,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Zendaya as Chani in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Three,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Zendaya as Chani in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Three,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Jason Momoa as Hayt in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Three,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Jason Momoa as Hayt in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Three,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Robert Pattinson as Scytale in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Three,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Robert Pattinson as Scytale in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Three,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Florence Pugh as Empress Irulan in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Three,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Florence Pugh as Empress Irulan in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Three,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Rebecca Ferguson as Lady Jessica in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Three,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Rebecca Ferguson as Lady Jessica in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Three,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Anya Taylor-Joy as Alia in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Three,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Anya Taylor-Joy as Alia in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Three,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    A Scene from Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Dune: Part Three,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.
    A Scene from Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Dune: Part Three,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.