Lionsgate’s John Wick spinoff, Ballerina, has added Ian McShane to its cast. The news was revealed by The Hollywood Reporter with the outlet reporting McShane will reprise his role as Winston, the manager of the Continental. He will star opposite leading lady Ana de Armas. The film follows a young woman with killer skills who uses said skills to get revenge when her family is killed by hitmen and is set within the John Wick cinematic universe.
McShane has appeared in every John Wick film to date as Winston and reprises the character once again in John Wick: Chapter 4. Outside of the John Wick universe, McShane has appeared in titles such as American Gods as Mr. Wednesday, Hellboy, Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides and the HBO series, Deadwood.
The movie is being produced by John Wick director Chad Stahelski, Basil Iwanyk, and Erica Lee. The project is being overseen by Brady Fujikawa and Chelsea Kujawa for Lionsgate. Production on Ballerina is expected to kick off on Monday with Len Wiseman (Underworld) directing from a screenplay by Shay Hatten (John Wick: Chapter 4). As of now, the film does not yet have a release date.
With Deadpool 3 now deeply entrenched in the pre-production process, casting and plot leaks and rumors are sure to become more prevalent. While nobody has an idea of what to expect from the upcoming film, the idea that it’ll somehow connect the Fox X-Men-verse to the MCU is a prevalent one amongst theorists. Now, an interesting bit of casting information might make that theory a little more believable.
According to insider Daniel RPK, Owen Wilson will reprise his role as TVA Agent Mobius in Deadpool 3. It would mark the character’s first cinematic debut after being a prominent member of the Disney+ Loki series. His addition would also imply that this storyline will lead Deadpool out of his original Fox X-Men universe into the main Marvel Cinematic Universe, as his role also changed in the finale of the series.
Owen Wilson will reprise his role as Agent Mobius in ‘DEADPOOL 3’.
According to RPK, Wilson’s role is a fairly meaty one which would seem to make quite a bit of sense if Deadpool and Wolverine started any multiversal shenanigans over the course of the film. It’ll be interesting to see if this implies that the version of Wolverine we meet is even from the original universe or a new version altogether. Hopefully, whatever direction they go, he’ll get to finally wear the iconic yellow suit that he never was able to wear during his tenure as Logan in the 20th Century Fox films.
In February 2020, it was revealed that Sleight director J.D. Dillard was set to direct a Star Wars movie from screenwriter Matt Owens. At the time, it wasn’t known whether or not the project would be for the big screen or for Disney+. Details regarding the plot and characters involved were also unknown at the time. Unfortunately, it seems those eager to see a Star Wars film from Dillard will continue to wait, though, as the mysterious project is no longer moving forward.
In an interview with The Wrap to promote his latest film, Devotion, Dillard was asked about the status of his Star Wars project. Sadly, it seems things simply didn’t work out and the project is no longer moving forward. “It was not for lack of trying.” the director said. He also made it a point of noting if he does make a space film, it’ll be an original idea.
The outlet tried to get Dillard to comment on what a Star Wars film from him would “feel like,” to which Dillard cited a memory from his childhood.
“My dad being an aviator, we had a bunch of flight simulators, including TIE Fighter. I’m playing this game for months. And my dad’s flying it with me. And I’m like, ‘Man, this game is just so cool.’ And he’s like, ‘Well, you know, this game comes from a series of movies.’ And I was like, ‘You’re kidding me.’ That is where I watched ‘Star Wars’ for the first time and realized the full scope of what it meant to world build because I’d been playing this pseudo-16-bit game.”
Dillard, however, did briefly comment on the J.J. Abrams‘ Superman project with Ta-Nehisi Coates, which he was loosely tied to at some point. He called the project, “something I have never spoken about” and said that Abrams has his number “if that is ever to be a conversation.”
News that Dillard is no longer developing a Star Wars project comes on the heels of the announcement that Shawn Levy is entering a galaxy far, far away. That project, however, will take some time to enter production as Levy still has Season 5 of Stranger Things and then Deadpool 3 to worry about first.
Devotion, the latest film from Dillard, will hit theaters on Nov. 23rd.
Ryan Coogler’s emotion-packed Black Panther: Wakanda Forever opens in theaters this weekend but critics, including our own Hunter Radesi, have had ample time to screen the film ahead of its wide release. With the expiration of the embargo, dozens of reviews are making their way online and onto Rotten Tomatoes and the early returns are very promising for the film.
Though it’s not quite Certified Fresh yet because there are not enough reviews, Black Panther: Wakanda Foreveropened up with an impressive 94% through the first 84 reviews. The balance between a powerfully emotional tribute to the late Chadwick Boseman and a plot that advances the story of the nation of Wakanda are among the most commonly mentioned strengths. Others who were less high on the film called into question the film’s hefty run time, its pacing and convoluted plot.
2018’s Black Panther stands as Marvel Studios’ highest-rated film to date with a Certified Fresh rating of 96% with over 529 reviews. For the sequel to be so well-received following the tragic loss of Boseman and a complete rewrite of the script is a testament to Ryan Coogler and the team behind the sequel.
Namor the Sub-Mariner is one of the few remaining marquee Marvel characters to never appear on the silver screen but now Tenoch Huerta is prepared to introduce the character in a major way as the antagonist of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. Wakanda Forever afforded Ryan Coogler the ability to build another civilization into the Marvel Cinematic Universe. While speaking with ScreenRant about the upcoming project, producer Nate Moore discussed this concept and how connections between Wakanda and Talokan (the Mayan-influenced version of Atlantis) play a major role in the sequel.
Because there’s such an interesting contrast between Talokan and Wakanda, that’s [what] I think drew Ryan as a storyteller to Namor in the first place. Obviously, there’s a history in publishing of Namor and Atlantis and the Black Panther and Wakanda being at loggerheads because they’re both such powerful nations that have such autonomy. But to also tell the story of colonization through the perspective of two people who’ve experienced it so differently made for a really interesting collision of ideologies.
Nate Moore
The themes of colonization and cultural identities are right within the wheelhouse of Ryan Coogler as a filmmaker. If he can keep the momentum that he brought with the original Black Panther (alongside his other directorial triumphs), then Wakanda Forever has all the earmarks to be another resonant classic. In that line of thinking, the Black Panther sequel could certainly match the quality of the first with another villain on the level of Michael B. Jordan’s Killmonger. Early reviews of the film seem to indicate he’s hit the mark with Namor. Nate Moore further elaborated on the idea of Namor being a major threat and how that plays into the infrastructure of Wakanda.
Namor’s such a powerful character. It’s hard to think of anybody who could challenge Wakanda, right? It’s the most technologically advanced nation in the world. At times, it has a Black Panther, if not the Dora Milaje. Man, who’s going to scare these guys? That is a very short list. And all of a sudden they’re faced with somebody who’s more powerful than anybody they have, and it forces them to respond in a different way than any other person would, really. Namor is such an important character that you have to commit time to get to know him. So, it’s not like you can throw him into an ensemble and say, “Also this guy.” You want to take the time to build out that world. Hopefully, we were able to achieve that with the same love and dedication to the details as we did with Wakanda in the first movie.
Nate Moore
It certainly will be interesting to follow the audience’s response to the character and see if Namor will have the longevity of other notable antagonists of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever opens exclusively in theaters on November 11, 2022.
With Deadpool 3 and Season 5 of Stranger Things still on deck, Shawn Levy looks to have already set his next feature. Deadline has reported that Levy is in talks to helm a Star Wars movie. The outlet reports that Levy will develop the project to direct it, but no further details are available as of this time.
Levy is the latest director to be attached to an untitled Star Wars project. Taika Waititi is developing a Star Wars film and Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy recently signed on to direct a movie penned by Damon Lindeloff. Lucasfilm is also working with Marvel Studios’ Kevin Feige to develop an unspecified project. With Levy tied up on the final season of Stranger Things, and then set to jump on Deadpool 3 with his Free Guy leading man Ryan Reynolds, Levy’s Star Wars project is likely still years away at best.
Up next for the always-busy Levy is the Netflix mini-series, All The Light You Cannot See, in which he directed all four episodes. He most recently directed The Adam Project, which also starred Reynolds. Levy also helmed Free Guy with Reynolds, in which a sequel is reportedly being discussed. As of right now, no writer or release date has been announced for Levy’s Star Wars film.
Grief is not to be trifled with. It’s a difficult, strange beast. Necessary and uncomfortable all at once. It’s hard to encounter and put into words, which is why it’s so impressive when Ryan Coogler and the incredible cast of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever manage to embody the emotion with such grace and understanding. It’s important to face the challenges of life with honesty and progression, something Wakanda Forever accepts wholeheartedly. If superhero films are to be the voice of a generation, then they should also be willing to speak in languages sometimes foreign to the genre. They should reach to tell stories that impact their viewers and move them forward. Pain, humanity, and healing flow through every crease of this project as it unfolds, and the entertainment landscape is ultimately better for it.
One likely expected Wakanda Forever to be emotional, considering the circumstances of the past few years, and it absolutely is. Of course, the movie is rife with tears. It’s forced to deal with something nobody ever imagined it would need to. Yet, it also accomplishes something else between the moments of heartbreak and loss. It alleviates a pressure viewers might not have known was still there, and does its best to close the mourning process on a chapter most would like to have forgotten. It’s a cathartic movie in the way it allows it’s characters to react, letting their feelings guide its plot instead of the other way around. The audience feels as they do, and by the time their arcs reach a natural conclusion, the viewer might also have found some semblance of closure. Stories are beautiful because of their power to help people comprehend their own emotions, and Coogler seems to know this better than anyone. Wakanda Forever is a blockbuster film, yes, but it’s also a message about surviving and moving on.
Astonishingly, it also works as a near-perfect sequel to its predecessor. The themes of loss, identity, and perseverance are not new to the Black Panther franchise. Although stemming from a less-than-ideal state of affairs, Wakanda Forever is able to pick up almost exactly where Black Panther left off. It’s a full, complete movie, with expertly crafted storylines and character development. Every move made by Coogler makes perfect sense in the context of both Marvel’s fictional world and the real one from which it draws inspiration. Even the film’s new characters, specifically Tenoch Huerta‘s immaculately complex antagonist Namor, fit into Black Panther‘s corner of the Marvel Cinematic Universe as though they were designed for it from the start. Namor and his people – the Talokan – are magnificent foils for Letitia Wright‘s Shuri, Angela Bassett‘s Queen Ramonda, and the people of Wakanda. Huerta‘s performance in particular is sure to stay with fans for quite some time, molding Namor into a distinguished force in the MCU going forward.
If one were to strip the project of all its comic-based origins, it would still be a masterclass in filmmaking. It’s gorgeous from top-to-bottom, with several stunning set pieces and consistently wonderful design. Coogler has made it clear that his films mean much more than adapting stories. They exist to push the boundaries of what cinema can do. Not just visually, but at their thematic centers. Wakanda Forever has raised the bar for what Marvel Studios, and the industry at large, should be capable of producing when the occasion calls for it. Seeing this one on the biggest screen possible is highly recommended. Sobbing throughout is not required, but it will probably happen anyway.
Think Night of the Living Dead, but with Adderall! Sleep. Walk. Kill. is a funny, campy horror film built on a fresh concept and worth toughing out through its slow opening. When a strange alien sound blares across the skies of Yardley, Pennsylvania, folks rise from their sleep with murder on their minds. Wives butcher husbands; children murder parents; and, presumably, the only way to stay alive is to stay awake. Though at times it feels like the cast is still finding its footing in the early minutes, there’s plenty of tension and compelling storytelling worth staying through the third act. I spoke with Director and Screenwriter Justin Miller and lead actor Bill Reick about the creation of the film and the comedically-talented cast in this independent horror debut.
Tell me about the creation of Sleep. Walk. Kill. How long has this project been in the works?
Justin Miller (JM): It was actually shot three years ago. About a year before that is when I started to write it. I’ve always been fascinated with dreams and night terrors and people talking in their sleep (like my wife sometimes does). But what really got me to write a script I could shoot was I wrote comedy for a theater in Philly and my daughter never really got to see that. But I’d watch movies when I was home and she’d refer to me as “the guy on the sofa.” (laughs) I didn’t want to be that to her! So I started writing something I could shoot. I knew I was going to have to do a lot of it and thank goodness I had a lot of help on this project with Bill (Reick) and Samantha Russell. So that really got me started on it.
That’s a good motivation! Not being the guy on the sofa. (laughs)
JM: Exactly! (laughs) I showed her hard work. It was really hard work. Everyone put in a lot of time and effort on this.
So you shot this film three years ago. Was that at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, or just before?
JM: Just before. We finished shooting about two months or so before the pandemic. We were pretty fortunate in that respect because there’s no way we could have shot in that tiny, cramped basement during the pandemic.
Sleep. Walk. Kill. is sure to invoke memories of Night of the Living Dead with its taut basement scenes.
The basement scenes especially were very reminiscent of some of my favorite horror films. Night of the Living Dead comes to mind. Maybe Shaun of the Dead? That forced closeness always ratchets up the tension between people who are confined together. What were your biggest influences for the film?
JM: Definitely Night of the Living Dead. I try, though, when I’m writing to not specifically think of “I want to make it seem like this…” but it definitely has a strong Night of the Living Dead feel. I can see the connection also between Shaun of the Dead. The Thing. John Carpenter is definitely a big influence. I just wanted to show what happens to this family when they’re put in extreme circumstances.
Yeah! Very fun practical effects in the film, speaking of The Thing and John Carpenter. And speaking of Carpenter, is it true that you also did the score, Justin?
JM: Yes, that is true. You know, pretty much everyone on this film—actors included—did more than just one thing. (laughs) They’d be like, “Hey I’m not in this scene, hold this light.” Or “Pour blood on somebody.” Everyone worked pretty hard on this!
You have a very talented and funny cast that assembles in that basement. Those later scenes are a lot of fun. Ellen Boscov is fantastic as Edgar’s Mom—funny, annoying, frustrating—I mean that in the best of ways.
JM: Yeah, if you hate her than she did her job.
Yes! And The Legendary WID, who maybe had some of the best one-liners in the film. And of course Bill, who plays Edgar, who has to bounce off each of these characters in different ways. Tell me a little bit about assembling this cast and what it was like wrangling their comedic skills into a horror film.
JM: Samantha Russell, she’s a sketch director from Philly, she helped assemble the cast. She did an amazing job. Actually the first thing she said when she read the script was, “I thought it would be funnier.” (laughs) But I wanted to write a horror movie that had comedic elements, not specifically a comedy, though that’s what we do in sketch writing.
I had a few people audition for the dad and one of the people I was considering was Bob Quintana. I knew he was in theater productions around the area and he knocked it out of the park. And working with them was such a blast. We had such a fun time on set—sometimes a little too fun. (laughs) When it was time to get serious everyone turned it on and did an amazing job.
I think maybe that’s who we’re aiming for. People who’ve been left a little bit cold by multi-million-dollar productions and want something a little more human and a little less decided by committee.
Bill Reick
Bill, can you talk a little about the role of Edgar and your approach to it, and also riding that line between horror and comedy?
Bill Reick (BR): Well the character is a real slob so I didn’t really have to try to get in the role or anything. (laughs) I can be a loser. That’s not too far out of my wheelhouse.
The only real adjustment I had to make is on set is when Justin would say, “Hey thank you for that last take. It was really funny. But let’s make it serious this time. Let’s convey that somebody just died. Let’s give it the weight it deserves.” (JM laughs) Justin did a really good job of helping me tune things into what he was looking for.
It’s interesting to hear that the approach was more horror film with comedic elements because you did have a very funny cast. I imagine that almost might have been a bit of a challenge with that team to work with.
BR: Yeah it was definitely a bunch of cut-ups in there. It was going to be a funny movie whether Justin set out for it to be or not, just because of who he put in it. It was definitely great to be able to utilize that. But everyone was talented enough to be able to fine-tune their approach so that if a given scene wasn’t calling for a comedic approach, Justin was able to step in, like any great director, and say “hey, let’s dial it this way,” just so we could keep a more consistent tone.
Sure. And it seems like Edgar has quite the arc in the film.
BR: Oh my gosh, does he.
Maybe he starts off as a slob, but especially toward the end he becomes our point person and our sort of a savior. But Edgar definitely does get a little beat up in the film emotionally.
BR: Oh, and physically.
And physically. Do you have a lot of experience with physicality in your roles or with horror?
BR: Oh, definitely I have a lot of experience being physical on stage. Prior to this film—and during, and after it—I was doing a lot of sketch comedy. If there’s a chance I could get one person to laugh, I will grievously injure myself at the drop of a hat. (JM laughs) It was nice to be able to take those… skills? (laughs) and apply them to a recorded medium where I don’t have to hurt myself every time to get the laugh. They can just press play.
(laughs) Any injuries sustained on set for this one?
BR: Oh plenty! (Thinks for a moment.) Yeah, none that… Maybe… Well, I don’t think I should have gone to hospital for any of them. (JM laughs) But definitely lots of really, really solid bumps and bruises where I’d come home and my girlfriend would say, “I thought you were making a movie.”
Ellen Boscov delights and annoys as Edgar’s mom in Sleep. Walk. Kill.
There’s very much a lot centering around how Edgar relates to his mom and his ex-wife in the film. Which relationship was maybe most fun to work with?
BR: Ellen Boscov was just a howl to work with. We knew each other and we’d bump into one another in Philly, but as soon as we started to work on this project—she must have some crazy acting training I don’t have—because she was getting herself super in-the-zone and treating me like her son right away. She’d come up to me and give me big smooches. (laughs) She made a scrapbook, like a photo album, and she found pictures of me that I’d never given her. And that was really cool, really interesting.
I was definitely one of the least experienced people on set. Everyday was a lesson and everybody was a teacher. I was super grateful to learn by watching John Reshetar and Melanie Rosedale, same with Raquel Watson, who auditioned to be in this film. They were actors. I got to say, “Oh hey they did that. That worked well. Maybe I’ll apply that next time.”
Same with (Bob) Quintana too. I feel like I learned how to deliver dialogue by just watching him because he’s tasked with explaining the science of the story and it was quite a monologue. But he was able to handle it with the gravitas that it deserved. I learned so much from just observing everybody.
Ellen Boscov showed up with a scrapbook? Was that the scrapbook that’s in the film?
BR:(laughs) Yeah she showed up with it.
JM:Yeah it’s in the script, but she… (laughs) she showed up with a scrapbook full of memories.
That’s amazing! (laughs)
BR: It was a trip to see this other life with my face on it. (BR and JM laugh)
No spoilers, but as we approach the end of the film, we really see that relationship with Edgar’s mom… blossom. (BR laughs) How did you feel about the gore? Was it fun? Was it gross?
BR: Oh, I was there for the gore. I was showing up early for the gore. (laughs) Allison Goetz was the professional who did all of our makeup effects and blood spray… She was just really fantastic in making blood go where it needed to be.
The only parts that were gross were at the end of the day when I’d go to peel something off (laughs), when I had dried, peeled up, fake blood and it would get caught in my arm hair. That was a little nasty. But as far as everything on camera, no I’m a gore-hound. I love it.
Actor Bill Reick as Edgar with Samantha Russell as Ady in Sleep. Walk. Kill.
So for the both of you, I’m curious, promotion about the film includes the line “This is a message-in-a-bottle we hope will reach like-minded misfits.” Who do you have in mind as fans for this film? Who do you hope sees this film?
JM: Anyone who dreamed of making a movie and wants to go out and do it no matter what. It didn’t matter if I hired 10 people and they all backed out, I was going to get this done. It didn’t matter the budget. I hope it just inspires people to go out and make something. Make something because they want to because it’s something they’ve always wanted to do. What do you think Bill?
BR: That piece of artsy-fartsy copy came out of me. (BR and JM laugh) I really see this movie as a flare going off from Yardley, Pennsylvania. I just hope somebody else sees this and goes “Oh yeah, I could do that.” And I think that’s what I love about a lot of horror movies, some of my favorites being Dead Alive, Evil Dead 2… There’s a quality about it that says it’s not the traditional studio system. So I think maybe that’s who we’re aiming for. People who’ve been left a little bit cold by multi-million-dollar productions and want something a little more human and a little less decided by committee.
That’s an aspiration worth reaching for. You can check out Sleep. Walk. Kill. streaming now on Vudu, Google Play, and Amazon Prime, and coming soon to Tubi and other platforms.
From the moment Disney’s merger with Fox Studios was complete, fans began theorizing about how one of Marvel Comics’ most powerful mutants, Storm, might fit into the story of the Black Panther sequel. Once the wife of T’Challa and the Queen of Wakanda, Storm’s connection to Wakanda remains strong in the present day despite no longer being married to T’Challa. While her duties to the X-Men had her busy on Mars, Ororo still found herself playing a role in current Black Panther writer John Ridley’s series. Even though T’Challa’s relationship with Nakia was clearly prioritized in Black Panther, fans were still adamant that Storm could find her way into the sequel and even as the film was reworked following the death of Chadwick Boseman, the Storm theories never stopped coming.
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever opens this week and, to nobody’s actual surprise, Storm is not in the film. However, with at least one more Wakanda-based streaming series on the way and a third film in the series all but a sure thing, fans are still looking to the future for hope that the character might show up in Wakanda, reflecting the strong connection she has to the nation in the pages of Marvel Comics. In an interview with Screen Rant, Marvel Studios Parliament member and Wakanda Forever Executive Producer Nate Moore may have dashed those hopes. When asked about the chances of Storm showing up in Wakanda down the road, Moore certainly didn’t seem optimistic saying, “Well, Storm’s relationship with Wakanda in publishing is pretty interesting. Obviously, we might be a few years out from the X-Men, so I’m not sure we’re there yet.“
The quote certainly doesn’t inspire confidence that Ororo will find her way to Wakanda any time soon, though it doesn’t completely rule it out of the question. While there are plenty of ways that Storm could be worked into Black Panther 3, the unfortunate reality is that the strength of the character’s connection to Wakanda came from her relationship with T’Challa and that’s sadly not something that the MCU can replicate at the moment. Perhaps down the road after Avengers: Secret Wars, new possibilities for the pair to unite on screen might emerge but until then, it sounds like Storm may not be part of the plans to continue to story of Wakanda.
After taking some time to get the pieces in place for it, Deadpool 3 now seems to be making steady progress. Hugh Jackman agreed to return to the role of Wolverine, which he believed he’d left behind with 2017’s Logan, and the film was finally put on the Marvel Studios slate with a release date of November 8, 2024. Obviously, that means production on the film must be getting underway at some point in 2023 and in a recent interview, star Ryan Reynolds gave a little clarity to when that should be.
In an interview with Sirius XM’s Stars, Reynolds explained that he, Jackman and director Shawn Levy are “up to our necks in prep” and that the film is still being written, and that he will be wrapped up in production on it for the next two years. The actor then added that shooting on the film, which he called “the easy part”, is expected to take place “just before Summer.”
Ryan Reynolds on ‘DEADPOOL 3’ and confirms that production is set to begin before Summer 2023.
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