Henry Golding is enjoying a little vacation in Italy!
21.07.2021 - 17:37 / variety.com
Rebecca Rubin Film and Media ReporterTwo new movies — “Snake Eyes” starring Henry Golding and M.
Night Shyamalan’s “Old” — will open nationwide this weekend, but neither are expected to take down reigning champ “Space Jam: A New Legacy” on domestic box office charts.After its $31 million start, the sequel to 1996’s sports comedy “Space Jam,” the latest version led by LeBron James, Bugs Bunny and a smattering of Looney Tunes characters, is heading for a repeat victory in North America. The
.Henry Golding is enjoying a little vacation in Italy!
Amanda Knox, who spoke out last week about her name being associated with the new movie, saying any connection rips off her story with her consent at the “expense of my reputation.”Knox called out the film’s director Tom McCarthy in a series of tweets for using her name to promote the movie.“Space Jam: A New Legacy” has progressively dropped to No. 6 after going No.
Saleka Shyamalan is opening up about working on her dad M. Night Shyamalan‘s new movie, Old.
Rebecca Rubin Film and Media ReporterAt the box office, “Snake Eyes” is ringing true to its moniker.The latest “G.I. Joe” installment, an origin story starring Henry Golding of “Crazy Rich Asians” fame, fell short of expectations, collecting a paltry $13.3 million in its first three days in North American theaters.
Old is on top at the box office.
Making the movie Old was a family affair for director M. Night Shyamalan, who hired his daughter Ishana to serve as the second unit director.
While that meets tracker and studios projections, it is also the lowest opening weekend ever for director M. Night Shyamalan, falling below the $18 million earned by "Lady in the Water" in 2006.
Henry Golding addressed some of the hate he has received as a Malaysian-British actor in a new interview with Inverse.
Henry Golding surprises fans at the first showing of his film Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins at AMC Movie Theater on Thursday (July 22) in Century City, Calif.
M. Night Shyamalan's "Old" at the box office Thursday night narrowly topped "Snake Eyes: G.I.
.The film finally declassifies the backstory of one of G.I. Joe's original members, revealing the man underneath the mask.
“Crazy Rich Asians” charmer is so stiff in his first go-round as an action hero, at no point do you care if Snake Eyes lives or dies. That is a big problem for a film in which the only stakes are life and death. To cut him some slack, though, Golding signed onto awful material that shouldn’t exist in the first place.Running time: 121 minutes.
Henry Golding is just as eager to see a “Crazy Rich Asians” sequel as fans are.
The latest attempt by a studio to rejuvenate a series with big merchandising potential, “Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins,” is not a particularly good version of the prevailing popcorn blockbuster.
especially close, but pretty darned good for a franchise that was specifically created to sell toys to children.So it’s frustrating to watch Schwentke’s film “Snake Eyes” transform that saga into a dispassionate and mediocre action movie. The drama is muddled, the action is murky, and the storyline can’t help but get goofier and goofier until, by the end, every attempt this movie makes to ground the “G.I.
Samara Weaving steps out with Henry Golding for an exclusive screening of their new movie, Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins, in Los Angeles on Wednesday night (July 21).
itself as the early reactions are overwhelmingly negative. Fans who saw recent early screenings generally had praise for co-star Andrew Koji as Storm Shadow, but that’s generally it.
Two wide releases, Paramount’s Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins and Universal’s M. Night Shyamalan thriller Old, both respecting a theatrical window, will face off this coming weekend with results which are still too early to call as each are eyeing a mid-teens opening result.
Henry Golding had one request: Cut out the toxic masculinity. «Especially with a film like this and a character like Snake Eyes, there is a real kind of misnomer of trying to make him too masculine,» he told ET's Matt Cohen.