With November 5 in just days, plans for Bonfire Night have begun.
13.10.2021 - 21:39 / thewrap.com
Drew McWeeny shared on his Substack some more details behind the series with which he is involved, and which he hopes is unlike “any other show about movies that you’ve seen.” McWeeny says the series will be composed of standalone essays about the movies from various critics, each one running 10 to 30 minutes long, and each tackling a different idea of something “that intrigues us or upsets us or that has to do with our connection to the movies.”“Voir” also has the support of “The Empty Man”
.With November 5 in just days, plans for Bonfire Night have begun.
Always a big delayed viewing gainer, ABC’s A Million Little Things set new high bench marks with its Oct. 6 episode. After seven days of TV playback, the ensemble drama more than tripled its Live+Same Day adults 18-49 rating, posting growth of +250% from Live+SD to Live+7 (0.2 rating to 0.7).
Katie Song Matt Damon is the new face of … cryptocurrency.The Oscar winner will star in Crypto.com’s new global ad campaign “Fortune Favors the Brave,” which begins airing in the U.S.
Masai Ujiri, Vice-Chairman and President of the Toronto Raptors, has been brought on board to exec the Fremantle/Passenger docu-series based on the newly-launched Basketball Africa League (BAL).
, hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark, is giving fans a special year-end treat. ET can exclusively reveal that the pair has lined up several famous friends to share their hometown stories in the upcoming series . The bonus episodes will debut on the podcast feed on Wednesday, Oct.
Joe Otterson TV ReporterPeacock has given a straight-to-series order to a new crime drama that hails from David E. Kelley, Variety has learned exclusively.The one-hour series is titled “The Missing,” based on the Dror A.
The Earl of Grantham Hugh Bonneville is narrating two wildlife series for Smithsonian Channel.
Broadcast FilmAll In: The Fight for DemocracyDirected by Liz Garbus and Lisa Cortés | AmazonDavid Byrne’s American UtopiaDirected by Spike Lee | HBODisclosureDirected by Sam Feder | NetflixIn the Same BreathDirected by Nanfu Wang | HBOTinaDirected by Dan Lindsay and T.J.
Anna Cathcart, who played the role in the movie trilogy, will lead the 10-episode, half-hour show.The new YA series, which will be overseen by author Jenny Han, who created it, and Sascha Rothchild, follows teen matchmaker Kitty, who thinks she knows everything there is to know about love.
Sascha Rothchild.Here’s the official description for “XO, Kitty,” which will consist of 10 half-hour episodes: “Teen matchmaker Kitty Song Covey thinks she knows everything there is to know about love. But when she moves halfway across the world to reunite with her long-distance boyfriend, she’ll soon realize that relationships are a lot more complicated when it’s your own heart on the line.”“XO, Kitty” will be executive produced by Han, Rothchild and Matt Kaplan of ACE Entertainment.
Voir, a new noir docuseries for Netflix that is an ode to cinema.The series of video essays will be executive-produced by Fincher, and will premiere at AFI Fest in November.
Rebecca Rubin Film and Media ReporterDavid Fincher is partnering with Netflix on “Voir,” a new documentary series of visual essays celebrating cinema.Netflix, or at least, the Twitter account dedicated to its movies, had film fans buzzing on Tuesday after tweeting: “Something special is coming tomorrow from David Fincher…”Alas, that “something special” is not a third season of “Mindhunter” or a sequel to “Mank,” the director’s Oscar-nominated Netflix drama about the screenwriter of “Citizen
Yesterday, Netflix made a big tease on Twitter: Filmmaker David Fincher would be dropping something today on the channel, or at least its existence would be finally known. Well, it’s here, and it’s called “Voir.” What is that? The long-awaited season three of “Mindhunter,” maybe? Nope, it’s precisely what Fincher teased earlier this year: “I’m working on a show about film appreciation and about movies that I love, with guests I love, about movies that they love,” he said in March 2021.
Yesterday, Netflix made a big tease on Twitter: Filmmaker David Fincher would be dropping something today on the channel, or at least its existence would be finally known. Well, it’s here, and it’s called “Voir.” What is that? The long-awaited season three of “Mindhunter,” maybe? Nope, it’s precisely what Fincher teased earlier this year: “I’m working on a show about film appreciation and about movies that I love, with guests I love, about movies that they love,” he said in March 2021.
After teasing us yesterday with an upcoming David Fincher project, Netflix has spilled the goods on Twitter: They’re reteaming with the 3x Oscar nominated filmmaker on a new noir docu-series Voir.
Jem Aswad Senior Music EditorDavid Bowie’s would-have-been 75th birthday isn’t until January, but next week his estate is beginning “Bowie 75,” a year-long celebration that kicks off with the openings of two “curated experiential pop-up shops” — one at the site of the cover shoot of his classic “Ziggy Stardust” album in London, and another in his New York neighborhood.For a very limited window beginning October 25, 2021 — 75 days before the anniversary — through late January 2022, the “Bowie
tweeted, complete with eyeball emjoi.
David Fincher‘s upcoming Netflix movie, “The Killer” starring Michael Fassbender, was supposed to shoot this fall in Paris with Oscar-winning “Mank” cinematographer Erik Messerschmidt behind the camera. That’s now slightly changed, but we’ve also received confirmation about something we’ve been hearing about for months: Tilda Swinton is going to co-star in the assassin thriller based on a French graphic novel series.
Writer-director-actress Julie Delpy is perhaps best known for her work in the “Before Trilogy” with Richard Linklater and Ethan Hawke. But those who are familiar with her directing work, from the duo of relationship comedies “2 Days In Paris” and “2 Days In New York,” to her more recent films “Lolo” and “My Zoe” likely have a deeper understanding of her creative bent.
Mark Schilling Japan CorrespondentJapanese network Tokyo Broadcasting System has announced a partnership with Netflix for streaming TBS content, including new shows, with nearly simultaneous international release.The partners are starting off with “Japan Sinks: People of Hope,” a TBS drama series that starts airing on Oct. 10.