Norman Reedus made headlines back in March when he suffered an on-set injury while filming the final season of “The Walking Dead”, and he opens up about what happened in a new interview with Entertainment Weekly.
23.08.2022 - 22:25 / deadline.com
It looks like Peacock needs to juice its paid subscriptions some more. Universal/Blumhouse/Miramax’s Halloween Ends, which is already set for theatrical release on October 14, will also debut on NBUniversal’s Peacock streaming service day-and-date. This is a similar practice to what happened with the previous installment of the revived Jamie Lee Curtis horror franchise, Halloween Kills, last October.
Similar to Halloween Kills, I understand that the creative partners on Halloween Ends are being made whole financially given the shift to a theatrical day-and-date distribution strategy.
Halloween Ends is one of the first tentpoles of autumn after a desert filled with adult counterprogramming titles. Uni would argue that the simultaneous Peacock run for Halloween Kills last year didn’t dent the box office with its $49 millionopening, and a $92M domestic final. The sequel for Peacock pulled in 2.8 million U.S. households, according to Samba TV, during a 30-day period.
The first revived Halloween from director David Gordon Green, and EP and story by guy Danny McBride, owns the fourth-highest opening of October at $76.2M and turned the late October period into a box office launchpad.
Don’t blame Covid for Halloween Ends going day-and-date; it’s pure experimentation and based on Peacock’s need for more subs. Reported positive Covid cases continue to decline and dipped below the 100,000-a-day mark for the first time in several weeks as of Saturday. The CDC is reporting that the rolling seven-day average was down 9.9% to 95,650 per day. As for hospitalizations, that number also fell last week, by 6.1%, to 5,690 per day.
Here’s Curtis’ message on social Tuesday about the day-and-date strategy, which she says last time was successful
Norman Reedus made headlines back in March when he suffered an on-set injury while filming the final season of “The Walking Dead”, and he opens up about what happened in a new interview with Entertainment Weekly.
Updated: In the wake of Sanaa Lathan’s world premiere of On the Come Up here at TIFF, the pic is getting a limited theatrical release in the top 50 markets nationally in sync with its Friday, Sept. 23 Paramount+ drop date. Previews start on Thursday, Sept. 22.
James Martin has proved to many people that they can lose weight without going on a strict diet. The Saturday Morning presenter opened up about his "secret" to dropping the pounds and it's very "simple". And what James found even better was that he didn't have to change what he was eating.
Norman Reedus is opening up about an injury he sustained while filming the series finale of "The Walking Dead," sharing how the injury worried him more than any others. While filming the series finale in March, Reedus suffered a concussion after a stunt he was performing went wrong. Filming was immediately put on pause in order to give Reedus the opportunity to fully recover, and a body double was used in scenes where his face would not appear on screen.
concussion on the set of “The Walking Dead” this past March.While it was first reported that it was a simple head injury and he would be recovering soon, it turns out that the accident was more traumatic than people initially believed, Reedus revealed.The actor, 53, spoke to Entertainment Weekly, recalling how the injury was “horrible” and the “whole ordeal for me personally was terrifying.”“I thought I was going to die,” the “Boondock Saints” actor said. “It was very serious. It was scary.
Halloween may still be a month away, but for many parents of little ones you'll know that it is one of those holidays that you'll need to plan a bit earlier for.
We are just about six weeks away from the debut of “Halloween Ends.” This is a film that horror fans have been waiting for a while now, as the previous two “Halloween” films from Blumhouse and filmmaker David Gordon Green have been pretty well received, making a lot of money for the studio. But even though we’re just over a month away from the film’s release, it appears “Halloween Ends” is still being tinkered with.
Halloween Ends may not be the final film in the franchise, creator John Carpenter has revealed.In a recent interview with The New Yorker, the man behind the iconic slasher saga suggested that any further sequels are completely dependent on the next film’s performance at the box office.“If a movie makes enough money, you can be assured that it will [get a sequel]” he told the publication.When asked if Halloween Ends would be the final instalment of the franchise, he then replied: “I will have to see how much money it makes!”Earlier this month, Carpenter expressed a similar sentiment while talking the Pittsburg Post Gazette, saying: “If the movie makes money, I don’t believe it’s the end. There’s a way of when a movie makes money, it seems to resurrect the next one.”Set for release this October, Halloween Ends has been touted as the epic conclusion to the slasher saga, with Laurie Strodes (Jamie Lee Curtis) and masked serial killer Michael Myers (James Jude Courtney) set for one final showdown.Directed by David Gordon Green, the upcoming film also stars Kyle Richards, Will Patton, Andi Matichak, Rohan Campbell and Nick Castle.The official synopsis for the film reads: “After 45 years, the most acclaimed, revered horror franchise in film history reaches its epic, terrifying conclusion as Laurie Strode faces off for the last time against the embodiment of evil, Michael Myers, in a final confrontation unlike any captured on-screen before.
Like father, like son! David Beckham‘s son Romeo Beckham is the spitting image of his dad in these new yacht pics!
Helen Skelton has shared a glimpse into her summer break ahead of taking to the ballroom this autumn The Countryfile star showed off her toned and tanned body as she donned a swimsuit during a trip to the Lake District on Monday (August 30).
EXCLUSIVE: Deadline has learned that Warner Bros. is making a slew of release date changes next year. First of all, James Wan’s Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom needs more time in post, so it’s moving from March 17, 2023 to Dec. 25, 2023.
The director of “Don’t Worry Darling” is dispelling some rumours.
If you listen to the many pundits out there who will bend your ear off about every topic, one of the biggest topics right now is theatrical and how theatrical can “live” for the rest of the summer and beyond without superhero films and tentpoles. Check the trades, there have been many various nervous posts worried about the theatrical experience between now and, say, October when some blockbusters return to the screen.
Halloween Ends is officially heading to streaming at the same time as it’s hitting movie theaters.
Rebecca Rubin Film and Media Reporter Laurie Strode’s final battle against her seemingly immortal nemesis Michael Myers will transpire in theaters… and on a streaming service near you. Universal Pictures has announced “Halloween Ends,” the next sequel in the long-running slasher series, will land on Peacock on the same day it arrives on the big screen. The movie is scheduled to premiere on Oct. 14, 2022. Directed by David Gordon Green and produced by Blumhouse and Miramax, “Halloween Ends” is the conclusion to the decades-long film franchise. “Only one of them will survive,” according to the movie’s logline, which also hints at “a final confrontation unlike any captured on-screen before.”
pic.twitter.com/x9sAOiAHgc“Last year when we put out ‘Halloween Kills,’ we were in the thick of the COVID crisis so we made that movie available in theaters and in homes at the same time. We discovered that there are people who want to go to the theater and scream their guts out.
Benoit Blanc is coming to dinner.