Kaley Cuoco is in a thankful mood!
05.04.2022 - 00:53 / variety.com
The Flight Attendant.” The new season will premiere on Thursday, April 21.The dark comedy series focuses once again on lead character Cassie Bowden, played by Kaley Cuoco. Bowden is living a sober life in Los Angeles while moonlighting as a CIA asset in her free time when she is assigned overseas, leading her to accidentally witness a murder. Once again, Bowden is entangled in another sprawling network of international intrigue.The series stars Cuoco, and Season 2 will bring back series regulars Zosia Mamet, Griffin Matthews, Denis Akdeniz and Rosie Perez, as well as returning recurring guest stars T.R.
Knight, Yasha Jackson and Audrey Graace Marshall. The new season will also introduce Mo McRae, Callie Hernandez and JJ Soria as well as new guest stars Alanna Ubach, Cheryl Hines, Jessie Ennis, Mae Martin, Margaret Cho, Santiago Cabrera, Sharon Stone and Shohreh Aghdashloo. “The Flight Attendant” is developed by show runner Steve Yockey, who serves as executive producer alongside co-showrunner and executive producer Natalie Chaidez.
Executive producers include Greg Berlanti, Kaley Cuoco, Sarah Schechter, David Madden, Suzanne McCormack and Silver Tree. Jess Meyer is co-executive producer and Bonnie Munoz is producer. The Max Original series is produced by Warner Bros.
Television, Cuoco’s Yes, Norman Productions and Berlanti Productions.Also in today’s TV news:Season 3 of Netflix’s original fantasy series “The Witcher” began production on Monday. The new season will pick off where Season 2 left off, with Geralt (Henry Cavill) escorting the Princess Cirilla of Cintra (Freya Allan) to safety as beings all around the Continent compete to capture her. Yennefer of Vengerberg (Anya Chalotra) leads the duo to the fortress of
.Kaley Cuoco is in a thankful mood!
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticIt took me about 1.5 new episodes of “The Flight Attendant” to remember exactly how stressful it is to watch “The Flight Attendant.” It had been long enough since its November 2020 premiere that my memory of the show had almost become a facsimile of its slick Saul Bass-ian credits, in which a tiny blonde flight attendant runs away from shady spies and enormous bunnies. I knew I loved Kaley Cuoco’s screwball energy, Michiel Huisman’s arched eyebrow, Michelle Gomez’s exasperated sigh, and the dueling pleasures of a skittish Rosie Perez and a ruthless Zosia Mamet.
HBO Max show “The Flight Attendant,” and there’s one star who is joining her in the spotlight: Sharon Stone.The “Big Bang Theory” star, 36, looked back on working with the Oscar nominee, 64, telling Jimmy Kimmel about some “very intense scenes.”As it turns out, the “Basic Instinct” star got handsy with Cuoco and slapped her several times while filming.“[Stone] was a fan of the show. She loved Season 1 and heard we were casting my mom, and she called casting herself and said, ‘I’d love to do this,’ ” Cuoco said on Monday’s episode of “Jimmy Kimmel Live.”“And casting said we had a voicemail from Sharon Stone … I was like this can’t be real and found out it was,” she added.Cuoco noted that the scene where Stone smacked her across the face was improvised.
A nearly three-hour Batman film, bordering on R-Rated, certainly not for kids, that’s nihilistic, darker than the Christopher Nolan films, and not really much of a traditional superhero movie released during a pandemic seemed like a risky endeavor for Warner Bros. earlier this year (read our review here).
Cassie Bowden just can’t catch a break. The second season of “The Flight Attendant” finds Kaley Cuoco’s character struggling to stay one step ahead in a frenetic, spy-fueled game of cat and mouse.
is back with season 2. The HBO Max series starring Jean Smart is set to premiere almost exactly one year later, on May 12, 2022.
“The Batman” finally has a streaming release date.While director and co-writer Matt Reeves’ moody reboot is currently lighting up the box office, the film will be available to stream exclusively on HBO Max on Monday, April 18, followed by a linear debut on HBO on Saturday, April 23 at 8:00pm ET/PT.The streaming release date for “The Batman” was expected, as it falls on the 45th day after the film first hit theaters. While Warner Bros.
John Mulaney, Billy Eichner, Bill Burr and other comedians have been added to the growing roster of performers headlining events at the inaugural “Netflix is a Joke: The Festival,” the streamer announced on Tuesday.The festival will host over 250 live shows in over 30 Los Angeles venues over the course of 11 days, featuring A-list names in stand-up and comedy. Previously announced performers and events include David Letterman, Gabriel Iglesias, Dave Chappelle, Amy Schumer, Tim Robinson and Aziz Ansari.Highlights from the newly announced shows include stand up sets from Mulaney, Sebastian Maniscalco, Franco Escamilla, Neal Brennan and Jacqueline Novak.
“The Flight Attendant” is back and Cassie is seeing… double?
Kaley Cuoco) is living her best sober life in Los Angeles while moonlighting as a CIA asset in her spare time. But when an overseas assignment leads her to inadvertently witness a murder, she becomes entangled in another international intrigue. Filmed on location in Los Angeles, Berlin and Reykjavik, the sophomore installment puts Cassie in unfamiliar territory as she is led to believe that someone else may be trying to her. The two-minute trailer, which dropped Monday, reveals that Cassie is seeing her literal twin.
Sharon Stone is making her first appearance on the trailer for The Flight Attendant, where she plays the mom to Kaley Cuoco‘s character Cassie!
If you thought a series starring former “The Big Bang Theory” star Kaley Cuoco as a CIA agent moonlighting as a flight attendant, probably wouldn’t work, well, you wouldn’t be the first person. But Cuoco proved she could be more than just a broad sitcom star and HBO Max’s “The Flight Attendant” has been a major hit, greenlit for season two and there’s likely more coming soon after that.
trailer released Monday, which you can watch above, shows Cuoco’s Cassie on cloud nine as she’s living her best life in Los Angeles while settling into her secret life as a CIA operative. But, when an overseas assignment leads her to inadvertently witness a murder, she becomes entangled in more international intrigue. The pressure forces Cassie to confide in her closest friends about her new gig. As she investigates the slaying, she also realizes the killer might be more familiar than she had initially thought when she’s confronted by a room full of her doppelgängers.Eventually, the revelations send her into a spiral.
HBO Max original series picks up 15 years later, with the beloved original cast spending two months in Rivera Maya in Mexico. Three generations of Garcias sit in a beautiful room, while the family matriarch makes an announcement.
The Flight Attendant will be returning for season two imminently, arriving on screens in late April.WATCH BELOW: Trailer for The Flight Attendant Season 2The return of the HBO series, which first aired in 2020, has been hotly anticipated by many fans, who can now expect to see the first two episodes on April 21.The third and fourth episodes are slated for release a week later, on April 28, with the final four episodes being released weekly from then.Season two will continue to follow Cassie Bowden, played by Kaley Cuoco (of The Big Bang Theory fame), a first-class flight attendant and world-class party girl.The first season saw Cassie in a heap of trouble when she awakes to find one of her passengers, Alex, dead beside her in bed, with no idea what happened to him.“Cassie is trying to live a sober life, and also trying to be the fun Cassie."The new episodes will follow a now-sober Cassie as she lives her best life in Los Angeles, while also moonlighting as a CIA asset in her spare time.However, there are more murders to be encountered, and Cassie will find herself entangled again in an international-scale problem.“Cassie is trying to live a sober life, and also trying to be the fun Cassie,” Kaley said of what comes next for her beloved main character.“She thinks she’s not enjoyable when she’s not drunk. She thinks that’s who she is.“So, to take that away from her; to try and live a normal existence, she’s going to learn really fast that it’s not going to work for her.”Kaley as Cassie in season one.“She also looks at life in black and white,” Kaley explained.“She thinks she’s sober now, and so here comes her perfect life, and it is not going to turn out that way for her at all.
Wilson Chapman editorThe final episodes of “Grace and Frankie” will premiere April 29, Netflix announced Tuesday.Created by Marta Kauffman and Howard J. Morris, “Grace and Frankie” stars Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin as the title characters, two very different women who have disliked each other for years, even though their husbands Robert (Martin Sheen) and Sol (Sam Waterston) are law partners. When their husbands announce they’re in love and plan to divorce them to be together, Grace and Frankie find themselves roommates, and overcome their mutual animosity to become best friends navigating romances, business ventures and family drama together.The longest running show on Netflix, “Grace and Frankie” originally premiered in 2015 and has since run for seven seasons.
reboot!In the season finale, Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker), Charlotte York (Kristin Davis) and Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) are all making big moves in their lives. Carrie decides to spread the ashes of her late husband, Mr. Big (Chris Noth), off a bridge in Paris, France, and comes back to New York City to start a new podcast, appropriately titled, and makes out with her podcast producer, Franklyn (Ivan Hernandez), in an elevator. As for Miranda, she divorces her husband, Steve Brady (David Eigenberg), and jets off to Los Angeles to be with her new romantic partner, Che Diaz (Sara Ramirez), as they start their new pilot.And as for Charlotte, she has a bat mitzvah for herself after her youngest child, Rock, refuses, and is facing menopause later than the rest of her friends.'s finale also opens a door for one leading lady to return.