wrote. Then she took things in a place no one saw coming, writing, “My cousin in Trinidad won’t get the vaccine cuz his friend got it & became impotent.
27.08.2021 - 20:40 / justjared.com
Patty Jenkins is looking back at the release of Wonder Woman 1984.
The director made an appearance during a luncheon chat at CinemaCon on Thursday (August 26) in Las Vegas, via Deadline.
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When she was asked about the Wonder Woman 1984 release going theatrical day-and-date on HBO Max, she said: “It was the best choice in a bunch of bad choices at the moment,” adding that it was a “heartbreaking experience.”
“It was detrimental to the movie. I knew that could have
wrote. Then she took things in a place no one saw coming, writing, “My cousin in Trinidad won’t get the vaccine cuz his friend got it & became impotent.
Donny Osmond has been a fixture in Hollywood for over six decades and the accomplishment is not lost on the iconic performer. While promoting his first-ever solo residency at Harrah's in Las Vegas, Osmond told Fox News "reinvention" has been his key to longtime success in the entertainment industry. "It's all about reinvention, if you want a long career, you can't rest on your laurels," Osmond, 63, advised.
In writer-director Stephen Karam’s feature debut, the dark horror-comedy “The Humans,” it’s not so much a bump in the night or the creak in the door that can rupture an untapped fear. Those are merely the externalized notes that grant music to the ever-present existential dread.
In writer-director Stephen Karam’s feature debut, the dark horror-comedy “The Humans,” it’s not so much a bump in the night or the creak in the door that can rupture an untapped fear. Those are merely the externalized notes that grant music to the ever-present existential dread.
Wonder Woman director Patty Jenkins has criticised the straight-to-streaming model for films, saying they feel “like fake movies”.Across the pandemic, a host of films have foregone traditional cinema releases due to restrictions, and gone to streaming services straight away, something that is becoming more common even outside of COVID restrictions.In a CinemaCon appearance this week (as noted by the Los Angeles Times), Jenkins hit out at films made for streaming services.“Aren’t you seeing it?
Director Patty Jenkins recently voiced her objection to the day-and-date model at CinemaCon, which was first used by WarnerMedia on her film “Wonder Woman 1984” before applying the hybrid model to all of their 2021 releases as a way to help boost subscriptions to their streaming service, HBO Max.
“Wonder Woman 1984” director Patty Jenkins criticized films that are being released via streaming services and called them “fake.”The 50-year-old expressed her thoughts about the future of the big screen during a CinemaCon panel, opening up about her distaste for original films released on streaming giants.“Aren’t you seeing it? All of the films that streaming services are putting out, I’m sorry, they look like fake movies to me,” Jenkins said, the Los Angeles Times reported.
The director of the “Wonder Woman” sequel wishes things could have been different.
When WarnerMedia announced that “Wonder Woman 1984” would have a day-and-date release dropping on HBO Max at the same time as theaters, it sounded from various reports that it was a contractual situation that has been resolved before the announcement. This made their other announcement about all 2021 releases following the hybrid releases without working out deals with talent and production partners extremely puzzling.
Jenkins was asked about the day-and-date decision as part of a panel on Thursday at CinemaCon, and her remarks were met with applause by the audience of movie theater owners. Releasing “WW84” was the “best choice in a bunch of bad choices at the moment,” she said, given that COVID-19 vaccines had yet to receive emergency approval and the film’s Christmas Day release coincided with the biggest spike in infections in the U.S.
more than a billion dollars), and the Mouse House has confirmed that its Barry Jenkins-directed follow-up to 2019's «live-action» will be set before the events of that film and reveal Mufasa's origin story.Kelvin Harrison Jr. () will play a young Mufasa, ET can confirm.
Anyone who skipped CinemaCon this year out of fear of the pandemic in Las Vegas missed a spitfire of a luncheon chat this afternoon. Not only was Patty Jenkins smashing the theatrical day & date model, and wagging a finger at exhibition over the decline in moviegoing experience, but also Paramount Domestic Distribution Boss Chris Aronson put Marcus Theatres CEO & President Rolando Rodriguez in check over exhibitors’ ticket pricing.
Production for Disney’s highly-anticipated “The Lion King” prequel is underway.
Rebecca Rubin Film and Media ReporterAaron Pierre and Kelvin Harrison Jr. will venture with director Barry Jenkins to the Pride Lands, with the actors set to voice Mufasa and Scar in Disney’s upcoming prequel to “The Lion King.”After the studio’s 2019 photo-realistic adaptation of the animated classic grossed $1.6 billion at the global box office, Disney was eager to return to the vast savanna and greenlit a follow-up with Jenkins, the filmmaker behind the Oscar-winning “Moonlight,” at the
Matt Donnelly Senior Film WriterCinemaCon, the annual convention of movie theater owners, is all about flash.
No one is here to incriminate themselves when it comes to movie piracy. But if you’re reading this website, odds are you’ve seen a pirated movie at some point in the past.