. In the clip, Angela and Michael meet with a sex educator, and warning, it's NSFW.The couple is presented with a toy that Angela can put on her body and Michael could use an app to control the device.
10.08.2023 - 20:55 / nypost.com
came the unfunny “Renfield,” starring Nicolas Cage as the count and Nicholas Hoult as his mistreated assistant. And now, as if we haven’t been bitten enough already, here’s the new horror film “The Last Voyage of the Demeter,” about the vamp’s not-so-pleasurable cruise to England.Running time: 118 minutes. Rated R (bloody violence).
In theaters August 11.As always, Dracula sucks blood. But his latest movie simply sucks.Director André Øvredal’s choppy film is based — as loosely as possible — on the captain’s log from Stoker’s 1897 novel, about the doomed watery journey from Bulgaria to Whitby. The project languished in development hell for years, and you have to wonder why so much time and effort went into it.
Anybody with a kindergarten diploma knows that the experience of watching Dracula gradually kill one sailor after another in exactly the same way aboard a medium-sized vessel with only a few rooms would turn out to be mind-numbingly boring.And, oh, has it ever. Øvredal attempts to overcome the lack of an engrossing plot by upping the gore, which has worked wonders for the “Evil Dead” movies. But there’s no creativity or artfulness to this violence.
The occasional bashed skull earns a “so what?” Nothing about “Demeter” is frightening, really, despite the million “he’s behind you!” jump-scares liberally tossed in.The filmmakers also try to boost the fear factor by turning Dracula (Javier Botet) into an unclothed Gollum-like creature with gray skin and bat wings (the Netflix series “Midnight Mass” did this in a much smarter way). At first glance, we think he’s a dangerous mythical animal, akin to the Mothman. But then he whispers four words in English.
. In the clip, Angela and Michael meet with a sex educator, and warning, it's NSFW.The couple is presented with a toy that Angela can put on her body and Michael could use an app to control the device.
Davina McCall has discussed her first marriage to husband Matthew Robertson and revealed she was very unhappy. The television presenter, 55, has confessed that she only stayed married to him for 17 years for the sake of their children. It was only when her sister Caroline died that she looked again at her relationship with her husband and concluded that it wasn't working.
Stakes are high in the trailer for The Morning Show season 3.
DEVO have confirmed that their current world tour will be the band’s last.The Ohio new wave group – who announced a farewell tour for 2023 earlier this year – confirmed in a new interview that the current run of shows will indeed be their last after 50 years together.Speaking to The Guardian, the band’s lead singer, Mark Mothersbaugh, explained why the band had decided to wrap up the live portion of their career.“Are you married?” he asked. “Imagine you had four wives and you worked together.
Allure. “People think I had a facelift. They’re like, ‘What did she do to her face?’ I’m like, ‘B—h, I’m just aging! It doesn’t mean I got bad plastic surgery.
Nearly one month into its theatrical run, and “Barbie” keeps trucking. Greta Gerwig‘s blockbuster now sits at $1.19 billion at the global box office, good for the year’s second highest-grossing film (and demolishing Margot Robbie‘s pitch to studios that “Barbie” would break the billion dollar barrier). So will “Barbie” surpass “The Super Mario Bros.
HBO‘s hit live-TV adaptation of The Last Of Us could last around four seasons, according to showrunner Craig Mazin.Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter, Mazin teased that his and The Last Of Us creator Neil Druckmann’s vision for the HBO series could see it last anywhere between three to five seasons, though he thinks “four seems like a good number”.“It can end up being three or five. But four seems like a good number.
. In the clip, Big Ed is accused of cheating during an exercise where participants have to guide their partner through a trust-based obstacle course blindfolded. In the clip, Ed and fellow castmate Molly are blindfolded while their respective partners — Liz and Kelly — give them directions.
Kalani and Asuelu definitely left it all on the table on the premiere episode of. The couple got shockingly candid about their marriage issues during a group therapy session with their fellow castmates, and Kalani revealed the jaw-dropping way she found out Asuelu was cheating on her with another woman while he was in Samoa.
In a hodgepodge pile of nostalgic reboots and revivals, Offspring is the one show on this planet that truly needs, no deserves, to return to our screens. But does that mean it will come back? Maybe not. Not when we, as a society, have the potential to create something new and fresh like High School Musical: The Musical: The Series.
The charm and sweetness of Casey McQuiston's novel Red, White & Royal Blue shine through in its Prime Video adaptation, directed by Matthew López.The core of the story remains intact, centring on the whirlwind romance between Alex Claremont-Diaz, played by Taylor Zakhar Perez, the First Son of the United States, and Prince Henry of Wales, played by Nicholas Galitzine. As with any adaptation, certain alterations have been made to bring the story to the screen. Let's delve into the significant changes and explore their impact on the film.
Once known for being the band of brothers with purity rings, the Jonas Brothers have evolved – and so has their music.Embarking on a worldwide tour where they will play 5 of their albums in one night, the Jonas Brothers (Kevin, Joe and Nick), address how they sing about sex now that they’re all married with children.“It’s just natural to speak about your life and where you’re at. Like, that’s my wife and partner in crime of 13 years, you know,” Kevin, 35, told Bustle of how his marriage to wife Danielle has inspired the group’s music.“We’re always conscious that we’re three brothers singing on stage together.
Barbie and Oppenheimer are continuing to reign as “Barbenheimer.”
Brent Lang Executive Editor “The Last Voyage of the Demeter” sank without a trace over its opening weekend, going to a watery grave with just $6.5 million. The period horror film, which centers on one chapter of Bram Stoker’s “Dracula,” namely the bit where his coffin gets transported from Transylvania to England, was distributed by Universal. It’s the studio’s second stab at reviving the world’s most famous vampire, with last spring’s “Renfield,” a campy take on the bloodsucker, also collapsing at the box office.
Naman Ramachandran Irish actor Liam Cunningham’s eclectic career includes playing fan favorite Davos Seaworth in HBO’s “Game of Thrones” and starring roles in Ken Loach’s Palme D’Or-winning “The Wind that Shakes the Barley” and Steve McQueen’s BAFTA-winning “Hunger.” Cunningham has won acting prizes at the Irish Film and Television Awards three times. Next up for him is the Amblin and Universal film “The Last Voyage of the Demeter,” by “The Autopsy of Jane Doe” filmmaker André Øvredal. The supernatural thriller, adapted from a chapter of Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel “Dracula” called “The Captain’s Log,” is set aboard the schooner Demeter, which was chartered to carry 50 unmarked wooden crates from Transylvania to London.
Michaela Zee “The Last Voyage of the Demeter,” a new period horror film set aboard a merchant ship, is capsizing in its debut at the domestic box office amid the ongoing success of “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer.” The Universal release — the studio’s second stab this year at a Dracula film after the action-comedy “Renfield” bombed in the spring — is facing some choppy waters after earning $2.62 million on its opening day from 2,715 locations, a figure that includes $750,000 in Thursday previews. “The Last Voyage of the Demeter” is projecting a fifth-place debut and a mere $6.5 million gross for its three-day opening weekend. Nothing really says the summer blockbuster season is winding down like an anachronistic genre picture meeting a swift end in its debut.
Brent Lang Executive Editor “The Last Voyage of the Demeter” set sail with $750,000 in previews on Thursday. The horror film, which is derived from a transit-heavy chapter of Bram Stoker’s “Dracula,” screened in 2,350 theaters with showings beginning at 5:00 p.m. It tells the story of the merchant ship that ferried fifty unmarked wooden crates from Carpathia to London.
FRIDAY AM UPDATE, refresh for more…The only new wide release this weekend is Amblin’s period Dracula horror pic The Last Voyage of the Demeter being distributed by Universal. It made $750K last night in previews from showtimes that began at 5PM in 2,350 theaters in what is expected to be an underwhelming 3-day single digit million result for the $45M feature production. The R-rated pic expands to 2,715 theaters today.
The new movie The Last Voyage of the Demeter, inspired by a single chilling chapter from the original Dracula novel by Bram Stoker, is now in theaters.
Owen Gleiberman Chief Film Critic “The Last Voyage of the Demeter” has a terrible title, but in theory the film sounds intriguing. It wants to be an old-fashioned monster movie, the kind they used to produce back when horror films were actual movies, made with the stodgy well-carpentered rhythm that any movie was made with. “The Last Voyage of the Demeter” is set in 1897, and for most of it we’re aboard a large wooden ship with multiple sails — the Demeter, a handsome relic, since this is already the era when metal ships were coming in — that’s sailing from Bulgaria to London.