By Sonia Kil
12.05.2020 - 19:28 / hollywoodreporter.com
WarnerMedia's Warner Bros. will "continue to work with theater owners" even though it took animated film Scoob! straight to premium on-demand instead of waiting for cinemas to reopen after the novel coronavirus pandemic, John Stephens, the CFO of WarnerMedia owner AT&T, said Tuesday.
By Sonia Kil
Henry Cavill may not be done playing Superman after all. After starring as the core hero of the DC Comics universe for three movies, the 37-year-old actor is reportedly in talks to reprise his role for a yet-unknown project that will exist in the same canon as “Justice League,” “Wonder Woman,” “Suicide Squad" and more.
Henry Cavill will reportedly reprise his roll as Superman in the DC Universe — and we know what it film won’t be.
Unrelated movies with the same title are nothing new in Hollywood, from the Oscar-winning “Crash” and David Cronenberg‘s psychological thriller of the same name, or Marvel’s “The Avengers” and the movie based on the 1960s British spy series with the same title. But when a multi-million dollar movie shares not only the same name, but also the design of your company, you’d be forgiven from worrying about how that could hurt you.
You thought HBO Max officially announcing the release of the director’s cut of “Justice League” would mean outlets would stop writing about The Snyder Cut? Well, you thought wrong.
Two years after departing the role, Henry Cavill is in talks to once again portray Clark Kent/Superman in films based on DC Comics, insiders with knowledge of the situation told TheWrap.
By Andreas Wiseman
Rod Lurie is an incredibly underrated director. In particular, his three political films in The Contender, Deterrence, and Nothing but the Truth, really are phenomenal works.
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Years of fanboy dreams are finally coming true.
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Disney+ has picked up Clouds, the inspirational teen drama that stars relative newcomer Fin Argus, former Disney Channel star Sabrina Carpenter and Annabelle Comes Home star Madison Iseman. The movie, which wrapped shooting in Montreal earlier this year, was acquired from Warner Bros., where it was produced by studio-based producer Andrew Lazar and his Mad Chance banner.