Movie News
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The Freshest Movie Development News of 2021
Few industries enjoy taking really, really long extended holiday vacations quite like Hollywood, and when we get to this time of the year, there’s rarely much in the realm of “movie development news” to discuss. So, this week and next, we’re going to review 12 of the year’s top stories, presented to you in monthly chronology. The year-in-review begins with the “Fresh Developments” of 2021, and we’ll continue next week with the year’s “Rotten Ideas.” JANUARY: KEVIN FEIGE’S STAR WARS MOVIE MOVES FORWARD WITH RICK AND MORTY POWER (Photo by Image Group LA/Getty Images) The future of Star Wars on the big screen seemed to hit a stumble last month, when the…
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The Biggest Movie News Of 2021 | Movies
When 2020 ended, we all hoped for better things in 2021. And if it was still another mightily difficult 12 months in many ways, there were things to celebrate in there – more must-see movies on screens big and small, times where audiences could congregate in cinemas again, and a slew of delayed releases finally making their way into the world. It was nothing if not eventful – and now, you can take a trip through the ups and downs of the year in movies with Empire’s round-up of the year’s biggest talking points. Enjoy, and here’s hoping for more lightness to come in 2022. Marvel goes small-screen After a…
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Movie Review: “Spider-Man: No Way Home” | News
‘Spider-Gentleman: No Way Home” was the No. 1 motion picture this earlier weekend. Let me rephrase that – “Spider-Person: No Way Home” turned the #1 film of 2021 this earlier weekend, its opening weekend, when it created an approximated $253 million at the domestic box office. As if that weren’t plenty of, the film made for the most immersive theater expertise I have had in yrs, with the audience cheering and screaming at every single transform. When we final saw Peter Parker aka Spider-Person (Tom Holland), his key id had been discovered by no-good newscaster J. Jonah Jameson (J.K. Simmons). Thanks to a incredibly fantastic attorney, no legal charges can…
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Elkhart’s Sheridan returns to the movie theaters this Christmas | News
This week, Elkhart indigenous and Hollywood up and comer Tye Sheridan will strike the large display screen in “The Tender Bar” directed by George Clooney and showcasing Ben Affleck and Lily Rabe. Sheridan plays J.R. Moehringer, a boy growing up on Extended Island who seeks out father figures amongst the patrons at his uncle’s bar. Ben Affleck performs “Uncle Charlie.” The Tender Bar, an adaption of the 2005 memoir of the similar title, is a coming-of-age drama that recounts the existence of J.R. Moehringer expanding up in Long Island and ordeals at a regional bar connect with Publicans (beforehand referred to as Dickens and subsequently renamed Edison’s) which served as…
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Christmas horror movies give us a much-needed break from being merry all the time
There is a crass commercialization of the Yuletide time exemplified by the retail Christmas creep that starts in September. A lot of people obsessively play and sing holiday getaway jingles for months. The Hallmark Channel unleashes two months of whitewashed Christmas flicks that evoke nostalgia for an period that, for a great deal of us, in no way was. Although numerous of us unquestionably locate consolation in spouse and children, good friends and feasts in the course of December — which is the genuine spirit of this thirty day period — there are people who truly feel isolated, dislike their insufferable in-legal guidelines or only tire of the unlimited needs…
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Denis Villeneuve to Tackle Sci-Fi Classic Rendezvous with Rama, and More Movie News
This week’s Ketchup brings you more headlines from the world of film development news, covering such titles as Blue Beetle, The Masked Singer, and the Kanye biopic. This WEEK’S TOP STORY DENIS VILLENEUVE TO TACKLE SCI-FI CLASSIC RENDEZVOUS WITH RAMA (Photo by Jan Thijs/©Paramount Picture) In many ways, science fiction authors in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s were decades ahead of what Hollywood could adapt. Classics like Isaac Asimov’s Foundation (now an Apple TV+ series), Robert A. Heinlein’s Stranger in a Strange Land, and Arthur C. Clarke’s Childhood’s End all have development histories that date back to the 1970s itself. Another such sci-fi classic that has eluded adaptation is Clarke’s…