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Dick Cavett in Pioneers of Television (2008)

News

Dick Cavett

Les Griffes du cauchemar (1987)
Chuck Russell tells us how Dokken got involved with A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors
Les Griffes du cauchemar (1987)
Back in the 1980s, we got multiple really cool horror movies with rocking soundtracks, with one of the best being the 1987 classic A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, which features an iconic theme track by the band Dokken. Dream Warriors director Chuck Russell is currently doing the press rounds for his remake of writer/director Kevin S. Tenney’s 1986 horror classic Witchboard – and while we were talking to Russell about Witchboard, we also took the opportunity to ask him about Dream Warriors and Dokken. You can find out what he had to say about the band in the video embedded above.

Directed by Russell from a screenplay that...
See full article at JoBlo.com
  • 8/26/2025
  • by Cody Hamman
  • JoBlo.com
Dick Cavett Says John Cassavetes ‘Chewed Out’ His ‘Husbands’ Co-Stars After Infamous Talk Show Appearance: They Were ‘Total A***s’
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Dick Cavett is still miffed about a publicity stunt 50 years later. The iconic talk show host, who led his own eponymous series for decades, visited the Criterion Closet (in the below video) to reminisce about a few of his most beloved films — and most infamous moments on his series.

Cavett recalled how the cast of “Husbands” were some of the most “crappy” guests on “The Dick Cavett Show” in 1970. Actors Peter Falk, Ben Gazzara, and John Cassavetes, who also directed the film, appeared on Cavett’s show on September 18, 1970. The trio pretended to faint, stripped off their socks, and had a meandering discussion onstage. Watch it here. Apparently, it was so bad that Cassavetes preemptively blamed whether or not “Husbands” flopped in theaters on the talk show appearance.

“That’s the movie that these three guys came on and made total asses of themselves. You can find it online: ‘The...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 7/7/2025
  • by Samantha Bergeson
  • Indiewire
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The ‘Meanest’ Cameo ‘The Simpsons’ Ever Wrote for a Celebrity Guest Star
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The Simpsons has featured some pretty harsh celebrity burns over the years — from poking fun at John Travolta’s struggling career (less than two weeks before the release of Pulp Fiction), to lampooning Robert Downey Jr.’s legal troubles, to McBain’s brutal stand-up comedy routine about Woody Allen.

On the other hand, the celebrity guest stars who offer to voice cartoon versions of themselves on the show seem to get treated pretty well. Although Mark Hamill wasn’t crazy about the show’s suggestion that he makes personal appearances in his Star Wars costume for money.

Even harsher was the show’s portrayal of legendary talk show host Dick Cavett. In the Season Six episode “Homie the Clown,” Cavett is the host of Springfield’s Regional Ace Awards. A notorious name-dropper, Cavett ends his monologue by bluntly telling the audience, “I know Woody Allen” to a smattering of tepid applause.
See full article at Cracked
  • 6/29/2025
  • Cracked
The Highest-Grossing Zombie Movie Ever Made Finds New Streaming Success 12 Years Later
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The zombie horror genre has always been popular, but some films did it better than others. Ahead of a new zombie film, the addition in the 28 Days Laterfranchise, 28 Years Later, set to premiere on June 20, the highest-grossing zombie film of all time is making a splash on streaming.

In 2013, Brad Pitt starred in World War Z, which is now having a resurgence on streaming. The film recently headed to a new streaming home, its studio Paramount Pictures' streaming platform, Paramount+. However, it didn't make an imminent impact on the streaming platform, but World War Z reached the Top 10 globally on Netflix,Tudum reports.

World War Z has had a long, complicated relationship with Netflix. The zombie film left the streaming service in October 2024, but it's still available internationally. For the week between June 9 and 15, World War Z debuted in the charts again in seventh place. It received 3.8 million views and 7.4 million hours viewed.
See full article at CBR
  • 6/19/2025
  • by Monica Coman
  • CBR
How Steve Jobs Courted Hollywood
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Sometimes, a decision speaks a thousand words. The first-ever celebrity spokesman hired by Apple to pitch its personal computers in television ads was Dick Cavett. The company was barely 5 years old in 1981 when it tapped Cavett to star in a series of commercials designed to demystify the idea of using a home computer. The choice of the erudite writer and talk show host said so much about who Apple saw as its target audience.

Steve Jobs, the legendary tech visionary who co-founded Apple with Steve Wozniak, was famously attentive to image-making for his brand. And when it came to speaking to Hollywood, first and foremost, Apple took care to position itself as a wellspring of high-end filmmaking tools. Jobs, who died of pancreatic cancer in 2011 at age 56, knew how valuable it was for Apple to be embraced as the gold standard for creative design, editing and visual effects. He also...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 6/11/2025
  • by Cynthia Littleton
  • Variety Film + TV
When John Wayne Nearly Stormed The 1973 Oscars Stage Over An Unexpected Speech: “Had To Be Restrained By Six Men”
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Throwback To John Wayne’s Infamous Oscars 1973 Moments! ( Photo Credit – YouTube )

Before Will Smith ever slapped Chris Rock at the Oscars, John Wayne nearly caused his own headline-grabbing scene. At the 1973 Academy Awards, the True Grit icon had to be physically restrained by six security guards because he was seconds away from storming the stage.

That year, The Godfather dominated the night. Marlon Brando won Best Actor but ditched the ceremony. In his place, activist Sacheen Littlefeather appeared on stage. Dressed in traditional Apache attire, she calmly rejected Brando’s Oscar while drawing attention to the portrayal of Native Americans in Hollywood and the ongoing Wounded Knee Occupation.

The crowd wasn’t ready. Boos echoed through the room. Some listened. But behind the scenes? It got real. John Wayne was allegedly waiting in the wings, ready to charge. It wasn’t a dramatic metaphor. He reportedly tried to get on...
See full article at KoiMoi
  • 4/13/2025
  • by Koimoi.com Team
  • KoiMoi
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Is David Fincher preparing to reunite with Brad Pitt on a new movie?
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David Fincher has worked with Brad Pitt on three films: Se7en, Fight Club, and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. According to WorldofReel, the pair are looking to reunite on a new Netflix movie which could even be the director’s next project.

Take all of this with a grain of salt for now, but the report states that the project will be a sequel to a movie Fincher didn’t direct. Interesting. I wonder if this could be a resurrected version of the World War Z sequel, which Fincher was once slated to direct before it fell apart. Either way, Fincher and Pitt have done good work together, and it would be a treat to see them collaborate once again.

Related Panic Room (2002) – What Happened to This Thriller?

After the World War Z sequel was scrapped, Fincher said he was glad it didn’t move forward as it was...
See full article at JoBlo.com
  • 3/28/2025
  • by Kevin Fraser
  • JoBlo.com
Everyone Who Has Ever Hosted ‘Saturday Night Live’
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Since 1975 nearly a thousand hosts have graced the stage at Studio 8H at Rockefeller Center for “Saturday Night Live.”

Actors, comedians, musicians and even politicians have taken the stage to make America laugh on Saturday night for 50 seasons. Twenty five of these hosts have been inducted into the “Five Timers Club.” The club was first introduced during Tom Hanks’ 1990 monologue, featuring Steve Martin, Elliott Gould and Paul Simon.

During Martin Short’s December 2024 appearance, several Five Timers Club members popped up on the show to welcome him into the club, including Emma Stone, Tina Fey, Paul Rudd, Kristen Wiig and more, to give him the ceremonial robe.

Alec Baldwin has hosted the show 17 times, the most in the series’ history, with Martin, Hanks, Buck Henry and John Goodman following close behind.

As the show celebrates its 50th anniversary this year, we have rounded up every person who has hosted the sketch show.
See full article at The Wrap
  • 2/16/2025
  • by Tess Patton
  • The Wrap
10 Reasons Why 'Last Week Tonight' Is the Best Late Night Show
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There are so many late night shows nowadays that it's hard to keep track of them all. The Tonight Show and The Late Show are among the biggest, with hosts like Jimmy Fallon, Taylor Tomlinson, Bill Maher, Stephen Colbert, and others bringing levity to the evening in their own unique ways. While legends from the old days like Johnny Carson and Dick Cavett are often considered the best hosts of all time, there's still a lot that can be said about the late night shows airing today. Of them all, Last Week Tonight with John Oliver arguably is and has been the best since its debut in 2014.
See full article at Collider.com
  • 12/29/2024
  • by J.S. Gornael
  • Collider.com
Bogart: Life Comes in Flashes review – enjoyable look at extraordinary life of mythic star
Kathryn Ferguson
Kathryn Ferguson uses clips, voiceovers and interview archives to offer a candid and entertaining account of the actor who was at the pinnacle of Hollywood’s golden age

Kathryn Ferguson’s very serviceable and enjoyable documentary about Humphrey Bogart takes us through his extraordinary, almost mythic life story; it uses clips, voiceovers and existing interview archives (including the inevitable and indispensable Dick Cavett) but no new on-camera material.

Bogart was the son of a distinguished New York surgeon and a refined artist, illustrator and suffragette and might easily have become a bland east coast bourgeois professional, were it not for his academic underperformance and love of acting which took him from Broadway to Hollywood. The accident of his rugged looks and unmistakable voice brought him tough-guy roles under the whip of studio boss Jack Warner, and he became the face of heroic masculinity – what Helen Hayes called Bogart’s “plain...
See full article at The Guardian - Film News
  • 12/6/2024
  • by Peter Bradshaw
  • The Guardian - Film News
Winona Ryder's Sad Beetlejuice 2 Story Has A Gaping Plot Hole After The Original Ending
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Warning! This article contains Spoilers for Beetlejuice 2 (2024)!The primary conflict for Winona Ryders Lydia Deetz in Beetlejuice Beetlejuice revolves around her strained relationship with her teenage daughter, Astrid, but one of their biggest points of contention could have easily been resolved by Delia. Over 36 years after the original movie, Ryder, Catherine OHara, and Michael Keaton return in Beetlejuice 2s cast as the Deetz family returns to their haunted Winter River house for the funeral of Lydias father, Charles Deetz. When the movie kicks off, tensions are already high among the Deetz family, with Lydias teenage daughter Astrid (Jenna Ortega) resenting her and denying her ghost-seeing ability.

Though Lydia built a famous television career around her gift to communicate with ghosts, which originated with the deceased Maitlands in Winter River, Astrid never believed the ability was real until she met Jeremys ghost in Beetlejuice 2. Before developing the ability herself,...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 10/10/2024
  • by Jordan Williams
  • ScreenRant
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All the Times Chevy Chase Got His Teeth Knocked Out
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Dick Cavett couldn’t have known in 1978 that Chevy Chase and Bill Murray had recently exchanged blows backstage during a live SNL show. But then again, he might have had an inkling. “In the vapid research that I did on you,” he told Chase, “I found that you had been beaten up a number of times in the past.”

“Yeah, my teeth were knocked out a few times,” Chase admitted, “but they weren’t knocked out in fights a lot.”

So how exactly did Chase lose his teeth multiple times?

“The first time they were knocked out, I was playing polo with my brother,” Chase said. The boys weren’t actually on ponies, but it was polo nonetheless, played with wooden mallets at a 13th birthday party. “It started off to be a friendly little croquet game except with 11- to 13-year-old guys of the caliber of my brother, there’s trouble.
See full article at Cracked
  • 10/9/2024
  • Cracked
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Chevy Chase Says Animosity ‘Ruined My Performance’ When He Returned to ‘SNL’
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After leaving Saturday Night Live a few episodes into its second season, it didn’t take long for Chevy Chase to return to 30 Rock. He hosted in February during the show’s third year, but it wasn’t a pleasant homecoming.

After receiving a series of smart-ass answers from Chase in October 1978, just a few months after that SNL hosting gig, talk-show host Dick Cavett begged for a straight response. “I don’t suppose there’s any chance of getting you to talk seriously about — what can I call it? — the rumored animosity that your friends on Saturday Night Live are supposed to have felt when you left. They thought maybe you endangered their careers and yours.”

Chase obliged — sorta. “I can talk about that seriously,” he said. “Here?”

Chase said he wasn’t fully dialed in on the rumors as he didn’t get back to New York much.
See full article at Cracked
  • 10/3/2024
  • Cracked
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Where to Watch Tim Burton’s Original ‘Beetlejuice’ Movie Online
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With the release of Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice, it may be a good idea to watch (or re-watch) the original to get ready for the sequel.

Released in 1988, Beetlejuice has been a fan-favorite for generations with more people gravitating to the work of director Tim Burton and the performances from Geena Davis, Alec Baldwin, Winona Ryder, Catherine O’Hara and, of course, Michael Keaton as “The Ghost with the Most.”

At a Glance: How to Watch Beetlejuice Online

Stream online Max watch 'beetlejuice' on max

Keep reading below for more details on where to stream Beetlejuice online and when the sequel is expected to be available online.

Where to Stream Beetlejuice Online

Beetlejuice in 4K Ultra HD is available to watch on Max, or to buy digitally on sale for $7.99 (reg. $14.99), or rent for $3.79 on Prime Video. The movie is also available on Apple TV.

watch 'beetlejuice' on Prime...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 10/3/2024
  • by Rudie Obias
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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The Marx Brothers movies: All 13 films ranked worst to best
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The Marx Brothers – mustachioed, stogie-smoking ring-leader Groucho, chatty, Italian-accented con man Chico, silent skirt-chaser Harpo and, early on, relatively “normal” matinee idol Zeppo – first got their start as a vaudeville comedy act at the turn of the 20th century. They would go on to conquer the Broadway stage before landing in films when “talkies” took off.

Zeppo would drop out of the act after five films, becoming an engineer and a talent agent. But his older siblings would continue their frenzied verbal and visual hilarity on the big screen until 1949, when the medium of television beckoned and competed for eyeballs. Groucho would host a TV version of his radio game show, “You Bet Your Life,” for 11 seasons on NBC and appeared on Dick Cavett’s TV talk show in the late ‘60s. That is when their Marx Brothers’ anarchistic approach to humor and word-play takedowns of hypocrites and stuffy high-society...
See full article at Gold Derby
  • 9/28/2024
  • by Susan Wloszczyna, Chris Beachum and Misty Holland
  • Gold Derby
Denzel Washington Once Refused To Leave David Letterman's Couch – For A Great Reason
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Once upon a time in late night television, it was customary for talk shows to fill up their couches as the evening's episode progressed. The first guest would do their segment and then move down a spot on the adjacent couch, making room for the next guest to yap with Johnny Carson, Dick Cavett or whoever. What with the barnacle presence of sidekick Ed McMahon, Carson's couch could get especially crowded some nights. Sometimes this got tense (like the time Burt Reynolds inexplicably went after "Double Dare" host Mark Summers on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno"); sometimes it was chaotic comedy bliss (which is what happens when you ask Carson to rein in the irrepressible duo of Robin Williams and Jonathan Winters); and sometimes it was just plain surreal.

This tradition started to fade out of fashion in the 1980s when "Late Night with David Letterman" introduced its one-guest-at-a-time approach.
See full article at Slash Film
  • 9/22/2024
  • by Jeremy Smith
  • Slash Film
Where to Watch the Original ‘Beetlejuice’? (Streaming)
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If you are getting excited to see the latest legacy comedy horror sequel film, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice which is making a name for itself by earning millions and millions of dollars, and you haven’t watched the original movie. In that case, this article is for you. Directed by the legendary Tim Burton from a screenplay co-written by Michael McDowell and Warren Skaaren, the beloved comedy horror film is climbing the streaming charts as people revisit the Burton film before heading out to watch the sequel in theaters.

The 1988 film follows the story of the ghosts of a married couple Adam and Barbara as they continue to live in their home but when new people move into their house they fail to get them to leave. Adam and Barbara reluctantly call upon the miscreant Betelgeuse, so that he can...
See full article at Cinema Blind
  • 9/17/2024
  • by Kulwant Singh
  • Cinema Blind
11 Original Characters Still Missing From Beetlejuice 2
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Includes Spoilers for Beetlejuice Beetlejuice!

Tim Burtons Beetlejuice 2 brings several original figures back from the dead after 36 years, though there are still some great living and deceased Beetlejuice characters who didn't return. The highly-anticipated sequel to Tim Burtons 1988 horror-comedy classic Beetlejuice has been met with acclaim from critics and audiences, using the original movie as a launch-off point and adding to it faithfully. The Beetlejuice 2 ending is arguably even zanier and more comedic than that of the original, really allowing the whacky horror world to run wild.

The returning cast and characters in Beetlejuice 2 are Michael Keaton as Beetlejuice, Winona Ryder as Lydia Deetz, and Catherine OHara as Delia Deetz, with Jeffrey Jones' absence being explained by his character's death. Additionally, Beetlejuice 2s cast features Jenna Ortega, Willem Dafoe, Justin Theroux, and Monica Bellucci in new roles. Still, there are several characters missing from Beetlejuice 2 that...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 9/10/2024
  • by Jordan Williams, Charles Papadopoulos
  • ScreenRant
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Beetlejuice: 10 Reasons Why It’s A Classic
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Well, it’s only taken thirty-six years, but we’re finally, Finally getting a sequel to Beetlejuice, with Tim Burton and Michael Keaton returning for Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice (read our review here). With the sequel bound to introduce a new generation to the Tim Burton classic, now’s the perfect time to look back at the movie and figure out why it stands the test of time. So, here are 10 Reasons Why Beetlejuice Is Still The Ghost With the Most!

10. A Timeless Tale:

There’s a reason why Beetlejuice still resonates all these decades following its initial release. From the time we mere mortals realize that our time on earth is limited, we become preoccupied with the afterlife. Beetlejuice tackles the theme with unusual aplomb, imagining the afterlife as just another stop in our soul’s journey to its final resting place, with our heroes, Alec Baldwin’s Adam and Geena Davis’s Barbara,...
See full article at JoBlo.com
  • 9/8/2024
  • by Chris Bumbray
  • JoBlo.com
Beetlejuice 2 Confirms An Original Character's Survival After Years Of Death Theories
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Warning! This article contains Spoilers for Beetlejuice Beetlejuice!In addition to revealing the fates of a few other surprise characters, Beetlejuice 2 confirms that one of the original movies supporting figures didnt die actually during their 1988 bout with Betelgeuse. Tim Burtons 2024 sequel sees Beetlejuices Deetz family return to Winter River after the tragic death of patriarch Charles, who died being eaten by a shark after his plane crashed into the ocean. At the funeral and wake, Charles wife Delia (Catherine OHara) and daughter Lydia (Winona Ryder) reunite with some familiar faces from the original movie.

Alongside the Deetzes and Michael Keatons Betelgeuse, only one supporting character from the 1988 horror-comedy returns in Beetlejuice 2s cast. This happens to be Little Jane Butterfield, the now grown-up realtor daughter of the Maitlands and Deetzes former realtor, Jane Butterfield. The sequel doesnt bring back the Deetzes friends Otho (actor Glenn Shadix passed away in 2010), Dick Cavetts Bernard,...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 9/8/2024
  • by Jordan Williams
  • ScreenRant
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‘One to One: John & Yoko’ Review: An Exhilarating and Deeply Political Vision of a Year in the Life
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The bond between John Lennon and Yoko Ono, mutually inspired artists from very different worlds, is only one of the love stories at the core of director Kevin Macdonald’s vibrant and stirring new documentary. Tracing an eventful year, One to One: John & Yoko is, first and foremost, a portrait of the couple’s love affair with New York City, their newly adopted home. In its mix of remarkable archival material, the film is both tender and galvanizing, summoning up what New York felt like in 1972 (yes, I would know) and offering a fresh slant on a country’s upheaval and a generation’s countercultural awakening.

For Macdonald (One Day in September, The Last King of Scotland), One to One is not only a return to form after his mixed-bag profile of John Galliano, but one of his finest pieces of work. He and co-director/editor Sam Rice-Edwards have conjured...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 8/30/2024
  • by Sheri Linden
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Doing It Her Way: Bobbi Althoff On Shaking Up Social Media & The Talk Show Format – Crew Call Podcast
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Deadline’s Crew Call continues its spotlight on the revolutionaries of social media who are impacting the film and TV industry with Gen-z mom vlogger-turned-absurdist online talk show host Bobbi Althoff.

Similar to our previous social media guests — actor/comedic performer Adam Rose and teen K-drama series Alan’s Universe architect and star Alan Chikin Chow — Althoff is burning a trail for herself in the entertainment industry and leading her own burgeoning empire of brand endorsements and more at a time when the film and TV spheres are undergoing contraction and confusion about what consumers crave.

For Althoff, host and creator of The Really Good Podcast, pop culture is still the rage for many; it’s just how you harness it. Her deadpan talk show style, unprepared host styling and fearless demeanor to call guests out on their sh*t has lassoed her 13 million followers across social media, regularly topping the podcast charts,...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 8/21/2024
  • by Anthony D'Alessandro
  • Deadline Film + TV
Michael Cieply: Waiting For ‘Saturday Night,’ The Jason Reitman Dramedy About Comedy
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Lo, the enduring miracle of the film awards year. Just when things begin to look hopeless—and it was looking pretty bleak a month ago—intriguing, maybe even watchable, prospects suddenly sprout. The movies are like Osiris, that old Egyptian resurrection god: You just can’t keep ‘em down.

As August arrives, more than a few adult viewers, unattuned to the ongoing fantasy-and-animation boom, are now peeking around the corner at Saturday Night, Jason Reitman’s Saturday Night Live origins story. The film was scheduled last week by Columbia Pictures for release on Oct. 11—the 49th anniversary of NBC’s first SNL broadcast, back in 1975.

As historical moments go, that may or may not impress the film Academy’s growing body of foreign-based Oscar voters. But for the domestic crowd, especially those in upper age brackets, the birth of an American comedy phenomenon, still alive some five decades later, is compelling.
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 8/4/2024
  • by Michael Cieply
  • Deadline Film + TV
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Woody Allen’s Scandals Forced ‘The Simpsons’ to Change a Joke at the Last Minute
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The Simpsons hasn’t exactly shied away from including references to Woody Allen over the years, such as when Bart and Homer spotted him shooting a Japanese rice cracker commercial, or when he was seen hammering out Chinese fortune cookie messages, or the time he was absolutely torn apart by the comic stylings of McBain.

But while these jokes were obviously intended to demean the Oscar-winning filmmaker/accused sexual predator, the show once came very close to including an innocuous Allen reference at the worst possible time.

The second segment in “Treehouse of Horror III” was the King Kong parody “King Homer,” which ends with an old-timey newspaper spinning into frame bearing the headline “Woman Weds Ape.” Just below it is the headline “Dick Cavett Born,” featuring an image of a fully adult Dick Cavett.

Disney

Which is a funny joke, but if you pause the scene right as the newspaper is spinning,...
See full article at Cracked
  • 7/31/2024
  • Cracked
Olivia Cooke and Emma D'Arcy in House of the Dragon (2022)
7 Best Movies & TV Shows on Max in August 2024
Olivia Cooke and Emma D'Arcy in House of the Dragon (2022)
As House of the Dragon Season 2 comes to an end on August 4, Max subscribers will be wondering about what’s next. The Warner Bros. Discovery streaming service has a lot to offer in the upcoming month including as many classic and new content comes out on the service. Just like every month there is a lot of content on the way and just like every month, we have sorted out the best movies and TV shows you should invest your time in. So, here are the 7 best movies and TV shows coming to Max in August 2024.

Beetlejuice (August 1)

Beetlejuice is a fantasy comedy horror movie directed by Tim Burton from a screenplay co-written by Michael McDowell and Warren Skaaren. The 1988 film follows the story of a ghost married couple Barbara and Adam, who lead a peaceful life but when their house gets sold to new people, they call on the...
See full article at Cinema Blind
  • 7/28/2024
  • by Kulwant Singh
  • Cinema Blind
Tom Hanks in Forrest Gump (1994)
Tom Hanks Dug His Digital ‘Forrest Gump’ Co-Stars
Tom Hanks in Forrest Gump (1994)
Image Source: Paramount Pictures When Forrest Gump arrived in theaters 30 years ago it showed us something we’d never seen before: Using new technology, director Robert Zemeckis had his star, Tom Hanks, interact seamlessly with historical footage of real people and events, including Presidents John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, and Richard Nixon; John Lennon; and talk show host Dick Cavett. When the movie first opened, Hanks told us he was in awe of what those scenes looked like on the screen. (Click on the media bar below to hear Tom Hanks) https://www.hollywoodoutbreak.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Tom_Hanks_Forrest_Gump.mp3

Forrest Gump is currently streaming on Paramount+ and Pluto and available on DVD, Blu-Ray, 4K, and most digital platforms. .

The post Tom Hanks Dug His Digital ‘Forrest Gump’ Co-Stars appeared first on Hollywood Outbreak.
See full article at HollywoodOutbreak.com
  • 7/6/2024
  • by Hollywood Outbreak
  • HollywoodOutbreak.com
All 10 Real-Life Figures In Forrest Gump Explained
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1994's Forrest Gump features Tom Hanks' title character meeting many real-life historical figures. Two of the only characters not to appear via archive footage were Elvis Presley and Dick Cavett. Gump also met several Presidents including Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon.

Forrest Gump featured Tom Hanks' title character interacting with several well-known historical figures. The 1994 movie, which was based on the 1986 Winston Groom novel of the same name, was directed by Robert Zemeckis from a screenplay by Eric Roth. It was a major sensation in the mid-1990s, becoming the second highest-grossing movie of the year worldwide thanks to a gross of $678.2 million against its $55 million budget. It would then go on to win six Oscars, including Best Picture.

By the time the Forrest Gump ending catches up with the character in the early 1980s, he has the opportunity to meet quite a few real-life historical figures over the course of his adventures.
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 7/5/2024
  • by Brennan Klein
  • ScreenRant
John Mulaney on Whether He Will Make More ‘Everybody’s in L.A.,’ Return for ‘The Bear’ Season 3 or Host the Oscars
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We can’t get enough of John Mulaney these days.

After winning his third Emmy last year for writing his Netflix stand-up special “Baby J,” where he spoke candidly (and hilariously) about his stint in rehab for addiction, the former “Saturday Night Live” writer has risen from the ashes like a comically witty Phoenix.

In the Emmy race once again this year in multiple categories, most notably for guest comedy actor for his performance in the brilliant episode “Fishes” from FX’s second season of “The Bear” and outstanding talk series for the Netflix live smash “Everybody’s in L.A.”

On this episode of the award-winning Variety Awards Circuit Podcast, Mulaney discusses his experience and perspectives on Los Angeles’ identity, his creative processes, and whether he’ll host the Oscars. Listen below!

Mulaney surprised everyone as the host of the 14th annual Governors Awards, where he killed in the...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 6/6/2024
  • by Clayton Davis
  • Variety Film + TV
A Tribute to Alfred Hitchcock’s Many Mothers
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There’s a story Alfred Hitchcock always liked to tell about how, when he was five years old, his father dropped him off at the local police station near his home in East London. William Hitchcock left a note for the coppers explaining that his son had been misbehaving. A policeman locked young Alfred in a cell for a few minutes and explained, “This is what we do to naughty boys.”

When Hitchcock recounted that story to Dick Cavett he was in his 70s, but the incident continued to leave a profound mark on the director. He said he was still “terrified of the police” because of that and drew a connection from that to the feelings of guilt and wrong-men-on-the-run paranoia that seeps into so many of his films.

The funny thing is, though, father characters are almost entirely absent from Hitchcock’s work. There are a few: Cedric Hardwicke...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 5/12/2024
  • by Christian Blauvelt
  • Indiewire
‘John Mulaney Presents: Everybody’s in LA’ Is a Winningly Shambolic Pop-Up Talk Show: TV Review
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Los Angeles is not the first city fans would associate with comedian John Mulaney. That would be Chicago, his hometown and the backdrop to innumerable childhood anecdotes in his stand-up act, or New York, where he broke out as a writer on “Saturday Night Live” and shot a special at Radio City Music Hall. But L.A. is where Mulaney now lives; it’s also currently home to the second iteration of Netflix Is a Joke, a massive, weeklong comedy festival organized by the streaming service as a show of genre dominance. (Netflix stand-up head Robbie Praw used to run programming at Montreal’s vaunted Just for Laughs event and has essentially created a West Coast version.) And so we have “John Mulaney Presents: Everybody’s in LA,” a weeklong special event combining studio segments, pre-taped sketches and man-on-the-street interviews into a sort of pop-up talk show.

“We’re only doing six episodes,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 5/4/2024
  • by Alison Herman
  • Variety Film + TV
“Our characters are stuck”: Geena Davis Confirms She’s Not Returning for Beetlejuice 2 But Has a Convincing Theory That Will Make Fans Understand Her Absence
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It’s been more than 30 years since the first Beetlejuice terrified and tickled audiences. Now, Michael Keaton is back as the iconic bio-exorcist in the much-anticipated sequel, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.

Winona Ryder and Catherine O’Hara are coming back to play Lydia and Delia Deetz again. Plus, fans will get to see some new faces in the movie. Jenna Ortega, Willem Dafoe, Justin Theroux, and Monica Bellucci are joining the cast to play brand new characters.

A still from Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

But fans will notice the void of two main characters: Geena Davis and Alec Baldwin, who played the Maitlands (Barbara and Adam) in the original movie. However, Davis has an explanation for her and her co-star’s absence.

The Reason Behind Geena Davis’ Absence from the Beetlejuice Sequel Geena Davis and Alec Baldwin in a still from Beetlejuice

Geena Davis explained to Et Online why she’s not in the Beetlejuice sequel.
See full article at FandomWire
  • 4/13/2024
  • by Shreya Jha
  • FandomWire
Marlon Brando Wanted to Scam Warner Bros. Out of $2 Million
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Marlon Brando's unique tactics to get paid for acting roles involved creative solutions like playing 'the invisible man' for two days. Brando's disdain for traditional acting methods led him to push boundaries, even asking for entire films to be rewritten after being cast, such as City Hall. Schrader shared fascinating stories of working with Brando, and thinks "his tragedy was that acting became so easy for him, he came to disrespect his own craft."

The renowned Paul Schrader began his career in Hollywood just as the legendary actors of the past were fading and making way for the New Hollywood actors of the 1970s. One of the very few actors who bridged both periods was Marlon Brando, often considered the greatest actor of all time, or at least someone who changed the meaning of acting. It turns out that Schrader, writer of Taxi Driver and Raging Bull and...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 4/10/2024
  • by Matt Mahler
  • MovieWeb
“They sent me a bunch of footage”: David Dastmalchian’s Late Night with the Devil Preparation Involved Watching Talk-Show That Inspired Heath Ledger’s Joker
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Directed by Cameron and Colin Cairnes, Late Night with the Devil is a supernatural horror film that stars David Dastmalchian in the lead role. In the film, Dastmalchian plays the role of a late-night talk show host and watched several talk shows to prepare for the role, including one that inspired Heath Ledger’s Joker.

David Dastmalchian in Late Night with the Devil

In a recent interview, Dastmalchian spoke about his preparation for the role of a talk show host. The actor revealed that he was recommended an old talk show by the directors, which co-incidentally also inspired Heath Ledger’s turn as Joker. At the same time, Dastmalchian revealed being skeptical about playing a talk show host. Here is everything Dastmalchian has said about his preparation for Late Night with the Devil.

Late Night with the Devil‘s David Dastmalchian Reveals Watching the Talk Show That Inspired Heath Ledger...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 4/4/2024
  • by Pratik Handore
  • FandomWire
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Late Night With The Devil review: a stunning, high-concept 1970s nightmare
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David Dastmalchian in Late Night With The Devil Image: Shudder/IFC Films There’s a certain quality that select horror movies can conjure, something with a high degree of difficulty that gets even higher when said horror movie is trying to evoke a very specific time and place. We’ve...
See full article at avclub.com
  • 3/21/2024
  • by Matthew Jackson
  • avclub.com
Late Night With The Devil review: a stunning, high-concept 1970s nightmare
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David Dastmalchian in Late Night With The DevilImage: Shudder/IFC Films

There’s a certain quality that select horror movies can conjure, something with a high degree of difficulty that gets even higher when said horror movie is trying to evoke a very specific time and place. We’ve seen...
See full article at avclub.com
  • 3/21/2024
  • by Matthew Jackson
  • avclub.com
David Letterman Visits Stephen Colbert, Talks Johnny Carson: “He Was The Mount Olympus”
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David Letterman visited Manhattan’s Ed Sullivan Theater last night for the first time since he retired from CBS’ The Late Show eight years ago, chatting comfortably with his successor Stephen Colbert as if he’d never left.

Fittingly, the two late-night heavyweights discussed, among other things, other late-night heavyweights. When Colbert mentioned that he’d become friends with Dick Cavett and occasionally sought his advice, he asked if Letterman ever contacted his own champion, Johnny Carson, in a similar capacity.

After a brief pause, Letterman shook his head no. “Johnny is, was, the Mount Olympus,” he said, “so you didn’t just call Johnny and say, ‘Hey, Johnny, what do you think? Should I do this? What about the color of the socks, are they going to be alright, Johnny? So, no, I was pretty much alone. I was orphaned in the talk show world.”

When the audience responded...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 11/21/2023
  • by Greg Evans
  • Deadline Film + TV
David Fincher Reveals Canned World War Z Sequel Was Similar to The Last of Us
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David Fincher opened up about the canceled World War Z sequel and how The Last of Us left him with no regret.

In an interview with GQ, The Killer director was asked about his ideas for the canned World War Z 2 and how the HBO series The Last of Us allowed Fincher to dive deeper into the same themes as the Brad Pitt-led movie. He explained, “Well, it was a little like The Last of Us. I'm glad that we didn't do what we were doing, because The Last of Us has a lot more real estate to explore the same stuff. In our title sequence, we were going to use the little parasite… they used it in their title sequence, and in that wonderful opening with the Dick Cavett, David Frost-style talk show.”

Related: World War Z's Zombies Don't Feed On Humans - But Why?

World War Z,...
See full article at CBR
  • 10/28/2023
  • by Frank Yemi
  • CBR
David Fincher reveals why he’s glad his ‘World War Z’ sequel never got made: ‘It was a little like The Last of Us’
David Fincher is glad his ‘World War Z’ sequel never got off the ground. The ‘Fight Club’ filmmaker, 61, was set to do a follow up to director Marc Foster’s 2013 apocalyptic zombie movie starring Brad Pitt, 59, but said he was relieved it never happened as the plot was too similar to HBO’s hugely popular dystopian thriller ‘The Last of Us’. David told GQ: “Well, it was a little like ‘The Last of Us’. I’m glad that we didn’t do what we were doing, because ‘The Last of Us’ has a lot more real estate to explore the same stuff. “In our title sequence, we were going to use the little parasite… they used it in their title sequence, and in that wonderful opening with the Dick Cavett, David Frost-style talk show.” The original ‘World War Z’ movie was inspired by Max Brooks’ 2006 book of the...
See full article at Bang Showbiz
  • 10/26/2023
  • by BANG Showbiz Reporter
  • Bang Showbiz
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David Fincher Says Canceled ‘World War Z’ Sequel Would Have Been a “Little Like ‘The Last of Us'”
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David Fincher, who was set to direct a World War Z sequel before it was canceled by Paramount, is revealing some of the plans he had for the follow-up film.

In an interview with GQ UK, published online Wednesday, the Fight Club filmmaker said the zombie movie would have been a “little like The Last of Us,” the hit HBO series starring Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey that premiered earlier this year

“I’m glad that we didn’t do what we were doing, because The Last of Us has a lot more real estate to explore the same stuff,” he explained. “In our title sequence, we were going to use the little parasite … they used it in their title sequence, and in that wonderful opening with the Dick Cavett, David Frost-style talk show.”

The 2013 hit film starring Brad Pitt and directed by Marc Forster was an adaptation of...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Carly Thomas
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
David Fincher Is Glad World War Z 2 Was Cancelled (Because The Last Of Us Is Better)
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After "The Last of Us" video game became one of the most acclaimed games of the past decade and was lauded as a game-changer, this year saw its live-action TV adaptation heralded as one of the best video game adaptations, ever. Both are not only fantastic horror stories but gripping dramas with a focus on characters.

The "Last of Us" franchise has become such a game-changing addition to the zombie genre that instead of spawning cheap competitors that cash in on its success, it is actually scaring the competition away. At least one big zombie movie is reportedly no longer happening, in part due to "The Last of Us." Speaking with GQ for the release of "The Killer," David Fincher addressed his long-awaited sequel to "World War Z."

"It was a little like 'The Last of Us,'" Fincher said about his ideas for the canned sequel. "I'm glad...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Rafael Motamayor
  • Slash Film
The Last of Us Is the Reason Why David Fincher Is Glad His World War Z Sequel Was Canceled
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World War Z 2 was canceled, but director David Fincher isn't too unhappy about that as The Last of Us explores the themes he wanted to delve into. Both World War Z and The Last of Us revolve around a deadly virus that threatens humanity, with characters seeking a way to find a cure and end the conflict. The canceled sequel would have focused on Brad Pitt's character from World War Z, as he searched for a more effective solution to the virus outbreak.

It has been 10 years since the release of the film adaptation of World War Z, based on the 2006 novel by Max Brooks. And for a decade fans have been waiting for the sequel that, unfortunately, is destined to never appear. But for director David Fincher, it turned out to be a good thing. The reason? The Last of Us.

From the start, World War Z was conceived as a trilogy,...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Maca Reynolds
  • MovieWeb
“A Little Like The Last Of Us”: Canceled World War Z 2 Movie Plan Teased By David Fincher
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David Fincher teases his canceled World War Z sequel, describing it as "a little like The Last of Us." The sequel was initially planned after the success of the first World War Z and Fincher was set to direct. Production trouble and China's ban on films featuring zombies were cited as reasons for the sequel's cancelation.

David Fincher teases his canceled World War Z 2 movie plan, describing it as "a little like The Last of Us." The 2013 film, which was directed by Marc Forster based on the book by Max Brooks, starred Brad Pitt as a former Un investigator leading a worldwide search seeking a solution to a sudden zombie apocalypse. World War Z was a big box office success that grossed $540 million, opening the door to a potential sequel that Fincher was slated to direct before being canceled.

In a new interview with GQ, Fincher revealed some of his...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Adam Bentz
  • ScreenRant
David Fincher Is ‘Glad’ the ‘World War Z’ Sequel Was Canceled: ‘The Last of Us’ Did It Better
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David Fincher is “glad” the long-gestating “World War Z” sequel was ultimately scrapped.

The “Killer” director told GQ UK that the slated “World War Z” sequel would have explored similar themes to hit HBO series “The Last of Us,” which was based off of the video game franchise of the same name.

“Well, it was a little like ‘The Last of Us,'” Fincher said of the follow-up he planned to Marc Forster’s 2013 zombie apocalypse movie. “I’m glad that we didn’t do what we were doing, because ‘The Last of Us’ has a lot more real estate to explore the same stuff.”

Fincher continued, “In our title sequence, we were going to use the little parasite…they used it in their title sequence, and in that wonderful opening with the Dick Cavett, David Frost-style talk show.”

“World War Z” starred Brad Pitt as a U.N.
See full article at Indiewire
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Samantha Bergeson
  • Indiewire
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David Fincher is glad his World War Z sequel didn’t happen because it was similar to The Last of Us
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The 2013 film World War Z isn’t very popular, but it made a lot of money at the box office, pulling in over $540 million worldwide. So of course a sequel was put into development. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom director J.A. Bayona worked on the project for a year before stepping away because they couldn’t quite figure out the story, despite having great set pieces in mind. Then the sequel very nearly went into production in 2019 with Fight Club director David Fincher at the helm – but the studio decided it to scrap it over budgetary issues. Now, during an interview with GQ Magazine UK, Fincher revealed that he’s glad his World War Z sequel didn’t get made because it would have been similar to HBO’s TV series adaptation of the video game The Last of Us – and the TV series format allows The Last of Us to...
See full article at JoBlo.com
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Cody Hamman
  • JoBlo.com
David Fincher
David Fincher Talks ‘World War Z’ Sequel That Never Happened; Compares It to ‘The Last of Us’
David Fincher
There was a time when David Fincher was attached to direct a sequel to the zombie epic World War Z, you may recall, but we learned back in 2019 that it was no longer happening. So what happened? And what would Fincher’s take on the material have been like?

Chatting with GQ UK this week, Fincher opens up about the unmade sequel.

“Well, it was a little like The Last of Us,” Fincher explains. “I’m glad that we didn’t do what we were doing, because The Last of Us has a lot more real estate to explore the same stuff.

“In our title sequence, we were going to use the little parasite. They used it in their title sequence, and in that wonderful opening with the Dick Cavett, David Frost-style talk show.”

When asked by GQ UK if his World War Z sequel was going to stick...
See full article at bloody-disgusting.com
  • 10/25/2023
  • by John Squires
  • bloody-disgusting.com
David Fincher Says Canceled ‘World War Z’ Sequel Was Going To Be Like ‘The Last Of Us’
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David Fincher is opening up about the scrapped World War Z sequel and revealing that it was going to be like HBO’s The Last of Us.

“It was a little like The Last of Us. I’m glad that we didn’t do what we were doing, because The Last of Us has a lot more real estate to explore the same stuff,” Fincher told GQ in an interview. “In our title sequence, we were going to use the little parasite… they used it in their title sequence, and in that wonderful opening with the Dick Cavett, David Frost-style talk show.:

World War Z is a 2013 film directed by Marc Forster with a screenplay from Matthew Michael Carnahan, Drew Goddard and Damon Lindelof based on the 2006 novel by Max Brooks. The film starred Brad Pitt as a former United Nations investigator looking to find a solution to the zombie apocalypse.
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Armando Tinoco
  • Deadline Film + TV
Scrapped 'World War Z 2' Was Similar to 'The Last of Us,’ Says David Fincher
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David Fincher's vision for the follow-up to Brad Pitt's critically acclaimed zombie thriller from 2013, World War Z — which is still the highest-grossing zombie movie at the box office — was discarded for budgetary concerns back in 2019. Fincher had taken it on after the director J.A. Bayona had a falling out with Paramount Pictures. However, in a recent interview with GQ Magazine, David Fincher said, “Well, it was a little like The Last of Us. I'm glad that we didn't do what we were doing because The Last of Us has a lot more real estate to explore the same stuff. In our title sequence, we were going to use the little parasite… they used it in their title sequence, and in that wonderful opening with the Dick Cavett, David Frost-style talk show.”...
See full article at Collider.com
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Safwan Azeem
  • Collider.com
David Fincher Is ‘Glad’ His ‘World War Z’ Sequel Never Got Made: It Was Like ‘The Last Of Us,’ Which ‘Has a Lot More Real Estate to Explore the Same Stuff’
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In a new interview with GQ Magazine UK ahead of the release of his latest directorial effort “The Killer,” David Fincher expressed a bit of relief over his “World War Z” sequel never getting off the ground. Why? He revealed the sequel’s storyline was a bit too similar to HBO’s wildly popular, apocalyptic video game adaptation.

“Well, it was a little like ‘The Last of Us,'” Fincher said when the “World War Z” sequel was mentioned. “I’m glad that we didn’t do what we were doing, because ‘The Last of Us’ has a lot more real estate to explore the same stuff. In our title sequence, we were going to use the little parasite … they used it in their title sequence, and in that wonderful opening with the Dick Cavett, David Frost-style talk show.”

The original “World War Z” movie was inspired by Max...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Zack Sharf
  • Variety Film + TV
David Fincher
David Fincher Says His Scrapped ‘World War Z’ Sequel Was ‘A Little Like ‘The Last of Us’’
David Fincher
Lauded filmmaker David Fincher nearly made the leap to blockbuster sequel territory with a follow-up to Brad Pitt’s 2013 zombie action thriller “World War Z,” but the director now says he’s glad the project didn’t come together because his take was similar to HBO’s “The Last of Us.”

Fincher boarded and started developing “World War Z 2” in 2017 after the Paramount Pictures film lost director J.A. Bayona, marking a reunion with his “Fight Club” and “Curious Case of Benjamin Button” star Pitt. But in 2019, Paramount canceled the project over budgetary concerns and Fincher moved on to his Netflix film “Mank.”

Speaking with GQ UK, Fincher teased a bit of what he had planned for the zombie sequel, comparing it to HBO’s acclaimed video game adaptation “The Last of Us.”

“It was a little like ‘The Last of Us.’ I’m glad that we didn’t do what we were doing,...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 10/25/2023
  • by Adam Chitwood
  • The Wrap
Notebook Primer: Martin and Lewis, Partners in Film and Life
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The Notebook Primer introduces readers to some of the most important figures, films, genres, and movements in film history.Artists and Models.By rights, Martin and Lewis should have the kind of cultural footprint renders them permanent household names: the status that turns artists into Halloween costumes, as archetypal as cartoon characters and ancient gods. For ten years, from 1946 to 1956, Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis were a double act, and accurately describing how popular they were sounds like gross exaggeration. They were so big that the only fitting comparisons are to rock stars—and not just any rock stars, but Elvis Presley, or The Beatles. “For ten years after World War II, Dean and I were not only the most successful show-business act in history,” Jerry Lewis wrote with his trademark humility in Dean and Me: A Love Story (1984), “—we were history.” Their live shows were pandemonium. They reportedly made eleven million dollars in 1951 alone.
See full article at MUBI
  • 10/23/2023
  • MUBI
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