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Tag: M3GAN

  • Th3 ‘M3GAN’ Cin3matic Univ3rs3 Might B3 D3ad

    Sexbot spinoff movie ‘Soulm8te’ has been removed from Universal’s release calendar, though it may find new life elsewhere.

    Cheryl Eddy

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  • M3GAN Spin-off Movie Delayed, Universal Shopping It

    The M3GAN spin-off movie that was supposed to come out early next year has been delayed indefinitely.

    Blumhouse and Universal Pictures’ M3GAN franchise began in 2022 with the Gerard Johnstone-directed film that was written by Akela Cooper. It was followed by a sequel, M3GAN 2.0, that was released in United States theaters this past June.

    M3GAN 2.0, however, wasn’t a huge hit at the box office, as it only made around $39.1 million globally. The first film, in comparison, made $181.8 million. M3GAN 2.0 also received mostly mixed and negative reviews from critics.

    In June 2024, plans for a M3GAN spin-off movie titled SOULM8TE were announced. Directed and co-written by Kate Dolan, it was supposed to arrive in United States theaters on January 9, 2026. 

    What is the update on the M3GAN spin-off movie?

    Given that there’s been no trailer or marketing for SOULM8TE, many M3GAN fans assumed that the movie was going to be either delayed or canceled. Paramount Pictures also has its Primate horror movie, which is about a killer chimpanzee, scheduled for January 9, which led to further speculation that SOULM8TE likely wouldn’t be keeping its release date. Deadline has now confirmed this to be true as, according to the outlet, the movie has been removed from Universal’s release date calendar, and the film is currently being shopped around to other studios.

    “In Soulm8te, a man acquires an Artificially Intelligent android to cope with the loss of his recently deceased wife,” the article further notes. “In an attempt to create a truly sentient partner, he inadvertently turns a harmless lovebot into a deadly soulmate…The pic was billed as being inspired by the classic erotic thrillers of the 1990s. Dolan is the award-winning writer-director of the 2021 indie horror film You Are Not My Mother.”

    The cast includes Claudia Doumit, Lily Sullivan, Isabelle Bonfrer, Emma Ramos, and Sydney Blackburn.

    Brandon Schreur

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  • You Can Own A Life-Size Megan For The Cost Of A PS5

    You Can Own A Life-Size Megan For The Cost Of A PS5

    Image: NECA / Universal / Kotaku

    A new life-size replica of the robotic doll and star of 2022 horror hit M3GAN is now available to pre-order from collectible company NECA. The doll was revealed on April Fools, but this isn’t a joke or prank product. No, this doll is real and it’s also really expensive, too. You’ll need to put down $500—the price of a PlayStation 5 with a disc drive—to get your hands on this replica Model 3 Generative Android.

    In 2022 the world was introduced to Megan, the killer robot from the M3GAN horror film about a—get this—killer robot doll. The movie was a lot of fun, inspired a bunch of online jokes, and made enough money to greenlight a sequel which is set to arrive in 2025. And if you want to scare your friends or just have someone to hang out with while you wait for the new sequel, NECA has a full-size 1:1 replica doll based on the Megan robot seen in the film. No, it doesn’t move or talk, sorry.

    An image shows the Megan doll's size compared to an average person.

    Image: NECA / Universal / Kotaku

    As spotted by IGN, the NECA version of Megan stands approximately 55 inches tall and is a true replica, “duplicated from actual film-used digital files to be the most screen-accurate representation available,” according to the store listing for the new doll.

    NECA claims the fabric used for the doll’s dress is an exact match for the material used in the real movie. It also created custom shoes to better match the footwear Megan wears in the film. Inside the large doll is an articulated inner-armature and it also boasts movable eyes and synthetic hair.

    As mentioned, the doll isn’t cheap. If you want your own Megan doll you’ll need to fork over $500—or the cost of a PlayStation 5 with a disc drive—to bring everyone’s favorite little murder doll home. NECA says this is a special “introductory” price, so it could go up at a later date.

    NECA is taking pre-orders for the life-size Megan right now and says dolls will ship out sometime later this year.

    .

    Zack Zwiezen

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  • Star Trek: Picard’s Showrunner Says There’s Still No Word on a Spinoff Yet

    Star Trek: Picard’s Showrunner Says There’s Still No Word on a Spinoff Yet

    Smile 2 rounds out its cast. M3GAN 2.0 is going to take a lot longer to come out than planned. Simu Liu is teaming up with James Wan for a new sci-fi series. Doctor Who teases a mysterious new alien. Plus, what to expect on the rest of Halo season 2. To me, my spoilers!

    Smile 2

    Deadline reports Raúl Castillo (Cassandro) and Miles Gutierrez-Riley (The Wilds) have joined the cast of Smile 2 in currently undisclosed roles.


    Relapse

    Variety has word Joseph Quinn (Fantastic Four, Stranger Things) will star in Relapse, an “elevated horror film” directed by novelist Bret Easton Ellis. Quinn will play Matt Cullen, a man “who checks into rehab after witnessing a horrific death during a debauched party. Three months later, he is set to get his life back together, staying at his parent’s mansion in the hills of Los Angeles. But things have changed around Matt and everything seems off balance. Fueled by his unstable personality and the invading power of social media, Matt’s paranoia grows, messing up with his rehabilitation program. As he starts using again, a mysterious presence starts growing around Matt, and a monster that has been haunting him since he was a teenager reveals itself. His therapist tries to help, convinced that the monster is actually in Matt’s head.”


    The First Omen

    According to Bloody-Disgusting, The First Omen has been rated “R” for “violent content, grisly/disturbing images, and brief graphic nudity.”


    Abigail

    Bloody-Disgusting additionally reports Abigail has also been rated “R” for “strong bloody violence and gore throughout, pervasive language and brief drug use.”


    M3GAN 2.0

    M3GAN 2.0 has been pushed back four months and will now reach theaters on May 16, 2025.

    [Bloody-Disgusting]


    Laugh

    A demon named Calypso wants the soul of an Afghanistan war veteran-turned-actor in the gory, likely NSFW trailer for Laugh. 

    Laugh – Teaser Trailer


    Untitled Simu Liu Series

    TV Line reports Peacock has handed a straight-to-series order to an untiled “sci-fi thriller” starring Simu Liu. Produced by James Wan, the story is said to follow Liu as “an intelligence analyst who realizes his brain has been hacked, giving the perpetrators access to everything he sees and hears. Caught between his shadowy agency and the unknown hackers, he must maintain a performance 24/7 to flush out who’s responsible and prove where his allegiance lies.”


    Bewitched

    Deadline also has word a reboot of Bewitched from The Boys writer, Judalina Neira, is now in development at Sony Pictures TV.


    Star Trek: Legacy

    During a recent interview with Trek Movie, Terry Matalas confirmed there have still been no discussions with Paramount about developing his proposed Star Trek series.

    There’s not. They have Star Trek that they are making and they only have so much money and streaming space. There’s currently not, but we’re looking forward to whatever the Star Trek universe brings … and never say never.


    SurrealEstate/Reginald the Vampire/The Ark

    According to TV Line, Syfy has renewed SurrealEstate, Reginald the Vampire and The Ark for new seasons.


    Chucky

    TV Line additionally reports the second half of Chucky’s third season will premiere Wednesday, April 10, at 10/9c on USA and Syfy.


    Doctor Who

    The BBC has shared Russell T. Davies’ audition script for the role of Fifteenth Doctor introducing the “Spikes” — a spiky, yet-to-be-seen monster said to be intense thoughts brought to life.


    Quantum Leap

    Ben leaps into the bodies of a Baltimore firefighter and a 1970’s race car driver in the trailer for next week’s two-part season finale of Quantum Leap.

    Quantum Leap 2×12 “As the World Burns” / 2×13 “Against Time” Promo (HD) Season Finale


    Halo

    Finally, Paramount+ has released a new “this season on…” trailer for the second season of Halo.

    Halo Season 2 “This Season On” Trailer (HD)


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Gordon Jackson and James Whitbrook

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  • Best of 2023: 15 Horror Movies Worth Watching

    Best of 2023: 15 Horror Movies Worth Watching

    The world is a hellhole, so that usually means that horror is in a golden period. You can quantify the success of the horror genre in a variety of ways in 2023.

    This year brought all sorts of questionably sticky treats to choose from. Softcore naughtiness and Lovecraftian horror? You got it! Alien invaders? They’re here! Killer dolls? Killing it.

    So — let’s take a spooky trip down memory lane and look back at the best horror of 2023.

    Suitable Flesh (Joe Lynch)

    It’s no mean feat to try and capture the spirit of the legendary Stuart Gordon, who brought us Lovecraft adaptations such as Re-Animator and From Beyond. Joe Lynch manages just that whilst retaining his own style.

    Suitable Flesh is down and dirty in the world of Lovecraft, with Heather Graham showing a natural affinity to the horror genre alongside stalwarts such as Barbara Crampton, and promising young things like Judah Lewis.

    Horny body-swapping madness slathered in a deliciously skeezy 90s erotic thriller coating.

    Huesera: The Bone Woman (Michelle Garza Cervera)

    I can’t deny I roll my eyes when I see a horror movie doing the ”everyone thinks that I’m going crazy because of this supernatural entity haunting me” trope, but that’s mainly because there are, so many terrible examples of it. The top tier stuff just makes it more aggravating.

    Huesera: The Bone Woman is one of those top-tier examples of it being done right. A woman’s pregnancy is seemingly haunted by an entity that terrorizes and manipulates her even after the child is born. Of course, it appears to the outside world that she is suffering from the realities of motherhood. Cervera ensures there’s reasonable doubt about the truth and isn’t afraid to dig under the skin of her protagonist and unnerve many a parent in the process.

    No One Will Save You (Brian Duffield)

    After being surprised by Brian Duffield’s superb splat-tastic romance movie Spontaneous, I was excited to read his next film, which was an alien invasion thriller with a home invasion spin. But No One Will Save You still managed to pull the rug out from under me with its tight and tense action.

    Despite a wordless performance, Kaitlyn Dever commands the screen as a traumatized and isolated young woman battling against alien invaders that start out in a traditional grey bipedal form before chucking in some interesting new ones as the battle for survival goes on.

    Saw X (Kevin Greutert)

    Jigsaw and Spiral: From the Book of Saw were supposed to reinvigorate the Saw franchise by taking it further from the influence of Tobin Bell’s John Kramer. Instead, it falls to Bell to put the jumper cables to the series’ flesh with a prequel that goes back to the heady heights of those early days.

    Saw X is a worthy new entry because it puts much more focus on character, fleshing out Jigsaw’s reasoning for his brutal justice with a more personal edge against a seemingly worthy adversary.

    It’s like the villain version of Spider-Man 2, where there’s a glimmer of a life that could be for John Kramer before the world reminds him why it needs him (well, at least that’s how he sees it!)

    Hell House LLC Origins: The Carmichael Manor (Stephen Cognetti)

    Now and then, a found-footage horror movie comes along and reminds me why I fell in love with the sub-genre. I genuinely did not believe the fourth entry in the Hell House LLC series would be one of them, but here we are.

    Hell House LLC: The Carmichael Manor takes the action away from the Abbadon Hotel of previous films, which does refresh the formula to some degree, but really its greatest quality comes from taking things back to basics in building unease and dread.

    M3GAN (Gerard Johnstone)

    Chucky has the cynical, blood-splattered killer doll thing down to a tee, and Annabelle has the supernatural entity schtick going. So, where does M3GAN sit? It’s a rather bloodless film, with a checklist of overcooked modern tropes in its execution, but it’s on this list, so why?

    Because it’s a really fun time and is fully aware of its limitations. M3GAN itself may feel like a cynical attempt to create a new horror icon, but it has worked because, visually speaking, she lives on the precipice of the uncanny valley that makes that effect so unsettling.

    When Evil Lurks (Demián Rugna)

    Demonic possession done differently. Rugna’s When Evil Lurks is a nasty piece of work that floods the screen with apocalyptic despair as it treats demons like a multipurpose disease, polluting the soil and the soul in equal measure.

    When Evil Lurks doesn’t shy away from showing the devastating consequences of causing a deadly outbreak, nothing is off the table, and the demon may never be seen in physical form, but its malicious and manipulative intent is always on show.

    Birth/Rebirth (Laura Moss)

    There have been plenty of takes on the Frankenstein story, and Laura Moss achieves the admirable feat of recreating the gothic horror of the source material whilst feeling incredibly fresh in its modern womanhood-centered spin.

    Marin Ireland is superbly cold, clinical, and antisocial as Dr. Rose Casper, a modern Dr. Frankenstein type, and Judy Reyes as nurse Celie Morales brings tragic obsession to the party as the unlikely pair team up to handle the reanimated body of a young girl.

    Birth/Rebirth surprises with dark humor, heartbreaking tragedy, and abhorrent behavior as Rose and Celie push way beyond moral boundaries.

    Godzilla: Minus One (Takashi Yamazaki)

    While 2016’s Shin Godzilla made the radioactive lizard an abomination (in a good way!), it’s been quite some time since we got a pure angry creature from the sea Godzilla.

    Enter Godzilla Minus One. Essentially another reboot of the Godzilla origin, but taking it back to before the gargantuan monster first waded from the ocean. Post-war Japan is in tatters in a variety of ways, and just as life is starting to return to some kind of normalcy when the mutated local legend Godzilla takes personal offence to people living in what it considers its territory.

    And so Godzilla is a destructive force once more. Not friend to man, just generally annoyed man is in the way.

    Infinity Pool (Brandon Cronenberg)

    Brandon Cronenberg is really growing into his own skin (which feels like an apt description) and forging his own weirdo path as a director. He follows up surreal and violent bodyjacking in Possessor with a very different kind of body abuse in Infinity Pool.

    There was no way a tale of two young couples meeting at a swanky resort was going to end well in a film that features a Cronenberg in the director’s chair, but yeah…Infinity Pool is a bit sadistic.

    It’s helped on its way by two very different performances. Alexander Skarsgard exudes naivety and obliviousness in equal measure, while Mia Goth is menacingly manipulative and just a bit batshit.

    Enys Men (Mark Jenkin)

    Mark Jenkin’s Bait made for a striking audiovisual experiment, utilizing supposedly outdated and niche equipment to create an unsettling and intense tale of tensions in a cornish fishing village. It was abrasive and artful. Jenkin reteamed with many of that film’s cast to create Enys Men, an actual horror movie that doubled down on those qualities.

    Enys Men is a low-fi folk horror that tells the story of a wildlife volunteer (Mary Woodvine) isolated on an uninhabited island off the British coast. Her secluded life appears to unravel in a strange dreamlike fashion.

    It’s a film that I hadn’t even finished and knew would be the subject of divisive reviews. Enys Men is as experimental a horror film as you can get in the modern day. That comes the same year as the equally divisive and evasive Skinamarink gives some hope that horror can still be as strange, complex, experimental, and against the grain as this.

    Brooklyn 45 (Ted Geoghan)

    Being a chamber piece horror set in the aftermath of World War II means Brooklyn 45 could be accused of being little more than a fancy stage play being called a movie. However, its theatrical nature is what enhances it as an unorthodox ghost story.

    A group of wartime pals, all of whom have personal grief and trauma from their time at war, reunite on a chilly December night in 1945 to support one of their number after the death of his wife. A cozy reunion becomes something more supernatural as the group’s dirty laundry is laid bare by literal ghosts of their past.

    Brooklyn 45 features just the seven cast members, but all get to make an impact in a punchy, twisty-turny 90 minutes.

    Evil Dead Rise (Lee Cronin)

    Ten years had passed with an Evil Dead movie, and folks had started to come around to Fede Alvarez’s gore-soaked 2013 edition. So naturally, that vibe is what Sam Raimi brought back with director Lee Cronin taking the Deadite action to the city in Evil Dead Rise.

    While it’s a bit disappointing just have a whole apartment block infested with Deadites, the fairly contained blood-splattered adventure we get does feel like a transference of the traditional Evil Dead setup. It largely works because of Alyssa Sutherland’s unhinged demonic performance.

    Talk to Me (Danny & Michael Phillipou)

    Arguably the breakout horror hit of the year. The Phillipou brothers’ fresh take on possession, curse movies, and general teenage tomfoolery is a fine example that old ideas can be refreshed in horror when done right.

    The film’s mean streak propels it into unsettling territory, and the interpersonal drama that gets wrapped up in a possession gone wrong adds to the impact of their consequences.

    Dark Harvest (David Slade)

    I’m still not exactly sure how I feel about David Slade’s Dark Harvest. It has a really strange tone, feels like it was smushed together from several different interpretations, and it’s genuinely difficult to tell if some performances are meant to be bad as they appear.

    And yet Dark Harvest’s story of small-town boys competing to beat the literal stuffing out of a supernatural scarecrow is dark, funny, and just the right kind of chaotic to make it stick in the mind. I genuinely would not be surprised to see this become a cult favorite of sorts in years to come.

    Neil Bolt

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  • Best of 2023: Outstanding Horror Movie Performances

    Best of 2023: Outstanding Horror Movie Performances

    Not only was it a fine year for horror movies, but it was also punctuated by a variety of intriguing, interesting, enticing, and downright mesmerizing performances in them.

    From scenery-chewing villains to heartbreaking characters of tragedy, here are some of the best horror movie performances of 2023.

    Alyssa Sutherland (Ellie in Evil Dead Rise)

    Credit: New Line Cinema

    The Evil Dead franchise is notable for two things. Ash Williams and Deadites. If one isn’t there, then it sure as hell needs a hefty showing from the other.

    Evil Dead Rise features no Ash, so it leans heavily on its Deadite action, and Alyssa Sutherland performs like, well…a woman possessed.

    Sutherland’s ”maggot mommy” is a mixture of Evil Dead Deadite old and new. Mischievous wise-cracking is there to a degree but with the nasty streak of Fede Alvarez’s 2013 movie.

    Mary Woodvine (The Volunteer in Enys Men)

    Enys Men is a difficult watch. Its discordant sound, grainy visuals, and repetitious story beats all serve a worthy purpose, but I can see how people might struggle with it.

    Anchoring the increasingly swimmy tale of a remote lighthouse is Mary Woodvine. Her protagonist, known only as The Volunteer, serves as a vessel for our feelings on the strange turn of events depicted on screen whilst going on a narrative voyage of her own.

    A lot of her performance has to come from facial expressions, and Woodvine conveys the dismay, worry, and horror of the story beautifully.

    Heather Graham (Dr. Elizabeth Derby in Suitable Flesh)

    Heather Graham’s expressive face just works wonders with Suitable Flesh. Joe Lynch’s cosmic horror madness works so well because Graham is at the heart of its body-swapping tale and conveys each of her personalities with fluid ease and no small amount of glee.

    More Heather Graham in horror movies, please.

    Larry Fessenden (Lt Col. Clive Hockstatter in Brooklyn 45)

    I really enjoyed Ted Geogahn’s World War II chamber piece because its ensemble of characters pulled the tale in all sorts of fascinating directions, but its catalyst is undoubtedly Lt. Col. Clive Hockstatter played by genre stalwart Larry Fessenden.

    Fessenden’s manic, heartbroken turn as a grieving army man sets the supernatural events of Brooklyn 45 in motion, and he continues to play a disturbing part of proceedings throughout.

    Mia Goth (Gabi Bauer in Infinity Pool)

    Mia Goth is a supreme weirdo, and we should be oh-so grateful she does horror movies. Case in point, her turn as Gabi Bauer in David Cronenberg’s unsettling and surreal latest Infinity Pool.

    Goth’s Gabi is enchanting and alluring in a slightly dangerous way at first, but as we delve deeper into the film’s story, she reveals her sadistic, manipulative ways and her frankly deranged glee in tormenting Alexander Skarsgaard.

    After the 1-2 punch of X and Pearl, Goth is on her way to becoming a genre icon.

    Sophia Wilde (Mia in Talk to Me)

    Talk to Me was one of the surprise hits of the year, thrusting its creators, Danny and Michael Phillipou, into the limelight. Its unique take on possession sees it used as a drug. And like any drug, the consequences can be devastating. Which Talk to Me emphatically shows us.

    Central to that is the tortured protagonist Mia, played by Sophia Wilde. She enters the story already grieving, and when the possession game appears to offer some closure, she carelessly pursues it, with a horrendous impact on the lives of those around her.

    Wilde’s complicated character is believable and sympathetic, and yet that doesn’t stop us from watching in abject horror as she goes down a self-destructive path.

    Justin Long (Mayor Henry Waters in It’s a Wonderful Knife)

    This was a toss-up between Long and his younger co-stars Jane Widdop and Jess McLeod who delivered a warm-hearted Christmas romance story in the bitter cold of a slasher movie. But Long perhaps best encapsulates what director Tyler MacIntyre and writer Michael Kennedy were going for.

    Long’s almost cartoonishly evil Mayor is very much a throwback to the kind of boo-hiss baddie of a certain Frank Capra Christmas classic but with the more obvious murderous edge. Justin Long’s likable qualities convert well to playing utter pricks, and Mayor Henry Waters is a fine example of that.

    Kaitlyn Dever (Brynn in No One Will Save You)

    Kaitlyn Dever in No One Will Save You
    Photo Credit: 20th Century Studios / Hulu

    Brian Duffield’s follow-up to the superb Spontaneous blends alien invasion with home invasion to tremendous effect. It’s near-wordless, but that doesn’t stop its star from shining bright.

    Kaitlyn Dever’s performance as the troubled recluse Brynn relies heavily on movement and expression to convey her character’s somewhat self-imposed isolation. Brynn’s struggles, both internal and external, come across on screen without a word being said, and Dever communicates them with a natural ability.

    Joaquin Phoenix (Beau Wassermann in Beau is Afraid)

    Ari Aster’s Beau is Afraid hops genres constantly, sometimes to its detriment, but Beau himself is living in a personal horror movie, and as such, Joaquin Phoenix’s performance as the titular character is a notable horror performance.

    That’s most readily apparent in the opening, where Aster and Phoenix put on a masterclass in ratcheting up anxiety-ridden uncomfortable tension. Beau utters every word like he believes the world will punish him for it.

    Phoenix absolutely delivers on the title’s sentiment because Beau is afraid, always, in so many different and uncomfortably relatable ways.

    Judy Reyes (Celie Morales in Birth/Rebirth)

    A female-centric modern-day spin on the Frankenstein story, Birth/Rebirth focuses on womanhood and the ability to bring life into this world and the tragedy found within that. Both leads in Laura Moss’ superb horror represent that in quite different ways, to begin with, but common ground unites them in a horrifyingly twisted vision.

    Judy Reyes may don the scrubs once more, but her character Celie Morales couldn’t be further removed from that sitcom variant. It’s a tough call to pick between the performances of Reyes and Marin Ireland in Birth/Rebirth, but the tragedy at the center of Celie’s story and the lengths she ends up going to in trying to reverse it make for a heartbreaking and shocking journey.

    Amie Donald/Jenna Davis (M3GAN in M3GAN)

    Both Amie Donald and Jenna Davis need mentioning in the performance of murderous robot M3GAN because both the physical and vocal performance make the character what it is.

    The deadpan line delivery of Davis is as deliciously cutting as the unnerving physical delivery of Donald is deadly.Sure, you could say the film’s always angling to make M3GAN a bonafide modern horror icon, but the attempt wouldn’t have been successful without the two actors involved.

    Russell Crowe (Father Gabriele Amorth in The Pope’s Exorcist)

    The Pope's Exorcist 2: Sequel in Development for Russell Crowe Movie

    The Pope’s Exorcist is a terrible movie. It’s the most cliche-ridden exorcism/demonic possession nonsense you’ll see wrapped into a single film.

    But here comes Father Gabriele Amorth, riding in on his scooter and chugging caffeinated beverages whilst kicking demon arse with a tongue sharper than a butcher’s knife. Russell Crowe drags the film kicking and screaming into relevance with a wonderfully outlandish performance.

    It’s the kind of role that feels like it should somehow allow Crowe to make a dozen more of these films. All technically terrible, but used as the perfect scaffolding for Amorth to strut his stuff again and again.

    Neil Bolt

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  • Allison Williams Is Still Taking Style Cues From Her Onscreen Rival, M3GAN

    Allison Williams Is Still Taking Style Cues From Her Onscreen Rival, M3GAN

    Allison Williams served horror-movie haute couture during a stroll through New York City on Oct. 25. Following the viral success of director Gerard Johnstone’s “M3gan,” in which Williams plays the malevolent doll’s rival, fans have been taking style cues from the fashionable AI robot. In the film, M3GAN unleashes her vengeance on dozens of unsuspecting victims, and she does it all in patent-leather Mary Janes and a peplum silhouette. After months of filming, her chic sense of style appears to have rubbed off on Williams, and something about the preppy ensemble has us envisioning a whole collection of M3GAN-inspired outfits.

    Putting a M3GAN-core twist on some of our favorite fall fashion trends, Williams stepped out in a Brunello Cucinelli Giacca double-breasted leather blazer, which retails for $8,400, layered over a white button-up shirt and a sequin necktie. She styled the brown leather blazer with a plaid miniskirt, sheer tights, and pointed-toe pumps in a rich chocolate shade. Even her manicure reflected the autumnal tones.

    For those who haven’t had the pleasure of watching the comedy-infused horror film, “M3GAN” closely follows the eponymous AI robot as she attempts to pick off the human race one by one. Even as she’s coaxing her next victim into the forest to meet their unfortunate end, the doll manages to keep her peplum coat and hand-polished shoes looking pristine. As a children’s plaything, she is lethal; but as a horror-movie fashion idol, M3GAN’s wardrobe is a lesson in the power of simplicity, which Williams has executed perfectly.

    Falling heavily in line with the traditional prep and school-girl aesthetics, M3GAN-core is all about attention to detail. From an artful pair of tinted sunglasses to a set of leather driving gloves that beg the question “Can M3GAN drive?,” the AI doll’s wardrobe is stacked with luxe accessories. Like the carefully curated pieces that round out M3GAN’s costumes, Williams’s sleek heels and shimmering necktie feel purposeful in their styling and invoke the idea that — dangerous AI bot or not — a quality coat never goes out of style.

    Admire Williams’s “M3GAN”-inspired ensemble from all angles ahead, and see more of our favorite “M3GAN-core” looks here.

    Chanel Vargas

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  • ‘M3GAN’ Gets New Streaming Home

    ‘M3GAN’ Gets New Streaming Home

    While it’s already hit some other streaming sites, M3GAN is now officially available for streaming on Amazon Prime

    While a lot of people have compared the film to Child’s Play (especially because one of that series’ reboots already centered around an A.I. companion), it does manage to assert its own identity. See, M3GAN is acutely aware of just how silly the whole premise is. Unless you somehow have a major doll phobia, the premise itself is pretty played out. Annabelle takes itself rather seriously, but it’s still a campy big-budget Conjuring-verse Blumhouse film at the end of the day.

    So how can you get around all of that baggage if you’re essentially making a killer doll movie? Well, the A.I. component certainly helps. Horror tends to function best when there are societal fears baked in. The rising trend of A.I., the unconscious effects that technology has on our children while we leave them unattended; all of this together created a perfect storm. The satirical and comedic elements blend brilliantly to create a film that’s just genuinely fun to watch if nothing else.

    READ MORE: The Best Horror Movies on Netflix

    The ScreenCrush staff are big M3GAN fans. In our review back in January, Matt Singer wrote…

    Eventually, M3GAN becomes less of a demented protector and more of a stock slasher villain, and at that point M3GAN grows more routine and less interesting. Until then, the film is miles better than the junk that typically comes out at this time of year. While most of 2022’s holiday toys are destined to be dumped in storage bins or even the garbage in a matter of weeks, I have feeling M3GAN is going to stick around a lot longer than that. Just don’t let her near my kids.

    Unfortunately, the only cut that’s available on Prime Video for streaming is the PG-13 version. While the unrated cut only adds an additional minute of footage, that minute is split throughout the whole film, and includes a little more graphic content. If you want to check that version out, you’ll probably have to go the rental or purchase route.

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Popular Movies That Were Supposed To Be Way Darker

    Popular Movies That Were Supposed To Be Way Darker

    While there are plenty of aspects that go into making a good movie, the overall “tone” is certainly one of the most important. This goes beyond the overall genre of a film — for example, a romance movie can be playful or serious, while a comedy can be silly or rife with cynicism. Therefore, any type of film can be classified as “dark” — and the term can mean several different things.

    A dark horror movie may be particularly violent, a dark comedy may be tinged with morbidity, and a dark drama may be bleak and tragic. No matter how you slice it, a dark movie can basically be chalked up as the opposite of a “feel-good” movie. But did you know that some of your favorite movies — including campy cult classics and lighthearted comedies — were once envisioned as being much darker?

    READ MORE: The Most Unintentionally Hilarious Horror Films of All Time

    Oftentimes, a production team will start out with one concept for a movie, only to see that concept morph as the script is rewritten, roles are cast, and filming commences. Changes continue throughout the production process all the way down to the final edit, which can be heavily influenced by test audiences and studio executives. It’s not uncommon for a finished product to look totally different than its initial script. In the cases of these movies, that meant cutting back on violence, gore, and other dark themes to appeal to a wider audience demographic.

    If their success is any indicator, it’s safe to say that these popular movies ended up becoming exactly what they needed to be — even though some of these original visions sound pretty cool. Here are ten films that were supposed to be way darker, but were toned down before being released in theaters.

    Popular Movies That Were Supposed To Be Way Darker

    Things might have turned out differently for these hit films if they’d stuck with their original (darker) scripts.

    Actors Who Were Traumatized By Their Roles

    Claire Epting

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  • M3GAN Is Ultimately A Techno-Horror Version of Baby Boom and Raising Helen

    M3GAN Is Ultimately A Techno-Horror Version of Baby Boom and Raising Helen

    Although the automatic correlation to make with M3GAN is that it’s a mere pale imitation of the Child’s Play movies (particularly the 2019 one), at the core of the story is “the Baby Boom narrative.” Directed by Gerard Johnstone and written by Akela Cooper, M3GAN wields the same Nancy Meyers trope established in this seminal 1987 film from her oeuvre. One that screenwriters Jack Amiel and Michael Begler would also emulate in the 2004 Garry Marshall-directed film, Raising Helen. In Baby Boom, the career woman at the center of the story who suddenly gets an unexpected child plopped in her lap is J. C. Wiatt (Diane Keaton). As a high-powered management consultant, this is the last thing she could possibly want or need. The same goes for her investment banker boyfriend, Steven Buchner (Harold Ramis), who has as little interest in the burden of a child as J. C. (deemed, offensively, “the Tiger Lady” at her workplace—because any successful woman would be given such a belittling nickname, no?).

    The “bequest” of the child, named Elizabeth, came from a distant cousin. And, as such, J. C. feels no real sense of obligation or guilt about giving her up… at first. Naturally, as this is a Charles Shyer-Nancy Meyers movie, J. C. finds herself growing quickly attached to Elizabeth despite her lack of maternal aptitude, as well as the upheaval this baby is causing in J. C.’s professional life. Not to mention her romantic one, for when she tells Steven she wants to keep the baby (“Papa Don’t Preach”-style), he essentially says, “Fuck that, I’m out.” Nonetheless, it’s an “amicable” split and J. C. goes about the grueling task of balancing the dual roles of mother and supposedly indispensable employee, which is something women have been expected to manage ever since “equality” became “a thing.” A “rock n’ roll, deal with it” attitude foisted upon women by the men who aren’t expected to perform any such feat (except in “comedic” 80s movies like Mr. Mom and Three Men and a Baby).

    Well, J. C. isn’t quite “dealing with it”—not in the way her boss, Fritz Curtis (Sam Wanamaker), finds satisfactory anyway. The same goes for David Lin (Ronny Chieng), the boss of star roboticist/toymaker Gemma (Allison Williams) in M3GAN (a.k.a. Model 3 Generative Android). Except David’s dissatisfaction is expressed before the arrival of an unwanted and unexpected child in Gemma’s life: her niece, Cady (Violet McGraw). While she’s supposed to be perfecting a new prototype for Perpetual Petz (sort of like a Giga Pets concept meets a Furby aesthetic, but far more sinister), she has instead been working on a more advanced project in the form of Megan, an AI-powered doll that blows up right in her face (literally) when she’s caught by David running tests on it with her coworkers and collaborators, Tess (Jen Van Epps) and Cole (Brian Jordan Alvarez). Having secretly spent one hundred thousand dollars of company money to work on it, Gemma drops further down the workplace shit list when her now-deceased sister leaves her only child in Gemma’s care right at this time.

    Indeed, just as it was in Raising Helen, Cady’s parents die in a car crash. In such a way, mind you, that gives one cause to believe that their stupidity in not putting chains on their tires might have been Darwinism at work, if you catch one’s drift. At least in Lindsay (Felicity Huffman) and Paul Davis’ (Sean O’Bryan) case, it wasn’t their fault they were mowed down by another car (minding their own business when another vehicle jumped the center divide and crashed into them). In Cady’s parents’ case, it definitely was, as they chose to remain at a standstill in a snowstorm without pulling over to the side of the road. Cady, who was in the backseat trying to take her seatbelt off to save her Perpetual Pet, remains unscathed. And yes, her unhealthy attachment to an inanimate object is far more disturbing than the one Helen Harris’ (Kate Hudson) youngest niece, Sarah (Abigail Breslin), has to a hippo stuffed animal (named, what else, Hippo). In truth, her clinginess to this simple, “analog” hippo smacks of a far simpler time, when AI wasn’t a factor in the manufacture of “toys.” Now merely tech devices in disguise. That Gemma was the one who gifted the Perpetual Pet (which, as mentioned, she designed herself for Funki, the Seattle-based toy company where she works) to Cady not only indicates that she had no idea how annoying it would be to a parent subjected to it, but also serves as a foreshadowing of the Frankenstein to come. For that’s what Megan is: a monstrous creature of Gemma’s own making.

    And yet, she might not ever have continued focusing on the project were it not for the unwitting urging of Cady, who sees another prototype named Bruce from Gemma’s college-era robotics days and regards its capabilities in awe. When Gemma explains that advanced toys like these are impossible to market because of how expensive they would retail, Cady off-handedly notes, “If I had a toy like that, I don’t think I would ever need another one.” Bring on the “determined” scene of Gemma magically being able to finish her creation anew (no explanation as to where she suddenly got all the “extra” supplies to do it). And voilà, Megan. An Olsen twin-looking creep (though Johnstone stated she was meant to be modeled after a combination of Grace Kelly, Kim Novak, Audrey Hepburn and Peggy Lipton). But Cady seems to like her. Mainly because she’s far more interested in paying attention to Cady than Gemma is—still set in her “selfish” (i.e., liberated) ways to the point where we’re given a scene of Gemma and Cady sitting across the table from one another with the latter totally desperate to be noticed by her aunt as she concentrates on some work through her phone—a total inverse of the dynamic we’ve become accustomed to seeing between parent and child. Or “guardian” and child. But it is Megan who swiftly takes over the role of caretaker for Gemma, who really can’t be bothered. Sure, she had the chance to foist Cady onto her grandparents in Florida (Helen’s nieces and nephew also have grandparents in Florida, theirs in Miami as opposed to Jacksonville), but perhaps we’re supposed to believe something like guilt was too powerful of an emotion for her to do such a thing. So yeah, Megan turns out to be a great unpaid nanny to pick up the slack where Gemma can’t (read: doesn’t want to).

    It is Tess who is the one to point out to Gemma that, if Megan is doing all the parenting, what are the moral implications of this “toy”? What’s the purpose of being a parent at all if you’re just going to have “someone else” do the job for you? Here, the same old guilt trip is reinstated for women who would dare to think they could “have it all.” But, as usual, they must eventually choose. Granted, at least in M3GAN, some sign of “progress” has been shown in that Gemma’s boss seems totally uninterested in Gemma’s new status as “Mom,” so much as the dollar signs the kid is providing by becoming a test subject with Megan, “pairing” with her (like any device does), as it were, so that Gemma can collect as much data as possible before rolling out the product to the public. In contrast, the bosses in Baby Boom and Raising Helen are utterly vexed by the plight of juggling motherhood with work. For, just as J. C. is expected to magically make her situation “work,” so is Helen, with no understanding from her Miranda Priestly-esque boss, Dominique (Helen Mirren). The Dominique in Dominique Modeling Agency where Helen serves as her assistant a.k.a. right-hand woman. A role that has become increasingly difficult to uphold with three kids to consider. Dominique is especially horrified when Helen dares to bring the trio to a fashion show, sucking all the glamor out of the front row. When Helen subsequently causes one of the agency’s top models, Martina (Amber Valletta), to get her face covered in permanent marker by the kids at Sarah’s school, it’s the final straw for Dominique. She cannot fucking deal with this children bullshit anymore. That’s how Gemma herself feels, a sentiment that eventually extends to Megan as she becomes just another “child” to concern herself over—what with Megan interpreting Gemma’s instruction to “protect Cady” as license to kill whoever she deems a threat.

    With the “doll” having transmuted into a serial killer, Gemma accepts that such a “toy” (slated to sell for ten thousand dollars a pop) can’t be released. But her revelations are too little, too late, with David in full-tilt launch party mode and Cady so addicted to her “best friend” that she acts like a heroin addict in withdrawal when Gemma takes Megan away from her to try “troubleshooting.” Having been so focused on not wanting Cady to be sad (therefore, not feel anything at all) by distracting her with Megan, when Cady tells her she needs the “doll” back because she doesn’t feel so awful when Megan’s around, Gemma has the epiphany, “You’re supposed to feel this way. The worst thing that could have happened to you happened.” As it did for the Davis children in Raising Helen. By the same token, these children losing their parents is also the worst thing that could have happened to the free-spirited, independent woman forced to take them on. At one moment in Raising Helen, she demands of her potential love interest, “Pastor Dan” (John Corbett), “Do you have any idea what this has done to my life?” Pastor Dan retorts, “Do you have any idea what it’s done to theirs?” Because no, there is not supposed to be any empathy for the woman in such a scenario who, for all intents and purposes, gets fucked over with this responsibility, but instead for the children who end up “stuck” with her.

    Raising Helen is the only film of the three that wants us to briefly believe that Helen might have actually come to her senses and embraced who she is as a person by forking the children over to her more responsible sister, Jenny (Joan Cusack). Afterward, Dominique “joyfully” (or as much joy as the plastic surgery will allow her to express) welcomes Helen back, noting, “Ibsen wrote, ‘Not all women are meant to be mothers.’” And yet, in Movie World, of course they are. That’s the message that always gets reiterated: no woman is so “heartless” a.k.a. career-oriented that she wouldn’t soon realize that the “reward” of having a child far outweighs any sense of gratification she might have gotten in her job. Even someone as overtly single-minded and self-oriented as Gemma.

    This, too, is why, upon briefly going back to her old life toward the end of Raising Helen’s third act, Helen suddenly fathoms that it doesn’t “fit” her anymore. So we cue the scene of her half-heartedly clubbing while looking completely empty inside before she begs Jenny to let her have the kids back. Similarly, Gemma dips out on the launch David has been planning so that she can keep Cady separated from Megan and reestablish herself as the “dominant force” that Cady should be attaching to in the wake of her parents’ death—not some killer robot. A forced attachment that conveniently comes just in time for Gemma to be spared from getting passed over by Cady in favor of a non-human.

    Now that she’s fully committed to motherhood with no AI help, perhaps we can try to naively believe that Gemma will be able to carry on with her work as before, even getting plenty of useful tips on successful toymaking from an actual child. But, in the end, she’ll sacrifice in the same manner as J. C. and Helen, all while telling herself that this “job” is far more important and worthwhile. Thus, the filmic method for brainwashing the last “holdouts” against motherhood continues. Even in something as ostensibly un-romantic-comedy as M3GAN—for there are now more “covert” ways to sell motherhood to single, job-loving women in techno-horror-comedy.

    Genna Rivieccio

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