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Tag: Mahershala Ali

  • Report: ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ Is Getting a Sequel and the Gang Is All Back

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    The Jurassic Park films will never go extinct. After this year’s reboot of the franchise, Jurassic World Rebirth, grossed almost $900 million worldwide, a sequel seemed more likely, and now, it’s apparently happening. Director Gareth Edwards is returning to direct, and stars Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Bailey, and Mahershala Ali are all expected to come back as well.

    The InSneider was the first to break the news. io9 reached out to Universal for comment or clarification, but had not yet heard back as of publication. We’ll update this story if or when we hear back.

    Either way, the news isn’t exactly surprising, of course. As we said, Rebirth was a massive hit, one of the biggest of the year, and while it didn’t quite make as much as the previous installment, Jurassic World Dominion (which crossed a billion), the film’s success both domestically and internationally proved that the franchise still has legs. Plus, Edwards was able to jump on board a project pretty far along and do something solid with it. He at least deserved to develop his own sequel from the very beginning.

    There’s no word on who will be writing the film or when we might see it in theaters, but the last film clearly left the story wide open. The team had retrieved the necessary materials to create a radical breakthrough medicine and unleashed it on the whole world. Clearly, the company they were working for wasn’t pleased, but they are probably heroes to most everyone else. Why they’d have to go anywhere to tangle with dinosaurs again, we don’t know, but that’s Hollywood’s job to figure out. Also, Ali’s character was originally supposed to die, but the filmmakers specifically brought him back so that he could return for a sequel. The writing was on the wall.

    Steven Spielberg will also return as an executive producer, and it’s already been a big day for the legend. Earlier today, it was confirmed he’d once again return to produce a third Gremlins movie as well. So until audiences stop going to see movies with scary creatures in them, Steven Spielberg is happy to provide.

    What do you think about this news? Are you excited that Edwards is returning? What would you want out of a Rebirth sequel? Let us know in the comments.

    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.

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    Germain Lussier

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  • Conspiracy Theories Run Wild Amid Mass U.S. Cell Outage

    Conspiracy Theories Run Wild Amid Mass U.S. Cell Outage

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    Wireless customers with AT&T, Cricket Wireless, T-Mobile, and Verizon all reported outages across the country this morning. And just like clockwork, some folks online pounced on the disruption as evidence of a global conspiracy.

    Alex Jones, arguably America’s most popular conspiracy theorist, believes the telecom outage is a direct result of Chinese hackers.

    “Is it a cyber attack? AT&T is being very tight-lipped,” Jones insisted in a web broadcast on Thursday in his typical “just asking questions” style.

    In fact, even people who aren’t known conspiracy theorists were bringing up the apocalyptic Netflix movie Leave the World Behind, causing the title to trend on X.

    “Predictive programming from the Netflix movie ‘Leave The World Behind,’” a prominent X account that shares QAnon conspiracy theories wrote on Thursday.

    “No internet. No phones. No going back to normal,” the account continued, echoing the movie’s promotional tagline.

    And while that really is how the movie is promoted on Netflix, there’s no evidence this outage is “predictive programming,” a term used by some conspiracy theorists to explain how speculative fiction sometimes accurately predicts events in the real world. In the real world, sometimes artists simply predict events because they’re because they’re lucky or have a good handle on things likely to happen in the future.

    Leave the World Behind movie stars Julia Roberts, Ethan Hawke, and Mahershala Ali, and follows two families as they try to navigate the world after a mysterious attack, possibly by a foreign adversary, destroys modern technology like cellphone service, internet access, and TV broadcasts.

    Believe it or not, the movie was already a popular movie with people who might have a screw loose. Why? It was executive produced by Barack and Michelle Obama, who have a producing deal with Netflix. The Obamas figure prominently in baseless conspiracy theories that hinge on a worldwide network of pedophiles controlling the world and that Michelle Obama is transgender. Not to mention the birther conspiracy theory, an idea that President Obama wasn’t born in the U.S. which President Donald Trump helped spread.

    But it wasn’t just conspiracy theorists who were comparing this outage to Leave the World Behind. Apocalyptic movies work by tapping into our greatest fears for the future. In this case, the movie did a good job of making viewers feel like they weren’t sure what was happening. And when it’s difficult to get real information—as it obviously was for the characters in the movie—several conflicting narratives can start to spread, including rumors about who or what was actually causing the communications breakdown.

    We use movies like Leave the World Behind as cultural touchstones—a shared shorthand when something scary or unjust happens. If the movie is popular enough, it makes sense and everyone instantly knows what you’re getting at, like when the Syrian refugee crisis hit Europe in 2015 and people were comparing the horrific photos that were emerging to the 2006 dystopian film Children of Men.

    Other times the meaning of a film requires a lot more interpretation, like when I argued in 2018 that Bird Box, the Netflix movie starring Sandra Bullock, was the first great monster movie where the unseen horror was social media. But whether it’s Bird Box or Leave the World Behind, we clearly live in an era of incredible unease around technology. We’re all staring at our phones and other screens for hours each day and none of this “connection” is making us feel any more connected to other humans.

    It’s that alienation that can drive many people further into conspiracy theories in a vicious cycle that’s enticing for its simplicity. But why would President Obama help make an entire movie about a plan to disrupt communications and then actually carry out that plan? Apparently in the minds of conspiracy theorists, guys like Obama are all villains in a James Bond movie who tell you their entire plot before they carry it out, giving the hero just enough time to save the day.

    Again, there’s no evidence that anything happening with today’s telecom outage is anything but a normal service disruption. But if you start seeing hundreds of self-driving Teslas piling up with no humans inside, then you can start to worry.

    Update, 9:50 p.m. ET: AT&T has released a statement to explain that today’s outage wasn’t a cyberattack.

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    Matt Novak

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  • ‘Leave the World Behind’ Director Sam Esmail on Collaborating with the Obamas and Telling Another Cyberattack Story After ‘Mr. Robot’

    ‘Leave the World Behind’ Director Sam Esmail on Collaborating with the Obamas and Telling Another Cyberattack Story After ‘Mr. Robot’

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    Writer-director Sam Esmail premiered his latest film Leave the World Behind at the opening night of AFI Fest on Wednesday night, where he opened up about getting notes on the film from the Obamas — who served as producers — and comparisons of the project to his past work on Mr. Robot.

    The film is based on the 2020 novel of the same name by Rumaan Alam, and unfolds as Amanda (Julia Roberts) books her family an impromptu staycation at a luxurious home in Long Island. As she and her husband Clay (Ethan Hawke) get settled in, two strangers — G.H. (Mahershala Ali) and his daughter Ruth (Myha’la) — upend their trip in the middle of the night, claiming ownership of the home. Together, they contend with the mysterious ramifications of a nationwide cyberattack that leaves them vulnerable to the earth’s elements and human nature’s darkness. 

    “It was a crazy time, those early days [of the pandemic], and when I read the book what really resonated for me was this idea that in a moment of crisis, just how easily we could forget our common humanity,” Esmail — who walked the carpet without his stars amid the ongoing actors strike — said of his interest in adapting the story. “That’s something that’s as relevant back then as it is today with what’s going on in the world.”

    After reading the book upon its debut six months into the COVID shutdown, Esmail was one of the first people to discuss the project with Alam, who was also an executive producer on the movie.

    “You’re sort of in a vacuum when you’re on a project like that,” the author told THR on the carpet. “You talk to your editors, you talk to your agent, but there’s no one else in that metaphorical room with you. So to have that first conversation with this director and really have it be about his emotional and intellectual responses to what I had done was really meaningful.”

    Esmail is most known for his work on the Rami Malek crime drama vehicle Mr. Robot, on which he served as creator, writer, producer and showrunner. When asked about the series’ similarity to the Netflix flick, he described the two cyber-themed projects as the “yin and yang” versions of each other.

    “In Mr. Robot, we were following someone who was really knee-deep in technology, he was fluent in it and he was narrating that for us,” he said. “In this film, we took the opposite approach. It really is about these people who have no clue what’s going on around them and it was really more about the fear of the unknown and how technology could be used against us.”

    When it came time to cast the project, Esmail looked to previous collaborator Roberts, with whom he’s worked on series Homecoming and Gaslit. He said it was a “no-brainer” decision for the Pretty Woman icon, who also serves as producer on the film.

    “It took her America’s sweetheart persona and flipped it on its ear,” Esmail explained. “Knowing Julia — we’ve been friends since we worked together on Homecoming — she’s game to do something challenging. So she read the book in one sitting and called me right away and she said she was in.”

    Alam added, “When her name came up, I mean, what kind of response am I gonna have beyond enthusiasm to know that a performer of that caliber is going to dig her teeth into this person who only existed in my imagination?”

    The project is also produced under Barack and Michelle Obama’s Higher Ground production company, with their involvement dating back to when the novel appeared on the former President’s beloved year-end list.

    “They gave notes on everything from the disaster elements to the characters,” Esmail said of working with the couple. “And it’s amazing, it’s a surreal moment, it’s a highlight of my career that I got to work with the Obamas. They’re some of the most brilliant minds on the planet and I’m really grateful for their involvement.”

    Leave the World Behind starts streaming on Netflix Dec. 8.

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  • ‘Leave the World Behind’ Review: Julia Roberts and Mahershala Ali in Sam Esmail’s Not Quite Satisfying Dystopian Vision

    ‘Leave the World Behind’ Review: Julia Roberts and Mahershala Ali in Sam Esmail’s Not Quite Satisfying Dystopian Vision

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    Anyone who still needs convincing that we live in a fractured world may be startled by the futuristic nightmare drama Leave the World Behind, which had its world premiere at AFI Fest. Others might find something a bit stale in its portrait of racial suspicion and environmental catastrophe. Fine performances help to bolster a problematic picture written and directed by Sam Esmail, adapted from Rumaan Alam’s best-selling novel. The film will take its bow via Netflix in December, the streamer’s second release this year (after Rustin) that counts Barack and Michelle Obama among its executive producers.

    The story starts with a New York family (Julia Roberts, Ethan Hawke and, as their teenage children, Farrah Mackenzie and Charlie Evans) leaving the city for a vacation in a Long Island rental home that advertised with the line “Leave the world behind.” The house and the grounds are indeed enticing, and the nearby beach seems like just the tonic that the stressed family needs. But matters quickly turn ominous when the young daughter (Mackenzie), who seems to be the most perceptive of the four of them, notices a giant oil tanker that seems to be moving a little too close to the swimmers and sunbathers.

    Leave the World Behind

    The Bottom Line

    High-class horror offers a few jolts but little fresh insight.

    Venue: AFI Fest
    Cast: Julia Roberts, Mahershala Ali, Ethan Hawke, Myha’la, Farrah Mackenzie, Charlie Evans, Kevin Bacon
    Director-screenwriter: Sam Esmail; based on the book by Rumaan Alam

    Rated R,
    2 hours 18 minutes

    Esmail, probably best known for writing and directing the TV series Mr. Robot, and who worked with Roberts on Amazon’s Homecoming, has studied a number of earlier movies. The scene on the beach serves up a variation on Jaws, with the tanker substituting for the shark. The picture also echoes Get Out, with its nightmarish vision of conflict between the races. The family is surprised in the evening by a knock at the door. Seeing a Black man and his adult daughter (Mahershala Ali and Myha’la) outside, Roberts’ Amanda barely tries to conceal her suspicion. The interlopers inform the white couple that they own the vacation house and fled their New York apartment because of a blackout in the city. Power is still working in the country, but television and cellphone service have been disrupted. Gradually, more nightmarish events unfold.

    Hawke’s Clay initially seems more open-minded than his wife, but he reveals his prejudice when, on a drive into town, he’s approached by a frightened Latina who begs for his help and he responds by locking his car doors and speeding away.

    Late in the film, Kevin Bacon appears as some kind of survivalist with a huge American flag in front of his house and guns at the ready. He blames the “Koreans or Chinese” for threats to the American way of life. These political themes are rendered with a heavy hand by the filmmakers and carry few surprises.

    As a nightmarish suspense drama about everyday life disintegrating, Esmail’s movie is sometimes effective, even while it echoes earlier films like The Road and David Koepp’s underrated 1996 thriller, The Trigger Effect. Esmail uses encroaching animals — a sinister herd of deer, a flock of flamingoes — with skill. A scene involving a crashing phalanx of empty Teslas is striking, and there’s a creepy scene in which teenage son Archie (Evans) finds his teeth falling out.

    Performances are strong. Roberts has on occasion played unsympathetic characters, though these have been rare over the course of her long career. Here she is basically playing a Karen, a privileged white woman who makes little attempt to hide her mistrust and contempt for people who seem to be intruders in her privileged world. Gradually she does begin to see Ali’s homeowner as a three-dimensional character, and his performance is always riveting. Myha’la has a sassy, no-nonsense presence that also enriches the movie.

    Technically the feature is extremely well crafted, with striking widescreen cinematography by Tod Campbell and expert production design — a mixture of elegance and decay — by Anastasia White. However, the overbearing score by Mac Quayle, who may be best known for his work on American Horror Story, too often crushes any subtlety that might have existed in the script. You come away depressed but not entirely convinced by this film’s dire warnings about the disintegration of a divided America.

    Full credits

    Venue: AFI Fest
    Distributor: Netflix
    Cast: Julia Roberts, Mahershala Ali, Ethan Hawke, Myha’la, Farrah Mackenzie, Charlie Evans, Kevin Bacon
    Director-screenwriter: Sam Esmail
    Based on the book by Rumaan Alam
    Producers: Sam Esmail, Chad Hamilton, Julia Roberts, Marisa Yeres Gill, Lisa Gillan
    Executive producers: Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, Tonia Davis, Daniel M. Stillman, Nick Krishnamurthy, Rumaan Alam
    Director of photography: Tod Campbell
    Production designer: Anastasia White
    Costume designer: Catherine Marie Thomas
    Editor: Lisa Lassek
    Music: Mac Quayle

    Rated R,
    2 hours 18 minutes

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  • What the ‘Leave the World Behind’ Adaptation (and a Julia Roberts-Starring Role) Means to Rumaan Alam

    What the ‘Leave the World Behind’ Adaptation (and a Julia Roberts-Starring Role) Means to Rumaan Alam

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    When Rumaan Alam released his third novel, Leave the World Behind, the world was six months into a deeply traumatizing — and claustrophobic — pandemic. The book opens on a white family vacationing at a rural Long Island Airbnb as the Black family who owns the home knocks at the door asking for refuge from a citywide blackout back in Manhattan, and deftly transitions between a provocative exploration of race and class into a new kind of disaster tale. As the two families navigate the politics within their four walls, the world outside is slowly nearing apocalypse; that blackout turns out to be much more serious. The book’s prescience struck a chord with audiences and critics, but months before its release its success was cemented further by Sam Esmail and Netflix, who scooped up the rights for a reported seven-figure sum.

    Now, three years later, the final form of the thriller will premiere as the opening night film at AFI Fest. Its stars — Julia Roberts and Ethan Hawke play the vacationers, Mahershala Ali and Myha’la are the father-daughter pair who own the place, and Ethan Hawke pops in to play a neighboring doomsday prepper — will be sitting out the big night due to the SAG-AFTRA strike, but Esmail (who is a graduate of the AFI Conservatory) and Alam will represent. The author joined THR via Zoom from his Brooklyn home ahead of his travels west to reflect back on his book’s success and tease what little he can about the big screen version.

    Now that we’re a couple of years out from the October 2020 release of the book, what still sits with you the most about the experience, and the reception of the book?

    The book was published during a really tough moment for of us. So to find a readership at all, is so gratifying, and I’m still really touched by it. When you write the book, there’s always some remove from its reception — you’re not in the room with the reader. It’s sort of a one-way transaction. There are a lot of books that I love, and I’ve never told those writers that I love them. I just read Underworld by Don DeLillo, and it’s so rare to read a book that makes you want to reorder your lifetime top 10 list. That’s one of the greatest books I’ve ever read, and I’m not sure I’d want to talk to [DeLillo] about it. But I have still been aware that [Leave the World Behind] has connected with readers and I’m really grateful for that.

    Do you remember a moment, especially in comparison to the pre-publication process of your previous books, where the fact that this was going to be quite big came into clarity?

    I think it was probably when I talked to Sam Esmail. He was one of the first readers — outside of my agent, or Ecco’s editors and publicists — that I talked with, and that conversation made me realize that the book really worked in a way I hadn’t quite seen before. It made me realize that maybe there would be an audience. But we as authors are also very good at reminding ourselves not to get delusional about things, so afterwards I just went back to work writing and back to managing my kids’ homeschool.

    What do you remember most about that first conversation with Sam?

    It’s a day that lives very vibrantly in my head, because my husband is a photographer and he had a story about a holiday collection that he shot in our home — it was June 2020 and unbelievably hot in New York and my children and I were wearing our winter clothes and coasts. The conversation was very similar to the kind that I have with my friends and colleagues, where we’re talking to each other about what the work made us think of. It wasn’t about Sam walking me through what his version of the adaptation would be, because of course he hadn’t written it at that point, it was just what we were interested in artistically. I’m pretty sure we talked about Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, because the way that play (and film) works is you begin by watching something that these four people are doing and by the end you feel like you’re in the room with them. You’re kind of tipsy, you’ve lost control, and you’re sort of trapped with these poor people. That was what I wanted to accomplish on the page.

    When you first read the script, what stood out to you the most — in particular, what felt most different than the book version?

    My impression at first was that Sam had planted more firm suggestions about the disaster that was happening, but then when I watched the film I realized what he was doing was adapting a technique that the film also uses. The book does say this thing is happening and this thing is happening, and it declines to fit them all together into one explanation. There’s no actual explanation offered in either version. The difference is that I have access to the ability to tease the reader in a different way than Sam is able to tease the audience.

    Do you think there was any inclination to offer a slightly less ambiguous ending than what was in the book? I often think that ambiguity feels more frustrating onscreen than it does when reading, but I could be wrong.

    I think it was a tricky balance for Sam. When I watch the movie, I see a work that is aiming to leave its audience the same way that my book left its readers, but the conventions of the form are just different. The two feel really intertwined to me and the adaptation feels very faithful to what I was trying to accomplish.

    In observing this process, do you feel any pull to write a screenplay yourself?

    That’s a tall order. (Laughs) Sam’s script is so good that I can’t imagine thinking that I’m going to write something like that. I am interested in other forms, and in fact I was trying to write a play earlier this year. I don’t really know where I’m at with that — but I feel deeply committed to the novel as a form.

    What can you tell us about going to set during production?

    It was a personal and career highlight. The actors were so warm and kind, especially to my kids. We are actually in one of the scenes that I went to set for — the scene shot at the beach where the principal are walking through the 1950s bathhouse. And the second day I went was when they were shooting Julia and Ethan’s family lying in bed together while the daughter is telling a story.

    I didn’t know you were extras!

    Listen, my kids are going to be furious if you don’t call out that their beautiful faces are in that scene. (Laughs) I’m torn about showing them the movie, because it is not a movie for children, but they’re really eager about seeing their moment of fame. Most kids don’t care about what their parents do, and I don’t need them to care about what I do, but it was meaningful to me that they saw all this. At some point it will become clear to them just how unusual it is that Julia Roberts said hello to them.

    I remember when you first spoke about this movie coming together, saying that it was so wild to be in meetings where people mentioned Julia Roberts so casually — you said, everyone’s talking about her like she’s our friend Julia.

    It’s absolutely wild and I hope I never get to a point where I don’t think that’s wild. She’s one of the absolute best at what she does. There is a very deep relationship between me and the fake people I wrote in this book, and to have her interpret that for this vast audience — it’s crazy.

    Leave the World Behind is the first feature to come out of the Obama’s Higher Ground production company; did you get to meet them?

    I haven’t met them. I still can’t believe that my book was on his year-end list. It’s one of the most momentous experiences a writer can have. He’s considered the bookseller-in-chief so of course there is a commercial opportunity in it, but he is a very discerning reader and to be counted among the level of taste that he brings to those lists is really meaningful.

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