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Tag: Maika Monroe

  • We Wish This ‘100 Nights of Hero’ Trailer Was Even More Fantastical

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    100 Nights of Hero is clearly a romantic fantasy, but the romance part of that gets a bit more weight in this first trailer. Sure, we get a tiny taste of Hero (Deadpool & Wolverine‘s Emma Corrin) talking up her storytelling abilities, but most of the focus is on the battle of wills between Hero, Cherry (Longlegs‘ Maika Monroe), and Manfred (future He-Man Nicholas Galitzine)—the latter of whom has been summoned by Cherry’s husband to secretly test her loyalty while he’s away, perhaps not realizing Cherry and Hero also have a rather strong attraction.

    What’s at stake? Several hearts and at least one castle, from the looks of things. We are loving the lavish production design, especially the costumes and quirky hats, and the whimsical fairy tale quality.

    “Any time you feel like you need rescuing, I’ll tell a story,” Hero tells Cherry in a tender moment, and later we see the stories become a way of coping with the predicament Cherry’s husband has put everyone in. However, aside from a few quick glimpses, we don’t get much on the stories in this trailer—or characters we’re particularly excited to meet played by Charlie XCX and a silver-haired Felicity Jones.

    Written and directed by Julia Jackman and based on Isabela Greenberg’s acclaimed graphic novel, The One Hundred Nights of Hero, the movie also features Amir El-Masry and Richard E. Grant. 100 Nights of Hero hits theaters December 5.

    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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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Emma Corrin, Maika Monroe Wrap Up Star-Spangled London Film Festival With ‘100 Nights of Hero’

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    The 2025 BFI London Film Festival has closed in style thanks to Julia Jackman’s superstar 100 Nights of Hero cast.

    The Canadian filmmaker was joined by Emma Corrin, Maika Monroe, Amir El-Masry, Richard E. Grant and Felicity Jones at the city’s Royal Festival Hall on Sunday night to wrap up an almighty run of premieres for the LFF. Key cast members Nicholas Galitzine and Charli xcx were not in attendance.

    Jackman’s sophomore feature, based on the graphic novel of the same name by Isabel Greenberg, is a visually stunning fantasy set in a fairytale kingdom. Cherry (Monroe) is happily married to Jerome (El-Masry) and living a seemingly idyllic life. But the couple have yet to conceive an heir, so when Jerome absconds and his dashing friend Manfred (Galitzine) arrives with dastardly intentions, Hero (Corrin), Cherry’s wily and loyal maid, is forced to concoct a plan to distract Manfred by telling captivating stories about rebellious women.

    “I’ve been dreaming of making this film for a long time,” Jackman said on stage. “And I actually, to be honest, didn’t know whether I’d get the chance. So to be here with you guys is incredible. Thank you so much for coming.”

    Corrin, star of The Crown, Nosferatu and Deadpool & Wolverine, added about crafting the character of Hero with Jackman: “So much of it was in Julia’s incredible adaptation. … Hero’s all-knowing wisdom — she [has] confidence and knows who she is and there’s a real relief to playing someone like that. We chatted a lot about that, and [about] getting the comedy right.”

    Monroe — best known for last year’s horror hit Longlegs — said Jackman’s script was “so incredible unique and so beautiful.” She said: “Even just reading the script, I could imagine this fantastical world. I fell in love with Cherry. … [There] was just this feeling of, like, needing to do this role.”

    The Hollywood Reporter‘s review out of Venice Critics Week — where 100 Nights of Hero earned its world premiere in August — described the feature as “eccentric, fey and surprisingly dark.” Leslie Felperin wrote that “viewers may start to expect anything could happen — like pop superstar Charli xcx showing up in a supporting role as an unlucky bride with barely any lines but a sumptuous assortment of jewel-toned gowns.”

    It marks the end to another BFI London Film Festival after 11 days of star-studded screenings that had A-listers, including the likes of George Clooney, Adam Sandler, Daniel Craig, Julia Roberts, Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Jacob Elordi, Josh O’Connor, Oscar Isaac, Paul Mescal, Jessie Buckley and Daniel Day-Lewis, flocking to London’s Southbank.

    The fest kicked off Oct. 8 with the European premiere of Rian Johnson’s Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery and hosted the casts of Jay Kelly, Hamnet, Frankenstein, Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere, After The Hunt, Die My Love, Bugonia, Ballad of a Small Player, Sentimental Value and Is This Thing On?, among others.

    The fest has also hosted some of the industry’s most celebrated directors and actors for Screen Talks sessions at BFI Southbank, including Yorgos Lanthimos, Daniel Day-Lewis, Richard Linklater, Jon M. Chu, Chloé Zhao and Lynne Ramsay.

    “It’s not enough for a film to just have an incredible cast — the film has to really stand on its own two feet,” London Film Fest director Kristy Matheson told THR at the opening-night gala. “We’re really trying to find a program that’s got a lot of different textures in it, that really feels like it reflects the city that we are in. We want a really great geographical spread.

    “We want different types of stories, because here in London,” she continued, “the cinema audiences are amazing. They’re seeing great films every day of the week here. They really do know their cinema, so we have a standard that we need to meet.”

    A total of 247 titles — comprised of features, shorts, series and immersive works — from 79 countries premiered at this year’s festival, with official wins for Martel’s Landmarks (Nuestra Tierra), David Bingong’s The Travelers (Les Voyageurs), as well as One Woman One Bra by Vincho Nchogu and Coyotes, directed by Said Zagha.

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    Lily Ford

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  • Nicholas Galitzine Plots to Seduce Maika Monroe in First Clip From Venice-Bowing Fantasy Film ‘100 Nights of Hero’ (EXCLUSIVE)

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    An air of sexual tension hangs over the banquet table in the first clip from “100 Nights of Hero,” the period fantasy feature set to have its world premiere in Venice.

    The film — a feminist fairytale written and directed by Julia Jackman based on Isabel Greenberg’s graphic novel — stars Nicholas Galitzine, Emma Corrin and Maika Monroe in lead roles.

    In the clip, Amir Al-Masry’s neglectful husband Jerome tells his innocent bride Cherry (Monroe) that he’s going away unexpectedly, leaving her in his castle with his friend Manfred (Galitzine). The charming guest suggestively assures he’ll “take good care of your lovely wife” while Corrin’s maid Hero looks on suspiciously. The story sees Manfred given a secret wager by Jerome to test the fidelity Cherry, who teams with Hero to fend off his attempts to seduce her. As time starts running out, emotions intensify, resulting in a love triangle with life and death stakes.

    Charli Xcx, Richard E. Grant and Felicity Jones also star in the feature, being produced by Project Infinity’s Grant S. Johnson (“May December”) alongside Helen Simmons and Stephanie Aspin as a producer, while Jones’ Piecrust Pictures is an executive producer.

    Earlier this year, Independent Film Company acquired the North American rights to “100 Nights of Hero” and set a wide theatrical release for later in 2025.

    “I’ve been in love with Isabel’s graphic novel since I read it in 2016, and it’s been a dream to adapt it into its own weird cinematic universe,” said Jackman, who acquired the rights to the novel before the Pandemic. “I’m excited for people to see what we’ve done with Manfred, Cherry and Hero — even if you’ve read the book, you may not know the whole story just yet.”

    See the exclusive clip below:

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    Alex Ritman

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  • ‘100 Nights of Hero’ Teases a Cheeky Medieval Fantasy

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    Released in 2016, Isabel Greenberg’s graphic novel The One Hundred Nights of Hero earned a devoted following for its witty twist on The Arabian Nights, imagining a married woman and her beloved maid turning to the power of storytelling to protect the wife from her husband’s creepy wager. Now the tale is coming to the big screen with an all-star cast—and today’s teaser gives us our first look at its medieval folklore-inspired world.

    As the trailer shows, Deadpool & Wolverine‘s Emma Corrin (as the maid, Hero), Longlegs‘ Maika Monroe (as the wife, Cherry), and Masters of the Universe‘s Nicholas Galitzine (as the wife’s determined suitor) lead a cast that also includes Amir Al-Masry, Charlie XCX, Richard E. Grant, and Felicity Jones.

    Here’s the official synopsis: “When her neglectful husband departs after placing a secret wager to test her fidelity, Cherry (Monroe) and her sharp-witted maid, Hero (Corrin), must fend off a dangerously seductive visitor: Manfred (Galitzine).”

    There are almost Yorgos Lanthimos vibes in the blend of period setting, fantasy, and what looks like an offbeat and modern sense of humor; the costumes are also spectacular. It’s not clear from this first teaser if the movie will hew to the novel’s storytelling device, but you have to imagine some of the characters we just see for an instant (Felicity Jones in a long silver wig; Charlie XCX, strumming a very unusual-looking guitar) may be characters in Hero’s carefully crafted tales.

    Written and directed by Julia Jackman, 100 Nights of Hero hits theaters December 5.

    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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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • “Daddy! Mommy! Save Me From the Hell of Living!”: Longlegs

    “Daddy! Mommy! Save Me From the Hell of Living!”: Longlegs

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    As the 90s seem to be taking hold of the box office this summer (with Twister also reanimating as Twisters), it’s only right that someone should take a stab at what amounts to an updated version of The Silence of the Lambs and Seven. That person is none other than the son of Anthony “Norman Bates” Perkins himself, Osgood Perkins (formerly known as “Oz”). And yes, being a child of such a particular kind of actor has undoubtedly influenced Perkins’ overall “spooky” bent in terms of generally opting to make creepy films (some of his previous ones include The Blackcoat’s Daughter, The Girl in the Photographs, I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House and, more commercially, Gretel & Hansel). That in addition to playing “Young Norman Bates” in 1983’s Psycho II. But, obviously, more than anything, the lives and deaths of Perkins’ parents would be enough to inspire him to pursue this genre.

    It was already bad enough that Anthony, his long-closeted father (though, of course, it was an open secret in Hollywood), died of AIDS in 1992 (along with Robert Reed a.k.a. “Mr. Brady”), but then, nine years later, his mother, model/actress Berry Berenson, died in one of the planes that was hijacked and crashed into the World Trade Center. Really, shit doesn’t get more horrific than that in terms of parent-related trauma and loss. Which is exactly why one of the most standout lines from Longlegs is: “Daddy! Mommy! Save me from the hell of living!” This delivered hauntingly and, it goes without saying, memorably by Nicolas Cage in the titular satanic killer role.

    As for the nickname, well, it pertains to “Longlegs” approaching children with a life-size replica doll of themselves and, instead of bending down to meet them at their eye level, saying, “It seems I wore my long legs today.” The “jovial” saying usually directed at children (especially in a pre-twenty-first century era) is, thus, turned on its ear (or leg)—rendered bone-chilling in a way that one never thought possible, and all done so simply, too.

    Indeed, “simplicity” is the keyword for this film. As Perkins put it to The Wrap, in terms of conceptualization, “The basic step is to pick something that’s true. Write to a theme that’s a true theme for me. In the case of this, that true theme was, it’s possible for parents to lie to their children and tell them stories. It’s very basic and easily understandable. If you want to start building projects that way, it should be simple.” What builds out of that simplicity is a haunting, unforgettable story centered on a young FBI agent named Lee Harker (Maika Monroe, who, like Perkins, is also known for making mainly horror movies). Tasked with tracking an untrackable killer in the already ominous setting of the Pacific Northwest (rendering the supplemental Twin Peaks nod complete), Harker falls as far down the rabbit hole as Clarice Starling ever did. And, among one of her more unique skills (besides being what Karen [Amanda Seyfried] from Mean Girls would call “kind of psychic” and having a “fifth sense”), Harker is extremely well-versed in the Bible. A knowledgeability that leads her to decode Longlegs’ formerly undecodable letters to the police. Accordingly, Agent Carter (Blair Underwood), Lee’s superior, is starting to understand why he enlisted her to take on this case.

    Alas, the case quickly starts to take her on instead, permeating Lee’s entire life until it leads her down the path of having to question her mother, Ruth (Alicia Witt, who, incidentally was in Twin Peaks: The Return), about Longlegs’ appearance in Lee’s childhood decades prior, at a time when Marc Bolan and T. Rex would have been all the rage. As far as Longlegs is concerned though, T. Rex remains “king” in his world (well, apart from Satan) as he constantly belts out chilling ditties of his own in the style of Bolan. This, of course, was already foreshadowed by the opening title card featuring the “Get It On (Bang A Gong)” quote, “Well you’re slim and you’re weak/You’ve got the teeth of a hydra upon you/You’re dirty, sweet and you’re my girl.” “His girl,” unfortunately, extends to many children who grow up not fully aware that they’re under his spell (in this sense, there’s more than a touch of Charles Manson [no stranger to satanism and the occult] to the Longlegs character). Chief among them being Carrie Ann Camera (Kiernan Shipka, who also starred in Perkins’ The Blackcoat’s Daughter), the sole survivor of one of Longlegs’ killings, which always follow the pattern of infiltrating a family’s home and miraculously getting the father to slaughter his wife and children, with no signs of outside force anywhere.

    With Lee’s gift for what some might call “supernatural” intuition (though not quite to the extent of Phoebe Halliwell’s [Alyssa Milano] premonitory abilities in Charmed), Perkins adds another element into his elixir of ideas that are often incorporated into different sub-genres of thriller/horror films. As he described, “This movie is very pop. And it starts with reproducing Silence of the Lambs. If it’s pop art, then you want to adhere to certain indicators. And so the nineties became an easy indicator that we were in the realm of Silence of the Lambs and Seven. We were wanting to sit alongside the good ones and invite the audience into a safe space.” Of course, what’s also important about the nineties as the film’s backdrop is that it makes it much more difficult for law enforcement to track a killer without the modern technology of today. And yes, even the Longlegs of 2024 would be forced to have a phone, freakshow or not.

    But no matter what decade Longlegs existed/came of age in, he seems the type that was doomed to be a failure. And it is precisely that failure that turns him toward darkness, toward channeling his “talents” toward killing. Like the aforementioned Manson, Longlegs might not have become a satanic serial killer if his music career had taken off. As Perkins speculated, “Longlegs probably wanted to be a guitar player in a glam rock band called Longlegs. One day, the Devil started sounding through his headphones and through his records in the Judas Priest sense.”

    More than being a movie about a devil/glam rock-worshiping serial killer that targets children as the weak link for entry (a.k.a. possession), it is a movie that speaks to the ways in which parents lie to their children from an early age. All under the pretense of “protecting” them, of course (even from music like the kind T. Rex made)—but, in the end, that protection usually turns out to be a disservice. Especially as the child, in their “grown-up” years has to learn how to actually grow up after being insulated from harsh reality for too long. Again, Perkins knows all about this, better than most people, in fact. To that point, he would also state of this particular theme in the film, “It’s a bad world, and when Ruth finally comes out with her truth and tells the story, it makes me think about my own parents. That resonates as the most dynamic section of the movie; the revelation.” No biblical pun intended…probably.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Longlegs Sets New Box Office Records in Opening Weekend

    Longlegs Sets New Box Office Records in Opening Weekend

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    After weeks of creepy trailers and very good pre-release buzz, Neon’s long-awaited Longlegs finally hit theaters this weekend. Directed by Osgood Perkins, attention on the Maika Monore and Nicolas Cage-led horror thriller has built up a lot of goodwill, and that appears to have paid off big time at the theater.

    Despite some mixed impressions, Deadline reports Longlegs has earned $22.6 million domestically. It’s the biggest opening to date of Neon’s seven-year stint, and the biggest opening for an original horror movie this year. The studio’s definitely proud of it: in a press release, it noted the movie’s performance was similar to Blair Witch Project. “Not since [Blair Witch] has there been an independent genre film that out-projected, out-performed and over-indexed so wildly that it seemed to the industry it ‘came out of nowhere.’”

    Neon really went all-out to make sure everyone knew that Longlegs existed. Trailers played ahead of many tentpole movies in the last several months, and a marketing campaign further encouraged viewers to uncover potential secrets. It also helped to hide Cage’s appearance–if your movie’s already looking creepy as hell, the only way to see what its co-lead looks like is to steel yourself and see the damn thing. Neon’s distribution boss Elissa Federoff noted the marketing was “built with creativity and imagination,” and understandably took pride in the studio’s efforts. “We built a movement around this film,” she noted. “When audiences can tell that it will be original and something they haven’t seen before, they’ll rally behind it.”

    As strong as Longlegs did, it still ultimately fell in second place behind Despicable Me 4. The Illumination film added another $44.7 million from North America to its haul, bringing its domestic box office to $211.1 million. An additional $88 million oversees puts it at $437.8 million worldwide, helping the larger Despicable Me franchise cross $5 billion. It’s surely gonna make more money over the next few weeks, so get ready to bring your kids to Minions 3 in 2027. Both Inside Out 2 and A Quiet Place: Day One were also solid earners this weekend, respectively bringing their global totals to $1.35 billion and $203.6 million.

    Next weekend’s big blockbuster is Universal and Warner Bros.’ Twisterswhich has been building up hype of its own in recent weeks. The following week on July 26 is the long-awaited Deadpool & Wolverinewhich is likely gonna make a lot of money, especially since that’s also the same weekend as San Diego Comic-Con. With how well movies have done in this month and June, it’s hard to believe we were fretting about theatrical movies so much back in May.

    While we’re here, did Longlegs live up to its hype, or were you left wondering what the big deal was? Let us know in the comments below.


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    Justin Carter

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  • Box Office: ‘Despicable Me 4’ Easily Wins With $44.7M as ‘Longlegs’ Stuns With Record $22.6M Launch

    Box Office: ‘Despicable Me 4’ Easily Wins With $44.7M as ‘Longlegs’ Stuns With Record $22.6M Launch

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    Animation continue to the be hero of the summer office thanks to Despicable Me 4 and Inside Out 2, but Neon‘s Longlegs can rightly take a bow after scoring the biggest opening for an independent horror pic in a decade with $22.6 million in ticket sales.

    From Illumination and Universal, DM4 easily stayed atop the domestic box office chart in its second weekend with $44.7 million from 4,449 theaters as it jumped the $200 million mark to finish Sunday with a North American tally of $211.1 million. Overseas, Gru and the mischievous Minions also continued to stir up strong sales, earning $88 million from 78 markets for a foreign tally of $226.7 million and $437.8 million globally.

    In a notable milestone, the Despicable Me/Minions franchise has crossed $5 billion mark in global ticket sales, a feat no animated franchise has achieved before. (Earlier this week, Illumination announced that a Minions 3 is in the works.)

    The big surprise of the weekend is the better-than-expected performance of writer-director Osgood Perkins Longlegs, a serial killer chiller starring Maika Monroe and Nicolas Cage. The tense FBI procedural, playing in 2,510 cinemas, is the biggest opening ever for Tom Quinn‘s Oscar-winning specialty production and distribution outfit Neon, home of Parasite.

    Among other records, it’s Cage’s biggest opening since National Treasure: Book of Secrets almost twenty years ago in 2007. It’s also the top R-rated opening of 2024 to date. And it is the only indie horror film of the past decade to open to $20 million or more (this excludes one of the Insidious movies from Focus Features/Universal).

    Going back as far as 25 years, Neon also notes that very few indie films have crossed the $20 million threshold in their debut. For purposes of context, however, many indie titles — including Neon releases — only open a few theaters, versus rolling out nationwide from the get-go as Longlegs did.

    The well-reviewed movie earned $10 million on Friday alone, including previews, and wasn’t hampered by a C+ Cinemascore, since it’s common for the horror genre to land a grade in the C range. Fun fact: More than 70 percent of ticket buyers were between ages 18 and 34.

    The record-shattering Inside Out 2 — which has a shot at becoming the top-grossing animated film of all time — finished Sunday with a global cume of $1.35 billion. It’s already become the top-grossing Pixar title of all time and the third biggest animated title, not adjusted for inflation. The film has helped propel Disney become the first major studio to cross the $2 billion mark in 2024 global ticket sales.

    In North America, Inside Out 2 came in third in its fifth weekend with $20.8 million for a domestic tally of $572.6 million. Overseas, it earned another $50.2 million from 47 markets for a foreign cume of $777.5 million. It has yet to open in Japan, where it could do sizeable business.

    Paramount’s holdover A Quiet Place: Day One continues to entice moviegoers and placed fourth despite the entry of Longlegs. The prequel scared up another $11.8 million this weekend from 3,378 theaters for a domestic total of $116.2 million through Sunday.

    Apple Original Films‘ continues its theatrical ambitions with the release of director Greg Berlanti’s Fly Me to the Moon, a romantic comedy starring Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum. The period space-age movie, distributed by Sony on behalf of Apple, opened to a subdued $10 million from 3,356 sites to place No. 5. The number isn’t a surprise considering the film was fueled by older adults; more than half of ticket buyers were 45 or older, including 32 percent over the age of 55.

    The movie has earned meh reviews, but audiences were kinder in bestowing the older-skewing film an A- CinemaScore. Reviews matter more to older moviegoers, upon whom Berlanti’s film is relying, but Apple and Sony believe the film will have long legs, similar to Ticket to Paradise, which opened to $16.5 million domestically on its way to topping out at $68 million, and Where the Crawdads Sing, which opened to $17.7 million and topped out at $90 million domestic.

    At the specialty box office, new offerings include A24‘s Sing Sing, which is on course to score a solid per-theater average of $34,280 or thereabouts from four theaters in Los Angeles and New York. The film, from director Greg Kwedar, chronicles an arts program at the infamous Sing Sing prison.

    July 14, 7:45 a.m. Updated with revised estimates.

    This story was originally published July 13 at 10:16 a.m.

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    Pamela McClintock

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  • Nicholas Cage Made Longlegs a “Deeply Personal” Role

    Nicholas Cage Made Longlegs a “Deeply Personal” Role

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    Say what you will about Nicholas Cage, he always goes for it in whatever movie he’s in. The newly released Longlegs has kept him out of the movie’s marketing in a direct capacity, but slivers of footage and pre-release hype about his reportedly freaky look have drawn a lot of attention. And in playing the titular serial killer targeting families, Cage used parts of his own family history to inform his performance.

    Talking to Entertainment Weekly, Cage recalled a moment from his childhood where he saw his mother Joy Vogelsang putting on Noxzema cold cream. Being two at the time, he remembers seeing her “turn her face really fast and stared at me after [putting on] the cold cream. The whiteness of [it] just really spooked me.” In the film, Longlegs has a ghastly white complexion similar to that moment with Cage’s mother, but without a clear motive. The actor doesn’t have a specific reason as for why his character is so white, but noted the “strange connection” between killer and color. “He says it’s just a force he’s aware of, and you don’t question it too much,” Cage notes. “He knows it when he sees it.”

    Performance-wise, Cage previously called this a “deeply personal” role owing to his mother’s schizophrenia throughout her life. In June, he told EW about how she’d talk in poetic terms, something he also brought into Longlegs. To Cage, the character is a tragic figure because he’s “at the mercy of these voices talking to him.” Ahead of shooting in early 2023, he’d record his performance on his phone to nail the character’s “rhythms and melodies. […] By the time I got on set, it was so dialed in and became almost like performing a song or a bit of music.”

    Cage’s interview also contains Longlegs spoilers, so if you haven’t seen the film yet, don’t go past the banner below.

    In the film’s climax, Maika Monroe’s Harker finally comes face-to-face with Longlegs, who’s been giving dolls possessed with Satanic energy to families of girls born on specific days. It’s eventually revealed that he’d targeted her as a young girl, but was spared thanks to her mother’s intervention. The meeting where they “reunite,” and Longlegs’ suicide in front of her, is why Cage joined the film in the first place. The two actors didn’t socialize prior to that point–a move he believes was intentional from director Osgood Perkins–and he’d been really looking forward to the “explosive” encounter between their characters.

    Turns out, the scene has a meta layer added onto it. Cage professed to being a fan of Monroe and her horror chops in films like It Follows and Watcher. Like with some audiences, It Follows was his first time seeing her, and he called the film “one of my favorites in the genre.” Cheekily, he also drew parallels between the adoration for his costar and Longlegs’ years-long obsession with Harker, calling her “a hero of sorts” his character finally had the pleasure of meeting.

    Before that point, the movie goes out of its way to not shoot Longlegs directly. Instead, he’s glimpsed through different angles or reflections. Perkins explained it as showing how the killer left such an impression on Harker as a child, even as she supressed that memory. He’s there, in a sense, said Perkins, but he’s “totally not there, but [also] totally there.”

    From the pre-release buzz, Cage is delivering a pretty unnerving (complimentary!) performance in Longlegs that’s enough to get folks to see it in droves. After seeing him do so many roles over the decades, it’s nice to know that he can find new ways to freak people the hell out.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest MarvelStar 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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    Justin Carter

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  • ‘Longlegs’ Will Leave You Terrified

    ‘Longlegs’ Will Leave You Terrified

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    Scary moves are a dime a dozen. I think we have had a new horror movie at least once a month this year. So when a film really stands out in the genre, you take notice. And that film is Longlegs.

    Osgood Perkins’ Longlegs is an eerie story about Agent Lee Harker (Maika Monroe) investigating a string of murders for the FBI. Longlegs (Nicolas Cage) is a man who uses the occult to seek out his victims and as Lee begins to discover that she has her own connection to him, we see a story unfold of a woman trying desperately to stop a killer while he is almost taunting her.

    I watched this movie both on the edge of my seat and hidden behind my fingers. I was so captivated by what Perkins had created but at the same time, I felt like my skin was crawling every time Cage was on screen. Lee is often standing in a room with dark hallways or corners and I found myself yelling at her to turn on a light.

    Agent Carter (Blair Underwood) is the beam of light in that darkness. He cares for Lee, invites her into his home, and wants to solve the case with her. Lee is determined, odd, and someone who separates her feelings from what she is working on. Their dynamic is a fascinating thing to see play out on screen.

    Because Lee is a female FBI agent trying to stop a killer, the comparisons to The Silence of the Lambs write themselves. But Longlegs’ eerie energy isn’t because of what you know Longlegs can do but instead because you don’t know why.

    A frightening feat

    It isn’t easy to scare an audience anymore and I found myself just terrified. There were so many moments within Perkins’ Longlegs that had me wondering what was going to come next. Whenever I felt “safe” for a moment, I knew that it wouldn’t last and it left me so unnerved that I haven’t stopped thinking about Longlegs. You never quite know where it is going, you’re on edge the entire time, and the end of the movie resolves and doesn’t necessarily give you the release that you want and that makes it all work together.

    Monroe plays Lee’s detachment with such a cold yet sincere approach that I couldn’t help but be captivated by her. Whenever Lee was too involved in the case and not about the people around her, I knew it wouldn’t work out but I still was invested.

    This might be one of my favorite horror movies of all time and you need to see Longlegs as soon as possible.


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    Rachel Leishman

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  • Maika Monroe’s Horror Movies, Ranked

    Maika Monroe’s Horror Movies, Ranked

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    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Everett Collection (RADiUS-TWC, IFC Midnight, Neon)

    Before Jenna Ortega and Scream, before Mia Goth and Pearl, and before the young cast of Yellowjackets became our cannibal darlings, Maika Monroe arrived to put her own indelible stamp on 21st-century horror. For the past decade, Monroe has established herself as a mainstay in the horror genre, not just a dependable player but a true modern scream queen who’s able to elevate predictable fare, stand toe-to-toe with monsters of all kinds, and, of course, lead modern classics to even greater heights.

    Now, with her nerve-shredding performance in Oz Perkins’s serial-killer terrifier Longlegs, Monroe is on the verge of a kind of second breakthrough in her horror career, a chance to remind audiences that she’s not just still here but still arguably the best young actress in the genre at the moment. In celebration of that new breakthrough, and of Monroe’s tireless talents, here are all of her horror films so far, ranked from worst to best.

    One of Monroe’s great gifts, and a hallmark of good horror acting in general, is her ability to maintain the compelling edge in a scene without another human partner, something she achieves brilliantly in other films we’ll get to later. It’s a gift that’s a tremendous asset in a film like Tau, in which she plays a woman kidnapped by a mad scientist (Ed Skrein) to help him develop an advanced AI (voiced by Gary Oldman) he’s trying to perfect. For huge swaths of the film, Monroe is left alone in a vast, cold house with nothing but the voice of the AI to keep her company, which means the film’s humanity rests squarely on her shoulders. The attempt to balance out claustrophobic horror with high-concept sci-fi doesn’t quite work, and it all goes pretty much exactly how you’d expect, but because it has Monroe at the center, Tau retains a watchability and a surprisingly steady emotional core.

    Monroe takes a supporting role in Greta, Neil Jordan’s psychological horror film about a young woman (Chloë Grace Moretz) who befriends a mysterious older woman (Isabelle Huppert in the title role) and soon finds she’s accidentally bonded with a monster. As Moretz’s roommate, the lively and bold Erica, Monroe disappears from the film for significant stretches, but Jordan is smart enough to keep her an active participant in the plot, and she eventually becomes the star of the film’s two best scenes. One is a fantastically tense stalker-y chase sequence, the other is a showdown with Huppert; Monroe gets to flex her Final Girl muscles in both scenes to great effect, helping Greta land its most frightening moments.

    A blackly comic crime film with a horror movie’s soul, Villains pairs Monroe with Bill Skarsgård as they play a couple of small-time crooks trying to raise enough money to live their dream lives in Florida. When their car breaks down, they stumble upon a house in the woods, and a strange couple (Jeffrey Donovan and Kyra Sedgwick) hiding a dark secret. What follows is a strange, violent, twisty game of predator and prey that’s both tension-laden and deeply satisfying. A big part of that satisfaction, unsurprisingly, is the chemistry between Skarsgård and Monroe, who are able to pivot from the film’s comic tones to its horrific developments with ease and grace. It’s arguably the funniest film on this list, but that doesn’t stop it from being truly frightening.

    There’s a very delicate tonal dance at work in Significant Other, which stars Monroe as a woman who’s reluctantly going out to hike and camp with her boyfriend (Jake Lacy), only to find something she never expected out in the woods. Humor, paranoia, and heart front-load the narrative, and when the real sci-fi/horror elements start to kick in, you think you know where it’s going, right up until you don’t. The twist in Significant Other is quite effective, but it’s what happens next that makes the film a hidden gem from the 2022 horror scene, and Monroe and Lacy both navigate the film’s gleeful strangeness wonderfully.

    This is the point where the list starts to shift from Good Genre Movies into the realm of Potential Masterpieces. In Watcher, Chloe Okuno’s stylish and nail-biting directorial debut, Monroe stars as a lonely woman who moves to Bucharest with her husband (Karl Glusman) and, while he’s at work, starts to worry that someone in the apartment across the street is watching her. It’s the stuff of classic paranoid-thriller filmmaking, clearly following in the footsteps of Hitchcock and De Palma. But what makes Watcher particularly special is just how squarely Okuno keeps the focus on a woman who must persist despite no one listening to her and how well Monroe does in that environment. It’s one of those performances she has to very often sell on her own, in a room, reacting not to a scene partner but to a certain environmental edge, and she not only nails it but makes us feel the same sense of creeping anxiety, too.

    Monroe’s breakthrough as a genre-cinema mainstay came in 2014 thanks to two films. One offered a leading role, which we’ll get to in just a moment, and the other saw her land second billing under Dan Stevens’s incredible title-role performance in The Guest. Helmed by the You’re Next team of director Adam Wingard and writer Simon Barrett, The Guest emerges as a seemingly straightforward thriller about a military man (Stevens) who visits the family of a departed comrade and forms a strange bond with their teenage daughter (Monroe) and bullied young son (Brendan Meyer). One of the film’s great strengths is how it’s able to warp from this thriller perspective into full-on slasher-style terror by the end, and that’s not just thanks to Stevens. Monroe has to slowly tilt from being beguiled and intrigued by Stevens to totally terrified by him, and her ability to pull it off while explosions and gun battles are going on around her sells the film’s tonal shifts perfectly.

    In this combination of procedural thriller and Satanic nightmare from horror filmmaker Oz Perkins, Monroe stars as Lee Harker, an FBI agent trying to track down the title serial killer (Nicolas Cage) even as he closes in on her as the object of his latest fascinations. Monroe plays Lee with a certain steadfast restraint, keeping her emotions shielded until the film’s terrifying plot strips that shield away bit by bit, and Cage is … well, he’s unhinged in all the best ways. It’s one of those movies that feels eerie and shrouded in strangeness from the very beginning, and Monroe knows exactly how to navigate that environment.

    The other major 2014 film (though it didn’t hit U.S. theaters until 2015) that cemented Monroe’s status as a genre star, It Follows has since become not just a hit horror film but a cultural mainstay, up there with The Babadook and Get Out as one of the most talked-about genre movies of its decade. Monroe stars as Jay, a young woman who finds herself cursed after a one-night stand to be followed by a strange entity that will kill her if it can ever catch her. Conceptually, it’s a brilliant piece of horror work from director David Robert Mitchell, but it’s Monroe who has to navigate the harrowing emotional journey of the piece, as Jay goes from unwitting participant to desperate prey to unforgettable Final Girl. It’s a fantastic performance in one of the best horror films of the 21st century so far, one that cemented Monroe as one of the genre’s brightest and most compelling performers.

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  • Nicolas Cage Is So Scary in Longlegs, He Freaked Out His Co-Star

    Nicolas Cage Is So Scary in Longlegs, He Freaked Out His Co-Star

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    Longlegs hasn’t yet hit theaters—July 12 is the big day—but the creatively creepy marketing alone is enough to give a person nightmares. The latest trick in Neon’s big book of scare tactics is to release audio charting Maika Monroe’s actual heartbeat from the first time she saw Nicolas Cage in character as the titular serial killer.

    Sure, it’s a big moment, as Monroe’s FBI agent character is finally able to confront her long-sought quarry, and probably some of the palpitations are due to the pressure the actor was feeling about engaging in such a tense, pivotal scene opposite an Oscar winner. But you also have to assume that some of it was the fact that he’s just so agonizingly off-putting. Check out the video here, which helpfully pastes a black box over Cage’s face to avoid spoilers.

    As writer-director Osgood Perkins explained in an interview with io9, he didn’t actually have any input into Longlegs‘ marketing campaign, though he’s been very pleased with the way it captures the eerie spirit of his film. He also talked about how Monroe and Cage actually only share one scene together—the scene you see excerpted above—in a sequence that maximizes the contrast not just between their characters, but also their acting styles. She’s more reserved and interior; he’s well, he’s Nic Cage. “I was conscious of the fact that I had two very counterweight, counterbalancing energies,” Perkins said. “Luckily, I was able narratively to keep them apart … then when they do connect, it’s a very charged moment. And so their opposite charges work even better.”

    So charged, apparently, that Monroe had a very physical reaction to Cage’s appearance. And if a trained performer got such a shock from seeing him, imagine how movie audiences are going to feel! You can push the limits of your own circulatory system, and possibly your ability not to pee your pants in terror, when Longlegs arrives this Friday, July 12.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest MarvelStar 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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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Nic Cage Thinks His Mysterious Longlegs Monster Is Explosively Horrifying

    Nic Cage Thinks His Mysterious Longlegs Monster Is Explosively Horrifying

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    The bizarre marketing for Longlegs has raised the intrigue level for the summer horror movie sky-high. But one thing audiences have yet to catch a good glimpse of is its biggest star: Nicolas Cage, who plays the title character. And there’s a careful reason behind that.

    In a new interview with Entertainment Weekly, Longlegs director Oz Perkins confirmed he’s been deliberately withholding of the titular villain’s design. “It’s driving people towards a freak show at a circus tent,” according to Perkins. We’ve got the thing behind the curtain, and when there’s enough people gathered ‘round, we’re going to pull the curtain.”

    Cage bombastically echoed his director’s statement, claiming his character’s visage is so ghastly, it could potentially incite mass hysteria if not treated delicately enough. “It’s the equivalent of putting a warning label on a jar of nitroglycerin. The monster is a highly, highly dangerous substance. The way it’s moved, unveiled, deployed has to be treated very carefully,” he said. “Forget about the movie theater blowing up; the whole city could blow up, nay the country, maybe even the world. He is going to change your reality. Your doors of perception are going to open, and your life is not going to be the same.”

    That is one hell of a claim for a humble little horror movie to live up to. Just what is the secret of the film’s serial murderer, only referred to as “Longlegs?” According to EW, the full reveal of Cage’s character doesn’t come until the movie’s been underway for awhile.

    “Editing a picture is a nearly psychedelic experience,” says Perkins. “It really is because it’s so infinite. The permutations and combinations you can get from putting this there and that there, you’re in a Rubik’s Cube of possibilities. I think we found the sweet spot. This guy lives just outside the consciousness of our protagonist. He’s there, but he’s totally not there, but he’s totally there.”

    While we don’t know what the character looks like, plot hints suggest Longlegs has both ties to the occult and a “personal link” to Maika Monroe’s character, FBI agent Lee Harker. While we wait on tenterhooks for the film’s July 12 release to see for ourselves, you can call the film’s official hotline in the meantime to at least hear Cage’s character rant at you ghoulishly.


    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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    Gordon Jackson

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  • 10 Unforgettable Cult Movies You Can Watch On Netflix Today

    10 Unforgettable Cult Movies You Can Watch On Netflix Today

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    STARSHIP TROOPERS [1997]– Official Trailer (HD) | Get the 25th Anniversary 4K Ultra HD SteelBook Now

    Released in 1997 but somehow as timeless as ever, Paul Verhoeven’s sci-fi satire draws from the Robert Heinlein novel but adds its own slick, glossy blend of soap-opera drama, stylized storytelling, and buggy gore. Would you like to know more? Watch on Netflix.

    (This post originally appeared on Gizmodo.)

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    Cheryl Eddy

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