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Tag: movie news

  • ‘Quantumania’ Suffers Worst Box Office Drop in Marvel History

    ‘Quantumania’ Suffers Worst Box Office Drop in Marvel History

    For the second straight week, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania ruled the weekend box office chart, grossing $32.2 million and bringing its ten-day domestic total to a little over $167 million. But that’s pretty much where the good news ends for Marvel, as the film’s weekend-to-weekend drop was 69.7 percent — which represents a record worst second-weekend decline for any Marvel Cinematic Universe movie in history. (The previous worst drop in MCU history was Thor: Love and Thunder’s 67.7 percent just last year.)

    There are a few potential reasons for the film’s extreme decline. While Quantumania opened strongly last weekend — and in fact had the biggest opening weekend for any of the three Ant-Man films — it got poor reviews (currently the second-worst in MCU history, barely, with a 48 percent on Rotten Tomatoes, compared to Eternals’ 47 percent). It has also received a low “B” rating from paying customers polled by CinemaScore, which also ranks among the worst in the history of the MCU.

    The film also got proverbially mauled by Cocaine Bear, which grossed an impressive and surprising $23 million in its opening weekend, and almost certainly diverted some potential customers away from Quantumania. The dark crime comedy benefited from an outlandish premise and a catchy title — and, shockingly, much better reviews than Quantumania. (Cocaine Bear is currently holding with a 71 percent on Rotten Tomatoes.)

    It may also be that more casual Marvel fans have decided that especially in a case where the film gets so-so reviews and word-of-mouth like Quantumania, they can just wait to see it on Disney+ — and with Disney premiering most of their blockbusters on streaming a few months after they’re in theaters, it’s not even that long of a wait. Either way, this is not a great start for Phase 5 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, or the use of Kang the Conqueror as Marvel’s big new bad guy.

    The next Marvel Cinematic Universe movie, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 is scheduled to open in theaters on May 5, 2023.

    Every Marvel Movie Ever Made, Ranked From Worst to First

    From the Captain America serial to Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, we ranked the entire history of Marvel at the movies.

    Matt Singer

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  • Every Potential ‘Quantumania’ Plot Hole, Explained

    Every Potential ‘Quantumania’ Plot Hole, Explained

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania is the 31st film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe — and that doesn’t even include all the Disney+ shows and short films in the MCU. At this point, things are bound to get a little confusing from time to time in the world of Marvel — and we have heard from a lot of ScreenCrush viewers and readers about issues they had with Quantumania; potential plot holes that they felt didn’t add up.

    That’s what our latest Ant-Man video is all about. We solicited your questions on Twitter, and then we used all our prodigious nerd knowledge to explain all the potential plot holes in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. Why wasn’t Janet worried about Scott going into the Quantum Realm at the end of Ant-Man and the Wasp? What happened to Janet’s quantum powers? How come her suit seems to be nanotech when nanotech wasn’t introduced into the MCU until Black Panther, while Janet was still trapped in the Quantum Realm? For the answers to those questions and many more, watch the video below:

    If you liked that video trying to explain all of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’s potential plot holes, check out more of our videos below, including how Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania and Kang’s technology connects to a bunch of other movies in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, what happens after Quantumania, and whether critics are being too hard on the film. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next Marvel movie, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, is now playing in theaters everywhere.

    Sign up for Disney+ here.

    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever: All the Coolest Marvel Easter Eggs

    Here are all the best callbacks to Black Panther (and to decades of Marvel Comics) in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.

    ScreenCrush Staff

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  • How ‘Quantumania’ Secretly Connects to the Rest of the MCU

    How ‘Quantumania’ Secretly Connects to the Rest of the MCU

    This is a theory that has been floating around for a while, but it’s undeniable: The rings of Kang’s Quantum City from Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania bear an unmistakable resemblance to Shang-Chi’s Ten Rings, as well as numerous other mystical artifacts strewn across the Marvel Cinematic Universe. But how are all these Marvel MacGuffins connected?

    That’s the subject of our latest Quantumania video, which looks at Kang’s technology and sees how it compares to a variety of other powerful objects in the MCU. As to how Kang’s tech could also connect to the Ten Rings, if Wenwu held it for years and years — don’t think so linearly! Remember: Kang is a time traveler, he could have traveled into the ancient past and left behind some of his tech — which was later found and became the Ten Rings. For more on Kang’s connection to the rest of the MCU watch the video below:

    If you liked that video on how Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania and Kang’s technology connects to a bunch of other movies in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, check out more of our videos below, including what happens after Quantumania, whether critics are being too hard on the film, and all the Easter eggs in Quantumania. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next Marvel movie, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, is now playing in theaters everywhere.

    Sign up for Disney+ here.

    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever: All the Coolest Marvel Easter Eggs

    Here are all the best callbacks to Black Panther (and to decades of Marvel Comics) in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.

    ScreenCrush Staff

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  • We Asked a Chatbot Why 25 Classic Movies Are So Great – Here’s What It Said

    We Asked a Chatbot Why 25 Classic Movies Are So Great – Here’s What It Said

    Everywhere you look these days, people are talking about artificial intelligence. A New York Times reporter recently had a conversation with an AI chatbot created by Microsoft that, among other things, confessed to destructive impulses and seemingly fell in love with said reporter over the course of the chat. (Microsoft has already limited the number of questions a user can ask the chatbot in a single session, so things are going great so far.)

    Chatbots use artificial intelligence to interpret and answer questions. Some chatbots are sophisticated enough to create complex responses that could have been written by human beings. But can they write film reviews?

    To find out, I posed a series of questions to the chatbot ChatGPT. I gave it a list of 25 widely recognized cinematic classics and asked it why each was considered a great work of art. It gave lengthy responses for each; a series of bullet points, followed by a summary, which I have excerpted below:

    An AI Chatbot Reviews Classic Movies

    We asked ChatGPT about 25 of the greatest movies ever made. Here are its reviews…

    So, what did we learn? Well, for one thing, I will not be out of job and replaced by an AI in the immediate future. (In the semi-near future, maybe.) While none of what the chatbot said about the 25 movies was incorrect, its responses were a bit repetitive. It praised the movies’ “groundbreaking” visuals over and over; and it cited some variation of “enduring cultural significance” for title after title. Again, it’s not wrong! Most of these movies do include groundbreaking imagery and most left some kind of impact on po culture. But one of the most crucial parts of being a critic is finding different ways to say the same thing over and over again — and at least at present, ChatGPT had a difficult time with that.

    That said, I was slightly relieved that when I asked why Terminator 2: Judgment Day was a great movie it didn’t respond with “because it gave me a lot of practical ideas for career goals to strive toward as an artificial intelligence.” I was testing you, ChatGPT . And you passed.

    The Biggest Box-Office Hits in History (Worldwide)

    These are the highest grossing films in the history of cinema.

    Matt Singer

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  • Steven Yeun Cast In Marvel’s ‘Thunderbolts’

    Steven Yeun Cast In Marvel’s ‘Thunderbolts’

    Steven Yeun is stepping into the MCU, joining the cast of the upcoming Thunderbolts film. There’s no word yet about who exactly he’ll play, although we do know a pretty extensive amount of the actors we can expect to see. The main characters are as follows: Florence Pugh (Yelena Belova/Black Widow), Sebastian Stan (Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier), David Harbour (Red Guardian), Wyatt Russell (U.S. Agent), Hannah John-Kamen (Ghost), Olga Kurylenko (Taskmaster) and Julia Louis-Dreyfus (Valentina Allegra de Fontaine).

    Yeun is perhaps most well-known for his years-long stint on AMC’s The Walking Dead. Unfortunately, a big turning point for the viewership of the show was his character Glenn’s tragic death at the hands of Negan. He also went on to star in a number of acclaimed films like Burning and Minari. At the moment, he’s probably most recognizable as the voice of Mark Grayson from Invincible. He was also recently seen in Jordan Peele’s Nope.

    The director set to helm Thunderbolts, Jake Schreier, has worked on a few films, such as Robot & Frank, as well as Paper Towns. Most of his career has actually been in directing music videos for some pretty high-profile artists, as well as a number of commercials.

    We don’t really know much at all about the actual plot of the upcoming film, but we do know a good bit about the characters, and the nature of the team they’re on. The Thunderbolts are a team made up of reformed (or mostly reformed) supervillains, trying to atone for their past sins. Perhaps Kevin Feige put it best when he said: “It tells you a lot about the team when beloved Winter Soldier is the most stable among them.”

    Thunderbolts is set to start filming in June of 2023, with a release date of July 26,  2024.

    Marvel Villains Who Became Heroes

    These characters were introduced in Marvel Comics as villains. But that didn’t last.

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • ‘Creed III’ Review: A Heavyweight Sequel

    ‘Creed III’ Review: A Heavyweight Sequel

    The wall of Adonis Creed’s gym is adorned with a mural of his dad, the late heavyweight boxing champ Apollo Creed, adorned with the inscription “Build Your Own Legacy.” That’s an interesting mantra for a film like Creed III, the first entry in either the Rocky or Creed franchises without an onscreen appearance from Rocky Balboa himself, Sylvester Stallone. Stallone’s name does pop up as a producer in Creed III’s closing credits, but Rocky is barely mentioned otherwise. Intentionally or not, the message is clear: This is Creed’s show now. And coincidentally or not, that’s sort of what Creed III is about as well. A man from Adonis’ past returns to challenge him, claiming that he has unfairly enjoyed the life that should have been his.

    That is Dame Anderson (Jonathan Majors). An opening flashback shows Dame and Adonis in 2002, when both were still kids and Dame was one of the hottest amateur boxing prospects in the country. 20 years later, it’s Adonis (Michael B. Jordan) who’s a boxing champ while Dame is fresh out of jail, having spent most of the intervening years behind bars. Finally out on parole, he turns up at Adonis’ gym to reconnect. When Adonis recognizes Dame, he’s happy — and a little wary. Clearly something in their shared past left a bad taste in both men’s mouths.

    Adonis invites Dame into his life anyway, and the latter observes the former’s glamorous lifestyle with a mixture of admiration and understandable jealousy. Recently retired from boxing, Adonis gets to spend most of his time in his stunning Hollywood hills mansion with his gorgeous and talented music producer of a wife (Tessa Thompson) and their adorable daughter (Mila Davis-Kent). It’s obvious from the start that Dame blames Adonis for his time in jail, and over the course of Creed III it’s revealed why — and why Adonis may blame himself for Dame’s past as well. So when Dame announces his ambition to become a champion boxer, Adonis feels obliged to help him, especially since he’s become a boxing promoter after his in-ring retirement.

    Despite the slogan on Creed’s wall about building a legacy, there are undeniable parallels between Creed III and earlier Rocky films. Its structure comes straight from Rocky III, which saw the Italian Stallion grappling with fame and celebrity while battling a new challenger who was tougher, stronger, and hungrier. But Jordan, making his directorial debut, doesn’t simply rehash old Rocky plots; he cannily weaponizes the audience’s familiarity with the franchise to subvert their expectations.

    Dame isn’t just an updated Clubber Lang or Ivan Drago. (Although Majors’ jacked physique certainly makes him look like a very credible heavyweight.) Majors’ character is a lot closer in construction to Rocky Balboa, another down-on-his-luck underdog who wants to prove himself worthy of the big time. By extension, that comparison almost makes Adonis — the rich guy whose mansion is a veritable monument to himself — the Apollo of this story. So who is the hero and who is the villain here?

    To Creed III’s credit, things are rarely that cut and dried. Neither was the original Rocky, which was less of an adrenaline-pumping sports movie than a character study about a soft-hearted palooka. The sequels became more cartoonish and formulaic — including 2018’s Creed II, which saw Adonis fight the son of the man who had killed his father decades earlier. Creed III returns the franchise to its roots in macho melodrama. Yes, Adonis and Dame eventually fight. But a lot of Creed III is about their lives away from the ring, and about universal themes that have nothing to do with boxing like getting older and feeling as if your dreams are about to slip through your fingers.

    As such, time is a big motif in Creed III, and not just when referees are counting out boxers who’ve been knocked to the mat. But then time has always been a big motif in Rocky, which have been about the importance of endurance, in life as well as in the ring, since the very first film. (“Time takes everybody out, it’s undefeated,” said Rocky during a particularly haunting scene in the first Creed.) So it’s at least a little odd that the embodiment of that idea in Creed III is portrayed by Jonathan Majors just a few weeks removed from his role as Kang the Conqueror in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania — another powerful and time-obsessed antagonist with somewhat inscrutable motives who has spent years in a prison he feels he does not belong in, and now looks to make up for lost time by striking back at the people he blames for his incarceration.

    The parallels between the characters are a little jarring. But as good as Majors was as Kang, he’s even better here; more natural, more at ease, and a lot more intimidating in his boxing scenes with Jordan and others. He also lets the audience see the cracks in Dame’s emotional armor; this is not a one-dimensional tough guy. Majors (and the script by Keenan Coogler and Zach Baylin) provide glimpses of Dame’s warmth and kindness, particularly in scenes with Adonis’ daughter Amara. For all his flaws, Dame might have a point about Adonis’ role in his criminal past. When the inevitable final match arrives, you don’t necessarily want Dame to win, but you also don’t want to see him lose, either. He really might be the most interesting antagonist in any Rocky movie since Apollo Creed. He’s certainly the most fully realized.

    Credit for that goes not only to Majors and the screenwriters but to Jordan as well, who delivers an extremely poised directorial debut. He’s not as flashy a filmmaker as Ryan Coogler; Creed III’s boxing matches are never quite as visceral or as intricately shot and choreographed as the ones in the first Creed. But he also takes some interesting swings at mixing up the franchise’s tried-and-true elements, like its training montages and climactic title bout, which is far more impressionistic than anything in any other Rocky to date. Like Adonis, Jordan is clearly interested in making his own legacy.

    To do that, I think he’ll need to direct some original material, not just another satisfying installment in a long-running franchise. That said, Jordan more than proved himself up to the task of directing himself in a brawny but thoughtful sequel. After the first Creed, it’s certainly a contender for the best sequel this series has ever produced.

    Additional Thoughts:

    -Mila Davis-Kent is a total scene-stealer as Adonis’ daughter. The film sort of forgets about her when the boxing rivalry heats up, but if they make a Creed IV, she better be in it.

    -Does Creed III need Rocky or Sylvester Stallone?  No — but there is one scene where his absence is noticeable, simply because it’s hard to explain why his character wouldn’t show up for this key moment in his friend Adonis’ life.

    RATING: 8/10

    The Worst Billion-Dollar Blockbusters

    All of these movies grossed more than $1 billion at the box office. And they all stink.

    Matt Singer

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  • New ‘The Lord of the Rings’ Movies Are Coming

    New ‘The Lord of the Rings’ Movies Are Coming

    One ring to rule them all — but a whole lot of movies. Many, many more movies.

    Warner Bros. Discovery announced today as part of their earnings called that they had made a deal with the rights holders for J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth saga to produce more movies based on The Lord of the Rings. WBD’s New Line Cinema was the original distributors of The Lord of the Rings trilogy by Peter Jackson, as well as the follow-up prequel trilogy based on Tolkien’s The Hobbit.

    WBD signed a deal with Embracer Group AB, who recently acquired the rights to make Lord of the Rings movies and assorted other forms of media by purchasing Middle-earth Enterprises from The Saul Zaentz Company.

    While these will be the first new Lord of the Rings movies since 2003’s The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, there is already a Lord of the Rings TV show currently airing on streaming television. The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power premiered last year on Prime Video; Amazon has already committed to producing and distributing five seasons of the series, so it is going to be around for quite a while and would potentially be competing with any Lord of the Rings film produced in the next several years.

    But The Rings of Power is a prequel series, set thousands of years before the events of the novels and the original films. These upcoming movies from Warner Bros. could conceivably remake the films with a new cast, or build off them with sequels in some ways.

    Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit films grossed a combined $5.8 billion worldwide.

    Famous Movies That Got a 0 on Rotten Tomatoes

    It takes a very special kind of bad movie to get absolutely zero good reviews. These 20 titles have all done it.

    Matt Singer

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  • VFX Workers Say Marvel Prioritized ‘Wakanda Forever’ Over ‘Quantumania’

    VFX Workers Say Marvel Prioritized ‘Wakanda Forever’ Over ‘Quantumania’

    Marvel’s cinematic universe is built on superhuman spectacle. And all of those gravity-defying visuals have to be created by special effects — something that has earned the company some negative press in recent years for allegedly overworking (and underpaying) some of the artists who create the imagery for their films and television shows.

    Marvel continues to crank out upwards of half a dozen movies and Disney+ shows every single year — and, based on a new report that quotes anonymous VFX workers, they are not only competing with other studios and big-budget blockbusters for talent, they might even be competing with themselves as well.

    Two out of three sources quoted in an article at Vulture claim that VFX resources were diverted from Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania in order to give “priority” to Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, which was also being edited around the same time last year. One unnamed worker says that as far as they saw, “All the money went to [Wakanda Forever]. All the best resources went to that. It’s understandable given the context — with Chadwick [Boseman] and everything and how well the first film did. But it did diminish the ability to carry Ant-Man all the way through.” And a second worker confirmed that “Wakanda Forever took precedence … [Quantumania] was on the back burner — less of a pressing thing.” That second artist also claimed that two-second shots would sometimes “have to be redone 20 times to get the look that they want.”

    ANT-MAN AND THE WASP: QUANTUMANIA
    Marvel

    I have no insider knowledge of Marvel’s post-production process; I’m just a guy who watches everything that they make. And purely from an outside observer’s perspective, it does seem like the studios’s quality control has taken a dip in recent years, and particularly in the realm of visuals. Maybe it’s just because after 15 years of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, it takes more to impress me. But it does seem like there are fewer and fewer “Wow!” moments in these films and shows than there used to be.

    Whether that’s because of budget, or too many productions all at once leading to a shortage of skilled VFX workers, or something else entirely, I couldn’t say. Typically, visual effects get better and better all the time. That does not seem the case with Marvel’s productions lately. (In fact, it seems closer to the opposite.) And it’s a little surprising to hear that resources were supposedly diverted to Wakanda Forever from Quantumania, because I thought that some parts of the new Black Panther looked even more unpolished than Ant-Man.

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania is now playing in theaters. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is now streaming on Disney+.

    Sign up for Disney+ here.

    The Worst Billion-Dollar Blockbusters

    All of these movies grossed more than $1 billion at the box office. And they all stink.

    Matt Singer

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  • The Race Is On in New ‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Poster

    The Race Is On in New ‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Poster

    Universal and Illumination didn’t just make a Super Mario Bros. movie; they made a Mario Kart movie too.

    The new poster for the upcoming Super Mario Bros. Movie makes that very clear. Instead of just focusing on Mario (Chris Pratt) trying to save the Princess (Anya Taylor-Joy) and defeat Bowser (Jack Black) it shows Mario and a whole crew of racers zooming around on the iconic Rainbow Road track from the Mario Kart series.

    Here is the full Mario Kart poster for The Super Mario Bros. Movie:

    The film’s main trailer also ends with a brief glimpse of a Mario Kart sequence… but where are the references to Hotel Mario?!?

    The most recent trailer for the movie was a spoof of the old Super Mario Bros. Super Show opening titles and theme song. This film is going deep into the mythology of the Mario brothers.

    Here is the film’s official synopsis:

    From Nintendo and Illumination comes a new animated film based on the world of Super Mario Bros. Directed by Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic (collaborators on Teen Titans Go!, Teen Titans Go! To the Movies) from a screenplay by Matthew Fogel (The LEGO Movie 2: The Second Part, Minions: The Rise of Gru), the film stars Chris Pratt as Mario, Anya Taylor-Joy as Princess Peach, Charlie Day as Luigi, Jack Black as Bowser, Keegan-Michael Key as Toad, Seth Rogen as Donkey Kong, Fred Armisen as Cranky Kong, Kevin Michael Richardson as Kamek and Sebastian Maniscalco as Spike.

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie is scheduled to open in theaters on April 7.

    Every Video Game Movie Ever Made, Ranked From Worst to Best

    ScreenCrush Staff

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  • ‘Babylon’ Is Now on Streaming

    ‘Babylon’ Is Now on Streaming

    Based on the box office receipts, odds are you did not see Babylon, director Damien Chazelle’s ode to the silent era of Hollywood moviemaking. The film grossed just $15 million in U.S. theaters against a reported budget of $80 million. (For sake of comparison, Chazelle’s La La Land made almost $450 million worldwide against a $30 million budget.)

    But if you’re one of the many folks who liked La La Land and missed Babylon you have another chance; the film is now available on Paramount+. Chazelle’s epic — it clocks in at over three hours — follows a diverse group of characters as they navigate the years where cinema transitioned from silent filmmaking to sound. The cast includes Margot Robbie as a vivacious young starlet on the rise and Brad Pitt as a well-established, and extremely alcoholic leading man, trying to pull his career out of a tailspin.

    Despite a great cast, fascinating subject matter, and a critically acclaimed writer/director, Babylon fared just as poorly with critics as with audiences. It earned a 56 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and was nominated for only three Academy Awards: Best Costume Design, Best Original Score, and Best Production Design. In my own mixed review, I wrote:

    If nothing else, you have to appreciate that Chazelle has managed to make one of the few big-budget Hollywood films of the last few years that is about something other than superheroes or video game characters. Throughout, he wears his inspirations on his sleeve; long sequences play like a more serious version of Singin’ in the Rain; others have the drug-fueled energy of Boogie Nights. But the final product doesn’t measure up with either of those superior showbiz comic melodramas. Chazelle seems so enamored with his simulacrum of this forgotten world that he loses sight of the people in it.

    Still, I would definitely watch this movie again on streaming. For all the things that don’t work about it, there are others that do — and it is an incredible ambitious effort, even if I don’t think it’s a totally successful one. I could see it becoming a cult film over time, especially now that it’s widely available to stream on Paramount+.

    Sign up for a Paramount+ trial here

    The Real-Life Inspirations For the Characters in Babylon

    Here are the historical figures who inspired the fictional characters in Damien Chazelle’s Babylon.

    Matt Singer

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  • ‘Happy Death Day 3’ Would Be ‘Bigger’ Than the First Two

    ‘Happy Death Day 3’ Would Be ‘Bigger’ Than the First Two

    Happy Death Day was a very clever horror-movie version of the Groundhog Day formula. Happy Death Day 2U was a funny and scary sequel worthy of its title, which is maybe the best name for a horror sequel ever. So when are we going to get a Happy Death Day 3?

    According to Happy Death Day franchise director Christopher Landon, he’s wanted to do it. In fact, he told The Hollywood Reporter that if he could green light any project rattling around in his head, it would be Happy Death Day 3. But there’s a problem; Happy Death Day 2U did not perform as well at the box office as the first film. ($64.6 million worldwide versus $125.4 million.)

    Now $64.6 million for a relatively small horror film is not a terrible total. Unfortunately, from the way Landon is describing it, these films keep getting bigger, not smaller. As he described his concept for the third film…

    I have that movie in my head, and I know exactly what I want. It’s actually a bigger movie than the previous two films, and that’s part of the issue, ultimately. This third movie needs a bigger budget, but since the second movie didn’t perform as well as the first, it’s a tall order. But I’m still holding out hope that Universal will give me a chance because it would be a really fun conclusion.

    Happy Death Day 2U did leave a cliffhanger for a sequel, but it didn’t seem like a “bigger movie” in any meaningful way. I don’t know that what the franchise needed were more epic stakes anyway; the appeal of the first two movies were their repetition of these mundane characters running for their lives (and lives and lives). It’s not clear what the solution would be here, but I enjoyed both of the first two movies, and I would definitely like to see a third at some point.

    Landon’s new film, We Have a Ghost, premieres on Netflix on February 24.

    10 Horror Movies That Are Supposedly Cursed

    From mysterious on-set accidents to unexplainable audience reactions, these movies have all gained a reputation for being cursed.

    Matt Singer

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  • ‘Ant-Man: Quantumania’ Is the Worst Reviewed MCU Movie

    ‘Ant-Man: Quantumania’ Is the Worst Reviewed MCU Movie

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania had a very big weekend (we love size jokes when writing about Ant-Man movies, don’t we folks?) at the box office. The film grossed some $120 million in the United States over the President’s Day weekend, and some $240 million worldwide. That’s easily the best opening in the franchise’s history; Ant-Man grossed $57 million in its debut in 2015 and Ant-Man and the Wasp made $75 million in 2018.

    But if tons of people came out to see the film, some of them weren’t necessarily enthused with what they saw. The film earned a “B” from CinemaScore, which polls paying moviegoers on opening night. That’s way worse than the A and A- the first two Ant-Man films received, respectively.

    And Quantumania’s Rotten Tomatoes score keeps drooping lower and lower. Today it hit 47 percent — meaning it is now tied for the worst-reviewed film in the history of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. In 31 films to date, the only MCU movie that performed this poorly with critics is Eternals, which also has a 47 percent. If just a handful more critics weigh in with a few last-minute negative reviews, Quantumania will soon hold the title of worst-reviewed MCU movie all by itself. (Eternals is also the only MCU movie to get a B from CinemaScore, so don’t necessarily believe the folks who claim critics’ tastes are totally different from audience’s.)

    Here are the five lowest-reviewed films in the history of Marvel Studios:

    Among other things, that means that three of Marvel’s five worst-reviewed films were released in the last 18 months. That seems like a very ominous sign for a company that has long been defined by movies that were popular with audiences as well as critics. (The company never even had a movie rated “rotten” on Rotten Tomatoes before Eternals in the fall of 2018.)

    The biggest (yes, more size jokes) difference with Quantumania compared to the first to Ant-Mans was the decision to set it entirely in the Quantum Realm, and to shift the franchise’s priorities from small-scale action (you heard me, small scale) to a sci-fi epic introducing the new major MCU villain Kang. In my own (mixed-to-positive) review here at ScreenCrush I predicted that shift would make Quantumania “the most financially successful entry in the franchise” but also could be a choice that wasn’t to everyone’s taste. It looks like I was right on both fronts.

    So far, this recent string of poorly-reviewed Marvel films haven’t made a huge impact on the studio’s bottom line. But one does wonder how long Marvel can keep churning out movies like this before it does begin to affect audience turnout. The company will have its next test when Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 opens in theaters on May 5.

    Famous Movies That Got a 0 on Rotten Tomatoes

    It takes a very special kind of bad movie to get absolutely zero good reviews. These 20 titles have all done it.

    Matt Singer

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  • ‘Avatar 2’ Passes ‘Titanic’ For Third on All-Time Box Office List

    ‘Avatar 2’ Passes ‘Titanic’ For Third on All-Time Box Office List

    James Cameron just beat … James Cameron.

    It might have sounded like a pipe dream when the film was coming out — especially since it took over a dozen years for Avatar: The Way of Water to follow AvatarSupposedly, that movie left no cultural impact. No one remembered Avatar, even thought it became the biggest film of all-time. Avatar? What’s Avatar? Isn’t that that cartoon about people who can bend air?

    No. Avatar is Avatar. It‘s about wild blue aliens with braids that they stick in dragons and fly in the sky. And this weekend, Avatar: The Way of Water grossed $2.244 billion at the worldwide box office — good enough to pass James Cameron’s other massive blockbuster, Titanic, with its $2.243 billion worldwide. That makes The Way of Water the third-biggest movie ever — and means that two of the three biggest movies in history are Avatar movies. (And that three of the four biggest movies in history are James Cameron movies.)

    To commemorate the occasion, 20th Century Studios released this video:

    After continuing a slow, inexorable march up the all-time worldwide box office chart, this may finally be where Avatar: The Way of Water stays. The number two film on the list, Avengers: Endgame, has $2.799 billion — more than half a billion more than The Way of Water at present. That’s going to be a hard number to match. And the original Avatar is even farther ahead than that — it’s got $2.923 billion worlwide, a little less than $700 million more than its sequel at present. (For sake of comparison: That difference is about how much Captain America: The Winter Soldier made in its entire run in theaters.)

    Here’s what the all-time box office list looks like now that The Way of Water has unseated Titanic…

    The Biggest Box-Office Hits in History (Worldwide)

    These are the highest grossing films in the history of cinema.

    Avatar: The Way of Water is still playing in theaters. Avatar 3 is currently scheduled to open in theaters on December 20, 2024. Where do we think that one will wind up on this list?

    The Worst Billion-Dollar Blockbusters

    All of these movies grossed more than $1 billion at the box office. And they all stink.

    Matt Singer

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  • Another Fake Trailer From ‘Grindhouse’ Will Get a Movie

    Another Fake Trailer From ‘Grindhouse’ Will Get a Movie

    It’s still so wild that Grindhouse exists. It was an attempt by directors Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez to pay homage to and recreate the old experience of seeing exploitation movies by giving audiences two full feature-length movies for the price of one. (Naturally, the thing bombed despite the fact that it gave audiences double the bang for their buck.) To complete the illusion, the Grindhouse program was filled out with vintage theater bumpers along with trailers for movies that did not exist, including a couple from Tarantino and Rodriguez’ filmmaker friends.

    The faux trailers included Thanksgiving by Eli Roth, a spoof of holiday-themed horror films like Halloween or My Bloody Valentine. Improbably, more than 15 years after Grindhouse came and went from theaters, Roth is finally going to turn Thanksgiving into a feature-length film, with Patrick Dempsey reportedly in talks to star. Production is set to begin later this spring.

    Here is the vintage (and extremely graphic) trailer for Thanksgiving from Grindhouse:

    Thanksgiving will be the third fake trailer that appeared in Grindhouse to be turned into a full-length movie. Robert Rodriguez quickly made Machete with Danny Trejo into its own low-budget exploitation movie. (It even got a sequel, Machete Kills.) And a trailer for Hobo With a Shotgun, which was screened with the movie after winning a contest to create the best faux grindhouse trailer, later became its own movie as well.

    Roth was still in his early 30s at the time he made the Thanksgiving trailer, following his rapid rise among the ranks of young horror directors on the strength of his films Cabin Fever and the Hostel movies. In recent years he’s branched out a little bit with thrillers like the remake of Death Wish and the fantasy film The House with a Clock in its Walls. He recently directed the upcoming adaptation of the Borderlands video game franchise.

    The 10 Worst Horror Movie Cliches Of All Time

    While the horror film genre has expanded immensely over the past few decades, there’s still some annoying stereotypes that just won’t go away. Here are the worst clichés in scary movie history.

    Matt Singer

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  • ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’: All Our Biggest Unanswered Questions

    ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’: All Our Biggest Unanswered Questions

    This really should not need to be said but just in case. Yes, yes the piece on unanswered questions left by Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania contains spoilers for Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. Why I need to say this is a bit of an unanswered question in and of itself, but I digress…

    Ant-Man and the Wasp Quantumania is the first movie in Phase Five of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. By design, it is meant to leave some mysteries for the audience to puzzle over, in order to keep them curious about what comes next (in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 this May, followed by The Marvels in November). But this is a movie about time travel, alternate realities, variants, miniature universes, and impossibly intelligent ants. It’s bound to get at least a little confusing.

    So we here at ScreenCrush expect that most viewers will walk out of the theater after Quantumania with at least a few questions about Kang the Conqueror, about his plans, and about some specific elements of the plot. In the list below we’ve taken the ten biggest questions left by the movie and done our best to lay out potential answers for all of them.

    (Note they are potential answers. These are just our best educated guesses based on the movie, and the accumulated dork knowledge of decades of reading Marvel comics. If you want to disagree with us over on our Twitter or Facebook pages, be our guest.)

    Quantumania: All Our Unanswered Questions About the Movie

    Here are the parts of the Ant-Man sequel that we are still puzzling over.

    The Coolest Quantumania Easter Eggs

    There are some really obscure comic and movie references in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania — here are the best ones.

    Matt Singer

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  • Disney Movies May Spend Longer in Theaters Before Streaming

    Disney Movies May Spend Longer in Theaters Before Streaming

    Disney has apparently been thinking long and hard about giving their animated features a longer window in theaters before moving them over to Disney+. This whole hybrid approach to releasing movies is still pretty new, and it seems like Disney still has some kinks to work out. While the animated features they’ve been putting out have been getting decent responses from critics and fans, they aren’t raking in the big bucks like Disney anticipates.

    Perhaps the biggest examples of this whole issue are Lightyear and Strange WorldLightyear was in theaters for 47 days before it made its way over to Disney+, and during that time, it only narrowly made back its budget. But if you think that’s bad, check out what happened with Strange World… Despite stellar reviews pretty much all around, it was Disney’s first box-office bomb since 2007’s Meet The Robinsons. Since the specific budget isn’t public knowledge, it’s difficult to pinpoint exactly how much money the movie lost. Given the range they were likely to have spent, the film could have lost them as much as $150 million dollars.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, as Disney reassess its strategies under its new (and former) CEO Bob Iger “there is talk of longer theatrical windows for Elemental (June 16) and Disney Animation’s Wish (Nov. 22).” They also blame “confusion in the marketplace” about when and where movies debut for some of the company’s recent box office woes.”

    The weird thing about this whole situation, and where Disney may actually have the right idea, is that these movies go on to be fairly successful once they hit streaming services. In fact, Strange World became the most-streamed movie on Disney+ for a time. Using that information, it only makes sense that they wait much longer to put movies on streaming, as inconvenient as it would be for consumers who have gotten used to that model. At the very least, it would make sense if Disney waited about as long as they would when physical media like DVDs were still a huge driver of revenue.

    Either way, it seems like Disney is desperate for some good news. Maybe that’s why they recently announced sequels to Toy StoryFrozen, and Zootopia are all now in development.

    Sign up for Disney+ here.

    The Worst Billion-Dollar Blockbusters

    All of these movies grossed more than $1 billion at the box office. And they all stink.

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • New ‘The Marvels’ Poster Reveals the Film Has Been Delayed

    New ‘The Marvels’ Poster Reveals the Film Has Been Delayed

    When Marvel fans roll into theaters today to watch Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, they might spot a brand-new poster for The Marvels, the upcoming Marvel Cinematic Universe film that partners Brie Larson’s Captain Marvel with Iman Vellani’s Ms. Marvel and Teyonah Parris’ Monica Rambeau for a new cosmic team-up.

    But if they look closely at the poster they will see that the film’s release has been pushed back. Previously scheduled for a theatrical debut in late July of 2023, the movie will now premiere in early November.

    The poster also includes our first look at Parris’ new costume. It’s sort of hard to see on such a small image, but it looks like Ms. Marvel’s costume has been tweaked from the one she wore on the Ms. Marvel Disney+ series as well. (And by the by, Ms. Marvel’s casting a shadow that looks like the emblem on her costume is pretty cool.)

    With that change of release date, here is what the upcoming Marvel release calendar looks like. You may note that there are a lot of TV shows listed on here without firm release dates, including the very next MCU TV show, Secret Invasion.

    Marvel’s Upcoming Phase Five and Six Movie and TV Lineup

    Here’s every movie and show Marvel currently has scheduled for release in Phase Five and Six of their cinematic universe.

    Because of Marvel’s complex calendar, changing the release date of one film often requires the shuffling of their entire upcoming lineup. But in this case, Marvel didn’t have a film set for the fall of 2023. (They typically don’t release more than three films in a calendar year and this year they have Quantumania in February, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 in early May, and now The Marvels in the fall.)

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania is now playing in theaters. The next Marvel film, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 is still on track for its scheduled release date on May 5, 2023.

    Sign up for DIsney+ here.

    Every Marvel Cinematic Universe Movie, Ranked From Worst to Best

    It started with Iron Man and it’s continued and expanded ever since. It’s the Marvel Cinematic Universe, with 31 movies and counting. But what’s the best and the worst? We ranked them all.

    ScreenCrush Staff

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  • Liam Neeson Says Star Wars Has Been ‘Diluted’ By Spinoffs

    Liam Neeson Says Star Wars Has Been ‘Diluted’ By Spinoffs

    Liam Neeson has finally entered the Star Wars discourse in a big way, and it seems that he agrees with a hot take that tons of superfans already have. Being a Star Wars fan is difficult right now, and that’s not in regard to the quality of the media. It’s just the sheer quantity of it. First, we had the sequels trilogy. Then, there were standalone films, like Rogue One and Solo: A Star Wars Story. That’s aside from television shows like The MandalorianThe Book of Boba Fett, Obi-Wan Kenobi, and most recently, Andor. And then there are movies on the horizon, including projects under development from Taika Waititi and Kevin Feige.

    People were excited for more when there was a pretty sizable span of time without any new Star Wars media after the release of Return of the Jedi. Then, we got the prequel trilogy, which fans have a complicated relationship with. Then, things settled down again outside of an animated movie and a television series taking place during the Clone Wars. When Disney took over, it began to seem like multiple Star Wars projects were being put out every year. It seems they decided to take the Marvel approach and flood the market with their franchise. Some people can’t get enough of the expanded universe lore, while others aren’t so enthused. Liam Neeson revealed why in an episode of Watch What Happens Live!

    He was asked if he’d be interested in returning, and he said:

    “No, I’m not. There’s so many spinoffs of Star Wars. It’s diluting it to me, and it’s taken away the mystery and the magic in a weird way.”

    That contradicts an interview he had with ComicBook.com just last year when he was asked if he would return as Qui-Gon in the future.

    “Oh, I think so, yeah, yeah, yeah, I think so…if it was a film. Yeah, I’m a bit of a snob when it comes to TV, I must admit. I just like the big screen, you know? Qui-Gon, I can’t believe it’s 24 years since we made The Phantom Menace, I just cannot believe where the time has gone. It was a terrific experience, shooting that film in London.”

    It’s probably also worth noting that Liam Neeson did recently return to Star Wars, filming a cameo that appeared at the end of Obi-Wan Kenobi.

    The next Star Wars series is The Mandalorian Season 3, which premieres next month on Disney+.

    Sign up for Disney+ here.

    Every Star Wars Movie, Ranked From Worst to Best

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • The Worst Movies That Made $1 Billion

    The Worst Movies That Made $1 Billion

    Discerning moviegoers understand: A movie’s success at the box office is not indicative of (or even determined by) its artistic merit. Some of the greatest movies ever made became massive commercial flops. And every year, mediocre or flat-out awful movies attract massive crowds and generate millions upon millions of dollars in ticket sales.

    Still, I think most cinephiles like to imagine that there is at least some connection between quality and popularity. After all, a movie has to attract millions of customers to become a true blockbuster. And it doesn’t seem like a bad movie should be able to attain the kind of word-of-mouth popularity you need to generate sell-out crowds.

    But it happens. When you look at the list of the highest-grossing movies of all time, you see a shocking number of terrible films. To date, just 51 movies have grossed $1 billion at the worldwide box office, and in my subjective opinion at least a quarter of those are bad — and a few rank among the worst films Hollywood has produced in the last 50 years. For every Titanic or Top Gun: Maverick or The Dark Knight — blockbusters whose popularity speaks for itself — there are almost as many pieces of junk that, for one reason or another, still managed to catch on with audiences.

    Below are the ten worst offenders. By any measure that Hollywood studios care about, these movies were hits — all-time, record-breaking hits, in fact. But that didn’t make them good movies. Not even close.

    The Worst Billion-Dollar Blockbusters

    All of these movies grossed more than $1 billion at the box office. And they all stink.

    The Worst Movies Based On Good TV Shows

    Sometimes horrible movies happen to bad television series. Here are the worst offenders.

    Matt Singer

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