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Tag: Predator: Killer of Killers

  • ‘Predator: Badlands’ Filmmaker Dan Trachtenberg Signs First-Look Deal With Paramount

    Dan Trachtenberg, who has spent the last several years reviving and steering the Predator franchise for 20th Century Studios, is planting his flag at Paramount Pictures.

    The filmmaker has signed a three-year first-look directing and producing deal with the studio. He will develop, direct and produce feature projects with his producing partner, Ben Rosenblatt.

    The deal marks a return to the Melrose lot for Trachtenberg, who made his feature debut with 2016’s 10 Cloverfield Lane for Paramount. And it’s the latest big-name filmmaker deal for the David Ellison-owned Paramount, which is headed by co-chairs Josh Greenstein and Dana Goldberg.

    “As a kid I remember seeing the Paramount logo and dreaming of the epic adventure that would follow,” said Trachtenberg in a statement. “Now to have the opportunity to bring new huge and emotional stories to giant screens is a literally a dream come true. Ben and I cannot wait to join Dana, Josh, Don, and the entire Paramount team in pursuing our shared vision of making Paramount once again the apex of cinema.”

    Paramount, since being acquired last summer, has brought filmmakers and producers such as the Duffer Brothers (Stranger Things), Jon M. Chu (Wicked), James Mangold (A Complete Unknown), Issa Rae (Insecure) and JD Lifshitz and Raphael Marguelies (Barbarian) into the fold as its stocks up with cupboard with talent.

    Stated Greenstein and Goldberg: “Dan has an extraordinary ability to deliver films that are both daring and deeply entertaining. He has a rare instinct for tension, scale, and storytelling that connects with audiences worldwide. We’re excited to welcome him to the studio.”

    Trachtenberg is coming off the success of Predator: Badlands, the third of his Predator features. Released in November, Badlands became the highest-grossing entry in the franchise’s 38-year history, earning $184.5 million worldwide and surpassing the previous franchise record holder, 2004’s Alien vs. Predator ($177.4 million).

    That came on the heels of his animated feature Predator: Killer of Killers, which was released in June on Hulu. He first took on Predator with Prey, the 2022 movie that revitalized the franchise by taking it into the colonial West. The movie earned Trachtenberg two Emmy nominations, including outstanding directing for a limited series anthology or movie and outstanding writing for a limited series anthology or movie.

    Rosenblatt was a producer on the Snowpiercer and Ripley series, in addition to producing Trachtenberg’s Predator franchise films.

    Trachtenberg, who also directed the pilot for Amazon series The Boys, is repped by CAA, Untitled and Johnson Shapiro.

    Borys Kit

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  • 11 Fantastic Movies From 2025 to Catch Up on This Holiday Season

    You’re at home with your friends or family. The turkey is gone. The football game is over. The conversation is slowing. What can everyone do to keep the holiday spirit alive? Well, 2025 has been a pretty fantastic year for movies, and many of the best ones released this year are streaming right now in your home. Maybe you should watch one of those.

    But which one? Below, we’ve got 11 suggestions of sci-fi, horror, or fantasy films released this year that we love and maybe you missed. Some you probably didn’t miss. But we’re going under the assumption not everyone has seen everything, so even if you’ve seen something, maybe your brother or sister hasn’t. Here they are, in alphabetical order.

    Bugonia (for rent or purchase)

    Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons star in the latest film from director Yorgos Lanthimos about two men who kidnap a CEO they believe to be an alien. It’s super timely, very mysterious, and incredibly hilarious. Read our review here.

    Elio (on Disney+)

    It was kind of a box office bomb, but Pixar’s latest film, about a young boy who becomes the voice of the entire planet, is wildly exciting and heartwarming. It 100% lives up to its Pixar pedigree. Read our review here.

    Final Destination Bloodlines (on HBO Max)

    Maybe don’t show this one to Grandma and Grandpa, but the latest film in the tense, funny, gory horror series about the inevitability of death is easily the best film in the franchise. A total riot. Read our review here.

    Frankenstein (on Netflix)

    Frankenstein isn’t Guillermo del Toro’s best movie, but it’s the one he’s been building towards his whole life. It’s a sumptuous, emotional, and unforgettable retelling of the classic tale with wonderful performances across the board. Read our review here.

    How to Train Your Dragon (on Peacock)

    The original animated How to Train Your Dragon is one of the best animated films ever. So, that its live-action remake is also very good is no surprise. It’s the exact same movie, just with a whole new look. Read our review here.

    The Life of Chuck (for rent or purchase)

    We adore this movie. It’s not for everyone, and it gets very weird very quickly, but once it clicks and that lightbulb goes off over your head, you’ll never forget it. Mike Flanagan has become the master of Stephen King adaptations, and this wonderful, joyous King adaptation is so different from the rest. Read our review here, and learn more about some spoilers here.

    The Long Walk (for rent or purchase)

    A group of young men compete in a life-changing event where they have to march until only one remains. Based on the Stephen King novel, the film adaptation is shockingly brutal but well worth the trip for the harrowing performances. Read our review here.

    Predator: Killer of Killers (on Hulu)

    Did you see or hear about that awesome Predator movie, Predator: Badlands, that’s now in theaters? Well, its director, Dan Trachtenberg, released another Predator movie earlier this year, and it might be even better. It’s an animated anthology showing Predators fighting humans from across history. It’s phenomenal. Read our review here.

    Sinners (on HBO Max)

    Part music-driven masterpiece, part terrifying horror story, Sinners is unlike anything you’ve ever seen. But, we’ve come to expect that kind of quality and originality from the team of director Ryan Coogler and star Michael B. Jordan. Read our review here.

    Superman (on HBO Max)

    There have been so many iterations of Superman over the years, you could’ve assumed James Gunn’s new film was more of the same. But that’s not the case. Gunn’s film has a palpable joy about it. An optimism and excitement that so many superhero films these days are lacking. This is one you’ll want to watch again and again. Read our review here.

    Weapons (on HBO Max)

    Again, maybe this one isn’t for the more easily scared or grossed-out members of your family, but for others, Weapons is a can’t-miss. A horror mystery about a town that loses a whole classroom of kids is wholly entertaining and unforgettable. And messed up. And scary. And awesome. Read our review here.

    Also…

    If you want to go to theaters, there are also plenty of good movies to see. Yes, everyone might be seeing Wicked: For Good, and you could do that, but we’d suggest Predator: Badlands, Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery, The Running Man, or Zootopia 2 instead.

    Finally, we didn’t want this list to be too long, so if nothing on there interests you, here are a few others that didn’t quite make the cut: Pee Wee as Himself (on HBO Max), Jaws @ 50 (on Hulu or Disney+), 28 Years Later (on Netflix), or Black Phone 2 (for rent or purchase).

    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.

    Germain Lussier

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  • What Is Dan Trachtenberg’s ‘Predator’ Trilogy About?

    Not every franchise can have a comeback as consistently strong as what Predator is having right now. Beginning with 2022’s Preythe sci-fi horror series has found itself revitalized between that and this year’s Predator: Killer of Killers and Predator: Badlandsthe latter of which hit theaters this past weekend.

    Directing all three is Dan Trachtenberg, whose feature film debut was 2016’s 10 Cloverfield Lane. Along with each film giving longtime Predator fans things they’ve wanted or didn’t expect—like officially canonizing the term “Yautja” in these movies or Killer pitting the aliens against different historical factions—what binds them together are the thematic threads that run between specific pairs or the full trilogy and may define the filmmaker’s larger mission statement.

    The most prevalent theme explored in Trachtenberg’s trio is masculinity. Predator has always been about this to some degree—how can it not, when it’s got that handshake and features big dudes picking fights to stroke their egos and blowing themselves up when things don’t go to plan?—and it’s all over Prey and Badlands in particular.

    Badlands’ protagonist Dek is deemed a lesser Yautja owing to his small size, a status so humiliating in Yautjan culture his father Njohrr considers his son too weak to survive and wants to just kill him. Meanwhile, Prey’s Naru longs to be a hunter alongside her brother Taabe, but she’s impeded mainly by the other young men in their Comanche tribe, who try to physically or verbally prevent her from proving herself. She can’t join them because she’s a woman, but she thinks the other Comanche women’s duty of foraging and healing is a lesser act.

    Predator Killer Of Killers Viking

    Prey and Badlands explore masculinity from different angles: the former posits that Naru needs to use both her hunting and foraging skills if she’s to defeat the Feral Predator, who otherwise tears through the Comanche, the French fur traders, and the local animal population with a degree of curiosity and cockiness. Yautja have always been likened to big game hunters whose advanced technology enhances the mean streak they have for killing things. But when they mess up, they really mess up; Prey’s Feral Predator almost meets his end just going up against a wolf and a bear, and there’s a similar arrogance in Dek. Despite declaring he won’t fail in killing a beast to redeem himself, he’s humbled within minutes of crash landing on Genna when the local flora steal most of his gear and nearly do him in then and there.  

    Of the two, Badlands’ jabs at masculinity are sharper and hit harder owing to Dek being the first Predator protagonist in these films. Like Naru, he’s positioned by Trachtenberg as an underdog, which likely wasn’t a coincidence, since the director’s mentioned almost pairing the two together. Instead, Dek’s allies are the bisected Weyland-Yutani synthetic Thia and a Gennan creature dubbed Bud. Dek takes pride in his people’s ethos of survival through strength and solidarity, which is established at the start of the film with an opening epigraph. But he also does some reconsidering when Thia asks him a simple question that challenges his whole worldview: “Who would want to survive on their own?” He eventually repays the kindness of Thia and his brother Kwei, who died protecting Dek against their father, in the film’s climax by using Genna’s wildlife to save her.

    Predator Badlands Dek
    Dek on the hunt. – Fox

    People are nothing without community, as emphasized in Killer of Killers and Badlands. The animated film’s three leads—Viking warrior Ursa, airman John Torres, and exiled shinobi Kenji—all fight their respective Predators with allies by their side. None of them have the honor of surviving, but they give the heroes a shot they otherwise might not have if they worked alone, and when they’re forced to fight each other for the amusement of spectating Yautja, they decide to work together to escape. Language barrier be damned, the three of them watch each other’s backs, and almost all get away, with Kenji and Torres flying off thanks to Ursa staying behind. She ends the film in suspended animation again, but Killers establishes that the Yautja capture anyone who’s killed a Predator, including Naru, but also Dutch and Harrigan (the respective leads of the first two Predator movies), so she’s not entirely on her own.

    “It’s good to have friends, so quit being a jerk” is an interesting pivot for the Predator films to make, and it’s telling that all three films close on the promise of community. Those endings may tease ominous things for the characters—Kenji and Torres look well and truly screwed against a legion of Yautja ships, ditto Dek squaring off against his mother—but the underlying message Trachtenberg establishes here gives Predator some potentially fun new tools to play with as it continues gloriously doing its own thing.

    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.

    Justin Carter

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