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Tag: the iron claw

  • Box Office: ‘Wonka’ Leads New Year’s Waltz as ‘Aquaman 2’ Continues to Sink

    Box Office: ‘Wonka’ Leads New Year’s Waltz as ‘Aquaman 2’ Continues to Sink

    Wonka is winning the long New Year’s weekend box office race as a tumultuous 2023 comes to a close.

    The Warner Bros. origin pic — starring Timothée Chalamet as young candymaker Willy Wonka — is on course to gross $31.8 million for the four-day holiday weekend, putting its domestic tally at a sweet $142.5 million through Monday. And it wasn’t the only musical from Warners to hit the right note. The Color Purple, produced by Oprah and Steven Spielberg, has been doing better-than-expected business since opening on Dec. 25, and placed No. 4 on the New Year’s weekend chart with an estimated $17.7 million for the four days. The film’s estimated domestic tally through Monday is an impressive $50 million.

    Two weeks ago, box office pundits weren’t sure whether domestic revenue could clear $9 billion after a brutal fall season. But thanks in particular to mid-range and smaller films that overperformed over Christmas, revenue was able to eke past $9 billion in a post-pandemic era first. That marks a 20 percent gain over 2022. The bummer: Revenue is still down 20 percent to 21 percent from 2019, the last year before the COVID-19 crisis.

    Wonka, which launched in mid-December, emerged as this year’s Christmas box office winner when Warners’ very own Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom sunk in its box office debut over the Dec. 22-25 weekend and failed to recover in a meaningful way even though it stayed high up on the chart. The DC superhero sequel is looking at a No. 2 finish over New Year’s weekend with an estimated Friday-Monday gross of $26.3 million.

    That would put Aquaman 2‘s domestic tally through Monday at a lackluster $84.7 million — compared to $215.4 million earned by the first Aquaman through New Year’s Day over the year-end holidays in 2018. Both films were directed by James Wan and star Jason Momoa in the titular role.

    After a sluggish start over Christmas weekend, Illumination and Universal’s Migration held in steadily for an estimated domestic total of $59.4 million through New Year’s Day after placing No. 3 for the long weekend with a four-day gross of $22.3 million. Its domestic total is ahead of the $55 million earned over the 2022 year-end holidays by Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, which topped out with a strong $186.1 million domestically. Globally, Migration has earned $100 million (it’s been soft overseas).

    The Color Purple, from Warners and Amblin, got off to a dazzling start Christmas Day with $18 million, the second-best opening ever for a film launching Dec. 25 and the best since 2009, not adjusted for inflation.

    Wonka and The Color Purple appear to reverse the musical curse of recent times, and their success is good news for Paramount’s upcoming Mean Girls and Universal’s 2024 Christmas event pic Wicked.

    The troubled rom-com genre also got a boost with Sony’s edgy holiday entry Anyone but You, which rounded out the top five with an estimated $11.5 million for the four days to push its domestic tally to $27.6 million.

    MGM and Amazon’s George Clooney-directed The Boys in the Boat followed at No. 6 on the four-day holiday chart with $11 million for an estimated domestic total of $24.6 million through Monday.

    A24’s wrestling drama The Iron Claw placed No. 7 with an estimated $6.9 million for the four days. The Zac Efron-led pic’s cume through Monday is a pleasing $18.2 million.

    Neon’s Ferrari placed No. 8 over New Year’s weekend with an estimated $5.2 million for the four days for an early domestic tally of $12.1 million. Like The Color Purple and Boys in the Boat, Ferrari opened Christmas Day.

    More to come.

    Pamela McClintock

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  • Box Office: ‘The Color Purple’ Trounces ‘Aquaman 2’ With Near-Record $18M Christmas Day Opening

    Box Office: ‘The Color Purple’ Trounces ‘Aquaman 2’ With Near-Record $18M Christmas Day Opening

    The Color Purple has brought some much-needed cheer to the year-end holiday box office.

    The musical — whose producers include Oprah and Steven Spielberg — opened to $18.1 million from 3,142 theaters on Monday, the second best showing ever for a movie opening on Christmas Day and the best since 2009. Fantasia Barrino, Taraji P. Henson, Danielle Brooks and Colman Domingo star in Blitz Bazawule’s retelling of the beloved Alice Walker novel, adapted from the Tony-winning Broadway show.

    The record-holder for biggest Christmas Day opening belongs to 2009’s Sherlock Holmes ($24.6 million), not adjusted for inflation.

    The George Clooney-directed The Boys in the Boat, another film opening on Christmas Day, also did notably better than expected with $5.7 million from 2,557 locations. The MGM and Amazon adult drama, starring Joel Edgerton and Callum Turner, joined The Color Purple in earning an A CinemaScore. Michael Mann’s Ferrari, also opening on Dec. 25, earned $2.9 million from 2,330 sites after receiving B CinemaScore.

    While The Color Purple easily trounced James Wan’s Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom‘s Monday gross of $10.6 million, Aquaman 2 is the overall winner of the long Christmas weekend with a four-day opening of $38.3 million from 3,706 theaters domestically. But the superhero sequel — which was also slapped with a meh B CinemaScore — doesn’t have much to crow about after posting one of the lowest starts in the history of the DC Cinematic Universe. The Jason Momoa-led superhero sequel fared better overseas with $80.1 million from 72 markets, with the largest chunk, or $30.4 million, coming from China.

    In 2018, the first Aquaman was the king of the year-end holiday when swimming to a three-day opening of $67.9 million over the Dec. 21-23 weekend. Through Christmas Day, which fell on a Tuesday that year, its domestic tally was a rousing $105.4 million (it earned $22 million on Dec. 25). The movie went on to earn $335.1 million domestically and $1.15 billion globally, the best showing ever for a DCEU title, not adjusted for inflation.

    Wan’s movie lends further credence to the superhero fatigue theory. Aquaman 2‘s opening trails the recent $46.1 million start of box office debacle The Marvels from rival Marvel Studios.

    This year’s Christmas box office feast was a mixed blessing. Revenue for the four-day weekend was up 11 percent over the same stretch in 2022, but down 46 percent from 2019, which is considered a key pre-pandemic benchmark. And revenue for the three-day weekend (Dec. 22-24) was up 1 percent over 2022, but down 62 percent behind 2022. Making year-over-year comparisons can be tricky when it comes to the year-end holiday, since Dec. 25 is a moving target.

    Warners definitely dominated this year’s holiday marquee, between Aquaman 2, Wonka (also a musical), and The Color Purple.

    Wonka, which opened the weekend before the holiday, placed No. 2 on the four-day holiday chart with a take of $28.4 million from 4,213 sites for a domestic cume of $85.9 million. The Timothée Chalamet-led movie is dazzling overseas, where it has earned $171.3 million to date, for a global tally of $257.2 million through Monday. Wonka and Color Purple are proving that musicals may not be an endangered species after all, and it’s no small feat that The Color Purple placed No. 3 on the holiday chart considering it played just one day.

    Coming in No. 4 on the four-day chart was Illumination and Universal’s animated family pic Migration. The tentpole is reporting a four-day opening of $17.5 million, the lowest start in Illumination’s history. The movie is doing muted business so far overseas, for a projected foreign tally of $22 million from 43 markets through Sunday.

    The final verdict on Migration won’t be rendered until New Year’s weekend, as there is no more lucrative stretch of the movie going year than the week between Christmas and New Year’s. Still, Disney was skewered when Wish posted a five-day start of $32.5 million over Thanksgiving last month.

    As with the superhero genre, there is concern across Hollywood about the animated theatrical marketplace.

    Columbia/Sony’s edgy romantic-comedy Anyone But You unwrapped a fifth-place finish with an estimated $8 million from 3,055 theaters for the four days. The new pic, starring Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell, earned a B+ CinemaScore. (No studio likes anything other than some variation of an A grade for most movies.)

    Females made up nearly 80 percent of all patrons buying tickets to see Anyone But You, while males made up at least 66 percent of A24’s Zac Efron-led wrestling drama The Iron Claw, which placed No. 6 with a better-than-expected $6.8 million from 2,774 cinemas.

    At the specialty box office, Searchlight Pictures opened Andrew Haigh’s acclaimed All of Us Strangers in four locations in New York and Los Angeles. The awards contender is looking at an estimated location average of $36,000 for four days, the highest of any film on the Christmas weekend chart.

    Pamela McClintock

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  • Box Office Humbug: ‘Aquaman 2’ Opening to $38M-$40M in U.S. But Swims to $80M Overseas

    Box Office Humbug: ‘Aquaman 2’ Opening to $38M-$40M in U.S. But Swims to $80M Overseas

    Christmas revenue at the domestic box office is running behind 2022, a sobering stat as Hollywood studios and theater owners prepare to ring out a topsy-turvy year.

    As it stands now, combined ticket sales in North America for the marquee holiday weekend (Dec. 22-Dec. 25) are down 7 percent from last year, although the gap could close somewhat if traffic picks up in earnest on Christmas afternoon once presents are unwrapped. (Studios never like it when Dec. 25 falls on a Monday, since many consumers use the weekend to finish final yuletide preparations.)

    Either way, James Wan’s Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom is headed for one of the lowest starts in the history of the DC Cinematic Universe with a projected four-day domestic gross of $38 million to $40 million, including $27 million to $28 million for the three days (numbers will be updated Monday morning.) The good news: It can still claim a No. 1 finish. Overseas, it took in $80.1 million from 72 markets — including a promising $30.4 million in China, where it turned in the biggest start of the year for a Hollywood superhero pic.

    The big-budget tentpole, reteaming Wan and star Jason Momoa, has been largely rebuked by critics and only earned a B CinemaScore from audiences. The sequel, which faced a troubled road to the big screen, marks the end of an era as new DC chiefs James Gunn and Peter Safran are set to reboot the DC Universe with 2025’s Superman: Legacy. (Momoa himself has all but said there won’t be an Aquaman threequel.)

    In 2018, the first Aquaman was the king of the year-end holiday when swimming to a three-day opening of $67.9 million over the Dec. 21-23 weekend. Through Christmas Day — a Tuesday that year — its domestic tally was a rousing $105.4 million (that included several million in special sneak peeks the previous weekend). The movie went on to earn $335.1 million domestically and $1.15 billion globally, the best showing ever for a DCEU title, not adjusted for inflation.

    Wan’s movie lends further credence to the superhero fatigue theory. Even the most ardent fanboys are weary. Aquaman 2 is also trailing the recent $46.1 million opening of box office debacle The Marvels from rival Marvel Studios.

    A slew of other films also opened Friday, and the Warners empire is feeling particularly giving. The studio has no fewer than three year-end holiday event movies: Aquaman 2; Wonka, which opened last weekend; and The Color Purple. It’s a daring feat, to say the least, as the latter two are musicals. (Like The Color People, several other holiday titles waited until Monday to unfurl, including The Boys in the Boat and Ferrari.)

    In yet another test of the appetite for theatrical animated fare, and especially original stories, Illumination and Universal are contributing Migration to the holiday mix for families.

    The animated tentpole, which earned an A CinemaScore, is expected to earn $12.5 million for the weekend proper from 3,761 theaters and $17.2 million for the four days, ahead of what some tracking services had predicted but still the lowest start in the history of Illumination, not adjusting for inflation. The movie is doing muted business so far overseas, for a projected foreign tally of $22 million from 43 markets through Sunday.

    The final verdict on Migration won’t be rendered until New Year’s weekend, as there is no more lucrative stretch of the movie going year than the week between Christmas and New Year’s.

    Migration is looking at a No. 3 weekend finish behind Aquaman and Wonka. Starring Timothée Chalamet, Wonka is on course to earn an estimated $28 million.

    Columbia/Sony’s edgy romantic-comedy Anyone but You is unwrapping a fourth-place finish with an estimated $8 million from 3,055 theaters for the four days. The new pic, starring Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell, earned a B+ CinemaScore. (No studio likes anything other than some variation of an A grade for most movies.)

    Females make up nearly 80 percent of all patrons buying tickets to see the rom-com, while males make up at least 66 percent of A24’s Zac Efron-led wrestling family drama The Iron Claw, another title on the Christmas marquee movie. Iron Claw is pacing to open to $6.1 million, also slightly ahead of tracking.

    At the specialty box office, Searchlight Pictures opened Andrew Haigh’s acclaimed All of Us Strangers in four locations in New York and Los Angeles. The awards contender is looking at an estimated location average of $43,000 for four days, one of the best averages of the year.

    Final numbers for the four-day weekend will be released on Tuesday.

    Dec. 24, 8 a.m.: Updated with revised weekend estimates.
    Dec. 24 8:10 a.m.: Updated with revised estimates.

    This story was originally published on Dec. 23 at 8:23 a.m.

    Pamela McClintock

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  • ‘Iron Claw’ Director Didn’t Include One Von Erich Brother Because His Death ‘Was One More Tragedy That the Film’ Couldn’t Withstand

    ‘Iron Claw’ Director Didn’t Include One Von Erich Brother Because His Death ‘Was One More Tragedy That the Film’ Couldn’t Withstand

    The Iron Claw” revolves around the Von Erich family, a dynasty of professional wrestlers who made history in the intensely competitive sport in the early 1980s. Based on a true story, the A24 drama features Von Erich brothers Kevin (Zac Efron), David (Harris Dickinson), Kerry (Jeremy Allen White) and Mike (Stanley Simons). One brother, however, was omitted from the film altogether: Chris Von Erich.

    In a recent interview with the Los Angeles Times, “Iron Claw” filmmaker Sean Durkin explained why he decided not to include the youngest Von Erich, who also wrestled but struggled to match his brothers’ success due to his asthma and brittle bone condition. He died by suicide in 1991 at age 21.

    “There was a repetition to it, and it was one more tragedy that the film couldn’t really withstand,” Durkin said of a version that included all the brothers. “I honestly don’t know if it would have gotten made.”

    The pro-wrestling family was plagued with a series of tragedies that became known as the “Von Erich curse”: David died suddenly in 1984 at age 25, and both Mike and Kerry died by suicide in 1987 and 1993 respectively. These deaths are seen through the eyes of Kevin, the sole surviving Von Erich brother, in “The Iron Claw.”

    “Chris was in the script for five years,” Durkin said, adding that removing Chris from the final version was “an impossible choice” that he fought against for a while.

    Durkin also decided not to contact Kevin until he finished writing his script.

    “When you’re trying to get a film made, you have to separate it at some point and say, ‘These are characters on a page, and this is a film, and there’s no way you’re going to fully capture the life of a person in a film,’” Durkin explained. “You have to make difficult choices to try and get to something truthful or representative or emotional that reflects the core of the journey you’re choosing to tell within this family.”

    “The Iron Claw” is currently in theaters.

    Michaela Zee

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  • Box Office: ‘Aquaman and the Last Kingdom’ Finding Lump of Coal With $40M-Plus Christmas Opening

    Box Office: ‘Aquaman and the Last Kingdom’ Finding Lump of Coal With $40M-Plus Christmas Opening

    DC’s James Wan’s Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom is headed for one of the lowest starts in the history of the DC Cinematic Universe with a projected four-day Christmas weekend gross in the $40 million to $45 million range. The good news: It can still claim a No. 1 finish and is faring slightly better than leading tracking services had predicted.

    The movie earned an estimated $13.7 million Friday from 3,706 theaters, including $4.5 million in Thursday previews. Hollywood studios are never happy when Christmas Day falls on a Monday since the weekend box office has to compete with final Christmas preparations, including travel and gift buying.

    However, Aquaman 2 has larger issues than just that. The big-budget tentpole, reteaming Wan and star Jason Momoa, has been largely rebuked by critics and only earned a B CinemaScore from audiences. The sequel, which faced a troubled road to the big screen, marks the end of an era as new DC chiefs James Gunn and Peter Safran reboot the DC Universe with 2025’s Superman: Legacy. (Momoa himself has all but said there won’t be an Aquaman threequel.)

    In 2018, the first Aquaman was the king of the year-end holiday when swimming to a three-day opening of $67.9 million over the Dec. 21-23 weekend. Through Christmas Day — a Tuesday that year — its domestic tally was a rousing $105.4 million (that included several million in special sneak peeks the previous weekend). The movie went on to earn $335.1 million domestically and $1.15 billion globally, the best showing ever for a DCEU title, not adjusted for inflation.

    Wan’s movie lends further credence to the superhero fatigue theory. Even the most ardent fanboys are weary. Aquaman 2 is also trailing the recent $46.1 million opening of box office debacle The Marvels, from rival Marvel Studios.

    A slew of other films also opened Friday. Warners has no fewer than three year-end holiday event movies — Aquaman, Wonka, which opened last weekend, and The Color Purple — a daring feat (to boot, two are musicals).

    In yet another test of the appetite for theatrical animated fare, and especially original stories, Illumination and Universal are contributing Migration to the holiday mix for families.

    The family pic, which earned an A CinemaScore, is expected to earn $13 million for the weekend proper from 3,761 theaters and $18 million for the four days, also ahead of what some tracking services had predicted.

    The final verdict for Migration won’t be rendered until New Year’s weekend. There’s no more lucrative stretch of the moviegoing year than the week between Christmas and New Year’s.

    Migration will come in No. 3 behind Aquaman and Wonka, as the Timothée Chalamet starrer is projected to gross a pleasing $30 million for the four days.

    Columbia/Sony’s edgy romantic-comedy Anyone but You is unwrapping a fourth-place finish with an estimated $9 million from 3,055 theaters for the four days. The pic, starring Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell, earned a B+ CinemaScore. (No studio likes anything other than some variation of an A grade for most movies.)

    Females made up 67 percent of Friday ticket buyers, while males made up 66 percent of A24’s Zac Efron-led wrestling family drama The Iron Claw, another title on the Christmas marquee movie. Iron Claw is pacing to open to $8 million, also head of tracking.

    Estimates could shift by Sunday morning.

    More to come.

    Pamela McClintock

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  • ‘The Iron Claw’ Star Harris Dickinson Says His Mother Is Puzzled By the Tragic Pattern In His Roles

    ‘The Iron Claw’ Star Harris Dickinson Says His Mother Is Puzzled By the Tragic Pattern In His Roles

    [This story contains spoilers for The Iron Claw and A Murder at the End of the World.]

    Harris Dickinson is having a December to remember. 

    The rising English actor has concluded 2023 with two standout roles in Sean Durkin’s The Iron Claw and Brit Marling/Zal Batmanglij’s A Murder at the End of the World. In the former, Dickinson plays professional wrestler David Von Erich, the third of Fritz Von Erich’s (Holt McCallany) six sons, and the second out of five to suffer a tragic fate. The role has a lot in common with Dickinson’s other current role as Bill “Fangs” Farrah on A Murder at the End of the World, as both characters’ deaths set their respective stories in motion.

    Oddly enough, Dickinson has played the first major domino to fall on two other occasions, starting with 2021’s The King’s Man and then 2022’s Where the Crawdads Sing. Each death is central to their narrative, and in most cases, his characters still manage to maintain a presence in one way or another. However, this fateful pattern has come to irk Dickinson’s biggest fan: his mother.

    “It definitely hasn’t been lost on me. It’s a topic of conversation with my mum. She keeps wondering why this is a thing,” Dickinson tells The Hollywood Reporter. “I’ll probably think carefully before I do another one of those, because I don’t mean for them to keep happening like that. They seem to have lined up, weirdly.”

    Below, during a recent spoiler conversation with THR, Dickinson, who’s currently filming A24’s Babygirl with Nicole Kidman, looks back at the most emotional scene he shared with Zac Efron in The Iron Claw, before explaining Bill’s frustration with his partner in true crime, Darby Hart (Emma Corrin), in A Murder at the End of the World.

    So where did The Iron Claw fall on your timeline?

    I had just finished filming Murder at the End of the World in September of [2022], and then I went straight into Iron Claw. I had around a month before starting.

    Harris Dickinson in The Iron Claw

    A24

    As Sean and I discussed, biopics have to take creative license. You can’t include every wife and every child or, in this case, every brother. So did you focus mostly on the character details in the script? Or did you also incorporate real-life elements that weren’t scripted?

    Yeah, I did a pretty deep dive on David and the [Von Erich] family. I researched it for about three months before, and I tried to keep David’s mannerisms and who he was and how he spoke. I tried to find that pretty intensely. I wanted to do it justice. So, yeah, there were a lot of elements of him that weren’t in the film. I really wanted there to be a moment where we understood how much he loved his horses and the farm, but there wasn’t quite a moment for it.

    Fritz had a ranking system for his children, which is totally healthy. 

    (Laughs.)

    And David overtakes Kevin (Efron) at a certain point. Was his gift of gab the key to that happening? Or were there other factors at play?

    He was also a good wrestler. He was an all-arounder. He didn’t have the ripped, God-like physique of Kerry [Jeremy Allen White] or Kevin, but he certainly was a good wrestler. And like you said, he had the gift of gab, and he was confident. He had an ease about him. He was tall. He had a real presence and a real power to him and an aggression. He was good at promos. So that’s what got him through. 

    THE IRON CLAW, Jeremy Allen White (left), Harris Dickinson (pointing), Zac Efron as Kevin Von Erich (right), 2023

    The Iron Claw actors Jeremy Allen White (left), Harris Dickinson (pointing), Michael Harney and Zac Efron

    Everett

    Do you believe this family was cursed? Or did Fritz just drive them all to their breaking points as kids and adults?

    I don’t know about the curse, man. I think it was just real unfortunate circumstances and a real tragedy of events. They got pushed, and while things worked out in a way, it was almost like a knock-on effect from that first trauma that happened to them.

    How much of a footprint does this brand of professional wrestling have in England?

    The WWE was big, man. We had WWE in London a few times. They toured and came to the O2 [Arena], and I went to watch it as a kid. Rey Mysterio, John Cena, Big Show, all of the big stars made it over here, so it was big.

    [The next nine questions/answers contain spoilers for The Iron Claw and A Murder at the End of the World.]

    In the bathroom scene during the wedding reception, David didn’t know it’d be one of the last times he’d see Kevin, but did you still play it as if it was the last time he’d see him?

    No, Sean was like, “Don’t think about that. Just play the scene.” You can’t think about that, because I wouldn’t know. But in a sense, maybe, because we also wanted it to be more tender. Sean wanted it to be a gentle moment between them that we’ve never seen. So maybe we did try and adjust it a little bit in that sense.

    So I’ve noticed a trend in Iron Claw, The King’s Man, Where the Crawdads Sing and A Murder at the End of the World. In each story, you play a character whose dramatic death either sets everything in motion or establishes the deciding conflict. I presume this pattern is not lost on you?

    It definitely hasn’t been lost on me. It’s a topic of conversation with my mum. She keeps wondering why this is a thing. I’ll probably think carefully before I do another one of those, because I don’t mean for them to keep happening like that. They seem to have lined up, weirdly. 

    Shifting to Murder at the End of the World, did you shoot your limited present-day bits in Jersey and/or Iceland, and then reunite with everybody in Utah several months later?

    Yeah, I was in and out of Jersey for the whole shoot. I was popping in, popping out. We first shot in Iceland in March, and then at the end, it was just me and Emma on a little road trip in Utah. That was fun.

    A Murder at the End of the World

    A Murder at the End of the World stars Emma Corrin and Harris Dickinson

    Chris Saunders/FX

    Bill and Darby (Emma Corrin) began a relationship through a true crime subreddit, and then they took their show on the road to pursue a serial killer. And at a certain point, he got frustrated that she was more interested in the case than their budding romance. But considering that they met through true crime and she was basically raised in a coroner’s office, why was he so surprised by her commitment to the work? What did he really expect?

    After a while, he was scared of how intense she got with the case and how in depth it became and how risky she was being in confronting serial killers and stuff. It was way darker and more confronting than he ever thought it would get. So he became aware that she was never going to let him be with her in the close, intimate way that he had hoped for, emotionally. It just wasn’t going to be there. 

    Emma told me the other day how when you were shooting at that diner in Utah, Zal Batmanglij told them to imagine Bill’s death during their first in-person meeting. It was motivated by the fact that you shot the death scene first. So prior to shooting your coverage of their first meeting, did Zal also tell you to imagine Bill’s last time seeing Darby as he lay dying on the hotel floor?

    No, he said, “Imagine you’ve known this person your whole life, but you’re seeing them for the first time.”

    You probably had strong feelings about AI once you wrapped the show, but have those feelings only intensified over the course of the last year, as AI became a major issue in this industry?

    Yeah, it’s definitely way more poignant now than it was when we were filming. It’s become a bit more frightening. It’s interesting because I really love technology and I’m interested in the development of it, and that’s why I liked playing Fangs/Bill. He had a deep critique of it with his work, but he was also reliant on it in some ways. He was a computer specialist and a computer hacker, so he was very much in that world of tech. So there’s a real dichotomy of interests, and that’s the same for me. I’m deeply intrigued by it, but I’m also frightened by it. 

    When you hear someone sneeze now, do you instantly check to see if there was a change in light nearby?  

    (Laughs.) Yes, and I’ve noticed that I actually do sneeze when I hit bright sun, which is scary because it’s a real thing.

    So you likely have that very rare condition, whatever it’s called.

    Autosomal Dominant Compelling Helioopthalmic Outburst.

    Wow, you didn’t just memorize your lines; you truly learned them. Impressive. 

    (Laughs.)

    [Spoilers for The Iron Claw and A Murder at the End of the World have now concluded.]

    To close things out with Iron Claw, what day will you likely recall first when you reminisce decades from now?

    The day where we all wrestled the Freebirds. We had a three-man tag team match. Zac [Efron], Jeremy [Allen White] and I got to go at it for ten minutes of the match and just do it together. The crowd was roaring, and it felt like a real moment. Rush’s “Tom Sawyer” was playing, and we were really in it. It was really fun.

    Harris Dickinson The Iron Claw

    Jeremy Allen White and Harris Dickinson The Iron Claw

    A24

    A Murder at the End of the World also played its needle drops on set, such as Annie Lennox’s “No More ‘I Love You’s’” and Frank Ocean’s “Moon River.” Is it quite helpful when that happens?

    Yeah, it’s so helpful. It sets a mood and a tone for the scene and the day. When music and film coincide, they meet in this beautiful place, so it helps.

    ***
    The Iron Claw is now playing in movie theaters.

    Brian Davids

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  • ‘The Iron Claw’ director talks tragedy, power of Zac Efron and toxic masculinity – National | Globalnews.ca

    ‘The Iron Claw’ director talks tragedy, power of Zac Efron and toxic masculinity – National | Globalnews.ca

    The Iron Claw, starring some of Hollywood’s buzziest actors of the moment, Zac Efron and Jeremy Allen White, is easily one of the most anticipated movies of the year.

    Directed by Canadian-American Sean Durkin, the film, which explores the epic highs and tragic downfalls of the Von Erich family of wrestlers, is based on a true story. Led by patriarch Fritz Von Erich (played by Holt McCallany), the movie follows the family as Fritz’s sons follow his footsteps into the ring.

    Repeated tragedies haunt the family. Even before the events on screen, the family was thought to be cursed.


    Still from the movie ‘The Iron Claw.’ (L-R) Harris Dickinson as David Von Erich, Zac Efron as Kevin Von Erich, Stanley Simons as Mike Von Erich and Jeremy Allen White as Kerry Von Erich.


    Courtesy of Elevation Pictures

    The movie starts as a fun, nostalgic romp through the ’70s and ’80s, but quickly goes down a dark path and never turns back.

    Story continues below advertisement

    The Iron Claw tells a cautionary tale of toxic masculinity and intergenerational trauma, showing the lengths a son will go to in pursuit of his father’s dream, and the ultimate price paid when he fails to achieve them.

    The movie feels emotionally blunted by design, leaving viewers in a limbo of stoicism until its eventual cathartic release. The Von Erich family displays an unsettling lack of emotion, by order of its patriarch, and an unwavering devotion to wrestling excellence, even as history repeats itself in the most painful ways imaginable.


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    And yet the movie still finds time for levity. Viewers are sure to delight in the over-the-top hairstyles and costumes, ’80s graphics and ubiquitous rippling muscles. It’s impossible to not be charmed by the brotherly bond between the four Von Erich boys that grace the screen. (In real life there were five Von Erich brothers, but the stories of Mike and Chris Von Erich were combined into the character of Mike.)


    Still from the movie ‘The Iron Claw.’ (L-R) Harris Dickinson as David Von Erich, Jeremy Allen White as Kerry Von Erich, and Zac Efron as Kevin Von Erich.


    Courtesy of Elevation Pictures

    As Durkin puts it, this film is a story of tragedy, survival and “athletic glory.”

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    Durkin told Global News that the most challenging part of adapting the true story was “just how epic the story is.”

    “They’re such a huge family and have such an unbelievable history and things that happen to them, both the athletic glory and the tragedies and everything in between.”

    He hopes that the depiction of the Von Erichs’ “extreme world of wrestling” will help people connect to the “harmful” ideas of masculinity that isolated these boys and pushed them to the brink.

    “Although these ideas of masculinity have changed and things have gotten better, they’re still really dominant and really harmful,” he said.


    Sean Durkin attends the Los Angeles Premiere Of A24’s “The Iron Claw” at DGA Theater Complex on December 11, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.


    Tommaso Boddi/The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images

    Durkin also had praise for his cast, especially Efron, who “gave everything he had” and “fully committed” to this serious, dramatic role, a departure from Efron’s comedy roots.

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    “He just was amazing. He knew what it was. He knew what it had to be.”

    Durkin also noted that the film’s cast became close quite quickly, recounting how Efron and White started sparring in the wrestling ring almost immediately after meeting.

    “They got quite close wrestling because, within hours of meeting each other, they were in the ring, locking up,” Durkin said. “They just immediately hit it off and I think they both had so much respect for each other.”

    (Watch the full interview with Durkin, top.)

    ‘The Iron Claw’ is out in theatres across Canada on Dec. 22.

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Kathryn Mannie

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  • Zac Efron, Jeremy Allen White and Harris Dickinson on wrestling drama The Iron Claw

    Zac Efron, Jeremy Allen White and Harris Dickinson on wrestling drama The Iron Claw

    In The Iron Claw, Zac Efron, Jeremy Allen White, Harris Dickinson and Stanley Simons step into the ring to portray the Von Erich brothers who made history in the world of professional wrestling in the 1980s. Their story is that of extraordinary highs and lows. Directed by Sean Durkin, the film also chronicles their personal tragedies. During a press conference attended by Filmfare, the cast and filmmaker came together to open up about the film’s making.

    Zac Efron, best known for his roles in High School Musical and The Greatest Showman, admitted that he did not know much about the Von Erichs before he came on board to play Kevin Von Erich in the biopic film. He said, “I wasn’t aware of the Von Erichs before I read the script but after speaking with Sean, it seemed like that’s too much to happen to one person or one family. It didn’t feel as much like a wrestling movie as it did a really great movie about family and loss and being able to triumph over a crazy curse. It was really deep and I still can’t believe it.”

    When asked how the film compares to the experience of filming The Bear, Jeremy Allen White, who continues to win acclaim for his performance on the show, said, “The intensity of the kitchen vs the intensity of professional wrestling – it seemed like it wouldn’t be competitive. That would be the obvious answer. But I find both industries to be very competitive and anxiety-ridden. I will say that I found the process of filming The Iron Claw was less anxiety-inducing for me than The Bear.” White plays Kerry Von Erich in the film. 

    The Iron Claw

    Triangle of Sadness star Harris Dickinson, who plays David Von Erich, opened up about going down the rabbit hole and researching for the film. He shared, “It’s really tricky because there is so much content on the brothers. There’s material to go off of and find your rhythm. But there are versions where they are in promo mode or in the ring where it’s all heightened. There aren’t enough of them just talking or at the farm or at home. We had to wonder what that might have looked like. It can get pretty obsessive. I spent a lot of time watching and listening to them. It’s a strange thing. I remember David’s nieces came up to me and said ‘You’re a British guy, how the hell did you do Dave?’ But I think it was lovely, they received it very well.”

    The Iron Claw is set to release in theatres soon.

    Tanzim Pardiwalla

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  • Producers of ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Maestro,’ ‘Origin’ and More Oscar Contenders Talk the Toughest Tasks Behind the Scenes of Their Films

    Producers of ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Maestro,’ ‘Origin’ and More Oscar Contenders Talk the Toughest Tasks Behind the Scenes of Their Films

    Erika Alexander and Jeffrey Wright in Orion/Amazon MGM Studios’ American Fiction.

    Claire Folger/MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Producer Jermaine Johnson worked primarily as a literary manager for clients like first-time movie writer-director Cord Jefferson (whom he’s represented for close to a decade) before the pair collaborated on Jefferson’s darkly comic adaptation of the novel Erasure by Percival Everett, which Jefferson wrote on spec with Johnson’s encouragement. 

    Naturally, first-time filmmaking meant an inherent learning curve. “Day one was a tough day because Cord didn’t really feel qualified to tell Jeffrey Wright how to act,” Johnson recalls. “He did not feel like he was the guy for the job.” That meant adding pep talks to Johnson’s job description. “The conversation was, ‘Hey, man, Jeffrey wants to be directed. Actors want to collaborate and get in the clay with you,’ ” he says. “Next thing, he’s just in there, between takes, talking to Jeffrey, playing around with it. And they established a rapport, from day two on.”

    Shooting constraints prompted production to relocate from New York to the Boston area, where Jefferson would be able to film the scenes at Monk’s (Wright) family beach house in the Massachusetts coastal town of Scituate. “You start to crunch the numbers and think about what it takes to shoot in New York,” Johnson says. “Once we landed on Boston, it was a very quick yes.”

    Northeastern weather, however, proved one of the main production challenges. “I learned what it takes to light a beach at night. That is an extremely difficult task,” Johnson says of a scene in which Leslie Uggams, as Monk’s aging mother, wanders away from her home. Rigging lights amid 20-mile-an-hour winds proved nearly impossible. But for the 80-year-old actress, the wind was no problem. “We’ve got Leslie the legend out in this weather, and she is such a professional that she did as many takes as we needed,” Johnson says, adding that Uggams was “just the brightest light there.”

    Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Paul Giamatti in Focus Features’ The Holdovers.

    From left: Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Paul Giamatti in Focus Features’ The Holdovers.

    Seacia Pavao/Focus Features

    An Oscar winner for Rain Man, Mark Johnson wasn’t cowed by Alexander Payne’s rigorous commitment to getting his story right. But The Holdovers, set in a New England boarding school over Christmas break, proved a particular exercise in patience. “With Alexander, the script is understandably the most important part of moviemaking,” Johnson says. “He spent a lot of time [giving first-time feature writer David Hemingson feedback] on it.” One of the main developmental changes was expanding the character of grieving chef Mary, played by Da’Vine Joy Randolph. “I really do believe her performance is the heart of the movie,” he adds.

    Finding financing for a story on this scale — an intimate, humanist dramedy centered on Mary along with Paul Giamatti’s weathered teacher Paul Hunham and troubled schoolboy Angus (newcomer Dominic Sessa) — also proved a challenge: “It’s not a big, bombastic subject. Paul Giamatti has such great respect, but is he a big box office name? No,” says Johnson. But midscale films about life are “the movies that so many of us really enjoy,” he says. “These movies are harder and harder to put together. Movies that I’ve made from the very beginning, like Diner or even, quite frankly, Rain Man, I wonder how we would go about putting them together today?”

    Another challenge was location: The preppy Barton Academy where most of the movie takes place is actually a composite of multiple New England schools — though all that snow is, remarkably, very real (about “85 percent” of it, anyway). “I’ve had people come up to me after screenings saying, ‘Oh, I went to that school,’ ” says Johnson. “Well, no, they didn’t, because that school didn’t exist.”

    Harris Dickinson, Zac Efron, Stanley Simons and Jeremy Allen White in A24’s The Iron Claw.

    From left: Harris Dickinson, Zac Efron, Stanley Simons and Jeremy Allen White in A24’s The Iron Claw.

    Eric Chakeen/A24

    Writer-director-producer Sean Durkin had been obsessed with his drama’s subject matter — the Von Erich wrestling family — since an early age, having read about them in magazines and watched old tapes of their matches. When he began writing the script, he was very conscious of the constraints he would need to adhere to. “When I started out, I really did all the line producing myself,” says Durkin, whose films include Martha Marcy May Marlene (2011) and The Nest (2020). “I’ve never been able to separate financials. I’m so envious of writers who can just not worry about it. I’m very conscious of how to craft a world and to be aware of the type of budget [for] the film I’m making.”

    Most of the film takes place in the wrestling arena known as the Sportatorium or on the Von Erichs’ Texas ranch, and simulating those spots proved surprisingly difficult. Preparing to shoot in Louisiana, the scouting team had their work cut out for them. “We really covered the entire state to find the right feel for the ranch,” Durkin says. After landing in the Baton Rouge area, finding a warehouse that could house a wrestling stadium was equally tough. Production designer James Price “was going into every single building that could work size-wise, but it’d be the wrong shape inside, or the wrong texture.” The solution was found in a furniture showroom. “It was just a bunch of fake living rooms. We had to convince the place to let us clear out everything, knock down all the walls.”

    Zac Efron and the cast worked intensely to transform physically to play the Von Erichs, though Durkin didn’t require it. “I wanted them to feel comfortable getting to whatever shape they felt was best for the character,” he says. But for the wrestling, authenticity was key. “They had to learn how to wrestle all the way through from top to bottom, and do multiple takes,” he says, noting that he filmed matches live in front of an audience. “We got really lucky with the Baton Rouge crowd, because they were really into wrestling. It was really quite beautiful, that energy between the background [performers] and the actors.”

    Kristie Macosko Krieger, Maestro

    Bradley Cooper in Netflix’s Maestro.

    Bradley Cooper in Netflix’s Maestro.

    Jason McDonald/Netflix

    Kristie Macosko Krieger was originally planning to produce a Leonard Bernstein biopic directed by her longtime collaborator, Steven Spielberg, with Bradley Cooper signed on to star as the famed conductor and composer. When Spielberg made the decision to step away from the director’s chair, Cooper offered his own name as a replacement, and asked Spielberg and Krieger to watch an early cut of his directorial debut, A Star Is Born

    Krieger recalls, “Twenty minutes into the film, Spielberg got up and walked over to Bradley and said, ‘You’re directing this fucking movie.’ ”

    Cooper had a clear vision of the details he wanted to bring to Maestro, and he would not budge on any of them. “He was like, ‘We’re absolutely going to go over many time periods,’ ” Krieger says. (The film spans from the 1940s through the 1980s.) Cooper also worked with prosthetics designer Kazu Hiro for three and a half years to transform his face into Bernstein’s. “He wouldn’t stop until he got it right,” Krieger says.

    The film was shot on location in New York’s Carnegie Hall and Central Park, in England’s Ely Cathedral and at Massachusetts’ Tanglewood Estate. Some desired locations, however, were impossible to get. “We could not shoot in the Dakota apartment [on Central Park West],” she says. “Bradley wanted to re-create that to almost exactly what it looked like. He enlisted Kevin Thompson, our production designer, to build the entire Dakota set.”

    Cooper also insisted they shoot with live orchestras, which meant that the film could not shoot during the height of COVID and had to be postponed. “But again, he wasn’t compromising,” says Krieger. “He was like, ‘It will look better, it will be better, it will be the movie that I want to make.’ He made all of us better as department heads in figuring out this film, so none of us were settling, either.”

    Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy in Universal’s Oppenheimer.

    Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy in Universal’s Oppenheimer.

    Courtesy of Universal Pictures

    Emma Thomas has worked as a producer for her husband, Christopher Nolan, “on pretty much all of his films, ever,” as she puts it. “When I first read Chris’ script, I thought it was the best he’d ever written. It was very clear that he was approaching the story with a large scope in mind, as a blockbuster.”

    But despite Nolan’s pedigree and Oppenheimer’s seemingly endless scale, the biggest production challenge was working on a minimal budget. “It’s about very difficult and weighty subjects,” Thomas explains. “I wasn’t daunted by the things he was proposing shooting, but I knew that the only responsible way to make a film this challenging, that was inevitably going to be R-rated and three hours long, was to make it for a reasonable amount of money. And a reasonable amount of money was probably going to be about half of what anyone else would do it for.”

    Proposing a budget cut in half to department heads meant each sector of the crew had to find creative ways to consolidate resources. “Our production designer, Ruth De Jong, got really smart about ways in which she could build things, with a very targeted eye, building only what was necessary for the shots,” says Thomas. “Our DP, Hoyte van Hoytema, said, ‘There are things that I can do to go faster: to only have one camera, to do as much handheld as possible.’ Our actors were all on set all the time, ready to go as soon as the camera was ready. Those are things that added up to us being able to finish the film on this incredibly punishing schedule.”

    Building Los Alamos, the site of the atomic bomb’s creation, meant battling freezing temperatures in the mesas of New Mexico. “The weather was so cold, it was impossible to dig into the ground because it was frozen,” says Thomas. “We had snowstorms and windstorms. And that was just when we were building the town. Once we got the shoot there, we had another great big windstorm, and we weren’t even sure that the tents were going to stand.” But the production ultimately used the weather to its advantage. “It looks amazing on film — that shot of Cillian when he walks up to the Trinity Tower, and climbs up it, that’s real wind.”

    Paul Garnes, Origin

    Jon Bernthal and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor in Neon’s Origin.

    Jon Bernthal and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor in Neon’s Origin.

    Courtesy Array Filmworks

    Paul Garnes had worked as a producer with writer-director Ava DuVernay in the past, but it had been some time since the pair had operated outside the studio system. “In the early days, we were at Netflix,” he says. “[Origin] got caught up in the industry slowdown. Ava made the really bold choice to go out and make this independently.” 

    That decision made things more exhilarating and terrifying, Garnes says. “In every production, there’s some executive that you can call and say, ‘Hey, this is happening, what do we do?’ We didn’t have that. It was just me and Ava. We could really only depend on each other.”

    The film spans centuries and continents, with scenes in Berlin at the height of World War II, aboard slave ships in the 1600s and in the streets of contemporary India. The decision to finance independently meant working with local governments to shoot in as many historical locations as possible. “We weren’t going to build a bunch of sets on soundstages,” Garnes says. “Outside of the slave ship sequence, because obviously slave ships don’t exist, we shot everything else pretty much on location.”

    That made for some awkward asks. “Could we shoot a Nazi rally in downtown Berlin, in the place where that book burning in the Bebelplatz really happened?” says Garnes. “We didn’t know at the time, but they had never let anyone film there.” Filming also took place at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. “It’s a sensitive place. You don’t want to cause any stress or damage or anything to a place people visit in very solemn moments.”

    As a home base, production landed on Savannah, Georgia, where they were able to re-create a concentration camp. Bringing in those extras meant “Ava [taking] very careful time to get the background talent to understand what they were doing, who they were,” says Garnes. A sequence portraying the murder of Trayvon Martin was also filmed in that area, as well as scenes set in cotton fields in the 1930s South. 

    This story first appeared in the Dec. 7 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

    Kimberly Nordyke

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  • ‘The Bear’ Season 3 Eyes Winter 2024 Production Start; Jeremy Allen White Teases Carmy’s Fridge Escape

    ‘The Bear’ Season 3 Eyes Winter 2024 Production Start; Jeremy Allen White Teases Carmy’s Fridge Escape

    EXCLUSIVE: Deadline has learned that season 3 of FX/Hulu’s The Bear will commence production in late February-early March.

    We caught up with this year’s The Bear Emmy nominee/Golden Globe Best Actor Comedy TV series winner Jeremy Allen White aka young chef Carmen “Carmy” Berzatto on The Bear. White stars in the new A24 movie, The Iron Claw, as wrestler Kerry Von Erich aka “The Texas Tornado”. The movie about the tragedy-stricken wrestling Von Erich family opens on Dec. 22. At a time when the middle of the country needs more movies, here’s a sports drama that plays straight to the heartland.

    ‘The Iron Claw,’ Starring Zac Efron and Jeremy Allen White.

    Eric Chakeen/A24

    When we last saw Carmy last on The Bear, he was locked in a walk-in fridge during the restaurant’s ‘Friends and Family’ night, an interlude which Allen tells us he “hopes” the character escapes from in season 3. FX/Hulu recently announced a season 3 of the 13-Emmy nominated series.

    While Allen still has yet to see scripts, he’s hoping for a season 3 chockful of guest stars, one that rivals season 2 episode 6’s “Fishes” which saw a ton of noted TV and movie stars playing Carmy’s family members, i.e. Jon Bernthal (as Mikey, Carmy’s dead brother), Bob Odenkirk as Uncle Lee, Sarah Paulson as Cousin Michelle, John Mulaney as Cousin Michelle’s partner Stevie, Gillian Jacobs as Richie’s then-wife Tiffany, and Jamie Lee Curtis as Donna Berzatto, Mikey and Carmy’s alcoholic mother, as well as Carmy’s sister Natalie Berzatto (Abby Elliott), Uncle Jimmy (Oliver Platt), and Neil (Matty Matheson).

    The New York City native would love to see a season 3 episode where “we can get as many (guest stars) to come back for one day” ala “Fishes”. Allen tells us he would love to see Olivia Coleman’s Chef Terry come back. She was last seen in season 2’s Forks” as the proprietor of one of the finest restaurants in the world where Richie (Ebon Moss-Bacharach), temporarily works. Allen said he also loved to see Curtis return as Momma Donna. Allen’s dream guest stars include Oscar winner Sam Rockwell and Emmy winner John Turturro.

    Allen stars in The Iron Claw with Zac Efron (Kevin Von Erich), Harris Dickinson (David Von Erich), and Stanley Simons (Mike Von Erich) as the true-life fraternal family of wrestlers who were pressured by their domineering father and former wrestling legend Fritz (Holt McCallany) to succeed at all costs during the 1980s. Allen’s Kerry was a one-time NWA World Heavyweight Champion and four-time WCWA World Heavyweight Champion. Director Sean Durkin, who also wrote the movie, grew up in the UK as a die-hard U.S. wrestling fan; the Von Erichs’ fate an eerie resemblance of those in his own family.

    The Bear was created by Christopher Storer, and also stars Ayo Edebiri, Lionel Boyce and Liza Colón-Zayas. Matty Matheson was upped for season 2, while Edwin Lee Gibson, Corey Hendrix, Platt, Bernthal, José Cervantes, Richard Esteras, Carmen Christopher, Chris Witaske, Joel McHale, Curtis, Gillian Jacobs, Robert Townsend, Molly Gordon, Alex Moffat, Ricky Staffieri, Mitra Jouhari and Maura Kidwell recur.

    anthonypauldalessandro

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  • The Iron Claw is Already the Hottest Movie of the Year

    The Iron Claw is Already the Hottest Movie of the Year

    The SAG strike has been a long and difficult road for us all: the actors who are striking, the stubborn execs who just need to give in and make a deal already, and us, the lovers of cinema, who have had to endure so much. Movie after movie has been pushed to 2024, from Dune: Part 2 to Challengers, depriving us of not one… but two, Zendaya press tours.


    And some long-awaited shows can’t start filming, delaying their releases: White Lotus Season 3 won’t grace our screens until 2025…And the final season of Stranger Things won’t premiere on Netflix until 2027 — I genuinely don’t know if I’m going to make it.

    But thankfully, some films have reached interim agreements with SAG, allowing them to promote films that have agreed to their terms. A24 — a major indie studio that is known for its cult classics and mainstream success — is luckily in SAG’s good books, allowing films like A24’s Dicks (flop) and Priscilla (bop) to do press — hence Jacob Elordi’s recent It-boy status.

    But now, it’s time for another A24 team to take the reins, and at the helm are three certified heartthrobs: Zac Efron, Harris Dickinson, and Jeremy Allen White.

    In the words of Zac Efron in my favorite movie of all time, High School Musical 3: “The boys are back.”

    The stacked (literally … have you seen those abs) cast of The Iron Claw are playing a family of wrestlers in the 80s. You may remember the photos from the set leaking a few months ago, giving us the first glimpse of Zac Efron’s questionable wig. But now the full trailer is here, and the boys are bringing the heat.

    The Iron Claw | Official Trailer HD | A24www.youtube.com

    The press tour may have just begun, but it’s already the hottest thing I’ve ever seen. For Entertainment Weekly, the trio seductively ate a plate of ribs and all I could say was “Yes, chef!” They also talked about being naked on set and flashed their abs — making me think they knew exactly what they were doing.

    And if that weren’t enough, Jeremy Allen White was just unveiled as the cover star for this month’s British GQ. In a slew of tiny, slutty outfits, White shows off his guns, his tats, and his curly-boy hair to their full potential. With both this and EW on the stands, I will be rushing to the nearest bodega to pick up these print magazines hot off the presses.

    I am so excited for this cast, not just for their hotness, but because we have been so starved of heartthrobs who can actually pull their weight. Efron, White, and Dickinson all have some serious acting chops. Efron has been a household name since his teen years and roles like Incredibly Wicked, Evil, and Vile and The Paperboy have proven he’s more than just a pretty face — even if that face is the prettiest. He even won an Emmy for his TV show, Down to Earth.

    White has been having a smashing year with Season 2 of The Bear and his personal press campaign of paparazzi pics reminding us that he’s one of the hottest and best-dressed men in Hollywood. And though Dickinson is new to many, you might recognize him from the Cannes-award-winning film Triangle of Sadness. He was also nominated for an Indie Spirit award for his 2017 film Beach Rats and has been on my list to watch ever since.

    And believe me, I will be watching. Front row. Opening night. Iron Claw, here I come.

    LKC

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