Month: September 2024

Joker 2, reactions, reviews

The moment many of you have been waiting for is finally here! The first reviews and reactions for Joker: Folie à Deux are soft-shoeing their way online, and the consensus is perhaps not what you’d expect (or want to hear). Joker: Folie à Deux premiered at the Venice Film Festival to a packed house of eager cinephiles excited to witness the potentially mad genius of Todd Phillips’ follow-up to his billion-dollar-grossing film starring Joaquin Phoenix as Arthur Fleck, a failed comedian turned agent of anarchy in a city on the verge of a criminal uprising.

Today’s Joker: Folie à Deux reactions are divisive AF, with some calling it a “masterpiece” while others say it’s a “fascinatingly lifeless” sequel that wastes the talent of all involved. Woof. You can only know for sure if you see the film yourself when it opens in theaters on October 4, 2024. Let’s reach into Joker: Folie à Deux‘s mixed bag of tricks and find out if the film will have you floating on air or feeling like you’ve sniffed your last acid flower.

In Owen Gleiberman’s review for Variety, he says Joker: Folie à Deux is a “cracked jukebox musical” with an audacious concept. Still, the execution takes a step back from the danger of Joker. I should note that reviews for the film are chock full of spoilers, so readers beware and whatnot.

IndieWire‘s David Ehrlich is harsher on the film than most, saying Joker: Folie à Deux is “boring, flat, and a criminal waste of Lady Gaga.” Adding, Phillips’ Joker sequel feels “bad on purpose.” In his review, Ehrlich writes, “At a time when everything is consumed as entertainment, no matter how tragic, Phillips has created a corporate pop spectacle that all but demands to be seen as something else. Here is a movie that perversely denies audiences everything they’ve been conditioned to want from it; gently at first, and then later with the unmistakable hostility of a knife to the gut. And that, more than anything else, is why “Folie à Deux” adopts the form of a classic musical: Because no other genre makes it so easy to appreciate all the fun you’re not having.”

In contrast, Alex Harrison of ScreenRant thinks Joker: Folie à Deux is an improved sequel engineered to antagonize Joker fans. Harrison confirms the movie “is most certainly a musical” despite the filmmakers’ claims that it’s not.” To lighten the mood, Harrison writes, Joker: Folie à Deux has more coherent things to say about fan culture than it or its predecessor does about mental illness, which, for me, makes it the superior of the two. It also helps that it’s far less derivative. But it’s still plagued by the same have-its-cake-and-eat-it-too mentality.”

Thankfully for Joker fans, some are singing the film’s praises. Take reviewer Scott Menzel’s thoughts, for example. In a tweet that will get plenty of attention, Menzel calls Joker: Folie à Deux a “masterpiece,” saying the sequel is a “bold, daring and mesmerizing masterpiece. Joaquin Phoenix continues to amaze as Arthur Fleck, while Lady Gaga delivers the best performance of her career thus far as Harley Quinn. Todd Phillips has truly upped the ante in almost every way with this sequel, including the musical elements, which are brilliantly executed. Joker: Folie à Deux is the film of the year and will spark a lot of conversation and debate going into award season.” You can catch Menzel’s full review for We Live Entertainment here.

With a score that’s sure to anger fans, IGN gave the film a 5 out of 10, saying the movie “wastes its potential as a movie musical, a courtroom drama, and a sequel that has anything meaningful to say about or add to the first Joker.”

Finally, The Hollywood Reporter says Joker: Folie à Deux feels “narratively a little thin and at times dull… This sequel is built on more of a conceit than a solid story foundation.” THR‘s review by David Rooney continues, “Even more than its predecessor, Joker: Folie à Deux reduces the archvillain to a hollowed-out product of childhood trauma and mental illness. Which means there’s little we didn’t learn last time.”

These early reactions are bound to stir up a hornet’s nest among Todd Phillips’ Joker fans, who will be waiting with bated breath for reviewers to weigh in. The lesson here is that seeing the movie and making your own opinion is best. No one can tell you how you feel about the film except you. Hell, perhaps some will discover an untapped love for musicals!

Are you still excited about seeing Joker: Folie à Deux when it opens in theaters on October 4? Let us know in the comments section below.

The post Joker: Folie à Deux reactions paint the musically-charged sequel as a divisive dive into the mad minds of Gotham’s criminal love birds appeared first on JoBlo.

i know what you did last summer

It seems as though both properties that originated from Kevin Williamson-written films are facing casting disarray. As Scream 7 was in development, it was intended to pick up with Scream VI stars Melissa Barrera and Jenna Ortega reprising their roles. Then, Barrera would come under scrutiny for controversial statements made on social media in response to the Isreal-Hamas conflict, and the production would let her go. Following that, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice star Jenna Ortega would also leave the sequel, citing her schedule becoming conflicted with other projects.

Now, the I Know What You Did Last Summer sequel is also seeing its star exit the project. According to Deadline, Riverdale actress Camila Mendes, who had signed on to star in the urban legend tale, could not make the production date on schedule due to her commitments on the upcoming big-budget franchise production of Amazon MGM Studios and Mattel’s Masters of the Universe reboot. In that film, Mendes is set to play Teela, a warrior for Eternia who fights alongside He-Man, who is set to be portrayed by Nicholas Galitzine.

Jennifer Kaytin Robinson (Do Revenge – which also starred Camila Mendes) is attached to direct the I Know What You Did Last Summer sequel from a screenplay by Leah McKendrick (M.F.A.), and McKendrick told Collider a while back that the new sequel will reckon with “some big ideas about hero and villain, right and wrong, how your skeletons come back to haunt you. And in the age of the internet and the age where fame is such a revered concept, the creation of TikTok and social media, who is Julie James in a world where there are no secrets anymore?“ McKendrick also said that when she went in to pitch her take to Sony, the most important things they wanted to hear about were “the accident, the event that kicks it off, and who the killer is.“

Loosely based on the 1973 novel by Lois Duncan, the first I Know What You Did Last Summer movie was scripted by Scream writer Kevin Williamson and directed by Jim Gillespie. It revolved around four young friends (Jennifer Love Hewitt, Freddie Prinze Jr., Sarah Michelle Gellar, and Ryan Phillippe) who are stalked by a hook-wielding killer one year after they supposedly killed a man in a car accident and covered it up. The film was a big success at the box office, spawning a theatrical sequel, I Still Know What You Did Last Summer, and a direct-to-video follow-up, I’ll Always Know What You Did Last Summer. There was also a short-lived series which streamed on Prime Video in 2021 before it was cancelled.

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Jenna Ortega, Wednesday

As we found out from Wednesday Addams on her namesake series, she doesn’t bury hatchets – she sharpens them. Well, it looks like the pencil has been sharpened as well, as the first season of the Netflix series has received the literary treatment in the aptly titled Wednesday: A Novelization of Season One.

The Wednesday novelization comes courtesy of publisher Random House Books for Young Readers and author Tehlor Kay Mejia. Geared at young adults, this looks to be just the sort of book you would see a certain sect of middle school students reading in class. While it will be available through multiple outlets, Target’s release comes with an exclusive poster.

Here is the official synopsis of the Wednesday novelization: “Return to the hallowed halls of Nevermore Academy with Wednesday Addams in this delightfully dark novelization of season one of the hit show, Wednesday! Wednesday is a sleuthing, supernaturally infused mystery charting Wednesday Addams’ time as a student at Nevermore Academy. Follow along with her as she attempts to master her emerging psychic ability, thwart a monstrous killing spree that has terrorized the local town and solve the supernatural mystery that embroiled her parents 25 years ago — all while navigating her new and very tangled relationships at Nevermore Academy. Relive the excitement and intrigue in this amazing novelization of the phenomenal first season.”

Maybe a novelization of pretty much everything we saw in the first season of Wednesday isn’t quite what fans want, but it could work as a different sort of refresher as we anticipate the sophomore season, which is likely to drop on Netflix next year. And with it now being Spooky Season, we can see Wednesday – and other horror novelizations – hitting a niche demographic.

Season two of Wednesday will bring back much of the core cast from season one but also add the likes of Steve Buscemi, Billie Piper, Evie Templton, Owen Painter, and Noah Taylor. It, too, will expand on the horror DNA from the source set in place with the first Addams Family movies from the ‘90s, themselves adaptations of the works of the great Charles Addams.

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Mutiny, Jason Statham, Annabelle Wallis

Peaky Blinders and Malignant star Annabelle Wallis is ready to join Jason Statham (Crank, The Beekeeper, Wrath of Man) to co-headline the forthcoming action thriller Mutiny from Lionsgate. The hard-boiled project finds Statham producing through his newly established Punch Palace Productions banner alongside Marc Butan of MadRiver Pictures. Jean-François Richet (Plane, One Wild Moment, Blood Father) directs Mutiny from a script by J.P Davis and Lindsay Michel.

When principal photography begins this fall in the UK, Mutiny aims to tell the story of Cole Reed, a man set up to take the fall after his billionaire boss is murdered in front of him. Fearing for his life, Cole goes on the run while trying to uncover an international conspiracy at the heart of the crime.

Of course, Annabelle Wallis is a seasoned actor with many memorable characters to her credit. She plays Grace Shelby in the BBC-Netflix series Peaky Blinders, Rebecca Crosby in one of my comfort watches, Tag, the character Mia Form in the Annabelle horror franchise, the complicated Madison Mitchell in James Wan’s zany and criminally underappreciated Malignant, and the voice of Zora in Star Trek: Discovery, among other notable roles.

Wallis has two post-production projects, including the Floria Sigismondi-directed drama The Silence of Mercy and the upcoming sci-fi feature Mercy, directed by Timur Bekmambetov. The Silence of Mercy follows a woman who chooses a life of enclosure to face her personal demons as she’s challenged to break the walls of morality. Raffey Cassidy, Alexandra Dowling, Agnes Born, and Mark Doherty also star in the film. Meanwhile, Mercy focuses on a detective accused of a crime who’s forced to prove his innocence. Rebecca Ferguson, Chris Pratt, Kali Reis, Kylie Rogers, and Chris Sullivan also star in the high-profile sci-fi feature.

Will Annabelle Wallis and Jason Statham have great chemistry in Mutiny? Do you have a hiding place if forced to go on the run? I can think of a few good hiding places and people who would keep my secret. I hope Cole Reed can say the same when people tied to an international conspiracy come nipping at his heels.

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