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Lee Isaac Chung in Talks to Direct Sequel to 1996 Disaster Film, ‘Twister’

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It appears that Warner Bros. is attempting to bring back the disaster movie. According to a report from Deadline, Lee Isaac Chung (Minari) has been selected to direct Twisters, which will act as a sequel to the original 1996 blockbuster film, Twister.

The report by Deadline outlines that there was an extensive search between many filmmakers for the feature with Chung winning the job. Mark L. Smith (The Revenant, The Midnight Sky) wrote the script as legendary producers Frank Marshall and Steven Spielberg will return to produce the movie as well. It is said that Spielberg in particular was such a massive fan of Smith’s script that he wanted to fast track the project as soon as possible. As of now there are no actors in talks for any roles as the studio wants to lock up Chung as they’re still negotiating. Smith most recently wrote Boys in the Boat for Amazon and George Clooney, reuniting with the actor/director after having penned his last directorial effort, The Midnight Sky for Netflix.

Twister starred Helen Hunt and the late-Bill Paxton becoming a massive blockbuster hit having grossed $494 at the box office worldwide. Early reports of the development of Twisters were said to have followed the daughter of Hunt and Paxton’s characters who catches the storm chasing bug from her parents. Hunt was originally rumored to return to the project but as of this latest report, there is no confirmation of that.

Chung was nominated for two Academy Awards for his last film, Minari for Best Original Screenplay and Best Director. If he locks in his deal with Warner Bros., Twisters will mark his first foray into tentpole filmmaking. The report also details that Chung’s upbringing on a farm in rural Arkansas led to a familiarity with tornadoes through his own experiences in his life. These experiences left executives with the thought that he would be their top choice to helm the sequel following his pitch.

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Godzilla Minus One | Official Trailer #2

Post war Japan is at its lowest point when a new crisis emerges in the form of a giant monster, baptized in the horrific power of the atomic bomb

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Genre:

Action, Adventure, Drama

Release Date:

December 1, 2023

Director:

Takashi Yamazaki

Cast:

Ryunosuke Kamiki, Minami Hamabe, Yuki Yamada

Plot Summary:

Post war Japan is at its lowest point when a new crisis emerges in the form of a giant monster, baptized in the horrific power of the atomic bomb

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The Continental Review: Not The Prequel We Needed

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Ever since Lionsgate greenlit this series in early 2017, fans of the franchise have been eagerly anticipating to see how the John Wick universe expands. 4 movies in, the John Wick franchise is widely known as one of the greatest action movie franchises of all time with our titular character (a.k.a Baba Yaga) becoming one of the most iconic and bad-ass figures ever in Hollywood. The Continental: From The World of John Wick is a prequel series that tells the story of Winston Scott and how he became the manager of New York’s The Continental branch.

 

The miniseries was developed by Greg Coolidge, Kirk Ward and Shawn Simmons. It is executive produced by Paul Wernick, Rhett Reese, Derek Kolstad, David Leitch and Chad Stahelski, the director of all four John Wick movies. It is structured as a 3-night event told through three 90-minute episodes. The series was originally supposed to air on Starz, but the network sold it to Peacock in 2022. After 6 years in development, it finally aired on Peacock this September.

A lot has been made of the subtitle of the project ever since it was announced. The fact that the makers needed to include it says a lot about the show. It almost felt like the prime marketing asset for it many times as the other promotional material didn’t necessarily create a lot of hype for the show. Albert Hughes directed the first and third episodes, while Charlotte Branstrom directed the second, and disappointingly both directors do not bring the same novelty or creative prowess that Chad Stahelski managed to bring in the John Wick movies.

The Continental [credit: Peacock]

The show also surprisingly lacks any real star power. This franchise is one of Lionsgate’s most prized assets, so you would imagine that they would make sure to get a big cast and crew for this prequel miniseries, but they didn’t. Colin Woodell as Winston Scott is the clear standout among the cast despite delivering only a decent performance, which says a lot about the acting standards in this 3-episode miniseries. Many have criticized the casting of Mel Gibson in the series, but I personally had no issue with his performance and he’s also the most recognizable member of the cast despite having no real audience pull anymore.

 

The writing doesn’t offer too much to ponder upon or any seriously shocking turns in the story as most of the focus is on making the product as epic, badass and action-packed as possible. Some of the characters had some interesting layers to them, especially Charon (Ayomide Adegun) and Lou (Jessica Allain). Lemmy (Adam Shapiro) provides some much-needed comic relief with his witty dialogues. The structuring of the story works really well as a 3-night event which sets the high stakes and sets a standard of intensity for the narrative.

The Continental [credit: Peacock]

But the thing that people were most looking forward to, was the action and how it fared against John Wick. Unfortunately, that department was inconsistent as well. Ben Robson’s fight sequence in the early part of the first episode was great and it makes you optimistic that the action would get better from here on, but it never does. Most of the action blocks here involve explosions and guns rather than the hand-to-hand combat John Wick franchise is known for. Some of the action was awesome and some of it sadly wasn’t.

 

The Continental: From the World of John Wick brings a lot of glamour as it tries to expand its world but fails to engage with its paper-thin plot. The characters are mostly dull with a formulaic villain and misses the presence of a magnetic protagonist like Wick. A prequel about Wick’s backstory would’ve been much more interesting than this inconsistent prequel event saved by its style and some great action. It has almost enough to be its own thing but doesn’t quite have enough to match its parent movies.

 

The Continental: From the World of John Wick premieres on Peacock in the US and Prime Video in the UK and Australia on 22 September, with new episodes weekly.

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Silent Night | Official Trailer

A grieving father enacts his long-awaited revenge against a ruthless gang on Christmas Eve.

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Genre:

Action

Release Date:

December 1, 2023

Director:

John Woo

Cast:

Joel Kinnaman, Kid Cudi, Catalina Sandino Moreno

Plot Summary:

A grieving father enacts his long-awaited revenge against a ruthless gang on Christmas Eve.

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