Exclusive: David Duchovny, known for his starring roles as FBI Agent Fox Mulder in The X-Files and Hank Moody in Californication, has returned to his former agency, ICM Partners, for representation. Duchovny had been repped largely by ICM and WME over the past decade; he previously moved from ICM to WME in 2011 before returning and then again in 2019.
Duchovny can next be seen starring in the Kenya Barris Netflix comedy, You People, alongside Jonah Hill, Eddie Murphy and Julia Louis-Dreyfus, in Paramount’s film prequel to Stephen King’s best-seller Pet Sematary, and in the Sarah Jessica Parker produced family comedy, The Estate, opposite Toni Collette and Anna Faris.
Two-time Golden Globe winner and four-time Emmy nominee, Duchovny recently appeared in Judd Apatow’s Netflix comedy film The Bubble, opposite Fred Armisen, Keegan-Michael Key, Kate McKinnon and Leslie Mann and he was recently seen in a guest-starring role in Netflix’s The Chair.
Duchovny can next be seen starring in the Kenya Barris Netflix comedy, You People, alongside Jonah Hill, Eddie Murphy and Julia Louis-Dreyfus, in Paramount’s film prequel to Stephen King’s best-seller Pet Sematary, and in the Sarah Jessica Parker produced family comedy, The Estate, opposite Toni Collette and Anna Faris.
Two-time Golden Globe winner and four-time Emmy nominee, Duchovny recently appeared in Judd Apatow’s Netflix comedy film The Bubble, opposite Fred Armisen, Keegan-Michael Key, Kate McKinnon and Leslie Mann and he was recently seen in a guest-starring role in Netflix’s The Chair.
- 5/10/2022
- by Nellie Andreeva
- Deadline Film + TV
Actress Meg Ryan will direct and star alongside ‘Californication’ star David Duchovny in ‘What Happens Later’, an “evolved and nostalgic” take on the romantic comedy. The film is based on the play ‘Shooting Star’ by American playwright Steven Dietz, who also co-wrote the screenplay with playwright and novelist Kirk Lynn, and Ryan, reports ‘Variety’. ‘What […]...
- 5/4/2022
- by Glamsham Bureau
- GlamSham
Meg Ryan is returning to her romantic comedy roots and will star and direct a film called “What Happens Later” that will co-star David Duchovny.
“What Happens Later” is described as an evolved and nostalgic take on the rom-com. Bleecker Street has acquired the U.S. rights to the film and is planning a 2023 theatrical release. HanWay Films has also come aboard the film to handle international sales and distribution, and will kick off sales at Cannes this month.
Production on the film will begin later this year in Bentonville, Arkansas.
Here’s the logline and full synopsis: “What if late one snowy night you came face to face with someone from your long ago? Someone who once held your secrets, because once, long ago, that person held your heart.
Ex-lovers Willa (Ryan) and Bill (Duchovny) are reunited for the first time since their split decades prior when they both find themselves snowed in,...
“What Happens Later” is described as an evolved and nostalgic take on the rom-com. Bleecker Street has acquired the U.S. rights to the film and is planning a 2023 theatrical release. HanWay Films has also come aboard the film to handle international sales and distribution, and will kick off sales at Cannes this month.
Production on the film will begin later this year in Bentonville, Arkansas.
Here’s the logline and full synopsis: “What if late one snowy night you came face to face with someone from your long ago? Someone who once held your secrets, because once, long ago, that person held your heart.
Ex-lovers Willa (Ryan) and Bill (Duchovny) are reunited for the first time since their split decades prior when they both find themselves snowed in,...
- 5/3/2022
- by Brian Welk
- The Wrap
Meg Ryan will direct and star alongside David Duchovny in “What Happens Later,” an “evolved and nostalgic” take on the romantic comedy.
The film is based on the play “Shooting Star” by American playwright Steven Dietz, who also co-wrote the screenplay with playwright and novelist Kirk Lynn, and Ryan. Bleecker Street has snapped up the U.S. rights and is planning a 2023 theatrical release. London-based sales agent HanWay Films has come on board to handle international sales and distribution and will kick off sales at this month’s Cannes Film Festival.
Production will begin later this year in Bentonville, Arkansas.
“What Happens Later” is produced by Independent Spirit Award winners Jonathan Duffy and Kelly Williams through their Ten Acre Films, Independent Spirit Award nominee Laura D. Smith (“I’ll See You In My Dreams”), and Kristin Mann (“The Quarry”). Kerri Elder and Blake Elder of Rockhill Studios are executive producers together...
The film is based on the play “Shooting Star” by American playwright Steven Dietz, who also co-wrote the screenplay with playwright and novelist Kirk Lynn, and Ryan. Bleecker Street has snapped up the U.S. rights and is planning a 2023 theatrical release. London-based sales agent HanWay Films has come on board to handle international sales and distribution and will kick off sales at this month’s Cannes Film Festival.
Production will begin later this year in Bentonville, Arkansas.
“What Happens Later” is produced by Independent Spirit Award winners Jonathan Duffy and Kelly Williams through their Ten Acre Films, Independent Spirit Award nominee Laura D. Smith (“I’ll See You In My Dreams”), and Kristin Mann (“The Quarry”). Kerri Elder and Blake Elder of Rockhill Studios are executive producers together...
- 5/3/2022
- by Manori Ravindran
- Variety Film + TV
Legendary action director John Woo is making quite the Hollywood comeback. He’s currently working with actor Joel Kinnaman for his new western pic “Silent Night” that is already in production, but another high-profile project will see the Hong Kong filmmaker take a crack at remaking one of his seminal movies from the 1980s.
Peacock has officially announced today that Woo will direct a new film based on his Hong Kong action classic, “The Killer,” a film that follows an isolated assassin who pines for a woman he blinded during a previous hit and is one of the more action-packed films the director made before heading to Hollywood to make things like “Face/Off.”
Not only that, but the film from Universal Pictures will debut on the streaming service sometime in 2023 which will also see the LeBron James origin story “Shooting Star” and the church choir drama “Praise This.”
Read More:...
Peacock has officially announced today that Woo will direct a new film based on his Hong Kong action classic, “The Killer,” a film that follows an isolated assassin who pines for a woman he blinded during a previous hit and is one of the more action-packed films the director made before heading to Hollywood to make things like “Face/Off.”
Not only that, but the film from Universal Pictures will debut on the streaming service sometime in 2023 which will also see the LeBron James origin story “Shooting Star” and the church choir drama “Praise This.”
Read More:...
- 5/2/2022
- by Christopher Marc
- The Playlist
NYC Weekend Watch is our weekly round-up of repertory offerings.
Japan Society
Ghost in the Shell kicks off “Monthly Anime.”
Film at Lincoln Center
The thematically arranged Hong Sang-soo double features have their last weekend until May—highlights include Tale of Cinema on 35mm and a triple-feature on Sunday.
IFC Center
The new restoration of Inland Empire continues, while Mississippi Masala starts; Eraserhead, The Crow, Twilight, and Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane have late-night showings.
Roxy Cinema
A Nick Zedd program screens Friday; Death in Venice, Traveling Light, and prints of Unstoppable and Lady Terminator play on Saturday; Death in Venice and Unstoppable also play on Sunday, alongside a Yale Film Archive program.
Museum of Modern Art
As retrospectives of Larry Fessenden’s genre house Glass Eye Pix winds down, Buñuel’s Nazarin screens in a new restoration.
Metrograph
The Robert Siodmak retrospective winds down, while three Dracula movies play in...
Japan Society
Ghost in the Shell kicks off “Monthly Anime.”
Film at Lincoln Center
The thematically arranged Hong Sang-soo double features have their last weekend until May—highlights include Tale of Cinema on 35mm and a triple-feature on Sunday.
IFC Center
The new restoration of Inland Empire continues, while Mississippi Masala starts; Eraserhead, The Crow, Twilight, and Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane have late-night showings.
Roxy Cinema
A Nick Zedd program screens Friday; Death in Venice, Traveling Light, and prints of Unstoppable and Lady Terminator play on Saturday; Death in Venice and Unstoppable also play on Sunday, alongside a Yale Film Archive program.
Museum of Modern Art
As retrospectives of Larry Fessenden’s genre house Glass Eye Pix winds down, Buñuel’s Nazarin screens in a new restoration.
Metrograph
The Robert Siodmak retrospective winds down, while three Dracula movies play in...
- 4/14/2022
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage
NYC Weekend Watch is our weekly round-up of repertory offerings.
Film at Lincoln Center
A series of thematically arranged Hong Sang-soo double features has begun.
IFC Center
The new restoration of Inland Empire is now playing, while Eraserhead, Dune, Twilight, Mamma Mia!, and Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane have late-night showings.
Roxy Cinema
A 35mm-heavy Alex Ross Perry retrospective is underway; a print of Lady Terminator plays on Saturday; prints of River’s Edge and The Seventh Seal play on Sunday.
Museum of Modern Art
As retrospectives of Larry Fessenden’s genre house Glass Eye Pix and films by Larry Clark continue, The Birds has a screening.
Metrograph
The Robert Siodmak retrospective continues, as does “Pop Plays Itself,” a collection of musicians onscreen; Eden and After plays in Left Bank Cinema; Perfect Blue and Son of the White Mare are in “Late Nights.”
Anthology Film Archives
The Hong-Kong-a-Thon returns, while programs screen in “Essential Cinema.
Film at Lincoln Center
A series of thematically arranged Hong Sang-soo double features has begun.
IFC Center
The new restoration of Inland Empire is now playing, while Eraserhead, Dune, Twilight, Mamma Mia!, and Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane have late-night showings.
Roxy Cinema
A 35mm-heavy Alex Ross Perry retrospective is underway; a print of Lady Terminator plays on Saturday; prints of River’s Edge and The Seventh Seal play on Sunday.
Museum of Modern Art
As retrospectives of Larry Fessenden’s genre house Glass Eye Pix and films by Larry Clark continue, The Birds has a screening.
Metrograph
The Robert Siodmak retrospective continues, as does “Pop Plays Itself,” a collection of musicians onscreen; Eden and After plays in Left Bank Cinema; Perfect Blue and Son of the White Mare are in “Late Nights.”
Anthology Film Archives
The Hong-Kong-a-Thon returns, while programs screen in “Essential Cinema.
- 4/7/2022
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage
The world of cult cinema has never been a stranger to the concept of ripping off James Cameron’s “The Terminator,” offering up plenty of choices that have taken partial or just outright pillaging of the themes, concepts, or wholesale scenes from the seminal film. While most of these choices originate from Italy, and especially Bruno Mattei who ripped off the concept several times in his career, an unlikely source emerged in Indonesia when cult director H. Tjut Djalil took the idea and offered up a localized flavor to the scenario with his beloved cult classic “Lady Terminator”.
While on holiday in the South Seas, anthropology student Tania (Barbara Anne Constable) hears a story about the legend of the South Seas Queen, a cruel ruler who killed male lovers if they were unsatisfactory and disappeared years before. After going for a swim in the area and coming back to shore,...
While on holiday in the South Seas, anthropology student Tania (Barbara Anne Constable) hears a story about the legend of the South Seas Queen, a cruel ruler who killed male lovers if they were unsatisfactory and disappeared years before. After going for a swim in the area and coming back to shore,...
- 9/27/2021
- by Don Anelli
- AsianMoviePulse
Ringo Starr is turning 80 on July 7th and he plans on celebrating with a virtual charity concert featuring Paul McCartney, Sheryl Crow, Gary Clark Jr., Sheila E, and Ben Harper. “I love birthdays,” Starr recently told Rolling Stone. “This year is going to be a little different. There’s no big get-together; there’s no brunch for 100. But we’re putting this show together — an hour of music and chat. It’s quite a big birthday.”
Starr originally planned on celebrating his landmark birthday by touring all across America, but...
Starr originally planned on celebrating his landmark birthday by touring all across America, but...
- 7/2/2020
- by Andy Greene
- Rollingstone.com
“Freud,” Netflix’s upcoming mystery thriller from director by Marvin Kren, places a young Sigmund, before his establishment as a worldwide medical icon, in the middle of a brutal 19th century murder case in Vienna.
A Vienna native himself, Kren won numerous awards for his work in TV (“Four Blocks”) and film. In addition to directing and producing the series, he also co-wrote with Stefan Brunner (“Tatort”) and previous collaborator Benjamin Hessler (“4 Blocks”).
Robert Finster plays the cocaine-addicted outsider responsible for founding psychoanalysis, 2020 Berlin Shooting Star Ella Rumpf mysterious medium Fleur Salomé, and 2017 Berlin Best Actor winner Georg Friedrich (“Bright Nights”) has the role of inspector Alfred Kiss.
“Freud” is produced by Netflix, Austrian public broadcaster Orf, Bavaria Fiction and Satel Film with the support of Vienna’s Filmfonds Wien and Media. Screening at Berlinale Series from Feb. 24, “Freud” releases on Netflix worldwide and Orf in Austria on March...
A Vienna native himself, Kren won numerous awards for his work in TV (“Four Blocks”) and film. In addition to directing and producing the series, he also co-wrote with Stefan Brunner (“Tatort”) and previous collaborator Benjamin Hessler (“4 Blocks”).
Robert Finster plays the cocaine-addicted outsider responsible for founding psychoanalysis, 2020 Berlin Shooting Star Ella Rumpf mysterious medium Fleur Salomé, and 2017 Berlin Best Actor winner Georg Friedrich (“Bright Nights”) has the role of inspector Alfred Kiss.
“Freud” is produced by Netflix, Austrian public broadcaster Orf, Bavaria Fiction and Satel Film with the support of Vienna’s Filmfonds Wien and Media. Screening at Berlinale Series from Feb. 24, “Freud” releases on Netflix worldwide and Orf in Austria on March...
- 2/26/2020
- by Jamie Lang
- Variety Film + TV
The film is fully-funded through Screen Ireland’s Pov scheme.
Jim Sturgess will lead the cast of Antonia Campbell-Hughes’ directorial debut It Is In Us All, which will begin shooting in Ireland in July.
The film has been fully funded through the inaugural edition of Screen Ireland’s female-focused Pov scheme.
Conor Barry (The Hole In The Ground), Emma Foley and Tamryn Reinecke will produce for Savage Productions.
One Day star Sturgess plays Hamish, a Londoner who returns to his ancestral homeland of Donegal, Ireland and is drawn in by a teenage boy who almost kills him in a car crash.
Jim Sturgess will lead the cast of Antonia Campbell-Hughes’ directorial debut It Is In Us All, which will begin shooting in Ireland in July.
The film has been fully funded through the inaugural edition of Screen Ireland’s female-focused Pov scheme.
Conor Barry (The Hole In The Ground), Emma Foley and Tamryn Reinecke will produce for Savage Productions.
One Day star Sturgess plays Hamish, a Londoner who returns to his ancestral homeland of Donegal, Ireland and is drawn in by a teenage boy who almost kills him in a car crash.
- 2/23/2020
- by 1101321¦Ben Dalton¦26¦
- ScreenDaily
Festival’s industry strand crowns work-in-progress winners from Macedonia and Ukraine.
The Grand Prix of FilmFestival Cottbus (8-13 November) went to Russia for the fourth time in the last six years, with filmmaker Ivan I. Tverdovsky taking the top award for his second feature Zoology after also winning top honours for his debut Corrections Class in 2014.
The other previous winners from Russia had been Angelina Nikonova in 2011 with Twilight Portrait and Alexander Veledinsky in 2013 with The Geographer Who Drank His Globe Away.
Moreover, Tverdovsky is the third film-maker to win Cottbus’s top prize twice in the festival’s 26-year history following Slovakia’s Martin Sulik (1993: Everything I Like and 1995: The Garden) and Serbia’s Oleg Novkovic (2006: Tomorrow Morning and 2010: White White World).
The international jury, which included veteran Israeli producer Marek Rosenbaum and Serbian actress-director Mirjana Karanovic, described Zoology as ¨an original and emotional story about loneliness, love, hope and...
The Grand Prix of FilmFestival Cottbus (8-13 November) went to Russia for the fourth time in the last six years, with filmmaker Ivan I. Tverdovsky taking the top award for his second feature Zoology after also winning top honours for his debut Corrections Class in 2014.
The other previous winners from Russia had been Angelina Nikonova in 2011 with Twilight Portrait and Alexander Veledinsky in 2013 with The Geographer Who Drank His Globe Away.
Moreover, Tverdovsky is the third film-maker to win Cottbus’s top prize twice in the festival’s 26-year history following Slovakia’s Martin Sulik (1993: Everything I Like and 1995: The Garden) and Serbia’s Oleg Novkovic (2006: Tomorrow Morning and 2010: White White World).
The international jury, which included veteran Israeli producer Marek Rosenbaum and Serbian actress-director Mirjana Karanovic, described Zoology as ¨an original and emotional story about loneliness, love, hope and...
- 11/14/2016
- by screen.berlin@googlemail.com (Martin Blaney)
- ScreenDaily
Tom Sommerlatte’s debut Summers Downstairs (Im Sommer wohnt er unten) was picked by the audience at this year’s Oldenburg International Film Festival (Sep 16-20) for the German Independence Award.
The French-German co-production, handled internationally by Arri Worldsales, premiered in the Berlinale’s Perspektive Deutsches Kino sidebar in February, won Best Feature Film at the Achtung Berlin! festival in April, and was the opening film of Filmfest Schwerin in May.
There were double honours for Sommerlatte at the closing night gala on Sunday (Sep 20) when the nomination jury for the European Film Awards’ European Discovery - Prix Fipresci announced that Summers Downstairs had been chosen as one of five finalists.
The Seymour Cassel Award - in honour of one of Oldenburg’s aficianados - was shared this year for the first time between two actors: actress Sarah Silverman for her performance in I Smile Back and former European Shooting Star Nikola Rakočević for his role in...
The French-German co-production, handled internationally by Arri Worldsales, premiered in the Berlinale’s Perspektive Deutsches Kino sidebar in February, won Best Feature Film at the Achtung Berlin! festival in April, and was the opening film of Filmfest Schwerin in May.
There were double honours for Sommerlatte at the closing night gala on Sunday (Sep 20) when the nomination jury for the European Film Awards’ European Discovery - Prix Fipresci announced that Summers Downstairs had been chosen as one of five finalists.
The Seymour Cassel Award - in honour of one of Oldenburg’s aficianados - was shared this year for the first time between two actors: actress Sarah Silverman for her performance in I Smile Back and former European Shooting Star Nikola Rakočević for his role in...
- 9/21/2015
- by screen.berlin@googlemail.com (Martin Blaney)
- ScreenDaily
“We’ve seen more dead bodies than you’ve eaten hot dogs!”
This month.s big-screen midnight madness from the guys at Destroy The Brain is Lady Terminator from 1989, an utterly whacked-out combination of cheesy FX, sleaze, gore, sex, explosions, shootouts, hot Asian chicks, mullet-headed stoners (one named .Snake.) driving armored cars, inane dialog, hideous dubbing, brainless disco tunes, and guns that never run out of ammunition – all the things that make life worthwhile! Of course, it.s part of their monthly Late Night Grindhouse film series and it will be screened midnights in a 35mm print at St. Louis. fabulous Hi-Pointe Theater (1005 McCausland Avenue) this Friday and Saturday (January 4th and 5th). The pre-show begins at 11:30.
Lady Terminator opens in 1889, and tells of an evil succubus known as “Queen of the South Sea” who has a mean case of vagina dentate: she murders men during sex thanks to...
This month.s big-screen midnight madness from the guys at Destroy The Brain is Lady Terminator from 1989, an utterly whacked-out combination of cheesy FX, sleaze, gore, sex, explosions, shootouts, hot Asian chicks, mullet-headed stoners (one named .Snake.) driving armored cars, inane dialog, hideous dubbing, brainless disco tunes, and guns that never run out of ammunition – all the things that make life worthwhile! Of course, it.s part of their monthly Late Night Grindhouse film series and it will be screened midnights in a 35mm print at St. Louis. fabulous Hi-Pointe Theater (1005 McCausland Avenue) this Friday and Saturday (January 4th and 5th). The pre-show begins at 11:30.
Lady Terminator opens in 1889, and tells of an evil succubus known as “Queen of the South Sea” who has a mean case of vagina dentate: she murders men during sex thanks to...
- 1/2/2013
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
It's time for more various oddball trailers from the far reaches of cinema obscurity. So, without any further ado, let's check out some "coming attractions"!
Dr. Alien (1989):
Ah, Empire Pictures. What's not to love about the infamous production company that gave us such 80's cult favorites as Ghoulies, Trancers, Re-Animator, TerrorVision and Psychos in Love? Well, here's one from Empire that I bet you probably missed; Dr. Alien. This goofy sci-fi teen comedy stars Billy Jacoby (Just One of the Guys, Parker Lewis Can't Lose) as Wesley, a nerdy student who becomes a sexual dynamo after being injected with a serum by his new smokin' hot teacher, Ms. Xenobia played by Judy Landers (Stewardess School, Armed and Dangerous), who just happens to be an alien. Sound ridiculous enough for ya yet? This nugget of pure late-80's video fun was directed by David DeCoteau, who got his start directing...
Dr. Alien (1989):
Ah, Empire Pictures. What's not to love about the infamous production company that gave us such 80's cult favorites as Ghoulies, Trancers, Re-Animator, TerrorVision and Psychos in Love? Well, here's one from Empire that I bet you probably missed; Dr. Alien. This goofy sci-fi teen comedy stars Billy Jacoby (Just One of the Guys, Parker Lewis Can't Lose) as Wesley, a nerdy student who becomes a sexual dynamo after being injected with a serum by his new smokin' hot teacher, Ms. Xenobia played by Judy Landers (Stewardess School, Armed and Dangerous), who just happens to be an alien. Sound ridiculous enough for ya yet? This nugget of pure late-80's video fun was directed by David DeCoteau, who got his start directing...
- 8/7/2011
- by noreply@blogger.com (Kevin, Mark & Parker)
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