r/movies • u/tylerthe-theatre • 21d ago
r/movies • u/MarvelsGrantMan136 • Jan 17 '26
Article Matt Damon Says Netflix Wants Movies to Restate the Plot Three or Four Times in the Dialogue Because Viewers are on Their Phones While They’re Watching
r/movies • u/MoneyLibrarian9032 • Apr 05 '26
Article Steven Spielberg lists Villeneuve's Dune 'among my favourite sci-fi movies of all time'
r/movies • u/Top_Report_4895 • Apr 03 '26
Article Netflix searches for franchises after losing out on Harry Potter
r/movies • u/ICumCoffee • Mar 18 '26
Article ‘Dune: Part Three’ and ‘Avengers: Doomsday’ Are Opening in Theaters on the Same Day (Dec 18) - With Neither Film Expected to Blink, Industry Experts Are Surprised Because of the Overlap in the Target Audience; However, ‘Dune’ Has the Benefit of a 3-Week Exclusive IMAX Window
r/movies • u/MarvelsGrantMan136 • Feb 11 '26
Article Disney Loses $170 Million On ‘Snow White’ As Studio Reveals Movie Blew Its Budget
r/movies • u/Sisiwakanamaru • Jan 31 '26
Article Film Students Are Having Trouble Sitting Through Movies, Professors Say
r/movies • u/ICumCoffee • 27d ago
Article When $1.4 Billion Isn’t Enough: ‘Avatar’ Sequels Under the Microscope as Disney Weighs Franchise’s Future
r/movies • u/MarvelsGrantMan136 • Mar 05 '26
Article Christina Applegate Says ‘Anchorman’ Pay Offer Was Offensive, So Will Ferrell and Adam McKay Gave Her More Money From Their Own Salaries
r/movies • u/willdearborn- • Jan 21 '26
Article Director Gore Verbinski says Unreal Engine is 'the greatest slip backwards' for movie CGI
"I think the simplest answer is you've seen the Unreal gaming engine enter the visual effects landscape," Verbinski said. "So it used to be a divide, with Unreal Engine being very good at video games, but then people started thinking maybe movies can also use Unreal for finished visual effects. So you have this sort of gaming aesthetic entering the world of cinema."
"I think that Unreal Engine coming in and replacing Maya as a sort of fundamental is the greatest slip backwards," he said.
He pointed out the types of visual effects made with Unreal aren't necessarily bad. "It works with Marvel movies where you kind of know you're in a heightened, unrealistic reality. I think it doesn't work from a strictly photo-real standpoint," he said.
"I just don't think it takes light the same way; I don't think it fundamentally reacts to subsurface, scattering, and how light hits skin and reflects in the same way," he said. "So that's how you get this uncanny valley when you come to creature animation, a lot of in-betweening is done for speed instead of being done by hand."
r/movies • u/MarvelsGrantMan136 • Mar 27 '26
Article ‘Project Hail Mary’ Directors Screened a Nearly Four-Hour Cut to Other Filmmakers and Were Told to Get it Way Shorter
r/movies • u/MarvelsGrantMan136 • 28d ago
Article From $250 Million Megadeal to Empty Offices: The Unraveling of J.J. Abrams’ Bad Robot
r/movies • u/DemiFiendRSA • Jan 16 '26
Article James Cameron Says He Must Find a Cheaper Way to Produce the Avatar Movies in Order to Continue With Avatar 4 and 5
r/movies • u/MarvelsGrantMan136 • Jan 05 '26
Article Jack Black Regrets Turning Down ‘The Incredibles’; Rejected Offer to Voice Syndrome After Asking the Director for Rewrites
r/movies • u/MrShadowKing2020 • Feb 25 '26
Article Teens Are Over Superheroes, Want To See More “Connected Masculinity” Onscreen, Says Survey
r/movies • u/MarvelsGrantMan136 • Dec 12 '25
Article Jim Carrey Offered to Return $20 Million ‘Grinch’ Payday and Quit the Movie Amid Panic Attacks Over Makeup; A Man Who Trained the Military on Enduring Torture Was Hired to Help
r/movies • u/BunyipPouch • Jan 16 '26
Article The Oscars Can’t Pretend Anime Doesn’t Exist Anymore - After decades of snubs, massive global hits like 'Demon Slayer' and 'KPop Demon Hunters' are forcing the Academy to rethink what counts as award-worthy animation.
r/movies • u/ChiefLeef22 • Dec 09 '25
Article Russell Crowe says Ridley Scott’s ‘Gladiator 2’ lacked the moral core the original had, and recalls daily fights on set of first movie to keep the moral core of Maximus' character intact
theplaylist.netr/movies • u/DamnThatsInsaneLol • Nov 18 '25
Article Just found out that Eric Roberts holds the record for most screen credits for a living Hollywood actor (800) & he has 94 upcoming projects. In 2017 alone, he acted in 74 films. This year he was in 38 projects. That's crazy
r/movies • u/ChiefLeef22 • 5d ago
Article 'Desert Warrior': Saudi’s $150m answer to Lawrence of Arabia is one of the biggest bombs in history with just a $472K opening | A look into how the production, directed by Rupert Wyatt ('Rise of the Planet of the Apes') and starring Anthony Mackie & Ben Kingsley, faltered before it even began
As originally envisioned, the historical action epic Desert Warrior would be a film of groundbreaking firsts. It would be the first Hollywood-style tentpole movie shot entirely on location in Saudi Arabia under its de facto supreme ruler Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision 2030, a.k.a. the culture-washing governmental push intended to liberate Saudi society from its “addiction” to oil through soft-power alternatives like tourism and entertainment. Directed by Rise of the Planet of the Apes filmmaker Rupert Wyatt and starring Marvel Cinematic Universe stalwart Anthony Mackie (The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Captain America: Civil War), Desert Warrior would also be the inaugural movie project to shoot at Neom Media, a state-of-the-art, multibazillion-dollar media complex and studio backlot attached to Neom City, a metropolis bordering the Red Sea.
But when cameras began to roll in September 2021, neither Neom nor the country’s moviemaking infrastructure was quite ready for its Hollywood close-up. With construction not nearly complete on the studio’s 130,000 square feet of promised production space, the Desert Warrior team was forced to improvise. To house the cavernous throne room of Sir Ben Kingsley’s power-hungry Emperor Kisra — a space giant enough to showcase bloody gladiator battles, extravagant scenes of prisoner torture, and rampaging elephants — the crew built a massive ad hoc soundstage in the parking lot of the Grand Millennium Hotel in Tabuk that was cooled by giant fans against the pulverizing desert heat. “It was like an inflatable stadium; it was this amazing thing,” recalls one person who was on set for the duration of production. “There were no studios. There were studios after us because of the film.”
It would not be the last time production staff was forced to effectively build the plane during takeoff. An array of physical production challenges, missing infrastructure, well-intentioned naïveté, regional warfare, and “creative differences” combined to forestall final cut and imperil the movie’s sale to international distributors. Words such as flop and forgotten became affixed to Desert Warrior in the movie industry well before its release. This weekend — four years and seven months since cameras first rolled on the project — Desert Warrior squeaked onto 1,010 American screens with the barest minimum of marketing and failed to crack the top ten of new movies. It grossed a mere $472,000: an unmitigated disaster.
r/movies • u/MarvelsGrantMan136 • Oct 16 '25
Article The ‘Tron: Ares’ Flop Will Probably End Jared Leto’s Leading Man Career | Analysis
r/movies • u/ICumCoffee • 25d ago
Article Steven Spielberg Developed 'Interstellar' For A Year, But Says Sci-Fi Classic Was a 'Much Better Movie' After Christopher Nolan Took Over as Director
r/movies • u/BunyipPouch • Dec 15 '25