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'Now You See Me 3' Opening Day Ahead of 'Running Man'
TV & Streaming

‘Now You See Me 3’ Opening Day Ahead of ‘Running Man’

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

The “Now You See Me” franchise’s reappearing act is landing on the top of box office charts, debuting ahead of the weekend’s other new releases “The Running Man” and “Keeper.”

Lionsgate’s “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t” heisted $8.4 million across Friday and preview screenings from 3,403 locations. The PG-13-rated threequel is looking at a three-day opening between $21 million and $24 million — about in line with pre-weekend projections and in the ballpark of the prior 2016 entry, which opened to $22 million.

Critics turned in mediocre marks for “Now You Don’t,” but it is the best-reviewed of the trilogy. Meanwhile, audiences lean positive at a “B+” grade from moviegoer pollster Cinema Score (though lower than the “A-” grades for both prior entries). Lionsgate shelled out north of $90 million to revive the franchise, which is directed by Ruben Fleischer and sees Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Isla Fisher and Dave Franco return as a quartet of Robin Hood-like illusionists. Both prior entries scored a majority of their grosses overseas and, notably, Lionsgate typically sells off international rights to limit its financial exposure, at the cost of capping upside.

Meanwhile, Paramount’s “The Running Man” starring Glen Powell will have to vie for second place against the sophomore weekend of “Predator: Badlands” (funnily, another stab at resurrecting a property that was first introduced to moviegoers via an Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle in the ’80s.) The R-rated “Running Man” racked up $6.4 million across Friday and preview screenings from 3,534 locations. That puts the film on track to land behind projections for a debut north of $20 million, now forecast for the $17 million to $19 million range.

It’s an inauspicious kick-off for the Stephen King adaptation, which carries a hefty $110 million production budget co-financed by Domain Entertainment. Reviews have been lukewarm, though audiences are kinder at a B+ grade from Cinema Score. But with a crowded November slate ahead, including “Wicked: For Good” and “Zootopia 2,” “The Running Man” likely could’ve used some much stronger initial buzz to propel it through the coming weeks.

Also opening this weekend, Neon’s “Keeper,” the latest indie horror effort from writer-director Osgood Perkins, earned about $1 million from 1,950 locations across Friday and previews. It’s headed for a fifth-place debut. The opening doesn’t compare to the last two Perkins efforts — last year’s summer breakout “Longlegs” ($22 million) and this past spring’s “The Monkey” ($14 million). Reviews are worse than those last two movies too, and Cinema Score turned in a dismal “D+” grade.

Disney’s “Predator: Badlands” earned $3.5 million on its second Friday, down 68% from its opening day total a week ago. The science-fiction sequel’s domestic gross is now at $56 million and looks to go north of $66 million through Sunday. It’s gunning to pass “Alien vs. Predator,” which, though a crossover, is the biggest domestic box office hit ever for the franchise with $80.2 million in North America.

“Regretting You” will round out the top five, earning $1.2 million on Friday and projecting a 39% drop for a $4 million fourth weekend and another strong hold. Paramount’s release of the Colleen Hoover adaptation will hit a domestic total of $45 million through Sunday.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Cricket in L1
Bollywood

Opening for Linkin Park in Bengaluru is a full-circle moment for Delhi metal band Bloodywood: ‘Lit a fire within us’

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Delhi-based folk-metal band, Bloodywood has described opening for Linkin Park as ‘a full-circle moment,’ after it was announed that they will be the supporting act for the American band’s Bengaluru concert on January 23, next year.

Bloodywood will be opening for Linkin Park in Bengaluru next year

“This is a full circle moment for all of us in Bloodywood. We all have looked up to Linkin Park at certain points in our lives and are big fans of the band. Their sound really defined the nu metal sound in the 2000s and just they kept going ahead with full force,” said the band’s frontman Jayant Bhadula explaining why the opportunity felt deeply personal for the band.

“They lit a fire within all of us that made us create this band and try to walk the same steps as them,” he said. Adding that the announcement was “a very big moment” for the trio, he also said that much of Bloodywood’s identity can be traced back to the band they will now open for .

“Honestly, we are heading into these shows with a lot of love and passion. And the same fire that Linkin Park lit in our hearts back in the day. Yes, not just as musicians, but also as human beings. Also as people who would have posters of Linkin Park in their rooms and would just listen to each and every track of theirs. It’s a very big moment for all of us. It’s a very wholesome one,” he added.

The show in Bengaluru comes just two days before Linkin Park headlines Lollapalooza India in Mumbai, marking the band’s first-ever live performances in the country.

For Bloodywood, the slot adds another major milestone to their international rise, placing them on a platform alongside the artists who shaped their earliest musical ambitions. Known for blending heavy metal with Indian folk elements, the band has been consistently touring globally, building a loyal audience across Europe, the U.S. and Asia.

As they prepare to step on stage before one of their biggest influences, Jayant summed up the mood simply: “We’re just very, very excited to share the stage with them.”

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Badlands' Opening to $39M Franchise Record
TV & Streaming

Badlands’ Opening to $39M Franchise Record

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

SATURDAY PM UPDATE: Dan Trachtenberg’s Predator: Badlands is now opening to $39M+ — a record domestic debut for the 20th Century Studios’ 38-year-old Predator franchise.

This comes after a great hold on Saturday of $14M, a mere -10% dip from Friday/previews of $15.6M. Predator: Badlands outstrips the previous series record held by Alien vs. Predator ($38.2M) which was a mid-August 2004 theatrical release. Here’s something we haven’t seen in a while at the box office (arguably going back to Conjuring: Last Rites and Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle in September)– a tentpole with an opening that grows throughout the weekend, while besting its tracking forecast. After a torturous October, finally some optimism at the box office.

In addition, the Trachtenberg, Ben Rosenblatt and John Davis production ranks as the second-best domestic opening ever for actress Elle Fanning after 2014’s Maleficent ($69.4M) and ahead of 2019’s Maleficent: Mistress of Evil ($36.9M).

We’ll have more updates in the morning.

SATURDAY AM UPDATE: 20th Century Studios’ Predator: Badlands is looking good, knock on wood, coursing to a near-record opening for the franchise, around $37M, after a $15.6M Friday/previews. It also has the best CinemaScore a Predator movie has ever seen with A-. As we told you, the previous highs for a Predator movie were the original 1987 installment and 1990 sequel, both of which earned a earned B+. That audience score is further boosted by the Screen Engine/Comscore PostTrak “definite recommend” of 78% and five stars — which is platinum for any movie.

It’s clear that audiences are enjoying this version of Predator from director-producer-writer Dan Trachtenberg and producers Ben Rosenblatt and John Davis, hence the higher-than-expected ticket sales, which were expected to be around the $25M range. The movie’s momentum is in a better position than Disney’s early-October attempted tentpole Tron: Ares, thanks to word of mouth. At the end of the day, no matter how much stunting a studio does in a highly competitive social media-streaming landscape, the movie ultimately sells itself, meaning audiences discover it upon viewing and spread the gospel from there. Both Tron: Ares and Predator: Badlands dazzled Hall H at San Diego Comic-Con with equally memorable stunts; the lead character of the latter, Dek, stepped onstage to scan the audience with his eye vision.

Switching ratings, i.e. from R to PG-13, hasn’t dented the appeal for the alien-killer movie, this particular installment casting the series villain as the protag. That’s the hook as far as distinguishing itself from previous Predator movies. Rather than just a one-sheet with the fleshy, toothy-faced guy in a profile shot, Badlands one-sheets went hardcore sci-fi with epic shots of him battling creatures, etc. The problem with the static opening between 2018’s The Predator and 2010’s Predators opening to around the same number of $25M stemmed from the campaigns being quite similar and not selling anything fresh. There was no one-up.

RELATED: The Movies That Have Made More Than $1 Billion At The Global Box Office

What’s interesting, though, is that going to PG-13 might not necessarily have brought in a younger audience: Badlands only pulled in 5% for the 13-17 demo. Compared to 2018’s The Predator, it shows that older males still come out for the IP (57% to 45%), as well as older females (about the same between both installments at 22%). However, men under 25 shrunk between The Predator and Badlands (from 21% share to 16%) in addition to women under 25 (11% to 5%). Diversity demos are 44% Caucasian, 26% Latino and Hispanic (bigger than The Predator‘s 23%), 15% Black and 8% Asian American.

Predator: Badlands has nearly all the Imax and premium large-format screens, which are driving 53% of the weekend. The pic is playing best in the South Central and West regions, with the latter seeing 43% of the gross coming from there vs. a norm of 38% for all other titles in the marketplace. The AMC Burbank is Badlands’ best theater in the country with over $59K to date.

With a social media universe of 244M across TikTok, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram and X, Badlands reach is very similar to the reach of last year’s Alien: Romulus before opening, that being 246M. Elle Fanning is promoting to her 6.7M fans.

RELATED: 41 Of The Most Anticipated Movies Of 2025

Social media data corp RelishMix remarks, “Convo runs positive for Predator: Badlands as fans are lit up at the idea of expanding the Yautja universe beyond Earth, praising its young-blood narrative and connections to Prey and Predators (2010). Enthusiasts loved the lore depth and ‘proving hunt’ concept, calling it ‘refreshing’ and ‘bad ass.’ Comments like ‘Looks fantastic — reminds me when people clowned on Prey and it was awesome,’ and ‘Teenage Yautja with something to prove? Sign me up,’ highlight genuine anticipation. Others noted the Monsterverse-style shift toward creature-led storytelling, celebrating it as ‘finally giving us the Predator story we’ve been waiting for.’

As far as the new upscale adult films, oy, nothing is mind-blowing gross wise. See below.

  1. Predator: Badlands (Dis) 3,725 theaters, Fri $15.6M, 3-day $37M/Wk 1

2. Regretting You (Par) 3,196 (-229) theaters, Fri $2.2M (+80%), 3-day $7.3M (-7%), Total $38.7M/Wk 3
The Constantin $30M production brought into Paramount by former Global Marketing and Distribution Boss Marc Weinstock is bound for $100M worldwide. Phenomenal hold here.

3. Black Phone 2 (Uni) 2,943 (-362) theaters, Fri $1.5M (-38%), 3-day $5.2M (-38%), Total $70M/Wk 4

4. Sarah’s Oil (AMZ) 2,410, Fri $1.7M 3-day $4.4M/Wk 1
The best of the adult bunch. Who knew? No surprise when you realize that it’s a Kingdom Story production (their fanbase knows about these faith-based films). A+ CinemaScore which is where faith-based audience scores live. Nothing shocking here: over 55 is 48% of the audience, 66% women. The Zachary Levi movie is playing where these pics play best in the South, South Central and Midwest with 63% of the gross coming from there compared to a norm of 44% for all other titles in the marketplace. The Southlake Pavilion in Atlanta is the movie’s top grossing location with just over $5K.

Rami Malek in ‘Nuremberg’

Sony Pictures Classics

5. Nuremberg (SPC) 1,802 theaters, Fri $1.4M 3 day $3.8M/Wk 1
No CinemaScore, but great PostTrak exits of 5 stars, 76% definite recommend, and 93% positive to overshadow those middling reviews of 69% fresh. The over 55 crowd was prominent at 51% (they gave it an amazing 88% definite recommend), over 45 at 67%, and male leaning at 57% for the WWII drama. Pic is playing on the coasts with 48% of the gross coming from there versus 43% of all films in the marketplace. AMC Grove in LA is the top grossing multiplex with just over $13K. Caucasian 75%, Latino and Hispanic at 10%, 6% Black and 5% Asian American.

6. Bugonia (Foc) 2,043 theaters, Fri $1M (-43%), 3-day $3.7M (-26%), Total $12.5M/Wk 3

7. Chainsaw Man (Sony) 2,285 (-718) theaters, Fri $900K (-31%), 3-day $3.6M (-42%), total $38M/Wk 3

'Die My Love' distribution deal Mubi

‘Die My Love’

Kimberly French

8. Die My Love (Mubi) 1,983 theaters, Fri $1M, 3-day $2.7M/Wk 1
A huge chasm between critics at 78% on Rotten Tomatoes and audiences who dismissed this Jennifer Lawrence-Robert Pattinson melodrama about a woman’s depression from Lynne Ramsay with a D+. Remember Lawrence’s other big swing from Darren Aronofsky, Mother! got an F back in 2017. Despite the great acting in Die My Love, this is a tough movie about a very sad situation; that’s hard if you want to lasso people off their couches. Can’t write this enough: Mubi paid $24M for domestic and multiple foreign rights on the movie (versus $12.5M they shelled out for The Substance; that hipster horror pic opened to $3.2M and did a 5.5x multiple with a final domestic of $17.5M). A 29% definite recommend on PostTrak is the kiss of death. Male leaning at 51%., 25-34 being the biggest show at 44% with 18-34 at 78%. Diversity demos are 60% Caucasian, 22% Latino and Hispanic, 9% Black, and 6% Asian American. Coastal play, which is what these upscale adult movies do, with 50% coming from the East and West. AMC Lincoln Square in NYC is the top grossing location with $12k.

9. Springsteen…(20th) 2,200 (-1260) theaters, Fri $637K (-24%) 3-day $2.2M (-39%)/Total $20.4M/Wk 3

10. Tron: Ares (Dis) 1,970 (-605) theaters, Fri $477K (-21%), 3-day $1.9M (-37%), Total $71.3M/Wk 5

Sydney Sweeney on the set of 'Christy'

Sydney Sweeney on the set of ‘Christy’

TIFF

11. Christy (Black) 2,184 theaters, Fri $600K, 3-day $1.25M/Wk 1
The biopic about female boxer Christy Martin, Black Bear finance’s foray into domestic theatrical distribution, gets a B+ CinemaScore better than A24’s MMA movie Smashing Machine which landed an B-. PostTraks are better with a solid 84% positive and a 59% definite recommend. Maybe this builds more momentum today off that and breaks into the top 10. Sydney Sweeney championed the movie all the way through including appearances last night at the AMC Century City with director David Michod. Black Bear put this theatrical release together quite quickly, taking their own movie off the table from domestic buyers and positioning it for an asap theatrical release post its TIFF world premiere. The town says we need more theatrical distributors in an environment where major studios like Paramount and Warner Bros could potentially collapse into each other. Let’s see where Black Bear winds up in the long run. It took a while for A24 to build-up its brand; Bling Ring with Emma Watson was one of its early releases and only grossed $5.8M before we got to the Hereditary, Uncut Gems, Everything Everywhere All at Once, etc.

FRIDAY AFTERNOON UPDATE: 20th Century Studios’ Predator: Badlands is creeping toward the second-best Friday start ever for the franchise at $14M, which would get the Dan Trachtenberg-directed movie to the second-best opening ever for a Predator movie at $33M. The John Davis-produced feature is booked at 3,725 theaters.

The best Friday and opening for a Predator movie belongs to 2004’s Alien v. Predator with $16.4M and $38.2M, respectively. Friday ticket sales of $14M includes the combined previews from Wednesday and Thursday of $4.8M.

Some might say, “Oh, well, this looks like Tron: Ares,” given how that movie a month ago posted a $14.4M Friday and a $33.2M start. But Predator: Badlands has some of the best reviews and audience scores for its franchise, plus it cost 52% less than the $220M pricetag of the Jared Leto movie.

RELATED: ‘Regretting You’ Review: True Love Inevitably Prevails In A Ridiculous Romantic Drama

Second place goes to Paramount’s Colleen Hoover adaptation Regretting You with a third Friday of $1.9M and third weekend of $6.5M, -17%, at 3,196 theaters for a running total by Sunday of $37.9M.

At 2,943 theaters, it’s the fourth frame of Universal/Blumhouse’s The Black Phone 2 with $4.2M, -50%, after a $1.2M Friday and running cume through Sunday of $69M.

Fourth is Amazon MGM Studios/Kingdom Story/Wonder Project’s Sarah’s Oil is the best of the original adult bunch with $1.6M today, and $4.1M for the weekend at 2,410 theaters.

Focus Features’ third weekend (second wide) of Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia is looking at $1.1M today at 2,043 theaters, $3.7M for the frame, -26%, for a total by EOD Sunday of $12.5M.

RELATED: ‘Nuremberg’ Review: Russell Crowe And Rami Malek In Thrilling And Urgent Nazi Drama More Relevant Than Ever – Toronto Film Festival

Sony Pictures Classics’ Nuremberg starring Russell Crowe, Rami Malek, Michael Shannon, John Slattery and more is seeing $1.4M today for a $3.5M opening at 1,802 theaters.

FRIDAY AM: The Dan Trachtenberg-directed Predator: Badlands speared $4.8 million in previews, which includes both Wednesday fan and Thursday night shows.

The preview number is less than that of another sci-fi genre title, Alien: Romulus‘ $6.5M, which also was a franchise reboot for the revived 20th Century Studios under new owner Disney. That Fede Alvarez-directed revival went on to open to $42M stateside. But keep in mind that movie was R-rated and had a mid-August release in 2024. Also, Predator: Badlands, with its female-action-hero sensibility, also is getting comped by Disney sources to Ballerina, which did $3.8M in previews before a $24.5M opening in June. Badlands previews are also ahead of 2017’s Blade Runner 2049, which did $3.5M before a $12.5M Friday, and 3-day of $32.7M.

Also good news for Badlands at this point in time: Total previews here are ahead of The Predator, which did $2.5M in Thursday previews back in September 2018. That pic posted a $10.3M Friday on its way to a $24.6M start.

The 2004 crossover title Alien vs. Predator owns the franchise-record opening at the domestic B.O. with $38.2M. 2010’s Predators from director Nimród Antal and produced by Robert Rodriguez follows as the second-best U.S./Canada opening for the series at $24.7M. The forecast going into the weekend for Badlands was $25M+, hopefully the second-best start in the Predator franchise.

1987’s Predator and 1990’s Predator 2 own the best CinemaScores for the series conceived by Jim and John Thomas with a B+.

Predator: Badlands cost $105M net before marketing, shot in New Zealand with tax credits. Trachtenberg breathed new life into the Predator movies in August 2022 with the direct-to-Hulu Prey, which was the streamer’s most-watched premiere ever at the time. Critics believed the movie should have been booked in theaters, hence, here we are with Badlands.

RELATED: The 2026 Oscars: Everything We Know About The Ceremony, Host, Date & More So Far

On the Rotten Tomatoes audience scale, Badlands is the fan favorite of the franchise with 96%, ahead of the original 1987 Arnold Schwarzenegger movie at 87%. Prey remains the most critically acclaimed in the alien series at 94%.

PREVIOUSLY: Amazon MGM Studios release of Kingdom Story’s Sarah’s Oil posted $460K in previews. The
Cyrus Nowrasteh-directed faith-based movie starring Zachary Levi, Sonequa Martin-Green and Garrett Dillahunt follows the true story of 11-year old Sarah Rector, an African American girl born in Oklahoma Indian Territory in the early 1900s who believes there is oil beneath the barren land she’s allotted and whose faith is proven right. No RT or audience scores.

Katy O'Brian as Lisa Holewyne and Sydney Sweeney as Christy Martin in 'Christy' (2025)

Black Bear Pictures

RELATED: ‘Christy’ Review: Sydney Sweeney Is A Coal Miner’s Boxer In This By-The-Numbers Biopic That Goes Very Dark – Toronto Film Festival

Black Bear Finance’s first domestic theatrical release under its new arm, Christy, starring Sydney Sweeney as boxer Christy Martin, posted $400K in previews last night. RT reviews stand at 67% fresh. The pic is going wide in north of 2,000.

Sony Pictures Classics and Walden Media’s WWII drama Nuremberg, booked at 1,700 theaters this weekend, started off with $210K last night in previews. The movie directed and co-written by James Vanderbilt stands at 71% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes from 76 reviews.

Mubi’s $24 million global acquisition Die My Love starring Robert Pattinson and Jennifer Lawrence is opening wide this weekend as well.

Top 5 for the week; note that Netflix’s Kpop Demon Hunters, which made $5.9M over the weekend, didn’t play the weekdays, we’re told.

  1. Regretting You (Par) 3,425 theaters, Wk $12M (-38%) Total $31.4M/Wk 2
  2. The Black Phone 2 (Uni) 3,305 theaters, Wk $11.3M (-35%), Total $64.8M/Wk 3
  3. Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc (Sony) 3,003 theaters Wk $9.67M (-61%), Total $34.4M/Wk 2
  4. Bugonia (Foc) 2,043 theaters, Wk $7.8M (+6800%), Total $8.8M/Wk 2
  5. Back to the Future (re) 2,290 theaters, Wk $6.4M, Lifetime total $221M/Wk 1 (re)
November 9, 2025 0 comments
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“No Strategy Is the Strategy”: Kiko Kostadinov on Opening a London Store (That’s Also Much More)
Fashion

“No Strategy Is the Strategy”: Kiko Kostadinov on Opening a London Store (That’s Also Much More)

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

“It should be fine,” says Kiko Kostadinov brightly last Friday afternoon — just as the urgent grind of a power drill sounds through the floor of his office. Beneath the new East London studio space Kostadinov and his team moved into in April, his third store is being fitted out. This Friday, 7 November, it will open with a show: the first ever to blend the menswear designed by Kostadinov himself with the womenswear created by Laura and Deanna Fanning.

The space is at 21 Whiston Road, near Columbia Road and Broadway Market. The studio occupies the first floor; the store below (mid-construction as we speak), will be shaped around a reassembled artwork by ongoing collaborators Ryan Trecartin and Lizzie Fitch. “It’s really an artwork recontextualized into a store,” Kostadinov says. “It’s exciting to keep the narrative between the three stores, Tokyo, LA and now London, all part of Ryan’s universe.” The installation piece arrives in 10 crates, and has yet fully to be pieced together: Kostadinov is confident of meeting Friday’s deadline.

The London space will complete a loose trilogy of ad hoc Kostadinov flagships that have grown independently. Tokyo opened in March 2024, followed by Los Angeles last November. “Tokyo is sustainable and solid,” he says. “LA is a bit intense; there, it’s a different way of shopping.” Each store operates with local programming and generates content through its own Instagram account. In LA, for instance, the store partners with Rocky Xu’s Rocky’s Matcha to host monthly breakfasts. London will follow a similarly organic rhythm, opening Thursday to Saturday, and maybe sometimes on Sunday to coincide with the Columbia Road Flower Market.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Baahubali The Epic box office collection day 1: SS Rajamouli film records biggest opening day for re-release in India
Bollywood

Baahubali The Epic box office collection day 1: SS Rajamouli film records biggest opening day for re-release in India

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Baahubali The Epic box office collection day 1: SS Rajamouli and Prabhas’ two blockbusters, Baahubali: The Beginning and Baahubali: The Conclusion, re-released in theatres today as one film, titled Baahubali The Epic. The film received positive reviews from audiences and also took a bumper opening.

Baahubali The Epic is a re-edited re-release of the two Baahubali films packaged as one.

Baahubali The Epic box office performance

According to Sacnilk, Baahubali The Epic collected ₹7.88 crore on day 1 at the domestic box office. The film has not only surpassed the opening day haul of previous re-releases such as Vijay’s Ghilli (reportedly ₹4.87 crore) and Mahesh Babu’s Khaleja (reportedly ₹5.75 crore), but it has also exceeded the day-one collections of recent blockbusters like Lokah Chapter 1 Chandra ( ₹2.71 crore) and Dragon ( ₹6.5 crore).

About Baahubali The Epic

Baahubali: The Epic is a remastered version of filmmaker SS Rajamouli’s two-part magnum opus — Baahubali: The Beginning (2015) and Baahubali: The Conclusion (2017). The combined film, re-released in cinemas on 31 October 2025, is backed by Arka Media Works. The re-edited version runs for approximately 3 hours and 45 minutes, with select sequences trimmed. Featuring Prabhas, Rana Daggubati, Anushka Shetty, and Tamannaah Bhatia in lead roles, the epic chronicles the story of Mahishmati, its power struggles, and the rise of the valiant warrior, Amarendra Baahubali.

The film opened to overwhelmingly positive responses from audiences and critics. The re-release isn’t confined to Indian theatres — it has been re-released across more than 1,150 cinemas worldwide, including over 400 screens in the US, 210 in the UK and Ireland, and numerous venues in the UAE, Australia, and Southeast Asia.

Annapurna Studios’ CTO, CV Rao, the man behind the transformation of two films into a 3-hour-44-minute-long spectacle, told Hindustan Times, “When Baahubali first came out, each film took us four months of post-production. It took us approximately 10 weeks, or around two months, to complete the project this time around. But the bigger challenge for us was to deliver the output in multiple formats.”

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Watch HBO's 'Welcome To Derry' Stunning New Opening Credits
TV & Streaming

Watch HBO’s ‘Welcome To Derry’ Stunning New Opening Credits

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Is this the best new opening credits sequence of the year?

HBO‘s horror-thriller It: Welcome to Derry just revealed a stunner of a credits sequence (watch it below) that debuted on the show’s second episode, which was released on HBO Max a few days early for Halloween.

The phantasmagorical animated sequence peels apart the seemingly idyllic Maine town during the early 1960s to gradually reveal an increasingly horrifying succession of postcard-like tableaus, from Pennywise causing death and destruction to the threat of nuclear war. The sequence is set to the aggressively sunny 1956 song “A Smile and A Ribbon,” by Patience and Prudence, and extends HBO’s track record for creating groundbreaking titles for shows (with previous standouts including The Sopranos, Game of Thrones and Westworld).

The show’s executive producer and director, Andy Muschietti (who made the series along with his creative partner Barbara Muschietti) calls the concept “a descent into dread” that was inspired by the film’s postcard-tourism Welcome to Derry title.

“The name Welcome to Derry felt touristic and brings you to the world of postcards and facade, which has a lot to do with what Derry is — a place that’s seemingly wholesome, but there’s something dreadful under the surface,” says Muschietti, who heavily praised the production studio Filmograph, which created the sequence. “There was a lot of tweaking and calibration — how much is the next step? It reflects our desire to show the big catastrophic events [described in Stephen King’s book IT], all leading to the explosion at the Ironworks.”

The Ironworks factory explosion and other events shown in the credits, however, will not necessarily be depicted in the series, particularly during the first season. Another key event in the sequence is a shootout in the street with the Bradley Gang, which took place during the 1930s.

A crucial component is the song “A Smile and A Ribbon,” which was originally going to be used for a sequence where a character gets ready for school. Then they tried the song for the credits instead, and it fit perfectly. As the images get weirder and darker, the song offers up the unsettling key lyric, “The louder I say I’m happy, the more I believe it’s so.”

“The song is about faking a state of mind, faking a feeling,” Muschietti says. “The message of the song wrapped in such a beautiful tune is dreadful in itself.”

The team at Filmograph also gave some insight into the title’s creation, including one element that went too far even for Muschietti.

“Our assignment was to take the literature [from King’s novel] and take vignettes that also exist in the world of the show and find a way to stitch them together,” said Aaron Becker, a principal and director at Filmograph. “Andy [was] dead set on the idea of taking us back in time through a specific type of medium — the tourist postcards that you would find in like the gift shop in a small town, which worked perfectly for Stephen King’s lexicon and Derry in particular.”

The animation itself was done with CG, but then HBO let them take what they had created and put the final product on film, which added a bit of grainy realism to the end result. “And the nice thing is that Andy kept saying, ‘I want the dirtiest-looking version.’”

The grain also meshed well with the song, which has record scratches and pops as part of its original recording. “We got the track and we dropped it in, it almost lined up perfectly,” said Troy James Miller, Filmograph producer. “We realized this is the perfect track for this. And now it’s been in my head for the last year.”

“It just made what we did look so much better, because the song itself is so jarring,” Becker added. “It mirrors the characters’ arc as children coming of age, trying to convince themselves that their biggest fears aren’t real.”

“We imagine viewers really looking at this from an Easter egg perspective, just like the show,” noted
Seth Kleinberg, a Filmograph principal and executive producer. “There’s so much opportunity to not skip the intro and to really look at the finite details of what we’ve created, and I think that that’s really special. This is seriously one of our most favorite projects we’ve done.”

The sequence also has literal Easter eggs during its climactic postcard showing the explosion at Ironworks, which took place during an Easter egg hunt in 1908. A girl running from the flames originally was going to have eyeballs popping out, but that proved one step too far Muschietti. “That was too much and we dialed that back,” Kleinberg said.

And just because it’s pretty rare you have three experts in making opening title sequences on a Zoom call at one time, we couldn’t resist asking each of them what was their favorite all-time credits. And the trio came back with: David Fincher’s Seven, Alfred Hitchcock’s North by Northwest and David Chase’s The Sopranos.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Cast and Creators Talk Gruesome Series Opening
TV & Streaming

Cast and Creators Talk Gruesome Series Opening

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • The cast and creators talk to TV Insider about the series premiere of It: Welcome to Derry, which is set in 1962 and explores the era’s collective fears.
  • The episode introduces a new group of children and adults, highlighting themes of social exclusion and prejudice, while connecting their personal fears to the supernatural terror in Derry.
  • The shocking massacre of most main child characters in the premiere subverts audience expectations, signaling that the series will not follow the familiar patterns of the original It films.

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for the premiere episode of It: Welcome to Derry.]

Welcome back to Derry, Maine, for another cycle of the title extraterrestrial monster emerging from the sewers to terrorize young children.

The premiere of the It prequel series is set in 1962, against a landscape of widespread fears about the bomb and the pernicious racism that prevailed in the era. For cocreator Jason Fuchs, he needed to look no further than Stephen King‘s original text for inspiration for that defining element of the new series.

“Stephen King, I think, intentionally approached it in the way he did, because he wanted Derry to be a microcosm of America, and, in some ways, a microcosm of the larger world around us. We sort of wanted to explore that. We wanted to explore the moment of 1962. It’s a specific period with very specific fears and terrors. Obviously, It does not exist in the beginning, is taking advantage of people’s very real fear. So what are people scared of in 1962, and what are people worried about? There’s a long list, but certainly chief amongst them [is] the threat of nuclear war. It’s the Atomic Age.”

The opening shot of the series plays upon the first of those; a young (but not quite young enough for the pacifier he’s gnawing on) boy named Matty (Miles Ekhardt) is caught watching The Music Man without a ticket at the local cineplex. The usher who chases him implies this is a regular occurrence, but Matty is clocked and covered for by young Ronnie Grogan (Amanda Christine), the daughter of the friendly reel operator, Hank (Stephen Rider), who implies that Matty’s family is terrible to him.

Miles Ekhardt as Matty / HBO

Matty then braves the cold in an effort to get out of Derry and is picked up by a family that goes from wholesome to horrifying in a matter of minutes. As the kids in the backseat with him join their folks in a chorus of bizarre chants, the mother gives birth to a mutant monster baby with wings that attacks. The inspiration for that fearsome new creature, according to Andy Muschietti, is drawn from the perceived dangers of radioactivity in the Cold War era.

“There’s a connection to the collective fears of the era, which is… the fear of nuclear attack, radiation, general nuclear tests. People were in panic of the imminent bang… This scare with the baby is based on the radio broadcast that’s talking about birth defects, stemming from radiation. So I thought it was a great way to start to set up the era where we’re living, what the fears are, and newborn baby, boom, in your face,” Muschietti explained. “There’s also a theme of having children that cuts across the whole book. When you realize that all the Losers in the second half of the book, when they’re adults, they come back to Derry, and they all realized nobody, none of them, had children, it sort of talks about the fear or the horror of bringing kids into this world, which is full of horrors.”

We then meet Major Leroy Hanlon (Jovan Adepo) as he’s welcomed to the air base outside of Derry by General Francis Shaw (James Remar), who quickly puts an obviously racist airman in his place for refusing to salute his superior.

James Remar and Jovan Adepo in It Welcome to Derry

James Remar as Gen. Francis Shaw and Jovan Adepo as Maj. Leroy Hanlon / HBO

For James Remar, while Shaw does want something from Hanlon and his bespoke set of special skills, that’s not the only reason he stands up for him. “Am I just using him? I don’t feel that’s the case, because if I were, then I could do it by force. Francis Shaw is doing it a little bit more by coercion, and trying to get him on his side, and to see what he’s doing is right. So he does have a respect and an affection for him. I don’t feel like he’s just using him. And he protects all his troops, because just about 10 years prior to when this was taking place, maybe 1948, the United States military was desegregated. Prior to that, in World War II, Black troops and white troops did not serve in the same units… But then they integrated. And when the boss, President Truman, said we’re integrating the troops, General Shaw was right on board,” he said. “These are my troops. These are my guys. And it didn’t matter what color they were anymore.”

Leroy is later attacked in his room by a pair of masked men who point a gun at his face and demand top-secret information that he refuses to give. He’s rescued by his partner, Pauly Russo (Randy Mancuso), before things take a grimmer turn.

Jack Malloy Legault, Matilda Legault, Clara stack, Mikkal Karim Fdler in It Welcome to Derry

Jack Malloy Legault as Phil, Matilda Legault as Suzie, Clara Stack as Lilly, and Mikkal Karim Fidler as Teddy / HBO

The show also introduces us to more children who’ve been otherized by their peers at school. There’s Lilly Bainbridge (Clara Stack), who is taunted with jars of pickles after her dad’s accidental death at a jarring factory, and fears she’ll be perceived as mentally unwell. She once confided in Matty about all of that before the boy’s disappearance, and as she remembers that, she begins to hear his voice through the bath drain before a pair of fingers pop out.

Then, there’s Margie (Matilda Lawler), a girl who’s desperately trying to fit in with the popular girls called the Patty Cakes, hates her glasses, and worries that her friendship with Lilly reflects badly on her. Meanwhile, Phil (Jack Molloy Legault) is a foul-mouthed sci-fi lover, and Teddy (Mikkal Karim-Fidler) is an apparent ancestor of Stanley Urie. Teddy, after hearing about the horrors of the Holocaust at the dinner table, experiences the second individual scare with a lampshade turning into human skin and chasing him around the room.

Lilly joins forces with Phil, Teddy, and Phil’s little sister Suzie (Matilda Legault) to dive deeper into what Teddy experienced and how it might relate to Matty’s disappearance. They recruit Ronnie to join in on the mission because she, too, heard something in the pipes. Together, they hit the movie theater to recreate the moment when Matty was last seen, and things take a horrifying turn when the mutant flying baby from the intro bursts through the screen and rips most of the kids to shreds, with just Lilly and Ronnie left alive in the massacre.

Amanda Christine in It Welcome to Derry

Amanda Christine as Ronnie Grogan / HBO

“For me, it was super fun to get to that, being drenched in blood and getting to scream and duck under the seats and see the kids climbing over the seats and getting flung in the air,” Clara Stack remembered of making that scene.

The deaths of three of these children, who at first appear to be in line with the archetypes of the original Losers (with Phil having echoes of Richie Tozier and Teddy reminding us, of course, of Stanley), subverts expectations. That upending was by design, according to executive producer Brad Caleb Kane.

“We wanted to show people in the first episode of the show, this is not the movies. We wanted to pull the rug out from under people right away to let them know you shouldn’t get too comfortable with anybody right away. Anything can happen. Anything will,” he explained.

Find out what else the cast and creatives had to say about the first episode of It: Welcome to Derry in TV Insider’s exclusive aftershow, embedded above. And stay tuned for more cast and creative analysis to come throughout Welcome to Derry‘s run.

It: Welcome to Derry, Sundays, 9/8c, HBO

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Sony Crunchyroll Anime Rules Box Office Again With ‘Chainsaw Man’ Powering To $17M+ Opening, ‘Springsteen’ Plays Low With $9M+ – Sunday AM
TV & Streaming

Sony Crunchyroll Anime Rules Box Office Again With ‘Chainsaw Man’ Powering To $17M+ Opening, ‘Springsteen’ Plays Low With $9M+ – Sunday AM

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

SUNDAY AM: Sony/Crunchyroll’s Chainsaw Man: Reze Arc is landing at the high end of where we were seeing it yesterday with $17.2M after a $5.2M million Saturday in a weekend where the Toronto Blue Jays and LA Dodgers were a complete distraction in the World Series, now with 1-1 tied streak. Universal/Blumhouse’s second weekend of […]

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Dinner Avec Dior! Inside the Opening Night of Beverly Hill's Most Fashionable New Eatery
Fashion

Dinner Avec Dior! Inside the Opening Night of Beverly Hill’s Most Fashionable New Eatery

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Upon arrival to the North Rodeo Drive address, they made their way up the sweeping staircase to the third-floor setting, which overlooks a lush multi-story garden created in collaboration with landscape architect Peter Wirtz. Designed by Peter Marino, the restaurant is reminiscent of the elegance of Dior’s historic boutique at 30 Avenue Montaigne—albeit seasoned with a distinctly Californian flavor. Its airy spaces are awash in shades of green and chartreuse in an ode to Christian Dior’s beloved gardens. And as for nodding to the new, the floor pays backdrop to Dior Maison, the home décor offering. Guests quickly spotted the reissued trompe-l’œil plates by Jonathan Anderson—the very same designs that doubled as the invite to his debut show last month.

Pre-dinner, cocktails were served at the bar area’s curved ebony-and-onyx counter, beneath a ceiling of white rose petals; Monsieur Dior’s favorite bloom. The party soon flowed into the dining room, where a dramatic 28-foot work by Nicole Wittenberg anchors the space. Dinner began with caviar service and savory buckwheat madeleines, presented on tables dressed in crisp white linen and set with porcelain and crystal glassware rendered in Dior’s signature Cannage pattern.

When it came to crafting the menu, Michelin-starred chef Dominique Crenn has drawn deeply from the Dior archives. “I went to the archive and to the atelier—to understand the craftsmanship, the story, and what lies beyond,” Crenn, the only female chef in the U.S. to hold three Michelin stars, told Vogue. “It’s not just about fashion—there’s so much more behind it. I wanted to see how I could bring my DNA to their DNA.”

The result is a smorgasbord of food and fashion that pays homage to signature Dior moments: tuna tartare with purple yam chips and crème fraîche recall the layered eggplant-hued tulle gown worn by Emilia Clarke at Cannes in 2018; black truffle agnolotti with mushroom consommé evokes Charlize Theron’s golden J’Adore campaign; Guinea hen with maitake mushrooms and turnip was inspired by Laetitia Casta’s shimmering gold lamé sheath from Cannes 2003; and a ribeye cap with cauliflower purée and truffle, references a Marilyn Monroe image from a 1962 issue of Vogue.“I’ve worked on this for the last three years,” Crenn said. “Everything is a story on the plate.”

The true showstopper of the night hit the table like a finale on the runway: a Cannage-topped chocolate mousse by pâtissier Juan Contreras, Crenn’s longtime collaborator, modeled after Princess Diana and her Lady Dior bag.

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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'Black Phone 2' Opening to $23 Million
TV & Streaming

‘Black Phone 2’ Opening to $23 Million

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

SATURDAY AM: Refresh for more analysis and chart… In what has been a heavy-loaded horror year, every other studio seemed to be winning with the genre except Blumhouse. Until now: the horror house of Purge & Five Nights at Freddy’s finally makes a comeback this weekend with Black Phone 2 which in its opening is ahead of its predecessor with a 3-day of $24.4M.

The sequel throughout last night continued to trend up against comps, which is a great sign for a horror film. A -22% ease from Friday today is expected with $8.3M. That’s better than the first Saturday of 2021’s Black Phone which declined -26% from Friday with a $7.5M take. Overall CinemaScore is a B, which is very good for a horror film on that exit poll’s scale. In ComScore/Screen Engine’s PostTrak, women under 25 (who showed up at 22%) loved the R-rated movie the most at 85% postive score and 76% definite recommend along with 13-17 year olds (12% more than Tron:Ares‘ 6% last weekend) who gave it an 88% positive score and massive 83% definite recommend. Overall definite recommend, the barometer for success on PostTrak, is a great 63%.

Audiences are picking up Black Phone 2 in the West, Midwest and South Central. Shared PLFs with Tron: Ares are driving close to a third of the gross with the AMC Burbank the nation’s highest grossing cinema with close to $31K so far.

Keanu Reeves as Gabriel and Sandra Oh as Martha in Good Fortune. Photo Credit: Eddy Chen

Eddy Chen

The weekend’s other starry wide entry, Lionsgate’s Good Fortune, which at net $30M cost as much as Black Phone 2, ain’t faring well with an estimated $6M (we’re still waiting on the studio’s figure). B+ CinemaScore, and a pretty good 59% definite recommend, but nobody is going. At a time when we want comedies to truly make a return at the box office, this Keanu Reeves, Seth Rogen, Aziz Ansari feature isn’t calling the masses out despite good revies at 78% certified fresh and a 77% audience score. The film, an homage to movies like Warren Beatty’s Heaven Can Wait, is playing ala an arthouse movie, on the coasts. Largely guys over 25 (42%) and women over 25 (39%) with hardly anyone under 25 at 19%.

With a 166 million reach across TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and X, Good Fortune‘s social media universe is paced 13% behind other comedy norms, RelishMix comping the Ansari directed movie to Naked Gun, Caught Stealing, Joy Ride and Honey Don’t. Rogen counts 24.5M social media followers, Keke Palmer is 23.2M, with full force from Ansari at 11.9M. Reeves is still off the grid for his films. As far as the sniping online, RelishMix noticed “Mixed-negative leaning chatter for Good Fortune hits on recycled looks, AI vibes, and some misplaced casting. Keanu’s Wick-hair-and-beard fatigue is real with complaints like, ‘You’d think Keanu would change his look for this movie. Instead it’s John Wick with costume store wings. Looks lame to me.’”.

More…

FRIDAY MIDDAY UPDATE: Blumhouse is looking at its biggest opening year-to-date after four movies with Black Phone 2, which is shaping up for a $23 million start after a Friday and previews of $10.1M at 3,411 sites.

After an autumn of lost hopes, thank God. That’s $600,00 lighter than the 2021 first installment’s opening, and we’ll take it.

Giving the Universal release some extra power are 1,000 exhibitor PLF screens as well as 170 AMC-only Dolby Cinema screens.

Second place goes to Disney’s Tron: Ares at 4,000 sites with a 65% second-weekend decline, steeper than the movie’s pre-Covid comp Blade Runner 2049, which was down 53% in its weekend 2. The Jared Leto movie’s three-day is $11.5M, and its second Friday is $3.3M. The 10-day running total by Sunday will stand at $54.9M, 10% behind Blade Runner 2049 at the same point in time and -37% behind 2010’s Tron: Legacy (its 10-day was $87.3M) which had the beneficial bounce of Christmas.

Third belongs to Lionsgate’s Good Fortune at 2,990 theaters, with $2.5M today and bad fortune at $6M for the net $30M feature.

Warner Bros’ fourth weekend of One Battle After Another at 2,532 sites is seeing $3.8M over Friday-Sunday and $1M today, for a running cume by Sunday of $61.7M.

Fifth is Paramount/Miramax’s Roofman at 3,370 with a second Friday of $1.1M and a second weekend of $3.65M (-55%), for a 10-day total of $15.4M.

Angel Studios is opening the Matt Whitaker-directed WWII period movie Truth & Treason at 2,088 theaters to $2.2M for the weekend after $1M today. The plot: One teen risks everything to expose the truth as he questions his loyalty to his German homeland. With the Gestapo closing in, he must decide what it really means to be a good German.

PREVIOUSLY, Friday AM: Universal and Blumhouse’s Black Phone 2 dialed up $2.6 million in previews Thursday at 2,900 theaters from showtimes that began at 2 p.m. That’s just under the $3M the original 2021 movie pulled in before bowing to $23.6M.

Black Phone 2 previews are in line with that of Paramount’s Smile 2, which opened in the same weekend a year ago with $2.5M in previews and a three-day total of $23M.

The hope is that Blumhouse, after seeing a lackluster streak in a horror-laden box office year for the industry, can actually get a break and post an opening that’s robust. The Scott Derrickson-directed sequel is figured to land between $20M-$30M. Reviews are solid at 74% certified fresh on Rotten Tomatoes. The first Black Phone was 81% with RT critics and had a B+ CinemaScore.

The setup for Black Phone 2 is that Ethan Hawke’s The Grabber is out there in the real world, not holed up in some neighborhood house in 1970s suburbia. Watch out. Production cost for Black Phone 2 is net $30M.

After the less-than-par opening for Disney’s Tron: Ares, and sophisticated adult movies in free-fall (I’m sorry, One Battle After Another is the exception and faring better at a near $58M than everything in its wake, i.e., Roofman, A Big Bold Beautiful Journey, Caught Stealing, etc.), it’s doldrums time at the autumn box office, though according to ComScore for, from Labor Day through last Sunday, the season is flat with a year ago at $770.7M. It would be nice to finally see a movie meet its tracking forecast.

Meanwhile, Lionsgate has the comedy Good Fortune, directed by and starring Aziz Ansari along with Keanu Reeves and Seth Rogen. It’s expected to ring up under $10M at 2,985 locations. The movie cost a net $30 million in line with other Lionsgate movies; the pic, you’ll remember, was impacted by a start-and-stop with the writers and actors strikes. Coming out of its TIFF world premiere, Good Fortune is 79% fresh. Previews last night were $725,000 at 2,500 sites. Note that Roofman, another adult-skewing (largely guys, ironically, for a Channing Tatum movie) title last week, did $1M in previews before posting an $8M start.

Check out our interview below with Ansari at our TIFF studio:

Disney’s Tron: Ares ends the week with $43.4M, a number many were hopeful the net $180M production would open at. This movie is pacing slightly behind another Jared Leto sci-fi property, also with a finite fan base, 2017’s Blade Runner 2049, which posted a first week of $45.4M. Blade Runner 2049 with an A- CinemaScore held at -53% in weekend 2 with $15.4M, and Tron: Ares is expected to be steeper with -60% off its B+ CinemaScore. Tron Ares will keep the Imax and majority of PLFs and their great showtimes this weekend.

This week’s top 5

  1. Tron Ares (Dis) 4,000 theaters, Thu $1.5M (-20% from Wed), Week $43.4M/Wk 1
  2. Roofman (Par) 3,362 theaters, Thu $567K (-23%), Week $11.8M/Wk 1
  3. One Battle After Another (WB) 3,127 theaters, Thu $545K (-19% from Wed), Wk $10.1M (-38%), Total $57.9M/Wk 3
  4. Gabby’s Dollhouse (Uni) 3,049 theaters, Thu $192K (-8%), Wk $5.2M (-21%), Total $28.2M/Wk 3
  5. Conjuring: Last Rites (NL/WB) 2,334 theaters, Thu $195K (-25%), Wk $4.36M (-24%), Total $173.8M/Wk 6
October 18, 2025 0 comments
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