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Full Trailer for Western 'Cottonmouth' w/ Esai Morales & Ron Perlman
Hollywood

Full Trailer for Western ‘Cottonmouth’ w/ Esai Morales & Ron Perlman

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Full Trailer for Western ‘Cottonmouth’ w/ Esai Morales & Ron Perlman

by Alex Billington
October 26, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Let me guess – you’re an innocent man?” “Damn right, I am.” Cineverse has debuted an official trailer for a western film titled Cottonmouth, a gritty revenge thriller set back in 1895 in Oklahoma. This film is sort of a western re-imaging of the classic The Count of Monte Cristo story from Dumas, inspired by it, but also with its own clever twists in a classic western setting. In 1895 Oklahoma, love and loyalty turn deadly when a groom-to-be is betrayed, imprisoned, and reborn as an outlaw bent on revenge. When Ed Dantes is framed and condemned to the tortures of a territorial prison in 1895, he must learn the ways of the outlaw to escape and exact his revenge on Billy Dunn. Directed by Brock Harris, this rugged frontier saga of passion, power, and payback reminds us that every bullet carries the weight of a broken heart. Starring Martin Sensmeier as Ed, Alyssa Wapanatâhk as Sophia, Jonathan Sadowski, Eric Nelsen, Jonathan Lipnicki, with Ron Perlman and Esai Morales. Have to say – this looks way better than it should! Perhaps reusing this story and spinning it as as western was a good idea. Out on VOD in November – if anyone wants to catch it.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Brock Harris’ western film Cottonmouth, direct from YouTube:

Cottonmouth Film Poster

Cottonmouth Film Poster

“Love turns to blood. Justice turns to revenge.” Set in Indian territory, back in 1895. Ed Dantes (Martin Sensmeier) rides to the town of Ingalls, Oklahoma on the eve of his wedding. Ed brings his saddle chum Frank (Jonathan Sadowski) to witness the ceremony but they will soon become enemies when a rivalry develops over Ed’s fiancé, saloon singer Sophia. To make matters worse, the saloon is neighbored by the Dunn Inn, owned by Billy Dunn (Eric Nelsen). Dunn has his eyes set on Sophia and her mother’s saloon, too. Ed must learn the ways of the outlaw to enact his revenge. Cottonmouth is directed by American writer / filmmaker Brock Harris, director of the films Wild Game and Dance Dads previously, plus a few other short films. The screenplay is written by Jared Bonner and Brock Harris. Produced by Talia Bella and Randy Wayne. This initially premiered at the 2025 Mammoth Film Festival earlier this year. Cineverse will debut Harris’ Cottonmouth film direct-to-VOD starting November 4th, 2025 this fall. Anyone want to watch?

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October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Henry Winkler was ‘so excited’ when his old friend Ron Howard earned his first acting Emmy nomination
Celebrity News

Henry Winkler was ‘so excited’ when his old friend Ron Howard earned his first acting Emmy nomination

by jummy84 August 24, 2025
written by jummy84

25 August 2025

Henry Winkler was “so excited” when his old friend Ron Howard earned his first Emmy nomination for acting.

Henry Winkler was ‘so excited’ when his old friend Ron Howard earned his first Emmy nomination for acting

The 79-year-old actor shows to fame along with Ron, 71, when they co-starred in beloved US comedy Happy Days, and he has now spoken to People magazine to reveal his pride in Ron’s acting success.

Recalling his immediate reaction to Ron’s Emmy nomination for his role in Apple TV+’s Hollywood satire series The Studio, Henry said: “I called (Run) immediately. He was so excited. He is limitless.”

Henry added Ron had spoken to him before filming his scenes for The Studio, which saw him have a furious bust-up with the bumbling head of a movie studio played by Seth Rogen.

He said: “He loved it. He said to me, ‘I’m doing it and I’m going full-tilt.’”

Henry added about how he would love a part in The Studio: “I would do it immediately. It’s a great show.”

Ron received his first-ever acting Emmy nomination in July for his performance as himself in the satire, which takes aim at the Hollywood studio system.

Speaking to People days after the announcement, he said: “I play an a****** version of myself. Apparently, it went over.

“I have many noms and even some wins on the producing and directing side, but first nom as an actor, which is kind of funny. I’m getting a kick out of it.”

It marked Ron’s 14th Emmy nomination.

The Studio stars Seth Rogen as Matt Remick, the new head of embattled movie company Continental Studios.

Ron appeared in the third episode of the first season, which aired in April.

In the episode, his director character – and exaggerated version of his real-life self – cries when he receives critical feedback from Seth’s character and angrily throws his trademark baseball cap at him.

The first season of The Studio also featured guest appearances from Martin Scorsese, Anthony Mackie, Zoë Kravitz and Dave Franco, all of whom also played versions of themselves.

Bryan Cranston also earned an Emmy nomination for a guest role in the series, though he portrayed a fictional character.

Henry and Ron worked together on sitcom Happy Days, which ran for 11 seasons on ABC, between 1974 and 1984.

Ron starred as Richie Cunningham, while Henry played Arthur ‘Fonzie’ Fonzarelli – initially a recurring role before he became a series regular.

The pair reunited briefly on stage at the 2024 Emmys.

Henry said: “I was with him for 45 seconds on the Emmys last year. It was like we had just been on the set a minute ago.

“Oh my God, I love him very much.”




August 24, 2025 0 comments
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Ron Howard's Darkly Funny Adult ‘Lord of the Flies’
TV & Streaming

Ron Howard’s Darkly Funny Adult ‘Lord of the Flies’

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival. Vertical releases “Eden” in theaters Friday, August 22, 2025.

Dr. Friedrich Ritter (Jude Law) is loath to repeat anyone else, so when his writer’s block finds him spitting out quotes from bigger, better, far more well-known philosophers, he knows things are going badly. Things have, in fact, been going badly for a very long time, as is prone to happen when someone moves to an uninhabited island and attempts to carve out a new world order. Still, had Friedrich — a very real person — been a bit more comfortable with the idea of repeating someone else, he likely would have found plenty of comfort in Jean-Paul Sartre’s perpetually prescient observation that “Hell is other people.”

Lurker

Such is the thrust of Ron Howard’s darkly funny “Eden,” a fact-based story that follows what happened after Friedrich and his partner Dora Strauch (Vanessa Kirby) moved to a Galapagos Island (Floreana, to be precise) after the end of World War I (and the start of all the stuff that would lead to World War II) in search of a very different way of living, only to find that they simply can’t shake the stuff that tends to make society so unbearable (read: other people). Frederich likes to act as if he’s above it all, but at a certain point, he started sending out missives to the outside world touting the paradise he and Dora have created, so they shouldn’t be so surprised when people start showing up, seeking a similar life.

Oh, but are they ever. Frederich’s dream is to, by his own admission, “save humanity,” but the furthest he got in that process was to move away from the entire world to bang away at his typewriter, dreaming up nonsense philosophy he’s completely (and hilariously) unable to live out himself. While he and Dora (who has MS, which they try to clear with meditation, sex, and hard living) have carved out a bit of a living on Floreana, it’s precarious by every measure. “Everything on this island can kill you” Dora tells their newest visitors, and it’s perhaps the most true thing anyone says throughout Noah Pink’s clever screenplay.

Those new visitors? The Wittmer family: father Heinz (Daniel Bruhl), second wife Margret (Sydney Sweeney, who gets one hell of a go-for-broke sequence in this film), and ill son Harry (Jonathan Tittel). The family has been enthralled by what they’ve read in the German papers of Friedrich and Dora’s adventures, and they want in. They show up in kicky little camp clothes, toting butterfly nets, starry-eyed at the whole affair. Friedrich and Dora promptly send them up the hill to a notoriously infertile slice of the island — Dora’s beloved burro helps, and that will be the last time that happens — and expect they’ll abandon the whole affair in weeks. They don’t.

Eden
‘Eden’Courtesy TIFF

Things are already feeling “Lord of the Flies”-y enough already, but with a distinctly adult bent and plenty of unexpected humor, and that’s before “Baroness” Eloise Bosquet de Wagner Wehrhorn (Ana de Armas, a scream in a cast filled with standout performances) shows up, all delusional big talk about building the world’s most luxurious hotel (for millionaires only!), most of it helped along mightily be her dedicated cadre of manservants and lovers (including Felix Kammerer and Toby Wallace). On an island filled with blinkered people (and that’s being generous), Eloise is queen. Well, that’s the plan.

As she starts pulling strings between her friends and neighbors — all of it both obvious and understandable, and truly entertaining enough that you’ll laugh out loud when Law proclaims “deus ex machina!” at a plot twist that is precisely that — Eden collapses. “Eden” does not. Howard and his stacked cast keep the entire thing chugging right along toward the inevitable, and even that doesn’t feel so expected, if only because of how damn funny this trip straight to Hell feels.

A certain amount of creative license helps — goodness knows, no one on Floreana looked quite this good as they were coming undone in increasingly dark manners — even as occasionally bloodless drama feels like a whiff. Listen, for a film in which Sydney Sweeney fights off a pack of feral dogs while giving birth by herself, things could (and maybe even should) feel a lot more fucked up than what we get in “Eden.”

But what we do get from Howard’s latest is a strong reminder of his handle on not just craft and casting, but also story and tone. No film about the utter demise of a supposed utopia — a real one, to boot! — and the utter infallibility of human beings should be this fun, but we’re lucky this one is. It helps the hard truths go down easier, especially about who we all are as people (you know, hellish).

Grade: B

“Eden” premiered at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival. Vertical releases the film Friday, August 22, 2025.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best reviews, streaming picks, and offers some new musings, all only available to subscribers.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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