Tag Archives: Mark Gatiss

New posters for Hobbit 3, Downey Jr talks Iron Man 4 and Dad’s Army line up revealed

Dad's Army

Dad’s Army is one of the most popular British serial comedies of all time. A huge announcement was made when Toby Jones (Captain America: The Winter Soldier, The Hunger Games) was cast as Captain Mainwaring and Bill Nighy (Love Actually, Shaun of the Dead) as Sergeant Wilson. The rest of the ensemble has now been revealed. Tom Courtenay (Doctor Zhivago) is Corporal Jones, Daniel Mays (The Adventures of Tintin) as Private Walker, Blake Harrison (The Inbetweeners) as Private Pike, Bill Paterson (The Killing Fields) as Frazer and Michael Gambon (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban) as Private Godfrey. Sarah Lancashire (Lark Rise to Candleford), Mark Gatiss (Sherlock) and Catherine Zeta Jones (Chicago, The Terminal) have been cast in unspecified roles.

Its no secret that the Marvel Cinematic Universe are planning all the way to 2018 by building from the original Avengers characters. Guardians of the Galaxy, Ant-Man, Captain Marvel, Black Panther and Doctor Strange will eventually succeed as the lead stars of the franchise. Still, the most lucrative character is Iron Man, played by Robert Downey Jr (Sherlock Holmes, Chaplin, The Judge), but his own trilogy came to an end last year with the billion dollar success of Iron Man 3. His involvement will continue with The Avengers: Age of Ultron next year but he’s now opened up the possibility of Iron Man 4. Having previously denied it, Downey Jr has revealed to Ellen DeGeneres that early development is taking place. Should this project go through then I’d suspect that Shane Black (Kiss Kiss Bang Bang) will be directing.

Next today, a second character poster of The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, the last in the trilogy. This time it shows Gandalf in a spot of bother and Galadriel in full-on “all shall love me and despair” mode. The Battle of the Five Armies is directed by Peter Jackson (King Kong, Heavenly Creatures, The Lord of the Rings) stars Martin Freeman (Bilbo), Ian McKellen (Gandalf), Richard Armitage (Thorin), Evangeline Lilly (Tauriel), Orlando Bloom (Legolas), Luke Evans (Bard), Hugo Weaving (Elrond), Aidan Turner (Kili), Lee Pace (Thranduil), Manu Bennett (Azog), Sylvester McCoy (Radagast), James Nesbitt (Bofur), Ken Stott (Balin), Ian Holm (Old Bilbo), Christopher Lee (Saruman), Cate Blanchett (Galadriel) and Benedict Cumberbatch as Smaug.

galadriel

Lastly, we’ve got our hands on the very first pictures from Tomorrowland, a new sci-fi adventure set in a world described as the Hogwarts of science. Brad Bird (The Incredibles, Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol) directs, Damon Lindelof (Prometheus, World War Z) writes while the film stars George Clooney (Gravity, The Descendants, Up in the Air, Ocean’s Eleven), Britt Robertson (Under the Dome), Judy Greer (Dawn of the Planet of the Apes) and Hugh Laurie (House).

Tomorrowland – May 22nd 2015

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies – December 12th

Dad’s Army – 2015

Iron Man 4 – 2018?

Tomorrowland-Syd-Mead.jpg

Britt-Robertson

George-Clooney

Channig Tatum in new poster for Foxcatcher, first stills from Exodus and Sherlock likely for Christmas return

Around four years ago, Doctor Who’s Stephen Moffat and Mark Gatiss set about realising their dream of Arthur Conan Doyle’s classic Victorian detective in the modern day. And thus born was the brilliant Sherlock, the sharpest, slickest and frankly best British drama around. The 2012 follow up to the more experimental first series was the Empire Strikes Back of second series, darker, grander but just as ingeniously complex as the original. Then earlier this year came season three, a tragically terrible bulking disappointment, chock full of poorly constructed twists and stripped of the smarts that once made the show great. Moffat divided attention between Sherlock and Doctor Who has derailed both of them.

It’ll be a long while until the series does return. Its co-lead Martin Freeman (The Hobbit trilogy, The World’s End, Fargo) has spoken out about when it will. “It looks pretty likely,” Freeman explains, breaking the silence of the tight-lipped BBC. “I’m speaking off-message here – if this was New Labour I’d get fired but a Christmas special is what I understand.” I’d expect this seasonal special to land in 2015 before another three part series taking shape for Summer 2016. Sadly, the third run of the show was a ratings smash as so there’ll be no rush to revoke the brainless format. The series will star Benedict Cumberbatch, Martin Freeman, Amanda Abbington, Mark Gatiss, Louise Brealey, Rupert Graves, Una Stubbs and Andrew Scott.

Around this time of the year, those who don’t find blockbusters their thing may be lost for a film choice during this summer and may well turn their eye to the Oscar frontrunners arriving later in the year. Gone Girl, The Judge, Boyhood, Fury and Interstellar are proving popular choices but the one film everyone’s going crazy about is Foxcatcher, a wrestling drama building up to horrifying but secretive conclusion. Bennett Miller (Capote, Moneyball) won Best Director and was nominated for Palme D’Or when the film caused a stir at Cannes this year and directs the stellar cast of Channing Tatum (The Vow, White House Down, 21 Jump Street), Mark Ruffalo (Zodiac, The Avengers, Now You See Me, Shutter Island), Sienna Miller (Stardust, American Sniper), Vanessa Redgrave (Julia, Mary Queen of Scots, Mission: Impossible) and Steve Carell (Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy, Despicable Me, The Office). The brand new poster (above) has just been released.

Another film generating masses of hype is the new biblical epic from legendary British director Ridley Scott (Thelma and Louise, Black Hawk Down, American Gangster, Prometheus, Blade Runner, Alien, Gladiator). Exodus: Gods and Kings (which’ll go head to head with Foxcatcher at the box office) promises some of the biggest live action sets and battles in film history, paying debt to the lavish classics of grand scale of the ’60s such as Ben-Hur, Cleopatra and of coarse The Ten Commandments. Some awesome new stills have arrived, courtesy of Entertainment Weekly, of the cast, including, Christian Bale (The Dark Knight, American Hustle), Joel Edgerton (Warrior, The Great Gatsby), Aaron Paul (Need for Speed, Breaking Bad), Sigourney Weaver (Avatar, Aliens) and Ben Kingsley (Hugo, Gandhi).

Exodus: Gods and Kings – December 26th

Foxcatcher – December 25th

Sherlock Christmas special – December 25th 2015?

Marvel hires new writer for Doctor Strange, title change for McAvoy’s Frankenstein and new Batman for 2019

Across the years, they’ve been endless variations of Frankenstein but the upcoming reincarnation does have a fair amount of hype surrounding its main cast, especially James McAvoy as Victor and Daniel Radcliffe as Igor. The film has now extended its title to Victor Frankenstein and we’re not too surprised. While nearly all of the primary characters have been cast there’s been little mention of the monster itself so it’ll probably only play a small role. Paul McGuigan (Sherlock, Lucky Number Slevin) directs James McAvoy (Atonement, X-Men: First Class, Wanted, Filth), Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter, The Woman in Black, Kill Your Darlings), Jessica Brown Findlay (A New York Winter’s Tale, Downton Abbey), Mark Gatiss (Match Point, Game of Thrones) and Andrew Scott (Sherlock, Locke).

As of yet, only three films have been confirmed as part of the Marvel Cinematic Universes’ Phase 3 line up, although many others are in production. First off is Peyton Reed’s Ant-Man (which I’ve now lost nearly all enthusiasm for) followed by Anthony and Joe Russo making their return to Captain America in the third instalment before Doctor Strange finally lands on our screens in 2016. Horror writer/director Scott Derrickson (Sinister, The Exorcism of Emily Rose) is the hired man for this fantasy action but he’ll now be aided by Prometheus scribe Jon Spaihts on the screenplay. Tom Hardy (The Dark Knight Rises, Bronson, Warrior), Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, Star Trek Into Darkness) and Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club, Requiem for a Dream, Lord of War) have all been named in connection to the role.

The-Batman-May-Land-In-2019

Tonight’s final report concerns the recent proposed schedule for future DC films running into 2018. Including Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice, Shazam, Justice League, Sandman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern/Flash team-up and Man of Steel 2, there was no mention of a standalone Batman film. A new rumour does state that a Wayne-centred spin off titled The Batman will swoop in for 2019 meaning that we’ll have to wait another half a decade for Ben Affleck (Good Will Hunting, Argo, The Town) to take the sole lead in a superhero film. We expect Zack Snyder (Watchmen, 300, Man of Steel) to direct a few films in the series that’ll also star Henry Cavill, Gal Gadot, Jesse Eisenberg, Amy Adams, Jason Momoa, Diane Lane, Ray Fisher, Holly Hunter, Jeremy Irons and Laurence Fishburne.

The Batman – 2019

Doctor Strange – 2016

Victor Frankenstein – October 2nd 2015

BIFA 2013 wins and new Sherlock series 3 trailer

We reported for you about a month ago the 2013 nominations for the British Independent Film Awards, or BIFA. Now the winners have come in and Metro Manila is the victorious film in this celebration of this country’s indie cinema. The 16th BIFAs were sponsored by Moet and, just in case you think this is a minor ceremony, remember that proud supporters of the group include Ewan McGregor, Tilda Swinton, Helen Mirren, Michael Sheen and David Thewlis.

BEST BRITISH INDEPENDENT FILM

Sponsored by Moët & Chandon 

Metro Manila

BEST DIRECTOR

Sponsored by AllCity & Intermission

Sean Ellis – Metro Manila

THE DOUGLAS HICKOX AWARD [BEST DEBUT DIRECTOR] 

Sponsored by 3 Mills Studios

Paul Wright – For Those in Peril

BEST SCREENPLAY

Steven Knight – Locke

BEST ACTRESS  

Sponsored by M.A.C Cosmetics

Lindsay Duncan – Le Week-end

BEST ACTOR 

Sponsored by BBC Films  

James McAvoy – Filth

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS 

Imogen Poots – The Look Of Love

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR 

Sponsored by Sanderson & St Martins Lane 

Ben Mendelsohn – Starred Up

MOST PROMISING NEWCOMER

Sponsored by Studiocanal

Chloe Pirrie – Shell

BEST ACHIEVEMENT IN PRODUCTION 

Sponsored by Company3

Metro Manila

BEST TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT 

Sponsored by LightBrigade Media

Amy Hubbard – Casting – The Selfish Giant

BEST DOCUMENTARY

A Punk Prayer

BEST BRITISH SHORT 

Supported by BFI NET.WORK

Z1

BEST INTERNATIONAL INDEPENDENT FILM 

Blue is the Warmest Colour

THE RAINDANCE AWARD 

Sponsored by Wentworth Media and Arts 

The Machine

THE RICHARD HARRIS AWARD (for outstanding contribution by an actor to British Film)

Julie Walters

THE VARIETY AWARD 

Paul Greengrass

THE SPECIAL JURY PRIZE 

Sixteen Films & Friends (AKA Team Loach)

It’s great to see Paul Greengrass being honoured as one of the most forward British directors of our age, alongside Christopher Nolan, Danny Boyle, Sam Mendes, Joe Wright, Guy Ritchie, Lynne Ramsay, Kenneth Branagh, and Rupert Wyatt, but we move swiftly on to the new trailer for the third season Stephen Moffat and Mark Gatiss’ Sherlock. Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman are the key stars of the acclaimed detective thriller which’ll will hopefully tie up the loose ends of 2012’s season finale. Here at Tourhoth Movies, we can’t wait.

Sherlock series 3 – January 1st 2014 on BBC One

Sherlock series 3 announces air dates and Trevorrow hints at Jurassic World setting

The excellent second series of Stephen Moffat and Mark Gatiss’ modern retelling of the adventures of Sherlock Holmes swooped in for a January 1st 2012 release and, despite the huge conundrum to solve, they’ve left us hanging for two full years. Yes, series three will premier with a usual hour and a half long episode which will at last solve The Final Problem raised in the series 2 finale The Reichenbach Falls, New Year’s Day on BBC One and BBC America. The episode titles are of coarse The Empty Hearse, The Sign of Three and His Last Vow.

The only possible explanation as to why we’ve had to wait so long is stars Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman’s dedication to The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, as well as the impending third instalment The Hobbit: There and Back Again, as well as writer Stephen Moffat’s time taken off to wheel in Doctor Who’s seventh series, 50th Anniversary Special, two Who themed short films and this year’s Christmas special, titled The Time of the Doctor.

“Reboot is a strong word. This is a new sci-fi terror adventure set 22 years after the horrific events of Jurassic Park.”

— Colin Trevorrow (@colintrevorrow)

This has just come from the twitter feed of, the relatively unknown but likely future household name, director Colin Trevorrow. He’s calling the shots of reboot new sci-fi terror adventure Jurassic World which will star Bryce Dallas Howard, Jake Johnson, Nick Robinson and Ty Simpkins as well as the rumoured Idris Elba, Josh Brolin, Chris Pratt and David Oyelowo. You can make your own assumptions from this tweet but terror seems to be the new emphasis.

Jurassic World – June 12th 2015

Sherlock series 3 – January 1st 2014 – BBC One/BBC America

An Adventure in Space and Time review

Director: Terry McDonagh

Starring: David Bradley, Jessica Raine, Brian Cox, Lesley Manville, Sacha Dwahan, Claudia Grant, Reece Shearsmith, Nicholas Briggs

Sherlock and Doctor Who writer Mark Gatiss is hugely responsible for the excellent telling of how a sci-fi legend nearly never came. With incredible acting and casting, this TV movie really does brilliantly to bring to light how close Doctor Who came to being another forgotten failure.

An Adventure In Space and Time is set over four years of the career of William Hartnell (Bradley), a tired an ageing actor who lives with his wife (Manville) and granddaughter. He’s approached by Head of Drama Sydney Newman (Cox), director Waris Hussein (Dwahan) and the BBC’s first female producer Verity Lambert (Raine) for a role in a new kids’ science fiction serial as a rough but charming old man travelling in history and the cosmos with varying companions. However, after the assassination of JFK, the country is in no mood for whimsical time-travel.

David Bradley is actually incredible as Hartnell. He has the dotty, sometimes rage filled but ultimately adorable First Doctor spot on. He, Raine and Cox, manage top notch performances that allow the behind the scenes world of Doctor Who to become as magical as we watch it on our screens.

Gatiss’ script perfectly manages the terrifying introduction of the Daleks, the friendship and wonder that Who brought as well as the darker tones, the gravitational pull of fame and the sad road of Hartnell’s slight loss of sanity. The brilliant humour mixes with all of this to make an extraordinarily engaging biopic, even if it is a little full of itself and the excellence of the show at times.

“CS Lewis meets HG Wells meets Father Christmas: that’s The Doctor!”

9/10

Doctor Who 50th trailer, Brolin and Elba for Jurassic World, Burton considering Beetlejuice 2 and more

We do apologize for our recent absence but we’re back with a huge round up of everything you may have missed while we were gone.

November 23rd should be the most anticipated date of next month, going against the release of Gravity (8th) and The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (21st). It’s not just the event of Doctor Who’s 50th Anniversary, marked by the new TV movie An Adventure in Space and Time starring Brian Cox, David Bradley, Lesley Manville, Jessica Raine, the show’s head writer Steven Moffat and Reece Shearsmith, directed by Terry McDonagh (director of several episodes of Breaking Bad, Homeland and Suits) and written by Sherlock and Dr Who’s writer Mark Gatiss, but there’s the 50th Anniversary Special titled The Day of the Doctor.

Watch the new trailer here. We’re going to give you a fairly lengthy breakdown of the in jokes we spotted. Initially, you notice the many Sonic Screwdrivers and gadgets that the Doctor has used in the past 5 decades. Some of the cameos from Tom Baker (the Fourth Doctor), William Hartnell (the First Doctor), the Daleks, what I presume is a UNIT soldier, the late great Elizabeth Sladen (Sarah Jane Smith), Jon Pertwee (the Third Doctor), Jenna Louise Coleman (the current companion Clara Oswald) and David Tennant (the Tenth Doctor) are easy to spot under Matt Smith (the Eleventh Doctor’s) narration but some you’ll be squinting for.

I spotted the Eleventh’s favourite head wear beside Stetsons, the fez from the series 5 finale and Sarah Jane’s robotic companion K9. The villainous Cybermen also crop up under the Big Ben (which gets destroyed by the Slitheen in series 1 episode 4) backdrop and the Third is battling The Master (a pre John Simm incarnation, who’s Laser Screwdriver is out there somewhere in the trailer). Clara’s leaf, which reoccurs several times in the 2nd half of series 7, can be seen too

And in the flash zoom in at the end I saw Doctors Seven (Sylvester McCoy), Five (Peter Davison), Six (Colin Baker) and Nine (Christopher Eccleston) as well as terrifying beasts like an Ice Warrior (classic Mars villain who’s been revamped in some way in 2009 and 2013 – is 084 a reference to anything other than Agents of SHIELD), a Weeping Angels (who deserve better than The Angels Take Manhattan and should get more episodes like Blink and The Time of Angels) and I just spotted a hand of a member of The Silence (the great big bads of series 6 who were too hastily replaced by the Great Intelligence).

After that, there’s another Cyberman, another Dalek, an Ood, who I think is Rose (Billie Piper), the Eighth Doctor (Paul McGann, who only appeared in the role in the 1996 TV movie) and an Auton. The number 17162311, which appears on what looks like an alarm clock, doesn’t mean much to me but I think it may become of significance in the near future. There’s a bizarre yellow car on the left of the screen at one point, which I presume is the vehicle of choice of the Earth stranded Third Doctor.

We then meet the current Doctor Matt Smith with an unusual background of an apparently American desert plain (possibly near Lake Silencio from series 6 episode 1), San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge and  London’s iconic Shard (which the Eleventh motorcycles up in series 7 episode 6 (or 7 if you count the Christmas Special). I’m unsure of setting but I think it’ll become apparent soon enough. Who’s the man flailing his arms in front of David Tennant’s Tenth? Please tell  us in the comments if you have any clues as to his identity. I didn’t see the Second Patrick Troughton in there but he must in in there somewhere. There’s nothing from John Hurt’s mysterious Time War incarnation of The Doctor although the Eleventh does paraphrase him:

“The choices I made in the name of The Doctor!”

The Doctor Who 50th Anniversary Special or The Day of The Doctor –  November 23rd on BBC One and BBC America

Another upcoming BBC action project is The Musketeers. We’ve got our hands on the first official picture from the show that stars the future Doctor Who and The Thick of It’s Peter Capaldi, Tom Burke (Only God Forgives), Charlotte Hope (The Invisible Woman), Julian Bastida (Killer Bees), Emily Beecham (28 Weeks Later), Phillip Brodie (A Landscape of Lies) and Santiago Cabera (Heroes, Che). The Three Musketeers story could do with a half decent revamp. Paul WS Anderson flopped in 2011 with Logan Lerman, Luke Evans, Milla Jovovich, Orlando Bloom, Dexter Fletcher, Matthew Macfadyen, Ray Stevenson and Mads Mikkelsen. Charlie Sheen and Kiefer Sutherland’s 1993 version didn’t exactly become a classic in the way that Richard Lester and Raquel Welch’s 1973 or George Sidney and Gene Kelly’s 1948 editions did. The poster informs us that Adrian Hodges’ (writer of My Week With Marilyn, David Copperfield, Primeval, Survivors) new work is going to be stylish and big budget stuff.

The Musketeers – Early to mid 2014 on BBC One

We’ve now got a few snippets of casting news. First off, it’s Academy Award nominee Josh Brolin. He’s come a long way since his first ever acting role in adventure classic The Goonies. He’s done Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, W., Gangster Squad, True Grit, American Gangster, No Country For Old Men, Men in Black 3 and picked up his Oscar nom for Milk.

He’s now listed as a potential star of Jurassic World, meaning he could be joining Bryce Dallas Howard (The Help), Nick Robinson (Kings of Summer) and Ty Simpkins (Insidious, Iron Man 3). He could also be trapped on the dino island with Pacific Rim and Luther star Idris Elba; they’re both rumoured to be joining the Jurassic Park sequel under the direction of Colin Trevorrow (Safety Not Guaranteed).

Jurassic World – July 12th 2015

Another sequel with casting plans is Night At the Museum 3. Shawn Levy has talked about returning to his Night at the Musuem franchise for a while after taking off to make the above average robot boxing drama Real Steel as well as the unsuccessful Date Night and The Internship. Robin Williams (star of Dead Poet Society, Good Will Hunting and Academy Award winner, plus three time nominee) is in talks to reprise the role of Teddy Roosevelt for the fantasy sequel with Ben Stiller returning as Larry Dale.

Night At the Museum 3 – 26th December 2014/15

British actor Damian Lewis has thrown himself into international acclaim with his role of Nicholas Brody on the thriller TV shows Homeland (which won him a Golden Globe and an Emmy) and Band of Brothers. He’s now joined Queen of the Desert, Werner Herzog’s biography of Gertrude Bell. The legendary German director is the one who brought you Grizzly Man, Aguirre Wrath of God, Encounters at the End of the World, Rescue Dawn and most recently Cave of Forgotten Dreams and Into the Abyss. For Queen of the Desert, Lewis is joining James Franco (Spider-Man, 127 Hours, Oz the Great and Powerful), Robert Pattinson (Twilight, Cosmopolis, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire) and Nicole Kidman (Eyes Wide Shut, The Others, Moulin Rouge).

Queen of the Desert – 2015

The final casting rumour is for Benedict Cumberbatch, who’s had  far too many of these already after Doctor Who and Star Wars. The Sherlock, Star Trek and The Hobbit star could be taking over from Tom Hardy (The Dark Knight Rises, Inception, Bronson, Warrior and the new Mad Max) on Everest. Director Doug Liman (Jumper, The Bourne Indentity, Fair Game, Mr. and Mrs. Smith) lost Hardy when he began to push for a production date of next March leaving the space open.

Cumberbatch is the favourite however, according to Deadline, Joel Kinnaman (The Killing, RoboCop), Henry Cavill (Man of Steel), James McAvoy (X-Men: First Class, Trance), Luke Evans (Fast and Furious 6, The Hobbit), Dan Stevens (Downton Abbey, Summer in February), Matthew Goode (Watchmen, Stoker), Jim Sturgess (Cloud Atlas, Across the Universe) and Marvel’s Loki himself Tom Hiddleston (The Avengers, War Horse, Midnight in Paris) are all in contention. It seems to me like they’ve just gone through a list of British actors from ages 25 to 35 to play real life, 20th century English mountaineer George Mallory.

Everest – late 2014 or early 2015

Edgar Rice Burroughs is well known amongst sci-fi and fantasy fans as the creator of A Princess of Mars (which inspired 2012’s John Carter) and Tarzan of the Apes. The latter has seen several version through the years. Gordan Scott and Sean Connery starred in 1959’s Tarzan’s Greatest Adventure but it’s most famous incarnation was likely the 1999 Disney animation directed by Chris Buck and Kevin Lima and starred Minnie Driver and Brian Blessed.

Tarzan is due another remake and it’s another animation but it’s a CGI one unlike the ’99 edition and more like anything by Pixar. It’s Disney however. Warner Bros and Consantin Films are tackling this one with motion capture and the voices of Kellan Lutz (Twilight, Immortals), Robert Capron (Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Frankenweenie) and Spencer Locke (Resident Evil). The animation and effects look great and it looks quite a bit more action based than I’d anticipated, much more like Avatar than Tarzan. Reinhard Klooss, who brought in names like James Corden, Stephen Fry, Andy Serkis, Vanessa Redgrave, Dawn French and Omid Djalli into his Animal Kingdom, is the director. Here’s the new trailer.

Tarzan – January 24th 2014

Beetlejuice is director Tim Burton’s (Batman, Ed Wood, Edward Scissorhands, Sweeney Todd, Sleepy Hollow, Corpse Bride, Dark Shadows, Frankenweenie, Alice in Wonderland and Mars Attacks) beloved fantasy horror comedy hit. The idea of a sequel has been around for years. In fact, it’s 25 years since the original was released but now Burton is genuinely considering it. The Wrap reported that  Burton and star Michael Keaton could be reuniting for Beetlejuice 2 with perhaps Winona Ryder, Geena Davis and Alec Baldwin reprising their roles.

Beetlejuice 2 – 2016?

Little Women, the 1868 novel by Louisa May Alcott, has seen three big screen adaptations. There’s the 1933 classic with Katharine Hepburn and Joan Bennett which was followed by the 1949 remake with June Allyson and Peter Lawford before the 1994 version with Winona Ryder, Susan Sarandon, Claire Danes and Christian Bale. Sony have given the order for another remake which’ll have a script by Olivia Milch (son of David Milch, creator of the massively popular Deadwood) which revolves around the March family, made up of four daughters and their mother.

Little Women – 2016?

The Raid was easily the biggest and best action film of 2011. It took a remarkable $15 million, it doesn’t sound like much in blockbuster terms but for an independent action film with an unheard of Welsh director in the form of Gareth Evans and an unknown lead star in the form of Iko Uwais. The Raid 2: Berandal is set just two hours after the end of the first film and sees Rama (Uwais) returning home only to find that the action has only just begun. Evans (who’s been very busy with both Berandal and his segment of six part horror anthology V/H/S/2, is confident that he’ll be able to launch the first trailer next month but, until then, he’s given us a teaser poster for the sequel.

The Raid 2: Berandal – early 2014