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Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
James Gunn's ‘Superman' Tracking for $135 Million U.S. Box Office Opening
With three weeks left to go, James Gunn and DC Studios' Superman is tracking to open in the $135 million range at the domestic box office. If that forecast is right, Superman would land high up on the list of DC openings, although it would lag well behind the $166 million domestic debut of 2016's Batman v Superman: The Dawn of Justice, not adjusted for inflation. At the same time, it would come in safely ahead of the last solo Superman movie, Zack Snyder's 2013 film Man of Steel ($116 million). More from The Hollywood Reporter Box Office Preview: Will 'How to Train Your Dragon' Eat '28 Years Later' and Pixar's 'Elio' for Lunch? DC Studios Horror Movie 'Clayface' to Star Tom Rhys Harries European Box Office Revenue Rises (Barely) Despite Softer Admissions Opinion, however, is sharply divided as to just how high Superman can fly. The $135 million stat is from leading tracking service the National Research Group, according to sources with access to the data. NRG always provides a range in addition to a solo number; in this case, the range for Superman's domestic opening is $125 million to $145 million. Tracking is hardly a science, and projections have been notably off in a number of instances from all the services. To that end, insiders at DC Studios and Warners are being more conservative in suggesting $90 million to $125 million (although anything less than $100 million might be seen as a blemish). On the opposite end of the spectrum, some box office experts who monitor social metrics speculate that Superman could open to as much as $175 million, which would supplant Batman v Superman as DC's biggest opening. As of now, the next two biggest openings belong to Christopher Nolan's final two Batman movies, 2012's The Dark Knight Rises ($160.9 million) and 2008's The Dark Knight ($158.4 million). If opening to $135 million, Gunn's Superman would take the next spot, ahead of 2022's The Batman ($134 million) and 2016's Suicide Squad ($133.7 million), unadjusted. The highly anticipated summer tentpole is a seminal moment for Gunn and Peter Safran, as it's their first homegrown release since being tasked with restoring the luster to DC and making a stab at catching up with Marvel Studios. The movie, which kicks off their DC Universe, opens July 11 in North America, timed to its release around the world, meaning DC and Warners have three weeks to make their final marketing push. Superman stars David Corenswet in the titular role opposite Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane and Nicholas Hoult as Lex Luthor. In this latest rendition of a story that's been told on the big screen numerous times, Superman grapples with his powers while trying to balance everyday life as journalist Clark Kent after being sent to Earth from his home planet Krypton. (One new addition is the dog, Krypto). The cast also includes Skyler Gisondo (Jimmy Olsen), Sara Sampaio (Eve Teschmacher), Edi Gathegi (Mister Terrific), Terence Rosemore (Otis), Anthony Carrigan (Metamorpho), Isabela Merced (Hawkgirl) and María Gabriela de Faría (The Engineer). Best of The Hollywood Reporter 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Hollywood Stars Who Are One Award Away From an EGOT 'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
'Superman''s David Corenswet Says There's 'No Single Zipper' in the Suit for Easy Bathroom Access (Exclusive)
According to David Corenswet, getting in and out of the Superman suit isn't super easy. Talking with PEOPLE about what it was like to wear the iconic Man of Steel costume, Corewnswet gets candid. 'There are lots of zippers, but there's no single zipper that allows me to go to the bathroom, which you would think would be quite straightforward,' he says. 'But nothing is straightforward about these things. I mean, we talked about it and we tried and it was not worth the costs that came with it,' adds the star of director James Gunn 's Superman, in theaters July 11. Asked if that was torture for him, Corenswet says 'not at all.' 'I never had an issue with that. I had the most amazing dresser you could ask for, Scotty, who was sort of like a, I don't know, he felt like a mob fixer. He was always in my ear going, 'Do you need a break? Do you need a break? Tell 'em you need a break and we can step you out. I'll tell him it's me,' ' he says. 'He would make excuses for me if I needed, and we got very good together at getting in and out of the suit, so he would do it quite quickly, and I could take breaks if I needed to over the course of a day,' says Corenswet. The actor recalls the first time he put on the suit after getting cast in the role. 'It was very underwhelming. It was in pieces. The S wasn't even on yet. It was really just about the blue tights,' says Corenswet, who packed on around 40 pounds of muscle to play the superhero. 'It was quite snug because they had made it to my proportions when I screen-tested where I weighed about 195 pounds, and when I walked in for my first costume fitting, I weighed about a 235, 240 pounds,' he says. 'You hear actors who play superheroes talking about squeezing into the suits. I got kind of claustrophobic in the suit the first time just being constricted in all those places at the same time,' he says, calling it an 'intense experience.' Corenswet was announced as the star of Superman in 2023 after he beat out several other names including Patrick Schwarzenegger and Nicholas Hoult (who was since cast as Superman's nemesis Lex Luthor). The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Emmy winner Rachel Brosnahan plays Daily Planet reporter and love interest Lois Lane for Superman's alter ego Clark Kent. She and Corenswet bonded after they were both cast. 'I think James felt like the relationship between Clark and Lois was integral to the heart of the story and the success of the movie, and so we spent a lot of time talking through those scenes and talking about our characters and our relationship.' Superman Read the original article on People
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
'Superman''s David Corenswet Recalls ‘Intense' Time He Screen-Tested for the Movie During Wife's Pregnancy (Exclusive)
David Corenswet tells PEOPLE that he and his wife had to keep two big secrets when they found out she was pregnant and he was cast as Superman "We had these two quite huge secrets that we just had between the two of us," he says Corenswet is PEOPLE's latest cover star as the new Superman movie is poised to take flight this summerFor Superman star David Corenswet, 2023 was a busy year: He learned he'd be a father and landed the part of the Man of Steel. In PEOPLE's new cover story, the Philadelphia native, 31, recalls going through the 'intense' time with wife Julia, 34. 'She told me that she was pregnant two days after I found out I was going to screen test for Superman,' says Corenswet. 'For the first several months of her pregnancy, as is sort of protocol, we weren't telling anybody. We had these two quite huge secrets that we just had between the two of us. And that was intense.' 'For a period we had just each other for these two huge things,' continues Corenswet, who says Julia's due date originally coincided with when he was set to start filming in early 2024. 'It was very close. It wasn't direct, but it was still very close. But it was just having to do two big unknown things at the same time. And they were both great things,' he says. The good-natured Corenswet found the lighter side of the situation. 'She gained about 40 pounds while she was pregnant and in the same period I gained about 40 pounds gaining weight for Superman,' he recalls. 'I started snoring and had to use her pregnancy pillow.' The actor says he was at his home, on a break from making the 2024 movie Twisters, when he got the call from Superman director James Gunn telling him he had been cast in the lead role. 'It started with, 'Hey David, it's James Gunn.' And I said, 'Can you prove that?' I guess in the moment before when I saw the unknown 310 number, I thought, 'I'm pretty sure this is James telling me whether or not I got the part, but it could be anybody from Los Angeles who has my number and maybe somebody's going to play a prank on me,' " Corenswet says of the phone call that changed his life. 'Anyway, I think he appreciated that and he said, 'That's a good point. I'm calling to offer you the role of Superman.' And I said, 'Well, you're the only person who could do that, so it must be you,'' Corenswet continues. Now he's hoping he did the role justice. 'I feel much more a sense of responsibility than a sense of accomplishment having done the role. I also know that so much in life and especially the life of an actor is up to chance and good luck, and certainly you get what you make of your situation,' he says. 'I just think of it as a great stroke of luck and I better do everything I can to earn the responsibility,' Corenswet continues. For more on and tons of other summer fun around the country, or pick up this week's issue of PEOPLE, on stands Friday. Read the original article on People


Daily Mail
15 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Russell Crowe reunites with Superman son Henry Cavill for reboot of another beloved action franchise
Russell Crowe is reuniting onscreen with Henry Cavill, more than a decade after they acted with each other in the Superman film Man of Steel. The 2013 superhero movie starred Henry in the lead role and Russell as his biological father Jor-El, who saves his son's life just before losing his own. Now, fans will be able to see them back onscreen in a remake of the 1986 action fantasy picture Highlander, which launched a franchise of the same name. In the original Highlander, Christopher Lambert played Connor MacLeod, a 16th century Scottish warrior who discovers he is immortal unless his head is severed. He gets initiated into the secret world of immortals by the virtuoso swordsman Juan Sánchez-Villalobos Ramírez, memorably portrayed by Sean Connery. A reboot starring Henry as MacLeod was announced in 2021, and now, after years of development, Russell has been cast as Ramírez, according to Variety. The original Highlander emerged as a roaring success in 1986, leading to the 1991 sequel Highlander II: The Quickening, which flopped disastrously. However the series staggered on for the 1994 release Highlander III: The Sorcerer, a direct follow-up of the first film as if the events of the second never happened. There was also a TV series from 1992 to 1998, followed by the 2000 film Highlander: Endgame, which was a sequel to the show rather than to the previous movies. In 2021 it emerged that the original movie was being remade with Henry in the lead, back when he was still starring as Geralt of Riva on the Netflix medieval fantasy series The Witcher, before his departure and replacement by Liam Hemsworth. The new film will be directed by Chad Stahelski, who helmed all the John Wick movies, and will have a script by Michael Finch, who co- wrote the fourth John Wick picture. Russell first met Henry long before they ever worked together, back when the latter was a teenager at boarding school in the English countryside. The encounter took place when Russell was filming his 2000 drama Proof of Life, starring him and Meg Ryan, at the Stowe School - where Henry was a student along with Russell's onscreen son Merlin Hanbury-Tenison. Russell recalled that 'during a break in the shooting,' he caught sight of a rugby union game and noticed 'one kid on that field who was very fluid and in control.' The teenager 'came over to have a chat, but all his questions were about acting, and there was just this smile in his eyes but there was something dead serious behind that smile,' Russell said on The Graham Norton Show in 2013. 'So instead of not answering the questions or whatever - 'cause you get asked these questions a hundred thousand times - I told him the truth in the brief moment that I had with him, and put it in front of him that it's a challenge that's up to him. Nobody's gonna give it to you,' Russell remembered. 'A couple of days later, I was putting a package together for the kid who'd played my son, because I figured the greatest thing if you're at boarding school must be unexpected mail, and I thought: "I'll put one together for that other bloke," and I'd remembered his name because he'd been very clear when he said it,' he shared. His note to Henry was the saying: 'A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step,' which Russell interpreted as meaning: 'If you want it, you go and get it.'


Forbes
12-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Forbes
The Latest ‘Superman' Trailer Has Me More Worried Than Ever
Superman Credit: DC / Warner Bros Tickets for Superman are now on-sale. I purchased mine through a special Amazon Prime / Fandango promotion for Prime members and get to go watch the new James Gunn movie two days early on July 8th. I'm genuinely hoping that this is a return to form for DC and the Man Of Steel, but every trailer released so far has me worried, and the latest two-minute spot has me more concerned than ever. It's hard to put into words exactly why this is, partly because there's a lot to like about the film's direction – or what we can tell about its direction – so far. I'll start with the good. First of all, I love the casting all around. David Corenswet is a great choice for Superman and Clark Kent, and every glimpse of him in action or delivering lines is pitch perfect. I also love Nicholas Hoult who plays the film's main villain, Lex Luthor. The rest of the cast, from Rachel Brosnahan's Lois Lane to Nathan Fillion's Guy Gardner/Green Lantern, is on-point. Anthony Carrigan as Metamorpho, Isabela Merced as Hawkgirl, Wendell Pierce, etc. etc. I could rave all day about the casting. I also like the more upbeat, positive tone of the movie. Superman is a beacon of hope. This is a character who feels at odds with so much of modern cinema and modern culture because he's so optimistic and earnest. Even the one-liner in this trailer feels like upbeat banter rather than the snarky, sarcastic quippiness we find in so many superhero movies these days. So what is it about this trailer that has me worried? Pretty much the same things I've noted in the past. First, the visual effects are jarring. There are some cool moments here, but the overall effect is unpleasant. What's with all the slow-motion, Mr. Gunn? If we wanted egregious use of slow-mo action shots we could just ask Zack Snyder to return to DC. The abundance of wide-angle, fishbowl shots is also very off-putting. And what's with this shot of teeth bouncing off the camera? This just looks awful to me: I don't hate the color pallette but I don't love it, either. I'm even glad to see such a colorful superhero movie given how inert and dark and lifeless, or just plain drab, so many DC movies have been in recent years. There's a place for dark and gritty in DC and it's called Gotham, but far too many other films in this franchise have felt colorless and bland. This bucks that trend. But perhaps it bucks it too hard, because at timesthe color-grading just looks cheap and makes the visuals look fake. Which reminds me of films like the recent Flash (though, again, more saturated and less bland). I've gotten responses from fans who say something sarcastic like 'oh no a comic book movie that looks like a comic book!" but this isn't the problem. I'm all for comic book movies looking like comic books. I just don't love how this one is shaping up. It looks more like a commercial than a movie at times, if that makes sense. Some of the scenes – like this one with Superman laser-beaming a bunch of baddies – looks like a weird cutscene from a video game. The CGI is just . . . it's not good, especially in shots where Superman himself is clearly almost entirely CGI. I'm not sure why people are defending it so passionately. You see fans saying things like 'it's a superhero movie with flying and superpowers and you complain that it looks fake?' But the trick with filmmaking is to create immersion, especially when you're doing magical things, whether that's dragons, magic or superhero stuff. If the special effects look fake or even too clean, you break immersion. Then there's the cast. As I said above, it's a wonderful cast but it's also just massive. This is a two-hour movie (which is a perfect runtime!) but we have so many characters, I can't imagine any of them getting the screentime they deserve. I worry a lot about the pacing and this just turning into a frenetic mess with too much plot squeezed into too short a picture, like spreading far too much butter over too little bread. Fans seem pretty hyped about Superman, so maybe I'm just overly cynical and need a dose of Superman's effervescent optimism myself. I want to be wrong. I want all my concerns to be laser-blasted into oblivion. If the story is good, I can probably look past all the rest, and I've enjoyed plenty of Gunn's work in the past, which assuages some of my fears. We'll know one way or another in less than a month. Here's the latest trailer: What do you think? Let me know on Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky or Facebook. Also be sure to subscribe to my YouTube channel and follow me here on this blog. Sign up for my newsletter for more reviews and commentary on entertainment and culture.