Category: Uncategorized

  • One of the biggest pop stars in the world ‘to have main role’ in Narnia film

    One of the biggest pop stars in the world ‘to have main role’ in Narnia film

    While it seems the news isn’t official yet, Deadline has reported that the Grammy-award-winning artist has been in serious talks with the streaming giant to take on the role of the iconic villain.

    To the delight of C.S. Lewis fans everywhere, Netflix announced in 2018 that it was preparing to develop a new series and film projects based on The Chronicles of Narnia series.

    In 2020, Little Women director Greta Gerwig joined the project to adapt and direct the beloved children classics.

    The only details that have been reported thus far is that the film will recevie an exclusive two-week Imax global run for Thanksgiving 2026 before coming to Netflix.

    This is Gerwig’s first film since directing Barbie for Warner Bros., which became the studio’s highest-grossing movie of all time.

    Charli XCX and Gerwig worked together on that project as well, at least in theory, as the singer’s song Speed Drive was part of the film’s soundtrack.

    They both also featured in an Uber Eats Super Bowl advert alongside Matthew McConaughey, Kevin Bacon, Sean Evans, and Martha Stewart, so have presumably spent some time together.

    It’s been a big year for Charli, who won five Brit Award wins at the weekend.

    She’s also forayed into acting, with her upcoming debut screen credits including Cathy Yan’s The Gallerist, Romain Gavras’ Sacrifice, and Gregg Araki’s I Want Your Sex.

    Charli is on the lineup for Saturday, confirmed to be headlining the Other Stage by Nick Grimshaw and Annie Mac’s Sidetracked podcast after taking over Levels last year.

    Jadis the White Witch is perhaps the most iconic villain in the Chronicles of Narnia series, and was previously played by Tilda Swinton in the 2005 Walt Disney Pictures feature film adaptation.

    Got a story?

    If you’ve got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the Metro.co.uk entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@metro.co.uk, calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we’d love to hear from you.

  • From disco to Afrobeats: Here are the artists on King Charles’s playlist

    From disco to Afrobeats: Here are the artists on King Charles’s playlist

    King Charles has unveiled his eclectic musical tastes in a new Apple Music show, The King’s Music Room.

    The show, recorded to mark Commonwealth Day on Monday, sees the King sharing his personal playlist spanning disco, reggae, and Afrobeats.

    It was recorded in his Buckingham Palace office and features artists from across the Commonwealth, including Bob Marley, Kylie Minogue, Grace Jones, Davido, and Raye.

    The King’s selections, which he describes as the soundtrack to his life, offer a glimpse into his personal experiences and the impact music has had on him.

    He shares anecdotes about encounters with some of the featured artists, revealing how the songs have brought him comfort and sparked cherished memories.

    “Throughout my life, music has meant a great deal to me. I know that is also the case for so many others,” Charles said.

    “It has that remarkable ability to bring happy memories flooding back from the deepest recesses of our memory, to comfort us in times of sadness, and to take us to distant places.

    “But perhaps, above all, it can lift our spirits to such a degree, and all the more so when it brings us together in celebration. In other words, it brings us joy.”

    The King, who is Head of the Commonwealth, added: “So this is what I particularly wanted to share – songs which have brought me joy.

    “This seemed such an interesting and innovative way to celebrate this year’s Commonwealth Day.”

    He told his audience: “Thank you for listening. I wish you all every possible blessing.”

    Apple said the show also revealed that Charles was a fan of “1930s crooners”.

    Errollyn Wallen, master of the King’s music, said: “You can see His Majesty’s wide-ranging enthusiasm for music in this playlist to mark Commonwealth Day.

    “The Commonwealth has produced more than its fair share of wonderful songs, singers, and musicians, and this fun and eclectic collection is a great reminder of this treasure trove of creativity.”

    Charles’s collaboration with Apple Music isn’t the first time a member of the royal family has worked with the tech giant. Both the Duke of Sussex and the Prince of Wales have previously partnered with Apple on separate projects.

    In 2021, Prince Harry co-created a mental health docuseries with Oprah Winfrey for Apple TV+.

    In the series, he appeared to suggest his father, the late Queen, and the late Duke of Edinburgh had failed as parents. He expressed a desire to “break the cycle” of “genetic pain and suffering” for his children.

    That same year, Prince William appeared in a special episode of the Time To Walk series on Apple Fitness+. During the audio walking tour, he spoke about traumatic moments from his time serving with the air ambulance.

    In 2021, while appearing on a hospital radio show, Charles revealed some of his favourite artists, including The Three Degrees, Diana Ross, and Edith Piaf.

    The late Queen’s favourite hits included ‘Oklahoma’ from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical of the same name, ‘Anything You Can Do’ from Annie Get Your Gun and ukulele-playing George Formby’s ‘Leaning On A Lamp-Post’, as disclosed by her friends and family in a 2016 BBC Radio 2 programme about her musical tastes.

    William joined Prince George and Princess Charlotte at a Taylor Swift concert in 2024 and has said he listens to a “bit of everything”, including dance music, Coldplay and Linkin Park.

    The King’s Music Room is on Apple Music 1 on Monday March 10 at 6am, or on demand with an Apple Music subscription.

  • $10M reward offered for arrest of former Olympic snowboarder turned alleged drug lord

    $10M reward offered for arrest of former Olympic snowboarder turned alleged drug lord

    Ryan Wedding is wanted on multiple federal charges, including murder.

    The U.S. Department of State is offering a $10 million reward for the capture of a former Olympic snowboarder accused of running a major transnational drug trafficking organization and orchestrating multiple murders, authorities announced Thursday.

    Ryan Wedding, 43, a Canadian national, has also been added to the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list, the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office revealed Thursday.

    Wedding is wanted for allegedly running a drug trafficking network “that routinely shipped hundreds of kilograms of cocaine from Colombia, through Mexico and Southern California, to Canada and other locations in the United States, and for orchestrating multiple murders and an attempted murder in furtherance of these drug crimes,” the FBI said in a press release.

    He was indicted last year in Los Angeles federal court on multiple federal charges, including running a continuing criminal enterprise, committing murder in connection with a continuing criminal enterprise and assorted drug crimes, the FBI said.

    He and his alleged second-in-command, 34-year-old Canadian Andrew Clark, are accused of conspiring to move hundreds of kilograms of cocaine from Mexico to the Los Angeles area, where it was stored in stash houses before being transported to Canada and U.S. cities in long-haul semi-trucks, authorities said.

    Wedding and Clark are also accused of ordering the murders of multiple people in Canada to achieve the organization’s aims, the FBI said.

    Clark was arrested in Mexico last year by Mexican authorities and was among the 29 fugitives who were extradited to the U.S. from Mexico last week, while Wedding’s whereabouts remain unknown, the FBI said.

    “Wedding went from shredding powder on the slopes at the Olympics to distributing powder cocaine on the streets of U.S. cities and in his native Canada,” Akil Davis, the assistant director of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office, said in a statement on Thursday. “The alleged murders of his competitors make Wedding a very dangerous man, and his addition to the list of Ten Most Wanted Fugitives, coupled with a major reward offer by the State Department, will make the public our partner so that we can catch up with him before he puts anyone else in danger.”

    The State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs’ $10 million reward for information leading to Wedding’s arrest and/or conviction was authorized by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the FBI said.

    The reward is in addition to a $50,000 reward already offered by the FBI for information leading to Wedding’s apprehension, arrest and extradition, the agency said.

    Wedding competed for Canada in the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, where he placed 24th in the parallel giant slalom, before allegedly running the billion-dollar cocaine operation from Mexico for more than a dozen years, officials said.

    He is believed to reside in Mexico but investigators have not ruled out his presence elsewhere, including in the U.S., Canada, Colombia, Honduras, Guatemala or Costa Rica. His aliases include “El Jefe,” “Giant,” “Public Enemy,” “James Conrad King” and “Jesse King,” the FBI said.

    If convicted of murder and attempted murder charges, he faces a mandatory minimum penalty of life in federal prison, the DOJ said. The continuing criminal enterprise charges also carry a mandatory minimum penalty of life in federal prison.

  • Review | ‘Mickey 17’ sends in the clones in a devilish Bong Joon Ho satire

    Review | ‘Mickey 17’ sends in the clones in a devilish Bong Joon Ho satire

    Robert Pattinson plays an off-world “Expendable” having a serious personality crisis.

    (3 stars)

    “Mickey 17” is the latest firecracker placed between our toes by the South Korean director/prankster/genius Bong Joon Ho. It’s his first film since “Parasite” became the first foreign language movie to win a best picture Oscar in 2020, and while it’s not his best work, “Mickey 17” is still a great deal of acrid fun. In the bargain, you get three great performances from two very good actors.

    As the film opens, we’re a few decades into the future and a space colonization mission under the leadership of messianic ex-Congressman Kenneth Marshall (Mark Ruffalo) is trying to set up shop on the ice planet of Niflheim. Among the many busy worker bees under his leadership is Mickey Barnes (Robert Pattinson), a sweet but hapless schmendrick who has made the mistake of signing up as the colony’s “Expendable.” A new technology allows human beings to be “reprinted” when they die, body and memories intact, and while Expendables are too controversial to be permitted on Earth, they make a fine test case for interstellar exploration.

    Need someone to fix a spaceship exterior while getting blasted by deadly radiation? Use an Expendable — you can always print a new one. (And it really is a printer, ka-chunging out a new body like an old Epson dot-matrix and dumping the results on the floor if you forget the tray.)

    So poor Mickey signs up to be the canary in the colony’s coal mine. Between the radiation, serving as a guinea pig for an antiviral vaccine and other mishaps, he’s already gone through Mickeys 1 through 16 when the movie begins and is up to Mickey Version 17. It’s not a bad life, or lives. He has a devoted girlfriend in security officer Nasha (Naomi Ackie of “Blink Twice”), a slippery best buddy in Timo (the always-welcome Steven Yeun) and the condescending admiration of the other colonists, who see Mickey as their personal village idiot but who also really want to know what dying feels like. Wouldn’t you want to know, too?

    As is his wont, Bong slips the obvious ethical/existential issues under the skin of a diabolical sci-fi action comedy. Based on a 2022 novel by Edward Ashton, “Mickey 17” finds the director back in his wheelhouse of day-after-tomorrow satire following the contemporary head games of “Parasite.” The new film is very much in line with 2006’s “The Host” (Bong’s idea of a Godzilla movie), 2013’s “Snowpiercer” (humanity stuck on a trans-global bullet train, rich folk in the front and the poor in steerage) and 2017’s “Okja” (about a girl and her two-ton, genetically modified super-pig). Dig deep enough and you’ll find a molten core of class rage, nurtured in South Korea’s stratified society and easily exported for use in English-language blockbusters. But Bong is also a born filmmaker, and he dramatizes the deadly serious war between the haves and have-nots with slapstick invention that translates to irresistible entertainment.

    Here, his chosen instrument of subversion is Pattinson, an actor whom the masses may still dismiss as that pretty-boy vampire from the “Twilight” movies but who the attentive know is a gifted and playfully eccentric taker of risks. For Mickey 17, Pattinson adopts the affectless voice and shambling posture of a likable loser — it’s an enjoyable performance, but you think that’s all there is to it until Mickey 18 shows up.

    Wait, who’s Mickey 18? Through complications I won’t spoil, two Mickeys suddenly exist at the same time, and while the philosophical implications of non-selfhood get a brief chewing over, “Mickey 17” is more intrigued by the differences between the two. If Mickey 17 is a bit of a milquetoast, Mickey 18 is a bit of a psycho — a swaggering alpha male who kicks the movie’s plot into high gear. Among other things, Bong makes sure we see Nasha’s eyes light up at the prospect of having two Mickeys in her bed — the nice guy and the bad boy. (She calls them “Mild” and “Habanero,” but whatever.)

    It’s in the contrast between the two characters that a viewer takes the measure of Pattinson’s talent, his knack for physical comedy and the subtlety with which he embodies each Mickey’s best and worst traits. He — they — it — are a marvel. Meanwhile, over in the other corner, Ruffalo is giving a master class in outsize political satire, playing the colony’s cult head by rolling up every jingoistic bully you can imagine into one overinflated buffoon. There’s Elon’s blithering, blinkered self-regard in there, and Mussolini’s posture, Dear Orange Leader’s speech patterns and RFK Jr.’s teeth. It ain’t subtle, but it’s a hoot. (Toni Collette doesn’t get a lot to do as the character’s wife, the brains behind the throne, but there’s always too much going on in a Bong movie — that’s the fun of them and sometimes the liability.)

    I haven’t mentioned the scuttling creatures that run rampant on Niflheim, dubbed “creepers” and looking like a cross between a buffalo and a microscopic water bear. They’re possibly more sentient than the colonists would like to admit — “Don’t call them aliens,” Mickey 17 cautions someone. “We’re the aliens.” — and the final scenes of “Mickey 17” envision a snowy showdown between Them and Us that brings the movie to a clattery and generally satisfying finale.

    A Bong Joon Ho film tends to spin faster and faster as it goes, wild with invention, high spirits and a fury toward the people in charge that we’re invited to apply to our own lives once the lights come up. To them, we’re all replaceable, re-printable and expendable. In “Mickey 17,” the toner’s running low and we’ve just about had enough.

    R. At area theaters. Contains violent content, language throughout, sexual content and drug material. 137 minutes.

    Ty Burr is the author of the movie recommendation newsletter Ty Burr’s Watch List at tyburrswatchlist.com.

  • Pamela Bach, actor and ex-wife of ‘Baywatch’ icon David Hasselhoff, dies by suicide

    Pamela Bach, actor and ex-wife of ‘Baywatch’ icon David Hasselhoff, dies by suicide

    LOS ANGELES — Pamela Bach, the ex-wife of “Baywatch” star David Hasselhoff who also had a TV career of her own, was found dead at her home in Hollywood on Wednesday.

    The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner’s office confirmed Thursday on its website that Bach died by suicide. A gunshot wound to the head is listed as her cause of death. A spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police Department confirmed to The Times on Thursday that officers responded to a death investigation at the 3400 block of Troy Drive in Hollywood at around 10 p.m. Bach was pronounced dead on the scene, according to TMZ, which broke the news of her death. She was 62.

    “Our family is deeply saddened by the recent passing of Pamela Hasselhoff,” David Hasselhoff said in a statement to TMZ. “We are grateful for the outpouring of love and support during this difficult time but we kindly request privacy as we grieve and navigate through this challenging time.”

    Hayley Amber Hasselhoff, one of the two daughters Bach shares with David Hasselhoff, reposted a photo of her parents to her Instagram story Wednesday evening. The 32-year-old actor and model added a white heart emoji above the picture.

    Bach was born Oct. 16, 1962, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and had several acting credits — including stints on shows “The Young and the Restless” and “Otherworld” — before she married heartthrob David Hasselhoff in 1989. Her acting career spanned from the ’70s to the early aughts and also included roles on “The Fall Guy,” “T.J. Hooker,” “Superboy” and “Viper.”

    Bach met her husband on the set of his Emmy-nominated series “Knight Rider.” After the series ended its four-year run on NBC in 1986, Bach and Hasselhoff tied the knot in a private ceremony in Studio City. The then-partners in life later brought their relationship to the set of the beachside drama “Baywatch,” which ran from 1989 to 2001. The series starred Hasselhoff as dreamy lifeguard Mitch Buchannon. Bach played multiple characters over 14 episodes from 1991 to 2000, according to IMDb.

    In a 1989 interview with The Times, Bach dispelled any notion that her marriage to Hasselhoff helped her land “Baywatch” roles. At the time, she said her husband’s last name was “great baggage to have but I never open it up.”

    “Just because he’s the star and producer [doesn’t mean that’s how I got the job],” she doubled down. “I know inside myself that I cannot negate the fact that I know my lines, I’m always on time, I’m very professional and never pull any weight on the set. In fact, I go the opposite to make people feel more comfortable. I rely on my own laurels.”

    In 1990, Bach and Hasselhoff welcomed their first daughter, Taylor, a year after their marriage. Daughter Hayley Amber was born two years later. In the early aughts, the actors went their separate ways and divorced in 2006.

    Before her death, Bach dedicated her social media pages to sharing personal updates and family news. In her final Instagram post, Bach said she looked forward to what 2025 has in store, adding that watching her granddaughter London “grow and seeing her smile light up my world is truly the greatest blessing.”

    “May 2025 be filled with beautiful moments, laughter, and all the blessings your hearts can hold,” she continued. “Here’s to a year of making cherished memories, spreading joy, and embracing every precious moment!”

    — — —

    Suicide prevention and crisis counseling resources

    If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, seek help from a professional and call 9-8-8. The United States’ first nationwide three-digit mental health crisis hotline 988 will connect callers with trained mental health counselors. Text “HOME” to 741741 in the U.S. and Canada to reach the Crisis Text Line.

    — — —

  • Pamela Bach Dies: Actor And Ex-Wife Of David Hasselhoff Was 62

    Pamela Bach Dies: Actor And Ex-Wife Of David Hasselhoff Was 62

    While the Los Angeles medical examiner’s office is still investigating the death, TMZ cites law enforcement sources as saying Bach died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

    Deadline has not confirmed a cause of death.

    “Our family is deeply saddened by the recent passing of Pamela Hasselhoff,” David Hasselhoff wrote on . Facebook today. “We are grateful for the outpouring of love and support during this difficult period but kindly request privacy as we grieve and navigate through this challenging time.”

    After the couple’s 1985 meeting on Knight Rider, the two dated and were married four years later. From 1991 to 2000 she appeared on 14 episodes of Hasselhoff’s series Baywatch portraying the character Kaye Morgan.

    Other TV credits include a brief 1994 stint on The Young and the Restless and guest appearances on TJ Hooker, Cheers, The Fall Guy, Castle Rock and, most recently, the 2015 horror film Mansion of Blood starring Gary Busey.

    Born Pamela Weissenbach on October 16, 1963, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, she shortened her last name to Bach as a stage name in 1985 when she made her TV debut with a guest role on the short-lived sci-fi series Otherworld.

    The Bach-Hasselhoff marriage ended badly, with Bach accusing Hasselhoff of domestic abuse (Hasselhoff denied the accusations) and, in one notorious 2007 incident, Hasselhoff losing visitation privileges to the couple’s two daughters for two weeks when he was videotaped, by one of the daughters, drunkenly eating a hamburger. During the video, Hasselhoff’s daughter could be heard pleading with her father to get sober. Two years later Hasselhoff’s attorney described his client as a recovering alcoholic.

    Bach, who sometimes went by the name Pamela Hasselhoff and Pamela Bach-Hasselhoff, posted a New Year’s Eve message on Instagram with a photo of her infant granddaughter London. “As we step into 2025, my heart is full of gratitude, especially for my precious grandbaby, London. Watching her grow and seeing her smile light up my world is truly the greatest blessing. My wish for all of you this year is health, happiness, and an abundance of love. May 2025 be filled with beautiful moments, laughter, and all the blessings your hearts can hold. Here’s to a year of making cherished memories, spreading joy, and embracing every precious moment!”

    Bach is survived by her daughters with Hasselhoff, Taylor and Haley, and Taylor’s daughter London.

  • CW’s ‘Powerpuff Girls’ Live-Action Footage Leaks: Bubbles Is Drunk, Buttercup Hates ‘Gender Normative’ Costume and More From Canceled Show

    CW’s ‘Powerpuff Girls’ Live-Action Footage Leaks: Bubbles Is Drunk, Buttercup Hates ‘Gender Normative’ Costume and More From Canceled Show

    Kimberly Burch, Fiancée of Faster Pussycat Singer, Dies After Going Overboard on ’80s Cruise 2 days ago

    In 2021, The CW ordered and shot a live-action “Powerpuff Girls” pilot starring Chloe Bennet, Dove Cameron, Yana Perrault and Donald Faison, only for the series to be canceled and never see the light of day — until now.

    Footage from the canceled series has been leaked onto YouTube and made into a trailer. Sources at CW confirmed to Variety that the footage is real, but a final trailer was never assembled before “Powerpuff Girls” was axed. At the time of the cancellation, CW may have been putting together a trailer for upfronts, but sources say the leaked footage would not have passed CW standards. The network sometimes used outside vendors to assemble trailers, so the leak could have been a rejected trailer from a third party. It may also have been a Warner Bros. TV trailer created for L.A. screenings or San Diego Comic Con.

    Nevertheless, the leaked footage spread on social media Thursday. It introduces Bennett as Blossom, Cameron as Bubbles, Perrault as Buttercup and Faison as Professor Drake Utonium, who created the trio of heroes in his laboratory. The trailer shows younger versions of the Powerpuff Girls, their rise to fame (which included the original Cartoon Network series) and their lives at young adults. Blossom was “constantly stressed,” Bubbles was “constantly drinking” and throws up in a trash can, while Buttercup was “constantly rebellious.”

    “I’m not wearing that dress anymore, it’s gender normative and ass ugly,” Perrault says. Things change when the Powerpuff Girls accidentally kill the adult, human version of Mojo Jojo, which results in Blossom running away, Buttercup working as a firefighter, Bubbles moving to Hollywood and Mojo’s vengeful son Joseph “Jojo” Mondel Jr. (Nicholas Podany) becoming the mayor of Townsville. Seven years later, the Powerpuff Girls reunite to fight Jojo Jr., who’s brainwashed Townsville and framed Prof. Utonium.

    “Oh God, they’re all possessed. This is exactly like the gathering of the Juggalos,” Bubbles says as the heroes watch citizens riot.

    The Powerpuff Girls save Townsville, their father and their reputations as they are embraced by their fans once again. The trailer also teases a romantic spark between Jojo Jr. and Blossom, but Blossom assures her sisters that he isn’t obsessed with her.

    “Yes, he was, and I bet he still is. But in, like, an angry, kinky, hate-boner kind of way,” Buttercup teases her. To which Bubbles adds, “That’s the best kind of boner.”

    The live-action “Powerpuff Girls” picked up steam in spring 2021 when it cast its trio of stars and was ordered to pilot. Oscar winner Diablo Cody and Heather Regnier were writers and executive produced, along with Greg Berlanti, Sarah Schechter and David Madden. Warner Bros. TV was also producing. However, the pilot was later overhauled and re-shot in May 2021, and Bennet dropped out in August.

    “The reason you do pilots is because sometimes things miss, and this was just a miss. We believe in the cast completely. We believe in Diablo [Cody] and Heather [Regnier], the writers. We believe in the auspices of Greg Berlanti and Warner [Bros. TV] studios,” said CW chairman and CEO Mark Pedowitz at the time. “In this case the pilot didn’t work. But because we see there’s enough elements in there, we wanted to give it another shot. So that’s why we didn’t want to go forward with what we had. Tonally, it might’ve felt a little too campy. It didn’t feel as rooted in reality as it might’ve felt. But again, you learn things when you test things out. And so in this case, we felt, let’s take a step back and go back to the drawing board.”

  • How To Watch ‘Mickey 17’ — Tickets, Premium Formats, and More for Robert Pattinson and Bong Joon Ho’s Sci-Fi Satire

    How To Watch ‘Mickey 17’ — Tickets, Premium Formats, and More for Robert Pattinson and Bong Joon Ho’s Sci-Fi Satire

    More than six years after the international success of Parasite, Oscar-winning director Bong Joon Ho returns to the big screen with his sci-fi action comedy Mickey 17. Based on the sci-fi novel, Mickey 7, written by Edward Ashton, the film follows the titular protagonist, Mickey Barnes, who signs up for a space colony mission as an “expendable”. The film adaptation began production in January 2022 before the novel’s publication. Robert Pattinson (The Batman) was attached as the lead star and was shortly joined by the incredible supporting cast, including Naomi Ackie (Blink Twice), Academy Award nominee Steven Yeun (Minari), Academy Award nominee Toni Collette (Hereditary), and Academy Award nominee Mark Ruffalo (Poor Things).

    Continue reading further below to find out how you can watch Mickey 17.

    Is ‘Mickey 17’ Coming To Theaters?

    Yes! Mickey 17 is one of the major tentpole films for Warner Bros Pictures this year, which means it is a highly anticipated movie to hit the cinemas. It will join other cinema releases during March, such as Black Bag and Novocaine.

    When Is the Release Date for ‘Mickey 17’?

    Bong’s upcoming film has faced many changes regarding its release date over the past year. The film was originally slated for release this time last year on March 24, 2024. However, the post-production work was impeded by the SAG-AFTRA strikes. It was pushed to January 31, 2025, then to April 18. Finally, it is expected to hit theaters on March 7 in the US and Canada. For international audiences, some countries in Asia, Europe, and the Oceania region will get the chance to see the film slightly earlier.

    Release Date

    Countries

    February 28

    South Korea

    March 5

    France, Belgium, Philippines

    March 6

    Australia, Brazil, Germany, Greece, Singapore

    March 7

    UK, China, Sweden, India

    March 28

    Japan

    Find Showtimes for ‘Mickey 17’

    Check out the following links below to purchase your tickets to watch Mickey 17:

    Fandango

    AMC Theatres

    Regal

    Cinemark

    Cineplex

    IMAX

    What Formats Will ‘Mickey 17’ Be Playing In?

    To see this epic action adventure, the cinemas will be offering the following formats to allow cinemagoers the full experience when watching Mickey 17.

    Standard

    IMAX

    Dolby Cinema

    3-D

    ScreenX

    4DX

    RPX

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    No

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    Watch the Trailers for ‘Mickey 17’

    The first trailer was revealed on September 18, 2024, by Warner Bros. It cold opens with a space station where Mickey floats around in an astronaut suit only to suddenly lose his hand. Set to Dean Martin’s swanky song “Ain’t That a Kick In the Head”, the film’s darkly comedic tone is immediately captured in the trailer to show the extraordinary job that the seemingly naive Mickey signs up for. Despite the morbid nature of his job as an expendable, Mickey finds some positives, such as his connection with Nasha (Ackie). He continues to roll with the punches until the unthinkable happens: he returns to the space station only to find another live clone of himself. Mickey’s survival is immediately threatened by the presence of an additional version of him based on laws brought forward by the shady politician Kenneth Marshall (Ruffalo). The trailer then shows Mickey teaming up with himself and other lowly workers to rise up against the unjust treatment of their employers.

    What Are the Box Office Projections for ‘Mickey 17’?

    The domestic box office projection is expected to be in the range of $15 million to $20 million. The film currently sits on a production budget that reportedly ranges from $120 million to $150 million USD.

    Other Bong Joon Ho Movies You Can Watch Right Now

    As mentioned, Mickey 17 marks the first returning film for esteemed Korean director, Bong Joon Ho, after the whirlwind international success of Parasite during the 2020 awards season. His filmography is definitely worth checking out in the lead-up to the sci-fi comedy, especially with Bong’s previous films being consistent with sharp social commentary, wonderfully talented casts, and invigorating stories.

    Snowpiercer (2013)

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    Snowpiercer

    R

    Action

    Drama

    Sci-Fi

    Release Date July 11, 2014

    Runtime 126 Minutes

    Cast

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    Chris Evans

    Jamie Bell

    Tilda Swinton

    Ed Harris

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    This dystopian film was the first endeavor in Bong’s collaboration with an international studio and a cast that gathered the likes of Chris Evans (Captain America: The First Avenger), Tilda Swinton (Only Lovers Left Alive), and Octavia Spencer (The Help). The story is based on the French graphic novel, Le Transperceneige, which follows a post-apocalyptic society that lives on a train in the aftermath of a climate disaster that caused the Earth to freeze over. The huge vessel is a self-sustaining vehicle that traverses around the globe and is the last safe place for the remainder of humanity. However, the passengers aboard are segregated within unfair living conditions where the rich live in luxurious compartments at the front while the tail-end homes everyone else. It isn’t until Curtis (Evans) invokes a revolution to lead the others to the front of the train and take back their lives beyond the unjust survival they experienced for 17 years.

    Okja (2017)

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    Okja

    15+

    Drama

    Action

    Adventure

    Release Date June 28, 2017

    Runtime 120minutes

    Cast

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    Hee-Bong Byun

    Steven Yeun

    Jake Gyllenhaal

    Seo-Hyun Ahn

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    The next international production for Bong was a collaboration with Netflix and British-American writer Jon Ronson (Frank). Okja centers on a young girl named Mija (Ahn Seo-hyun) who lives on a farm in South Korea. She and her grandfather were selected to raise a genetically modified “super pig” as part of an international species breeding program from the Mirando Corporation CEO, Lucy Mirando (Tilda Swinton). Mija’s quiet life with her pet pig, Okja, is abruptly interrupted by the arrival of Mirando Corporation workers and zoologist, Dr. Johnny Wilcox (Jake Gyllenhaal). They soon declare that her pig is the winner of the breeding program and must be brought back to the US. Mija is determined to stop the company from taking Okja and finds surprising allies with an animal protest group called Animal Liberation Front. Led by Jay (Paul Dano), the group works with Mija to try and rescue Okja from the Mirando Corporation’s farming scheme built on animal cruelty and capitalistic gain.

    The Host (2006)

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    The Host

    R

    Drama

    Horror

    Sci-Fi

    Release Date July 27, 2006

    Runtime 119 Minutes

    Cast

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    Song Kang-ho

    Byun Hee-bong

    Park Hae-il

    Bae Doona

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    Bong’s third feature film takes on the horror creature feature genre with a story that focuses on a mysterious creature that dwells in the Han River in Seoul. One day, the monster begins terrorizing the city’s inhabitants and even kidnaps the daughter of the protagonist, Park Gang-du (Song Kang-ho). Gang-du’s brother, Nam-il (Park Hae-il), and sister, Nam-joo (Bae Doona), join him on the dangerous quest to rescue his daughter, Hyun-seo (Go Ah-sung).

  • Music industry reacts to Roy Ayers’ death at 84

    Music industry reacts to Roy Ayers’ death at 84

    Roy Ayers, the legendary jazz-funk vibraphonist known for his influential sound and the hit song “Everybody Loves the Sunshine,” has died at the age of 84. His family confirmed his passing on Tuesday.

    “It is with great sadness that the family of legendary vibraphonist, composer, and producer Roy Ayers announce his passing which occurred on March 4, 2025 in New York City after a long illness,” the family said in a statement to Variety. They described Ayers as “highly influential and sought after as a music collaborator.”

    Ayers, often called the “Godfather of Neo Soul,” left an indelible mark on jazz, funk, R&B and hip-hop. His music has been widely sampled by artists such as Mary J. Blige, A Tribe Called Quest, Common and Kanye West. The musician’s influence extended beyond his own recordings, with collaborations spanning from jazz greats like Fela Kuti to modern stars like Erykah Badu and Tyler, the Creator.

    Born in Los Angeles in 1940, Ayers was inspired to take up the vibraphone after seeing Lionel Hampton’s Big Band at the age of five. He later studied music theory at Los Angeles City College before launching his professional career in the early 1960s.

    Ayers first recorded as a sideman with saxophonist Curtis Amy before releasing his debut album, West Coast Vibes, in 1963. He later formed Roy Ayers Ubiquity, the group responsible for Everybody Loves the Sunshine (1976), which remains a defining track of the jazz-funk era.

    Ayers also made a name for himself in film soundtracks, composing the score for the 1973 blaxploitation classic Coffy, starring Pam Grier. His ability to merge jazz, funk and soul helped shape the neo-soul movement, and his impact can still be felt in modern music. Even late into his career, Ayers continued to perform and collaborate, releasing Roy Ayers JID002 with Adrian Younge and Ali Shaheed Muhammad in 2020.

    As news of Ayers’ passing spread, tributes poured in from across the music world.

    Mary J. Blige, who sampled Everybody Loves the Sunshine in her 1994 album My Life, shared a heartfelt message on social media: “RIP Roy Ayers ❤️🕊️”.

    Producer and DJ Premier paid tribute to Ayers’ legacy, writing: “ICON is a status we all strive to earn in our journey of greatness. Thank you ROY AYERS for your heavy soul music. Thank you for touring with GURU and being a member of his Jazzmatazz Vol. 1 delivery. R.I.P. to both of you Kings.”

    Erykah Badu and Swizz Beatz reshared tribute messages from Ebony Magazine on their Instagram stories.

    British singer Estelle shared a deeply personal tribute along with a photo of herself with Ayers, writing on Instagram: “This day was special.

    My grandad on my dad’s side got to see me perform w one of his heroes. My grandad was a steel pan player in Trinidad and Grenada.

    So the vibraphone being the cousin of the steel pan naturally it was a time and to make it even more special this may have been the year i had re-connected w my dad since i was 3 and also then been re-introduced to my grandad. I was 22.

    Music has taken me to some of the most incredible places and I’ve sung with and for some incredible humans. Thank you for allowing me to be on stage with you our legend Roy Ayers.”

    Ayers’ pioneering fusion of jazz, funk and soul has left a lasting imprint on the music industry. His sound continues to be sampled, remixed and celebrated by artists across genres.

  • Exclusive jailhouse ABC interview with Tupac Shakur murder suspect

    Exclusive jailhouse ABC interview with Tupac Shakur murder suspect

    It’s Duane “Keffe D” Davis’ first interview since being arrested in 2023.

    The only man ever charged in the notorious Las Vegas murder of rapper Tupac Shakur insists he is “innocent,” being railroaded by authorities and that he only confessed to his purported role in the crime because he was getting paid to lie.

    In his first interview since being arrested in September 2023, Duane “Keffe D” Davis told ABC News in a jailhouse interview that he should be at home, watching his grandchildren grow up and tending to his garden. Instead, he said, he’s being forced to stand trial in a nearly three-decade-old case that’s devoid of concrete evidence.

    “I’m innocent,” Davis said during a sometimes-tearful hour-long meeting at the Clark County Detention Center. He described himself as a “good man” long retired from the drug game he once excelled at.

    “I did everything they asked me to do. Get new friends. Stop selling drugs. I stopped all that,” he said, referring to police and prosecutors. “I’m supposed to be out there enjoying my twilight at one of my f—— grandson’s football games, and basketball games. Enjoying life with my kids.”

    Prosecutors say Davis, 61, was a longtime member and leader of a set of the infamous Crips street gang based in his hometown of Compton, California. Authorities say that, as the alleged “shot caller” on the night of Shakur’s killing in September 1996, it was Davis who orchestrated the drive-by shooting of the rap star off the Vegas strip. On their way from Mike Tyson’s fight against Bruce Seldon, Shakur was gunned down at a red light in the passenger seat of the BMW being driven by rap impresario Marion “Suge” Knight. Shakur was rushed to the hospital and died six days later from his wounds.

    Though the killing occurred on the bustling streets of Sin City – it remained unsolved for nearly 30 years, mired in police scandals and turf wars, and a street code that frowns upon snitches.

    Eventually, Vegas detectives built their case off Davis’ own account of the killing, retold in multiple police interviews, public media appearances before his arrest, and a 2019 self-published memoir with his own name on it.

    Davis’ previous words copping to his role in the rapper’s killing are crucial in the case against him. Investigators say they spent years working to beef up Davis’ narrative of the events by using evidence and additional accounts to firm up their case – expected to be presented to a jury in 11 months.

    Davis, sitting on a wooden bench under the harsh fluorescent lights of a jailhouse conference room and accompanied by corrections officers, now insists he didn’t write his own memoir – and hasn’t even read it. And so, he says, those confessions aren’t worth the paper they’re printed on.

    “I’ve never read the book,” Davis said of his memoir “Compton Street Legend,” on which he shares the credit as a co-author. The back of the book bears the tagline, “The last living eyewitness to Tupac’s murder is telling his story.”

    Davis says his co-author took artistic liberties he had nothing to do with.

    “I just gave him details of my life,” Davis said. “And he went and did his little investigation and wrote the book on his own.”

    Not only does he say he had nothing to do with Shakur’s killing, Davis said he was hundreds of miles away from where it happened – asserting for the first time where he says he was that night: “in Los Angeles,” and at home.

    Davis said he has “about 20 or 30 people going to come” to his murder trial corroborating that alibi – to say nothing of the “13,000 people who say they killed Tupac.” He did not name the people who he said woukld verify where he was the night that Shakur was killed.

    “I did not do it,” Davis said of what had stood as one of the best-known cold cases in modern American history. Of prosecutors leading the case against him, he said “They don’t have nothing. And they know they don’t have nothing. They can’t even place me out here. They don’t have no gun, no car, no Keffe D, no nothing.”

    Las Vegas prosecutors declined to respond directly to Davis’ comments but continue to insist they are confident in the case and expect to see the man convicted at trial.

    In 2008, Davis confessed to his purported role in the Shakur homicide in an interview with detectives connected to a joint federal-Los Angeles task force that had set up a drug operation sting on Davis to extract information on fellow rap icon Biggie Smalls’ murder, which happened six months after Shakur’s. Davis at the time said he didn’t have information about Biggie’s murder — but did have other information that would be valuable. That time, according to police, Davis made his admissions as part of what’s known as a “proffer agreement,” so he could not be prosecuted for what he said.

    The following year, Davis again confirmed his purported role in the Shakur drive-by this time in an interview with detectives from Las Vegas. Vegas authorities were not connected to the earlier sessions, and were not required to honor any agreement that might have been made with Davis, according to interview recordings and transcripts reviewed by ABC. The only thing Vegas cops agreed to was that the interview with Davis would be voluntary and he would not be arrested on the spot.

    At the time, some Las Vegas detectives wanted to bust Davis and charge him with the Tupac murder, but prosecutors feared that both sets of alleged confessions could be thrown out of court because of the purported non-prosecution agreement in LA. If a judge were to side with Davis, the case would likely have been doomed.

    Davis’ lawyers did make that argument earlier this year and the judge rejected it. But the issue was largely beside the point because, officials have said, Davis went on to publicly recount his purported role in the homicide repeatedly in the years since 2009, especially in a 2018 docuseries and on the pages of “Compton Street Legends.”

    Davis’ own public words “reinvigorates the investigation,” the now-retired head of the Las Vegas homicide bureau, Jason Johansson, told ABC last year.

    Sitting in jail, Davis said that version of events was totally fabricated for profit when he told his story in the media. As for making his purported confession to the authorities, he said, that was a play to keep others caught up in a drug case out of prison. He said he told police what they wanted to hear “if they let me go.”

    “That’s the only way you’re walking free,” Davis said, recounting the choice he felt he had to make. “It would’ve been selfish to let everybody go down because of me.”

    As for the similar versions of events recounted by him on camera, before his arrest, and in the book with his name on it, Davis says that was just a financial investment.

    “They paid me to say that,” he said.

    Davis insists the 2008 non-prosecution agreement should still hold and that any statements to law enforcement connected with it should not be presented to the jury next year.

    “I’m not even supposed to be in jail,” he said. “A deal is a deal.”

    Davis also pointed the finger at an altogether different suspect: the former cop responsible for running some of the security operations for Knight and Shakur on the night of the shooting. That man, Reggie Wright Jr., a former Compton police officer, who testified before the grand jury that indicted Davis for the Shakur killing, ran security for Knight’s Death Row Records back in the mid-1990s. Wright has said he spent most of that night of the killing working out logistics at the club that Shakur and Knight were planning to visit after the Tyson fight.

    Echoing a recent accusation lodged in court papers by his attorney, Davis now accuses Wright and his security team of having orchestrated the shooting that killed Shakur.

    “Prove that I orchestrated this,” Davis said. “Their top witness is the lead suspect, Reggie Wright Jr.,” alleging both Wright and his onetime security company were “mercenaries.”

    Wright has denied any involvement in Shakur’s killing – and points out he was there for exactly the opposite purpose that night.

    “I was in charge of possibly protecting this young man,” Wright told ABC’s Nightline last year.

    “It’s heartbreaking they keep dragging in my name,” Wright said reacting to Davis’ attorney’s recent allegations. “I didn’t have anything to do with that. One of the worst days of my life when I heard that that happened.”

    Davis has repeatedly tried to make bail since he was arrested outside his home in Sept. 2023 but the judge refused to accept the financing packages he has put together. He now faces an additional charge and trial connected with a jailhouse fight with another inmate, set for April.

    According to jailhouse surveillance footage obtained by ABC News, the man who fought with Davis appeared to have been waiting alone and unattended in a common area when Davis came walking through with an escort. The second inmate can be seen lunging at Davis, who fought back.

    Both Davis and the other inmate have pleaded not guilty to charges of battery and challenging each other to fight. Davis said he was only defending himself. He has also pleaded not guilty to the murder charge.

    He insists that he will eventually beat the rap on both the murder and battery charge and that he knows how to fight his way through.

    “God got my back, and God will see me through this,” Davis said. “He had my back with cancer, I survived the streets, and the FBI. That’s a big accomplishment for a man from Compton.”