Casting director Matthew Barry told DailyMail.com hat it takes to become a movie star and how he gave actors including Rachel McAdams and Terry Crews their first big breaks.
Every ’90s Blockbuster Movie Ranked
Thirty years on, the 1990s has solidified its stature as one of the magical decades in filmmaking, much like how we view the ’30s and the ’70s. Precisely, this Gen X-decade pulled together the Hollywood studio power of the ’30s and the groundbreaking creativity of the ’70s, crocheting commercialism and art into the movie behemoths we speak of in legend as the ’90s blockbuster which we’ve now ranked all by Tomatometer!
First off, in putting together this list, we didn’t want no scrubs: We defined the ’90s blockbuster as any film that made over $100 million at the box office movies that had people literally lining up around the block to spend their easy-earned cash. (The economy was booming after all.) This, of course, ushers in all those films synonymous with ’90s blockbusterism, including
The
Red Sonjamovie that’s been kicking around Hollywood for several years now, has found its lead.
Hannah John-Kamen, who played Ghost in
Ant-Man and the Wasp, and whose credits include
Ready Player One,
Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City, will play the titular character, with
Joey Soloway directing a script co-written with
Tasha Huo.
Red Sonja movie, shall we? In 2008, Douglas Aarniokoski was hired to direct a
Red Sonja movie, with Robert Rodriguez producing and Rose McGowan set to star. That version of the film never came together, but by 2011, Megan Fox was soon in the running to star
As the nights get longer and colder, so the need increases for something entertaining to fill them. Naturally, free-to-air television’s solution is more reality competitions. TVNZ has dusted off
The Apprentice for a new generation (TVNZ1, May 10), while a day earlier, Three introduces a Kiwi version of international hot property
The Masked Singer. A new quiz show, 9 Lives, hosted by Matai Smith is also expected to debut this month. Meanwhile, for fans of the outdoors, TVNZ1 has a new series of Britain’s
Your Garden Made Perfect (May 13) and a show focused on New Zealand’s aim to be predator-free by 2050 –