Angela Bassett (Queen Ramonda) all signed on to reprise their roles.
(Photo: Marvel)
Black Panther debuted back in 2018 and became the top-grossing superhero film of all time. The blockbuster broke records and earned over $600 million in the country’s box office.
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The lead character of the film, King T’Challa, played by the late
Chadwick Boseman stole the hearts of fans across the world. Boseman’s performance was so superb the company considered not recasting the role after his untimely passing. But fans are fighting back to save the first Black superhero’s likeness in the film.
As reported by
This article includes frank discussion of the latest episode of
Mare of Easttown: âEnter Number Two.â If youâre not caught up, now is the time to leave.Â
A lot happened this week on HBOâs
Kate Winslet-starring
Mare of Easttown including Mare herself crossing an ethical line that has temporarily cost her her job. But while Winslet was captivating in Episode 2 as she revealed her complicated relationship with her son Kevin, it was
Evan Peters who got the big emotional moment in this weekâs episode. Peters dug so deep for his characterâs drunken confession to Mare that, series director
Nothing can stop this train.
Demon Slayer: Mugen Train, also known as
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba the Movie: Mugen Train took the top spot at the domestic box office this weekend with $6.4 million, rising from the silver medal spot last week.
Mortal Kombat, perhaps feeling the punch of a concurrent release on HBO Max, swapped places with $6.2 million.
The anime import surprised many last week with its $19.5 million in U.S. receipts. This was not just the biggest opening for Japanese animation, but for a foreign language film of any kind. What s more, descriptions of the film made it evident that audiences came to it already steeped in its lore as a series. Coming to the movie it out of the blue, critics wrote, would ultimately be confusing.
“D-day,” as some in the entertainment industry were calling it, was looming.
It was just two weeks before May 6, the date when the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. the group that puts on the Golden Globes had promised to unveil a slate of reforms aimed at “transformational change.” The pledge had come after a Times investigation highlighted allegations of financial and ethical lapses by the group and pointed out that not one of its 86 members is Black, spurring outrage in Hollywood.
On that April Tuesday, a handful of consultants for the embattled association met with a group of activists and publicists who’d been vocal in their criticism. The publicists represented a contingent of more than 100 powerful firms who’d declared that their clients would boycott the HFPA refusing to participate in screenings, interviews or award shows until the organization reformed. The activists included representatives from Color of Change and Time’s Up, including director Ava DuVe
After a Times investigation, the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. vowed to make sweeping changes, but the group behind the Golden Globes has struggled along the way.