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Overlord Director To Helm Flash Gordon Movie

Overlord helmer Julius Avery is moving onto another pulpy genre project, this time in the form of a Flash Gordon reboot for Fox. A big screen relaunch of the property has been on-again and off-again for years, with Matthew Vaughn (of Kick-Ass, X-Men: First Class, and Kingsman fame) being the last director attached. He formally left the Flash Gordon film relaunch last year, after it was placed on indefinite hold in the wake of Guardians of the Galaxy's success.

However, with the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise's future up in the air following writer/director James Gunn's firing on Guardians of the Galaxy 3, and Lucasfilm (possibly) planning to take a short break on Star Wars movies after Episode 9 hits theaters at the end of next year, that's helped to pave the way for the grandaddy of cosmic adventure franchises to make its grand return to theaters. Disney is now on course to finalize its acquisition of Fox by the start of 2019, but it seems the Mouse House isn't averse to the latter having a space-based IP of its own - one that, in an example of things coming full circle, was the basis for the (now Disney-owned) Star Wars movies in the first place.

Related: Read Overlord's Early Reviews

According to Deadline, Avery pitched his take for a Flash Gordon movie reboot to Fox and the studio liked it enough to hire him for the project. The current plan is for Avery to write and direct the film alone (though it's certainly possible another writer will be brought aboard later).

Flash Gordon was introduced in comic strip form back in 1934 and has since become a radio serial, multiple TV shows (both live-action and cartoon), and a famously campy 1980s movie, among other things. The pulpy property follows Flash - a talented while male college athlete - on a quest to save earth from the planet Mongo and its tyrannical leader, Ming the Merciless, and could very much use an update, especially when it comes to the franchise's racial overtones (see Ming, a villain who's clearly inspired by East Asian stereotypes) and white savior trappings.

Avery might just be the right man for that job, if the early critical response to his upcoming film Overlord is any indication. The WWII horror-thriller went over well during its premiere at Fantastic Fest last month, which suggests that Avery might have a talent for putting modern spins on pulpy concepts in general (something like Flash Gordon included). It's been reported that Avery and Overlord producer J.J. Abrams are going to reunite on an original superhero movie titled The Heavy in the near future, but it seems that Avery may've already found his next project after that (assuming he doesn't simply tackle Flash Gordon first).

MORE: Fall & Winter Holidays 2018 Movie Preview

We will bring you more details on Flash Gordon as they become available.

Source: Deadline



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Hulu’s Looking For Alaska Limited Series Casts Its Lead Roles

If you’re in the market for some tearjerking YA adventures, then Hulu’s announcement that the lead roles for its adaptation of John Green’s Looking For Alaska have been cast will likely be music to your ears. Green, a reliable purveyor of wildly popular, angsty teen stories, like The Fault In Our Stars, Paper Towns, and the 2017 novel, Turtles All the Way Down, will finally see his debut novel adapted, albeit in a way that’s much different from his previous efforts. Rather than a feature film set as counter programming against the latest superhero film, it will become an eight-episode limited series. 

The change in venue from theaters from to a streaming service will no doubt have some impact on the way the adaptation is received, as well as how it plays out. With additional time to better accommodate the book’s characters, subplots, and more granular details, it stands to reason that a limited series would be the ideal place for authors to see their work come to life. Sure, there’s the obvious downside of missing out on the massive potential returns at the box office (Fault in Our Stars brought in over $300 million on a $12 million budget), but what’s a couple hundred million dollars compared to seeing your work adapted with runtime to spare on a streaming service?

More: Channel Zero: The Dream Door Review — The Most Viscerally Frightening Season To Date

As announced by Hulu (and Green) today, Kristine Froseth (Apostle) has been cast as Alaska Young and Charlie Plummer (Lean on Pete, All the Money in the World) will star as Miles Halter. For those of you unfamiliar with with story of Alaska and Miles, you can check out a brief synopsis of the series below:

“The series is based on the John Green novel of the same name.  It is told through the eyes of teenager Miles "Pudge" Halter, as he enrolls in boarding school to try to gain a deeper perspective on life. He falls in love with a girl, Alaska Young, and after her unexpected death, he and his close friends attempt to uncover the truth behind her death and make sense of it.”

Whether or not Looking For Alaska will do for Froseth and Plummer’s careers what Fault did for Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort remains to be seen, but starring roles in what’s sure to be a high-profile series certainly won’t hurt. Froseth has had roles in two Netflix Original movies this year with Sierra Burgess Is a Loser and Gareth Evans’ bloody and unnerving Apostle. Plummer, meanwhile earned praise for is role in Andrew Haigh’s terrific Lean on Pete (which is currently available to stream on Amazon Prime Video), and has been seen in the likes of Ridley Scott's All the Money in the World and the well-received 2015 feature, King Jack.

Next: Chilling Adventures Of Sabrina Review: A Devilishly Fun Mix Of Camp & Horror

Hulu’s eight-episode adaptation of Looking For Alaska is expected sometime in 2019.



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Original Nightmare on Elm Street Star Wants To Do Another Sequel

Original Nightmare on Elm Street star Heather Langenkamp is eager to star in another sequel. Now that slasher revivals are a hot topic in Hollywood following the success of this year's Halloween sequel, the Elm Street star wants to pit Nancy Thompson against Freddy Krueger once again on the big screen.

In 1984, the late Wes Craven wrote and directed A Nightmare on Elm Street, in which the razor-gloved Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund) stalked and killed a group of teenagers in their dreams. With burned skin and a dark sense of humor, the "bastard son of a hundred maniacs" wreaked havoc in Springwood, Ohio, only to meet his match in a teenage girl named Nancy (Langenkamp), who would later face off against the Springwood Slasher in two other sequels. Now, after Jamie Lee Curtis made her triumphant return in David Gordon Green's direct Halloween sequel this year, Langenkamp can't help but hope she might make a similar return herself to her own nightmare-induced franchise.

Related: The Goldbergs Clip Teases Freddy Krueger's Return

In an interview with EWLangenkamp didn't bother hiding her enthusiasm towards a possible return to the Nightmare on Elm Street franchise, saying, “I’m sitting here like any other scream queen in Hollywood, hoping that they revive their franchise." And, though she didn't touch on exactly how Nancy might make a comeback, Langenkamp revealed that she's confident she isn't the only scream queen from her generation eager for more sequels. She said:

"I know of lots of other horror heroines who have this little bit of spring in their step thinking about the chance of perhaps being in [new versions of] the movies that they helped make famous as young people. It’s kind of crazy, but it’s definitely something I would love to do.”

As it so happens, Jamie Lee Curtis isn't the first actress from a classic horror movie to star in a long-awaited sequel. Neve Campbell returned to the Scream franchise as Sidney Prescott ten years after the previous installment, Anthony Perkins returned to the Psycho franchise as Norman Bates after a twenty-three-year gap, and Sigourney Weaver nearly returned to the Alien franchise over twenty years since her last appearance in Alien: Resurrection for Neil Blomkamp's Alien 5, but the project ultimately fell through.

While it's almost inevitable that studios will dog-pile onto Halloween's success (there's already talks of Lebron James reportedly producing a Friday the 13th reboot), there's currently nothing in the works involving more direct horror sequels featuring their respective scream queens. That said, given Robert Englund's recent return as Freddy on The Goldbergsas well as the fact that he's open to starring in one more Nightmare on Elm Street movie, the slasher stars may be aligning for another sequel after all. Whether it goes so far as to retcon all the other sequels before it, however, remains to be seen.

More: Robert Englund Pitches Ingenious Idea for New Nightmare on Elm Street

Source: EW



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Legends of Tomorrow: 7 Biggest Questions From "Witch Hunt"

"Witch Hunt", the second episode of DC's Legends of Tomorrow season 4, managed to glean a few laughs and even some Disney-esque songs from the Salem Witch Trials. In the process, some interesting new clues were dropped about the unknown Big Bad that is coming for John Constantine, which opened up further questions about this new enemy.

With Constantine coming aboard the Waverider - and demanding two weeks paid vacation for his services - our time-traveling heroes traveled to 1692 Salem, Massachusetts to capture a new magical Fugitive, the Fairy Godmother, who had ignited hysteria and caused an innocent woman named Jane Hawthorne to be accused of witchcraft and sentenced to death. Meanwhile, Nate Heywood remained in 2018 to reconnect with his estranged father Hank but found himself working with the Time Bureau to negotiate a new annual budget that would help the agency battle these new magical threats. This glimpse into the inner workings of the Time Bureau also raised some new questions about its origins and finances.

Related: Legends of Tomorrow Season 4 Cast And Guest Star Guide

As Zari Tomaz learned harsh lessons about not being able to interfere in the injustice of the Salem Witch Trials while Ray Palmer was magically turned into a pig, here's what Legends of Tomorrow's "Witch Hunt" left us wondering about:

7. How Does Magic Interface With The Waverider's Tech?

"Witch Hunt" begins with Ray shrunken down in his Atom suit and installing the mystical knuckle bones of a martyred saint into the Waverider's systems. As John Constantine explained, the bones will act as "a divining rod" that will pinpoint the locations of the magical Fugitives hiding throughout time. How this actually would work is anyone's guess - the Waverider is a time ship from the 22nd century but somehow its systems are able to interface with the mystical knuckle bones of a martyred saint? It's curious that Gideon, the Waverider's A.I., was silent while Ray performed this upgrade. Granted, Legends of Tomorrow is a superhero show (and the most outlandish one of the Arrowverse), but this is a stretch even by their bizarre logic.

6. Is The Fairy Godmother Really From The 5th Dimension?

The Fairy Godmother is Legends of Tomorrow' riff on the classic Disney stereotype and she even sings her own original songs as she attempted to kill our heroes. Unlike the kindly, magical old ladies found in Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty, however, the Fairy Godmother is quite malevolent, despite her claims that "all I want is to make the world a happier place". After a lifetime granting wishes to little girls, humans locked the Fairy Godmother away in "a dank and miserable dimension". Could this dimension possibly be the Fifth Dimension where Mr. Mxyzptlk comes from?

Mxyzptlk debuted in Supergirl season 2 and declared his love for Kara Danvers before she was able to banish him by tricking him into saying his name backwards. The Fairy Godmother exhibits very similar abilities to Mxy; she has reality-warping powers and she also attaches herself to unwilling mortals. Although, Mxyzptlk is a Fifth Dimensional imp and his powers are actually a super-advanced form of science that only resembles magic. The Fairy Godmother is apparently an actual magical being, as magic is now an established force in the Arrowverse, and she didn't share Mxy's ultimate weakness to saying her name backwards. Yet, the characters have enough similarities that there may be a further link between the two meddling beings.

5. What Is The Evil Coming After John Constantine?

So far, Legends of Tomorrow is in no rush to reveal the mystical Big Bad out to get John Constantine, but "Witch Hunt" offered a few intriguing new bits of info. Rather than banish the Fairy Godmother to Hell, Constantine offered to let him be her new human host in exchange for her help fighting the evil coming for him. The Fairy Godmother flat-out refused because she knows who John Constantine is, she knows he's damned, and she would "rather face Hell than piss him off" - a fate Constantine vengefully obliged her.

So now we know that the Big Bad is a "he" and that he's not from Hell. This seemingly eliminates the Devil/Lucifer Morningstar or the First of the Fallen, two well-known Constantine adversaries, from contention, since they're both lords of the fiery underworld. But what else could actually be worse than the Devil and is known and feared by all magical beings in the Arrowverse?

Page 2: Legends of Tomorrow Questions About The Time Bureau

4. How Can The Time Bureau Be Financed By The U.S. Government?

"Witch Hunt" is Legends of Tomorrow's first foray into the infrastructure of the Time Bureau and it's... confusing. We learn that the Time Bureau is funded by the U.S. Government's Department of Defense and, as Director, Ava Sharpe needs a boost in resources in order to finance their new war against the magical threats to the timeline. After Gary recapped the main plot points of Legends season 3 to the D.O.D.'s bewildered rep (and Nate's dad) Hank Heywood, Nate managed to negotiate a new $4.2-billion annual budget for the Time Bureau.

What this basically means is that in the Arrowverse's Earth-1, the U.S. Government finances a time travel police force, knows that both time travel and magic is real. The Time Bureau was founded by the late Rip Hunter in between seasons 2 and 3; it was never clear how he did so but apparently, Rip, a British time cop from the future, somehow got the U.S. Government to establish a time travel enforcement agency. Rather than a global organization or one that operates in secret (despite their resources, the Time Bureau does regularly wipe people's memories), the Time Bureau is, surprisingly, a United States-sponsored agency like the FBI, CIA, or A.R.G.U.S. But does this mean that the Time Bureau is actually the forerunners of the Time Masters of the future, and Rip Hunter is the founder of the entire enterprise?

Related: Legends of Tomorrow Season 4 Premieres To Series-Low Ratings

3. How Did Gary Get His Job At The Time Bureau?

Agent Gary Green is a lovable goofball who provides consistently hilarious comic relief, but how in the world did he get his job with the Time Bureau to begin with? With Rip gone and Ava as Director, Gary has somehow risen in the ranks to become one of the most high-profile agents in the Time Bureau. A lot of this has to do with his hero worship of the Legends and his unparalleled ability to involve himself in their adventures (even at the cost of a unicorn biting off his nipple). Still, one wonders what Gary actually does at the Time Bureau besides exasperate and embarrass Director Sharpe and keep a meticulous account of the Legends' exploits. Gary's origin story is something Legends of Tomorrow should definitely explain one day.

2. Why Aren't The Legends Getting Paid?

"Witch Hunt" also makes the finances of the Legends, or lack thereof, a plot point. As time traveling problem solvers who live on a spaceship, the Legends never really need money. Besides room and board, the Waverider replicates food and clothing from any time period and presumably can do the same for money as well (although the ship mysteriously has only one bathroom). Since their basic needs are taken care of, the Legends usually don't need outside sources of income. Also, they indulge in "light theft" now and again as they gallivant across various time periods.

When Ava offers Nate a job at the Time Bureau, Nate jumps at the chance, especially since he was embarrassed in front of his father at dinner by not having a regular source of income. However, the Legends are now essentially an (award-winning) adjunct of the Time Bureau and the heroes aboard the Waverider are the first-response team that deals with magical threats - they should finally be paid for the work they do just like how Nate is now being compensated. The Legends' paychecks can easily come out of the Time Bureau's $4.2-billion budget.

1. When Can We Play Beebo Blok For Real?

When the Legends gave Prudence Hawthorne sanctuary aboard the Waverider, they made sure the young girl from 1692 Salem, Massachusetts had all the comforts of home she would require: a doughnut with sprinkles and a tablet so she can play Beebo Blok. Naturally, fans watching at home got immediately jealous - when is Beebo Blok going to become a real app that we can download and play? A Candy Crush-like game about the cuddly blue Beebo needs to become a real thing A.S.A.P.!

Next: 6 Questions After Legends of Tomorrow's Season 4 Premiere

DC's Legends of Tomorrow airs Mondays @ 9 PM on The CW.



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Don't Watch This: The Weird Endings of Netflix's Short Horror Films Explained

Warning: SPOILERS for Don't Watch This ahead

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As a special gift for Halloween, Netflix has dropped a collection of short horror films titled Don't Watch This - featuring everything from a virtual reality death game to an American Psycho homage featuring Antoni "Avocado King" Porowski from Queer Eye.

The Don't Watch This shorts are all less than ten minutes long, and you can watch all of them in half an hour or so, but given their bizarre nature you may find yourself confused - especially since a couple of them have pretty weird endings. Let's try and figure things out as we dive right in with the first episode.

Related: The Best Horror Movies To Watch On Hulu

Friendship Bracelet

Julie is a strange girl with an apparent fixation on taking things apart. At the start of Friendship Bracelet we see her operating on her toy dolls, and then later poking at a dead animal with a stick. When two girls from school, Abby and Lisa, decide to leave Julie's lonely birthday party almost immediately after arriving, Julie decides that she just needs to "open their hearts" so that they can all be friends. Unfortunately for Abby and Lisa, she means this literally, and after a gory chase through the house the short ends with Julie making a new friendship bracelet - out of what looks like intestines and hair.

CTRL+ALT+DEL

CTRL+ALT+DEL is definitely the worst short of the bunch, but it may just about fall into the so-bad-its-good category. Basically, an internet troll who hacks young women's phones to steal compromising photos and post them online gets his comeuppance when an internet demon(?) invites him to play a puzzle game for the chance of access to a secret corner of the dark web. He fails all three puzzles (which is pretty embarrassing, since they don't seem to be very difficult), and every time he fails his skin boils and he gets an electric shock. After he fails all three, the internet demon appears and stabs him in the leg, which for some reason kills him in real life. It is unclear why he never bothered to just take the VR headset off.

Incommudum

Incommudun is the most "experimental" short of the bunch, which essentially means that it could easily double as the opening credits for a season of American Horror Story. This one is a collection of generically creepy shots - from killer clowns to a woman with wings standing in a field of grass, to what looks like a human jawbone falling to the ground. There's no real ending to this one, so just sit back and soak it in.

Keep Out

The most traditional horror short of the bunch, Keep Out is about a pair of YouTubers who go around spooky locations searching for ghosts and ghouls. They seem to quite obviously be modelled on the likes of YouTuber Logan Paul, who caused a controversy by filming the body of a suicide victim in Japan's Aokigahara forest. In this short, Noah and Alex get their comeuppance when they investigate a house that once belonged to a pharmacologist who used to test his experimental drugs on his own children. The mutated creature that attacks Noah and Alex is presumably one of those children. Alex gets disembowelled in the house, but Noah makes it all the way out to the car before the short ends with his bloody demise.

Antoni Psycho

Queer Eye's food expert Antoni Porowski is known for his love of simple finger foods and dishes involving avocado, and he has a dedicated social media following that appreciates his other qualities as well. In Antoni Psycho, a tribute to American Psycho, Antoni takes us on a tour of his house and his daily beauty routine, Patrick Bateman style. By the end, however, it's clear that Antoni is using a bit of long pig in his recipes.

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Let us know what you thought of Don't Watch This in the comments!

More: The Ghosts You Missed In The Haunting Of Hill House



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DC's Joker Origin Movie Could Be What Ruins The MCU

The upcoming Joker film could, if successful, hurt the MCU's influence on the film industry. The Todd Phillips directed film about the origin of the classic DC villain goes against just about every move the Marvel Cinematic Universe has made in becoming the juggernaut that it is. And if things work out with the thriller, it could further alter the landscape of comic book movies in Hollywood.

The one principle that Marvel Studios have best utilized in cultivating their franchise is the idea that everything is connected. Nothing happens in a bubble in the MCU, and nothing is made without a game-plan in place. Despite some minor road-bumps, this consistency has worked tenfold for the studio, allowing them to essentially revolutionize Hollywood franchising, take long-form filmic storytelling to unforeseen territory and make a lot of money from a lot of satisfied film-goers in the process.

Related: Everything We've Learned About Joker From Set Photos

But the ubiquity that Marvel lives by is also what holds them back creatively. Marvel universe films all follow a standard regime in terms of colour, tone and feel. Their stories are feelgood, their humor quippy and their stakes dramatic but easy to understand, and rarely are our heroes seen to be truly defeated. There's some very obvious guidelines in place, and while this rigidity protects them from ever producing a Fantastic Four or an X-Men Origins: Wolverine, it also stops them from ever creating a Logan or a Deadpool. Or a Joker.

For all the problems with Fox's handling of the X-Men license - and there's a lot to be said about their mishaps - they've unarguably produced some of the most interesting feature films to come from the whole comic book movie boom. Logan and the two Deadpools have a lot going on in terms of subverting and poking at the audience's expectations for how these stories are being told on the big screen. And the widespread response was no doubt bolstered by how refreshing these pictures were against the Marvel deluge.

Indeed, one of the biggest concerns about Disney acquiring 20th Century Fox is that we won't get another Logan under the Marvel banner, because Marvel don't need to do something that outlandish to make people see their films. They know how safe their brand is, and until now Warner Bros. has been chasing that security by trying to do what Marvel have done – make a universe with two-or-more releases per year and a big team-up along the way. Even Sony, with their Spider-Man villain universe, got ahead of themselves very early with several projects in the pipeline before Venom came out.

All except Marvel have, in one way or another, failed to build something like the MCU that has such a beloved fanbase. With Joker, DC and Warner Bros. are essentially deciding to go the opposite direction and see what happens. Though the picture is expected to help launch a non-DCEU movie brand, it has zero ties to any other franchise, with very little relationship to any established canon. There isn't even talk of star Joaquin Pheonix having a multi-picture deal or of it leading to a unique take on Batman. Joker is just a movie based on a beloved comic book character. And, so far, it looks good.

Related: Joaquin Phoenix's Joker Reveal Is Incredible (& So Much Better Than Leto's)

Not just good by comic book movie or blockbuster standards, but genuinely good. The rest of the cast is incredible, including Robert DeNiro and Frances Conroy, and bar some controversy surrounding treatment of extras, none of the set photos or reports have shown anything out of the ordinary. It looks like a functional crime film, and that's the interesting part, because if this is a hit, it'll tell the industry that nobody needs to follow the Marvel path to find success, and it'll tell the audience that Marvel's approach is leaving great stories on the table.

Joker wouldn't happen in the MCU because everything has to serve a purpose. Nothing is on its own, and that means that we won't get to see weird spins on iconic roles, or left-field narratives that take an idea and explore it for one movie without an eye towards effecting a half-dozen others. “It's all connected” is the sword Marvel have protected themselves by, and with Joker it might also be the sword the franchise dies by, too.

Next: Joker Origin Movie: Every Update You Need To Know



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Wes Craven's Original Version Of Cursed Still Exists

The original version of Wes Craven’s famously troubled horror movie Cursed still exists. The late Wes Craven is a legend in the horror genre, having directed landmark movies like A Nightmare On Elm Street, The Hills Have Eyes and Scream. Scream launched an entire subgenre of hip, self-aware horror movies, and the creative team behind the movie reunited for 2005’s Cursed. The movie starred Christina Ricci and Jesse Eisenberg, but the version that hit cinemas bared little resemblance to the original script.

The first version of Cursed centred on three strangers who are attacked by a werewolf following an accident. The project was pitched as a bold reinvention of werewolf movies, but when filming was around 90% complete producer Bob Weinstein shut it down and demanded sweeping changes. It took a year for the reshoots to commence, with the new story making two of the lead characters siblings and the third – played by Scream's Skeet Ulrich – being cut completely. Due to the large gap in filming, several other actors like Mandy Moore, Robert Forster and Omar Epps had to drop out too.

Related: 15 Movies That Had To Be Completely Reshot

Cursed went through more than one round of reshoots, the original, practical Rick Baker werewolf effects were mostly replaced with weak CGI and the studio cut it from an intended R-rating to a PG-13, much to Craven’s chagrin. The movie was released to weak reviews and was a box-office failure, with the director essentially disowning it. Most of the footage from his initial cut has never been released, but in an interview with Bloody Disgusting, former Dimension executive Cary Granat confirms the first version exists somewhere.

It still exists. I just don’t know if it went with The Weinstein Company. I left in 2000 to start Walden so it was in development after that.

Cursed was almost entirely reshot, so Wes Craven’s original version would likely drastically differ from the released cut. While it would be fantastic to see Craven’s cut released so the movie he intended can finally be seen, this version would likely need a lot of work – including additional editing and scoring – before release. There’s also the fact the original script wasn’t shot completely, so footage from the theatrical cut would probably be needed to fill in the gaps.

Sadly, Cursed wasn’t the original time a Wes Craven movie suffered at the hands of a studio. His 1986 movie Deadly Friend started life as a sci-fi drama about a teenager who brings his girlfriend back to life with a computer chip, but reshoots were ordered after negative test screenings. Craven was forced to add some nightmare and gore sequences, and like Cursed, the released movie barely resembles the director’s original intention.

More: 5 Wes Craven Movies Everyone Should See

Source: Bloody Disgusting



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20 Behind-The-Scenes Photos That Completely Change Friends

Friends is one of the most popular sitcoms of all time - and why wouldn’t it be, there's a lot to enjoy. It has a good script, a great cast, and hilarious jokes. The show is just "kick you in the crotch, spit on your neck fantastic."

Creators David Crane and Marta Kauffman originally pitched Friends to NBC with the simple one-liner: "This show is about six people in their 20s who hang out at this coffee house.” Before Friends aired for the first time on September 22, 1994, director James Burrows said  that he “had a good feeling” about the show. "I took them [the cast] to Vegas.” Burrows said. “...I had me and six of them and I said 'This is your last shot at anonymity. Once the show comes on the air, you guys will never be able to go anywhere without being hounded.'”

He was right. Despite having ended its run over 14 years ago, Friends is still one of the most syndicated shows on TV. While there’s currently a surge of '90s reboots in the works, talk of a Friends reunion remains a moo point, so fans must turn to the internet to get their fix of their six favorite best buds.

While most fans are well-versed in important on-screen moments, like whether Joey shares food and all eleven of Monica’s towel categories, much of what went on behind-the-scenes remains a mystery. This list sets out to change that. Do they know that we know about these behind-the-scenes photos? Maybe.

Here are the 20 Behind-The-Scenes Photos That Completely Change Friends.

20 The one where they film with babies

"The One With the Cake" had a lot of fun on-screen moments. We learned a lot about Ross’s hidden talents - some can sing, some can dance, while he, apparently, can turn phallic cakes into woodland creatures. Off-screen, the fun moments included playing with baby Emma between takes.

Emma was actually played by twins Noelle and Cami Sheldon.

If you’re wondering what it’s like to be a baby on the set of a hit series, the twins' mom had this to say: "Everyone was really, really nice to Noelle and Cali, and treated them like little princesses on the set. [Friends] filmed before a live audience, and Cali and Noelle would come out, and they would be waving and engaging with the live audience. It was a lot of fun."

19 The one where Gunther shares a snack with an extra

Gunther was not originally supposed to have any lines on Friends. The actor who plays Gunther, James Michael Tyler, was originally cast as a background extra. However, Tyler was upgraded to a recurring role after the first few episodes because he was the only extra who knew how to work an espresso machine. Despite his rise to fame, James Michael Tyler still hung out and fooled around behind the scenes with the other extras.

What many fans don't know about Tyler is that his hair wasn’t dyed for the part. According to him, it was just "a happy coincidence." "I have a friend who wanted to practice on my head because they wanted to be a stylist, so I offered what hair I had left to turn white. It definitely completed the character,” he said. However, the upkeep was brutal. Tyler had to bleach his hair every week for ten years.

18 The one where the girls are nervous about Joey

The show was as funny behind the scenes as it was on-screen. The cast was a true ensemble, and they often bounced ideas off of each other and found time to make each other laugh. However, the actors also had some preconceived notions about each other before they actually met.

Some of the female cast has said that they were nervous about working with Matt LeBlanc. All they knew about him was that he was a Levis model from Newton, MA whose father was a mechanic. “I was scared of that type of guy,” said Jennifer Aniston. However, once they all met, those notions flew out the purple door. “He thinks it’s very funny now. And actually, he can sit down and comfort me just like Courteney or Lisa could.” 

17 The one where Ross and Rachel study their lines

Ross and Rachel’s relationship was a central storyline in Friends, and even though as Ross mentions in the final season that “they haven’t been a couple in 6 years,” it never really felt that way. On-screen, their chemistry drove the show, and off-screen, Jennifer Aniston and David Schwimmer worked hard to make sure that this was the case.

The photo above shows the actors rehearsing a scene for season 10 episode 16 “The One With Rachel’s Going Away Party”.

James Burrows, the show’s director, once explained why the duo had to break up in season 3: "It’s the same as Sam and Diane [from Cheers]. They flirted for a lot longer, but you have to shake it up.… If you don’t fight, and if you don’t get angry, you have no place to go.”

16 The one where the gang fools around

The Friends cast was tight both on-screen and behind the scenes. They felt that they had to be in order to make the show work. "I think it was unspoken but we instinctively felt like we need to be friends, we need get along, we need to connect,” Lisa Kudrow said. "We spent 10 years together, almost every day... we all went through something significant together, and that's a strong bond. As you get older, you realize, oh, you don't have that with just about everybody."

When this photo was taken in 1994 during the first season of Friends, Matt LeBlanc stated "We're a really tight ensemble, we get along really well. It's just a real productive environment and a great time."

15 The one where they thank the live studio audience

This photo shows the gang entering the studio and clapping for their live audience for (almost) the last time. This was part of the pre-show entrance for season 10 episode 17 "The Last One: Part 1". While each Friends episode was only about 22 minutes long, a typical episode took roughly 5 hours to shoot. There were multiple takes of each scene and at least 20 minutes of set changes during each episode.

The live studio audience was an integral part of Friends and many '90s sitcoms. The audience was there to build excitement, but also as a way to test the jokes before they went to air. The only things not shot in front of a live audience were certain plot surprises or season cliffhangers.

14 The one where Christina Applegate guest stars

Friends had many famous guest stars throughout its ten seasons, including Brad Pitt, Winona Ryder, Alec Baldwin, and John Stamos, just to name a few. Pictured above is a behind-the-scenes look at Jennifer Aniston as Rachel Green, guest star Christina Applegate as Amy Green, and Friends creator David Crane giving the two actors notes.

It’s rumored that Christina Applegate was only asked to appear in Friends due to a scheduling conflict with Reese Witherspoon. The episodes that Applegate appeared in were supposed to feature Rachel’s sister Jill (played by Witherspoon). However, she was unavailable, so the writers brought Rachel’s second into the picture. It’s a good that thing they did. Christina Applegate ended up winning an Emmy for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for her portrayal of Amy in “The One with Rachel’s Other Sister”.

13 The one where Joey & Rachel are adorable

While the actors had a lot of fun together offscreen, things were a bit more intense behind the cameras. One of the Friends’ most controversial couples in later seasons was Joey/Rachel.

Many fans disliked the couple, and as it turns out, several cast members voiced their aversions as well.

"It felt wildly inappropriate," Matt LeBlanc stated. "Everybody got super-defensive about the whole thing. We went to David and Marta as a group and said, 'We're really concerned about this. It doesn't feel right. We have a problem with it.'" In 2017, Jennifer Aniston said: "I just don't think Joey and Rachel could have made it. I think it was more physical than emotional with them." Even though Joey/Rachel didn’t happen, at least this adorable behind-the-scenes photo did.

12 The one with Phoebe and Chandler rehearsing

When the script for Friends was first written, it only focused on four friends. Phoebe Buffay and Chandler Bing were originally only going to be supporting characters who popped every few episodes. Phoebe's character was also originally written to be goth. It’s hard to imagine the group dynamic if either of these original ideas had come to be.

This behind-the-scenes photo shows off Lisa Kudrow and Matthew Perry as we know and love them - two main Friends cast members sharing a laugh between scenes. "I find myself sort of reminiscing about how much fun the show was, and the hours that we worked," said Perry. "You know, you can see how much we laughed and everything"

11 The one with Ross directing

David Schwimmer was the very first actor cast in Friends. In fact, the writers created the role with him in mind, so he was invited to join the cast without an audition. When Schwimmer was contacted about being Ross on Friends, he almost turned it down, though, since he had given up on testing for a TV show and had actually started working  on starting a theater company in Chicago 

“It was hugely flattering, and I thought, well, it's quite disrespectful with all this talent asking to meet and just consider it. I'd be an idiot not to go,” Schwimmer saidSchwimmer is pictured above with the Friends writers, going over jokes for an upcoming scene.  He starred as Ross Gellar (occupation: dinosaurs) for ten seasons and also directed ten episodes of the series.

10 The one with Chandler & Rachel laughing between takes

Pictured above are Jennifer Aniston and Matthew Perry sharing a close moment together during rehearsal. While the cast often talks about all of the fun that they had on set, they also faced some hardships. Perry went through arguably the most change out of any of the cast members. He battled substance and alcohol addiction while shooting Friends. Because of this, he was admitted to rehab twice during filming. “[I] can’t remember 3 years of shooting,” he said.

However, Perry was able to overcome his addictions. He then made it his mission to help other addicts and transformed his former home in Malibu, California into a sober living home for men called the Perry House. Perry was also honored with the Champion of Recovery award from the White House.

9 The one where Joey and Phoebe have all the chemistry

This photo was taken behind-the-scenes of "The One With The Cake", an episode centered around Emma’s first birthday.

Matt LeBlanc and Lisa Kudrow loved laughing together offscreen and were great at making audiences laugh on-screen.  

Their chemistry begged the question: why didn’t Joey and Phoebe ever get together? According to LeBlanc, “Towards the end, we actually pitched the idea that Joey and Phoebe had been [sleeping together casually] the entire time.” They wanted to go back and shoot all of the most iconic scenes, in order to reveal that Joey and Phoebe had just been getting together, but the writers said no because it didn’t “fit the tone of the show.”

8 The one where it's all about Chandler and Monica

Chandler carries a slightly injured Monica over the apartment door threshold in "The One After Vegas". This hilarious behind-the-scenes photo was snapped at the moment right before the director yelled “cut.” Courteney Cox had been hanging off of Perry’s neck for just a bit too long, and both of them were laughing but relieved to move on to the next scene.

Friends producer and writer Scott Silveri has addressed the Monica/Chandler relationship and its impact on the series countless times. “If you didn’t have a Monica-and-Chandler relationship, if the center of Friends had remained Ross and Rachel, you would’ve seen a much shorter shelf life for the show,” Silveri said. “Without Monica and Chandler, it ends three years earlier."

7 The one with the cast huddles

This photo captures an emotional behind-the-scenes moment on Friends. The cast often huddled before each episode to wish each other luck. The photo here shows one of the very last cast huddles before the cast filmed "The Last One: Part 1".

When the final episode of Friends aired in 2004, fans weren’t the only ones grieving. The cast also had a very difficult time saying goodbye. “I don’t think we’ve ever taken more time in hair and makeup in between scenes,” Jennifer Aniston said. “...we kept crying all our makeup off, over and over again.” Things also weren't easy for David Schwimmer. “I started to lose it... that was the moment I was dreading for a long time,” he said.

6 The one where Lisa Kudrow is actually pregnant

Lisa Kudrow and Courteney Cox were all smiles between filming takes in “The One With All The Wedding Dresses". In this episode, Monica tries on Emily’s wedding dress and Phoebe, who wants to get-in on the fun, rents one of her own.

However, Kudrow’s real-life pregnancy meant that Phoebe had to rent her dress from a store called It's Not Too Late.

Kudrow had nothing but warm things to say about being pregnant while acting on Friends. “The six of us would do a huddle backstage and just say, ‘All right, have a good show, love you love you love you love you'... and when I was pregnant, then they would say, ‘Have a great show, love you love you — love you, little Julian!’…. so sweet, they included my little fetus in the huddle.”

5 The one with Ross and some awesome guest stars

This photo captures David Schwimmer posing with two excellent guest stars, Aisha Tyler and Greg Kinnear, during their stint on Friends. The story arc of Ross dating Charlie (Tyler) was a notable moment in the show’s history. After all, Tyler was the first black actress to become a (temporary) series regular.

“The cast was incredibly welcoming when I first joined," Tyler said. "I think they were very aware that it could be an intimidating set, and they made a special effort to be kind and open towards me... The night of my very first live performance in front of a studio audience, as the cast came together... to take a bow in front of the crowd, Matthew Perry made a point of saying to me as a quiet aside, 'Get ready for your life to change,' and it did!”

4 The one with Rachel and Joey being adorable, again

This sweet photo shows Jennifer Aniston and Matt LeBlanc striking a pose while filming season 10 episode 10 "The One Where Chandler Gets Caught". Aniston and LeBlanc were close on-screen and off, and the whole cast remains close today. “We’re lucky to actually love each other,” Aniston said of her castmates. “We’re really fortunate that there’s not a bad seed in the bunch, and yes, we were all really friends and cared about each other and had each other’s backs. We went through some really challenging times personally and were there for each other.”

It’s fun to search for moments that show off the cast’s friendship and closeness, especially unintentional moments. Another great example can be found in "The One Where Ross Dates a Student" - if you look closely, you can spot LeBlanc mouthing Aniston's line, “I love it at Joey’s!" 

3 The one where Monica reads through a script

The cast used their fleeting downtime to relax, focus on the day’s work, and study their lines. This photo from the early seasons of Friends shows Courtney Cox in a rare moment of solitude reading through the script for an upcoming episode. Cox is a lot of things. She’s Monica Gellar, she’s Monana, and she’s in the prime of lime. However, she almost wasn’t.

When Cox was originally being considered for Friends, the producers wanted her to play Rachel Green. However, Cox wanted to play Monica instead. She felt that Monica was a stronger character and therefore told producers that she felt that she really understood Monica. “I thought I related more to Monica, which maybe it’s because I do," Cox said. "I’m very similar to her."

2 The one where it’s the last episode

This now-iconic photo shows the main cast bowing after the last episode of Friends. After 236 episodes, Friends came to an end on May 6th, 2004. 

At this point, the case had been through a lot together, whether it be personal struggles or negotiations.

In fact, it was David Schwimmer’s idea for the cast to form a mini-union. They decided that each one of them would be paid the same amount or they would all leave the show. Thankfully, the decision paid off big time. During the first season, the main cast earned $22,000 each per episode. In 1997, they banded together to negotiate an increase of $100,000 per episode. By the time this photo was taken, they were each earning $1,000,000 per episode. It was the first time in TV history that cast members had demanded a group negotiation.

1 The one where the iconic picture frame was installed

This photo shows the now iconic peephole picture frame being installed on set. Friends set decorator Greg Grande bought the frame from the Rose Bowl Swap Meet and originally incorporated it into the set as a normal picture holder that sat on a table.

However, Grande let audiences in on a secret about the frame during an interview in 2017. “I originally had it as a picture frame that had a back on it,” Grande said. “And while we were dressing, the glass in it broke and I told one of the guys, ‘Well let’s see what that frame looks like around the peephole.’ And they put it up there for me and that’s where it lived for the next 10 years.”

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What do you think of these behind-the-scenes Friends photos? Sound off in the comments!



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Game of Thrones Prequel Casts Naomi Watts In Lead Role

Oscar-nominee Naomi Watts has reportedly landed a lead role in HBO's in-development Game of Thrones prequel. The prequel pilot, scripted by Jane Goldman, was ordered up by HBO back in June. The network's president of programming Casey Bloys later revealed that the prequel will be an ensemble piece featuring several strong female characters.

One of five GoT spinoff shows that were initially placed in development by HBO (it's not known how many of the planned spinoffs will actually make it to screens), the announced first prequel series will take place thousands of years before the events of the main series and will depict "the world’s descent from the Golden Age of Heroes into its darkest hour." The series will also reveal the true origins of the white walkers as well as "the mysteries of the East to the Starks of legend." The show is reportedly set to begin filming in early 2019 with an eye toward a 2020 premiere.

Related: Game of Thrones Spinoff: Every Update You Need To Know

With filming just months away from cranking up, the as-yet-untitled GoT prequel series has begun putting together its cast. As reported by Variety, Watts is the first actor to sign on for HBO's deep dive into the distant history of Westeros. Very little is being revealed about Watts' character (or anything else connected to the series, secrecy being a big deal in the world of Game of Thrones) but it's known that her strong female character is "a charismatic socialite hiding a dark secret."

A two-time Oscar nominee for her roles in 21 Grams and The Impossible, Watts was most recently seen leading up the now-canceled Netflix series Gypsy, as well as lending her talents to David Lynch's Twin Peaks: The Return as Dougie Jones' patient wife Janey-E. Twin Peaks indeed reunited Watts with Lynch after he gave the actress her breakthrough role in his acclaimed drama Mulholland Drive. Watts will next be seen starring alongside Mel Gibson and Frank Grillo in Joe Carnahan's action film Boss Level. She will also reportedly reprise the role of Evelyn in Ascendant, the planned TV movie wrap-up of the Divergent series.

Best-known for doing serious drama with the occasional genre movie mixed in, Watts' biggest role in the fantasy realm came when she starred as Ann Darrow in Peter Jackson's King Kong. Now Watts will make her way into the biggest small screen fantasy franchise of all, taking on a central role in what will surely be one of the most hotly anticipated shows of 2020. It's hard to glean many hints from the very brief description that's been offered, but it seems Watts' character will be a member of the elite of Westerosi society in the years before everything fell apart and the Long Night descended on the world. The coming weeks will no doubt see many more casting reports and more small hints about what the new series will cover.

As it heads into its 8th and final season, Game of Thrones has established itself as a pop culture juggernaut and huge money-maker for HBO. Much is riding on this new prequel series, and whatever other spinoffs the network concocts as a means of keeping the GoT brand alive beyond the wrap-up of the main series.

More: What George R.R. Martin Would Call The Game Of Thrones Prequel Show

Source: Variety



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Walking Dead Star Reveals The Last Scene Andrew Lincoln Filmed

The Walking Dead actor Norman Reedus has discussed the forthcoming departure of Andrew Lincoln's Rick Grimes and revealed a little about the final scene Lincoln filmed on the show. Prior to the currently running ninth season of The Walking Dead, it was confirmed that Rick would be gone by the season finale, with Lincoln exiting the show to spend more time with his family. It now seems that the character has but one final episode left and this week's effort, 'The Obliged', perhaps hinted at how Rick may meet his demise, with the protagonist finding himself in deep trouble during the episode's final scene.

For any television series, losing your lead actor is a difficult obstacle to overcome but has perhaps been exacerbated in the case of The Walking Dead due to last season's death of Carl Grimes and the impending exit of another main character, Maggie. This huge cast upheaval has caused some fans to speculate as to whether or not The Walking Dead can, or indeed should, continue without Rick and despite an upturn in critical reception for season 9, viewership has still been dropping.

Related: Who Died In This Week's Episode Of The Walking Dead?

In an interview with EW, Norman Reedus addressed Lincoln leaving the show and described what his final day on-set was like. In addition to revealing that the actor delivered a stirring, no-phones-allowed speech after his final scene and that filming without Lincoln has been "weird as f**k," Reedus also described his co-star's final moments in front of the camera as Rick Grimes:

"The very last scene that we shot, he’s supposed to smile. He was supposed to smile, and it was a close-up. So I kept sneaking in and tickling his feet and making him smile on this one line. And I thought it was funny. And he liked it. He kept asking me to keep doing it. So the last scene that he shot on this show, I’m below camera tickling his feet."

Given the dramatic ending to the most recent episode of The Walking Dead, it's difficult to imagine what Rick could possibly have to smile about in next week's installment. Perhaps this moment will tie in to the much-rumored dream sequence that will see the return of various faces from the show's history including Shane, Hershel and Sasha. Alternatively, it could be that, however Rick goes out, he leaves feeling content and is able to summon up one final smile before departing for good. It's worth remembering, however, that just because the smile was shot last, it won't necessarily be Rick's final scene. In either case, viewers can at least have fun trying to spot the exact moment Norman Reedus was tickling Andrew Lincoln's feet as he attempted to film what was presumably a very emotional and moving sequence.

Despite having only one episode left, it's still not clear what The Walking Dead will look and feel like after Rick's departure. The ninth season has, so far, still been very much centered around Lincoln's character and many other big names in the show such as Carol, Negan and Ezekiel have all had limited screen time in the early part of the current run. Clearly, this is something that will need to be addressed soon but with The Walking Dead yet to introduce the likes of Magna and The Whisperers, both confirmed for season 9, Rick's friends may not have much time for mourning.

More: Andrew Lincoln Says Goodbye To Walking Dead With Farewell Letter

The Walking Dead season 9 continues November 4th with 'What Comes After' on AMC.

Source: EW



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धोनी ने 13 साल पहले किया था ये बड़ा 'धमाका', आज भी बरकरार है रिकॉर्ड

धोनी ने 15 चौकों और 10 छक्‍कों की मदद से 183 रन की नाबाद पारी खेली, जो कि विकेटकीपर के तौर पर आज भी सबसे बड़ी पारी है.

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