
It’s still a few months until the remake of Carrie hits cinemas in November, due to the fact it’s been put back from its originally planned Spring release. However to keep us interested, Sony has released a new poster via Latino Review, which shows us Julianne Moore’s Margaret White.
If you know Stephen King’s novel or the 1976 film version, you’ll know that Margaret isn’t not exactly the nicest of people. She is Carrie’s (Chloe Moretz) mother and a bit of a religious zealot monster who believes her daughter’s newfound powers are evil and just about everything she does goes against God.
Carrie’s homelife is as bad as school, where the quiet young girl is laughed at and bullied – something that comes to a head when the popular people play a prank on her at the prom. Judy Greer, Gabriella Wilde, Portia Doubleday, Alex Russell and Michelle Nolden also star.
For a while it seemed as if Bradley Cooper was going to squander the star power he’d got from The Hangover movies, but now he’s an Oscar nominee thanks to Silver Linings Playbook and has another Hangover movie coming in a few months time.
Those who grew up in the 1980s may remember a pretty great cartoon called Ulysses 31, which took Homer’s classic tale The Odyssey into space. Sadly we’re not getting a big budget version of that toon, but it seems Warner Bros. is keen on a similar idea, as
Anne Hathaway got a Golden Globe over the weekend, and now she’s signed up for the sort of movie that could get her a second, as
Disney has been firming up its release slate and announcing when it plans to bring us new movies over the next couple of years. While we knew when the likes of Captain America: The Winter Soldier was coming (April 4th 2014 – and it’s been confirmed it’ll be in 3D), the studio has dated several other films.
For a few months now, Michael Fassbender has been attached to the lead role in a movie version of the videogame, Assassin’s Creed. Now that project is moving forward with the news, via
Last October, Big Gay Picture Show had a great time at the Iris Prize Festival in Cardiff. Each year the festival offers the winner of its main LGBT short film prize a great award – funding, help and support to make another film. It’s a great idea, and a great festival, showcasing the best in LGBT shorts from around the world, as well as a selection of feature-length projects.