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  • Welcome to your weekly ticket.

  • Ah, Willy Wonka prequel is in the works.

  • Warner Brothers is preparing for a third movie, which will be helmed by Paddington director Paul King.

  • This time around, the film will be a prequel called Wonka, which will dive deeper into the back story of how young Willy Wonka became a candy company and how he met the humble Lupas, which we did learn a little bit about through Johnny Depp's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

  • As for who will play Wonka this time around, early casting rumors suggest Timothy Shalem A and Tom Holland are among those potentially being eyed for the role.

  • Let them fight after a nearly year long delayed due to the ongoing Cove in 19 Pandemic, Godzilla versus Kong is finally here, but the fourth Monster verse movie definitely packs a punch with tons of monster action for fans to look forward.

  • Thio The film is directed by Adam Wingard with a script from Pirates of the Caribbean writer Terry Rocio.

  • In addition to the titular behemoths, it stars Alexander Skarsgard, Millie, Bobby Brown, Rebecca Hall and Brian Tyree Henry.

  • You'll finally be able to see the film in theaters on March 26th, and Searchlight Pictures has updated its 2021 release calendar, which includes Guillermo del Toro Nightmare Alley, which is now set for release on December 3rd.

  • This is the first film that Del Toro has directed since winning best director and best picture at the 2017 Oscars for The Shape of Water Nightmare.

  • Alley is based off the 1946 novel of the same name by William Lindsay Gresham, which is a carnival set mystery involving a famous mind reading act.

  • This new adaptation has an A list cast, which includes Bradley Cooper, Cate Blanchett, Rooney Mara, Willem Dafoe, Richard Jenkins and Toni Collette, to name a few.

  • Today we're celebrating the release of the little things being available to watch in theaters on Friday by talking to the film's cast.

  • Denzel Washington, Jared Leto and Rami Malek take a look at what they had to say to Fandango correspondent Nikki Novak about how a surprising amount of improv went into shaping their roles.

  • You wouldn't think that a movie like this would have a lot of improv, and yet that we've heard that it did, even including Jared you singing somewhere over the rainbow at 1.2.

  • Denzel's character.

  • So I wanted to ask.

  • First, I'll ask Denzel, How does improv inform?

  • How did it inform your performance in this movie?

  • And are you a fan of improv?

  • I never really improvised before.

  • I worked with Spike or not to that degree, as I did on Mo Better Blues.

  • There's a place for it sometimes, and you and you try it and may work.

  • It may not work, but I'm all for it If it fits, what did you learn about your character when you were improvising?

  • I know you really got to go over the top and learn things, but how did it inform your performance?

  • Well, I think humor is always a great place to, you know, experiment with improper because, you know, I always think about jokes or like it's like an open avocado.

  • It only lasts for so long before it gets brown.

  • You know, it's, you know, so surprises good with humor and eso.

  • I found that pretty useful because it suited the character like Denzel said.

  • If it if it's appropriate, then then it's great.

  • And you can also, you know, ruin a scene.

  • If it goes off the rails too much, but I'm quite a big fan of it when the opportunity arises.

  • So what was the moment that it went off the rails?

  • Was it the somewhere over the rainbow, or was there something even wilder that maybe ended up even on the cutting room?

  • I don't know.

  • Maybe was when I talked about potato skins.

  • I'm not sure really did that.

  • Actually, Romney, Romney, there are a bunch of takes.

  • Uh, there, Romney.

  • Did that happen?

  • And Romney, what did you learn about?

  • I know you've obviously watched these two actors perform before, but performing opposite them in those moments in those improv moments and even in the scripted moments, what did you learn about your castmates as performers?

  • Well, it's It's exactly what you're talking about in reference to improv.

  • It may not always be literal, but every time you stepped in this scene, you just don't know what's gonna happen.

  • And I think that's such a great form of improvisation.

  • And you, you know, you only get that with some of the finest actors.

  • So that's what I experienced.

  • What was the moment that surprised you?

  • Every moment you work with these two guys is gonna be surprising.

  • I don't think I could walk in on set and tell you what Denzel, what Jared was going to do in any given moment.

  • And I think that's really evident in the film, and I think that's evident.

  • When I watched it, I had no idea where it was going and you don't wanna blame because you don't wanna miss anything.

  • So thank the three of you.

  • I get a lot of awards screeners, and this is among my favorites.

  • So thank you all very much, thank you so much.

  • Also available to watch in theaters on Friday is ST Mind.

  • I have a responsibility.

  • Oh yes, of course.

  • This is life and death.

  • On another level, Maud played by More Fit.

  • Clark is a newly devout hospice nurse who becomes obsessed with saving her dying patients.

  • Soul but sinister forces and her own sinful past threatened to put an end to her holy calling.

  • The film, which marks the feature film debut for writer director Rose Class, is currently certified fresh with a 97% on the tomato meter and available to watch it home on Friday is savage.

  • None of us Way wouldn't be Gangsters if we always did way that mosque so you can see who I am among us.

  • Inspired by the true stories of New Zealand street gangs across 30 years, Savage follows Danny at three defining moments in his life, from the abusive state run boys institutions of the sixties to the emerging urban gang scene in the seventies, where disenfranchised teenagers created their own families on the streets to the eighties, when gangs became more structured and violent together, the three chapters of Danny's life combined to create a deeper look at a boy who grows up to become the brutal enforcer of a gang.

  • All right, well, that's it for today.

  • But leave us a comment and let us know what you'll be watching this week.

  • I'm Kale, and I'll see you next time.

Welcome to your weekly ticket.

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