Anime ‘Demon Slayer’ sequel scores shocking $70M weekend
Also, how has it been three decades since ‘Toy Story’ first hit theaters?
Let's start taking guesses on the new subtitle. PLUS: 'The Crown' final season gets a new trailer, 'Dune' goes Lego, and my thoughts on 'Loki.'
Welcome to a special birthday edition of Popculturology. Actually, there’s nothing special about it.1 It just happens to have been my birthday this week, an occasion that I celebrated with a visit to a new brewery, a cookie cake and a pair of sneakers. (Did you guys know that you can just keeping buying sneakers? Like, they’ll sell you new pairs even if you already have a closet full of them.)
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Let’s get to the news …
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The eighth Mission: Impossible movie has been pushed back a year, now scheduled to hit theaters on May 23, 2025, instead of June 28, 2024. With the studios still unwilling to agree to a fair contract with SAG-AFTRA, shooting on Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part Two has been unable to resume. Kind of hard to hit a release date without actors.
Read the article at The Hollywood Reporter.
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Woo boy, the final season of The Crown is going to be heavy, isn’t it? Elizabeth Debicki continues to steal the show in this new trailer for the first part of The Crown’s final season.
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No one can ever accuse the executive producers in charge of the James Bond franchise of moving too quickly. According to Bond producer Barbara Broccoli, they “haven’t even begun” working on the post-Daniel Craig version of the iconic character with there being “a big road ahead.”
According to a recent report, Christopher Nolan has been in talks to helm the Bond franchise, with the plan being to make the series period pieces and have Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Bond. It’s impossible to read what’s true when it comes to Bond rumors, but I’m guessing we’re going to beat the six-year gap between License to Kill and GoldenEye (when Brosnan was cast). (There was also a six-year gap between Spectre and No Time to Die, but that was for a million other reasons.)
Read the article at The Guardian.
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A.D. Miles. There’s a name I haven’t heard in a long time. It’s hard to believe in 2023, but Jimmy Fallon was once a funny and creative force while hosting Late Night. His sketches were inventive. There was audience participation. The soulless version of his schtick that we see on The Tonight Show hadn’t yet permeated into his performances.
A big part of that former vibe could be attributed to Miles, who served as head writer during Fallon’s entire run as host of Late Night before launching Fallon’s version of The Tonight Show. We’ll have a chance to see if Miles can recapture that magic, as he’s returning to The Tonight Show to once again serve as its head writer. (Not sure this will fix all of Fallon’s issues …)
Read the article at The Hollywood Reporter.
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The third Paddington movie has been scheduled to open in American theaters on Jan. 17, 2025 — two months after it debuts in the United Kingdom on Nov. 8, 2024. Everything is going great over here in America (and I’m sure will continue to be smooth sailing during that November 2024-January 2025 time period), so I guess it’s only fair that we get a delayed release for Paddington in Peru.
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A new report makes it official that Hasan Minhaj will not be the next host of The Daily Show. “Minhaj would have been announced as the new TDS host this summer had the strike not intervened,” Puck reports (via TVLine). “Instead, both sides sat on the announcement, and then … disaster.”
Look, I think Nate Bargatze is going to be a good Saturday Night Live host. Comedians are built for this show. But Bargatze would not be hosting SNL in a year when there wasn’t an actors strike. (He even recognized how weird it was to be asked to host while talking with Seth Meyers earlier this week.) We’re going to see a lot of people who normally wouldn’t have had a shot at hosting SNL get a chance as long as the SAG-AFTRA strike continues.
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While Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania flubbed its use of Kang, it’s been super interesting to watch the Marvel Cinematic Universe unspool the big bad of the Multiverse Saga across several projects — and presumably with a plan on how to do it. The Infinity Saga stuck its landing with Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame, but Kevin Feige and company lucked into Thanos working. He was introduced as a credits scene cameo in The Avengers and didn’t even have his final looked locked down until Infinity War.
As long as Jonathan Majors’ legal troubles don’t derail him playing He Who Remains/Kang/Victor Timely, we’re going to see the Multiverse Saga’s major villain grow from his introduction in the first season of Loki through Avengers: The Kang Dynasty and Avengers: Secret Wars.
The third episode of Loki’s second season felt like a major moment in this journey. As they tracked Renslayer, Loki and Mobius (and Sylvie) discovered Victor Timely, a variant of He Who Remains in 1868 Chicago.
I didn’t have Dune on my list of pop culture franchises that would get the Lego treatment, but Denis Villeneuve’s adaption of the iconic book is making the jump to brick form.
Lego unveiled the Dune Atreides Royal Ornithopter set this week. You can preorder the $164.99 set now, and it’ll be available in February. The set includes eight minifigures. There’s some incredible detail on a few of these minifigs, but the ridiculously long robe Lego gave Baron Harkonnen is the funniest part of the set.
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