Sunday, May 31, 2026

Warner Bros.’ Mike De Luca Hails the Benefits of YouTube Filmmakers: ‘A Little Bit Like the 70s

Michael De Luca at the 16th Annual Produced By Conference at Universal Studios, on Saturday, May 30, 2026 in Los Angeles, Calif.

 Pictures Chief Mike De Luca knows exactly why A24’s “Backrooms” and Focus Features’ “Obsession” are doing really well at the box office — and it has everything to do with where the directors came from.

“they work on their skills online.
 Kane worked on ‘Backrooms’ for five years,” De Luca said Saturday at the Produced By Conference. “these filmmakers talk directly with their audience from the beginning. their followers help shape each part of their work.”

The success of both movies, De Luca said, comes down to access — the old gatekeeping that kept young filmmakers out of Hollywood has changed.


“It used to be really expensive for a young writer-director to make a short film or an actual full-length independent movie,” De Luca added.
 “Now the tools for making films are cheaper. You can put something on YouTube and have a producer see it, and you don’t need to go to film school.”

De Luca also gave credit to producers for doing the hard work, pointing out “Obsession” producer James Harris, who found Barker by watching shorts on YouTube.


“good for him for finding that guy first,” De Luca said.
 “But that’s available to all producers. YouTube and TikTok and Instagram are where new talent is. They’re improving their skills without needing to go to film school or follow some strict path.”

De Luca’s comments match what Jason Blum, from Blumhouse, said earlier in the day.
 He compared today’s filmmakers, who started on YouTube, to the 1970s film auteur movement.

“a little bit like the 70s, I would say the writer-director is the star again, which I think is fantastic,” he said.

Marcia Lucas, Oscar-Winning Editor Behind ‘Star Wars,’ Dies at 80

Marcia Lucas, the film editor who won an Oscar for her work on *Star Wars* and was married to director George Lucas, has passed away. She was 80 years old.

She died on Wednesday in Rancho Mirage, California, from cancer.


Her family released a statement saying, "Marcia will be remembered as a brilliant storyteller, a trailblazer for women in film, a loving mother and grandmother, a generous host and a loyal friend.
 Her humor and sparkle filled every room she entered. Her influence on film is indelible, but those who knew her best will remember the way she made life feel more vivid, more beautiful, more fun and more full of love."

Marcia was born in California.
 She began her editing career through the Motion Picture Editors Guild apprenticeship program and later became an assistant to the famous editor Verna Fields, who worked on films like *Jaws* and *Paper Moon*. It was while working with Fields that she met her future husband, George Lucas, who was a film student at the University of Southern California.

Marcia married George in 1969.
 She worked as an assistant editor on his first film as a director, *THX 1138*. With Fields, she helped edit his next film, *American Graffiti*, which earned her her first Oscar nomination for best film editing in 1974. Although William Reynolds won that year for *The Sting*, Marcia later won an Oscar for her work on *Star Wars*. She shared the award with editors Paul Hirsch and Richard Chew, and it was one of six Oscars that *Star Wars* won, including best art direction, sound, score, costume design, and visual effects.

A 1977 review in the *Hollywood Reporter* praised *Star Wars*’ editing, calling it "perfectly paced."
 In his book about George Lucas, *Skywalking: The Life And Films Of George Lucas*, writer Dale Pollock referred to Marcia as his "secret weapon."

George once told *Rolling Stone* in 1977, "My wife, Marcia, can normally cut a whole reel— all ten minutes of the film—in one week.
 I think it took her eight weeks to cut that battle. It was extremely complex and we had 40,000 feet of dialogue footage of pilots saying this and that. And she had to cull through all that, and put in all the fighting as well. Nobody really has ever tried to interweave an actual plot story into a dogfight."

Marcia also suggested that Darth Vader kill Obi-Wan Kenobi, played by Alec Guinness.
 George told *Rolling Stone*, "The more I thought about Ben getting killed the more I liked the idea. It made the threat of Vader greater and that tied in with The Force and the fact that he could use the dark side."

Outside of her marriage to George, Marcia worked with acclaimed director Martin Scorsese in the 1970s.
 She edited *Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore* and helped with the edits on *Taxi Driver* and *New York, New York*.

She later edited another *Star Wars* movie, *Return of the Jedi*, which came out in 1983, the same year she and George divorced.
 George said that Marcia handled the emotional scenes in *Return of the Jedi*, and that was the last film where she was credited as an editor. She later married and divorced artist Tom Rodrigues.

In 1983, she told *Time Magazine*, "I love film editing.
 I have an innate ability to take good material and make it better, and to take bad material and make it fair."

She is survived by her daughters, Amanda Lucas and Amy Soper, and her grandchildren.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Backrooms’ Makes $10.4 Million in Previews, Shattering A24 Record

A24 and Chernin Entertainment's new horror movie, based on director Kane Parsons' YouTube creepy series of the same name, is expected to be another hit for movie theaters.
 It has made $10.4 million in Thursday previews at the box office.

'Backrooms' will break A24's record for the company's largest box office opening of all time.
 It's expected to beat its already huge projection of $40 million to $50 million, which would beat Alex Garland's 'Civil War' for the A24 record. The 2024 political thriller made $2.9 million in previews and opened to $25.5 million. With just a $10 million production budget, 'Backrooms' will be a major financial success for A24 and 20-year-old Parsons, who's making his feature directorial debut.
  
The psychological horror movie revolves around liminal spaces, which are eerie, endless rooms and structures that have become popular in online forums like Reddit and 4chan.
 Parsons created a popular web series called 'Backrooms' about a fictional research group that attempts to explore the odd liminal spaces. Now, he's bringing the concept to the big screen with stars like Chiwetel Ejiofor, Renate Reinsve, Mark Duplass, Finn Bennett, Avan Jogia, Lukita Maxwell, and more.



This weekend's other new releases include Sony and comedian Nate Bargatze's 'The Breadwinner,' which is aiming to debut with $8 million after making $750,000 in previews.
 Focus Features, StudioCanal, and Working Title's 'Pressure,' a historical drama about D-Day that stars Brendan Fraser as Dwight D. Eisenhower, is projected to make $6 million.

Fellow horror movie 'Obsession' is looking to make $15 million to $20 million in its third weekend after its huge second week surpassed its opening in a rare feat, especially for an indie feature.
 Disney's 'Mandalorian and Grogu' is also looking to make around $40 million in its second weekend, a standard 50% decline from its Memorial Day weekend launch.

Friday, May 29, 2026

The Breadwinner Movie

The Breadwinner


2026 | PG | 1h 35m

Genre: Comedy, Family

Directed by Eric Appel
Written by
Nate Bargatze
Dan Lagana
Produced by
Jeremy Latcham
Nate Bargatze
Dan Lagana
Starring
Nate Bargatze
Mandy Moore
Colin Jost
Zach Cherry
Martin Herlihy
Kumail Nanjiani
Will Forte
Cinematography Eigil Bryld
Music by
Leo Birenberg
Zach Robinson
Production
companies
TriStar Pictures
Wonder Project
Distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing
Release date
May 29, 2026
Running time 99 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English

Tuner Movie

Tuner

2025 |  R | 1h 49m

Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller, Romance

Directed by Daniel Roher
Written by
Daniel Roher
Robert Ramsey
Produced by
JoAnne Sellar
Lila Yacoub
Teddy Schwarzman
Michael Heimler
Starring
Leo Woodall
Havana Rose Liu
Lior Raz
Tovah Feldshuh
Jean Reno
Dustin Hoffman
Cinematography Lowell A. Meyer
Edited by Greg O'Bryant
Music by Will Bates[1]
Production
company
English Breakfast Productions
Distributed by
Elevation Pictures (Canada)
Black Bear Pictures (United States)
Release dates
August 30, 2025 (Telluride)
May 22, 2026 (United States)
Running time 107 minutes[2]
Countries
Canada
United States
Language English
Box office $126,323[3][

Backrooms Movie

Backrooms


2026 | R | 1h 50m

Genre: Sci-fi, Thriller, Horror

Directed by Kane Parsons
Written by Will Soodik
Based on
Backrooms
by Kane Parsons
Produced by
James Wan
Michael Clear
Roberto Patino
Shawn Levy
Dan Cohen
Dan Levine
Osgood Perkins
Chris Ferguson
Peter Chernin
Jenno Topping
Kori Adelson
Starring
Chiwetel Ejiofor
Renate Reinsve
Mark Duplass
Finn Bennett
Lukita Maxwell
Cinematography Jeremy Cox
Edited by Greg Ng
Music by
Edo Van Breemen
Kane Parsons
Production
companies
21 Laps Entertainment
Atomic Monster
North Road Films
Phobos
Distributed by A24
Release date
May 29, 2026
Running time 110 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget <$10 million

Pressure Movie

Pressure

2026 | PG-13 | 1h 40m

Genre: Thriller, War, History, Drama

Directed by Anthony Maras

Screenplay by

David Haig

Anthony Maras

Based on

Pressure

by David Haig

Produced by

Tim Bevan

Eric Fellner

Cass Marks

Lucas Webb

Starring

Andrew Scott

Brendan Fraser

Kerry Condon

Chris Messina

Damian Lewis

Cinematography Jamie D. Ramsay

Edited by Anthony Maras

Music by Volker Bertelmann

Production

company

Working Title Films

Distributed by StudioCanal

Release dates

29 May 2026 (United States)

11 September 2026 (United Kingdom)

Running time 100 minutes[1]

Countries

United Kingdom

France

Language English