Monday, March 2, 2026

‘Scream 7’ Scares Up Record $64M U.S. Opening, $97M Globally for a Victorious Paramount Box Office

Paramount is off to a great start as *Scream 7* made more money than expected during the weekend box office. The movie, made by Spyglass Media, opened with a record-breaking $64.1 million in the U.S. and $33.1 million overseas, totaling $97.2 million worldwide. In North America, it's the biggest opening ever for a horror movie released in February and the best debut of 2025 so far, even without adjusting for inflation.

On Friday, the U.S. box office made $28.8 million, including $7.8 million from Thursday previews.
 These previews started just as David Ellison's Paramount-Skydance learned that the path was clear for a big deal to buy Warner Bros. Discovery. This deal would be the largest leveraged buyout in history and has caused big changes in Hollywood, especially since Netflix stepped back. Many people are sad because it will reduce the number of major Hollywood studios from five to four and lead to lots of job losses in film, TV, and corporate areas.

Back to *Scream 7*, the movie shows why many genre films aren't affected by bad reviews.
 The movie's big win was getting Neve Campbell back after she wasn't in the last film. Right now, it has a low critics' score of 33 percent on Rotten Tomatoes, but the audience score is higher at 78 percent, which is considered good. Studios usually like at least 80 percent. The movie also got a B- CinemaScore, which is a strong grade for a horror film.

The audience was very diverse, with a fairly even split between men and women.
 Also, a lot of younger people came to see the movie, especially those aged 18 to 24 and 25 to 34.

Even though Dana Goldberg and Josh Greenstein were chosen as co-chairs of Paramount Pictures, they worked with newly hired marketing head Josh Goldstine to make sure the movie was a success.
 Spyglass fully made the movie, while Paramount shared half of the $45 million budget.

The film easily beat the previous record-holder, *Scream VI*, which opened to $44.4 million in March 2023 and $67.1 million in the same year.


Spyglass chief Gary Barber said, "This historic, franchise record-breaking box office performance is a testament to the enduring legacy created by our director Kevin Williamson 30 years ago, led by the incomparable Neve Campbell, breakout star Isabel May, legacy stalwart Courteney Cox and the entire cast."
 He also thanked the new leaders at the movie studio for their great work.

Earlier, Paramount was expecting a $40 million opening for *Scream 7*, which would still have been the best three-day start of the year.
 However, tracking numbers were even more positive, with the National Research Group predicting $45 million.

Another big factor in *Scream 7*'s success was that it was the first *Scream* movie to play in Imax and other premium formats.
 These formats made up 40 percent of the total gross, with Imax alone contributing 9 percent. Imax rarely gives a big part of its screens to a horror movie, but there hasn't been much big event content coming up in 2026.

Kevin Williamson, who wrote the original *Scream* and its first few sequels, directed the seventh installment.
 The story follows Sidney (Neve Campbell) and her daughter (Isabel May) as they return to a small town, where they encounter a new Ghostface killer. The daughter's name is Tatum, the same as Rose McGowan's character in the 1996 *Scream*, who was killed in the first movie.

A trailer released in October focused on Ghostface targeting Sidney and Tatum, with Sidney teaching her daughter how to survive the killer.
 Another ad aired during the Super Bowl, showing how important the *Scream* franchise is to the new leadership at Paramount. In addition to Neve Campbell, original star Courteney Cox returns as reporter Gale Weathers.

While Neve Campbell's return was highly anticipated, two stars from the revival films *Scream* (2022) and *Scream VI* are not returning.
 Melissa Barrera was fired from *Scream 7* due to her social media posts about the Israel-Hamas war. Jenna Ortega left the film on her own before the firing was made public. Christopher Landon, who was set to direct the next horror sequel, also quit after intense fan backlash over Barrera's firing, even though he wasn't the one who fired her.

Other returning actors include David Arquette as Dewey Riley, completing the legacy trio with Sidney and Gale.
 Matthew Lillard is back as Stu Macher, and Scott Foley returns as Roman Bridger, Sidney's half-brother. Siblings Chad and Mindy, played by Mason Gooding and Jasmin Savoy Brown, are also in *Scream 7*.

Among other movies, *Sony Picture Animation's* *The Goat* dropped 29 percent to an estimated $12 million, finishing in second place.
 It's doing well overseas with $56.5 million, for a global total of $130.5 million when including its domestic earnings of $73.9 million.

*Wuthering Heights* is doing very well, however, with a global total near $200 million.
 In the U.S., it made $6.9 million for a domestic total of $73.9 million. It's also doing well overseas, making another $15.6 million this weekend with a foreign total of $119.7 million and a worldwide total over $194 million.

After that, there was a tight competition among four films. The new concert documentary Twenty Pilots: I Can't Believe This is My Life seemed to have come in fourth. Neon and Baz Luhrmann's EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert was close behind, with an estimated $3.7 million for a 10-day total of $7.8 million. Amazon MGM's holdover, Crime 101, made another $3.4 million, bringing its domestic total to $38.1 million. Meanwhile, Lionsgate's I Can Only Imagine dropped 60 percent in its second week, earning an estimated $3.1 million for a 10-day total of $13.3 million.

Neon's Luhrmann film, EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert, expanded to more theaters this weekend after making a strong $3.3 million from 325 Imax showings last week.
 It's now playing in 1,608 locations and received an A+ CinemaScore from audiences on Friday, following positive reviews. The film comes four years after Luhrmann's acclaimed biopic Elvis, featuring Austin Butler, which was widely discussed.

PGA Awards: ‘One Battle After Another’ Takes Home Top Film Prize

The 2026 Producers Guild Awards have taken place, and One Battle After Another continued its winning streak by winning the biggest award of the night.

The Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures is usually a strong sign of who might win best picture at the Oscars.
 This is because both the Producers Guild and the Academy have similar numbers of members and both use the same type of voting system called the weighted preferential ballot. The nominees for this award were Bugonia, F1, Frankenstein, Hamnet, Marty Supreme, One Battle After Another, Sentimental Value, Sinners, Train Dreams, and Weapons. One Battle After Another won the award.

In his acceptance speech, he said, “You’ve heard their names over and over again.
 They should get an award for enduring a lot on the road to get these films made. You kept your head down and you protected me; Ryan [Coogler], I’ll speak for you, protected Ryan, protected Zach [Creggar]. You’ve done an incredible job protecting us.” He continued, “That’s real producing too — getting us out of the gate, letting us do our work, protecting us through the distribution and leading us here. And so whatever the road lies ahead, your work this year is so spectacular. I share this with you. None of us could have done this without the two of you guys and the entire team that you have around you. Long may you wave, whatever the future holds. It is one battle after another.”

A total of 10 categories were announced, along with awards for animated movies and a wide range of TV programs.
 KPop Demon Hunters, The Pitt, The Studio, My Mom Jayne: A Film by Mariska Hargitay, and The Late Show with Stephen Colbert are among those who also won trophies.

Four awards were given out before the ceremony on Saturday night.
 These included Formula 1: Drive to Survive, Sesame Street, Adolescence: The Making of Adolescence, and The Wizard of Oz as earlier winners. In addition to the competitive awards, three special honors were given: Amy Pascal received the David O. Selznick Award, Jason Blum got the Milestone Award, and Mara Brock Akil was honored with the Norman Lear Award.

Presenters at this year’s awards included Amy Madigan, Delroy Lindo, Elle Fanning, Emily V. Gordon, Greta Gerwig, Ike Barinholtz, Jacob Elordi, Jason Ritter, Jessie Buckley, Joachim Trier, Kate Hudson, Kerry Condon, Kumail Nanjiani, Lisa Gilroy, Mariska Hargitay, Michael Keaton, Odessa A’zion, Paul Mescal, Ralph Farquhar, Regina Hall, Seth Rogen, Teyana Taylor, Thomas Lennon, Vinny Thomas, Wagner Moura, William H. Macy, and Wumni Mosaku.


PGA executive director Susan Sprung started the evening by acknowledging the recent events in the Middle East and “praying for peace.”
 She also mentioned the recent deal for Paramount to take over Warner Bros. Discovery, saying, “I know all of us are also thinking about the future of one of our most storied studios and its implications for our industry more broadly. Please note that the guild’s position has not changed. We will continue to call on regulators for the scrutiny and ultimately the safeguards and protections that producers need, that everyone in this business deserves, and that are the right of those who consume what we create. The vitality of our industry is at stake, and on that, producers will not be silent.”

Ralph Farquhar was on hand to present to Brock Akil, who said, “I have spent over three decades working inside systems that were not built with me in mind — learning them, navigating them, stretching them.
 I am deeply grateful to every collaborator, every writer in every writers room, every cast and crew member who trusted me with their talent, their time, and their dreams.”

Later in the show, Barry Diller presented to Blum, as the horror mogul said, “We’re living at this time where machines are very confident that they can pick what will work, that algorithms can tell us everything we’ve ever watched and what we should watch next, and AI can tell us what to stream in the mood we’re in next Tuesday.
 But what machines can’t do?” He then brought up the success of Heated Rivalry, noting, “If you would ask an algorithm a few months ago to predict a low-budget gay hockey romance with zero known stars, I promise you the algorithm would have been like, don’t make that show. But that’s why Heated Rivalry needed us. It needed producers.” Blum added that he even invited the hit show’s producers to be his guests at the show, but they were in New York to watch Connor Storrie host SNL.

To close out the night, Greta Gerwig presented Pascal with her special honor, saying, “The person I dreamed I would meet when I came to Hollywood: a gorgeous, wild, genius woman.”
 Pascal had the crowd laughing with her speech, especially when she said, “The way I became a producer was pretty fucked, and then I got lucky, and then it was all really hard anyway.” She continued that being a producer is full of challenges, including “knowing that no matter how bad things get, how many mistakes you made, how many failures you have, it’s never really over, no matter what anyone tells you.”

A complete list of this year’s winners follows.



Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle
Nominees: TBD 

Elio
Nominee: Mary Alice Drumm, p.g.a.

KPop Demon Hunters
Nominee: Michelle L.M. Wong, p.g.a. (WINNER)

Zootopia 2
Nominee: Yvett Merino, p.g.a.

Norman Felton Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television – Drama
Andor 
The Diplomat 
The Pitt (WINNER)
Pluribus 
Severance 
The White Lotus 

Danny Thomas Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television – Comedy
The Bear 
Hacks 
Only Murders in the Building
South Park 
The Studio (WINNER)

David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Limited or Anthology Series Television
Adolescence (WINNER)
The Beast in Me 
Black Mirror
Black Rabbit
Dying for Sex

Award for Outstanding Producer of Televised or Streamed Motion Pictures
Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy
The Gorge
John Candy: I Like Me (WINNER)
Mountainhead
Nonnas

Award for Outstanding Producer of Non-Fiction Television
aka Charlie Sheen 
Billy Joel: And So It Goes 
Mr. Scorsese
Pee-wee as Himself (WINNER)
SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night 

Award for Outstanding Producer of Live Entertainment, Variety, Sketch, Standup & Talk Television
The Daily Show 
Jimmy Kimmel Live! 
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver 
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (WINNER)
SNL50: The Anniversary Special

Award for Outstanding Producer of Game & Competition Television
The Amazing Race 
Jeopardy! 
RuPaul’s Drag Race 
Top Chef 
The Traitors (WINNER)

Outstanding Producer of Documentary Motion Pictures
The Alabama Solution (HBO Documentary Films)
Cover-Up (Netflix)
Mr. Nobody Against Putin (Made in Copenhagen)
My Mom Jayne: A Film by Mariska Hargitay (HBO Documentary Films) (WINNER)
Ocean with David Attenborough (National Geographic)
The Perfect Neighbor (Netflix)
The Tale of Silyan (National Geographic)

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Delroy Lindo Speaks Out on BAFTA Tourette’s Incident at NAACP Image Awards: “Something Negative Becoming Positive

At the end of the week when the 2026 BAFTA Awards became controversial because guest John Davidson, who has Tourette Syndrome, used the N-word while Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting an award, the 2026 NAACP Image Awards gave many people affected by the incident a chance to show their support for Jordan and Lindo.

Delroy Lindo shared his first public comments about the event.
 He stepped onto the stage with his Sinners writer-director Ryan Coogler a little over an hour into the ceremony, and the audience gave him loud applause.

He said, "I'd like to officially say that we really appreciate all the support and love we've received since what happened last weekend.
 It means a lot to us." 

He also called the moment a "classic case of something that could be very negative becoming very positive.
" He also talked about the "honor" of being at the NAACP Image Awards.

BAFTA has since apologized for the incident, which became more widely known because it was shown during the BBC broadcast of the awards.
 They also promised to carry out a "comprehensive review" of the ceremony.

Earlier during the Saturday NAACP Image Awards, which was live on CBS and BET, host Deon Cole jokingly offered a prayer for anyone in the audience with Tourette's to "read the room."


Later, when presenting the first award of the evening to Sinners' Miles Caton, Regina Hall took a moment to praise Jordan and Lindo for their "class," which led to a standing ovation.


Abbott Elementary star and creator Quinta Brunson, who won the second award of the night for best actress in a comedy series, also took a moment to thank the cast and crew of Sinners.


She said, "We see you.
 We're behind you... love you."

Sinners was nominated for 18 awards this year and had already won nine by the time Coogler and Lindo took the stage.
 After that, the film won two more awards, including best actor (Michael B. Jordan) and best motion picture, bringing its total to 11.

Where to Watch the 2026 NAACP Image Awards

The NAACP Image Awards are back this weekend to honor and celebrate Black artists and their achievements in movies, TV shows, books, and other areas.

This year's 57th Image Awards have two new categories.
 One is Outstanding Editing in a Motion Picture, Television Series, Movie, or Special, with nominees like Michael P. Shawver for "Sinners" and Shaheed Qaasim for "Poker Face." The other is Outstanding Literary Work — Journalism, which recognizes excellent journalism that shares important stories, supports the Black community, and looks at issues affecting the U.S. through the lens of race, justice, and community impact.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Mortal Kombat Official Trailer

New ‘Mummy’ Sequel Stays True to the Original and ‘Takes Some Real Chances,’ Directors Tease

 After many years of waiting, fans of *The Mummy* are finally getting a new movie in the series with both Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz. The directors of this new film, Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett from Radio Silence, said the new movie will have the same energy as the first one but will also take some real risks.


The duo are directing the fourth *Mummy* movie, and they just finished working on *Ready or Not 2: Here I Come*, which is coming out in March.

 When they talked to TheWrap about the new *Mummy* film, they didn't reveal much about the story or how scary it might be, since they're known for making horror movies. However, Tyler Gillett mentioned they had some great conversations with Fraser and Weisz, who both love the franchise a lot.


He said, "They've been really happy with the script and the way we're handling their characters and their relationship.

 And I think, as fans, reading this script, it feels a lot like the first movie." 


He added, "It's romantic, it's scary, and it takes some real chances.

 There's a lot of risk, but it's also big and adventurous. It has all those things. And from our talks with both Brendan and Rachel, I think it really hits that same feeling for them. They feel strongly that it's a return to form in many ways."


The directors are excited to make something that's important to the fans.

 Matt Bettinelli-Olpin also mentioned they'll approach the movie similarly to how they made *Scream*.


He said, "The main thing for us is that this is our chance and the chance for fans of the originals to see Rick and Evie again and to have Brendan and Rachel back in the saddle.

 It's a big, fun adventure. And it's not unlike how we approached *Scream*—how do we take something we love as fans and not just make it about nostalgia, but actually create something new for today?"


He continued, "And I think everyone involved is on board for that.

 We're just thrilled to make a big, sweeping adventure movie with some incredible actors."


The next *Mummy* movie is set for a wide release on May 19, 2028.

Netflix Says Paramount Has Paid $2.8 Billion Breakup Fee for Warner Bros. Discovery Deal

 Netflix has become a bit more wealthy after allowing Warner Bros. Discovery to move on.


On Friday, Netflix confirmed that Paramount Skydance has given them the $2.8 billion fee they were promised, following Paramount's win in their competition for Warner Bros.

 Discovery. This is pending an official vote and regulatory approval.


According to a filing with the SEC, Warner Bros.

 Discovery informed Netflix that they had ended the merger agreement as per the terms, to join with Paramount Skydance for a better deal.


Once the agreement ended, Paramount Skydance paid the $2.8 billion fee that Netflix was due under the original merger agreement.



On Thursday afternoon, Netflix officially said they would not raise their $83 billion offer to buy Warner Bros. and HBO Max from Discovery.

 This came after Warner Bros. Discovery's board said Paramount Skydance's new offer of $111 billion for the whole company, including its linear channels, was a better deal than the one they had with Netflix.


The original deal, which would have included buying Warner Bros. and HBO Max, was worth nearly $83 billion.

 Paramount's latest offer, made on February 24, was about $111 billion for the whole of Warner Bros. Discovery, including its traditional TV channels.


Netflix's quick decision surprised Hollywood because they had only four business days, until Wednesday, March 4 at 11:59 p.m. ET, to come up with a new offer to keep the deal.

In a joint statement released Thursday, less than two hours after Warner Bros.

 Discovery announced the board's decision, Netflix co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters said, "The transaction we negotiated would have created shareholder value with a clear path to regulatory approval. However, we've always been disciplined, and at the price required to match Paramount Skydance's latest offer, the deal is no longer financially attractive, so we are declining to match the Paramount Skydance bid."


They also added, "This transaction was always a 'nice to have' at the right price, not a 'must have' at any price.

"