Saturday, March 21, 2026

Project Hail Mary’ Rockets to Gravity-Defying $12M in Previews

The meteoric rise of filmmaking duo Phil Lord and Chris Miller continues with their space epic, *Project Hail Mary*, starring Ryan Gosling.

The sci-fi adventure opened with a staggering $12 million in previews, the best preview gross of the year so far, including both regular Thursday showings and fan screenings earlier this week.
 Amazon MGM noted that this is also the second-best preview gross for a non-sequel, behind *It* ($13.5 million), unadjusted for inflation.

*Project Hail Mary* is expected to dominate the weekend; the only question is by how much.
 Based on the strength of the preview numbers, many believe it will surpass expectations, potentially earning $60 million or more. However, Amazon MGM insiders remain cautious, forecasting in the $50-million range, given the challenges in selling sci-fi overseas.

An important stat: only three non-sequel, non-franchise films have opened above $50 million in the post-pandemic era—*Oppenheimer*, *F1: The Movie*, and *It Ends With Us*.
 In terms of the genre, *Project Hail Mary* would join a rare group, including *Interstellar*’s opening in 2014.

So far, both critics and audiences are warmly embracing the heartwarming, action-packed film, which is ideal for studios.
 The return of screenwriter Drew Goddard, who successfully adapted *The Martian* from Andy Weir’s novel, also adds to the movie’s appeal.

The film, also starring Sandra Hüller and James Ortiz, is opening in 82 global markets, timed with its U.S. launch, including the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Mexico, Brazil, Australia, Korea, Japan, and China.


Among the weekend’s other wide releases is Searchlight Pictures’ *Ready or Not 2: Here I Come*, directed by the filmmaking duo Radio Silence (Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett), with Samara Weaving reprising her role as the beloved character Grace.


Internationally, the film also opens in territories like the UK, Australia, and Brazil, along with smaller markets, and will be available almost everywhere by mid-April.

Chuck Norris, Walloping Star of ‘Walker, Texas Ranger,’ Dies at 86

Chuck Norris, the famous martial arts expert and karate teacher who became a star in the 1980s with movies like *Missing in Action* and the long-running CBS show *Walker, Texas Ranger*, has passed away. He was 86 years old.

Norris passed away suddenly on Thursday in Hawaii after being hospitalized, his family shared in a statement.


They said, "He lived his life with faith, purpose, and a strong commitment to the people he loved.
 Through his work, discipline, and kindness, he inspired millions around the world and made a lasting impact on many lives."

They added, "Although our hearts are broken, we are deeply grateful for the life he lived and the unforgettable moments we shared with him.
 The love and support he received from fans around the world meant a lot to him, and our family is truly thankful for it. To him, you were not just fans, you were his friends."

They also said they "would like to keep the circumstances private" and that "he was surrounded by his family and was at peace.
"

Unlike some other actors who claimed to be fighters, Norris was real.
 He had black belts in karate, Tang Soo Do, and taekwondo, and trained with Bruce Lee. He even fought him in *The Way of the Dragon* (1972). On screen, he often played loners and, like one of his heroes, John Wayne, he only used violence when there was no other choice.

Encouraged by Steve McQueen, who had asked Norris to become an actor after giving him private karate lessons for years, Norris had his big break with *Lone Wolf McQuade* (1983), where he played a Texas Ranger facing off against an arms dealer and martial arts expert, David Carradine.


Norris later signed with the Cannon Group, a production company run by Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus, and became a big hit for the small studio.
 He played Col. James Braddock, a former POW returning to Vietnam to save captured soldiers, in *Missing in Action* (1984). Though critics didn't like the movie, it was loved by audiences, and it led to a 1985 prequel and a 1988 sequel.

He once said, "Steve McQueen once said, 'Look, the critics can praise you to the end of the world, but if your movie makes $2, you're not going to work.
 So the thing is, as long as people come and see your movies, you're going to keep working, no matter what the critics say.' So when I got criticized by the critics, I'd try to keep that in mind."

Norris continued his success with *Code of Silence* (1985), *Invasion U.S.A.* (1985), *Firewalker* (1986), and *The Delta Force* (1986), which led to a follow-up in 1990.


*Walker, Texas Ranger*, created by Al Ruddy, Leslie Greif, Paul Haggis, and Christopher Canaan at Cannon Television, started in April 1993 and ran for nine seasons with around 200 episodes, plus a 2005 special.
 Norris played Cordell Walker, a U.S. Marine turned Texas Ranger, on a show that had the feel of a classic Western, airing on Saturday nights on CBS like *Gunsmoke*.

The CW announced a new *Walker* series in December 2020, starring Jared Padalecki, which lasted four seasons.


Chuck Norris was the oldest of three sons, born on March 10, 1940, in Ryan, Oklahoma, near the Texas border.
 His father, Ray, was a mechanic and truck driver, and his mother, Wilma, did odd jobs to help support the family. He wrote in his 2004 memoir, *Against All Odds: My Story*, that "genetically speaking, I am equal parts Irish and Native American."

His father had a drinking problem and often left the family, so Norris looked up to Western heroes like John Wayne, Gene Autry, and Roy Rogers at the movies.
 He said, "I determined that I would grow up one day to be like them. Their behavior in their films was governed by the 'Code of the West' — loyalty, friendship, and integrity. They were unselfish and did what was right even when the risk was great. Years later I would recall those Western heroes when I developed the kind of character I wanted to play as an actor."

His family moved often, eventually settling in Southern California in 1950.
 Norris graduated from North Torrance High School and then joined the U.S. Air Force. One of his barracks buddies gave him the nickname Chuck, which he kept.

While stationed at Osan Air Base in South Korea, Norris started training in judo and Tang Soo Do, the art of empty-hand fighting.
 As he learned more, he mixed in other styles to create his own fighting style called Chun Kuk Do.

After leaving the military in 1962 — by then a first-degree black belt in Tang Soo Do and a third-degree brown belt in judo — Norris worked as a file clerk for Northrop Corp while teaching karate at his mom’s backyard and eventually opening his first karate school in Torrance.
 He also competed in fights, with a reported record of 65-5, and won six world karate titles.

Norris met Bruce Lee during a tournament at Madison Square Garden in 1967, and they became friends.
 Lee, serving as an adviser on *The Wrecking Crew* (1968), hired Norris to play a bodyguard in the Matt Helm movie starring Dean Martin.

The two lost touch after Lee moved to Hong Kong to further his movie career, but they reunited for an epic fight in the Roman Colosseum in *The Way of the Dragon*.

Chuck Norris opened more karate schools in Los Angeles, and one of them, the Chuck Norris Karate School, was mentioned in the movie Dolemite (1975), which had a lot of fight scenes. He also gave private lessons to famous people like Bob Barker, who once broke a couple of his ribs during a workout, Priscilla Presley, and Steve McQueen.

When Chuck Norris stopped competing in 1974, Steve McQueen encouraged him to try acting.
 McQueen said, “You either have a certain presence that comes across on the screen, or you don’t. I think you may have it. I strongly suggest that you give it a try.”

He acted in a few movies, like Slaughter in San Francisco (1974), where he played a trucker looking for his brother.
 He also used some of his former black-belt students in the cast. He starred as a CIA commando named John T. Booker in Good Guys Wear Black (1978), which also had James Franciscus, Dana Andrews, and Anne Archer, and it made a surprising amount of money.

He showed off his fighting skills in A Force of One (1979), The Octagon (1980), and An Eye for an Eye (1981).
 Then he played a sheriff who fights a man with superhuman strength in Silent Rage (1982), his first movie from a major studio.

Chuck Norris turned down about a dozen TV offers before he was asked about the show Walker.
 In an interview in the mid-1990s, he said he liked the idea of a modern Western story. He liked the action, the relationships between characters, and the humor in the show.

He did some acting in a cartoon called Karate Kommandos in 1986.
 He also starred in two President’s Man movies for CBS and later appeared in movies like Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004) and Expendables 2 (2012).

His fans made funny stories about his toughness, like: “When the boogeyman goes to sleep, he checks his closet for Chuck Norris.”
 Or “When Chuck Norris crosses the street, the cars have to look both ways.” And “People wanted to add Chuck Norris to Mount Rushmore, but the granite wasn’t tough enough for his beard.”

He wrote books like The Secret of Inner Strength (1987), The Secret Power Within: Zen Solutions to Real Problems (1996), and Black Belt Patriotism (2008).
 He also started the World Combat League in 2005, which is a team-based fighting competition.

His youngest brother, Aaron, who is a stuntman and a karate expert, directed and made episodes of Walker and some of Chuck Norris’s movies.
 (The family’s middle son, Wieland, died in Vietnam.)

In 2023, it was announced that Chuck Norris had settled a lawsuit against CBS and Sony Pictures.
 He claimed he was shortchanged at least $30 million from the profits of the show Walker, Texas Ranger.

He is survived by his second wife, Gena, whom he married in 1998, and their children: Mike, Dina, Eric (a stunt coordinator who also directed some Walker episodes), Danilee, and Dakota.


In the 1990s, Chuck Norris admitted that his movies were violent, but he said it was okay because of the “moral structure.”
 He said, “When you are fighting good against evil, when the good guys are taking on the bad guys and winning, then I think that’s good. Unfortunately in our society, in reality, that’s not always the case. It’s nice to be able to do movies where people say, ‘This is what should happen, this is the way it should be in real life.’ That’s why I think I’m so successful.”

Friday, March 20, 2026

Golden Movie

Golden

2025 | R | 1h 34m

Genre: Thriller

Director

Nick Leisure

Writer

Nick Leisure

Stars

Brian Austin Green

Glenn Plummer

Robert Miano

Producers
Brian Austin Green
executive producer
Jayden Lee
producer
Nick Leisure
producer
Justin Nesbitt
producer
Rachel Powell
Creative Consultant / producer
Geoffrey Ross
line producer
Adam Secondo
executive producer
Christian Vellanoweth
associate producer
Gregory Wilker
producer
Cinematographer
Martin Moody
Editor
Justin Clare
Set Decorators
Johnny Barragan
Jenna De Alba
Makeup Department
Frida De La Paz-Bjelke
makeup department head
Morgan Gardner
hair stylist (as Morgan Price)
Production Management
Quinn Gardner
unit production manager
Gregory Wilker
production manager

The Hunting Club Movie

The Hunting Club

2026

Genre: Action

Director

Junior L Ashwood

Writer

Mike Trnka

Cast

Mike Trnka

Grace H Bryan

Rachel Summers

Producers

Marc Treacy

executive producer

Mike Trnka

executive producer / producer

Cinematographer

Michael Carter

cinematographer

Casting

Junior L Ashwood

casting by

Michael Carter

casting by

Amarah Presley

casting director

Mike Trnka

casting by

Production Management

Kayada Robinson

office pa

Sound Department

James Baldwin

sound mixer

Keith Ford

boom operator

Addison Williams

assistant sound

Camera and Electrical Department

Sam Tim

camera operator

Costume and Wardrobe Department

Keyada Renèe

wardrobe supervisor

Location Management

Chris Brown

location manager

Script and Continuity Department

Richard Thorton

script supervisor

The Pout-Pout Fish Movie

The Pout-Pout Fish

2026 | PG | 1h 32m

Genre: Comedy. Family, Fantasy

Directed by

Ricard Cussó

Rio Harrington

Written by

Elise Allen

Elie Choufany

Based on The Pout-Pout Fish

by Deborah Diesen

Produced by

Nadine Bates

Madeira Ginley

Kristen Souvlis

Cyma Zarghami

Cast

Nick Offerman

Nina Oyama

Miranda Otto

Jordin Sparks

Amy Sedaris

Edited by Ahmad Halimi

Music by Ack Kinmonth

Production

companies

MIMO Studios

Like a Photon Creative

Cosmic Dino Studios

Alceon Entertainment

Eclectik Vision

Distributed by

Viva Pictures (United States)

Maslow Entertainment (Australia)

Release dates

January 1, 2026 (Australia)

March 20, 2026 (United States)

Running time 92 minutes

Countries

Australia

United States

Language English

Project Hail Mary Movie

Project Hail Mary

2026 | PG-13 | 2h 36m

Genre: Thriller, Sci-Fi,  Drama

Directed by

Phil Lord

Christopher Miller

Screenplay by

Drew Goddard

Based on

Project Hail Mary

by Andy Weir

Produced by

Amy Pascal

Ryan Gosling

Phil Lord

Christopher Miller

Aditya Sood

Rachel O'Connor

Andy Weir

Cast

Ryan Gosling

Sandra Hüller

James Ortiz

Lionel Boyce

Cinematography Greig Fraser

Edited by

Chris Dickens

Joel Negron[1]

Music by Daniel Pemberton

Production

companies

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Pascal Pictures

Open Invite Films

Waypoint Entertainment

Lord Miller Productions[1]

Distributed by

Amazon MGM Studios (United States and Canada)

Sony Pictures Releasing International (International)

Release dates

March 9, 2026 (Empire Leicester Square)

March 20, 2026 (United States)

Running time 156 minutes

Country United States

Language English

Budget

$248 million

Hunger Games’ Prequel Screenwriter Michael Lesslie to Polish ‘Fast Forever

Michael Lesslie, the writer of the "Hunger Games" prequel, has been hired to rewrite the upcoming "Fast and Furious" movie called "Fast Forever." This script was originally written by Aaron Rabin and Zach Dean, according to TheWrap. Vin Diesel, who is a main star and producer of the series, shared the news on his Instagram account.

He wrote, "Sitting across from Mike Lesslie, hearing what he plans to contribute to the polish of the next chapter, that same feeling returned.
 A story with something real beating inside it."  

Since 2023, when Universal released the highly expensive "Fast X," which saw director Louis Leterrier step in during production.