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

Box Office Stunner: ‘Obsession’ Makes History With Biggest Second-Weekend Spike in Modern Times Outside of Christmas

For those who have been following Gen Z filmmaker Curry Barker’s journey since he started gaining popularity on YouTube, it’s no surprise that his first movie, Obsession, is doing really well in theaters. The horror film has been playing in theaters for less than two weeks and has already made over $68 million in North America alone, despite having a very small budget of just $750,000.

For others, it’s a big surprise.
 During the long Memorial Day weekend, the film made $23.9 million for three days, which is a huge jump of 39.4 percent compared to its opening weekend of $17.2 million from 2,615 theaters. That’s the biggest increase in a long time for a movie playing in more than 2,500 theaters outside of the holiday season, and even then, the rise is bigger than many popular movies at the end of the year.

Paul Dergarabedian, a top box office analyst at Comscore, is amazed.
 He said he has been tracking box office numbers for 33 years and has never seen anything like this. He mentioned that the second weekend jump of almost 40 percent is very rare, and there’s really no movie that’s similar for comparison.

Lisa Bunnell, who is in charge of distribution at Focus, also said they knew the movie had something special.
 She said the performance is amazing and not like anything they’ve seen before.

One reason could be the audience.
 So far, 75 percent of people watching the film are between the ages of 18 and 34, which includes Gen Z and young Millennials. This group is very important for movies. Many of them grew up with lots of screen time and have been affected by pandemic rules that limited in-person socializing. They are now interested in going to the movies again to enjoy that shared experience.

Obsession did very well from the start.
 It opened with more than expected, reaching third place over the May 15-17 weekend, just behind The Devil Wears Prada 2. On its first Monday, it moved to number one and stayed there until Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu came out on May 22.

It surprised a lot of people by beating some big names and finishing second on every day of the Memorial Day holiday.
 The increase each day was higher than expected, including a big 39.3 percent jump over the weekend. It was also the only movie in the top 10 that saw an increase from Sunday to Saturday.

On Memorial Day, which is a Monday, it made $8 million, bringing its total in the first 11 days to $62.4 million.
 On Tuesday, May 26, it made an extra $5.5 million, bringing the total to $67.9 million. It was expected to cross $68 million by Wednesday, May 27, and possibly even reach $70 million.

Bunnell says it’s one of the best-performing movies they’ve had.
 Among Focus’s top successes is Robert Eggers’ horror film Nosferatu, which made $95.6 million domestically and $181.9 million worldwide. Another top performer is Downton Abbey from 2019, which made $97.8 million domestically and $194.7 million worldwide, without adjusting for inflation.

Obsession is a big win for everyone involved.
 Focus outbid other companies like A24 and Neon, which are known for being popular with Gen Z and younger Millennials, to get the rights to distribute the movie after it was shown at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival for $15 million.

This win is especially good for Peter Kujawski, the head of Focus.
 He has a lot of experience in finding and releasing good movies, and he has access to Universal’s international distribution. He was brought in by Donna Langley, who is a top leader at Universal and has been successful in finding and supporting new talent, including Jordan Peele. She still runs Universal Pictures and Focus, where Kujawski is known for his good eye for talent.

Jason Cassidy, the marketing head, is also experienced in indie movies.
 Lisa Bunnell started preparing for Obsession’s release six months earlier, reaching out to theaters like Alamo Drafthouse and AMC to build excitement. AMC even made an exclusive popcorn bucket for the movie, and Alamo gave Obsession top billing for months.

Focus pushed hard with merchandise, especially for a mysterious item called “One Wish Willow” that’s central to the story.
 The item is used by the main character, Bear, to wish for his crush, Nikki, to love him more than anyone. The movie has won over critics, with a 94 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Obsession is the only movie in Focus history that has more theaters in its third weekend.
 Bunnell says the number of theaters will go up to 2,755 by the May 29-31 weekend, with 100 more added this time.

She says people are going to see the movie three or four times.
 It’s mostly male at first, but more women are coming in as the movie keeps playing.


Many in the media are saying the closest comparison is July 2023's "Sound of Freedom," which was the only movie that didn't come out at the end of the year but still had a big jump in its second weekend, almost 38.6 percent. However, the company that made that movie, Angel Studios based in Utah, is being questioned for its unusual "pay it forward" way of doing business. People can buy tickets as donations, and then others can use them. Most people who used the tickets showed up, but a lot didn't.

Dergarabedian admits it's hard to compare the two because "Sound of Freedom" added 413 more theaters in its second weekend.


Barker has already made his next movie, a horror-comedy called "Anything But Ghosts," which Focus will release along with Blumhouse-Atomic Monster, which is part of Universal.
 It's also being made with Roy Lee and Steven Schneider's Spooky Pictures.

Barker has been building a following on YouTube through his sketch comedy channel "That's a Bad Idea" and his $800 found-footage horror film "Milk & Serial."
 He also has a movie called "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" for A24 in the works, where he will write, direct, and produce the new version.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Paddington 4’: Armando Iannucci to Write Bear’s Next Movie, ‘Paddington in Peru’ Director Dougal Wilson in Talks to Return

Paddington Bear has found a new pair of writers to come up with his next big screen adventure and looks to have secured a director as well.


Variety can exclusively confirm that Armando Iannucci, the Emmy-winning and Oscar-nominated Scotsman best known for creating hit satirical shows “Veep” and “The Thick of It,” is set to turn his pen to London’s most beloved four-pawed Peruvian expat and will write the upcoming fourth film in Studiocanal’s hit “Paddington” franchise.
 Iannucci will be joined on screenplay duties by his long-standing and fellow Emmy-winning and Oscar-nominated co-writer Simon Blackwell, who served as a key writer on both “Veep” and “The Thick of It.”

Meanwhile, Variety hears that Dougal Wilson, the award-winning commercials and music videos director who made his feature debut with the third film, “Paddington in Peru,” is in talks to return.


“Paddington 4” follows 2014’s “Paddington,” 2017’s “Paddington 2” and 2024’s “Paddington in Peru,” and a combined global box office in excess of $800 million.
 Paul King directed the first two instalments (he wrote the first and co-wrote the second with Simon Farnaby), with Wilson taking over directing duties on the third (which was written by Mark Burton, Jon Foster and James Lamont).

Rosie Alison (“Paddington,” “Paddington 2,” “Paddington in Peru”), who first came up with the idea to give Michael Bond’s red-hatted bear the live-action-meets-VFX big screen treatment some 20 years ago, continues as producer for Heyday Films.


The fourth Paddington movie was only officially announced earlier this year.
 At CinemaCon, Studiocanal CEO and Canal+ Chief Content Officer Anna Marsh revealed that the film was in development, but shared little else other than that “world-renowned comedy writers” had been hired.

Iannucci has earned his stripes many times over as a comedy writer, having also helped create the iconic TV character Alan Partridge, written for “The Day Today” and, more recently, created HBO’s “Avenue 5,” while on film he co-wrote and directed “In the Loop” (which was Oscar nominated for best adapted screenplay in 2010) and “The Death of Stalin.”
 Blackwell, meanwhile, is also known for creating the Brit TV dark comedy show “Breeders” and sitcom “Back,” helped co-write “In the Loop” and also co-wrote Iannucci’s last feature film, “The Personal History of David Copperfield” (which starred the voice of Paddington, Ben Whishaw).

But taking on Paddington Bear is several giant leaps from Charles Dickens adaptations, TV sitcoms or political satire, and will be no marmalade sandwich-laden picnic.


Perfectly balancing the duffel coat-wearing ursine’s impeccably well-mannered kindness with his endearingly clumsy tendency to land himself in trouble helped elevate the critically adored “Paddington 2” to the status of cinematic masterpiece (it was for a period the highest-rated film on Rotten Tomatoes).


Speaking to Variety around the release of “Paddington in Peru,” producer Alison said director Wilson was chosen partly because he was “Paddingtonian” and embodied all the positive values of the bear.
 No doubt in Iannucci and Blackwell she’s found the same qualities. If not, hard stares all round.

Albert Wolsky, ‘All That Jazz,’ ‘Bugsy’ and ‘Grease’ Costume Designer, Dies at 95


Albert Wolsky, the two-time Oscar-winning costume designer behind films like “All That Jazz,” “Bugsy,” “Grease” and more, died May 23 in Los Angeles.
 He was 95.

Wolsky’s death was confirmed by several colleagues, including fellow costume designer Christopher Lawrence, in an Instagram post on Sunday.


“Albert Wolsky.
 A prince among men,” Lawrence wrote. “Such love and gratitude for your friendship and mentorship. You were the first to tell me that I was going to be a costume designer and the man I turned to for so many big decisions. I’m so sad.”

For “Grease,” Wolsky created the memorable 1950s looks, including Olivia Newton-John’s skin-tight black pants and greaser leather jacket for her role as Sandy Olsson.
 They were actually sourced from vintage ’50s clothing, she revealed in her autobiography. “They were so old, and there was just one pair, so there was no room for error,” revealed Newton-John in the memoir. “One rip and disaster.” In 2019, Spanx founder Sara Blakely paid $162,000 for the pants at a charity auction.

Across his five-decade-plus career, Wolsky earned more than 20 award nominations, including seven Academy Award nominations.
 Wolsky earned nods for costume design for “Sophie’s Choice” in 1983, “The Journey of Natty Gann” in 1986, “Toys” in 1993, “Across the Universe” in 2008 and “Revolutionary Road” in 2009. He won the Oscar for “All That Jazz” in 1980 and “Bugsy” in 1992.

Wolsky’s career designing for film and TV began in the 1960s when he worked on “Camelot” on Broadway and then on “The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter” as well as the TV movies “The Desperate Hours” in 1967 and both “Of Mice and Men” and “A Hatful of Rain” in 1968.
 He continued to pick up credits in the 1970s, with films including “Lenny,” “Little Murders,” “Fingers,” “The Turning Point” and more. He also costumed Andrew Bergman’s “Striptease” and Carl Reiner’s “Fatal Instinct,” as well as a string of iconic romantic comedies: Nora Ephron’s “You’ve Got Mail,” Garry Marshall’s “Runaway Bride” and Wayne Wang’s “Maid in Manhattan.”

His final credit was for David O. Russell’s “Amsterdam.”


Wolsky was born on November 24, 1930 in Paris.
 He attended City College of New York, and went on to begin pursuing costume design in the years following.