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The new documentary 'Risk' goes deep inside the world of Julian Assange — here's the trailer

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Risk trailer Neon final

Documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras is following up her Oscar-winning look at NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, "Citizenfour," with a movie about another globally controversial figure: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. 

Made over six years, including through the 2016 presidential election, Poitras' movie "Risk" examines Assange with up-close access and the headline-grabbing leaks his site is responsible for. But it's also being touted as a "geopolitical thriller," as the documentary touches on Poitras' own experiences with government surveillance (Poitras has been monitored by the US government since making her 2006 movie "My Country, My Country"). 

WikiLeaks was constantly in the news through the presidential election, as the site leaked emails from Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton's campaign. It's still unclear what (if any) relationship the site and Assange's leaks had with Russia, which the US intelligence community says was behind hacking in the election.

"Risk" first premiered at 2016's Cannes Film Festival in May, but with WikiLeaks' involvement in the election and some other new developments, Poitras updated the film to spotlight the latest developments. 

Watch the trailer below. The movie opens in theaters through Neon and will then air on Showtime this summer.

 

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Daniel Craig is reportedly open to doing 'one more Bond movie'

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daniel craig james bond spectre

The saga of "will he or won't he?" that has centered on Daniel Craig's possible return as James Bond may be finally coming to a close. 

Sources tell Page Six that Bond producer Barbara Broccoli has "just about persuaded" Craig to come on board for one more movie. 

What seems to have gotten Craig to warm up to the idea is the success of his recent Off-Broadway production of "Othello," which Broccoli produced. 

“Daniel was very pleased with how ‘Othello’ went and the great reviews," a source told Page Six. "Now Daniel’s talks with Barbara are going in the right direction. They have a script — screenwriting duo Neal Purvis and Robert Wade [who’ve penned several Bond movies] are writing and they’ll go into production as soon as Daniel is ready to commit.”

The scratch-my-back-and-I'll-scratch-yours tactic is a favorite in Hollywood and this seems to be what might bring Craig back to play 007 for a fifth time, following the massive success of the two most recent entries in the franchise, "Skyfall" and "Spectre."

After "Spectre,"Bond told a reporter that he would "rather break this glass and slash my wrists" than play Bond again.

Page Six also noted that Broccoli did entertain the idea of hiring "The Night Manager" star Tom Hiddleston as a new Bond, but according to a source, she didn't like him because "he’s a bit too smug and not tough enough to play James Bond."

MGM declined to comment for this story.

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How Eddie Murphy became an overnight star when he made his first movie in 1982

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48 hrs paramount

Three years after director Walter Hill made the cult classic “The Warriors” he popularized the buddy-cop movie with the hugely successful “48 Hrs” (1982), which is responsible for exploding the genre to this day.

The movie stars Nick Nolte as a hard-nosed cop who has to team with a convict, played by Eddie Murphy, to solve a case. The movie is fueled by the love-hate relationship between Nolte and Murphy’s characters.

Thinking back on the movie, Hill says the thing that stands out most was watching the evolution of Murphy from popular “Saturday Night Live” cast member to movie star, more or less overnight.

"I thought he was sensational and I thought it might work," Hill recently told Business Insider, while promoting his new movie “The Assignment” (in theaters).

Hill had watched footage of Murphy on "SNL" while thinking over casting for "48 Hrs."

"I sent it up to the powers that be at the studio saying I would go with Eddie if they would go," he said.

At first, Hill admits, he had a different actor in mind.

A few years before Paramount pulled the trigger on the movie, Hill wrote a draft of the script and suggested that the studio should hire Richard Pryor to play the wise-cracking convict. Hill said that by the time he was hired to direct the movie, Pryor had become too big of a star for the role.

Walter Hill photo credit by Nicolas AprouxBy the end of shooting “48 Hrs.,” Hill said he knew that Murphy would be as big of a star as Pryor. But leading up to production, he only saw Murphy as a gifted comic who had never acted in a movie before, and that led to him giving his more polished actor Nolte a harsh direction.

"I came back from New York, I had met Eddie, he couldn't come to LA because he was so busy on the show, and I said to Nick, 'Look, he's a great talent but he's not a trained actor so Nick buddy this is the way it's going to be, it's going to be like working with a little kid or a dog — the one take that's good we're going to have to print it. So that means you have to be good every take,'" Hill told us with a laugh.

"Oh, that's not fair, Walt, goddammit," Nolte responded, according to Hill.

"And I said, 'I know you shouldn't have to but that's the way it's going to be,'" Hill said.

"He and Eddie got along great," the director added. "They loved each other. In fact, they would attack me on set every day complaining about the script, but it was fun."

It turned out to work well for everyone. The movie was one of the biggest box-office earners of 1982, it made A-list names out of both Murphy and Nolte, and it spawned a sequel in 1990.

SEE ALSO: The director of classics "The Warriors" and "48 Hrs." looks back on his legendary career

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The reviews of 'The Fate of the Furious' are here, and critics are calling it 'so awesome'

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the rock f8 fate of the furious

Can you believe the "Fast and Furious" franchise has been around for 16 years?

It's still going as fast and as furious as ever. "The Fate of the Furious" (opening Friday) is fun, according to the early reviews from critics trickling out, but with Dom (Vin Diesel) turning on the family he's so obsessed with talking about all the time, the new movie takes a darker turn than any of the other seven films in the franchise.

It also takes things to the next level. The eighth installment is getting generally positive though somewhat mixed reviews (it has a 75% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes as of this writing). But while it may not be the best of the franchise, fans will delight in plonking down money to see a scene in which Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson catches a torpedo with his bare hands (yes, really). Oh, and there's a submarine chase in the Arctic. Because after seven "Fast and Furious" movies, cars and tanks are not enough. 

Here's what the critics are saying about "The Fate of the Furious":

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It's exactly what fans of the franchise love and expect.

"A soap opera that just happens to cost millions of dollars and feature souped-up sports cars jumping over submarines."—Time Out

"The Fate of the Furious provides plenty of the high-octane escapism and ridiculously elaborate vehicular mayhem fans of the series expect."—IGN

"A dazzling action spectacle that proves this franchise is far from out of gas."—Variety



Some agree that after eight films, the franchise is getting a little tired.

"The plot twists suggest the kind of games that 11-year-old boys put together on the playground during recess, with women in peril and so many different parts for everyone to play that you begin to lose track of who everybody is."—The Wrap

"If you've spent the last sixteen years investing in the family and their ragtag tapestry, you might find yourself a little disappointed."—Collider



Jason Statham and Dwayne Johnson, both newer additions to the franchise, keep it interesting.

"Thankfully, it's frequently also much funnier and lighter on its feet than previous outings, and a lot of that credit goes to Statham and Johnson, whose love-hate bromance feels like the real core of the movie."—Entertainment Weekly



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

How Vin Diesel helped save the 'Fast and Furious' franchise from going straight to video

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Vin Diesel

The INSIDER Summary: 

  • "The Fast and the Furious" franchise nearly went straight to DVD after the third movie, "Tokyo Drift."
  • Universal Pictures thought the franchise "was played out."
  • The studio turned to Vin Diesel to help reboot the franchise starting with the fourth movie.
  • In exchange, Diesel received rights to his "Riddick" franchise.
  • Diesel received a lot of creative control over the sequels which saw the films go from racing movies to heist films centered around family.


The next installment of "The Fast and the Furious" is in theaters April 14. 

While fans are gearing up to see more of Dom, Letty, Roman, and the rest of the "Fast" family in "The Fate of the Furious," most of the franchise almost never made it to the big screen or happened at all. 

According to a 2013 interview in TheWrap, the franchise stalled creatively after the second film in the series, "2 Fast 2 Furious." 

2001's original "Fast and the Furious" movie with Diesel, Paul Walker, and Michelle Rodriguez made $207.3 million worldwide. 2003's "2 Fast 2 Furious" built on that amount with $236.4 million worldwide after bringing back Walker while ditching the rest of the original cast. Instead, it introduced later fan favorites, Ludacris and Tyrese to the series.

The third movie, 2006's "Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift," completely nixed the entire cast and feel of the first two films. "Tokyo Drift" revolved around a completely new character played by Lucas Black ("NCIS: New Orleans"). Despite a small surprise cameo at the film's end from Vin Diesel, the lack of recognizable stars or a real connection to the first two films, resulted in the series' worst performance of the franchise, grossing $158 million.

Lucas Black Fast and Furious

In turn, Universal, the studio behind the franchise, came close to releasing sequels directly to DVD. 

"The talk internally was that the franchise was played out," Jeffrey Kirschenbaum, former Universal Pictures co-president of production, told TheWrap. "At that point we were weighing whether to go straight to video or not for future sequels. We weren't sure what we were going to do."

What saved the franchise from direct-to-DVD purgatory?

Universal convinced Diesel to come back for a small, surprise cameo in "Tokyo Drift." (In return for an appearance, Diesel wasn't paid. He was given the rights to his "Riddick" franchise.) After seeing a huge response from audiences with Diesel in the picture, the studio handed a large amount of creative control over to the actor.

vin diesel fast and furious

Diesel is not just a producer; he considers himself to be the "saga visionary," as he does everything from structuring story to selecting songs for the soundtrack. Diesel has become the face of the series, and Universal knew that based off the huge amount of excitement over his surprise cameo in "Tokyo Drift." 

With Diesel back on board, Universal returned the franchise to its roots, focusing more on heists than underground street racing. Making the friendship between Diesel and Paul Walker the focus of the fourth film helped, given that the absence of one or the other in the second and third films didn't benefit the franchise. 

Another big factor in the franchise's comeback was its budding global appeal.

Universal strung together a multi-ethnic cast to better reflect its diverse audience, from half-Samoan Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson to Israeli actress Gal Gadot. The series welcomed back Tyrese, Ludacris, and Sung Kang, who played Han in "Tokyo Drift." Diesel even fought to bring back Michelle Rodriguez who appeared in the first film. 

fast and furious 7 paul walker

Then, the franchise took the crew all over the world, from Brazil in "Fast 5" to Russia, Spain, and England in "Fast & Furious 6." Its global ambitions have helped the franchise gross over $3.8 billion worldwide.

The "Fast and Furious" franchise is now one of the 10 highest-grossing movie franchises of all time, besting out the "Transformers" and "Pirates of the Caribbean." Since implementing many of these changes, the last four films grossed the majority of the franchise's money worldwide — over $3.2 billion.

fast and furious 7 cast

Universal also embraced social media. It gave "Fast & Furious 6" the largest social media campaign in the studio's history, leading to a Facebook following of 34 million at the time.

"Furious 7," meanwhile, amassed a fan following of 53 million on its official Facebook page. Before the film's release, the number rivaled other upcoming anticipated blockbusters at the time like "Avengers: Age of Ultron" (which had 13.4 million likes) and "Star Wars" (13 million likes). It also helps that Vin Diesel has one of the largest Facebook followings with more than 100 million followers. Today, the Fast and Furious Facebook page has over 60 million followers. The others currently have 14.8 million and 18.5 million followers, respectively.

fate of the furious facebook 

The best lesson Universal learned is that before sending your franchise to the $5 bin, listen to your fanbase, whether its at test screenings or on social media. Having Vin Diesel onboard doesn't hurt, either.

Ian Phillips contributed to an earlier version of this story.

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'The Fate of the Furious' could make $400 million over the weekend and top 'Furious 7'

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Fate of the Furious Universal

March holdovers "Beauty and the Beast" and "The Boss Baby" are the only things keeping the Hollywood box office afloat right now, so Universal's "The Fate of the Furious" couldn't come at a better time.

The eighth movie in the "Fast and Furious" franchise (opening Friday), with wall-to-wall hype, is projected to take in major coin over the weekend, and it could even top the unprecedented success of "Furious 7." Estimates range between $380 million and $400 million worldwide, according to Variety. Domestically the movie should easily take in over $100 million.

Releasing its title in 63 markets globally and showing on the most IMAX screens ever for a movie, Universal is expecting fans of the franchise to come out in droves and pay top dollar to watch Vin Diesel, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, and "Fast and Furious" newbie Charlize Theron drive fast and do insane stunts.

However, the movie has a big hill to climb if it plans to top the opening "Furious 7" had.

The 2015 hit broke the record for biggest opening weekend in April with $147.1 million domestically, and worldwide it took in $397.7 million, leading to the movie eventually earning $1.5 billion worldwide over its theatrical run, by far the largest haul for any movie in the franchise.

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John Boyega tries to survive a riot in the intense 'Detroit' trailer

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Detroit trailer final

Oscar-winning director Kathryn Bigelow is finally giving us another movie, and it looks like a riveting one.

Bigelow is known for her action-centered projects like "Point Break,""K-19: The Widowmaker," and "The Hurt Locker," and the trailer for her latest movie, "Detroit," is now online. It's her first feature film in five years, following "Zero Dark Thirty."

"Detroit" looks at the infamous 1967 Detroit riot, which sparked one of the largest citizen uprisings in US history. 

The cast includes John Boyega, John Krasinski, Jason Mitchell, and Anthony Mackie. The tense plot follows police and citizens as things get violent in Detroit, and race plays a crucial role.

Watch the trailer below. The movie opens in theaters on August 4.

 

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Why 'Fast and Furious' fans will love 'Fate of the Furious,' even though it makes no sense

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Fate of the Furious Universal

I have to admit, it’s kind of hard to review the “Fast and Furious” movies.

The franchise from Universal has pretty much perfected its formula to the point that it can only be derailed if everyone involved suddenly has a serious mental lapse.

Now, that doesn’t mean the movies are easy to pull off. Being a director for any of these titles means having to navigate huge egos from the cast and being the one everyone takes jabs at if the stunts and action don’t surpass the previous film in the series.

But let me put all the “Furious” fanatics at ease: “The Fate of the Furious” lives up to the hype, even if it isn't a great movie (did you really expect it to be?).

Though most of the die-hards will find that it doesn’t surpass “Furious 7” in the “wow” department (I mean, they drove cars out of an airplane in that one!), director F. Gary Gray (“Straight Outta Compton”) and his team use every trick to distract you from the fact that nothing in this movie makes sense. (And I mean that in a good way.)

The movie opens with Dom (Vin Diesel) and Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) enjoying a lovely honeymoon in Cuba. But suddenly his cousin is in a dispute about payment for his ratty car. Dom steps in and before you know it he’s racing the guy who wants his cousin’s car so his cousin can keep it. The kicker: Dom has to use his cousin’s car in the race.

After enhancing the car with some "Cuban nos," Dom races the guy, and at one point his engine catches on fire, so to avoid the flames he has to drive the final stretch backward to get the win.

Of course, Dom, with Cuban children surrounding him to praise his win, refuses to take his opponent’s car as his prize. Respect from the man is good enough.

Honestly, one thing you can say about the “Fast and Furious” franchise: It really highlights the rewards that come with giving and getting respect.

Jason Statham and Dwayne The Rock Johnson In Fate of the FuriousBut back to the action. The major plot of “Fate of the Furious” goes like this: Dom has gone rouge on his team/family and the rest have to stop him from using a nuclear weapon to complete the evil plan of Cipher (Charlize Theron).

Outside of the dull scenes needed to keep the pointless plot going — even the charisma of Kurt Russell returning as Mr. Nobody to deliver exposition can't overcome the fact that bland Scott Eastwood is right next to him trying to fit in as the newbie of the group — the movie has a great prison-fight scene featuring Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and Jason Statham, as well as a fun New York City chase scene.

The topper of the New York chase is when a group of cars, on self-drive mode after being hacked by Cipher, all shoot out of a parking garage's windows high above a street and land on the car Cipher is trying to get to.

And then there’s the action sequence in which Statham’s Deckard takes out an airplane full of bad guys while holding a baby in a car seat.

Yes, you read that correctly. I’ll give you a moment to collect yourselves.

The insane scene is made all the better by Deckard stopping from time to time to see how the baby is doing. The kid is having the time of his life.

the fate of the furious

The Rock fans will love the insults he throws at everyone throughout, there’s a great Helen Mirren cameo, and the finale with the submarine in icy waters is a fun time, but a lot of its juice is taken away seeing as how much of it was shown in the trailers.

So how does Universal top this one? It might be time to take Dom’s crew to space.

“The Fate of the Furious” opens in theaters on Friday.

 

SEE ALSO: Ranked: The 28 best car crashes in movie history

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How the 'Fate of the Furious' director pulled off the insane stunts in the movie

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F. Gary Gray on the set of Fate of the Furious

In modern-day filmmaking, there’s spectacle, and then there’s the Fast and Furious franchise. The speed-addled, gravity-defying, increasingly lunatic saga sees the release of its eighth film, The Fate of the Furious — get it? I hope you get it — this weekend, and it’s got some big shoes to fill. What started off with a $40 million movie about an undercover sting in the Los Angeles street-racing scene became by 2015’s Furious 7 a story of international intrigue, high-tech hackers, and, uh, street racing that cost nearly $200 million to make. It also earned a billion-and-a-half dollars worldwide, cementing the series’ record as Universal’s highest-grossing franchise of all time and virtually guaranteeing that Fast and Furiousmovies would continue until Vin Diesel decides to retire from acting and devote his full attention to Dungeons & Dragons.

If there’s one question that emerges from the franchise’s 958 minutes of cars falling out of airplanes, cars fighting tanks, and cars jumping between buildings, it’s this: How the hell do you direct one of these things? This time around, that task went to veteran filmmaker F. Gary Gray, the fifth director to come aboard the franchise. While Gray had worked with many of the core elements of the Fast series before, including action (Law Abiding Citizen), car chases (The Italian Job), and Vin Diesel (A Man Apart), nothing quite prepares you for directing a movie of this budget and magnitude, aside from, well, directing a movie of this budget and magnitude. When I met with Gray at the Four Seasons Hotel in Los Angeles, he was jet-lagged from doing pre-release press in China, where, true to franchise brand, he took a death-defying toboggan ride down the Great Wall. The Fate of the Furiousis Gray’s first major international press tour, and in China, he found the level of excitement you might expect from the successor to the country’s best-performing cinematic import ever.

When Universal needed a director for the eighth Fast and Furious, Gray was coming off a big win for the studio with Straight OuttaCompton, which made $200 million on a budget of just $28 million and earned an Oscar nomination for its script. He prepared by speaking to the architects of the franchise: producer Neil Moritz, who’s been involved with all eight movies; writer Chris Morgan, who’s written every Fast movie since Tokyo Drift; and Diesel, the star who came on as a producer starting with the fourth movie. Luckily, the trio already had a hook: This time, Diesel’s Dom Toretto goes rogue.

“Immediately, I’m thinking, Wow, that’s a great twist, because it’s family, family, family, family, family, family, family, and the family goes on a mission against the world,” Gray says, rivaling a Fast and Furious script for number of utterances of the word “family.” “It’s never, the family breaks apart and goes against each other. Dom is Darth Vader?Okay.

Gray had the entry point he needed, as well as a unique antagonist: Charlize Theron’s Cipher happens to be both the series’ first female baddie and a twist on the typical gun-toting villain. Gray describes her as a sociopath who holds the key to what makes Dom turn, and Theron came in with her own vision of the character. “The braids, that’s her idea. The Metallica T-shirt, that’s her idea. It makes her a little more funky as opposed to this normal Silicon Valley hacker.”

Of course, directing the eighth film in any series brings with it another challenge: How do you maintain a tonal consistency with the installments that came before while still bringing your own personal touch? Different franchises have handled this in different ways. At Marvel, super-producer Kevin Feige oversees its sprawling cinematic universe, and the studio tends to employ directors whose specialty is more tonal and character-oriented than visual. DC is in the process of creating its own extended universe, with the idiosyncratic Zack Snyder making two movies that have little in common with the equally idiosyncratic David Ayer’s Suicide Squad; the directors on deck, including Patty Jenkins, Matt Reeves, and Fast 7 alum James Wan, don’t seem likely to follow in either of their footsteps. Fox, meanwhile, has given up altogether, having produced such wildly divergent movies as Bryan Singer’s X-Men saga, James Mangold’s stand-alone Wolverine installments, and Deadpool, whose director, Tim Miller, is out for the sequel. Other long-running franchises like James Bond tend to reboot when a new director or star comes on. On few other megafranchises is continuity as important as it is to Fast.

F. Gary Gray and Vin Diesel on the set of Fate of the Furious

For Gray, that meant trusting franchise’s guardians like Morgan, Moritz, and Diesel, the latter two having a combined 30 years exploring the tao of Toretto. “I don’t look at it as, now I have to conform — I look at it as, these are building blocks to help make decisions for my vision,” Gray says. It helped that he’s not a filmmaker who’s married to one particular aesthetic: “Friday doesn’t look like Law Abiding Citizen. Italian Job doesn’t look like Straight Outta Compton.”

In long conversations with Gray in the Dominican Republic, Diesel spoke about the direction of the franchise, the significance of Fate, and how best to honor the legacy of the late Paul Walker. Morgan, meanwhile, was the man who supplied many of what Gray calls the “trailer moments,” including a bonkers third-act chase sequence involving a nuclear submarine. And Gray brought plenty of his own ideas, from the twisty “Cuban Mile” race that factors prominently in the first scene, to the Haka dance that Dwayne Johnson’s Hobbs does with his daughter’s soccer team, to the name of Scott Eastwood’s character, an apprentice of Kurt Russell’s Mr. Nobody: Little Nobody.

Some of these ideas demonstrated the unique opportunities for a director in making a movie at this budget and scale. After seeing a video online of a tank called the “Ripsaw,” Gray asked his line producer to get him one to put in the movie. ”He’s like, ‘Ah, that’s impossible, you’ve got to call the Department of Defense, and the way we would have to shoot it, we would have to have three. We only have access to one, but we need three in order to shoot this sequence. And then we have to ship it to Iceland. So it’s impossible.’ And I said, ‘Okay, well, we’re going to have to figure that out. Make it possible.’ And they made it possible.”

At another point, Gray was faced with a dilemma that could seemingly only happen to a director of a Fast movie. One scene features a so-called “impenetrable limousine,” which Toretto is supposed to break into with a badass saw. Except the prop department gave him one that was, frankly, a little too wimpy. “They came up with this Home Depot saw,” Gray says. “And I was like, ‘Naw. We’re going to have to design something a little more than that. I know the action in these movies can be outrageous, but let’s find a way to make this look really cool.’” (The saw in the movie is appropriately badass.)

Later, Gray had to reassure a cost-conscious producer who asked him, “You want to drown a Lamborghini?” Gray’s reasoning? “Listen, we have a submarine. We’re already beyond the boundaries of reason. Let’s have some fun with it.”

It wasn’t just a Lambo that got drowned: Among the cars in the movie are Bentleys, Corvette Stingrays, Jaguars, and Dodge Chargers, many of which meet the kinds of ends that will have car enthusiasts in the audience weeping into their sleeves. (The value of the cars totaled in this film makes the budget of Straight Outta Compton look like a child’s allowance.) But for Gray, this wasn’t excess: The orgies of destruction helped avoid the temptation to go fully CGI and puncture the franchise’s wafer-thin sense of verisimilitude. On a few scenes that ended up on the cutting-room floor, Gray was astonished to find that some of the shots were so outlandish that they looked fake, even though they actually happened.

“We did it for real,” Gray says. “These aren’t CG cars. These are atomic-orange Lamborghinis flying on the ice in Iceland, being chased by a submarine and tanks and things like that. It’s like being a big kid. I used to play with Legos when I was a kid. I had this big suitcase full of colorful Legos and Hot Wheels. This movie was like that big suitcase of fun for me.”

A submarine enters the picture in Fate of the Furious

To make the spectacle as coherent as he could, Gray created what he calls a “war wall,” where the movie could be seen at a glance. On the board he and his primary collaborators — including his director of photography, Stephen F. Windon, and his production designer, Bill Brzeski — could tweak and adjust individual elements, making them more visual and more distinct.

“I look at the movie almost musically: I look at the rhythm and pacing from beginning to end, and the influences of color palette, casting,” Gray says. “If there are any moments that feel too similar to what has been established up to this point, I would make adjustments: Okay, well, this car looks too much like the car from 5, so let’s change the rim color. Let’s make it a matte finish on the paint instead of a gloss finish.

On a production as fluid as this one, standard shot listings and pre-visualizations play a role, but they’re far more likely to change than they might be on a smaller film. That meant Gray had to work even more closely with his second- and third-unit directors — including series veteran Spiro Razatos, who handled much of the hard-core action — to ensure that Fatenever became a reproduction of the previous movies.

In one of Fate’s standout sequences, hacked cars hurl themselves like bombs off the upper floors of a parking garage in New York City. The scene is shot partly through the rearview cameras of the cars as they speed backward out of the garage; one memorable shot comes from a camera affixed to a car as it spins end over end through the air.

“I remember the phone call I made to Spiro in order to get that shot in particular,” Gray says. “I looked at the pre-viz and I wasn’t really satisfied. I said, ‘You know, this feels like the idea is bigger than the coverage. How can we do something that’s really special?’ These scenes are so massive that a lot of times, the instinct is just to get it, and you shoot these wide shots and you make sure you have it, because if you don’t, it’s a lot of money wasted. But what stimulates the audience is the detail shots within it.”

If Gray can be said to have a directorial trademark, it’s his use of helicopter shots, which he employed on one his first directing gigs, the video for Ice Cube’s “It Was a Good Day.” As he explains, it’s not just that they look cool. (Though they do look cool.) “It’s a pacing device,” he says. “Sometimes you need that air after you have something intense. You want to take a deep breath.”

Fate’s Cuban Mile race was actually shot in Havana, and the helicopter Gray used was the first one many of the locals had seen in their lives (and a massive logistical undertaking, considering it was an American aircraft in Cuban territory.) The crew set up monitors so spectators could watch the helicopter footage. Gray calls it a “profound” experience: “A lot of these people have never been off this island, never been off the ground. To see their city from that perspective, it made them cry.”

cuban mile furious 8

Another, smaller benefit for the locals: Before they shot the race, which includes several vintage cars, the Cuban government had to pave over the potholes in the roads. “Imagine a 1950s car going 100 mph on a street that’s like the streets in L.A.,” Gray says. “None of those cars would have survived.”

No matter how much NOS they use, Fast’s race scenes still resemble street races in other films; it’s the insane set pieces that truly make a Fast and Furious movie. Fate has its fair share of these, including a hacked-car pileup in New York and a midair shootout involving Jason Statham and a baby wearing Beats headphones. But no scene is more deliriously over the top than the one involving the heroes and a nuclear submarine. This is the kind of sequence that makes you marvel over the fact that these movies are made by human beings, even ones with access to the toys and money that the Fate filmmakers had access to. So, how do you direct a thing like this?

“You surround yourself with people who are way smarter than you,” Gray says with a laugh. “With the submarine, it was a huge idea, obviously, literally and figuratively, and to pull that off was just one big Rubik’s Cube. There’s a little bit of a suspension of disbelief that you have to embrace. But that’s what people go to these movies for: When you have a $2 million super-car jump from building to building in 7, or these cars flying out of an airplane. You have to top that.”

 

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Here's The Rock's insane workout and diet he uses to get ripped for 'Fast and Furious'

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WWE heavyweight turned highest-paid actor in the world Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson seems to get bigger and bigger with every movie. His body hardly even looks real, and he works hard to maintain it. He's striving for greatness, and a great physique is one of his top priorities.

For "The Fate of the Furious," he bulked up to make his character, Hobbs, the biggest he's ever appeared in the "Fast and Furious" movies or on the big screen generally.

Johnson often documents his workout routine and diet on his Instagram account, where he also occasionally posts photos and videos of his adorable dogs.

Here's what The Rock's workout routine and diet are like:

SEE ALSO: RANKED: The 28 best car chases in movie history

He loves to work out — maybe too much.

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"He loves to train, so you struggle to keep him out of the gym," said Dave Rienzi, Johnson's trainer. "When I started working with [Johnson], he was spending too much time in the gym, which was a little counterproductive, so I had to try to limit him to a really intense 45-60 minutes."

Source: Men's Health UK



His weight often fluctuates, and his goal weight depends on the movie.

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For his role in "The Fate of the Furious," he added 22 pounds to his already bulky body to be the "meanest, strongest" Hobbs yet.

"I'm stepping on set 260lbs of the meanest, strongest and most highly funny & entertaining s--- talkin' version of Hobbs the franchise has ever seen," Johnson said on Instagram.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Samuel L. Jackson really wants Mace Windu to return to the 'Star Wars' movies

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Samuel L. Jackson isn’t ready to give up his role as Mace Windu just yet, and is again campaigning for the character to return. After making appearances in the Star Wars prequel movie trilogy, Windu was one of the first to oppose Anakin Skywalker’s place within the Jedi Order, and his distrust was proven to be well placed. When Anakin rescued his new (Sith) master from meeting his death at the hand of Mace, Master Windu was seemingly killed in the process. He famously had his limbs cut off and was whisked away into the nightlife of Coruscant to his death… Or did he?

In the years since Revenge of the Sith hit theaters, Jackson has continued to say that in his mind Mace was able to survive these events and continued to live out his life. However, there has yet to be any official word on whether or not this is actually the case, but with a setting as big and as public as Star Wars Celebration, he is making one more pitch to Lucasfilm.

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Jackson was not able to be in attendance at Star Wars Celebration Orlando 2017, but he sent in a video message so he could still participate in the festivities. After stating that everyone knows Jedi can live through drastic falls and come back better than ever with mechanical appendages, he specifically addressed Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy to try and make something happen:

"I am not dead … Mace Windu is awaiting his return. Let’s make it happen. Kathy you’re sitting right there."

Even if Lucasfilm did want to grant Jackson his request and rework canon so Mace Windu is still out there fighting, the question then becomes where his plea could be filled. Unless Mace has a life expectancy that is far great than a typical human being, there is almost no chance he is still around during the ongoing Star Wars film trilogy. Maybe Mace could find a role in one of the Star Wars anthology movies in development. In fact, he would be almost the perfect age to make an appearance in a hypothetical Obi-Wan standalone movie starring Ewan McGregor.

If it is not in an anthology capacity, the prospects of Mace returning appears to be low. Jackson’s desire and that of some fans may be enough to kick off conversations in Lucasfilm, but they have remained quiet on the possibility of his return throughout the Disney-led revival of the Star Wars movie franchise. Maybe this will be a big enough push to make something happen (especially since Lucasfilm definitely knew that was on his tape) and Jackson’s plea will prove to be less far-fetched than it seems.

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'Fast and Furious' has given Corona $15 million worth of product placement — absolutely free

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When you think about the "Fast and Furious" series, what are the first things that come to mind? Cars? Explosions? Family

How about Corona?

Throughout the "Fast" saga — starting with the original 2001 film, when Vin Diesel's Dom tells Paul Walker's Brian, "You can have any brew you want... as long as it's a Corona"— the Mexican pale lager has had a starring role. 

In an eye-opening feature, The Ringer explored the relationship between the film franchise (whose latest, "The Fate of the Furious," is out Friday) and the beer. The site uncovered that the brew's involvement in the films hasn't been a long-running promotional deal, as you'd likely expect, but instead it's a natural relationship that just made sense

“I was trying to make an L.A. saga, and Corona, to me, just seemed like this iconic, Southern California beer,” Rob Cohen, who directed the first installment, told The Ringer. 

fast and furious corona

For the first film, there was no formal product-placement agreement. Corona simply sent the production a few cases of beer and granted the filmmakers permission to use the name in the movie.

Little did Corona's part owner, the global beer company AB InBev — or anyone else — know that the "Fast" franchise would grow into a $4 billion juggernaut (so far) that now includes the 6th-highest-grossing movie of all time worldwide in "Furious 7."

Eric Smallwood, managing partner at Apex Marketing Group, estimates that the beer's placement in the "Fast" films has brought the company over $15 million worth of free advertising. 

And if the below screenshot from a behind-the-scenes shot from B-roll of "The Fate of the Furious" is any indication, it looks like Corona will continue to be a part of the "Fast" universe as the series continues.

Fast 8 Corona

But despite the success of the films, the relationship with Corona has remained unchanged. Dom and his crew drink Corona because they like it — it's who they are. 

Read the original story, "How Corona Became the 'Fast and Furious' Beer of Choice," on The Ringer.

SEE ALSO: Here's The Rock's insane workout and diet he uses to get ripped for 'Fast and Furious'

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The story of how 'The Fast and the Furious' franchise got its name

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Before "The Fast and the Furious" franchise became a box office juggernaut with nearly $4 billion earned at the worldwide box office, producer Neal Moritz struggled to settle on a title. According to an interview Moritz, titles like "Racer X,""Street Wars," and "Redline" were being considered before he was reminded of a 1955 B-movie about race car drivers.

Business Insider recently sat down with B-movie king Roger Corman at his office in Los Angeles to talk about his most recent project,
"Roger Corman's Death Race 2050,"  a sequel to the cult hit "Death Race 2000," which Corman produced in 1975. 

Corman recounted the story of how Moritz approached him about appropriating the title, and the unusual request that Corman made in return. 

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'The Lost City of Z' is the best movie of 2017 so far

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Director James Gray has quietly been creating an impressive body of work for the last two decades, but his latest movie is his magnum opus.

Since 1994's "Little Odessa," Gray has told intimate tales often about hardworking people in unique situations. There was ex-con Leo Handler (Mark Wahlberg) in the corrupt world of the Queens rail yard in "The Yards" (2000), and Ewa Cybulska (Marion Cotillard), forced into a life of burlesque dancing in "The Immigrant" (2013).

But in "The Lost City of Z," Gray ups his game and tells an epic story that explores big dreams and the sacrifices that come with them.

the lost city of z4finalIf the title of the movie (out in limited release April 14 — it'll go nationwide April 21 and be available on Amazon later this year) sounds familiar, that's because it's based on the popular 2009 nonfiction book "The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon" by David Grann.

In it, Grann recounts the life of Percy Fawcett, a British explorer who in 1925 went into the Amazon jungle with his son to find an ancient lost city he believed existed and never returned.

The legend of the city that Fawcett named Z is well-known in the expedition community. As many as 100 people have died or disappeared searching for Fawcett or the city he was obsessed with.

Gray has taken Grann's book, which also recounts the author's quest to find Z, and brings Fawcett and his journey to life with such rich detail, you'll feel the sweat of the jungle. That's partly because of the stunning photography by Oscar-nominated cinematographer Darius Khondji and the talents of production designer Jean-Vincent Puzos.

Charlie Hunnam ("Sons of Anarchy") plays Fawcett as a man who's driven to make a name for his family in an era when class and legacy are everything and finds stardom as an explorer. Robert Pattinson is at his side as Henry Costin, a soft-spoken but equally driven aide-de-camp.

Both give incredible performances. It's the best one yet for Pattinson. His brooding stare is perfect for a character who must toil in the horrific conditions of the Amazon — at one point half his face is infected by a bug bite.

The Lost City of Z AmazonHunnam, meanwhile, is an incredible talent who thanks to some lousy movies has been largely missed by a wider audience. Here he gives a tour-de-force performance that proves his capabilities as a leading man. He carries this movie on his back with an intensity that is a joy to watch. He's sensitive and kind in some instances, ferocious in others.

The movie is close to two and a half hours, but it requires every second. To properly tell the story of Fawcett's journey — and make you fully understand his obsession with Z — we need to chronicle most of his adult life: being a cartographer in Brazil in the 1900s, going on one of his first expeditions to find Z, fighting in World War I, and going on his fatal final quest to find the lost city with his son, Jack (played by the new Spider-Man, Tom Holland).

The lengthy running time is also needed to delve into Fawcett's home life with his wife, Nina (Sienna Miller), and growing family. In another movie, this part would be omitted or stripped to brief moments, but Gray details Nina's struggles as she deals with Fawcett going off to explore and leaving her to care for their children. Still, she champions him, even at one point pleading to go with him.

If there's a movie so far this year you need to see on the big screen, it's this one. Its rich story, performances, and lush visuals should be taken in at the theater, where you can fully immerse yourself.

Then go see it again. I plan to.

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Here's how the stars of 'Fast & Furious' have changed over the years

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The 'Fast & Furious' franchise has been going on strong for 16 years, grossing over $4 billion at the worldwide box office. Here's how the cast changed over all those films we've watched and loved.

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'Fate of the Furious' is on its way to toppling 'Furious 7' at the box office

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"The Fate of the Furious" is coming fast out of the gate.

The eighth installment in the "Fast and the Furious" franchise, out Friday, already earned $10.4 million in Thursday night previews in over 3,300 theaters, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

The movie is on track to make over $100 million domestically and $400 million globally over the full weekend. With the movie playing in 63 markets globally and showing on the most IMAX screens ever for a movie, there's a good chance that this latest "Furious" movie could surpass the record-breaking opening "Furious 7" had.

The 2015 hit broke the record for the biggest opening weekend in April with $147.1 million domestically, and worldwide it took in $397.7 million, leading to the movie eventually earning $1.5 billion worldwide over its theatrical run, the largest haul for any movie in the franchise. It's also the sixth highest-earning movie worldwide ever.

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Meet Rose from 'The Last Jedi,' the newest major character in the 'Star Wars' universe

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rose star wars last jedi Kelly Marie Tran

Star Wars” fans were introduced to a major new character Friday: Rose.

The newcomer, portrayed by actress Kelly Marie Tran, was introduced at the “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” panel at the “Star Wars” Celebration event in Orlando, Fla.

“[She] has the biggest new part in the movie and ironically is played by the smallest actor,” director Rian Johnson said while introducing the actress.

“She’s part of the Resistance, and she works in maintenance. I can’t wait for you to meet her,” said Tran, an Asian American comedian known for her digital shorts.

“She’s not a soldier,” Johnson explained. “She’s not looking to be a hero, and she gets pulled a very big way into an adventure in this movie with Finn [John Boyega].”

Judging by the prolonged hug she had with Mark Hamill, Rose and Luke Skywalker may share screen time as well.

Tran was a fan of the space saga before landing the role. She had to keep the role secret from her family.

“They didn’t know for four months,” Tran explained. “I told them I was doing an indie movie in Canada. At one point, I actually got some maple syrup so I could bring it back to them so they actually thought I was in Canada.”

It’s unclear if Tran’s humor will be reflected in character, but Johnson said he was really excited about her addition to the cast.

“She’s pretty rad,” Johnson added.

“Star Wars: The Last Jedi” opens December 15, 2017.

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How the best movie of the year so far, 'The Lost City of Z,' almost fell apart

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Director James Gray has a high tolerance for pain. Not necessarily physical, but definitely mental.

Over the two decades he's been making movies, Gray has dealt with everything from battles with Harvey Weinstein over two of his movies ("The Yards" and "The Immigrant") to navigating the media circus created when the star of his movie "Two Lovers," Joaquin Phoenix, suddenly decided to quit acting and become a hip-hop artist (Phoenix later admitted the whole thing was a hoax).

So going into the jungle to make a movie about an explorer's obsession with finding a lost city wasn't exactly something that intimidated the 47-year-old director, at least in theory.

But then the toils of making "The Lost City of Z," out Friday (it's based on the nonfiction book), almost did break Gray over the nine-year period of putting it together, plagued with one crisis after another.

Movies set in the jungle include some of cinema's most memorable works — Francis Ford Coppola's "Apocalypse Now," Werner Herzog's "Aguirre, the Wrath of God" and "Fitzcarraldo." They've also been the sources of legendary stories about the grueling efforts to pull them off.

apocalypse now united artistsHerzog, the poster child of the jungle movie, once said on the set of "Fitzcarraldo,""Taking a close look at what's around us there is some sort of harmony — it is the harmony of overwhelming and collective murder." Francis Ford Coppola's "Apocalypse Now" was plagued with typhoon, the need for millions of dollars to complete it, and the star, Martin Sheen, suffering a heart attack during production.

Gray was aware of what the jungle can do to filmmaking when Brad Pitt's production company Plan B called him in 2008 offering him the job to adapt "The Lost City of Z." Though he agreed to make the movie, even his friends tried to talk him out of it.

A friend, director Matt Reeves ("Dawn of the Planet of the Apes"), gave Gray a warning after seeing the script.

"He calls me and says, 'Why do you want to make this movie? I don't understand.' So I said, 'What do you mean, it's that bad?' And he said, 'It's not bad — I just don't understand why you would ever want to do that.' He was talking about the craziness of pulling off the shoot," Gray recently told Business Insider.

But then he had a conversation with Coppola.

"I found out that Francis went to Roger Corman before shooting 'Apocalypse Now' and asked him what it was like shooting in the jungle and Corman wrote back, 'Don't go,'" Gray said. "But Francis is the last person to tell you don't go. He was the opposite with me. He not only told me to do it, he said, 'You know, I have this place in Belize.' And I was thinking maybe I go shoot at Coppola's resort in Belize, but that was totally impractical."

But Coppola's urging gave Gray the comfort he needed.

"The Lost City of Z" is Gray's most ambitious work yet. It follows British explorer Percy Fawcett, who in 1925 went into the Amazon jungle with his son to find an ancient lost city he believed existed and never returned.

To build up to the drama of Fawcett's final journey to find Z, Gray recounts the years before, which included exciting attempts to find clues to the city as well as fighting in World War I.

Charlie Hunnam gives an incredible performance as Fawcett with Robert Pattinson, Tom Holland, and Sienna Miller rounding out the cast.

Though the casting seems spot-on — especially Hunnam in the lead — it was the challenge of finding the star after Brad Pitt backed out that almost caused Gray to walk away from the movie.

Brad Pitt James Gray GettyFor over a year, Gray talked to Pitt about playing Fawcett while Gray was scouting locations in Brazil, but things quickly didn't work out as planned.

"Brad bought the book and I don't know how much thought he did give originally of him playing [Fawcett] but he knew it was something of interest," Gray said. "Then he went to make 'World War Z' and the movie fell apart." (Pitt is still a producer on the film.)

Gray forgot about the project and made "The Immigrant." Then while in postproduction on the movie he got a call from Plan B about having Benedict Cumberbatch play Fawcett.

"He has this great face and voice so I said, 'Great, let's make it,'" Gray said.

But two weeks before production was supposed to start, Gray got a call from a very sad Cumberbatch.

"He called and said he couldn't do the shoot. His wife was pregnant and would have given birth when we were in Amazonia," Gray said. "I couldn't be angry about it. So then I gave up. I said this is not going to happen."

The jungle delivered its wrath even before shooting started. But then Gray got a call from Plan B again a few months later.

"They asked about Charlie Hunnam and I said, 'Unacceptable. I will not cast some California biker dude to do a British accent,'" Gray said.

Having known Hunnam only from the FX show "Sons of Anarchy," he was shocked when the producers informed him that Hunnam was actually from Newcastle, England.

"I thought he was from Newport Beach," Gray said.

The two had dinner and Gray was instantly sold. Not just on his looks, which Gray compares to a 1930s movie star, but also on the actor's desire.

"He needed to prove himself," Gray said. "He felt inadequate on a creative level, that he hasn't gotten the chance to do the quality of work that he wants to do. So next thing I knew I was on a raft in the jungle with the guy."

Principal photography lasted from August to October 2015. Filming took place in Northern Ireland and in the jungles of Colombia. And shooting in the jungle had its fair share of injuries and sicknesses. Hunnam woke up late one night to find that a beetle had crawled into his ear, one of the grips was bitten by a viper, another crew member got malaria, and two people in the AD department got dengue fever.

The Lost City of Z AmazonGray, however, survived the shoot unscathed. He wore long-sleeve shirts and pants that had permethrin in the clothing, which kept him from any disease-carrying bugs, though he admits he looked like a beekeeper. He also brought along a suitcase full of San Marzano tomatoes to make pasta every night for himself and the crew, which he said kept him away from stomach problems.

"It's a very high-class problem," Gray said of the stories about jungle shoots. "You have all these people working for you to realize your dream and that pain goes away and all you remember is the glorious time of making it. The pain has gone away for me."

Gray admits that after wrapping "The Lost City of Z" he vowed he would never make a movie in the jungle again. He even ignored editing the jungle footage until that was all that was left to edit. But now he has a deep affection for the jungle.

"I used to not understand people like Herzog who keep coming back to the jungle, but now I understand," Gray said. "It's the most heightened form of your existence, much more than the cold or the desert. I've been to Everest, there's nothing there other than the goddamn mountain. The jungle is exploding with life. You cannot fall to sleep at night, that's how loud the insects and animal life is. Would I ever go back? If the material was right, I would. Yeah, I would."

"The Lost City of Z" opens in select theaters on Friday and goes nationwide April 21. It will be available to stream on Amazon later this year.

 

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'Fate of the Furious' has the biggest global box-office opening ever with $532.5 million

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The latest movie in the "Fast and the Furious" franchise, "The Fate of the Furious," did not disappoint at the global box office as the eighth installment took in an estimated global haul of $532.5 million, according to numerous reports.

That surpasses "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" ($528.9 million) for the all-time best global opening weekend.

It's also the best for its studio, Universal, beating the $525.5 million that "Jurassic World" earned in 2015.

The movie also took in $432.3 million at the international box office.

That figure blows away the previous overseas record holder, "Jurassic World" with $316.6 million. It was an incredible weekend in China, with "Furious 8" taking in a record-breaking $63.9 million opening day. It went on to make $190 million in the country over the weekend — the biggest opening ever for a Hollywood movie there.

Where Universal underperformed, surprisingly, was in North America, where the movie took in only $100.2 million.

Never expected to take on the enormous $147.1 million opening weekend that 2015's "Furious 7" did, with mixed reviews from critics, "Fate of the Furious" barely crossed the $100 million mark. The culprit is Saturday sales, which dipped a steep 32% from its Friday take of $45.8 million (including Thursday previews).

But it's hard for Universal executives to get too caught up about that, especially in the current era of the business where international box office is arguably more important for studios than US coin.

Also helping the film's big weekend is being released on 1,079 IMAX screens worldwide, the widest opening ever for a single film in IMAX history. The finally tally was $31.1 million globally on IMAX screens alone, a record for April.

Don't be surprised if you hear soon the studio announce a ninth film in the franchise (or Vin Diesel make it public to his Facebook fans).

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