Austin Butler, Zoë Kravitz Heat Up Trailer for Darren Aronofsky's Crime Thriller ‘Caught Stealing'
Sony Pictures is set to release Darren Aronofsky's thriller feature in theaters Aug. 29. Matt Smith, Liev Schreiber, Bad Bunny, D'Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Griffin Dunne, Carol Kane, Regina King and Vincent D'Onofrio round out the cast.
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Caught Stealing stars Butler as Hank Thompson, a down-on-his-luck former baseball player who is suddenly immersed in the New York City crime underworld in the late 1990s.
Aronofsky helmed the film from a script by Charlie Huston, who wrote the books on which the movie is based. Caught Stealing hails from Protozoa and counts Aronofsky, Jeremy Dawson, Dylan Golden and Ari Handel as producers.
Butler's recent projects include the features Dune: Part Two and The Bikeriders and the series Masters of the Air. He can soon be seen in Ari Aster's Eddington, which screened at Cannes this month and also stars Joaquin Phoenix, Pedro Pascal and Emma Stone.
Aronofsky most recently directed the 2022 drama The Whale, which won two Oscars, including best actor for star Brendan Fraser. Among the latter's competition in the category was Butler's performance for Elvis.
During Sony's presentation at CinemaCon earlier this year, Aronofsky debuted Caught Stealing's first footage and teased the film as 'something different.' He added, 'I wanted to do something that was a lot of fun.'
Aronofsky noted that he shot the project in NYC and called the movie 'a true love letter to the greatest city in the world,' which also happens to be the filmmaker's hometown.
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Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
How 'KPop Demon Hunters' became the surprise hit of the summer
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Musical tradition — and K-pop — are honored The 'KPop Demon Hunters' soundtrack utilizes some of the best and brightest in the genre. That included a partnership with K-pop company The Black Label, co-founded by super producer Teddy Park, known for his work with YG, Blackpink and 2NE1 — empowered girl groups used as references for the film's protagonists, the trio HUNTR/X. It's one of the many reasons the musical film's soundtrack stands on its own. Filmmakers 'really did their homework,' says Jeff Benjamin, a music journalist who specializes in K-pop. Indeed, they did a lot of research. One of the film's directors, Maggie Kang, said that her team prioritized 'representing the fandom and the idols in a very specific way,' as to not disappoint K-pop fans. They pulled from a treasure trove of influences heard at every corner: The fictional, rival boy band Saja Boys' hit song 'Soda Pop,' for example, references the '90s K-pop group H.O.T. And it has worked. 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Yahoo
8 hours ago
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Why Did Heidi Klum Leave ‘Project Runway'?
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Forbes
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The AI-Altered ‘Wizard Of Oz' Controversy, Explained
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