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Blumhouse Acquiring ‘Saw' Rights From Twisted Pictures

Blumhouse Acquiring ‘Saw' Rights From Twisted Pictures

Yahooa day ago

EXCLUSIVE: In a deal that will bring James Wan back in touch with the mega horror IP he first created, we hear from several sources that Blumhouse is acquiring the perspective rights to Twisted Pictures' portion of the Saw franchise.
In short, Blumhouse is essentially taking over the IP's ownership from Twisted's Mark Burg and Oren Koules. Lionsgate will continue to be involved as a partner, and in fact owns 50% of the franchise.
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As of this time, there isn't development on another movie yet. Wan directed the first Saw movie in 2004 and co-wrote with Leigh Whannell. Wan remained an EP on remaining Saw movies.
Saw follows the notorious serial killer John 'Jigsaw' Kramer and his cronies. Instead of killing his victims, he traps them in life-threatening tests and games as they try to survive through physical or psychological torture. The Saw franchise not only grossed over $1 billion at the global box office from ten movies, but spawned comic books, video games, theme park attractions, toys, masks and clothing.
The first Saw movie opened to $18.6M and made $56M domestic, $104M worldwide.
There was a Saw XI movie in development that was previously scheduled for September 2025. However, the project was stalled. Lionsgate and the producers of the Saw franchise didn't see eye-to-eye on the eleventh movie. Saw XI scribes Patrick Melton and Marcus Dunstan turned in a draft in 2024 with Saw X director Kevin Greutert attached to direct. His 2023 version opened to $18.3M domestic, finaled at $53.6M stateside and went north of $112M global.
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INdulge: It's heating up. Popular Filipino icy dessert is best thing I ate in Indy this week
INdulge: It's heating up. Popular Filipino icy dessert is best thing I ate in Indy this week

Indianapolis Star

time2 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

INdulge: It's heating up. Popular Filipino icy dessert is best thing I ate in Indy this week

We're starting to get some hot and humid days in Indianapolis, which some people allegedly enjoy. While summer is, to me, essentially one long Sisyphean effort to not sweat through my clothes, I must confess the season has one huge thing going for it — cold desserts. For this week's INdulge, I cooled off with the treasured sweet of a far-off nation. Brain freeze notwithstanding, it was certainly: If there is another dish like halo-halo, I certainly haven't encountered it in my (admittedly brief and very Middle American) existence. The popular Filipino dessert is a technicolor jumble of shaved ice, condensed milk or coconut milk, a scoop of ube ice cream and — so it would seem to someone eating halo-halo for the first time — pretty much whatever else the person making it feels like throwing in. On Sundays at the south side's Philippine Cultural and Community Center, you can find a lovely rendition prepared by Ardys Concession ($9). More: Yollie's Kitchen serves some of Indy's best comfort food at Philippine Cultural Center There is no set-in-stone recipe for halo-halo. But many modern renditions, like the one at Ardys, feature scarlet jelly-like bulbs of kaong palm fruit, cooked saba plantains, Filipino leche flan that's a touch denser than its more well-known Spanish counterpart, agar gelatin cubes called gulaman, sweetened kidney beans and bits of toasted flattened rice, or pinipig. Those ingredients and a few others await at the bottom of the glass. That's also where the thick, sweet milk concentrates, so be sure to mix your halo-halo well before digging in — easier said than done considering the top half of the dessert is already mushrooming out of its dish. While it may make for awkward consumption, that combining process effectively defines halo-halo. The dessert gets its name from the Filipino word haluhalo, which roughly translates to 'mixed together.' Many scholars trace halo-halo back to pre-World War II Japanese Filipinos, who adapted the Japanese class of shaved ice desserts called kakigōri by adding syrup-boiled Filipino mung beans rather than Japanese azuki beans. Filipino cuisine largely mirrors the Philippines' history of foreign intervention and immigration. The island nation endured centuries of Spanish imperial rule before declaring independence on June 12, 1898, then spent a half-century under a United States Insular Government and a few bloody years of Japanese occupation. Many Filipino soldiers and civilians were killed under both regimes. More on Ardys: They started at the bottom in a foreign country. Now they're some of Indy's top chefs Over time, Latin and Asian culinary traditions intersected. Since the creation of halo-halo, Filipinos have incorporated ingredients like kaong and saba, ultimately arriving at the splendid hodgepodge I recently downed too quickly at Ardys. The sweet milk, ube and shaved ice form a faintly fruity glue that marries together a seemingly incongruous spread of flavors and textures. The crunch of half-melted ice and nutty pinipig meets wobbling gulaman and gilded chunks of flan that may sound like overkill but, in my experience, went down just fine. Where one bite delivered candy shop levels of saccharine, the next brought starchy kidney beans and plantain. It's an unusual assembly of ingredients to a Westerner like me, but halo-halo makes a strong case for, literally, mixing things up now and again (side note: if anyone knows how to mix a towering glass of halo-halo without looking like you're using a spoon for the first time in your life, see my email address below). What: Halo-halo, $9 Where: Ardys Concession (currently open Sunday only, see Facebook page for updated hours to come), 4141 S. East St., (317) 985-6485,

Is the ‘Ballerina' John Wick Movie Streaming on Netflix or Amazon Prime?
Is the ‘Ballerina' John Wick Movie Streaming on Netflix or Amazon Prime?

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Is the ‘Ballerina' John Wick Movie Streaming on Netflix or Amazon Prime?

If you can't get enough of the John Wick franchise, I have good news for you: a new John Wick spin-off movie, Ballerina, opens in theaters this weekend. And even though he's not the star, Keanu Reeves makes an appearance in the Ballerina movie as Mr. Wick himself. Ballerina—aka From the World of John Wick: Ballerina—is a spin-off film that takes place between the events of the John Wick: Chapter 3 and John Wick: Chapter 4. Ana de Armas stars as Eve Macarro, a ballerina training to become an assassin. That's quite the career pivot! Her character also appeared in the third movie, but was portrayed by Unity Phelan, whom de Armas replaced for the spin-off. Also starring Gabriel Byrne, Catalina Sandino Moreno, and Norman Reedus, with Anjelica Huston, Lance Reddick, Ian McShane, and Reeves all reprising their roles, Ballerina is a can't-miss film for John Wick fans. Read on to find out where to watch the Ballerina movie, and when we expect to be able to watch the Ballerina John Wick movie on streaming. For now, Ballerina will only available to watch in a movie theater, when it opens in theaters in the U.S. on Friday, June 6. You can find a showing near you via Fandango. Ballerina is not yet available to watch online or on streaming. Ballerina is not streaming on Netflix right now. That said, Ballerina is a Lionsgate release, and another recent Lionsgate release, Den of Thieves 2: Pantera, began streaming on Netflix after two-and-a-half-months in theaters. So, maybe you'll see Ballerina on Netflix in about two and a half months, around late August 2025. However, don't count on it, because plenty of Lionsgate movies have not streamed on Netflix. You will be able to purchase Ballerina on Amazon Prime Video eventually, when the movie becomes available to buy and rent on digital. You also might be able to stream Ballerina on Prime for free eventually, thanks to the new deal between Lionsgate and Amazon that will send the 2026 Lionsgate movies to Amazon Prime for the 'Pay 1' window, after the films play in theaters. Even though it's still 2025, according to Variety, Prime Video also got the streaming rights to a 'package' of 2025 films, too. It's not clear which films those are, and if it includes Ballerina. But it's possible that Amazon subscribers will be able to streaming Ballerina for free on Prime before the end of the year. Ballerina is not yet streaming on Starz. You might see Ballerina on Starz this year, because it is a Lionsgate film, and Lionsgate extended its output deal with Starz, despite the fact the studios are still planning to separate in 2026. Supposedly, under the new terms of the deal, Starz will have exclusive rights to Lionsgate films post-theaters, and that the window will now come sooner after the movie's theatrical run. But in practice, the recent Lionsgate films don't seem to be streaming on Starz at an accelerated rate. The 2025 Lionsgate film Den of Thieves 2: Pantera began streaming on Netflix about two-and-a-half months after opening in theaters, and yet the movie is still not streaming on Starz. So, that's confusing! Recently, the 2025 Lionsgate movie, Flight Risk, began streaming on Starz about four-and-a-half a half months after the movie opened in the theaters. If Ballerina follows the same release pattern, you might see the movie on digital in about two-and-a-half weeks, around late June 2025, and on Starz in about four and a half months, which would be around late October 2025. But clearly, not all Lionsgate movies are following that strategy in 2025, and some may be going to Prime. Right now, we don't have a clear look at Lionsgate's 2025 release strategy. If you want to see Ballerina right away, you should go watch it in a movie theater.

AI-generated Pope sermons flood YouTube, TikTok
AI-generated Pope sermons flood YouTube, TikTok

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

AI-generated Pope sermons flood YouTube, TikTok

AI-generated videos and audios of Pope Leo XIV are populating rapidly online, racking up views as platforms struggle to police them. An AFP investigation identified dozens of YouTube and TikTok pages that have been churning out AI-generated messages delivered in the pope's voice or otherwise attributed to him since he took charge of the Catholic Church last month. The hundreds of fabricated sermons and speeches, in English and Spanish, underscore how easily hoaxes created using artificial intelligence can elude detection and dupe viewers. "There's natural interest in what the new pope has to say, and people don't yet know his stance and style," said University of Washington professor emeritus Oren Etzioni, founder of a nonprofit focused on fighting deepfakes. "A perfect opportunity to sow mischief with AI-generated misinformation." After AFP presented YouTube with 26 channels posting predominantly AI-generated pope content, the platform terminated 16 of them for violating its policies against spam, deceptive practices and scams, and another for violating YouTube's terms of service. "We terminated several channels flagged to us by AFP for violating our Spam policies and Terms of Service," spokesperson Jack Malon said. The company also booted an additional six pages from its partner program allowing creators to monetize their content. TikTok similarly removed 11 accounts that AFP pointed out -- with over 1.3 million combined followers -- citing the platform's policies against impersonation, harmful misinformation and misleading AI-generated content of public figures. - 'Chaotic uses' - With names such as "Pope Leo XIV Vision," the social media pages portrayed the pontiff supposedly offering a flurry of warnings and lessons he never preached. But disclaimers annotating their use of AI were often hard to find -- and sometimes nonexistent. On YouTube, a label demarcating "altered or synthetic content" is required for material that makes someone appear to say something they did not. But such disclosures only show up toward the bottom of each video's click-to-open description. A YouTube spokesperson said the company has since applied a more prominent label to some videos on the channels flagged by AFP that were not found to have violated the platform's guidelines. TikTok also requires creators to label posts sharing realistic AI-generated content, though several pope-centric videos went unmarked. A TikTok spokesperson said the company proactively removes policy-violating content and uses verified badges to signal authentic accounts. Brian Patrick Green, director of technology ethics at Santa Clara University, said the moderation difficulties are the result of rapid AI developments inspiring "chaotic uses of the technology." Many clips on the YouTube channels AFP identified amassed tens of thousands of views before being deactivated. On TikTok, one Spanish-language video received 9.6 million views while claiming to show Leo preaching about the value of supportive women. Another, which carried an AI label but still fooled viewers, was watched some 32.9 million times. No video on the pope's official Instagram page has more than 6 million views. Experts say even seemingly harmless fakes can be problematic especially if used to farm engagement for accounts that might later sell their audiences or pivot to other misinformation. The AI-generated sermons not only "corrode the pope's moral authority" and "make whatever he actually says less believable," Green said, but could be harnessed "to build up trust around your channel before having the pope say something outrageous or politically expedient." The pope himself has also warned about the risks of AI, while Vatican News called out a deepfake that purported to show Leo praising Burkina Faso leader Ibrahim Traore, who seized power in a 2022 coup. AFP also debunked clips depicting the pope, who holds American and Peruvian citizenships, criticizing US Vice President JD Vance and Peru's President Dina Boluarte. "There's a real crisis here," Green said. "We're going to have to figure out some way to know whether things are real or fake." bmc/mgs/sms

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