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'I Know What You Did Last Summer' costume designer on Fisherman's new look, Easter egg
'I Know What You Did Last Summer' costume designer on Fisherman's new look, Easter egg

New York Post

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • New York Post

'I Know What You Did Last Summer' costume designer on Fisherman's new look, Easter egg

New sequel, new hook, new look. The Fisherman is back to terrorize another group of friends in the latest 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' sequel, and with him is a fresh outfit to torment one more generation of scary movie fans. Mari-An Ceo, the costume designer behind the slasher villain's new look, has opened up about how this movie's Fisherman costume differs from the one featured in the 1997 original. Advertisement 13 Costume designer Mari-An Ceo at the Los Angeles premiere of 'MaXXXine' on June 24, 2024. Getty Images for A24 'The original one was basically made out of just vinyl, which cinematically looked great in the movie from 1997,' Ceo exclusively told The Post. 'But of course, we've got to make everything much more intense now with how they shoot, with the new digital cameras and whatnot.' 'So we actually went through quite a process of testing different fabrics,' she shared. 'The fabric we ended up with was a wax cotton, and we painted quite a bit into it to make it look like it was wet.' Advertisement After doing several camera tests with director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson and cinematographer Elisha Christian, Ceo and her team created the slicker seen on-screen in the new 'IKWYDLS.' 13 The Fisherman in the original 1997 'I Know What You Did Last Summer.' ©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection 13 The Fisherman on the poster for this year's new 'I Know What You Did Last Summer.' Sony Pictures While the original Fisherman wore a standard yellow slicker and hat made of vinyl, the new version features a darker raincoat and hood made of wax cotton. Advertisement 'So it was actually a lot of work just to get that jacket to where it was that they really loved filming it, and it had to move and do all the special things that you need a costume to do, especially in a movie like this,' Ceo added. Surprisingly, Ceo revealed that the new movie was not initially going to include a redesign for the Fisherman's costume. 13 The original Fisherman's costume was made of vinyl and included a basic ice hook for a weapon. Columbia Pictures 13 The new Fisherman's costume is darker and more menacing, with a sharper ice hook as a weapon. ©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection Advertisement 'Funny enough, we weren't going to redesign it in the beginning,' she shared. 'And then as we were looking at it on the actor, and it's moving, Jen's like, 'I don't know. Maybe we can do something else?' And we all sort of thought that.' After playing around with different concepts regarding how the costume could look, they came up with one new idea in particular. 'So it became this whole thing,' Ceo continued. 'Like, you know, maybe it's a hood, maybe it's this, and we had all these different ideas. I was like, let's try it.' 13 The original 1997 Fisherman also wore a vinyl fisherman's hat to hide his identity. Columbia Pictures 13 The new Fisherman's costume includes a hood built into the wax cotton slicker. ©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection 'We just kind of landed on the hood, which was funny,' she added. 'So that was the redesign for the new movie.' Besides a darker and more menacing new costume, the Fisherman in the latest 'IKWYDLS' is also armed with an upgraded ice hook to torture and kill his victims. Like the old Fisherman slicker and the new redesigned one, the new ice hook has some major differences compared to the original. Advertisement 13 The Fisherman's new ice hook looks pointier and more dangerous compared to the original 1997 one. AP 13 Chase Sui Wonders as Ava Brucks fighting the Fisherman in the new 'I Know What You Did Last Summer.' ©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection 'It was basically the same hook, but they made it look a little more dangerous,' Ceo explained. 'Props and the art department were also incredible on this. They had to make it a little more dangerous and pointy, but also make it safe.' 'With anything that we do, they had many of them doing different things for close-ups and pursuits and all that,' she added. Advertisement Starring Madelyn Cline (Danica Richards), Chase Sui Wonders (Ava Brucks), Jonah Hauer-King (Milo Griffin), Tyriq Withers (Teddy Spencer), Sarah Pidgeon (Stevie Ward) and Gabbriette Bechtel (Tyler Trevino), the new 'IKWYDLS' follows five friends one year after they cover up their involvement in a deadly car accident. 13 Madelyn Cline, Chase Sui Wonders, Sarah Pidgeon and Gabbriette Bechtel attend the Los Angeles premiere of 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' on July 14, 2025. FilmMagic 13 Jonah Hauer-King, Sarah Pidgeon, Chase Sui Wonders, Madelyn Cline and Tariq Withers in a scene from 'I Know What You Did Last Summer.' AP The new sequel includes some familiar faces from the original, including Freddie Prinze Jr. as Ray Bronson and Jennifer Love Hewitt as Julie James, who help the new group fight back against the vengeful Fisherman. Advertisement Besides the direct connections between the 1997 original and the 2025 sequel, Ceo revealed that she and her team included some throwbacks to the first film by way of the costumes worn by the new cast members. 'I did watch the original, of course, before doing it,' she shared. 'And we did want to do a few throwbacks, like Jennifer Love Hewitt in the original wore these overalls. And so we ended up doing overalls on Sarah Pidgeon in the finale, which is really fun.' 13 Freddie Prinze Jr. as Ray Bronson and Jennifer Love Hewitt as Julie James in the original 1997 'I Know What You Did Last Summer.' ©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection 13 Sarah Pidgeon's overalls in this scene are a throwback to Jennifer Love Hewitt's overalls in the original. ©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection Advertisement 'We tried to do a few homages from the original,' Ceo told The Post. 'Their clothes were just based on the characters for this. But we did reference some things from the original for what we did here.' As for the movie's costume design itself, Ceo said that she was proud of how it all ended up looking on the big screen. 'We put a lot of thought and effort into it,' she said. 'I liked how everybody wore it, and they were all super happy and comfortable in their clothes.' 'I'm proud of the costumes, for sure, and I'm proud of the crew, the cast and everybody involved in it.'

How to Watch the ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer' Movies in Order
How to Watch the ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer' Movies in Order

Cosmopolitan

time20-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Cosmopolitan

How to Watch the ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer' Movies in Order

In 1997, I Know What You Did Last Summer was released and became a teen horror classic. The movie stars four actors who were huge teen idols of the time: Jennifer Love Hewitt, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Freddie Prinze Jr., and Ryan Phillippe. It was a box office success, gained a passionate following, and kicked off a franchise that continues on today with a new movie debuting on July 18. The new I Know What You Did Last Summer follows a similar premise to the original: a group of friends believe that they have accidentally killed someone and end up being sent spooky messages while a disguised killer hunts them down. Hewitt and Prinze reprise their roles of Julie James and Ray Bronson, survivors of the "Fisherman" killer. If you want a refresher on the whole franchise, here's how you can watch everything I Know What You Did Last Summer — including the TV series and the third movie that went straight to video. (It's not so much of a big deal now for something to go straight to streaming, but at the time, straight-to-video was a bad sign.) In the original movie, a group of four friends accidentally hit a man with a car during the summer before they head off to college. They decide to keep the incident a secret, and one year later begin receiving messages from someone who claims to know what they did. Soon, a killer known as "the Fisherman" starts coming after the group as they try to figure out the mystery surrounding the death. STREAM ON MGM+ A year after the release of I Know What You Did Last Summer, the aptly titled sequel I Still Know What You Did Last Summer, hit theaters. It's set one year after the end of the first movie, and Hewitt and Prinze return. This time, "the Fisherman" follows a friend group—including new additions Brandy and Mekhi Phifer—on their trip to the Bahamas. Gore ensues. RENT/BUY ON AMAZON PRIME VIDEO The third movie in the franchise is a standalone sequel, meaning it does include any of the cast from the other two movies and the story is separate, too. This time, a group decides to keep the accidental death of one of their friends secret, because their town believes that he was killed by "the Fisherman." Of course, the real "Fisherman" killer then comes after them. The cast of this movie includes Brooke Levin, David Paetkau, Ben Easter, and Torrey DeVitto. RENT/BUY ON AMAZON PRIME VIDEO A TV series adaptation of I Know What You Did Last Summer debuted on Amazon Prime Video in 2021. (By the way, everything in the franchise is based on the 1973 novel by Lois Duncan.) The show lasted for one season and starred Madison Iseman, Bill Heck, and Brianne Tju. It follows a friend group who cover up a death of one of the friends' twin sister. STREAM ON AMAZON PRIME VIDEO This brings us to the newest movie, which has the same title as the original and the same premise. This time, though, the group at the center of the story have past "Fisherman" killer history to look back on and can seek advice from Hewitt and Prinze's characters. The new stars include Madelyn Cline, Chase Sui Wonders, Tyriq Withers, Sarah Pidgeon, and Jonah Hauer-King. BUY TICKETS HERE

I Know What You Did Last Summer: 10 burning questions the ending finally answers
I Know What You Did Last Summer: 10 burning questions the ending finally answers

Indian Express

time20-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Indian Express

I Know What You Did Last Summer: 10 burning questions the ending finally answers

The hook is back, and this time, it's personal and cuts deep. The 2025 reboot of the 1997 horror I Know What You Did Last Summer pulls a new group of friends into the same nightmare. Writer-director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson and co-writer Sam Lansky bring in Ava (Chase Sui Wonders), Danica (Madelyn Cline), Milo (Jonah Hauer-King), Teddy (Tyriq Withers), and Stevie (Sarah Pidgeon), a fresh batch of twenty-somethings who make a fatal mistake and bolt. What starts as a direct reboot turns into darker, messier, and way more twisted, packed with returning faces and brutal betrayals. Let's break down that wild ending with 10 burning questions. Spoilers Ahead Ava, Danica, Milo, Teddy, and Stevie are a group of friends living in Southport, N.C. One Fourth of July night, they cause a accident while over-speeding when a truck swerves to avoid them, crashes through a guardrail, and falls off the cliff with the driver inside. They try to help, decide to call cops, but panic and run. Teddy's dad, Grant (a powerful real estate guy), uses his influence to bury it. The story begins a year later when all those friends are now nearly estranged. However, once they arrive back in Southport, Danica gets a note: 'I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER.' Soon after, people around them are murdered by a Fisherman, just like in the original two stories, with a hook and speargun, mimicking the 1997 killing spree. Also read: Wall to wall ending explained: Who's the real noise maker in Kang Ha Neul's Netflix psychological thriller? The friends run to the survivors of the original attacks. Julie James (Jennifer Love Hewitt) and Ray Bronson (Freddie Prinze Jr.) reprise their roles. Meanwhile, Sarah Michelle Gellar's Helen also has a small cameo when she appears in Danica's dream to warn her. Wyatt (Danica's fiancé), true-crime podcaster Tyler, Pastor Judah, along with Teddy, Milo, and Grant, are among those who were killed. This season we've got two hook-wielding pyschos, Stevie and Ray. Stevie's motive is driven by revenge after she finds out the driver they accidentally killed was Sam. This is the same person who helped her post rehab, her pseudo boyfriend. She didn't realise it at first, but rage drives her to become the Fisherman. But the bigger jaw-dropper is the involvement of Ray. Years of repressed trauma, being ghosted by Southport, and watching the town erase the past make him go insane. Stevie's grief starts to feel personal to him, and together they plot the same massacre. Ava and Danica try to escape on a boat, only for Stevie to make the big reveal she had been hiding from her friends. At first, Stevie plans to spare Ava, considering she was the only one at the time of the accident who argued that they should stay and help the victim, but she changes her plan as she attacks Danica, stabs her, and she falls off the boat. But just then, Ray shows up, pretends to save the day, even 'shoots' Stevie, and takes Ava back to the bar. Back at his bar, Ava finds Ray with a new bandage exactly where the Fisherman cut himself earlier. He attacks Ava and just in time, Jennifer Love Hewitt shows up. When Ray stabs Ava, Julie confronts him, demands answers, and even throws back her iconic 'What are you waiting for?' line. And, then Ava harpoons Ray from behind. Also read: I Know What You Did Last Summer movie review: A slasher sequel that can't escape its past No. After getting shot and tossed overboard, her body vanishes. That's horror code for: still out there. Danica is alive somehow washes up on shore. Last we see, she and Ava are on the beach, bruised, hungry, and cracking jokes about hunting Stevie down. Mid-credits, Julie visits Karla Wilson (Brandy), another survivor from the old sequel. Next we see Karla's face is crossed out in a photo with a threatening note. She asks, 'Who do we have to f— up this time?' Then credits roll. No sequel announcement yet but it might happen soon.

‘I Know What You Did Last Summer' review: A funny stab at the lousy original
‘I Know What You Did Last Summer' review: A funny stab at the lousy original

Yahoo

time20-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

‘I Know What You Did Last Summer' review: A funny stab at the lousy original

movie review I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER Running time: 111 minutes. Rated R (bloody horror violence, language throughout, some sexual content and brief drug use). In theaters. Horror movie characters never learn from past mistakes. Running away from the killer, teen girls will always, always sprint up the stairs and into an inescapable bedroom. They know no other path. But, outside the screen, filmmakers occasionally do make life-saving course corrections. That's the most pleasant surprise of the sorta sequel to 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' (inasmuch as a reboot about a checklist of college kids getting impaled can be pleasant or surprising): It's a lot better than the 1997 version, if equally as stupid. 'Nostalgia is overrated,' says Jennifer Love Hewitt's returning Julie James, taking her own hook to all the zombified millennials and Gen Xers in the audience who unconditionally love the flawed original. The awful '90s movie was released in the wake of 'Scream' blowing up the genre a year earlier. Yet when it arrived, it was just another shrieks-and-shrugs slasher flick and went off a cliff in more ways than one. Yes, it had Hewitt, but it had no wit. The Fisherman wasn't remotely scary. The characters were interchangeable. The whodunit ending featured some guy we hadn't even met. The enduring image is crabs in a trunk! When other critics prattle on about so-called 'legacy' sequels, as if 'I Know What You Did Last Summer,' is some sort of vaunted Everest to climb, I laugh and laugh and laugh some more. The improved refresh, which also stars Freddie Prinze Jr. alongside the new young cast, is very funny and dry. The film is self-aware, but not in the obnoxious way the recent 'Scream' movies have been. And it's cognizant of the franchise's many, many faults. When one imperiled character suggests the group just 'f–k off to the Bahamas,' Prinze Jr.'s grizzled Ray shoots back, 'For reasons I won't get into, I wouldn't do that.' The kills are much more gruesome and the shadowy Fisherman is actually freaky. 'I Know' kept me interested, even if it also made me braindead. Make no mistake, this is a dumb movie. One woman loses two fiancés and is back to wisecracking a scene later. The flick is dependent on obvious jump-scares and retro throwbacks. But it's also a nice break from all the self-important horror movies out there with Oscar aspirations. The key word here is 'summer.' The waters off the shore of Southport, North Carolina, may be rocky, but one thing that's not rocking the boat is the familiar story. At the start, we're practically in 'Groundhog Day,' only it's the Fourth of July. A group of five well-heeled, well-lubricated friends drive up to a cliffside road to watch the fireworks. Rather than a hit-and-run, however, this time another car swerves off the road after almost slamming into Teddy (Tyriq Withers), a drunk dummy standing in the middle of the street. The driver plummets to their likely death. Teddy rings his powerful dad to fix the mess, Murdaugh murders style, and the group agrees to never speak of the incident again. One year later, at her engagement party, airhead Danica (Madelyn Cline) gets an ominous letter among her presents: 'I know what you did last summer.' Director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson's film then hitches onto the latest fad — the original scream queen, hardened and battle ready, goes once more unto the breach. Think Jamie Lee Curtis in the 'Halloween' reboot or Neve Campbell in the 2022 'Scream.' Julie, now a traumatized psychology professor, reluctantly gets roped in. Her young prototype is Ava (Chase Sui Wonders), an untethered free spirit with issues. She flirts with innocent Milo (Jonah Hauer-King) and is trailed by the suspicious Tyler (Gabbriette Bechtel), the host of the murder podcast 'Live, Laugh, Slaughter.' Most enticing is Stevie, a townie who works at the local bar, played by fresh-from-Broadway Sarah Pidgeon. Come to think of it, Pidgeon is the human embodiment of the 1990s. Somebody brutally dies, and then the self-absorbed, unlikable, helpless survivors have no solution but to throw a bath bomb in the tub and hook up. You see? Mocking Gen Z is the great American pastime. After a completely ridiculous ending — still leagues better than the first movie's — a post-credits sequence suggests that a sequel could be in the cards. But, honestly, by now the stationary stores are out of paper. The Sharpies runneth dry. Find me someone who doesn't know what they did last summer. We all remember how well a follow-up worked for this series the last two times. I say: One and done, then give 'em the hook. Solve the daily Crossword

The finale has plenty of twists in store this time.
The finale has plenty of twists in store this time.

Time​ Magazine

time18-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time​ Magazine

The finale has plenty of twists in store this time.

Warning: This post contains spoilers for I Know What You Did Last Summer. In the idyllic seaside town of Southport, N.C., young people are prone to grave errors in Fourth of July night judgment that result in horrible accidents. At least, that's what the I Know What You Did Last Summer franchise would have you believe. Nearly 30 years on from the 1997 original, a new I Know What You Did Last Summer from writer-director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson (Do Revenge, Someone Great) and co-writer Sam Lansky (a TIME contributor and author of The Gilded Razor and Broken People) introduces a whole new group of friends—Ava (Chase Sui Wonders), Danica (Madelyn Cline), Milo (Jonah Hauer-King), Teddy (Tyriq Withers), and Stevie (Sarah Pidgeon)—whose coverup of their involvement in a seemingly deadly roadside incident leads to them being stalked by a killer decked out in a fisherman costume. If we had a nickel for every time that happened, we'd have two nickels. Which isn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened twice. This time around, rather than hitting someone with their car while speeding around the Southport bluffs—and then dumping their victim's body in the ocean, as in the first movie—the crew of 20-somethings cause a driver to wildly swerve to avoid them and subsequently smash through the curve's guardrail. While the group attempts to pull the truck back from where it's dangling over the cliff edge, it ultimately ends up plummeting to the rocks below with the injured driver still inside. The friends then decide to call the cops but flee the scene, and later rely on Teddy's rich and powerful real estate developer father Grant (Billy Campbell) to ensure they aren't implicated. The following year, once the now-somewhat estranged pals are all back in Southport, Danica receives a mysterious note reading, "I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER," and the violence begins. After they realize their friends and loved ones are being brutally murdered by a hook and speargun-wielding Fisherman in a pattern that mirrors a local killing spree from 1997, the friends turn to the survivors of those long-ago attacks, former couple Julie James (Jennifer Love Hewitt) and Ray Bronson (Freddie Prinze Jr.), for help figuring out who's behind the disguise. Sarah Michelle Gellar also reprises her role as murdered pageant queen Helen Shivers in a dream sequence in which she appears to Danica to warn her about the consequences of her and her friends' misdeeds. Here's how the legacy slasher sequel, now in theaters, ends. Read More: The Filmmakers Behind the New I Know What You Did Last Summer on What They Changed This Time Around Who is the killer in the new I Know What You Did Last Summer? In the wake of Danica's fiancé Wyatt (Joshua Orpin), true-crime podcaster Tyler (Gabbriette), off-putting pastor Judah (Austin Nichols), Teddy, Grant, and Milo all being brutally killed off by the new Fisherman, Ava, Danica, and Stevie attempt to flee to safety on Teddy's boat. However, unfortunately for Ava and Danica, it turns out their old friend Stevie may have been keeping a few secrets from them. Once they're out at sea, Stevie turns the tables on the pair by revealing that the victim of their accidental manslaughter was actually her pseudo-boyfriend, Sam Cooper, the only person who had been there for her when her friends had previously deserted her in the wake of her father's abandonment. She strangely hadn't recognized the car or realized it was him at the time, but once she found out who was behind the wheel, her intense grief and rage pushed her to make a plan to seek revenge and take on the mantle of the Fisherman. The only person involved in the accident who she was considering sparing was Ava, since she had argued they should stay and try to help the driver. But Stevie has since scrapped that idea. After Ray arrives on a smaller boat and Stevie stabs Danica, causing her to fall overboard, Ray ends up shooting Stevie to stop her and she also falls into the ocean. Ray then takes Ava back to his bar, where he sets the scene for his own big reveal. Turns out, this time around, there were two Fisherman committing the murders—and Ray himself, Stevie's boss and mentor, was one of them. Traumatized Ray was driven to this heel turn by the fact that the powers-that-be of Southport were trying to erase the town's violent history in order to make it a more attractive vacation destination. Ray makes Ava question whether he even shot Stevie and also stabs her. But, luckily, Julie has put the pieces of the puzzle together and shows up in the nick of time. When Ray attacks Julie, Ava shoots him through the back with his speargun, killing him. In the movie's final minutes, Ava reunites with Danica, who ended up washing up on the beach alive, and the two discuss the fact that Stevie apparently also survived her fall into the ocean, seemingly leaving the door open for another installment. Is there going to be a sequel? In addition to revealing that Stevie is still alive, the new I Know What You Did Last Summer also features a mid-credits scene in which Julie arrives at the home of Karla Wilson (Brandy), her fellow final girl from the original 1998 sequel I Still Know What You Did Last Summer, to ask for her help dealing with any future attacks. Karla quickly gets on board and the final credits roll. But, according to Robinson, the potential for a sequel is still firmly in fans' hands. "If the audience shows up and people love this movie, we would love to make more," she says.

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