Latest news with #Jennifer Love Hewitt

News.com.au
a day ago
- Entertainment
- News.com.au
Jennifer Love Hewitt says she has ‘not talked' to Sarah Michelle Gellar since she was 18 amid feud rumours
Jennifer Love Hewitt revealed she hasn't spoken to Sarah Michelle Gellar for almost three decades, breaking her silence on rumours of a feud with her I Know What You Did Last Summer co-star. In a recent interview with Vulture, the 46-year-old actress downplayed online speculation of a falling out with Gellar, 48. However, Hewitt shared that she hadn't seen or communicated with Gellar, 48, since she was 18 when the hit 1997 slasher film was released. 'I honestly don't even know what that was or how that all came to be,' Hewitt said of the rumoured bad blood between her and the Buffy the Vampire Slayer star. 'I just think people don't want the narrative to be easy. Why do we always have to be against each other and out for each other?' 'I haven't seen Sarah,' the former Party of Five star added. 'Literally, we've not talked since I saw her at 18 years old when the first movie came out. That's why it's so funny to me. People were like, 'Say something back.' And I'm like, 'What am I going to say? I've not seen her.' On my side, we're good. I have no idea where this is coming from.' Hewitt played the lead character of Julie James in I Know What You Did Last Summer and reprised her role in the 1998 sequel, I Still Know What You Did Last Summer. The actress made a surprise return to the franchise in its fourth instalment, I Know What You Did Last Summer, which was released Friday. Gellar's husband, Freddie Prinze Jr., who portrayed Julie's love interest, Ray Bronson, in the original films, also reprised his role in the 2025 sequel. Neither star appeared in the direct-to-video 2006 stand-alone sequel, I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer, or the short-lived 2022 TV series, I Know What You Did Last Summer. Gellar and Ryan Phillippe co-starred in the original movie alongside Hewitt and Prinze Jr. However, they did not return for the following I Know What You Did Last Summer projects after the first movie since both of their characters, beauty queen Helen Shivers and boyfriend Barry Cox, were killed off. However, Gellar made a brief cameo appearance during a dream sequence in the latest instalment. On Monday, The Ghost Whisperer star accompanied Prinze Jr. to the premiere of the movie, which was also attended by Hewitt. During Hewitt's interview with Vulture ahead of the premiere, the actress was asked if she planned to see Gellar at the event. 'I hope so,' she told the outlet. After the premiere, social media users pointed out that Gellar and Hewitt did not appear in red carpet photos together. After being questioned by fans about the rumoured feud, Gellar later confirmed she didn't encounter Hewitt at the event, though she praised her former co-star. 'For everyone asking - I never got to see @jenniferlovehewitt who is fantastic in the movie,' Gellar wrote on Instagram. 'I was inside with my kids when the big carpet happened. And unfortunately JLH didn't come to the after-party. 'If you have ever been to one of these it's crazy,' she added. 'I sadly didn't get pics with most of the cast. But that doesn't change how amazing I think they all are. Unfortunately some things happen only in real life and not online.' Speculation of a feud between actresses began to swirl in December 2024, when Gellar was asked by an Extra reporter about Hewitt's potential return for the 2025 movie. 'I have nothing to do with that,' she said before abruptly ending the interview. Gellar later took to her Instagram story to explain her response was due to her wariness over violating a nondisclosure agreement that prohibited her from spoiling casting announcements. 'Aspiring actors, please note: This 'deer in the headlights' reaction is perfect for when you are excited to see so many old friends in one project but have already stupidly forgotten what NDA means once this month,' she wrote alongside a photo taken on the movie's set. That same month, Hewitt confirmed she would be reprising her role in the sequel with a post on Instagram. In April, Gellar further fuelled speculation of bad blood between her and Hewitt when she shared the trailer for 2025's I Know What You Did Last Summer, tagging members of the main cast, including Prinze Jr., Madelyn Cline, Gabbriette Bechtel, Sarah Pidgeon and Chase Sui Wonders and director/screenwriter Jennifer Kaytin Robinson and co-screenwriter Sam Lansky but notably leaving out Hewitt. While some fans on social media took the omission as a definitive sign of a feud between the stars, a few Reddit commentators noted that Hewitt has activated an Instagram feature that prevents her account from being tagged by other users.


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
I know What You Did Last Summer reboot underwhelms at box office as cult classic maintains top spot
Sony's attempt to revive I Know What You Did Last Summer may have brought back the original stars, but it couldn't bring back the box office magic. The latest installment of the legacy slasher, which reunited Freddie Prinze Jr. and Jennifer Love Hewitt, opened to a lukewarm $13 million domestically, the lowest debut in the franchise's nearly three-decade history. Caught between two superhero juggernauts — DC 's Superman and Marvel's upcoming Fantastic Four: First Steps (which hits theaters this Thursday) — the horror reboot failed to make a splash. This is a sharp contrast to the original 1997 film, which opened to $15.8 million and went on to gross over $125 million worldwide. Released in the wake of Scream's success, I Know What You Did Last Summer helped define the teen slasher boom of the late 1990s. With a tight, suspenseful plot — four friends cover up a hit-and-run, only to be stalked a year later by a hook-wielding figure who 'knows what they did' — it became a horror staple and cultural touchstone. The 1998 sequel, I Still Know What You Did Last Summer, wasn't as well-reviewed but still pulled in over $84 million globally. Together, the first two films built a recognizable franchise out of Lois Duncan's original novel. The 2025 reboot follows the now-adult survivors, who find themselves drawn back into a fresh cycle of terror after a new group of teens faces eerily similar threats. Ultimately, it landed in third place, narrowly beating out Smurfs and the polarizing A24 Western Eddington. While the film's $18 million budget keeps it in the realm of possible profitability, its lukewarm reception didn't help. Critics gave it a 38% Rotten Tomatoes score, and audiences were equally unimpressed, handing it a tepid 'C+' CinemaScore. Even director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson took the underwhelming reviews in stride, cheekily tweeting just one word: 'camp.' Meanwhile, Superman continued to fly high, hauling in $57.3 million in its second weekend and bringing its global total to over $400 million. With a modest 54% drop from its opening weekend, the reboot is holding strong — a crucial win for Warner Bros., which is betting on the film to launch a new era of DC superheroes. Spinoffs like Supergirl and Clayface are already in the pipeline, along with a rebooted Wonder Woman. Other newcomers didn't fare much better. The Rihanna-led animated Smurfs movie opened to a soft $11 million, despite a sprawling A-list voice cast, and Eddington, Ari Aster's Western satire starring Joaquin Phoenix and Pedro Pascal, debuted with a sluggish $4.2 million and a less-than-stellar 'C+' CinemaScore.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Jennifer Love Hewitt Teases the Jaw-Dropping Ending of the New ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer'
The wait for Jennifer Love Hewitt's return to the I Know What You Did Last Summer franchise is finally over. This Friday, for the first time in nearly three decades, Hewitt reprises her final-girl role of Julie James in Jennifer Kaytin Robinson's I Know What You Did Last Summer (2025). The legacy sequel reintroduces Julie as a psychology professor, one who fittingly specializes in trauma. Now single, Julie is living a happily quiet life after narrowly surviving two rounds of attacks by murderous fisherman, Ben Willis (Muse Watson), in the late '90s. More from The Hollywood Reporter Jennifer Love Hewitt Taps Her Scream Queen Notoriety for ID's 'A Killer Among Friends' Docuseries Jennifer Love Hewitt Calls Out Killer With Iconic Line in New 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' Sequel Trailer Nicholas Alexander Chavez Is Just Getting Started However, Julie's past soon catches up to her when Ava Brucks (Chase Sui Wonders) pays her a visit and requests her help in dealing with an all-too-familiar problem. A vengeful Fisherman copycat is now targeting Ava and her friend group of 20-somethings in Julie's hometown of Southport, North Carolina. For Hewitt, the decision to return to her most famous role was anything but automatic. 'I was hesitant at first. I wanted to make sure that she fit into the movie in the right way and that there was a reason for her to come back besides just the '90s nostalgia moment,' Hewitt tells The Hollywood Reporter in support of the film's July 18 theatrical release. 'I wanted her part in the movie to matter and for the audience to feel like they were proud of who she has become.' Once her return was finalized, Hewitt sat down to revisit Jim Gillespie's I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997) and Danny Cannon's I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (1998). But these latest go-rounds were particularly special since she got to share her teenage self's work with her kids for the first time. In doing so, she also recognized some elements from the first two films that paved the way for the jaw-dropping ending of Robinson's new installment. (Don't worry, this is a spoiler-free zone.) 'I will say that in thinking about it and watching the other movies before filming this new one, [the ending] makes sense,' Hewitt carefully teases. Below, during a recent conversation with THR, Hewitt also looks back on her character's iconic line of, 'What are you waiting for, huh!?' and how the indelible moment may have been conceived by a young kid who'd won a contest to visit the I Know What You Did Last Summer set in 1997. *** To go back to the very beginning, was it just a coincidence thatbecame the casting office for -written slasher movies? [Writer's Note: For the uninitiated, the Wiliamson-penned drafted Hewitt's co-star Neve Campbell from the same hit series.] Isn't that hilarious? Yeah, it was just a coincidence. What's the history with you and a third movie? Have there been other attempts to get you back as Julie James over the years? No, this is the first one! I was shocked and elated all at the same time. Hollywood loves the rule of three, so it was always surprising to me that they didn't conclude the first two films with a proper trilogy capper. I know, I was surprised, too. But after a certain span of years went by, I was like, 'Oh well. I guess it's just not going to happen.' But now it did. When writer-director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson pitched you, were you immediately on board? Or did you need to mull it over? I was hesitant at first. If I was coming back as Julie, I just wanted to make sure that we were bringing back the best and right version of her. I wanted to make sure that she fit into the movie in the right way and that there was a reason for her to come back besides just the '90s nostalgia moment. I wanted her part in the movie to matter and for the audience to feel like they were proud of who she has become. Julie is now a psychology professor, and I suppose one could say she's lonely by choice. Is this the life you expected for her? Or did you think she'd have three kids and a golden retriever by now? (Laughs.) No, she's exactly who I thought she would be and who I wanted her to be, honestly. As weird as it sounds, it was really important for me to not see a Julie James that had healed her trauma. She needed to stay in trauma, and she would've stayed in trauma, so this version of her feels right. During her reintroduction, is she wearing a Cure T-shirt underneath her jacket? Yes, I really liked the idea of her being a professor in a vintage T-shirt, and Jenn [Kaytin Robinson] is the one who chose The Cure. I'm also a massive Cure fan, so I was really psyched about that. It was just us wanting to be nostalgic by also having her hold on to some nostalgia. Originally, she was going to be in a shirt and tie when you first saw her, and then she would wear the vintage T-shirt later. But Jenn was like, 'No, we've got to go with the vintage T-shirt right off the top.' And I just loved that. You haven't played Julie in 27 years. How quickly did you find her again? Well, what's beautiful about this movie is that she feels like the same person from the original movie, but she also feels like a new character in some ways because of all the time that's gone by. But I did rewatch [I Know What You Did Last Summer]. It was my kids' first horror movie. They really wanted to watch it together, and so I watched it with them, which was a total trip. So it was really fun and exciting and interesting to go back and watch that girl on the road that night. When you watched it, could you focus on performance and story? Or were you more consumed by your behind-the-scenes memories? I think it was a mixture, but I did learn a lot about Julie that I didn't notice at the time. One big thing in particular that we tried to bring back into the new movie is that I never realized how silenced she was on the road that night. If you had asked me at 18 or even at 20, I would've said, 'Yeah, we were all in it together,' but that really isn't the case. After the accident happened that night, everyone basically looked at her and said, 'Shut the fuck up.' That's what they said, and she really was struck by that. And in that silence, her detective brain kept going, and she wanted to solve this. She didn't just lose her innocence that night; she lost everything. She lost her friends. She lost the respect that she had for the person [Freddie Prinze Jr.'s Ray] who was the love of her life in that moment. She also lost herself, and she lost the ability to ever live life trauma-free again. So I honestly don't think that I realized any of that when I watched the movie as a young person. Watching it now at this age after having children, I went, 'Oh, wow. These are some really interesting things that we can pull from in this new movie.' Do you still feel connected to that 18-year-old version of you? Yeah, I do. Very much so. It's interesting that you ask that. I've definitely had a loss of innocence and trauma in my life. Some of my friends don't [feel this way], but I still feel uniquely connected to my youth and who I was then. I carry her with me, and that's an important thing to do as you get older. When you lose that, you lose something very drastic. So I still feel very connected to that part of my life, for sure. When you reunited with Freddie Prinze Jr. on the set of (2025), did it feel like old times? Honestly, it was an out-of-body experience that I didn't totally process until after we were done with the first scene. That's when I was like, 'Oh my God, that's Freddie, and we just did that scene.' I was just so in my head about making sure that Julie and Ray felt like Julie and Ray, but also a totally new Julie and Ray. I didn't get a normal high school experience in my life, but [reuniting with Freddie] was what I imagine a high-school-reunion feeling to be. You know a person, and while so much time has passed to where it's different, we still fit in with each other. We immediately felt like Julie and Ray, but obviously new versions of them. Did you ever feel like you had to take the new cast aside and offer them some pearls of wisdom? No, but I was really touched by how much they celebrated and honored both the movie and us coming back. So I was just really excited to be there and be a part of it. But I have definitely taken a mom role to Chase [Sui Wonders]. (Laughs.) Off camera, I'm constantly checking in on her and making sure that she's eating and drinking and taking care of herself. I just felt very close to her in such a special way, and that was really sweet. Generally speaking, the ending of (2025) is quite shocking. It's a big swing. Yeah. When you read it, did your jaw hit the floor? It did. But I will say that in thinking about it and watching the other movies before filming this new one, it makes sense. [Writer's Note: I then asked Hewitt if she was referring to a specific scene from an earlier movie, and she confirmed that I was on the right track.] You incurred some fishing hook-related damage while making the first two movies. Were you able to come out of this one unscathed? I was! The only thing is that my feet were sore from standing in very tall shoes. I am now in my 40s, and I choose not to torture my feet in high heels most of the time. But other than that, no. All was well. As previewed in the trailer, Julie's famous line of, 'What are you waiting for, huh?' was bound to be incorporated somehow, and I liked that it had utility. It wasn't an empty reference. Right. Were you very particular about its usage in this? Not in its usage, but it had to be said again, and it had to be said in a fresh way. And I think we accomplished that. The meaning behind this one is very different, and I love where it is [in the movie]. That line has just become such a special part of my life; I hear it all the time. Even my kids say it to me, especially my 3-year-old, which is hilarious. He's in his, 'What are you waiting for?' phase, and it's really funny. So it holds a special place in my heart. The 'huh' really makes that line what it is. You put this extra emphasis on it, and it really showed Julie's fighting spirit in the first movie. Thank you. A lot of people leave out the 'huh' when they say it back to me, and so I appreciate that. Yeah, for me, the 'huh' was her gumption. The 'huh' was her challenge: 'Come at me! Bring what you're going to bring. I'm here, I'm ready, let's go.' So the 'huh' is important. There's an internet legend that the entire moment was conceived by a contest-winning child. Is that true? So here's the thing about that. I was 18 years old when we filmed the first movie, and all I know is that there was a kid visiting the movie that day. He was a horror fan, but I don't know who he was. I was 18, I'm now 46, and Lord knows I've had three children, so I don't remember everything perfectly. But I know that he was there that day, and I thought that he was a part of that moment, somehow, because we were all at a monitor. Originally, in the script, I wasn't spinning around and yelling, 'What are you waiting for?' It was a different kind of moment, and it suddenly became that moment. I've heard different versions of it, but I do remember a kid being there and him being a horror movie fan. So he was a part of that conversation, somehow. Was it his designed moment? I don't know. But I somehow ended up spinning around in the street that day, screaming that line that became very iconic. So whoever created it, I'm very grateful. 'And that kid's name was Damien Chazelle.' (Laughs.) Could you imagine? According to another internet legend, Jamie Lee Curtis was filming a different movie near your set in North Carolina, and so she would often come by to lend you emotional support. Is there any truth to that? No! But I've known Jamie since I was 14. She is a very supportive, amazing person, but I did not see her during [filming]. That would've been awesome. I love her. Have these movies altered your behavior at all? Do you avoid late night drives, tanning beds and fishing boats? (Laughs.) When we were filming the first movie, I was already terrified of horror movies, and I was very aware of the fact that I was actually filming in a real fishing village in Southport, North Carolina. I was like, 'There's fishermen everywhere, and I've been running from one all day. And now I'm supposed to go home and go to sleep? How is that going to work out?' But since this movie has come back into my life, I'm a tad bit more paranoid. I left that behind for a while, and now I'm definitely like, 'What was that!?' (Laughs.) I'm a little jumpier now that the movie is back in my life. Most of the new movie was shot in Australia for the necessity of summer weather, and I loved how Jennifer Kaytin Robinson used the unrecognizable locations to the movie's advantage. Southport's gentrification by an uber-rich land developer is a huge part of the story. Yeah, it's brilliant. If I could say anything to the audience, everything that you want this movie to be, it is. And everything new and fresh is so worth it and so awesome. It's a perfect way to come back in all facets. Sony is putting the new movie out just like they did the first two. They also have the rights to your beloved teen rom-com, (1998). Can you try to get that property back on its feet soon? I've been asking! I've asked a few times now. Yes, I would love that. ***I Know What You Did Last Summer (2025) opens July 18 in movie theaters nationwide. Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
What Convinced Freddie Prinze Jr. to Return to ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer'
Twenty-eight years after the original, I Know What You Did Last Summer is back — and so are stars Freddie Prinze Jr. and Jennifer Love Hewitt. The new film follows five friends who inadvertently cause a deadly car accident and cover it up, then a year later a stalker sends them taunting messages about their crime. Realizing that the stalker is imitating a famous serial killer, the group seeks help from the two survivors of the Southport massacre of 1997, in Prinze and Hewitt's characters. More from The Hollywood Reporter 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' Review: Freddie Prinze Jr. and Jennifer Love Hewitt Return for a Legacy Sequel Not Worth Screaming About Why Lola Tung and Nicholas Alexander Chavez Were Cut From 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' Jennifer Love Hewitt Teases the Jaw-Dropping Ending of the New 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' At the Los Angeles premiere on Monday, Prinze told The Hollywood Reporter that he would usually have been hesitant to return to the franchise, but he was friends with director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson beforehand and was impressed by her 2022 film Do Revenge. 'She said, 'Look, I know you're going to pass, but let me just pitch you my version of this and let you see my vision and let's see if you dig it.' So it started by just telling me where these characters were at all these years later and how they dealt with this traumatic event and I liked that, and then she pitched me this wild vision that she had for the movie and I fell in love with it,' the actor recalled. 'I told her, 'Yo, I'm your guy' before they even wrote a script. I was like, 'I know it's going to work out, you and [writer] Sam [Lansky] will write a great script, she's a great writer anyway. I was like, 'You guys will write a great script but I'm in and we'll make everything work.' It was pretty easy once I heard the idea.' Prinze walked the carpet with wife Sarah Michelle Gellar, who also co-starred in the original film but did not return for the 2025 version as her character had died. He joked about coming back without his spouse, 'I don't think she cared — that's not a F.O.M.O. thing, she's not insecure like that.' The star also admitted that he doesn't 'see much of what I do [but] I've seen this movie; I really love it, I'm really proud of it, I'm grateful to be in it. I'm grateful to see Jen's vision from beginning to end in a studio movie, which is a harder way to make films these days because the notes are kind of crazy. But she was able to circumnavigate all of those speed bumps and maintain her vision, preproduction to postproduction to tonight, and I'm really proud and excited to see it again with all of these people.' In addition to the veteran actors, the new friend group is composed of Madelyn Cline, Chase Sui Wonders, Jonah Hauer-King, Tyriq Withers and Sarah Pidgeon. Cline — who is currently filming the final season of Outer Banks — noted that she grew up in South Carolina and 'everybody loves I Know What You Did Last Summer. And also, it's funny because some of our crew and our production also worked on the original I Know What You Did Last Summer, so we're all big fans, it's a legacy film. It's iconic — it's very, very cool to be passed the baton and have their blessing.' I Know What You Did Last Summer hits theaters on Friday. Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
‘I Know What You Did Last Summer' Review: Freddie Prinze Jr. and Jennifer Love Hewitt Return for a Legacy Sequel Not Worth Screaming About
'So here we are, it's 1997 all over again,' one of the characters says tellingly in I Know What You Did Last Summer. That line, of course, is not from the original film in the series but rather its same-titled 'legacy sequel,' which, if you're not familiar with Hollywood parlance, basically means 'Let's see if we can squeeze more dollars out of this sucker.' Slavishly reminiscent of its predecessors, the film also features so many Easter eggs that it mainly serves as canned nostalgia. Those throwbacks, ironically, are the most fun aspect of this new installment, which is unlikely to garner the same sort of cult following as the 1997 original. The concept remains the same, with a group of extremely good-looking young people (here in their mid-20s rather than teen years) covering up a violent death for which they were responsible. Cut to a year later, when one of them receives a note containing the ominous titular message. Not long after, a killer armed with a metal hook and clad in a fisherman's slicker and hat begins gruesomely killing them one by one. More from The Hollywood Reporter What Convinced Freddie Prinze Jr. to Return to 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' Jennifer Love Hewitt Teases the Jaw-Dropping Ending of the New 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' Sarah Michelle Gellar's Goal Is to "Bring Back Everyone Who Has Died" on 'Buffy' for Reboot In this version, they're a fairly bland group, consisting of Danica (Madelyn Cline) and her fiancé Teddy (Tyriq Withers); Ava (The Studio's Chase Sui Wonders), their friend who's returned to celebrate their engagement; Milo (Jonah Hauer-King), with whom Ava has a romantic past; and Stevie (Sarah Pidgeon), their estranged friend from the other side of the tracks, who reunites with them for an ill-fated drive to watch fireworks from a stretch of highway accurately named Reaper's Curve. None of them winds up being the first victim of the stalking killer. That would be Wyatt (Joshua Orpin), Danica's equally bland new fiancé, with whom she got involved after breaking it off with Teddy. He didn't have anything to do with the incident that has spurred such violent revenge, but his demise serves the purpose of setting the murderous events in motion while still leaving the central cast members in play. Not receiving help from the local police chief or the town's chief real estate developer (Billy Campbell), who has a vested interested in covering things up, the group turns to two of the survivors of the previous rampage that took place nearly three decades earlier. They're Ray Bronson and Julie James (fan favorites Freddie Prinze Jr. and Jennifer Love Hewitt), who, needless to say, are still scarred by their experiences. Julie, at least, has made good use of her past, becoming a professor who teaches her students about the nature of trauma. For much of its running time, I Know What You Did Last Summer tediously lurches from one violent slashing to another, which would be fine if any of the kills showcased visual originality or genuine thrills, which they don't. It's not until the final act that the film goes seriously bonkers, throwing out so many red herrings and plot twists revolving around the true identity of the murderer that Agatha Christie would throw up her hands in disgust. It doesn't help that the more entertainingly colorful supporting characters, including a creepy pastor (Austin Nichols) and a sexy podcaster (Gabbriette Bechtel, very amusing) whose show is called 'Live, Laugh, Slaughter,' are sadly underutilized. Fortunately, Prinze Jr. and Hewitt are on hand to provide some much-needed gravitas to the proceedings (which is not a sentence I ever envisioned writing). Both are in excellent form, providing connective tissue to the original film and its sequel. And they're also good for some laughs, as when Ray, upon hearing one of the prospective victims announce that they should all simply flee the area and head to the Bahamas in a boat, sagely advises: 'For reasons I won't go into, I wouldn't do that.' Director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson (Netflix's Do Revenge) and her co-screenwriter Sam Lansky display clear affection for the franchise, as evidenced by some fun cameos from unbilled performers whose appearances garnered delighted screams from the audience (be sure to stay for the end credits). But they haven't succeeded in breathing new life into a tired franchise that, creatively speaking, should have remained dead. Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Solve the daily Crossword