As October turns to November, it is a great time to be a subscriber to Peacock as not only is the NBCUniversal streaming service able to bring audiences a ton of titles perfect to watch in preparation for Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s, but it also is the streaming home to some of the best football action at both the college and NFL levels. When you throw in new movies and series that are original and exclusive to Peacock and from across the NBCU family of networks, it is a good time to sign up for either a Peacock Premium ($5.99) or Peacock Premium Plus ($11.99) plan.
So, we here at The Streamable have put together a list of the five most exciting things coming to Peacock in November, and down below, you can take a look at everything new coming to the streaming service in the month.
What Are the...
So, we here at The Streamable have put together a list of the five most exciting things coming to Peacock in November, and down below, you can take a look at everything new coming to the streaming service in the month.
What Are the...
- 10/30/2023
- by Matt Tamanini
- The Streamable
The year is 3042, and the Earth has been destroyed. 15 years ago, humankind unveiled a mysterious and powerful technology called the Titan Project. Its true nature is not revealed immediately, but a species of envious aliens made of pure energy, the Drej, fear it and have destroyed humankind in defense. Now, the galaxy's remaining humans roam the cosmos as outcasts, forced to take odd jobs on freighters. A young human named Cale (Matt Damon) has taken a job on a vessel called the Valkyrie, where he works alongside a smarmy bat alien named Preedex (Nathan Lane), a kooky frog-like scientist named Gune (John Leguizamo), a bitter and angry kangaroo-like engineer named Stith (Janeanne Garofalo), a human pilot named Akima (Drew Barrymore), and the heroic Captain Korso (Bill Pullman). Together, they travel the stars avoiding Drej and following an obscure map to the location of the Titan, the ship that still contains Earth's technological breakthrough.
- 12/18/2022
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film
Get in touch to send in cinephile news and discoveries. For daily updates follow us @NotebookMUBI.NEWSThe winners of this year's socially distanced Academy Awards ceremony include Daniel Kaluuya, Youn Yuh Jung, and Chloé Zhao. Find our full list of winners and nominees here.The legendary layout artist Roy Naisbitt has died at 90. Best known for his intricate and interweaving visions, Naisbitt worked on films like Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Space Jam, Balto and 2001: A Space Odyssey. Recommended VIEWINGAn extension of This Long Century, Ecstatic Static is a database of films and information from a broad community of artists. The site is currently screening films like Simon Liu's Signal 8, and also has an extensive library featuring new notes on filmmaking by Jodie Mack, Helena Wittmann, and more. Anthology Film Archives has announced a new online festival, presented in partnership with production company Vanda. Entitled Vanda Duarte: Dissident Films by Latin American Women Directors,...
- 4/28/2021
- MUBI
Joseph Baxter Dec 4, 2019
Disney+ movie Togo tells the true story of a musher and his hero dog on an Alaskan tundra trek to deliver serum for an outbreak.
Togo, a fact-based movie about a legendary dog sled run to deliver an outbreak-combatting serum, may have the makings of an inspirationally adventurous family-driven Disney theatrical offering, but the film is instead headed to a device near you as a (non-Mandalorian) offering on streaming platform Disney+.
Four-time Oscar nominee Willem Dafoe headlines Togo as Norwegian sled rider Leonhard Seppala, sharing top billing with the film’s eponymous character, a 12-year-old hero dog who, despite his advanced age, leads Seppala’s team on a perilous 1925 trek across 674 miles of the Alaskan tundra from Seward to deliver life-saving serum to those suffering from a diphtheria outbreak in Nome.
Ericson Core directed Togo, bringing experience from 2015’s Point Break remake and 2006 Mark Walhberg-headlined Vince Papale biopic Invincible.
Disney+ movie Togo tells the true story of a musher and his hero dog on an Alaskan tundra trek to deliver serum for an outbreak.
Togo, a fact-based movie about a legendary dog sled run to deliver an outbreak-combatting serum, may have the makings of an inspirationally adventurous family-driven Disney theatrical offering, but the film is instead headed to a device near you as a (non-Mandalorian) offering on streaming platform Disney+.
Four-time Oscar nominee Willem Dafoe headlines Togo as Norwegian sled rider Leonhard Seppala, sharing top billing with the film’s eponymous character, a 12-year-old hero dog who, despite his advanced age, leads Seppala’s team on a perilous 1925 trek across 674 miles of the Alaskan tundra from Seward to deliver life-saving serum to those suffering from a diphtheria outbreak in Nome.
Ericson Core directed Togo, bringing experience from 2015’s Point Break remake and 2006 Mark Walhberg-headlined Vince Papale biopic Invincible.
- 12/4/2019
- Den of Geek
Based on the same real-life story that inspired the 1995 animated feature “Balto” and Disney’s forthcoming “Togo”, “The Great Alaskan Race” promises at the very least to be a satisfying movie for dog lovers. What else could one expect, as its poster consists of a husky’s face in giant closeup? Unfortunately, it turns out that very least is still too much to ask for from this handsome but hokey drama, which barely seems to notice its canine players amid a focus on one-dimensional humans.
Chief among them is writer-director-producer-star Brian Presley (best known for TV soap “Port Charles”), playing the man who successfully delivered serum to Nome with his dog team during a 1925 diphtheria epidemic — a near-miraculous run still commemorated annually by the Iditarod Trail competition. That triumph over extremely adverse conditions should make for an exciting physical adventure.
Bound to seem rather tedious to children, while most adults...
Chief among them is writer-director-producer-star Brian Presley (best known for TV soap “Port Charles”), playing the man who successfully delivered serum to Nome with his dog team during a 1925 diphtheria epidemic — a near-miraculous run still commemorated annually by the Iditarod Trail competition. That triumph over extremely adverse conditions should make for an exciting physical adventure.
Bound to seem rather tedious to children, while most adults...
- 10/24/2019
- by Dennis Harvey
- Variety Film + TV
Remember Balto, the 1995 animated movie about a sled dog who must make a dangerous trek in order to deliver life-saving medicine to the children of an isolated community? The new film Arctic Dogs asks “What if that, but without so many tiny coffins?” Yes, this is an animated film about animals delivering packages across […]
The post ‘Arctic Dogs’ Trailer: It’s Like ‘Balto,’ But With Fewer Dying Children appeared first on /Film.
The post ‘Arctic Dogs’ Trailer: It’s Like ‘Balto,’ But With Fewer Dying Children appeared first on /Film.
- 9/29/2019
- by Jacob Hall
- Slash Film
As Disney Plus prepares to launch, the streaming service is prepping a number of shows and films it hopes will have broad family appeal.
In fact, “family” is the operative word. Despite the constraint-free world of streaming, all of the new projects Disney has announced for the service will be viewable by a wide age range. Don’t expect a gritty reboot featuring an armed Bambi who turns the gun on the hunter anytime soon.
Disney Plus will be the online home of a library of more than 5,000 hours of the studio’s films and TV programs. Disney hopes this trove of classic material will make it a must-have for families with young kids, in the same way previous generations of parents bought the company’s VHS and DVD titles by the millions. The service will also be the exclusive streaming home of upcoming theatrical releases like “Avengers: Endgame” and the “Aladdin” remake.
In fact, “family” is the operative word. Despite the constraint-free world of streaming, all of the new projects Disney has announced for the service will be viewable by a wide age range. Don’t expect a gritty reboot featuring an armed Bambi who turns the gun on the hunter anytime soon.
Disney Plus will be the online home of a library of more than 5,000 hours of the studio’s films and TV programs. Disney hopes this trove of classic material will make it a must-have for families with young kids, in the same way previous generations of parents bought the company’s VHS and DVD titles by the millions. The service will also be the exclusive streaming home of upcoming theatrical releases like “Avengers: Endgame” and the “Aladdin” remake.
- 1/29/2019
- by Cynthia Littleton
- Variety Film + TV
“Sister Act 3” is ramping up development, tapping “Insecure” co-executive producer Regina Hicks and “Star” showrunner Karin Gist to pen the sequel for Disney’s newly named streaming service, Disney+.
Plot details of “Sister Act 3” are being kept under wraps, but the original starred Whoopi Goldberg and centered on her Reno lounge singer, who goes into protective custody at a San Francisco convent and pretends to be a nun after a mob boss puts a hit on her. Goldberg has said she would cameo in this pic, but that a new cast would put a fresh spin on the original.
The 1992 film from Disney’s Touchstone Pictures also starred Maggie Smith and Harvey Keitel and earned $232 million worldwide.
This marks another major piece of IP that Disney has added to its streaming service as it continues to build up its TV and film slate. The service has already set a live-action “Lady and the Tramp,...
Plot details of “Sister Act 3” are being kept under wraps, but the original starred Whoopi Goldberg and centered on her Reno lounge singer, who goes into protective custody at a San Francisco convent and pretends to be a nun after a mob boss puts a hit on her. Goldberg has said she would cameo in this pic, but that a new cast would put a fresh spin on the original.
The 1992 film from Disney’s Touchstone Pictures also starred Maggie Smith and Harvey Keitel and earned $232 million worldwide.
This marks another major piece of IP that Disney has added to its streaming service as it continues to build up its TV and film slate. The service has already set a live-action “Lady and the Tramp,...
- 12/7/2018
- by Justin Kroll
- Variety Film + TV
Film adaptations of Dr. Seuss' beloved children's books have been pulling in boatloads of cash over the past decade or so. With the exception of the live action The Cat in the Hat starring Mike Myers, all of them have been huge box office hits even when receiving mediocre reviews -- including Ron Howard's live action take on the holiday classic How The Grinch Stole Christmas. Of course, CG animation is now the medium of choice for almost every movie aimed at a family audience and with Illumination Entertainment in search of a follow-up to The Lorax, they have decided to turn back to this familiar tale once again. That's right, The Grinch is headed back to the screen for a third time... but will audiences be willing to pay to see it again so soon? According to THR, Universal has hired Peter Candeland to direct a new...
- 2/12/2013
- by Sean
- FilmJunk
Following the success of last year’s The Lorax, Christopher Meledandri from Illumination Entertainment is reportedly working on a new animated version of Dr. Seuss classic How the Grinch Stole Christmas. Melendandri will produce with Seuss’ widow Audrey Geisel onboard as an executive producer and Pete Candeland set to make his feature directorial debut. After working as an animator on Balto and Bonkers among others, Candeland has been behind the music videos for the animated band Gorillaz. In 2000, Universal released the reimagining of How the Grinch Stole Christmas, a live-action version The Grinch starring Jim Carrey, which was not received well by critics and audiences,...
- 2/8/2013
- by Nick Martin
- Filmofilia
After teaming up to bring Dr. Seuss' tales such as The Lorax and Horton Hears a Who to the big screen, Universal Pictures and Illuminaton Entertainment are teaming up again to animate one of the authors rhyming stories. However, this time will mark the first collaboration adapting a book that has already seen two different versions made. Variety reports How the Grinch Stole Christmas is on the docket for an animated adaptation that will be more faithful to the book, which actually lends itself better to the three act structure of a film, making it so less original material has to be created to pad out a feature film adaptation. Pete Candeland is set to make his feature directorial debut with the film after working as an animator on old projects like Balto and "Aladdin: The Animated Series." More recently, Candeland has been behind the music videos for the animated band Gorillaz.
- 2/8/2013
- by Ethan Anderton
- firstshowing.net
Mars Needs Moms
Directed by Simon Wells
Written by Simon Wells and Wendy Wells
Starring Seth Green, Joan Cusack, Dan Fogler, Elisabeth Harnois
A fascinating trend has been cropping up in mainstream filmmaking over the last 20 years, specific to major male directors who are widely considered to be technological pioneers. From James Cameron to Steven Spielberg to Peter Jackson, a good number of cinematic titans have not only embraced new advances in filmmaking, but they’ve become obsessed with them. You could probably argue that any auteur gets that way thanks mostly to obsession, so this shouldn’t be much of a surprise. Think of Cameron, who was, for a long time, utterly single-minded in his devoted relationship to the Hms Titanic, first making the massively successful 1997 epic with Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio. Then he made IMAX movies about the Titanic, such as Ghosts of the Abyss. Finally, in 2009, he moved on,...
Directed by Simon Wells
Written by Simon Wells and Wendy Wells
Starring Seth Green, Joan Cusack, Dan Fogler, Elisabeth Harnois
A fascinating trend has been cropping up in mainstream filmmaking over the last 20 years, specific to major male directors who are widely considered to be technological pioneers. From James Cameron to Steven Spielberg to Peter Jackson, a good number of cinematic titans have not only embraced new advances in filmmaking, but they’ve become obsessed with them. You could probably argue that any auteur gets that way thanks mostly to obsession, so this shouldn’t be much of a surprise. Think of Cameron, who was, for a long time, utterly single-minded in his devoted relationship to the Hms Titanic, first making the massively successful 1997 epic with Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio. Then he made IMAX movies about the Titanic, such as Ghosts of the Abyss. Finally, in 2009, he moved on,...
- 9/15/2012
- by Josh Spiegel
- SoundOnSight
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Disney has cancelled Robert Zemeckis' Yellow Submarine remake following the horrendous opening of his ImageMovers film Mars Needs Moms. Mars Needs Moms made $6.9 million last weekend, it's first weekend of release. It cost $150 million to make. You see the problem. Additionally, while motion-capture is an amazing form of animation, it's look may not serve the family film audience. The word often used to describe the animation is "creepy." So, yeah, you see the problem.
Zemeckis reportedly is "regrouping" in Montana and is said to be looking for a live-action film to direct. Before he created ImageMovers and its motion-capture animation,...
Disney has cancelled Robert Zemeckis' Yellow Submarine remake following the horrendous opening of his ImageMovers film Mars Needs Moms. Mars Needs Moms made $6.9 million last weekend, it's first weekend of release. It cost $150 million to make. You see the problem. Additionally, while motion-capture is an amazing form of animation, it's look may not serve the family film audience. The word often used to describe the animation is "creepy." So, yeah, you see the problem.
Zemeckis reportedly is "regrouping" in Montana and is said to be looking for a live-action film to direct. Before he created ImageMovers and its motion-capture animation,...
- 3/16/2011
- by tara@kidspickflicks.com (Tara the Mom)
- kidspickflicks
How the best new kids' movies are putting voice actors out of work, and perpetuating Hollywood's star system
"Well you might as well talk to me because nobody else will talk about it. I'm not afraid of anybody." I've just told prolific voice actor Billy West – who over the past two decades has worked extensively on the likes of Ren & Stimpy and Futurama – that I'm writing about the use of Hollywood actors in animated feature films. He's not a fan, and is eager to speak about it. "I love tickling the dragon's tail," he says. "It makes me feel like I'm alive! If I can't Tourette out the truth I should be muzzled. I can't help it. Some people say, 'Aren't you afraid you're gonna be blackballed?' but you know what? I'm 60 years old. I don't think there's anything in the world that I'm afraid of."
Over the past 20 years,...
"Well you might as well talk to me because nobody else will talk about it. I'm not afraid of anybody." I've just told prolific voice actor Billy West – who over the past two decades has worked extensively on the likes of Ren & Stimpy and Futurama – that I'm writing about the use of Hollywood actors in animated feature films. He's not a fan, and is eager to speak about it. "I love tickling the dragon's tail," he says. "It makes me feel like I'm alive! If I can't Tourette out the truth I should be muzzled. I can't help it. Some people say, 'Aren't you afraid you're gonna be blackballed?' but you know what? I'm 60 years old. I don't think there's anything in the world that I'm afraid of."
Over the past 20 years,...
- 3/5/2011
- The Guardian - Film News
From Image Movers Digital (A Christmas Carol, Polar Express) comes Mars Needs Moms, and adaptation of Berkeley Breathed‘s book. The film is directed by one of my favorite animators growing up, Simon Wells (An American Tail: Fievel Goes West, We’re Back! A Dinosaur’s Story, Balto, The Prince of Egypt), and feature voice acting by Seth Green, Joan Cusack and Dan Fogler.
We brought you the first trailer, and now Apple has premiered the snappier second one. While I’m not expecting much – and I’m certainly not the demographic – this could be a decent family film, based on Image Movers involvement and a few clever jokes in the trailer. Check it out below.
Synopsis:
Take out the trash, eat your broccoli–who needs moms, anyway? Nine-year-old Milo (Seth Green) finds out just how much he needs his mom (Joan Cusack) when she’s nabbed by Martians who...
We brought you the first trailer, and now Apple has premiered the snappier second one. While I’m not expecting much – and I’m certainly not the demographic – this could be a decent family film, based on Image Movers involvement and a few clever jokes in the trailer. Check it out below.
Synopsis:
Take out the trash, eat your broccoli–who needs moms, anyway? Nine-year-old Milo (Seth Green) finds out just how much he needs his mom (Joan Cusack) when she’s nabbed by Martians who...
- 2/16/2011
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
I still haven't seen the original Mean Girls, but it seems to qualify as a chick flick that has found a strong cult following outside of the usual audience one would expect for such a thing. It doesn't hurt that it was written by Tina Fey, and that the humour in it is both dark and clever. Now, with the recent success of Easy A, it would appear that the time is right for a Mean Girls sequel. Unfortunately, I don't think this direct-to-dvd cash grab is really what anyone was hoping for. The story involves a high school outcast named Abby (Jennifer Stone) whose father bribes a new student named Jo (Meaghan Martin) to befriend her. The two then take on the school's "mean girls" aka The Plastics. Of course, these aren't the same mean girls since none of the original cast members are returning, with the exception of Tim Meadows.
- 11/24/2010
- by Sean
- FilmJunk
Disney has released the first trailer for its upcoming Mars Needs Moms, based on the book by Bloom County author and illustrator Berkeley Breathed. It follows a young boy (voiced by Seth Green) who stows away on a space ship after his mom (Joan Cusack) is abducted. The boy gets help from the tech-savvy, underground earthman "Gribble" (Dan Fogler) and a rebel Martian girl "Ki" (Elisabeth Harnois).
The animation in the trailer doesn't look much like Breathed's original artwork, instead looking more like the (often creepy) motion-captured animation of The Polar Express and A Christmas Carol. This comes as no surprise — the director of those movies, Robert Zemeckis, is producing. Simon Wells (Balto) directed the movie from a script he co-wrote with Wendy Wells.
Next Showing:
Link | Posted 11/24/2010 by Ryan
Mars Needs Moms...
The animation in the trailer doesn't look much like Breathed's original artwork, instead looking more like the (often creepy) motion-captured animation of The Polar Express and A Christmas Carol. This comes as no surprise — the director of those movies, Robert Zemeckis, is producing. Simon Wells (Balto) directed the movie from a script he co-wrote with Wendy Wells.
Next Showing:
Link | Posted 11/24/2010 by Ryan
Mars Needs Moms...
- 11/24/2010
- by Ryan Gowland
- Reelzchannel.com
If you’ve been feeling that there just aren’t enough slightly creepy-seeming CG humans birthed using performance capture technology in cinemas these days, then here comes Mars Needs Moms to your rescue with a new trailer, available to view below.Okay, so the latest output from the pact between Robert Zemeckis’ ImageMovers and Disney (though actually directed by Balto/The Time Machine’s Simon Wells), is supposed to be slightly cartoonier than even, say, A Christmas Carol. But the effect is still a little unsettling.The plot has been adapted from cult Us cartoonist Berkeley Breathed’s book about… Well, you can probably guess what. But the movie’s script boils down to the fact that young Milo (Seth Green) doesn’t appreciate what a great mother he’s got until she’s whisked away by Martians who are in desperate need of maternal figures for their young. Why...
- 11/24/2010
- EmpireOnline
Moms need a little space. After that brilliant tagline (and poster), we now have the first trailer for Disney’s upcoming kiddie animation Mars Needs Moms. From Image Movers Digital, the team that brought you A Christmas Carol and Polar Express, comes this adaptation of Berkeley Breathed‘s book. The animation looks a bit plain, and this is definitely for children, but it looks like there will be a little something else for those not in that age-group. The film is directed by one of my favorite animators growing up, Simon Wells (An American Tail: Fievel Goes West, We’re Back! A Dinosaur’s Story, Balto, The Prince of Egypt), and feature voice acting by Seth Green, Joan Cusack and Dan Fogler. Check out the trailer below via Yahoo.
Mars Needs Moms hits theaters March 11th, 2011.
What do you think of the trailer?
E-mail Jordan Raup here. Follow him on...
Mars Needs Moms hits theaters March 11th, 2011.
What do you think of the trailer?
E-mail Jordan Raup here. Follow him on...
- 11/23/2010
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Today we bring you the latest in promo posters from Ralph Fienne’s directorial debut, Coriolanus, the controversial Jim Carrey comedy, I Love You Phillip Morris, and Disney’s upcoming animated adventure, Mars Needs Moms.
Coriolanus, a modern version of Shakespeare’s play, has been adapted into a “dangerous political thriller” by screenwriter John Logan, whose previously penned Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street and The Aviator. The film will star Ralph Fiennes, Gerard Butler, Vanessa Redgrave, and Brian Cox.
Synopsis provided by Icon Movies:
The citizens of Rome are hungry. Coriolanus, the hero of Rome, a great soldier and a man of inflexible self-belief, despises the people. His extreme views ignite a mass riot. Rome is bloody.
Manipulated and out-maneuvered by politicians and even his own mother Volumnia, Coriolanus is banished from Rome. He offers his life or his services to his sworn enemy Tullus Aufidius. Coriolanus...
Coriolanus, a modern version of Shakespeare’s play, has been adapted into a “dangerous political thriller” by screenwriter John Logan, whose previously penned Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street and The Aviator. The film will star Ralph Fiennes, Gerard Butler, Vanessa Redgrave, and Brian Cox.
Synopsis provided by Icon Movies:
The citizens of Rome are hungry. Coriolanus, the hero of Rome, a great soldier and a man of inflexible self-belief, despises the people. His extreme views ignite a mass riot. Rome is bloody.
Manipulated and out-maneuvered by politicians and even his own mother Volumnia, Coriolanus is banished from Rome. He offers his life or his services to his sworn enemy Tullus Aufidius. Coriolanus...
- 10/19/2010
- by Kristy Puchko
- The Film Stage
Six degrees, two degrees, no degrees. Kevin Bacon walks amongst us. If you live in N.Y.C. you will have seen him here or there. Ditto if you surf your TV for late night moving pictures. He is a chameleon in some ways. Appears in movies, maybe not in the forefront, that have defined Americans and our culture in every decade he has worked, and he has worked plenty, although you'd be hard-pressed to find fans and critics raining the same praise on him as they do his peer Sean Penn. Too bad, because he has maintained a steady and dignified career. From highbrow dramas to comedies, science fiction to horror flicks, and even animation (the voice of Balto). From Animal House in 1978, the original Friday the 13th in 1980, not to mention Diner and Footloose from that same decade, even my son's favorite dark monster comedy Tremors in 1990.
read...
read...
- 2/28/2009
- by Dusty Wright
- www.culturecatch.com
Alpine Pictures signs Martin Short and Jim Belushi to star in its upcoming animated musical feature film Dorothy of Oz. Short and Belushi will lend their voices to the Jester and the Lion respectively. Based on Roger S. Baum's books and writing, Dorothy of OZ is the first in a series of animated movies from Alpine Pictures, in association with Box Office Productions III. The movie is being produced by Bonne Radford (Curious George, Road to El Dorado, Balto) and directed by noted director/animator Daniel St. Pierre (Everyone's Hero, and upcoming Quantum Quest: A Cassini Space Odyssey, and Sheepish). Roger S. Baum is the great-grandson of L. Frank Baum, author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and other Oz books.
http://enews.cynopsis.com/html.asp?XZY1172226UTF60...
http://enews.cynopsis.com/html.asp?XZY1172226UTF60...
- 9/17/2008
- by gwen@cynopsis.com
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