As Marvel fans prepared to round out yet another week of waiting for the Spider-Man: No Way Home trailer, a different and much less pleasant surprise awaited them instead after news broke that Black Widow star Scarlett Johansson is suing Disney over breach of contract.
Johansson has starred in eight blockbuster Marvel Cinematic Universe entries as Natasha Romanoff – a former Russian spy who has defected to fight for the US government – including her final solo film in the franchise, which saw its release delayed several times during the pandemic. The actress has a successful career outside of her various Marvel Studios projects, and revealed she was done playing the character during a press tour for Black Widow earlier this month.
Johansson’s suit addresses a “guarantee” from Disney that Black Widow would get an exclusive theatrical release. Since Disney decided to release the film on its streaming service, Disney+, at...
Johansson has starred in eight blockbuster Marvel Cinematic Universe entries as Natasha Romanoff – a former Russian spy who has defected to fight for the US government – including her final solo film in the franchise, which saw its release delayed several times during the pandemic. The actress has a successful career outside of her various Marvel Studios projects, and revealed she was done playing the character during a press tour for Black Widow earlier this month.
Johansson’s suit addresses a “guarantee” from Disney that Black Widow would get an exclusive theatrical release. Since Disney decided to release the film on its streaming service, Disney+, at...
- 7/30/2021
- by Kirsten Howard
- Den of Geek
John Erman, the Emmy-winning director who worked on Roots, That Girl, Peyton Place, Star Trek, The Fugitive and M*A*S*H during his 40-plus years in television, died June 25 in New York after a brief illness, a publicist announced. He was 85.
A 10-time Emmy nominee, Erman won his statuette for helming the 1983 ABC telefilm Who Will Love My Children? starring Ann-Margret as a woman diagnosed with cancer in 1952 determined to find homes for her 10 kids.
Erman also called the shots for the actress in the miniseries The Two Mrs. Grenvilles in 1987, Queen in 1993 and Scarlett in 1994 and in the telefilms A Streetcar Named Desire in ...
A 10-time Emmy nominee, Erman won his statuette for helming the 1983 ABC telefilm Who Will Love My Children? starring Ann-Margret as a woman diagnosed with cancer in 1952 determined to find homes for her 10 kids.
Erman also called the shots for the actress in the miniseries The Two Mrs. Grenvilles in 1987, Queen in 1993 and Scarlett in 1994 and in the telefilms A Streetcar Named Desire in ...
John Erman, the Emmy-winning director who worked on Roots, That Girl, Peyton Place, Star Trek, The Fugitive and M*A*S*H during his 40-plus years in television, died June 25 in New York after a brief illness, a publicist announced. He was 85.
A 10-time Emmy nominee, Erman won his statuette for helming the 1983 ABC telefilm Who Will Love My Children? starring Ann-Margret as a woman diagnosed with cancer in 1952 determined to find homes for her 10 kids.
Erman also called the shots for the actress in the miniseries The Two Mrs. Grenvilles in 1987, Queen in 1993 and Scarlett in 1994 and in the telefilms A Streetcar Named Desire in ...
A 10-time Emmy nominee, Erman won his statuette for helming the 1983 ABC telefilm Who Will Love My Children? starring Ann-Margret as a woman diagnosed with cancer in 1952 determined to find homes for her 10 kids.
Erman also called the shots for the actress in the miniseries The Two Mrs. Grenvilles in 1987, Queen in 1993 and Scarlett in 1994 and in the telefilms A Streetcar Named Desire in ...
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