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Jason Reitman said his dad 'Ghostbusters' director Ivan cried tears of pride for son's 'Ghostbusters: Afterlife'

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Ernie Hudson — Paul Warner/Getty Images(NEW YORK) — In a chat with the UK movie magazine Empire, director and co-writer of Ghostbusters: Afterlife Jason Reitman revealed how emotional it was to screen the film for Ivan Reitman, his dad — and the director of the original films. 

The follow-up features the film’s original cast reprising their roles, along with Stranger Things‘ Finn Wolfhard and Captain Marvel co-star Mckenna Grace, playing siblings who move to rural Oklahoma, and thanks to a series of supernatural occurrences, end up taking part in their late scientist grandfather’s old job: busting ghosts.

Jason Reitman, 43, tells Empire he screened the movie for his 74-year-old dad in early December. “My father hasn’t been leaving the house much because of COVID. But he took a test, put on a mask and drove down to the Sony lot to watch the movie…”

The younger Reitman revealed, “And after, he cried, and he said, ‘I’m so proud to be your father.’ And it was one of the great moments of my life.”

For his part, co-star Ernie Hudson, reprising his role as former skeptic Winston Zeddemore, tells ABC Audio about the pandemic-delayed film, “I was disappointed that it didn’t come out last summer, and then they pushed it to February and now it’s pushed to the summer.”

He adds, “But I know the studio wants it to be shown in the theater, where people hopefully will see it to get that full experience as opposed to streaming it…”

The film is now slated to open June 11.

Hudson adds, “For me to…work with a new cast, but also to to be [back] together with Bill Murray and Dan Aykroyd, Sigourney Weaver and Annie Potts…I really feel blessed to have been a part of this franchise and what it means to people.”

By Stephen Iervolino 
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Hello again, Clarice! Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins reunite to celebrate 'Silence of the Lambs'' 30th anniversary

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Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images(LOS ANGELES) — Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins reunited virtually in part to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the film that netted them both Best Actor trophies, The Silence of the Lambs, Johnathan Demme’s adaptation of Thomas Harris novel.

The conversation was part of Variety‘s ongoing “Actors on Actors” series. 

Hopkins, who of course played the brilliant Hannibal Lecter, admitted to being confused by the film’s title at first. “My agent sent a script. He said, ‘Why don’t you read this? It’s called Silence of the Lambs.’ I said, ‘Is it a children’s story?”

For all of Lecter’s icy menace — modeled after an old acting teacher of Hopkins’, he revealed — it was he who was at first intimidated by Foster, who played newbie FBI recruit Clarice Starling. “I was scared to speak to you. I thought, ‘She just won an Oscar [for The Accused].”

Calling the Best Picture-winning film, “a life-changing adventure…for both of us,” Foster, who played newbie FBI agent Clarice Starling, recalled the pair’s first read-through of the script, sitting opposite each other at a table. “And as you launched into Hannibal Lecter, I felt a chill come over the room.” 

Foster also wondered if people “still ask [Hopkins] if he would like a nice chianti,” as one would expect, to which Hopkins replied, “all the time.” 

As fans would hope, Hopkins ended the conversation with an in-character “Goodbye, Clarice,” to which Foster laughed and responded, “Goodbye, Dr. Lecter.”

By Stephen Iervolino 
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Tom Holland reprises his role as Peter Parker for Avengers Campus' 'Spider-Man' ride at Disneyland

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Disney Parks(LOS ANGELES) — Good news for Marvel fans looking forward to the opening of the Avengers Campus at Disneyland Resort: Disney Parks has revealed more details about its first attraction to swing into the destination.

Actor Tom Holland will reprise his role as Peter Parker for the upcoming attraction WEB SLINGERS: A Spider-Man Adventure.

“What Walt Disney Imagineers have created is pretty spectacular,” Holland tells ABC’s Good Morning America. “When I first joined [the MCU] playing Spider-Man, I went to [the] Avengers headquarters [set] and it was just a bunch of green screens. So the fact that there will be a legit place where people can…visit is pretty awesome.”

The upcoming 3-D experience will catapult guests into Spider-Man’s world via the WEB SLINGER vehicle, a new invention from Peter Parker and the Worldwide Engineering Brigade (W.E.B.) Tech team.  The attraction starts with guests attending an open house, where the W.E.B. Tech team introduces their adorable Spider-Bots — robotic sidekicks capable of building anything a superhero might need. But Parker’s demo awry and he soon needs your help to stop them from escaping.

Guests will be able to fully channel their inner Spider-Man, thanks to new features specifically designed for the attraction.

“You actually get to sling webs,” Walt Disney Imagineering Executive Creative Director Brent Strong told GMA.  “We can render a virtual web coming right out of the palm of your hand, right out of your virtual web shooters…It’s a lot less painful than being bitten by a radioactive spider, but you actually get to have all of those amazing powers.”

“It’s the most I’ve ever felt like Spider-Man,” Holland added. “Everybody is going to get to share that experience, which is so awesome.”

Disney is the parent company of ABC News.

By Angeline Jane Bernabe
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Diane Lane talks about reuniting with Kevin Costner, and 'Let Him Go''s intense "Porkchop Summit" scene

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Focus Features/Kimberly French(NEW YORK) — Based on the 2013 Larry Watson book of the same name, writer-director Thomas Bezucha’s [bez-OOH-kah] intense drama Let Him Go is now available to own on digital. 

Set in 1963, the film stars Oscar winner Kevin Costner and Oscar nominee Diane Lane, who play George and Margaret Blackledge, a couple mourning the accidental death of their son and who go to great lengths to be reunited with their only grandson.  The retired lawman and his wife hit the road to find the boy and their former daughter-in-law after she’s forced to skip town with her abusive new husband.

For Lane, snagging Costner as the male lead was a wish come true, she tells ABC Audio. “We didn’t dare say Kevin’s name out loud,” Lane laughed. “We didn’t want to jinx it…”

She adds, “We’d worked together before portraying husband and wife…years before on Man of Steel, and [when] we said goodbye… I think Kevin said to me, “[W]e need to work together again…I think we have something here,’ Lane recalls, “I was like, ‘Ditto!'” 

Let Him Go slow-burns into an intense thriller as George and Margaret learn how dangerous her new in-laws really are. Things come to a head at a dinner at the new family’s creepy, off-the-grid home, hosted by a scene-stealing Leslie Manville as the family’s incredibly icy matriarch.  It might just be the most tense onscreen meal since Game of Thrones‘ infamous “Red Wedding.”

“I agree, and thank you,” Lane laughs at the comparison. “Yeah, we called that ‘Porkchop Summit,’ that sequence…It was delicious. I mean, pardon the pun!  It’s hard to have an appetite in that kind of stress. Have you ever had a situation where you’re trying to eat a beautiful meal and it’s just hell happening emotionally? It’s really tough.”

 

By Stephen Iervolino 
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

It's time to light the lights! 'The Muppet Show' coming to Disney+

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Disney+(LOS ANGELES) — “It’s time to play the music! It’s time to light the lights!” That’s right, it’s time to get things started, because every episode of Jim Henson’s classic variety program The Muppet Show is coming to Disney+.

The fun kicks off February 19.

The series not only featured the visionary puppeteer’s fuzzy friends, but also featured appearances by flesh-and-blood celebrities from John Cleese and Steve Martin to Alice Cooper and Elton John.  It aired in syndication from 1976 to 1981, winning four Primetime Emmys during its run.

This latest acquisition for Disney+ joins the other Muppet-related content on the streaming channel, which includes hit features like 1979’s The Muppet Movie and its sequels, the Jason Segel-penned 2011 film The Muppets, as well as the recent small-screen revival Muppets Now, which aired on ABC. 

Incidentally, the final two seasons of The Muppet Show have never been available for home viewing until this collaboration with the streaming service.

In a statement, Kermit the Frog beamed, “It’s going to be great to welcome back longtime fans, and to give a new generation of fans a chance to see how we got our start, how Miss Piggy became a star and so much more.”

Disney is the parent company of ABC News.

By Stephen Iervolino 
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.