
The 1986 drama Sid And Nancy was overlooked by all the major awards ceremonies, but its reputation has only grown with time. Walker director Alex Cox’s biopic tells the story of Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious, and his chaotic love affair with Nancy Spungen. It is notable as being one of Gary Oldman’s first films – he is compelling as Vicious throughout – while Chloe Webb is uniformly excellent as Spungen, by turns bratty, domineering, and oddly vulnerable. But it’s not merely the great performances of the two leads that makes it so effortlessly watchable.
- 2/22/2025
- by Craig Jones
- Collider.com


The 1987 sci-fi action classic RoboCop is one of those rare perfect movies. Everything about it works just right. The satire. The violence. The characters. The design of RoboCop himself. And it’s difficult to follow up perfection. Which is evident in RoboCop 2, a movie that tried to carry on the story… But ended up feeling tonally inconsistent and a bit scattered. It’s a fun movie, but not on the level of its predecessor. And now, we’re going to dig into just what happened to RoboCop 2.
Orion Pictures had a big hit on their hands with RoboCop, which they released on July 17, 1987. Made on a budget of just under fourteen million dollars, the film earned more than fifty-three million dollars at the box office. So, of course, Orion wanted to replicate that success as quickly as possible. They hired RoboCop writers Edward Neumeier and Michael Miner to...
Orion Pictures had a big hit on their hands with RoboCop, which they released on July 17, 1987. Made on a budget of just under fourteen million dollars, the film earned more than fifty-three million dollars at the box office. So, of course, Orion wanted to replicate that success as quickly as possible. They hired RoboCop writers Edward Neumeier and Michael Miner to...
- 1/31/2025
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com

Director Paul Thomas Anderson’s mysterious Leonardo DiCaprio-led 2025 movie could be the most surprising action movie, well, ever. The Academy Award-nominated filmmaker will join forces with the Academy Award-winning star for this year’s One Battle After Another, which has reportedly now had a test screening. And the results are...unexpected.
Known for the likes of Boogie Nights, Magnolia, and There Will Be Blood, One Battle After Another has now been described as the “closest we’ll ever get” to a Paul Thomas Anderson making a “full-on action movie.” The footage that was shown included “tentpole-level spectacle,” including “loads of action and car chases,” and a “phenomenal” car chase climax. According to The Film Stage and their sources, One Battle After Another could be the director’s most mainstream movie yet. “It could definitely appeal to a lot of people, starting with Leo and the scale that is present,...
Known for the likes of Boogie Nights, Magnolia, and There Will Be Blood, One Battle After Another has now been described as the “closest we’ll ever get” to a Paul Thomas Anderson making a “full-on action movie.” The footage that was shown included “tentpole-level spectacle,” including “loads of action and car chases,” and a “phenomenal” car chase climax. According to The Film Stage and their sources, One Battle After Another could be the director’s most mainstream movie yet. “It could definitely appeal to a lot of people, starting with Leo and the scale that is present,...
- 1/28/2025
- by Jonathan Fuge
- MovieWeb

“I need to start figuring out what the f— to say,” Paul Thomas Anderson recently said when it came to his biggest project yet, a $115 million Warner Bros. summer tentpole with a cast featuring Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Regina Hall, Teyana Taylor, Wood Harris, Alana Haim, Benicio del Toro, and Chase Infiniti. The promotion has not begun yet ahead of its August 8 release, but the film, which runs just under three hours, held its first test screening in Phoenix, Arizona at the Harkins Theatres Norterra 14 with the director in attendance and we have the first details.
Speaking with a lucky attendee at the screening, Anderson confirmed the film––which is titled One Battle After Another––is nearly finished, helping squash those unsubstantiated reports of the film being delayed. As early rumors hinted, it is indeed a modern take on Thomas Pynchon’s 1990 novel Vineland. While Donald Trump isn’t mentioned,...
Speaking with a lucky attendee at the screening, Anderson confirmed the film––which is titled One Battle After Another––is nearly finished, helping squash those unsubstantiated reports of the film being delayed. As early rumors hinted, it is indeed a modern take on Thomas Pynchon’s 1990 novel Vineland. While Donald Trump isn’t mentioned,...
- 1/25/2025
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage

In the last couple years I’ve conducted two very long interviews with Rob Tregenza, whose journey through cinema comprises four independent features of staggering vision (one being the sole film Godard produced outside his own direction), Dp duties for Alex Cox and (with remarkable strife) Béla Tarr, and ambitions for a fifth film. In our second conversation he surprised me: our first chat helped fuel The Fishing Place, a project he directed in Norway with elaborate crane systems (recalling his debut Talking to Strangers) and featuring, in his words, “the best [actors]––technically and artistically––I’ve ever had the blessing to work with.”
Tregenza’s own Cinema Parallel––distributor of Tarr and Godard when no American company bothered touching their work––will give The Fishing Place a one-week run at MoMA starting February 6 and in LA via Laemmle on March 7, ahead of which we’re pleased to exclusively debut a trailer.
Tregenza’s own Cinema Parallel––distributor of Tarr and Godard when no American company bothered touching their work––will give The Fishing Place a one-week run at MoMA starting February 6 and in LA via Laemmle on March 7, ahead of which we’re pleased to exclusively debut a trailer.
- 12/10/2024
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage

Throughout his lengthy Hollywood career, Gary Oldman has stepped outside himself and transformed into another person dozens of times. While so many of us will forever remember him for his fictional undertakings in projects like the Harry Potter franchise and Bram Stoker’s Dracula, the actor certainly has a particular knack for portraying real-life figures. From the troubled Sex Pistols bass player, Sid Vicious, in Alex Cox’s Sid and Nancy to his work as assassin Lee Harvey Oswald in Oliver Stone’s JFK, the actor has perfectly stuck the landing on numerous historical figures during his tenure in the biz. But, above all the others, it would be his work in Joe Wright’s 2017 biographical feature, Darkest Hour, that saw Oldman rise to new heights through his role as Winston Churchill. Right now, audiences can head over to Netflix, to see Oldman masterfully depict the ex-Prime Minister in the...
- 12/7/2024
- by Britta DeVore
- Collider.com

Emilio Estevez made his big screen debut at the age of 11 in the film "Badlands," Terrence Malick's mood drama starring Emilio's father Ramón Estévez, who was better known by his screen name Martin Sheen. When Emilio was 14, he flew with his father to the Philippines for another film shoot. Sheen was playing the lead role in Francis Ford Coppola's "Apocalypse Now," and the young Emilio was hired to appear as an extra. Sadly, his scenes were cut, but Estevez was inspired by his experience to write a play called "Echoes of an Era," and perform in the lead role. He was officially an actor like his father.
After graduating high school, Estevez eschewed college and entered show business. What followed was a decades-long and prolific career that brought him into the center of the Hollywood mainstream. In the 1980s, Estevez was part of a generation of rising actors...
After graduating high school, Estevez eschewed college and entered show business. What followed was a decades-long and prolific career that brought him into the center of the Hollywood mainstream. In the 1980s, Estevez was part of a generation of rising actors...
- 11/12/2024
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film

To watch Marco Bellocchio’s incendiary poliziottesco film Slap the Monster on Page One is to realize that the playbook of fascism has hardly changed over the past half-century. Exposing the thinly veiled collusion of right-wing politicians and reactionary media outlets, the demonization of leftist protesters, and the hypocritical piety that ran rampant during Italy’s “years of lead,” Bellocchio’s film probes the ways in which truth is undermined to shape public opinion and sway elections.
As the editor of Il Giornale, a fictional Italian newspaper, Giancarlo Bizanti (Gian Maria Volontè) certainly understands the power of seizing control of a narrative before one’s even been formed. Speaking to the lonely, embittered Rita (Laura Betti)—whom he manipulates into betraying her left-wing activist ex, Mario (Carrado Solari), ultimately falsely implicating the man in the murder of his current girlfriend, Maria (Silvia Kramar)—he says, “Let’s not try to lose our sense of reality.
As the editor of Il Giornale, a fictional Italian newspaper, Giancarlo Bizanti (Gian Maria Volontè) certainly understands the power of seizing control of a narrative before one’s even been formed. Speaking to the lonely, embittered Rita (Laura Betti)—whom he manipulates into betraying her left-wing activist ex, Mario (Carrado Solari), ultimately falsely implicating the man in the murder of his current girlfriend, Maria (Silvia Kramar)—he says, “Let’s not try to lose our sense of reality.
- 11/10/2024
- by Derek Smith
- Slant Magazine

NYC Weekend Watch is our weekly round-up of repertory offerings.
Film at Lincoln Center
The new 4K restoration of Sergei Parajanov’s Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors is now playing.
Bam
Robert Frank and Rudy Wurlitzer’s Candy Mountain begins screening in a new restoration. (Watch our exclusive trailer debut.)
Museum of the Moving Image
Monsters Inc. and What About Bob? play in a Frank Oz retrospective; Chantal Akerman’s American Stories: Food, Family and Philosophy screens on Sunday; The Texas Chain Saw Massacre shows throughout the weekend.
Metrograph
The Decameron, Fellini Satyricon, In America, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, The Legend of Suram Fortress, Corpse Bride, All the President’s Men, The Candidate, We Won’t Grow Old Together, Valerie and Her Week of Wonders, and Momma’s Man show on 35mm; an Azazel Jacobs series and Follow the Money: Kimberly Reed Selects begin; The Phantom of Ester Krumbachová, Rabbit on the Moon,...
Film at Lincoln Center
The new 4K restoration of Sergei Parajanov’s Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors is now playing.
Bam
Robert Frank and Rudy Wurlitzer’s Candy Mountain begins screening in a new restoration. (Watch our exclusive trailer debut.)
Museum of the Moving Image
Monsters Inc. and What About Bob? play in a Frank Oz retrospective; Chantal Akerman’s American Stories: Food, Family and Philosophy screens on Sunday; The Texas Chain Saw Massacre shows throughout the weekend.
Metrograph
The Decameron, Fellini Satyricon, In America, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, The Legend of Suram Fortress, Corpse Bride, All the President’s Men, The Candidate, We Won’t Grow Old Together, Valerie and Her Week of Wonders, and Momma’s Man show on 35mm; an Azazel Jacobs series and Follow the Money: Kimberly Reed Selects begin; The Phantom of Ester Krumbachová, Rabbit on the Moon,...
- 10/24/2024
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage

Ridley Scott's 2001 horror thriller "Hannibal" was a long-in-the-tooth sequel to "The Silence of the Lambs," both of them based on the works of author Thomas Harris. "Silence of the Lambs" was a boffo blockbuster when it came out in 1991, winning many Oscars and making millions. Anthony Hopkins took the world by storm with his lip-smacking performance as Dr. Hannibal Lecter, a brilliant psychiatrist with a penchant for mutilating, killing, and often eating his victims. At the end of "Lambs," Hannibal escapes his high-security prison and proceeds to wreak havoc in the world.
In "Hannibal," however, we learn that Dr. Lecter left one of his victims alive. Mason Verger (Gary Oldman) was a child stalker who, years ago, fell into Lecter's psychiatric care. Lecter, being a brilliant manipulator of minds, convinced Mason to use his autoerotic asphyxiation noose while slicing off his own face and feeding it to nearby dogs.
In "Hannibal," however, we learn that Dr. Lecter left one of his victims alive. Mason Verger (Gary Oldman) was a child stalker who, years ago, fell into Lecter's psychiatric care. Lecter, being a brilliant manipulator of minds, convinced Mason to use his autoerotic asphyxiation noose while slicing off his own face and feeding it to nearby dogs.
- 10/21/2024
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film

Having established himself with a string of low-budget, transgressive films, New Queer Cinema luminary Gregg Araki expanded his budgetary and artistic palette with his so-called Teen Apocalypse Trilogy, a series of narratively unrelated but thematically linked features about LGBTQ youths living on the margins of a Los Angeles redolent of the desiccated outskirts of the city as seen in Alex Cox’s Repo Man. Like that film, 1993’s Totally F***ed Up, 1995’s The Doom Generation, and 1997’s Nowhere are informed by the legacy and aesthetics of punk, but Araki builds on that foundation with styles drawn from the queer underground, as well as the rise of ’90s alternative music in its myriad forms of noise.
Totally F***ed Up sets the general narrative tone and atmosphere for all three features in the trilogy. Though it does have certain narrative through lines, the most significant of which is telegraphed by...
Totally F***ed Up sets the general narrative tone and atmosphere for all three features in the trilogy. Though it does have certain narrative through lines, the most significant of which is telegraphed by...
- 9/24/2024
- by Jake Cole
- Slant Magazine

An eventful week in the waning days of a medieval English village provides the narrative backbone for Harvest, Athina Rachel Tsangari’s moody-verging-on-mopish adaptation of Jim Crace’s novel of the same name. The book is written in a bewitching prose style somewhere between a monologue and a first-person essay. Dialogue is sparse, much of it denoted as overheard half-phrases, and the overall ambience alien, which is more than apt for a setting—a lord-of-the-manor-ruled agricultural collective—effectively lost to time.
Tsangari, who co-wrote the screenplay with Joslyn Barnes, finds her own way into this foreign land by accentuating the grit and the grime. This is evident in everything from Sean Price Williams’s grainy 16mm cinematography (some sort of crud is always visible at the edges of the frame) to the lead casting of Caleb Landry Jones, a performer who often seems like he’s just emerged dazed and confused from primordial sludge.
Tsangari, who co-wrote the screenplay with Joslyn Barnes, finds her own way into this foreign land by accentuating the grit and the grime. This is evident in everything from Sean Price Williams’s grainy 16mm cinematography (some sort of crud is always visible at the edges of the frame) to the lead casting of Caleb Landry Jones, a performer who often seems like he’s just emerged dazed and confused from primordial sludge.
- 9/23/2024
- by Keith Uhlich
- Slant Magazine

The utter weirdness of Alex Cox’s remarkable debut—a document of L.A.’s hardcore punk scene that’s also an ode to its car culture, a critique of the American middle class, and a kind-of sci-fi comedy about a radioactive Chevy Malibu—would seem to preclude its existence. And yet here it is. Forty years later, Repo Man is no worse for the wear. Not so much ahead of its time as outside of it, the film’s L.A. punk particularities have broadened over the years. Its ennui has endured not just as a portrait of a certain generation of angry adolescents, but as one of angry adolescence writ large. In a way, the film’s timelessness has always been assured by Cox’s restless protagonist, Emilio Estevez’s suburban punk-cum-repossession agent Otto, who’s always seemed like a bit of a nonentity.
As much as Repo Man...
As much as Repo Man...
- 9/22/2024
- by John Semley
- Slant Magazine

Like any movie genre, the Western has its fair share of popular subgenres. Well-known Western subgenres include neo-Westerns, revisionist Westerns, and spaghetti Westerns. More obscure Western subgenres include acid Westerns, meat pie Westerns, and weird Westerns. Influential film critic Pauline Kael coined the term acid Western in 1971 in her review of Alejandro Jodorowsky's El Topo.
In the mid-1990s, Jonathan Rosenbaum expanded upon the definition of acid Westerns. He noted acid Westerns are a type of revisionist Western that reflected the counterculture ideologies of the 1960s and 1970s. Acid Westerns have a hallucinogenic quality that is often aided by surrealist imagery. Rosenbaum also stated that in traditional Westerns, a character's journey West resulted in freedom and prosperity. In Acid Westerns, Rosenbaum argued a character's journey is a march toward death. Clint Eastwood's High Plains Drifter, Jim Jarmusch's Dead Man, and Sam Peckinpah's Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid...
In the mid-1990s, Jonathan Rosenbaum expanded upon the definition of acid Westerns. He noted acid Westerns are a type of revisionist Western that reflected the counterculture ideologies of the 1960s and 1970s. Acid Westerns have a hallucinogenic quality that is often aided by surrealist imagery. Rosenbaum also stated that in traditional Westerns, a character's journey West resulted in freedom and prosperity. In Acid Westerns, Rosenbaum argued a character's journey is a march toward death. Clint Eastwood's High Plains Drifter, Jim Jarmusch's Dead Man, and Sam Peckinpah's Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid...
- 9/21/2024
- by Vincent LoVerde
- CBR


For those who like a good dose of honesty and chaos, the 1984 punk cult classic debut from Alex Cox, Repo Man is out in a 4K/Blu-ray combo. The release is beautiful; from the physical booklet to the actual restoration, this is a release you’ll want to pick up. Repo Man follows the raucous Bud, played by the legendary Harry Dean Stanton, Rip. He takes young punk Otto (a young Emilio Estevez) under his wing, and together, the two of them are nihilistic urban cowboys on the brink of annihilation, of both themselves and the other criminals and punks they collide with in Los Angeles. Otto and Bud get into trouble ¾ a lot. They fight...
[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
[Read the whole post on screenanarchy.com...]...
- 9/20/2024
- Screen Anarchy

Mafia: The Old Country, the highly anticipated fourth installment in the beloved series, is set to take players on a thrilling journey through the gritty underworld of early 20th-century Italy.
But while the game promises to be a masterclass in storytelling and immersive gameplay, there’s one country where the Mafia franchise is more than just a popular video game series—it’s a matter of national pride!
Over time, the series has developed a global fan base. | Image Credit: Hangar 13
That’s right, we’re talking about Czechia (also known as the Czech Republic)—the birthplace of the series and a country where the games are celebrated as a “national institution.” But what is it about this Central European nation that makes it such a hotbed for Mafia fandom?
A Homegrown Franchise with a Global Reach
The Mafia series has come a long way since its humble beginnings in the Czech Republic.
But while the game promises to be a masterclass in storytelling and immersive gameplay, there’s one country where the Mafia franchise is more than just a popular video game series—it’s a matter of national pride!
Over time, the series has developed a global fan base. | Image Credit: Hangar 13
That’s right, we’re talking about Czechia (also known as the Czech Republic)—the birthplace of the series and a country where the games are celebrated as a “national institution.” But what is it about this Central European nation that makes it such a hotbed for Mafia fandom?
A Homegrown Franchise with a Global Reach
The Mafia series has come a long way since its humble beginnings in the Czech Republic.
- 9/12/2024
- by Soumyajit Mukherjee
- FandomWire

- 9/5/2024
- by Craig D. Lindsey
- avclub.com


Stars: Alex Cox, Niketa Roman, Satish Ratakonda, Harper Taylor, Brynn Taylor | Written and Directed by Phil Tippett
Mad God is a stop-motion, post-industrial, post-apocalyptic fever dream. It was brought to us via crowdfunding by Phil Tippett, a man who has Star Wars, Robocop and Jurassic Park in his resume. I assume Phil is the titular Mad God, rather than any of the monsters on display.
Visually, as grim as the views here are, the talent and craft on display here are incredible. The monster design, and the stop motion is all top-notch. There aren’t conventional acts in this film. As I sit here, I am not sure if moving scenes around, at random, twisting the mad rubrics cube would have made any difference. It is an hour and 20 minutes of grim suffering that has little of a linear path (that I can see).
We kick off, with an incredibly compelling opening.
Mad God is a stop-motion, post-industrial, post-apocalyptic fever dream. It was brought to us via crowdfunding by Phil Tippett, a man who has Star Wars, Robocop and Jurassic Park in his resume. I assume Phil is the titular Mad God, rather than any of the monsters on display.
Visually, as grim as the views here are, the talent and craft on display here are incredible. The monster design, and the stop motion is all top-notch. There aren’t conventional acts in this film. As I sit here, I am not sure if moving scenes around, at random, twisting the mad rubrics cube would have made any difference. It is an hour and 20 minutes of grim suffering that has little of a linear path (that I can see).
We kick off, with an incredibly compelling opening.
- 8/23/2024
- by Chris Thomas
- Nerdly

1992's secret Doctor Strange movie attempt with Doctor Mordrid could have drastically changed Marvel's cinematic landscape. The movie lost its licence for Doctor Strange before it was completed. Doctor Mordrid, a low-budget hero, shares similarities with Doctor Strange, ultimately shaping Marvel's occult cinematic future.
Before the MCU became the giant it is today, a secret Doctor Strange movie was created in 1992 that you probably never heard of. Benedict Cumberbatch's Doctor Strange is the definitive live-action adaptation of the Marvel Comics mainstay, with Strange's MCU story now being one of the most central in the current Multiverse Saga. By now, the character is privy to the McU's most mind-bending narratives and visuals, which are befitting of his entire Mo. Previous live-action iterations of Doctor Strange, however, weren't quite as much of a spectacle.
The first attempt to bring Doctor Strange to live-action was in the 1978 television movie, Dr. Strange starring Peter Hooten and Jessica Walter.
Before the MCU became the giant it is today, a secret Doctor Strange movie was created in 1992 that you probably never heard of. Benedict Cumberbatch's Doctor Strange is the definitive live-action adaptation of the Marvel Comics mainstay, with Strange's MCU story now being one of the most central in the current Multiverse Saga. By now, the character is privy to the McU's most mind-bending narratives and visuals, which are befitting of his entire Mo. Previous live-action iterations of Doctor Strange, however, weren't quite as much of a spectacle.
The first attempt to bring Doctor Strange to live-action was in the 1978 television movie, Dr. Strange starring Peter Hooten and Jessica Walter.
- 8/12/2024
- by Ollie Bradley
- ScreenRant

Alex Cox's 1984 punk rock sci-fi riot "Repo Man" is one of the defining films of its decade. It follows a disaffected punker named Otto who resents that he has to take a wage-slave job in the blasted-open, comedically meaningless landscape of Reagan's America. He finds solace and job satisfaction as a repo man, serving as the angry inversion of consumer culture. If we are defined by what we consume, then the repo man robs us of meaning, laying bare the fragility of modern economics. Also, be sure to keep your middle fingers highly raised at all times.
The magical McGuffin of "Repo Man" is an elusive 1964 Chevy Malibu, marked for repossession. The driver, however, is J. Frank Parnell (Fox Harris), and he seems to be unbalanced, having had a lobotomy at some point. Also, his trunk contains the corpse of a radioactive alien. Whenever someone tries looking in the trunk,...
The magical McGuffin of "Repo Man" is an elusive 1964 Chevy Malibu, marked for repossession. The driver, however, is J. Frank Parnell (Fox Harris), and he seems to be unbalanced, having had a lobotomy at some point. Also, his trunk contains the corpse of a radioactive alien. Whenever someone tries looking in the trunk,...
- 7/14/2024
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film

23 years into his film career, Tom Hardy is still impossible to pin down. Is he a leading man? A full-on movie star? A character actor? Would he be perfectly happy to just make Venom movies until he retires?
Here's what we do know about Hardy: he's handsome, he loves trying on weird accents (which we ranked here at /Film), and he commits fully to every role whether it's a prestige picture or a superhero flick. Critics dig him (even if they do not dig the "Venom" movies at all), and he's tremendously respected by his fellow actors. He's one of the best we've got. But it's been 16 years since his breakthrough bravura performance in Nicolas Winding Refn's "Bronson," and, for whatever reason, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' membership has only managed to nominate him for one measly Oscar.
What gives?
While he's been magnificent in very...
Here's what we do know about Hardy: he's handsome, he loves trying on weird accents (which we ranked here at /Film), and he commits fully to every role whether it's a prestige picture or a superhero flick. Critics dig him (even if they do not dig the "Venom" movies at all), and he's tremendously respected by his fellow actors. He's one of the best we've got. But it's been 16 years since his breakthrough bravura performance in Nicolas Winding Refn's "Bronson," and, for whatever reason, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' membership has only managed to nominate him for one measly Oscar.
What gives?
While he's been magnificent in very...
- 7/6/2024
- by Jeremy Smith
- Slash Film


For this week’s column, I spoke to Dawn Baillie, who is responsible for, or who has collaborated on, some of the most iconic American movie posters of the last four decades, from The Silence of the Lambs (1991) to Barbie (2023). Her work is currently the focus of an extraordinary ongoing exhibition at Poster House in New York City.I asked her if she would humor me by selecting her top ten movie posters of all time, now a tradition for this column. She most graciously accepted the challenge. Baillie’s top ten and comments are listed below in descending order. She explained that these are all posters she “refers to often,” and presents her selection with the caveat that she could easily list 50 more. Dawn Baillie’S Top Ten Favorite Movie POSTERS1. USA one-sheet by Erik Nitsche for All About Eve (Joseph L. Mankiewicz, USA, 1950)When we talk about encapsulating...
- 7/5/2024
- MUBI


Killer Collectibles highlights five of the most exciting new horror products announced each and every week, from toys and apparel to artwork, records, and much more.
Here are the coolest horror collectibles unveiled this week!
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga 4K Uhd from Warner Bros.
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga drives onto home video on August 13 via Warner Bros. The fifth installment in the post-apocalyptic action franchise is presented on 4K Ultra HD with Dolby Vision/Hdr and Dolby Atmos audio.
Mad Max creator George Miller directs from a script he co-wrote with Nico Lathouris (Mad Max: Fury Road). Anya Taylor-Joy, Chris Hemsworth, Tom Burke, Alyla Browne, and Lachy Hulme star.
Five featurettes are included: Highway to Valhalla: In Pursuit of Furiosa, Stowaway to Nowhere, Metal Beasts & Holy Motors, Darkest Angel: Anya Taylor-Joy as Furiosa, and Motorbike Messiah: Chris Hemsworth as Dementus.
The Toxic Avenger Figure from Super...
Here are the coolest horror collectibles unveiled this week!
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga 4K Uhd from Warner Bros.
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga drives onto home video on August 13 via Warner Bros. The fifth installment in the post-apocalyptic action franchise is presented on 4K Ultra HD with Dolby Vision/Hdr and Dolby Atmos audio.
Mad Max creator George Miller directs from a script he co-wrote with Nico Lathouris (Mad Max: Fury Road). Anya Taylor-Joy, Chris Hemsworth, Tom Burke, Alyla Browne, and Lachy Hulme star.
Five featurettes are included: Highway to Valhalla: In Pursuit of Furiosa, Stowaway to Nowhere, Metal Beasts & Holy Motors, Darkest Angel: Anya Taylor-Joy as Furiosa, and Motorbike Messiah: Chris Hemsworth as Dementus.
The Toxic Avenger Figure from Super...
- 6/21/2024
- by Alex DiVincenzo
- bloody-disgusting.com

Marking one of their biggest 4K months yet, Criterion has announced a September lineup led by Gregg Araki’s Teen Apocalypse trilogy of The Doom Generation, Nowhere, and Totally F***ed Up in a rather full set, and all but the last in 4K. One of Criterion’s earliest titles, John Mackenzie’s The Long Good Friday, is receiving a sizable 480-to-2,160 upgrade; a more recent addition, Repo Man, also gets upgraded, hopefully fueling further interest for Alex Cox’s recently announced sequel.
On the new-film front, Andrew Haigh’s All of Us Strangers makes the most-enviable home debut possible. And with regard to films I never thought would be presented in such profound resolution, Todd Solondz’s Happiness is given the 4K treatment, at long last supplying a companion to Life During Wartime.
See artwork below and find more details at Criterion:
The post The Criterion Collection’s September Lineup Includes Gregg Araki,...
On the new-film front, Andrew Haigh’s All of Us Strangers makes the most-enviable home debut possible. And with regard to films I never thought would be presented in such profound resolution, Todd Solondz’s Happiness is given the 4K treatment, at long last supplying a companion to Life During Wartime.
See artwork below and find more details at Criterion:
The post The Criterion Collection’s September Lineup Includes Gregg Araki,...
- 6/17/2024
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage

Eulogizing the 1960s in a haze of marijuana smoke, psychotropic apparitions, ether vapors, and coke sweats, Terry Gilliam’s adaptation of Hunter S. Thompson’s brilliant, notorious 1971 novel Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas has aged startlingly well. Picked up by Gilliam when fellow cinematic madman Alex Cox dropped out, the project was long thought to be the most preposterous screen adaptation ever mounted—an impossibly addled switchback ride through the death rattles of the 1960s, compacted and then stretched out like silly putty over a three-day fever dream in the heart of Sin City.
For Gilliam, the sheer outrageousness of the dystopian Freedomland that Thompson had found or hallucinated about out in the desert while covering the Mint 400 motorcycle race for Sports Illustrated presented a perfect outlet for his giddy, often disturbing brand of inventiveness, and, indeed, Fear and Loathing stands as the Monty Python alum’s last completely successful work.
For Gilliam, the sheer outrageousness of the dystopian Freedomland that Thompson had found or hallucinated about out in the desert while covering the Mint 400 motorcycle race for Sports Illustrated presented a perfect outlet for his giddy, often disturbing brand of inventiveness, and, indeed, Fear and Loathing stands as the Monty Python alum’s last completely successful work.
- 6/14/2024
- by Chris Cabin
- Slant Magazine


Chad Daybell was sentenced to death Saturday, two days after an Idaho jury found him guilty in the 2019 murders of his former wife Tammy Daybell and two children of his current wife, Lori Vallow Daybell.
On Thursday, Daybell was convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy charges — including insurance fraud and grand theft — in connection to the 2019 killings. The jury began weighing Daybell’s punishment on Friday, and after about eight hours of deliberation, recommended the death penalty.
Judge Steven Boyce formally imposed the sentence of death Saturday, saying it was appropriate under the law,...
On Thursday, Daybell was convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy charges — including insurance fraud and grand theft — in connection to the 2019 killings. The jury began weighing Daybell’s punishment on Friday, and after about eight hours of deliberation, recommended the death penalty.
Judge Steven Boyce formally imposed the sentence of death Saturday, saying it was appropriate under the law,...
- 6/1/2024
- by Daniel Kreps
- Rollingstone.com

NYC Weekend Watch is our weekly round-up of repertory offerings.
Film Forum
Films by Oshima, Tony Scott, Alex Cox, John Carpenter, Abel Ferrara, and Tobe Hooper play in “Out of the 80s“; Le Samouraï continues in a new 4K restoration; Back to the Future plays on Sunday.
Museum of Modern Art
A massive overview of Bulle Ogier has its final weekend with two films by Rivette.
Museum of the Moving Image
The Thin Red Line, The Big Lebowski, and Defending Your Life all play on 35mm as part of “See It Big at the ’90s Multiplex.”
Bam
The rarely screened films of György Pálfi are given a retrospective.
Metrograph
Films by Haneke, Kiarostami, and more play in an mk2 retrospective; Saturday brings Three Days of the Condor on 35mm; ’90s Noir, Euro-Heists, Dream with Your Eyes Open, and Ethics of Care, continue, while a Chris Marker series includes Sans Soleil and a shorts program.
Film Forum
Films by Oshima, Tony Scott, Alex Cox, John Carpenter, Abel Ferrara, and Tobe Hooper play in “Out of the 80s“; Le Samouraï continues in a new 4K restoration; Back to the Future plays on Sunday.
Museum of Modern Art
A massive overview of Bulle Ogier has its final weekend with two films by Rivette.
Museum of the Moving Image
The Thin Red Line, The Big Lebowski, and Defending Your Life all play on 35mm as part of “See It Big at the ’90s Multiplex.”
Bam
The rarely screened films of György Pálfi are given a retrospective.
Metrograph
Films by Haneke, Kiarostami, and more play in an mk2 retrospective; Saturday brings Three Days of the Condor on 35mm; ’90s Noir, Euro-Heists, Dream with Your Eyes Open, and Ethics of Care, continue, while a Chris Marker series includes Sans Soleil and a shorts program.
- 5/31/2024
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage


Chad Daybell, the Idaho man charged with the 2019 killings of his former wife, Tammy Daybell, and two children of his current wife, Lori Vallow Daybell, was found guilty of first-degree murder by an Idaho jury on Thursday, CBS reported.
Daybell was also found guilty of conspiracy to commit murder in his former wife’s death, conspiracy to commit murder and grand theft by deception in the deaths of Lori’s seven-year-old son “JJ” Vallow and 16-year-old daughter Tylee Ryan, and insurance fraud. The prosecution requested the death penalty, and the...
Daybell was also found guilty of conspiracy to commit murder in his former wife’s death, conspiracy to commit murder and grand theft by deception in the deaths of Lori’s seven-year-old son “JJ” Vallow and 16-year-old daughter Tylee Ryan, and insurance fraud. The prosecution requested the death penalty, and the...
- 5/30/2024
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com


Richard Foronjy, who spent more than eight years in prison before he turned to acting and appeared in such films as Serpico, Midnight Run, Repo Man and Carlito’s Way, died Sunday, his family announced. He was 86.
Foronjy said he was arrested more than 20 times for “forgery, bank robbery, credit card rip-offs, assorted crimes and skullduggery … [guilty of] almost everything except drugs and homicide,” he said in a 1987 interview with Upi’s Vernon Scott.
The Brooklyn native was convicted only once, but that got him an 8½-year stretch in the New York prisons Sing Sing and Attica before he was released when he was 32.
In Hollywood, not surprisingly, Foronjy specialized in portraying cops and crooks.
He was a cop killer in his screen debut, Serpico (1973), and cops in The Morning After (1986) and Prince of the City (1981), all for Sidney Lumet. “I was especially good at playing cops, no doubt because I got to...
Foronjy said he was arrested more than 20 times for “forgery, bank robbery, credit card rip-offs, assorted crimes and skullduggery … [guilty of] almost everything except drugs and homicide,” he said in a 1987 interview with Upi’s Vernon Scott.
The Brooklyn native was convicted only once, but that got him an 8½-year stretch in the New York prisons Sing Sing and Attica before he was released when he was 32.
In Hollywood, not surprisingly, Foronjy specialized in portraying cops and crooks.
He was a cop killer in his screen debut, Serpico (1973), and cops in The Morning After (1986) and Prince of the City (1981), all for Sidney Lumet. “I was especially good at playing cops, no doubt because I got to...
- 5/21/2024
- by Mike Barnes
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News


To celebrate the release of Once Upon a Time in the West on 4K Ultra HD today, as part of a 4K Uhd & Blu-Ray Collector’s Edition, we have a Collector’s Edition to give away to a lucky winner!
Director Sergio Leone’s monumental Western classic Once Upon A Time In The West celebrates its 55th anniversary this year and to mark the occasion Paramount Home Entertainment will release the fully restored film for the first time on 4K Ultra HD on May 13, 2024, as part of a 4K Uhd & Blu-ray Collector’s Edition.
One of the most iconic and influential movies ever made, Once Upon A Time In The West has been restored from the original 35mm Techniscope camera negative by Paramount’s archive team, L’Immagine Ritrovata and The Film Foundation. This restoration honours the 2007 Film Foundation photochemical restoration overseen by legendary director Martin Scorsese by matching its build and colour palette.
Director Sergio Leone’s monumental Western classic Once Upon A Time In The West celebrates its 55th anniversary this year and to mark the occasion Paramount Home Entertainment will release the fully restored film for the first time on 4K Ultra HD on May 13, 2024, as part of a 4K Uhd & Blu-ray Collector’s Edition.
One of the most iconic and influential movies ever made, Once Upon A Time In The West has been restored from the original 35mm Techniscope camera negative by Paramount’s archive team, L’Immagine Ritrovata and The Film Foundation. This restoration honours the 2007 Film Foundation photochemical restoration overseen by legendary director Martin Scorsese by matching its build and colour palette.
- 5/13/2024
- by Competitions
- HeyUGuys.co.uk


Stars: Cedric Jonathan, Kennedy Wilson, Jaqueline McNulty, Craig Nigh, Van Quattro, Brenna Jones, Nik L. Guerra, Larissa Dali, Gary Kent, Don Daro, Michael L Garcia Jr. | Written by Stefan Ruf, John Herndon | Directed by Stefan Ruf
Stefan Ruf says that Coyote Woman, his follow-up to Motorpsycho Maniacs aka Sex Terrorists on Wheels, was inspired by both Ralph Nelson’s Soldier Blue and Bruno Mattei’s Scalps. That combination of critically acclaimed sadism and grindhouse sleaze certainly caught my attention and all but demanded I give it a review.
Deep Water and his warriors attack a family of settlers, scalping the parents and abducting the two daughters Iris who escapes on the way back to their village, and Cynthia (Jaqueline McNulty; The Great Turkey Miracle) who is adopted into the tribe.
Ten years later, J.J. Glanton and his right-hand man Judge Holden decide they’ve had enough of the Texas Rangers...
Stefan Ruf says that Coyote Woman, his follow-up to Motorpsycho Maniacs aka Sex Terrorists on Wheels, was inspired by both Ralph Nelson’s Soldier Blue and Bruno Mattei’s Scalps. That combination of critically acclaimed sadism and grindhouse sleaze certainly caught my attention and all but demanded I give it a review.
Deep Water and his warriors attack a family of settlers, scalping the parents and abducting the two daughters Iris who escapes on the way back to their village, and Cynthia (Jaqueline McNulty; The Great Turkey Miracle) who is adopted into the tribe.
Ten years later, J.J. Glanton and his right-hand man Judge Holden decide they’ve had enough of the Texas Rangers...
- 5/3/2024
- by Jim Morazzini
- Nerdly


Eight months after his second wife, Lori Vallow, was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the murders of her seven-year-old son “JJ” Vallow and 16-year-old daughter Tylee Ryan, as well as conspiring to kill his first wife, Tammy Daybell, Chad Daybell is standing trial in Idaho for the same crimes.
Daybell is charged with three counts of first-degree murder, three counts of conspiracy to commit murder, grand theft, and insurance fraud. If convicted of the murder charges, he faces the death penalty — a possibility dismissed...
Daybell is charged with three counts of first-degree murder, three counts of conspiracy to commit murder, grand theft, and insurance fraud. If convicted of the murder charges, he faces the death penalty — a possibility dismissed...
- 4/11/2024
- by Miles Klee
- Rollingstone.com
Dynamite Entertainment’s “King Kong: The Great War” #5, is written by Alex Cox and illustrated by Tommaso Bianchi, with covers by Jae Lee, Jackson Guice and Joe DeVito:
“…our heroes finally reach the safety of high ground as they scale the deadly island’s skull-shaped mountain. Safe from ‘Kong, they can see human civilization in the distance. But will the cave in which they have taken refuge prove to be a sanctuary — or a mortuary?!?…”
Click the images to enlarge…...
“…our heroes finally reach the safety of high ground as they scale the deadly island’s skull-shaped mountain. Safe from ‘Kong, they can see human civilization in the distance. But will the cave in which they have taken refuge prove to be a sanctuary — or a mortuary?!?…”
Click the images to enlarge…...
- 4/4/2024
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek

Ethan Coen's queer roadtrip film "Drive-Away Dolls" is set in 1997, and feels like an escapee from that era, for better and for worse. On the one hand, it possesses all the impish, make-the-straights-squirm energy of a legit '90s indie lesbian farce. It is not just upfront about its queerness, but confrontationally playful about it. "Drive-Away Dolls" unapologetically and cartoonishly plunges audiences into lesbian basement make-out parties and rowdy gay bars, flinging about cunnilingus jokes, masturbation scenes, and multiple on-screen dildos with gleeful impunity. It's a lightweight, weirdly teen-friendly (but very R-rated) slumber party movie with an upbeat and liberating "be gay, do crime" vibe. It's a queer, hand grenade-shaped squeak toy.
On the other hand, however, "Drive-Away Dolls" is being released in 2024, and the very fact that it depicts queer characters having queer sex and talking about queer issues isn't nearly as confrontational as it once was. There...
On the other hand, however, "Drive-Away Dolls" is being released in 2024, and the very fact that it depicts queer characters having queer sex and talking about queer issues isn't nearly as confrontational as it once was. There...
- 2/21/2024
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film

Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer will be blending sci-fi and punk rock with a modern twist on technology and nostalgia. Director Alex Cox reveals Otto's new repo methods in the internet age, longing for beer, booty, and a world without nuclear war. The cult classic sequel promises a fresh take on Otto Maddox's journey, blending nostalgia with contemporary themes for a wild ride.
The 1980s gave birth to a film that would etch its name in the annals of cult cinema history: Repo Man. Directed by Alex Cox, the movie blended sci-fi elements with punk rock ethos, creating a unique and unforgettable experience. Fast forward to the present, and Cox is set to revisit this iconic universe with the announcement of a sequel, Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer.
In a recent interview with Inverse, Cox shared insights into the upcoming project, revealing that the...
The 1980s gave birth to a film that would etch its name in the annals of cult cinema history: Repo Man. Directed by Alex Cox, the movie blended sci-fi elements with punk rock ethos, creating a unique and unforgettable experience. Fast forward to the present, and Cox is set to revisit this iconic universe with the announcement of a sequel, Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer.
In a recent interview with Inverse, Cox shared insights into the upcoming project, revealing that the...
- 2/20/2024
- by Ali Valle
- MovieWeb

Alex Cox returns after forty years with "Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer." This sequel makes up for Universal's unofficial sequel, "Repo Men." "Repo Man 2" will add to "Repo Man's" big but unofficial film universe.
It was recently announced that Alex Cox is returning to his 1984 cult classic, Repo Man, with an upcoming sequel, Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, which will fix a 14-year old injustice created by Universal when they made their own unauthorized Repo Man sequel. Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer is a direct sequel to the 1980s hit, Repo Man. According to director Alex Cox, Kiowa Gordon has signed on to play Repo Man's Otto Maddox, and rather than repossessing cars, the iconic lead character will be surfing the internet and hijacking onboard computers.
In an interview with Inverse, Cox spoke about his Repo Man sequel: "Otto, who has...
It was recently announced that Alex Cox is returning to his 1984 cult classic, Repo Man, with an upcoming sequel, Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, which will fix a 14-year old injustice created by Universal when they made their own unauthorized Repo Man sequel. Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer is a direct sequel to the 1980s hit, Repo Man. According to director Alex Cox, Kiowa Gordon has signed on to play Repo Man's Otto Maddox, and rather than repossessing cars, the iconic lead character will be surfing the internet and hijacking onboard computers.
In an interview with Inverse, Cox spoke about his Repo Man sequel: "Otto, who has...
- 2/19/2024
- by Megan Hemenway
- ScreenRant

Classic 80s movie Repo Man is getting a long-awaited sequel with the same director. Originally released in 1984, Repo Man gained a dedicated following and became a cult classic. Titled Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, the sequel will satr Kiowa Gordon.
The classic 1980s movie Repo Man is getting a surprise sequel with the original director. Originally released in 1984, Repo Man is a dark comedy about a young man who is recruited by a car repossession agency to find a Chevy Malibu that is wanted for a $20,000 bounty. In the years since its release, the film has become a cult classic.
As per Variety, Repo Man will now be getting a sequel. Titled Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, the sequel will be directed by original Repo Man director Alex Cox. The film is set to star actor Kiowa Gordon, taking over for Emilio Estevez. The filmmakers explain...
The classic 1980s movie Repo Man is getting a surprise sequel with the original director. Originally released in 1984, Repo Man is a dark comedy about a young man who is recruited by a car repossession agency to find a Chevy Malibu that is wanted for a $20,000 bounty. In the years since its release, the film has become a cult classic.
As per Variety, Repo Man will now be getting a sequel. Titled Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, the sequel will be directed by original Repo Man director Alex Cox. The film is set to star actor Kiowa Gordon, taking over for Emilio Estevez. The filmmakers explain...
- 2/19/2024
- by Hannah Gearan
- ScreenRant


Get ready to dive back into the punk rock sci-fi wasteland of 1984’s Repo Man — a sequel, titled Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, has been announced, with the original writer and director, Alex Cox, set to return.
The story was first reported by Variety, who confirmed that Cox would be in the director’s chair, with Kiowa Gordon (Twilight) starring as the punk-turned-repo-man, Otto, portrayed by Emilio Estevez in the original. Plot-wise, the new film will pick up right where the original left off, following Otto after a brief trip “across the infinities of time and space,” which has only aged him “exactly 90 minutes.”
According to filmmakers, Repo Man 2 will “deliver an enthralling mix of punk energy, existential comedy, and unconventional storytelling, navigating the absurd and chaotic world of repo men into a new age of nuclear brinkmanship and driverless cars.”
Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer...
The story was first reported by Variety, who confirmed that Cox would be in the director’s chair, with Kiowa Gordon (Twilight) starring as the punk-turned-repo-man, Otto, portrayed by Emilio Estevez in the original. Plot-wise, the new film will pick up right where the original left off, following Otto after a brief trip “across the infinities of time and space,” which has only aged him “exactly 90 minutes.”
According to filmmakers, Repo Man 2 will “deliver an enthralling mix of punk energy, existential comedy, and unconventional storytelling, navigating the absurd and chaotic world of repo men into a new age of nuclear brinkmanship and driverless cars.”
Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer...
- 2/18/2024
- by Jo Vito
- Consequence - Film News

Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer's writer and director, Alex Cox, reveals the upcoming film's plot, character details and filming window.
The film is partly a reimagining and partly a sequel to the 1980s cult classic Repo Man, also directed by Alex Cox. In an interview with Inverse, Cox revealed some significant details about the upcoming sequel, which he aims to start filming around June/July 2024. Cox shared that Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer follows Otto's (Kiowa Gordon) transition from cruising through rough neighborhoods in search of cars to utilizing internet searches and hacking into onboard computers. Cox replaced Otto's original actor Emilio Estevez with Kiowa Gordon from The Twilight Saga as the lead.
Related 10 '90s Cult Classics That Are Ready For A Remake From Pretty Woman to Armageddon, there are some popular '90s cult classics that would make a great modernized version of the beloved storylines.
The film is partly a reimagining and partly a sequel to the 1980s cult classic Repo Man, also directed by Alex Cox. In an interview with Inverse, Cox revealed some significant details about the upcoming sequel, which he aims to start filming around June/July 2024. Cox shared that Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer follows Otto's (Kiowa Gordon) transition from cruising through rough neighborhoods in search of cars to utilizing internet searches and hacking into onboard computers. Cox replaced Otto's original actor Emilio Estevez with Kiowa Gordon from The Twilight Saga as the lead.
Related 10 '90s Cult Classics That Are Ready For A Remake From Pretty Woman to Armageddon, there are some popular '90s cult classics that would make a great modernized version of the beloved storylines.
- 2/18/2024
- by Garnet Phillip Tashinga
- CBR

Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer will see Otto trade in punk rock for tech upgrades in the repo world of 2024. Alex Cox hopes to begin filming the sequel with Kiowa Gordon and Angela Sarafyan in June or July. The iconic punk rock soundtrack and black humor of the original will make a comeback in this highly anticipated sequel.
Alex Cox, writer and director of the 1984 cult classic Repo Man, has revealed details about his upcoming sequel, Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer. Starring Emilio Estevez as Otto Maddox, a young punk rocker turned reluctant “repo man” in pursuit of a vehicle with extra-terrestrial connections, Cox’s sci-fi comedy garnered widespread acclaim on its original release. Bolstered by an iconic punk rock soundtrack featuring the title track sung by Iggy Pop, the original Repo Man would go on to be considered one of the best independent movies of the 1980s.
Alex Cox, writer and director of the 1984 cult classic Repo Man, has revealed details about his upcoming sequel, Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer. Starring Emilio Estevez as Otto Maddox, a young punk rocker turned reluctant “repo man” in pursuit of a vehicle with extra-terrestrial connections, Cox’s sci-fi comedy garnered widespread acclaim on its original release. Bolstered by an iconic punk rock soundtrack featuring the title track sung by Iggy Pop, the original Repo Man would go on to be considered one of the best independent movies of the 1980s.
- 2/17/2024
- by TC Phillips
- ScreenRant


“It’s a mystery… it’s a comedy… it’s a chase… it’s the forces of law against the representatives of discontented youth… against the finest minds in government… and they’re all in pursuit of a ’64 Chevy Malibu from… who knows where,” the original theatrical trailer for 1984’s Repo Man previewed. A fitting description for an oddball cult classic that’s… getting a sequel?!
40 years later, director Alex Cox is returning to the world of Repo Man with sequel Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, and Indiewire broke the news of the project this week.
According to the site, the upcoming sequel Repo Man 2 will “take place in a world of self-driving cars and an even more pressing threat of global destruction.”
“The advent of incredible technology means, for the repo man, that everything has changed — and nothing has changed,” Cox explained to Indiewire in an email this week.
40 years later, director Alex Cox is returning to the world of Repo Man with sequel Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, and Indiewire broke the news of the project this week.
According to the site, the upcoming sequel Repo Man 2 will “take place in a world of self-driving cars and an even more pressing threat of global destruction.”
“The advent of incredible technology means, for the repo man, that everything has changed — and nothing has changed,” Cox explained to Indiewire in an email this week.
- 2/15/2024
- by John Squires
- bloody-disgusting.com

Alex Cox on Why He’s Directing a ‘Repo Man’ Sequel: ‘Everything Has Changed and Nothing Has Changed’

Alex Cox’s 1984 “Repo Man” was a Reagan-era satire about consumerism and the Atomic Age. Its punk rock soundtrack transformed it into a cult hit, but its funny and strange combination of sci-fi, workplace comedy, and the fear of nuclear annihilation made it an enduring classic.
Forty years later, Cox will revisit the repo man and the world of bland, generic grocery store clerks stocking and selling “Food” and “Beer” day in and day out. He has written and will direct a sequel, “Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer,” and he told IndieWire why this film will embody “the repo world of 2024.”
Cox said “The Wages of Beer” will take place in a world of self-driving cars and an even more pressing threat of global destruction. “The advent of incredible technology means, for the repo man, that everything has changed — and nothing has changed,” he said via email.
Forty years later, Cox will revisit the repo man and the world of bland, generic grocery store clerks stocking and selling “Food” and “Beer” day in and day out. He has written and will direct a sequel, “Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer,” and he told IndieWire why this film will embody “the repo world of 2024.”
Cox said “The Wages of Beer” will take place in a world of self-driving cars and an even more pressing threat of global destruction. “The advent of incredible technology means, for the repo man, that everything has changed — and nothing has changed,” he said via email.
- 2/15/2024
- by Brian Welk
- Indiewire

Alex Cox is finally getting Repo Man 2 off the ground, and it’s set to be called Repo Man 2: The Wages Of Beer – more here.
It’s been seven years since British director Alex Cox’s last feature – Tombstone Rashomon – was released. But in a surprise piece of news, he’s heading back behind the camera again, for a project he previously tried to get going in the 1990s.
It’s a sequel to his 1984 cult favourite Repo Man, a film that starred Harry Dean Stanton and Emilio Estevez. It’s a satirical science fiction thriller, set in 1960s America, that never set the box office alight, but has earned its audience over time.
Now comes the news that Alex Cox has written the script for Repo Man 2: The Wages Of Beer, that he’s raising funds for at the European Film Market over the next week or so.
It’s been seven years since British director Alex Cox’s last feature – Tombstone Rashomon – was released. But in a surprise piece of news, he’s heading back behind the camera again, for a project he previously tried to get going in the 1990s.
It’s a sequel to his 1984 cult favourite Repo Man, a film that starred Harry Dean Stanton and Emilio Estevez. It’s a satirical science fiction thriller, set in 1960s America, that never set the box office alight, but has earned its audience over time.
Now comes the news that Alex Cox has written the script for Repo Man 2: The Wages Of Beer, that he’s raising funds for at the European Film Market over the next week or so.
- 2/15/2024
- by Simon Brew
- Film Stories

Marking an incredible escape from director jail, Alex Cox is ramping up his first feature in seven years (and perhaps the first well-financed project in 20-plus). At this year’s Berlinale and European Film Market he’ll shop Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, which continues directly from his 1984 cult classic as Otto, having aged a total of 90 minutes, boards “his trusty 1967 Chevy Malibu to journey across the infinities of time and space.” [Variety]
Cox has mostly laid low in recent years, directing the odd microbudget project here and there––among them a spiritual sequel, Repo Chick, that looks more like a Tim and Eric sketch than studio production––making this return to feature filmmaking quite notable. Though primarily known for Repo Man or Sid and Nancy, his filmography’s studded with treasures: Walker, Straight to Hell, and (personal favorite) Three Businessmen boast a punk-with-classicism sensibility that is simply non pareil.
Cox has mostly laid low in recent years, directing the odd microbudget project here and there––among them a spiritual sequel, Repo Chick, that looks more like a Tim and Eric sketch than studio production––making this return to feature filmmaking quite notable. Though primarily known for Repo Man or Sid and Nancy, his filmography’s studded with treasures: Walker, Straight to Hell, and (personal favorite) Three Businessmen boast a punk-with-classicism sensibility that is simply non pareil.
- 2/15/2024
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage


Per Variety, Alex Cox is ready to return to the bizarre world of car repossession and extraterrestrials. The outlet reports that the director is set to helm Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, a long-belated sequel to the 1984 cult classic.
The original movie starred Emilio Estevez as Otto, a young punk who is recruited by a car repossession agency and finds himself in pursuit of a Chevrolet Malibu that is wanted for a $20,000 bounty – and has something otherworldly stashed in its trunk. The sequel will pick up “after Otto has boarded his trusty 1967 Chevy Malibu to journey across the infinities of time and space. In that time, he has aged exactly 90 minutes.” As Estevez is naturally a little too old to reprise the role, Kiowa Gordon has stepped in to play Otto in the sequel.
Related Rip: Harry Dean Stanton has passed away at 91
Gordon is best known for...
The original movie starred Emilio Estevez as Otto, a young punk who is recruited by a car repossession agency and finds himself in pursuit of a Chevrolet Malibu that is wanted for a $20,000 bounty – and has something otherworldly stashed in its trunk. The sequel will pick up “after Otto has boarded his trusty 1967 Chevy Malibu to journey across the infinities of time and space. In that time, he has aged exactly 90 minutes.” As Estevez is naturally a little too old to reprise the role, Kiowa Gordon has stepped in to play Otto in the sequel.
Related Rip: Harry Dean Stanton has passed away at 91
Gordon is best known for...
- 2/14/2024
- by Kevin Fraser
- JoBlo.com


Alex Cox is getting back behind the wheel.
The “Repo Man” director is revisiting the off-kilter world of extraterrestrials and car repossession that he mined so memorably in the 1984 cult classic in a new sequel that is being introduced to buyers at the Berlin Film Festival and European Film Market. Entitled “Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer,” the film is being backed by Buffalo 8 Productions, a film and media company best known for the critically acclaimed work on Netflix series “The Jeffrey Dahmer Tapes.” Cox wrote the script along with directing the film.
Kiowa Gordon, best known for his role as Embry Call in “The Twilight Saga” and for his work in the AMC series “Dark Winds,” is set to lead the cast as Otto. Emilio Estevez played Otto in the 1984 original. The film picks up after Otto has boarded his trusty 1967 Chevy Malibu to journey across the infinities of time and space.
The “Repo Man” director is revisiting the off-kilter world of extraterrestrials and car repossession that he mined so memorably in the 1984 cult classic in a new sequel that is being introduced to buyers at the Berlin Film Festival and European Film Market. Entitled “Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer,” the film is being backed by Buffalo 8 Productions, a film and media company best known for the critically acclaimed work on Netflix series “The Jeffrey Dahmer Tapes.” Cox wrote the script along with directing the film.
Kiowa Gordon, best known for his role as Embry Call in “The Twilight Saga” and for his work in the AMC series “Dark Winds,” is set to lead the cast as Otto. Emilio Estevez played Otto in the 1984 original. The film picks up after Otto has boarded his trusty 1967 Chevy Malibu to journey across the infinities of time and space.
- 2/14/2024
- by Brent Lang
- Variety Film + TV


The 4K remasters of James Cameron’s The Abyss, True Lies and Aliens are coming in for criticism – and AI is getting some of the blame.
James Cameron has long been one of my favourite directors, and I’m not alone. I can still remember where I saw many of his films for the first time, especially the early titles, as I was growing up.
The Terminator premiered on BBC2 in a series called Moviedrome where the film was introduced by director Alex Cox. The Abyss I saw on a Sunday evening as it premiered on Channel 4, an infamous broadcast where the uncut version was mistakenly screened.
Being a fan, I have always purchased the latest physical media edition of Cameron’s films. I even bought into the UK laserdisc market at the wrong time, six months before the launch of DVD (I had no idea!), and purchased Terminator 2...
James Cameron has long been one of my favourite directors, and I’m not alone. I can still remember where I saw many of his films for the first time, especially the early titles, as I was growing up.
The Terminator premiered on BBC2 in a series called Moviedrome where the film was introduced by director Alex Cox. The Abyss I saw on a Sunday evening as it premiered on Channel 4, an infamous broadcast where the uncut version was mistakenly screened.
Being a fan, I have always purchased the latest physical media edition of Cameron’s films. I even bought into the UK laserdisc market at the wrong time, six months before the launch of DVD (I had no idea!), and purchased Terminator 2...
- 1/2/2024
- by John Abbitt
- Film Stories

A devoted family woman, Lori Vallow became obsessed with Chad Daybell's apocalyptic beliefs, leading to the gruesome murders of her own children. The suspicious deaths of Charles Vallow and Chad Daybell's wife, Tammy, added to the eerie circumstances surrounding the case. Tylee and JJ went missing after Vallow pulled them out of school, and their remains were later found buried in Daybell's backyard pet cemetery. Vallow and Daybell were charged with their murder.
Content Warning: The following article contains discussions of child murder.
Several shocking revelations were made in the three-episode Netflix documentary series, Sins of Our Mother. Sins of Our Mother chronicles the real-life case involving a mother named Lori Vallow whose children, JJ Vallow and Tylee Ryan, suddenly went missing. Not only was no one sure where they went, but Vallow strangely refused to answer any questions about their location. Eventually, it was discovered that Vallow and her husband,...
Content Warning: The following article contains discussions of child murder.
Several shocking revelations were made in the three-episode Netflix documentary series, Sins of Our Mother. Sins of Our Mother chronicles the real-life case involving a mother named Lori Vallow whose children, JJ Vallow and Tylee Ryan, suddenly went missing. Not only was no one sure where they went, but Vallow strangely refused to answer any questions about their location. Eventually, it was discovered that Vallow and her husband,...
- 11/9/2023
- by Timothy Lee
- ScreenRant

Robby Müller: Living The Light director Claire Pijman will do a Q&a with Andrea Müller-Schirmer following the 2:30pm screening at Metrograph on Sunday, October 1 Photo: Claire Pijman
Claire Pijman’s resourceful and enlightening documentary, Robby Müller: Living The Light (with a score by Jim Jarmusch and Carter Logan’s Sqùrl), is a big part of the series, Robby Müller: Remain in Light, at Metrograph that celebrates the legendary cinematographer, who died in 2018. Films by Wim Wenders, Jim Jarmusch, Sara Driver’s When Pigs Fly, Andrzej Wajda’s Korczak, Alex Cox’s Repo Man, Peter Bogdanovich’s Saint Jack, William Friedkin’s To Live And Die In LA, and Michael Winterbottom’s 24 Hour Party People will all be shown.
Claire Pijman with Anne-Katrin Titze on Robby Müller and Wim Wenders’ Buena Vista Social Club: “That’s how I got to know him, and since then we stayed...
Claire Pijman’s resourceful and enlightening documentary, Robby Müller: Living The Light (with a score by Jim Jarmusch and Carter Logan’s Sqùrl), is a big part of the series, Robby Müller: Remain in Light, at Metrograph that celebrates the legendary cinematographer, who died in 2018. Films by Wim Wenders, Jim Jarmusch, Sara Driver’s When Pigs Fly, Andrzej Wajda’s Korczak, Alex Cox’s Repo Man, Peter Bogdanovich’s Saint Jack, William Friedkin’s To Live And Die In LA, and Michael Winterbottom’s 24 Hour Party People will all be shown.
Claire Pijman with Anne-Katrin Titze on Robby Müller and Wim Wenders’ Buena Vista Social Club: “That’s how I got to know him, and since then we stayed...
- 9/27/2023
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk

The list of directors who put their trust in Robby Müller could constitute a nice history of post-war cinema. A retrospective of films on which he served as Dp reflects accordingly––so’s the case with Metrograph’s “Robby Müller: Remain in Light,” which starts on Friday, September 29, and for which we’re glad to debut the trailer.
Contained therein are bits and pieces of what Metrograph attendees can anticipate. The series will offer a chance to see (among others) 24 Hour Party People, Alice in the Cities, The American Friend, Barfly, Breaking the Waves, Dead Man, Down by Law, Ghost Dog: Way of the Samurai, Kings of the Road, Korczak, Living the Light – Robby Müller, Mystery Train, Repo Man, Saint Jack, To Live and Die in L.A., When Pigs Fly, The Wrong Move, and Paris, Texas. The opening night will be anchored by “a panel on Müller’s continued influence on filmmaking,...
Contained therein are bits and pieces of what Metrograph attendees can anticipate. The series will offer a chance to see (among others) 24 Hour Party People, Alice in the Cities, The American Friend, Barfly, Breaking the Waves, Dead Man, Down by Law, Ghost Dog: Way of the Samurai, Kings of the Road, Korczak, Living the Light – Robby Müller, Mystery Train, Repo Man, Saint Jack, To Live and Die in L.A., When Pigs Fly, The Wrong Move, and Paris, Texas. The opening night will be anchored by “a panel on Müller’s continued influence on filmmaking,...
- 9/21/2023
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage
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