Movie Trailers Trending This Month (Sep. 2020) Sep 1, 2020

Movie Trailers Trending This Month (Sep. 2020) Sep 1, 2020

Movie Trailers Trending This Month (Sep. 2020) Sep 1, 2020 These trailers are trending right now. Scroll below for movie titles, release dates, and coming soon movie previews. Movies Coming Soon The Trial of the Chicago 7 Dune Release Date: Dec. 18 Distributor: Warner Bros. Dune won't be out until Dec. 18, but this Denis Villeneuve-directed remake is getting some serious buzz. Check out the brand new trailer below. Rebecca Release Date: Oct. 21 Distributor: Netflix A newlywed arrives at her husband's estate and finds herself battling the shadow of his first wife. Watch the preview for Rebecca below. No Time to Die Release Date: Nov. 20 Distributor: MGM Studios When you're done doing your happy dance, go ahead and watch the new trailer for Daniel Craig's fifth and final performance as the iconic James Bond. No Time To Die will come out on Nov. 20th. Ammonite Release Date: Sep. 11 Distributor: Lionsgate Ammonite is inspired by the life of fossil hunter Mary Anning (played by Kate Winslet) and follows her romantic relationship with a young woman (played Saoirse Ronan). Watch the dramatic preview below. Tenet Release Date: Sep. 4 Distributor: Warner Bros. Pictures Tenet finally has a release date of Sep. 4. Watch the all-new trailer for Christopher Nolan's Tenet below. Antebellum Release Date: Sep. 18 Distributor: Lionsgate Another highly anticipated film is this horrifying-looking movie from Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz. Watch the trailer for Antebellum below. All In: The Fight for Democracy Release Date: Sep. 9 Distributor: Amazon Prime In anticipation of the 2020 presidential election, All In: The Fight for Democracy peeks into the issue of voter suppression in the United States. Death on the Nile Release Date: Oct. 23 Distributor: Netflix Watch the trailer below for Death on the Nile, an upcoming murder mystery straight from Netflix. Written by Michael Green, it’s based on the 1937 novel of the same name by Agatha Christie. Eternal Beauty Release Date: Oct. 2 Distributor: Samuel Goldwyn Films Sally Hawkins plays Jane, a peculiar character having a breakdown in a chaotic world, where love (both real and imagined) and family relationships collide in touching and humorous ways. Watch the Eternal Beauty trailer below. The Devil All the Time Release Date: Sep. 16 Distributor: Netflix Based on Donald Ray Pollock’s award-winning novel of the same name, The Devil All the Time features an ensemble cast of Robert Pattinson, Tom Holland, Jason Clarke, Riley Keough, Sebastian Stan, Eliza Scanlan, and more. Watch the trailer below. Kajillionaire Release Date: Sep. 18 Distributor: Focus Features Con artists Theresa (Debra Winger) and Robert (Richard Jenkins) have spent their entire lives training their daughter to swindle, scam, and steal. Now, they’ve convinced a stranger to join their scam, only to have their world shaken up. Watch the Kajillionaire trailer below. On the Rocks Release Date: October 23 Distributor: A24 / AppleTV+ Laura (Rashida Jones) begins to fear for the worst after her husband is suspiciously busy all the time. So, she turns to her father, played by the one and only Bill Murray, for advice. Watch the trailer for On the Rocks below. Judas and the Black Messiah Release Date: TBD Distributor: Warner Bros. Pictures Chairman Fred Hampton (Daniel Kaluuya) was 21 years old when he was assassinated by the FBI — who worked with petty criminal William O’Neal (Lakeith Stanfield) to help them silence him and the Black Panther Party. Watch the intense preview for Judas and the Black Messiah below. Top Movie Trailers From August, 2020 Netflix Party and 5 Other Watch Party Apps Now Streaming on Peacock You Can Now Watch (Some) Netflix Originals For Free Sep 1, 2020 Forgot your parents’ Netflix password? Well, now the streaming service is offering some movies and shows to non-subscribers for free. It’s not a new practice—Netflix opened up To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before to U.S. viewers in February (in hopes that they would subscribe to watch the sequel). But this time, 10 titles will be available to viewers globally. What exactly is on the list? On the movie side, there’s Bird Box, Murder Mystery, and the Oscar-nominated The Two Popes. For series viewing, you have Boss Baby: Back in Business, Elite, Grace and Frankie, Love is Blind, Stranger Things, Our Planet, and When They See Us. Click here to watch free. We don’t yet know how long this will last—or whether titles will rotate in and out—but until then, happy viewing. Original Mulan Passes The Torch Sep 3, 2020 If you’ve ever seen Princess Jasmine or Mulan sing, you’ve heard the voice of Lea Salonga. A singer and actor for over 40 years, Lea has played iconic roles both onscreen and onstage, including in the 1998 animated version of Mulan. This week, purely as a movie fan, she’s gearing up to see her role reprised in Disney’s live-action remake, available for purchase on Disney+ September 4. “I’m probably going to hole up somewhere in my house with a lot of snacks and plenty of water and I will just be sitting cross-legged, watching,” Lea said. “I’ve been waiting since March 20th to see this movie. I’ve got friends in this movie so I want to be able to cheer and clap, even if it’s just me and my family watching.” And although the film wasn’t released in theaters as planned this spring due to the COVID-19 pandemic, “it’s a matter of making the best out of a bad situation,” Lea said. “This is something that’s beyond anybody’s control.” “I want to be able to just take it all in and see all of that Asian beauty and badassery on that TV. I cannot wait.” Making history at the Tonys Lea began doing musical theater at 7 years old in her native Philippines. But it was only while she was working on Miss Saigon in London that she finally decided, “This is really it. I’m not going to be doing anything else in my life.” And she hasn’t looked back. Lea won the Tony for Leading Actress in a Musical for Miss Saigon on Broadway in 1991, becoming the first actress of Asian descent to win the prize. “The Tony Awards were the one award show that I really took interest in. I remember watching Chita Rivera. I remember watching Jennifer Holliday. Those two left a mark,” she recalled. “So when I was sitting at the Tony Awards with my brother, who was my date the year I won, I couldn’t believe we were there and that we were actually going to get to see it a few feet in front of us. The impact was nuts.” At the time, Lea said, “I don't know that it really entered my mind that I was representing a woefully underrepresented chunk of the population. But for the show to run for 10 years on Broadway and more than 10 years in London, and for there to be a touring production going all over the United States ... It means that more and more Asian actors can look to doing theater as a viable livelihood option. You don’t have to be a doctor or a lawyer.” Lea grew up watching Disney musicals, like The Rescuers, and listening to storybooks on tape. “Instead of my mom reading me a bedtime story, she’d turn on the Disney storybook tapes. Some of them got eaten up by the machine. Dumbo and Cinderella survived. I think Pinocchio got eaten up, but I do remember seeing the film anyway, so it’s fine.” She closely followed the Disney princess renaissance, beginning with The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast. Then it was Aladdin, which marked Lea’s Disney break. “It was a sweet beginning,” she said. “The casting director, Albert Tavares, left a really nice note at the stage door of the Broadway theater [during Miss Saigon] that said, ‘We’ve been trying to look for you. Can you please give me a call?’ I got to meet him at the audition, but he passed away a few months after that.” Also present at her audition: Alan Menken and Tim Rice. “Those two do not leave my memory so p ese a e aud o : a Me e a d ce. ose wo do o eave y e o y because of who they are to many musical theater people. I mean, Alan Menken—nevermind Mermaid and Belle. I’m looking at Little Shop of Horrors in front of me! And with Tim Rice, it’s Jesus Christ Superstar and Evita.” She sang “Part of Your World” from The Little Mermaid: “Of course, I had to sing something that sounded Disney princessy.” “And the next time that I sang for anybody, it was for a recording of the demo of ‘A Whole New World.’ So I guess I got the job,” she said. Becoming a warrior princess Lea’s Mulan audition took place in her native Manila. At the time, the film was going to be written by Stephen Schwartz, so she sang a song he had composed, “Written in Stone,” which didn’t end up making it into the final version. As with her Miss Saigon Tony win, Lea didn’t see the monumental impact a princess like this would have until after the fact. “I started to see a lot of young girls, Asian or otherwise, dressing up in this costume for Halloween.

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