‘Basic Instinct’ Writer Joe Eszterhas to Pen Reboot Movie for Amazon MGM Studios

‘Basic Instinct’ Writer Joe Eszterhas to Pen Reboot Movie for Amazon MGM Studios

‘Basic Instinct’ Writer Joe Eszterhas to Pen Reboot Movie for Amazon MGM Studios

Joe Eszterhas, who wrote the script for the 1992 erotic thriller Basic Instinct, is back to pen the screenplay for Amazon MGM Studios‘ planned reboot.

United Artists and Scott Stuber have acquired the rights to the franchise relaunch that is currently untitled. The deal marks the largest spec sale of 2025, with Amazon paying $2 million against a possible $4 million if the film gets made.

Producers include Stuber and Nick Nesbitt for UA and Craig Baumgarten for Vault Entertainment. Vault’s Adam Griffin serves as executive producer. 

Michael Douglas and Sharon Stone starred in director Paul Verhoeven‘s original Basic Instinct. It centers on a detective (Douglas) who connects with a writer (Stone) as she becomes the prime suspect in the murder of a wealthy musician.

During a 2018 conversation with The Hollywood Reporter’s podcast It Happened in Hollywood, Eszterhas said that if it were made today, the 1992 film would deal with “serious #MeToo protesters” over a sex scene between Douglas and his character’s psychiatrist, played by Jeanne Tripplehorn.

“It was rough sex,” the writer said in 2018. “But today’s yardstick is different.”

Prior to the release of Basic Instinct, Eszterhas was known for his work on such projects as Jagged Edge, Betrayed and Music Box. He sold the Basic Instinct screenplay for a whopping $3 million at the time (more than $6 million today) and would go on to pen the scripts for Sliver, Showgirls and Jade.

Basic Instinct collected $352 million at the box office ($811 million today) and was nominated for two Oscars. Stone reprised her role as Catherine Tramell in the 2006 sequel Basic Instinct 2, which underperformed at the box office.

Eszterhas and Baumgarten are represented by Doug Stone of Glaser Weil.

The Wrap was first to report on the new project.

TV & Beyond on 2025-07-17 21:14:10

TV & Beyond on 2025-07-17 21:14:10

The Hollywood Reporter, the new “Judge Dredd” movie based on the character from the “2000 AD” comic series is being shopped to various Hollywood studios, with a bidding war likely to ensue. This project seemingly takes the place of the “Judge Dredd: Mega-City One” TV show that had been in the works since 2017. The franchise rights holders, Chris Kingsley, Jason Kingsley, and Ben Smith, are on board as producers alongside Roy Lee, Jeremy Platt, Natalie Viscuso, and Pearce.

Plot details are currently under wraps, but the reports says the reboot will “take inspiration more from the comics than the previous screen iterations, leaning into the world-building and dark humor.” That sounds right up Waititi’s alley, since he’s the man who turned the “Thor” franchise into a superhero comedy with “Ragnarok” to great success. The report further states that it is “meant to be a fun sci-fi blockbuster that nonetheless speaks to this moment in culture.” Perhaps not surprisingly, this is also billed as the start of a possible “Dredd” universe, with other movies and/or shows to follow.

But let’s not get too ahead of ourselves just yet. First, this movie needs to find a studio. For fans, this may come as a blow as there was hope for many years that Urban would return for a “Dredd” sequel. Unfortunately, that was never going to happen, which made this reboot practically unavoidable.

Dredd wasn’t successful enough to start a franchise (at least not at first)

Directed by Pete Travis (with a major, uncredited assist from writer Alex Garland), “Dredd” first hit theaters in 2012 and was a gritty approach to the material found in the comics created by writer John Wagner and artist Carlos Ezquerra in the ’70s. The previous big screen effort, 1995’s “Judge Dredd” starring Sylvester Stallone, was a less serious affair as well as a major flop both critically and commercially.

By contrast, “Dredd” was widely beloved, particularly by audiences. The only problem? The movie failed to connect at the box office, pulling in just $41 million against a budget of at least $30 million. The movie has since found a sizable audience, which kept hope alive for a sequel, but it never made any sense financially. Hence, “Dredd 2” was never a realistic expectation, regardless of any online clamoring. Any backlash from those who wanted the sequel regarding this reboot news will also fall on deaf ears.

The post-theatrical interest in “Dredd” helped confirm for the rights holders that there is franchise potential in the property — it just has to be in a new direction with new talent. That’s where Waititi comes in. He won an Oscar for “Jojo Rabbit.” He helped revive the “Thor” franchise and made one of Marvel’s most beloved movies. He directed “What We Do in the Shadows,” which spawned a long-running TV show. He’s got that combination of humor and spectacle that could offer something new to help this reboot stand out. On paper, it’s easy to see why any studio would get excited about it.

Waititi’s “Next Goal Wins” was a financial disappointment and “Thor: Love and Thunder” was met with a mixed reception, but it was still a big hit. All this makes him a logical choice. The larger point, though, is that, be it with Waititi or someone else at the helm, a reboot was always going to happen. It was as inevitable as Thanos.

The new “Judge Dredd” movie does not currently have a release date.

How ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer’ Director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson Rebooted the Millennial Cult Classic for Gen Z

How ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer’ Director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson Rebooted the Millennial Cult Classic for Gen Z

I Know What You Did Last Summer director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson doesn’t want to see a cell phone on a movie screen.

“I’ve done this in all of my movies, for better or worse. I don’t like social media and phones,” says the 37-year-old director. “I don’t want to look at a phone screen. I don’t want to see you text-messaging. I just don’t care.”

There is something inherently ridiculous in asking audiences to leave their plentiful screens at home to go to a theater to watch a big screen, only to be confronted with a character incessantly looking at small screens. Still, when those characters are a gaggle of 20-somethings being stalked by a hook-wielding and slicker-wearing homicidal maniac, there is surely cause for some cellular activity.  

“Would all of these people be texting all the time? Sure. But I don’t care.” Robinson says, refreshingly doubling down. And anyway, she counters, “As someone who now knows a lot of Gen Z actors, their phones are always dead. They are always on their phone, and they are never on their phone. They have 400 unread text messages. They only voice note.”

Phones or not, with I Know What You Did Last Summer, out this Friday, Robinson has been tasked with capturing Gen Z onscreen and their hopeful attention at the movie theater by updating a touchstone of Millennial cinema.

1997’s I Know What You Did Last Summer starred Freddie Prinze Jr., Sarah Michelle Gellar, Jennifer Love Hewitt and Ryan Phillippe, the Mount Rushmore of 90s teen movie icons. After committing a hit-and-run and swearing each other to secrecy, this quartet is stalked by The Fisherman, a man wielding a killer hook.

Robinson first saw that movie at the age of 9 when a babysitter brought her to the theater and was likely never hired again. And while her mom was “really, really mad obviously,” the experience proved formative. “I am a true child of that time. I could lie and say that I came up on really important films, like film bro films, but I was forged in ’90s cinema,” says the director. From Dawson’s Creek to Scream, Robinson was reared on writer Kevin Williamson’s dialogue, and her 2022 movie Do Revenge paid homage to canonicals ’90s films like Cruel Intentions and Clueless.

It was while she was in post on Do Revenge that Sony Pictures and Neal Moritz’ Original Films approached Robinson about the prospect of rebooting I Know What You Did Last Summer. She wasn’t worried if the central story could translate for a 2025 audience, saying, “The core idea is completely evergreen. At any point, in any time, someone making a grave mistake and then paying for it can work as a story.” The larger challenge would be towing the line reboot between appealing to fans of the ’90s films and reinvention.

Too much of the former and “it alienates a new audience, because they feel like they’re on the outside of an inside joke,” says Robinson. Too much of the latter, and audiences will start wondering why they didn’t just make an original horror film. Says the director of the potentially maddening tightrope walk, “People are going to have thoughts and feelings and opinions, and that’s not a negative.”

The 2025 update sees a now post-collegiate group of high school friends coming together under the auspices of an engagement party, only to end the night by inadvertently causing an anonymous driver to nosedive off a cliff. After making the inevitably fatal decision to cover up the accident, the group is later hunted down by The Fisherman and calls upon the help of survivors Ray (Prinze) and Julie (Hewitt) as pseudo-mentors.

While the characters of the original film were still in their teens, filmmakers chose to age up the cast for the reboot. “What’s actually at stake is much more nebulous [in high school] than it is when you’re in your mid 20s,” says co-writer Sam Lansky. If the 1997 movie starred the bold-faced names of young adult ’90s movies, then the 2025 cast, which includes The Studio stand-out Chase Sui Wonders, an alum of Gen Z horror comedy Bodies Bodies Bodies, and Outer Banks breakout Madelyn Cline, could be poised to do the same.

How ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer’ Director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson Rebooted the Millennial Cult Classic for Gen Z

Gabbriette Bechtel, Sarah Pidgeon, Chase Sui Wonders, Jennifer Kaytin Robinson, Madelyn Cline

Jonny Marlow

As for generational markers, one character is a host of a true-crime podcast (played by model/singer/general “it” girl Gabbriette) and there is plenty of therapy-speak about trauma and self-care, with a character even name-checking the Instagram famous self-help title The Body Keeps the Score. The girls call each other “diva,” both with and without irony.

All the same, Robinson and Lansky weren’t combing TikTok for research. “That is extremely just how Jen and I talk,” says Lansky. “I am, at my heart, a Gen Z, brain rot girlie, despite being an aging Millennial.”

I Know What You Did Last Summer isn’t alone in studios tapping the well of Millennial nostalgia. The Lindsay Lohan-fronted Freaky Friday sequel is heading into theaters later this summer, while a Devil Wear Prada follow-up is currently in production. Earlier this summer, the $1 billion live-action Lilo & Stitch became a breakout hit thanks to catering early aughts IP to Zoomers. (18 and 24 year-olds making up 32 percent of the non-family audience, followed by 33 percent between ages 25 to 34.).

The interest is there, but the question becomes who will be the ones to make these movies. Amongst her age cohort, Robinson’s career is a singular one. After creating a critically adored television series, MTV’s Sweet/Vicious, she jumped into features with 2019’s Someone Great and Do Revenge, both original films for Netflix. (She isn’t a complete stranger to IP, having co-written Marvel entry Thor: Love & Thunder.)

The well-trodden path for Millennial filmmakers has most often been through the indie space, where a festival film begets larger budgets behind studio gates. But, as of the past couple of years, more filmmakers are staying away from the studio system (see: Celine Song, Ari Aster), while risk-averse studios are looking for known quantities in the director’s chair.

“I want there to be more filmmakers, especially indie-leaning filmmakers, who want to and are excited about and understand the assignment of commerciality and making commercial films. They can still feel original but are meant to be commercial. And I want studios to bring up filmmakers so that we can find that middle again,” says Robinson. “I miss the middle.” After all, that middle is where I Know What You Did Last Summer and many of the beloved films from ’90s and early ’00s once sat.

Robinson fully grasped the anticipation for another I Know What You Did Last Summer when the trailer dropped online two months ago and traveled far and wide across social media. But she knows some people will inevitably leave her movie with unmet expectations. (Reviews from critics have been soft). She says, “I unfortunately know that not everyone is going to like this because we took swings. But I’m really proud of those swings, and what I hope is that even if you don’t like it, you can be like, ‘Huh, cool swing.’”

And to Robinson, any conversation surrounding movies is a positive when it comes to getting young audiences to the movie theater. She points to Ryan Coogler’s Sinners and Song’s The Materialists as two films that stirred interest online and in media that then pushed people to go to the movie theater. She says, “Having discourse, good or bad, it doesn’t really matter, just talk about [movies] and make them feel like they have a place in culture. Everybody wants to be a part of culture.”

It Took More Than Half The Year, But Hollywood Finally Has Its First  Billion Hit In 2025

It Took More Than Half The Year, But Hollywood Finally Has Its First $1 Billion Hit In 2025

As we find ourselves smack dab in the middle of 2025’s movie releases, we’ve seen massive franchises like Mission: Impossible, Jurassic World and Superman return, live-action remakes soar and original movies like Sinners and F1 find their place among the year’s highest earners so far. But, which Hollywood movie is the biggest hit so far? We officially have our first $1 billion hit movie of 2025, and once again the honor belongs to Walt Disney Studios.

Lilo & Stitch Has Become The First Hollywood Movie To Reach $1 Billion Worldwide

The first Hollywood movie to officially cross $1 billion in box office cash is the live-action Lilo & Stitch movie. Walt Disney Studios made the announcement via a press release on Thursday ahead of the movie’s ninth weekend in theaters. The feature has made $416.2 million domestically and $584.8 million internationally after initially breaking Memorial Day weekend records when it opened alongside Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning.

Lilo & Stitch CinemaBlend review included, and Walt Disney Studios has already announced that a sequel is in the works.

Variety, but in years prior, it hasn’t taken so long. For example, The Super Mario Bros. Movie made that achievement at the end of April in 2023, and the year before that, Top Gun: Maverick reached the $1 billion mark at the end of June. But another 2025 movie got dang near close considering A Minecraft Movie has made over $950 million worldwide.

Other top earners of 2025 so far are still stuck below the $600 million mark with Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning having earned $584.6 million after eight weeks, and How to Train Your Dragon making $564.6 (now available to watch at home after its mid-June release). Jurassic World Rebirth has thus far sold $544.2 million in tickets worldwide already ahead of its third weekend (per Box Office Mojo).

Disney Has Officially Had Four $1 Billion Hits In A Matter Of 13 Months

The latest news about Lilo & Stitch marks the fourth billion dollar hit for Disney in the past 13 months, and it’s the only Hollywood studio to do so in that time. Before experiment 626 landed in Hawaii again, Moana 2 reached the milestone in January after Deadpool & Wolverine surpassed $1 billion in late August 2024, and the aforementioned Inside Out 2 started Disney on the winning streak.

This isn’t to say Disney has had some disappointments over the past year, though. Both of its Marvel movies that have come out this year so far have underperformed, with Captain America: Brave New World making $413 million worldwide and Thunderbolts* earning $382 million globally – which are both close to Eternals numbers. Disney’s other live-action remake offering, Snow White, made just $205 million worldwide (with a reported production budget of around $200 million on its own). Pixar’s Elio had the worst opening weekend for a Pixar movie ever, and it has made just $119 million in its theatrical run so far.

Lilo & Stitch is the second-highest movie worldwide in 2025, with China’s animated film Ne Zha 2 being number one with over $1.8 billion to its name – and that’s a huge deal not only for Walt Disney Studios, but the movie theater business. Now the question is: what 2025 movie will be next?

Taika Waititi Tackling ‘Judge Dredd’ Movie in Hot Package Hitting Hollywood (Exclusive)

Taika Waititi Tackling ‘Judge Dredd’ Movie in Hot Package Hitting Hollywood (Exclusive)

Taika Waititi Tackling ‘Judge Dredd’ Movie in Hot Package Hitting Hollywood (Exclusive)

Judge Dredd. Taika Waititi.

Those two names have studio heads and executives sitting up this week as one of the hottest packages of the year hits the Hollywood marketplace.

Waititi, the Thor: Ragnarok and Jojo Rabbit filmmaker, is attached to direct a new feature film take on Dredd, the popular and violent British comic book character.

Drew Pearce, the scribe known for his action movie-filled resume thanks to titles such as Fall Guy and Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation, is attached to write the script.

Producers include Dredd rights holders Chris Kingsley, Jason Kingsley and Ben Smith of Rebellion Developments, Roy Lee of Vertigo Entertainment, Jeremy Platt, Natalie Viscuso and Pearce.

Sources say Pearce and Waititi both grew up with the books and are friends who have been trying to find a project to work on together for years.

Created in the late 1970s by writer John Wagner and artist Carlos Ezquerra, Dredd debuted in the pages of weekly British anthology 2000 AD. He is a police officer in the bleak future metropolis of Mega-City One, part of a law enforcement corps that empowers officers to be judge, jury, and executioner. The character and his stories were a satire on a judicial system taken to the extreme. Dredd proved hugely popular, engendering several more comics and comics strips, video and board games, books, and even postage stamps in the United Kingdom. It is said that over 100,000,000 comics and graphic novels have been sold.

The character was given the glossy Hollywood treatment in 1995 with a big-budget adaptation that starred Sylvester Stallone. It was poorly received. More warmly was the reception for Dredd, a 2012 adaptation that starred Karl Urban with a script by Alex Garland, the writer behind 28 Days Later, who also wrote and directed Civil War.

The logline is being kept under the visor, but the pitch is said to take inspiration more from the comics than the previous screen iterations, leaning into the world-building and dark humor. It is also meant to be a fun sci-fi blockbuster that nonetheless speaks to this moment in culture. The desire is to see the movie launch a Dredd universe that could be explored with additional movies and shows across various platforms.

TV & Beyond on 2025-07-17 19:00:00

TV & Beyond on 2025-07-17 19:00:00

“Star Trek: Strange New Worlds” season 2 finale, “Hegemony,” things weren’t going too well. The vicious alien Gorn had abducted half of the bridge crew. War between Starfleet and the Gorn risked going hot. Captain Pike’s (Anson Mount) lover Captain Marie Batel (Melanie Scrofano) was infected with Gorn hatchlings. Pike himself was paralyzed by indecision as the Gorn ships bore down on the Enterprise; Admiral April (Adrian Holmes) called the Enterprise back to the fleet, not leaving them time to rescue their shipmates. The ship’s second in command, Una Chin-Riley (Rebecca Romijn), called for orders from the helm, but Pike didn’t give them.

As chilling a place as that was to leave “Strange New Worlds” season 2, we should’ve known the Enterprise crew would rise to the job. Pike’s silent freeze up was just a pause, not a breakdown. Pike pulls a classic Starfleet trick: Obey orders, but not to the letter. Since April didn’t order them back immediately, the Enterprise stays long enough to plant a tracking beacon on the Gorn ship (disguised with a dud torpedo) and then flies off. From there, the episode’s multiple threads tie together into a pretty clean victory for the good guys.

How the Enterprise defeats the Gorn in Strange New Worlds’ season 3 premiere

Newcomer Scotty (Martin Quinn) and his old engineering professor Pelia (Carol Kane) whip up a pseudo-cloaking device to make the Enterprise appear as a Gorn vessel on the Gorn’s own sensors, allowing Pike and company to pursue the Gorn ship they tagged.

Una and Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding) track data of Gorn activity and conclude that they have aggression/hibernation behavior patterns respondent to solar flare activity. So the Enterprise flies between two binary stars that mark the path to the Gorn homeworld. With the engineering magic, they induce a specific radiation flare to induce the Gorn fleet to return home and hibernate. This trick does the job just before the radiation would’ve seared the Enterprise and her crew beyond repair.

On said Gorn ship, La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong) breaks free and leads the other lead character captives — Dr. M’Benga (Babs Olusanmokun), Ortegas (Melissa Navia), and Sam Kirk (Dan Jeannotte) — to escape. Even wounded, Ortegas manages to pilot a Gorn fighter. They arrive at the Enterprise just as the solar flare gambit has paid off and get transported back to the ship.

Christine Chapel (Jess Bush) and Spock (Ethan Peck) put aside their relationship drama to tend to Batel. Their treatment options are limited and on a tight deadline, because she’s (in)conveniently allergic to cryosleep medication. They ultimately settle on a treatment that essentially tricks the Gorn hatchlings to not emerge, Xenomorph chestburster in “Alien”-style; this is an echo of the larger strategy of sending the Gorn fleet to sleep.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds completes its Best of Both Worlds homage

The cliffhanger ending of “Strange New Worlds” season 2 was a homage to one of the most important “Trek” episodes ever: “The Best of Both Worlds,” the season 3 finale/season 4 premiere of “Star Trek: The Next Generation.” That episode ends with Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Sir Patrick Stewart) being assimilated by the alien hive mind, the Borg. As “Locutus,” Picard will act to help facilitate the assimilation of the Federation into the Borg.

Command of the Enterprise-D falls to Will Riker (Jonathan Frakes), who must rescue Picard and prevent the unstoppable Borg from overrunning the Federation. They succeed; android crew member Data (Brent Spiner) interfaces with Locutus (allowing Picard to overcome the reprogramming) and thus the whole Borg Collective. Picard gives Data the answer: “Sleep,” which Data understands means to induce the Borg to power down. Their cube ship self-destructs in orbit of Earth and disaster is narrowly averted. 

“The Best of Both Worlds” is an excellent episode, but part of what made it so memorable was how fans had to wait months to see the story resolved. You can’t repeat that experience now, but “Star Trek” has repeatedly tried. Every subsequent “Next Generation” finale ended on a cliffhanger that would be resolved in the following season premiere. Future “Star Trek” shows “Voyager” and “Enterprise” also largely structured their season finales and premieres in this way. 

I understand “Hegemony” was leaning hard on “Best of Both Worlds,” but in “Part II,” it feels like it may have leaned too hard. The resolution is exactly the same as “Best of Both Worlds,” i.e. the Enterprise sending the enemy to sleep. “Trek” canon means a Gorn war couldn’t break out, but this tidy ending only proves that 35 years on, “Star Trek” is still trying to recapture the magic of “The Best of Both Worlds.”

“Star Trek: Strange New Worlds” streams on Paramount+. New episodes of season 3 release on Thursdays.