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Friday, March 20, 2026

Shutter Island Explained: The Soul-Crushing Truth You Missed

Michael

Who doesn’t love a good conspiracy theory? Don’t worry—we’re only talking movies here.

Whether it’s Jar Jar Binks secretly being a Sith Lord, John Mason in The Rock actually being 007, or even my personal favorite—Kevin McCallister growing up to be Jigsaw—we could fall down the rabbit hole for days. But what about the theory of Shutter Island being a secret government mind-control facility? Have you heard this one yet? Edward “Teddy” Daniels sure has. However, the truth is much uglier, and it’s laid out before your very eyes in the first moments of the film, in subliminal clues you didn’t even catch.

Today, we’re taking the ferry over to figure out exactly what’s going on. We’re decoding the hints you completely missed, discussing the harsh realities of one hell of a role-playing game, and explaining why the bleakest plot twist of the 2010s is NOT a cop-out. All to arrive at one final, soul-crushing question: “Which would be worse? To live as a monster, or to die as a good man?”

Let’s set the scene, shall we? The fog breaks to reveal a ferry. You hear the ominous pounding of the waves before you ever see them. A hopelessly seasick U.S. Marshal is staring into a grimy bathroom mirror, splashing water on his face to wash away a dream that—though he doesn’t know it—he’s already walking through. We know from the jump, the moment Martin Scorsese sets us down on Shutter Island, that something is horribly, fundamentally wrong.

In the majority of thrillers, the key to the mystery is carefully concealed until the big reveal in the third act. The film tricks you into thinking you’re one step ahead before blindfolding you and pointing you in the direction of the nearest cliff. It’s like hiding an ace up a sleeve until the final act, when they reveal it and yell, “Gotcha, bitch!” In Shutter Island, however, the ace is right in front of your eyes the entire time. The film shoves the brutal, heartbreaking truth right under our noses from the opening shot. It beats us into submission to the point that we’re locked inside this tortured mind, willing to do anything but see that magic trick revealed. We are shown all the pieces of the puzzle in the first 10 minutes—but we’re too blind to see them.

Shutter Island

When the flick hit theaters in early 2010, audiences expected some creepy asylum mystery that was tonally different from Scorsese’s previous film, The Departed. The film was released as just another creepy asylum thriller. Sure, that’s what we got—but what people also received was a lesson in psychological horror. A puzzle of off-screen symbolism.

THE FEBRUARY DUMPING GROUND

Now let’s travel back to the beginning of 2010 and reality. Paramount Pictures had a big problem. At least, this is what the Hollywood trades knew for certain back then. Martin Scorsese’s hotly anticipated thriller—intended to be released in October 2009, in the heart of awards season—was being held over until February 2010.

We all follow the film business, right? It’s February. That’s the graveyard shift—the place where studios go to dump movies they can no longer spend money on advertising. Paramount claimed they didn’t have the budget in 2009 to mount an Oscar campaign, but no one bought that. Everyone immediately assumed the worst. The speculation was that Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio had finally created a massive, expensive failure. That it was bloated and confusing.

But once the film actually hit theaters, it subverted all of those preconceptions. It wasn’t a watered-down awards-season drama—it was a brash, pulpy, Grade-B genre film done to perfection. It showed the world that Scorsese could craft a chilling, atmospheric horror film just as easily as a crime saga. It grossed over $294 million and featured one of the most stunning plot reveals of its time—one that completely alters how you view the film on a second watch.

THE GREATEST ROLE-PLAYING GAME EVER MASTERMINDED

So let’s start with the biggest rumors. No, Shutter Island is not a government mind-control facility, and no, there are no evil doctors who brainwash U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels by the end of the film. The reality is much more painful and personal.

DiCaprio’s Teddy Daniels is actually Andrew Laeddis—the very sick, extremely violent Patient 67 who murdered his wife after she drowned their three children in the lake behind their picturesque farmhouse.

How about Teddy’s lavish, hard-boiled investigation into the island’s dark secrets? It never actually happened. It was a game—a game of extreme, incredibly elaborate make-believe. The entire thing was scripted by Dr. Cawley and Teddy’s partner Chuck, who is actually his psychiatrist, Dr. Sheehan.

They believe that, with enough radical empathy and boundary-pushing therapy, they can cure Andrew of his violent delusions. They’re putting their careers on the line to save his life—and quite honestly, they’re the most sympathetic people in Andrew’s world.

On the other side, we have the Warden and Dr. Naehring. They believe men like Andrew are too far gone. They represent a harsher, more old-school approach to psychiatry—one that favors restraint, sedation, and ultimately lobotomy.

All of this becomes a high-stakes version of the emperor’s new clothes. Cawley and Sheehan must allow Andrew to live out his fantasy until it collapses in on itself. They must let him chase every conspiracy until he hits a literal brick wall. There’s no other way to force him to confront the nightmare of his reality.

Shutter Island

THE MARK RUFFALO MASTERCLASS IN DECEPTION

Once you understand the rules of the game, it becomes essential to rewatch Mark Ruffalo’s performance as Chuck.

At first, he seems like a generic, slightly awkward partner. But on a second viewing, you realize he’s delivering one of the most subtle and impressive performances of his career.

Look at him in the early scenes. When they have to surrender their guns, he struggles to remove his from the holster. He’s inept. Even Teddy notices. Why would a U.S. Marshal struggle with something so basic? Because he’s not a marshal—he’s a doctor who’s probably never handled a gun.

Every word Chuck says is calculated. He asks leading questions. He validates Teddy’s paranoia. When Teddy spirals into conspiracy theories about Nazi experiments and mind control, Chuck doesn’t challenge him—he encourages him.

Ruffalo is playing a man pretending to be a cop, while also conveying the genuine concern of a doctor watching his patient unravel. It’s phenomenal acting hiding in plain sight.

FIRE, WATER, AND THE INVISIBLE CLUES

Scorsese fills the film with subtle, almost subliminal cues that we’re seeing the world through a fractured mind.

One of the most obvious motifs is the contrast between fire and water.

Fire represents Andrew’s delusion. Whenever Teddy is near fire, he experiences hallucinations—visions of his wife, Dolores, and moments where he feels heroic and in control.

Water represents truth—the unbearable truth. It’s tied directly to the death of his children. It makes him physically ill and emotionally unstable throughout the film.

There’s also the famous continuity glitch in the interrogation scene: a woman drinks from an invisible glass, which suddenly appears in the next shot. We don’t notice it because we’re experiencing reality the same way Teddy is—through a mind that refuses to acknowledge trauma.

There are countless other clues: guards acting uneasy around him, patients reacting strangely, and small details—like Teddy not having his own cigarettes—hinting that he’s not who he thinks he is.

THE FINAL TRAGEDY

The lighthouse reveal strips everything away. There are no experiments. No conspiracies. Just truth.

And the most devastating twist comes after. The treatment works. Andrew remembers everything. He understands what he’s done.

But he can’t live with it. So he makes a choice.

He chooses to become Teddy Daniels again—knowing it will lead to his lobotomy. Knowing it will erase him.

Because, in his mind, it’s better to die as a good man than to live as a monster.

This isn’t a story about mind control or sinister doctors. It’s about grief. Guilt. Trauma.

And the terrifying lengths the human mind will go to in order to escape reality. Andrew Laeddis didn’t just lose his family—he built an entire world to avoid facing what happened.And when that world finally collapsed… he chose oblivion.

That’s what makes Shutter Island so powerful. It’s not just a twist—it’s a tragedy.

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Thursday, March 19, 2026

Kevin Williamson tried to get more dead Ghostface cameos into Scream 7

The slasher sequel Scream 7 took a bumpy road to production, losing some cast members and directors along the way, but it has now made its way out into the world. The reaction is split (you can read a 5/10 review from Tyler Nichols HERE and an 8/10 second opinion review from Mike Conway at THIS LINK), but the box office is good, with the film setting the record for the highest opening weekend of the franchise. The numbers have taken a dive since then, but it didn’t even take three weeks for the movie to become the highest-grossing entry in the series.

Months before the release, we heard that the cast would include Matthew Lillard and Scott Foley, who played Ghostface killers in the original Scream and Scream 3, respectively, and did not appear to make it out of those movies alive. David Arquette also returned as the dearly departed Dewey, who exited the world of the living in the fifth movie. Now, director Kevin Williamson has revealed that he tried to get more actors to make cameos as their dead Ghostface characters.

Cast and Synopsis

Returning franchise heroine Neve Campbell, back in the role of Sidney Prescott, is joined in the cast by Isabel May of the Yellowstone prequel 1883, who has signed on to play Sidney’s daughter Tatum; Mckenna Grace of the Ghostbusters franchise, Grace’s Ghostbusters co-star Celeste O’Connor, Gen V‘s Asa Germann, The Fabelmans‘ Sam Rechner, Pitch Perfect‘s Anna Camp, Riverdale‘s Mark Consuelos, fellow franchise star Courteney Cox, who reprises the role of reporter / author Gale Weathers, Joel McHale (Community) as Sidney’s husband Mark Evans, and Ethan Embry (The Devil’s Candy). Although two of the “core four” characters established in the previous two movies are no longer around, Mason Gooding and Jasmin Savoy Brown are back as Chad Meeks-Martin and Mindy Meeks-Martin.

Here’s the film’s official synopsis: When a new Ghostface killer emerges in the quiet town where Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) has built a new life, her darkest fears are realized as her daughter (Isabel May) becomes the next target. Determined to protect her family, Sidney must face the horrors of her past to put an end to the bloodshed once and for all.

Cameos

In addition to Lillard, Foley, and Arquette’s characters making appearances, Scream 7 also features a cameo from Laurie Metcalf as her dead Ghostface character from Scream 2.

During an interview with Happy Horror Time, Williamson said (thanks to our friends at Bloody Disgusting for the transcription), that other cameos fell through. “Since it was Sidney related, I felt like 1 through 4 needed to be represented. I desperately wanted Emma Roberts. Because that movie’s not represented. And I wanted her so badly. And I asked her like three times. But… the schedule or something didn’t work. It just didn’t work out for her. She couldn’t make it.

There’s one former Ghostface lost, but not the only one. Williamson said they also contacted Timothy Olyphant about appearing as his dead Scream 2 killer, “but he couldn’t do it.

While I had heard that Lillard, Foley, and Arquette were in the movie before I saw it, the Laurie Metcalf cameo was a nice surprise. Olyphant would have been cool, but unnecessary since Metcalf was already representing Scream 2. It does feel like a loss that Emma Roberts didn’t show up, though, especially since her killer character from Scream 4 was Sidney’s cousin.

What do you think? Would cameos from Emma Roberts and/or Timothy Olyphant have added anything important to Scream 7?

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The Terror: Devil in Silver, the third season of the AMC series, gets a May premiere date

Based on a novel by Dan Simmons (that you can buy HERE), the first season of the AMC series The Terror was about a doomed journey to the Arctic in the 1840s. Ordering a second season, AMC turned the show into an anthology, and season 2 told the story of a specter haunting prisoners in a Japanese internment camp during World War II. Now, after a six and a half year break, the show is making a comeback with a new season called The Terror: Devil in SilverDeadline has revealed that the third season is set to premiere on the AMC+ and Shudder streaming services on Thursday, May 7. New episodes will roll out weekly. The season will also air on AMC later this year, but Deadline did not confirm if those dates line up with the streaming dates.

Synopsis

Based on a novel by Victor LaValle (you can pick up a copy of that one HERE), The Terror: Devil in Silver is written by Chris Cantwell (Halt and Catch Fire) and LaValle. The story centers on Pepper, a working-class moving man who, through a combination of bad luck and a bad temper, finds himself wrongfully committed to New Hyde Psychiatric Hospital – an institution filled with the people society would rather forget. There, he must contend with patients who work against him, doctors who harbor grim secrets, and perhaps even the very Devil himself. As Pepper navigates a hellscape where nothing is as it seems, he finds that the only path to freedom is to face down the entity which thrives on the suffering within New Hyde’s walls – but doing so may prove that the worst demons of all live inside him.

Dan Stevens (The Guest) stars as Pepper and serves as an executive producer on the season. Also in the cast are Judith Light (Before), CCH Pounder (Rustin), Aasif Mandvi (Evil), John Benjamin Hickey (The Big C), Stephen Root (Barry), Michael Aronov (The Americans), Marin Ireland (Sneaky Pete), Chinaza Uche (Silo), Hampton Fluker (Shades of Blue), b (WeCrashed), Hayward Leach (Tom Swift), and Philip Ettinger (First Reformed).

Producers

While previous seasons of The Terror had ten episode runs, this season will consist of six episodes. An AMC Studios Production, The Terror: Devil in Silver was filmed in New York and New Jersey.

In addition to Stevens, executive producers include Ridley Scott, David W. Zucker, and Clayton Krueger of Scott Free Productions, Alexandra Milchan of Emjag Productions, Guymon Casady (Entertainment 360), and Brooke Kennedy, alongside series writers/showrunners Cantwell and LaValle, and Emmy nominee Karyn Kusama (Yellowjackets), who directed the first two episodes. 

Are you looking forward to watching The Terror: Devil in Silver when it premieres in May? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

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Wednesday, March 18, 2026

The Death Roll: Glen Powell producing crocodile horror thriller

Last month, it was officially announced that actor Glen Powell’s production company Barnstorm is teaming up with Spooky Pictures, Image Nation, Exurbia Films, and A24 to produce a Texas Chainsaw Massacre TV series that will be directed by JT Mollner (Strange Darling). Now, Deadline reports that Lionsgate has acquired the survival horror thriller project The Death Roll, which has Barnstorm attached to produce alongside Chasing Epic Pictures.

Writers

The spec script that launched The Death Roll was written by Kas Graham and Rebecca Pollock, who previously wrote the Kate Beckinsale / Scott Eastwood rescue thriller Stolen Girl. Deadline notes that Graham and Pollock have also been developing a Betty Ford movie for Netflix that has Sarah Paulson attached to star and Ryan Murphy attached to direct. Their feature May Savidge Moves Her House is set up with Pathè with Helena Bonham Carter starring, and their suffragist home invasion film Suffer has Tina Gharavi directing.

They were also producers on Apple TV’s Lessons in Chemistry and adapted the Diane Ducret novel La Dictatrice as a series for FX. They’re currently developing Young Agatha for Wiip, and have other projects set up with Monumental Pictures, Universal, A&E, and Apple France. They stay busy.

The story they crafted for The Death Roll follows a couple whose dream vacation turns into a nightmare when they encounter the unexpected: an invasive 15-foot saltwater crocodile.

Producers

Glen Powell and Dan Cohen will be producing the film for Barnstorm, while Bryan Haas does the same for Chasing Epic Pictures. Haas has also been working with Graham and Pollock on their Betty Ford project.

Barnstorm’s Ryan Schwartz will serve as an executive producer. Chelsea Kujawa and Maria Ascanio are overseeing the project for Lionsgate.

Killer crocodile movies always sound like a good idea to me. They don’t always end up being very good, but I’m glad to keep giving new ones a chance, so I look forward to seeing how The Death Roll is going to turn out.

Does The Death Roll sound interesting to you? Share your thoughts on this Glen Powell survival horror thriller production by leaving a comment below.

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Interview: Radio Silence and Kathryn Newton Talk Ready or Not 2: Here I Come

Radio Silence, the directing duo of Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, has become a favorite of mine over the past few years. Not only do I dig the guys, but I love the energy they bring. The horror they present generally excites this viewer. And out of all their work, the sly and engaging Ready or Not is a favorite. And frankly, so is the sequel. Ready or Not 2: Here I Come far exceeded my expectations.

The story is great and hilarious, and even surprising. Samara Weaving nails it once again. Yet for me, the addition of Sarah Michelle Gellar, Elijah Wood, and Kathryn Newton all had me in my movie happy place. It’s the kind of sequel that maintains a sense of freshness while still offering what drew people to the first film. And while I cannot reveal the final act, I had a blast with everything that transpired.

I mention that I dig both Tyler and Matt. Not only the talent they bring, but these two are just incredibly cool to speak with. I had just watched the film, and sitting down with them, I was impressed with just how bloody they get. One of the most unforgettable scenes isn’t terribly gory, but it made my skin crawl. I have a thing with broken glass. The two discussed how they approached the casting, especially bringing both Gellar and Wood on board.

And then came the amazing Kathryn Newton. I absolutely adore talking to Kathryn. She is funny, kind, unique, and just one of the coolest folks to chat with. Having spoken to her several times in the past, she always makes the interview so very engaging. I love this cast so much.

In other words, go see Ready or Not 2: Here I Come. Our own Chris Bumbray dug it too, perhaps not as much as I did, but you will have a great time.

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Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Ultimate Leprechaun 30″ replica doll coming from Trick or Treat Studios

Did you ever watch Leprechaun and wish you could take that nasty little guy home with you? Well, if you did, you’re in luck, because Trick or Treat Studios has announced that they’re working on the Ultimate Leprechaun 30″ replica doll – and they’ve even launched a Kickstarter campaign where fans can put in a pre-order their very own Leprechaun! As mentioned, this doll stands 30″ tall, which is around 6 inches shorter than Leprechaun franchise star Warwick Davis, so you’re not exactly getting a life-size Leprechaun… but surely this would be better than having no Leprechaun at all.

Trick or Treat Studios plans to start shipping the dolls out in March 2027. The doll was sculpted by Alex Ray and features fabric clothing with metal accessories that were developed from hundreds of film stills. It also has a magnetic head and hands for use with other Ultimate dolls and accessories. The base price is $600.

The Kickstarter campaign had a $100,000 goal, but it passed that number in just ten minutes. As of this writing, it’s closing in on $400,000.

The Original Film

Written and directed by Mark Jones, Leprechaun has the following synopsis: Dan O’Grady steals 100 gold coins from a leprechaun while on vacation in Ireland. The leprechaun follows him home, but Dan locks the murderous midget in a crate, held at bay by a four-leaf clover. Ten years later, J.D. Redding and his daughter, Tory, rent O’Grady’s property for the summer. When their new neighbors accidentally release the leprechaun, he goes on a murderous rampage to reclaim his gold.

The film stars Jennifer Aniston, Ken Olandt, Mark Holton, Robert Hy Gorman, John Sanderford, and Shay Duffin, with Warwick Davis as the leprechaun himself.

Davis returned to the role for Leprechaun 2, Leprechaun 3, Leprechaun 4: In Space, Leprechaun in the Hood, and Leprechaun: Back 2 Tha Hood. Dylan “Hornswoggle” Postl took over Leprechaun duties for Leprechaun: Origins, and Linden Porco starred in Leprechaun Returns.

Are you a Leprechaun fan, and would you like to add the Ultimate Leprechaun 30″ replica doll to your memorabilia collection? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

Ultimate Leprechaun doll

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Dune: Part Three teaser trailer promises an epic conclusion

Dune: Part Two racked up nearly $700 million at the worldwide box office, paving the way for the third Dune film that writer/director Denis Villeneuve and stars Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya all expressed interest in making during the build-up to the second movie’s release. While the first two Dune movies were both based on the story told in Frank Herbert’s novel Dune, the third movie would move on to different source material: Dune Messiah, the second book in Herbert’s series. The film adaptation is simply called Dune: Part Three, and it’s heading for a December 18, 2026 theatrical release. With that date still nine months off, the first trailer for Dune: Part Three has just been unveiled, and you can check it out in the embed above.

Story and Cast

The novel Dune Messiah has the following description: Dune Messiah continues the story of Paul Atreides, better known-and feared-as the man christened Muad’Dib. As Emperor of the Known Universe, he possesses more power than a single man was ever meant to wield. Worshipped as a religious icon by the fanatical Fremens, Paul faces the enmity of the political houses he displaced when he assumed the throne-and a conspiracy conducted within his own sphere of influence. And even as House Atreides begins to crumble around him from the machinations of his enemies, the true threat to Paul comes to his lover, Chani, and the unborn heir to his family’s dynasty.

Chalamet and Zendaya returned to the roles of Paul Atreides and Chani for the new film, along with Rebecca Ferguson as Lady Jessica, Josh Brolin as Gurney Halleck, Jason Momoa as Duncan Idaho, Javier Bardem as Stilgar, Florence Pugh as Princess Irulan, Anya Taylor-Joy as Alia Atreides, Robert Pattinson as Scytale, Isaach de Bankolé as Farok, Nakoa-Wolf Momoa as Leto II Atreides, and Ida Brooke as Ghanima Atreides.

Epic Conclusion

Although the film is being promoted as “The Epic Conclusion,” Villeneuve has said that he doesn’t see it as the completion of a trilogy. “First, it’s important that people understand that for me, it was really a diptych. It was really a pair of movies that will be the adaptation of the first book. That’s done and that’s finished. If I do a third one, which is in the writing process, it’s not like a trilogy. It’s strange to say that, but if I go back there, it’s to do something that feels different and has its own identity.” Villeneuve added that the story “takes place like 12 years after where we left the characters at the end of Part Two. Their journey, their story is different this time, and that’s why I always say that while it’s the same world it’s a new film with new circumstances.” 

It does, however, “finish the Paul Atreides arc.

Are you looking forward to Dune: Part Three? Take a look at the trailer, then let us know by leaving a comment below.

Dune: Part Three

JoBlo’s own Ryan Cultrera attended a special trailer launch event last night, where Zendaya, Anya Taylor-Joy, Javier Bardem, Robert Pattinson, and Denis Villeneuve stopped by for a moderated panel. Ryan provided the following quotes:

Denis on his return to the series after originally planning to step away for a while:

What happened was two things. When we released part one, it was at the end of the pandemic, I was not really in contact with the audience. And when we released part two, I received that wave of excitement and love from part one and people wanted to see part two. I mean, and when we screened the movie first in Mexico, there were some 14,000 people outside the theater and 5000 people inside. And it was that kind of, roller coaster like that around the world where we see an excitement. And I felt an appetite for the third movie that I was not expecting. As a filmmaker, you know, when you make a series of movies like you want in the relationship with the audience. And I felt a responsibility to finish the story. I had told the crew “that’s it, bye bye”. I went back home, but I kept awaking to those images, inspired by Dune Messiah. I was supposed to do another movie in the meantime, but the image kept coming back and kept coming back so I said “ok lets do it”

Denis on what has changed since 17 years have passed since the events of Dune Part Two:

The world changed in those years. The climate is different on Arrakis, still the desert planet. But there are differences. We are visiting new sets, new places. I brought the camera and areas of the planet that you guys have not seen before. And, you know, we are visiting on new planets as well. And I wanted to approach this with a new pair of eyes.

Denis on technical elements of shooting and seeing the movie in theaters:

We decided to shoot most of the movie on film. I have not shot on film in years. We shot the movie in 65mm. A big part of it was shot in Imax film. First time for me. But I kept the desert in digital because I like the brutality of the digital Imax. So the movie is really meant to be an Imax experience, and to be seen on the biggest screen as possible. Those are epic cameras. I mean, those are the best camera in the world. And it was like, when you see the result on screen, it’s quite unmatchable. Cinema is an artform that is meant to make you travel and to experience things that, you will not live in the regular life. I think as human beings, it’s important to share experiences, artworks, communal experiences. Our lives right now, we are like, in our little bubbles all around the world. And I think that theater brings us together. And I think it’s that there’s something beautifully beautiful and human about that. It’s very important.

Denis on Hans Zimmer coming back:

Hans is working on the music already and and scoring. Yes, yes, yes. But it’s going to be, like the movie is different, the score will be different. And it’s something that Hans is very excited about. And, approaching the, with the same spirit as the first films. I insist it’s a Dune movie, but it WILL be different. I want the audience to be shocked as to where we take the story.

Denis on Dune Messiah as inspiration for Dune Part Three:

Dune Messiah is by far my favorite book of the series. It’s a very dark, beautiful book. I will say this, it is my one of my most personal films if not my most personal film. I think that is very close to me and very contemporary. It’s the story of Paul and Chani, they’re struggling with their relationship, having the burden and incredible pressure from the world around them. And Paul is trying to find a way out of this cycle of violence. And there’s something about that with their love and their time and with their relationship they evolve. That study on the relationship of both characters, that that is very personal.

Zendaya on having expanded screen time with Florence Pugh

Well, I want to start by saying I love Florence Pugh, who’s so talented and so wonderful in this world. And, I was just, we we said the last time the press tour, like, we only got, like, one scene together and we are far away. And I was like, I hope we get more. So I don’t want to, you know, tease anything. But she’s absolutely phenomenal. And, you know, we’ll just have to see for yourselves what happens. Because it’s, yeah, quite the journey.

Zendaya was asked if her and Paul have kids in this movie. Javier Bardem chimes in:

I AM her kid! Twist!

Javier Bardem on his character’s loyalty to Paul and where that brings him:

Well, I think it takes him to a place where, he sees different realities of what being empowered means after so long. He’s in this contradiction between the loyalty to the idea that he strongly fought and believed back in the day, and also the result of the idea becoming something that he thinks or feels may not be the one he dreamt about. Sounds complicated, but also is a complicated book. But what I mean, it’s a great analogy about the idea of power and having the power.

Anya Taylor Joy on her new character, Alia:

Alia has a very intense blessing curse situation. She carries the weight and the wisdom of generations and generations in her head. She’s never in a singular conversation. It’s kind of everything everywhere, all at once. The one thing that she really feels most strongly about is her love and devotion to her brother, because that’s the only person who’s ever made her feel like she makes sense. He’s understood her from before she was even born, and she will do anything for him to various degrees of insanity.

Robert Pattinson on joining Dune:

I absolutely adored these movies. I saw them multiple times in theaters. I just think it’s such a towering achievement and the cast is so incredible. And, I just think everybody wants to work with Denis, he’s a master. When you see the scope and scale and ambition of these movies, like on set, you get why they feel like this on the screen. It’s just like an extraordinary and amazing experience.

Robert Pattinson on his character, Scytale:

I mean, he’s an unusual character in the book. I mean, you can’t really tell who’s side he’s on. It’s kind of what makes it quite interesting. wouldn’t say it’s conventional. It’s an extremely fun character to play. The look for it is for the most extraordinary.

Denis on bringing back Duncan Idaho:

Frank Herbert. Genius. The idea is that, I think he created that kind of tremendous, charismatic character that. Our heart was broken, seeing him falling in the first one. We have the desire to see him back. And he comes back just at the right moment in the story. And it’s like a very, very important comeback. Paul is struggling with his identity, and having that kind of strong previous figure coming back from the past will have a tremendous impact. That’s what I will say.

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