Toni Collette‘s new movie Mafia Mamma is now in theaters!
28.03.2023 - 23:21 / variety.com
Ethan Shanfeld Prettay… prettay… prettay… bad? “Curb Your Enthusiasm” may be coming to an end after 12 seasons, after two producers hinted on social media that they had wrapped production on the series for good. According to a now-deleted Tweet from producer Jon Hayman, the crew finished “shooting the last scene of the last episode of the final season.” Director and executive producer Robert B. Weide also hinted at the show’s end on Tuesday, writing: “1st day: March, 1998. Last day (?): March 27, 2023. These 25 years have flown by. Thank you, #LarryDavid.”1st day: March, 1998. Last day(?): March 27, 2023. These 25 years have flown by. Thank you, #LarryDavid. What a trip. #CurbYourEnthusiasm. #DirectedByRobertBWeide. pic.twitter.com/FlAwzS6hr1 HBO declined to comment.
Larry David’s long-running HBO comedy series is known to take long breaks between installments, once going on hiatus for six years before 2018’s Season 9. Since then, the series had remained consistent with a new season every two years.
David has been shy to definitively claim any season as “Curb’s” last, as the series has long operated with an open invitation from HBO and without a strict timeline. Each season of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” contains its own story arc which is introduced in Episode 1 and resolved in Episode 10. However, a source tells Variety that David’s current deal with HBO is coming to an end this year. Therefore, to continue with “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” David would have to ink a new deal with the network. “When you sign up to do a season of ‘Curb,’ you’re signing up to do the final season of ‘Curb,’” producer Jeff Schaffer recently told IndieWire. “And I finally figured out why. It’s because when Larry does a season, he puts every idea
Toni Collette‘s new movie Mafia Mamma is now in theaters!
Suzume is Crunchyroll’s latest anime movie and it’s playing now in theaters across the U.S.
The new Ari Aster film Beau Is Afraid, starring Joaquin Phoenix, is now playing in IMAX theaters in NY and LA ahead of a wide release next weekend.
The new horror film The Pope’s Exorcist is now playing in theaters and it’s likely to get attention from scary movie fans this weekend.
The new Dracula movie Renfield is now in theaters and it’s expected to be the biggest new release of the weekend.
Note: Spoilers for “Succession” Season 4 Episode 3 follow below.The “Succession” writer’s room successfully kept Season 4 Episode 3’s shocking twist a secret by using code, writer Georgia Pritchett revealed Tuesday.The episode, titled “Connor’s Wedding,” revolves around the Roy family’s reaction to the surprise death of Logan (Brian Cox).This was a tough secret to keep! We decided it in the #Succession writers' room in Jan 22. So nobody found out we used code on the whiteboards. Larry David meant Logan Dies.
Succession spoilers ahead! Click away if you’re not up to date with Season 4.
SPOILER ALERT! This post contains details from the first two episodes of Dave Season 3.
Todd Gilchrist editor SPOILER ALERT: This interview contains light spoilers from the first two episodes of Season 3 of FX’s “Dave,” which premiered on FXX on April 5, and is streaming on Hulu. In Season 3 of “Dave,” the rapper known as Lil Dicky is looking for love, probably in exactly the wrong place: on tour. Liberated from the writer’s block that plagued him throughout Season 2, Dave Burd has gathered his friends and collaborators in a suitably obnoxious pink bus for a nationwide tour — and brought all of his shortcomings and neuroses along for the ride. Series co-creator and “Seinfeld” and “Curb Your Enthusiasm” alum Jeff Schaffer spoke to Variety the show’s two-episode premiere “Texas” and “Harrison Ave,” about where Dave is headed this season after the “weighted blanket” of recording an album was finally lifted, the mechanics of humiliation in a show about a rapper who talks incessantly about his genitals, and the overall series trajectory as Burd grows older — but not always wiser.
Don’t go sending Curb Your Enthusiasm to an early grave just yet.
BBC comedy Ghosts will end following the show’s upcoming fifth season.The announcement was made on Friday (March 31) as filming concluded on the fifth series, which is set to be released later this year.In a post on social media, creators Mathew Baynton, Simon Farnaby, Martha Howe-Douglas, Jim Howick, Laurence Rickard and Ben Willbond, wrote: “After five incredible years haunting the halls of Button House, we have decided that the time is right to let our beloved sitcom Ghosts rest in peace.“We have just wrapped filming on our fifth and final series and we can’t wait to share it with you all later this year.
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is a big hit with critics, but will it become a big hit with moviegoers when it hits theaters this weekend?
Larry David’s beloved comedy may finally be coming to an end.
fans. On Wednesday, two months after the series was renewed for season 6, star Yara Shahidi announced that the FreeForm series' upcoming season will be its final installment. In a video posted to the series' YouTube page, Shahidi explains that the show's final season will air in two parts, similar to previous runs. The first part will premiere this summer and the second will debut in 2024.The Emmy-nominated spinoff plans to welcome some big guest stars for the final season, including Lil Yachty, Anderson .Paak and The Free Nationals.
Joe Otterson TV Reporter “Grown-ish” will end with its upcoming Season 6 at Freeform. The news comes around two months after it was announced the show had been renewed for a sixth season. The final season of the series, which is a spinoff of the ABC comedy “Black-ish,” will air in two parts. The first part will premiere this summer, while the second will air in 2024. The show will air its 100th episode during Season 6. “We’ve spent nearly a decade telling our stories through the -ish series and to say it has been an amazing journey would be an understatement,” said series creator and executive producer Kenya Barris. “To be able to watch Yara, Marcus and our entire ‘grown-ish’ family grow up in front of (and in many ways alongside) us over these past several years has been both a joy and an honor. From the stories we’ve told to the talent we’ve fostered and, most importantly, the memories made, I could not be more proud of everything we’ve accomplished and the -ish family I’ve been a part of.”
Grown-ish is coming to an end at Freeform. The series upcoming sixth season will be its last.
Curb Your Enthusiasm is set to end after season 12, according to one of the HBO show’s producers.The long-running comedy series, in which David plays a fictionalised and exaggerated version of himself, wrapped filming on its latest season this week.In a since-deleted tweet, writer-producer John Hayman shared a photo of himself with David and executive producer Jeff Schaffer, filming what he called the final episode of the entire series.“Maybe you love the show. Maybe you hate the show. Maybe you don’t give a shit,” Hayman tweeted on Tuesday (March 28).
“Curb Your Enthusiasm” fans rejoiced at the news that Larry David was making a 12th season of the HBO comedy series, they may want to savor the episodes once they drop. The show might be coming to an end after this next season.“Curb” writer and producer Jon Hayman shared a tweet (which has since been deleted) in which he captured a photo of David “shooting the last scene of the last episode of the final season” of “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” Richard Lewis, who returned for Season 12 after a health-related absence from Season 11 save for one episode, similarly tweeted “goodbye” sentiments last week, saying it was “hard to believe” they started the show in 2000.HBO declined to comment.“Curb” launched in 2000 as the brainchild of David, with the “Seinfeld” co-creator playing an exaggerated version of himself.
Larry David is seemingly saying goodbye to his long-running hit series.