Gareth Edwards has directed the upcoming American science fiction action thriller movie ‘The Creator’.
The plot features a war between humankind and the force of artificial intelligence.
A former special forces agent named Joshua who is grieving the disappearance of his wife, gets tasked with hunting down the elusive architect behind the advanced AI. That architect who has developed the weapon of ending the war as well as the entire humankind, is known as the Creator.
Also Read:
When Is the Upcoming Science Fiction Movie ‘The Creator’ Releasing? Collider
The film was first planned as an untitled project in February 2020. John David Washington was announced as a cast member in May of 2021.
That year in June some of the other cast members joined with the rest of the cast joining in January and February of 2022. Filming ran from January 17, 2022, to May 30, 2022.
Also Read: Fans Are Not Happy With Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine Return.
The plot features a war between humankind and the force of artificial intelligence.
A former special forces agent named Joshua who is grieving the disappearance of his wife, gets tasked with hunting down the elusive architect behind the advanced AI. That architect who has developed the weapon of ending the war as well as the entire humankind, is known as the Creator.
Also Read:
When Is the Upcoming Science Fiction Movie ‘The Creator’ Releasing? Collider
The film was first planned as an untitled project in February 2020. John David Washington was announced as a cast member in May of 2021.
That year in June some of the other cast members joined with the rest of the cast joining in January and February of 2022. Filming ran from January 17, 2022, to May 30, 2022.
Also Read: Fans Are Not Happy With Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine Return.
- 6/28/2023
- by Suvechchha Saha
- https://dailyresearchplot.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/new-sam
Theaters may be reopening, but physical media is forever — Alonso Duralde spotlights the best new DVDs and Blu-rays
New Indie
Peter Sarsgaard and Rashida Jones make a somewhat unusual couple in “The Sound of Silence” (IFC Films), a somewhat unusual film. And it’s not that Sarsgaard and Jones don’t have chemistry to burn; it’s that the movie operates at its own pace while diving deeply into the Sarsgaard character’s obsessions with the thrums and throbs and vibrations of our day-to-day lives. He “tunes” his clients’ New York City apartments, looking for the sounds (whether they’re on the outside or coming from household appliances) that are disturbing the tenants, and Jones plays a social worker who turns to him for his unique services. Somewhere between “The Conversation” and last year’s “Sound of Metal,” it’s a uniquely eccentric tale that might make you pay more...
New Indie
Peter Sarsgaard and Rashida Jones make a somewhat unusual couple in “The Sound of Silence” (IFC Films), a somewhat unusual film. And it’s not that Sarsgaard and Jones don’t have chemistry to burn; it’s that the movie operates at its own pace while diving deeply into the Sarsgaard character’s obsessions with the thrums and throbs and vibrations of our day-to-day lives. He “tunes” his clients’ New York City apartments, looking for the sounds (whether they’re on the outside or coming from household appliances) that are disturbing the tenants, and Jones plays a social worker who turns to him for his unique services. Somewhere between “The Conversation” and last year’s “Sound of Metal,” it’s a uniquely eccentric tale that might make you pay more...
- 5/6/2021
- by Alonso Duralde
- The Wrap
The 44th Japan Academy Film Prize ceremony was held on Friday at the Grand Prince Hotel New Takawana in Tokyo, despite a state of emergency still in force on the nation’s capital.
One big winner was Uchida Eiji’s gay-themed drama “Midnight Swan” with took the best picture prize, while star Kusanagi Tsuyoshi was awarded best actor honors for his turn as an ageing transgender nightclub performer.
Meanwhile, best actress went to Nagasawa Masami for her portrayal of an unreliable and domineering single mom in Omori Tatsushi’s “Mother.”
Also, Wakamatsu Setsuro was named best director for “Fukushima 50″ (pictured), a true-story drama that recreated the chaos and confusion at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant after a powerful tsunami on March 11, 2011, caused reactor meltdowns. “Fukushima 50” also won four technical prizes, including best cinematography.
As widely expected, best animation honors went to “Demon Slayer The Movie: Mugen Train,” a...
One big winner was Uchida Eiji’s gay-themed drama “Midnight Swan” with took the best picture prize, while star Kusanagi Tsuyoshi was awarded best actor honors for his turn as an ageing transgender nightclub performer.
Meanwhile, best actress went to Nagasawa Masami for her portrayal of an unreliable and domineering single mom in Omori Tatsushi’s “Mother.”
Also, Wakamatsu Setsuro was named best director for “Fukushima 50″ (pictured), a true-story drama that recreated the chaos and confusion at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant after a powerful tsunami on March 11, 2011, caused reactor meltdowns. “Fukushima 50” also won four technical prizes, including best cinematography.
As widely expected, best animation honors went to “Demon Slayer The Movie: Mugen Train,” a...
- 3/19/2021
- by Mark Schilling
- Variety Film + TV
To mark the digital release of Fukushima 50 – out 8th March from Altitude Films – we’re giving away a voucher code to three winners.
Ten years ago the world looked on as Japan battled to avert a potentially world-changing catastrophe – when, following an earthquake and tsunami, a nuclear reactor started to leak. Hot on the heels of 2019’s acclaimed Chernobyl, comes another recreation of a truly chilling moment in history, when the fate of mankind seemed to hang in the balance – or rather, in the hands of the workers at the Japanese power plant, who became known as the ‘Fukushima 50’.
Based on the extraordinary, jaw-dropping book by Ryusho Kadota, On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi, the film, directed by Setsurô Wakamatsu (Whiteout), is the rival of any Hollywood disaster epic, but at its heart it is a moving and extremely timely human drama about people pulling together in a time of unprecedented crisis.
Ten years ago the world looked on as Japan battled to avert a potentially world-changing catastrophe – when, following an earthquake and tsunami, a nuclear reactor started to leak. Hot on the heels of 2019’s acclaimed Chernobyl, comes another recreation of a truly chilling moment in history, when the fate of mankind seemed to hang in the balance – or rather, in the hands of the workers at the Japanese power plant, who became known as the ‘Fukushima 50’.
Based on the extraordinary, jaw-dropping book by Ryusho Kadota, On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi, the film, directed by Setsurô Wakamatsu (Whiteout), is the rival of any Hollywood disaster epic, but at its heart it is a moving and extremely timely human drama about people pulling together in a time of unprecedented crisis.
- 3/7/2021
- by Competitions
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
To mark the digital release of Fukushima 50 – out 8th March from Altitude Films – we’re giving away a digital voucher. Based on the extraordinary, jaw-dropping book by Ryusho Kadota, On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi, the film, directed by Setsurô Wakamatsu (Whiteout), is the rival of any Hollywood disaster epic, but at its heart it is a moving and extremely timely human drama about people pulling together in a time of unprecedented crisis.
Ten years ago the world looked on as Japan battled to avert a potentially world-changing catastrophe – when, following an earthquake and tsunami, a nuclear reactor started to leak. Hot on the heels of 2019’s acclaimed Chernobyl, comes another recreation of a truly chilling moment in history, when the fate of mankind seemed to hang in the balance – or rather, in the hands of the workers at the Japanese power plant, who became known as...
Ten years ago the world looked on as Japan battled to avert a potentially world-changing catastrophe – when, following an earthquake and tsunami, a nuclear reactor started to leak. Hot on the heels of 2019’s acclaimed Chernobyl, comes another recreation of a truly chilling moment in history, when the fate of mankind seemed to hang in the balance – or rather, in the hands of the workers at the Japanese power plant, who became known as...
- 3/3/2021
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
2nd February 2021, London UK – Altitude have announced the 8 March digital release of Fukushima 50; the gripping account of the 2011 Japanese earthquake and nuclear disaster in advance of its tenth anniversary on 11 March. The film will be available on altitude.film and all digital platforms across the UK and Ireland.
See The Official Trailer Here
Ten years ago the world looked on, as Japan battled to avert a potentially world-changing catastrophe – when, following an earthquake and tsunami, a nuclear reactor started to leak. Hot on the heels of 2019’s acclaimed Chernobyl, comes another recreation of a truly chilling moment in history, when the fate of mankind seemed to hang in the balance – or rather, in the hands of the workers at the Japanese power plant, who became known as the ‘Fukushima 50’.
Based on the extraordinary, jaw-dropping book by Ryusho Kadota, On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi, the film, directed...
See The Official Trailer Here
Ten years ago the world looked on, as Japan battled to avert a potentially world-changing catastrophe – when, following an earthquake and tsunami, a nuclear reactor started to leak. Hot on the heels of 2019’s acclaimed Chernobyl, comes another recreation of a truly chilling moment in history, when the fate of mankind seemed to hang in the balance – or rather, in the hands of the workers at the Japanese power plant, who became known as the ‘Fukushima 50’.
Based on the extraordinary, jaw-dropping book by Ryusho Kadota, On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi, the film, directed...
- 2/3/2021
- by Adam Symchuk
- AsianMoviePulse
The 3/11 catastrophe is a reoccurring topic in recent Japanese cinema. After a slow start, the industry seems to be confident enough to tackle the trauma. It almost took nine years for a big production company to release the premier Fukushima-themed blockbuster, “Fukushima 50” by Setsuro Wakamatsu. In the same year Nobuhiru Suwa, film director and President of the Tokyo Zokei University, presents “Voices in the Wind”. For the first time in 18 years, Suwa returns to his home country to tell a devastating and haunting roadtrip drama about 17-year-old Haru, who lost her parents in the tsunami and travels to the place that once was her home.
Voices in the Wind is screening at Camera Japan
In the northern coast town of Otsuchi, there is a white telephone booth to which over 30.000 people from all over Japan have come to speak to the “loved ones” that were lost in the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake.
Voices in the Wind is screening at Camera Japan
In the northern coast town of Otsuchi, there is a white telephone booth to which over 30.000 people from all over Japan have come to speak to the “loved ones” that were lost in the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake.
- 9/28/2020
- by Alexander Knoth
- AsianMoviePulse
„Fukushima 50” – the movie’s title – is a nickname that English-language media used to describe a group of employees at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, who still worked on-site after the evacuation of most of the staff to prevent further fatal consequences of 2011 disaster. Although the number of people at the plant rose significantly (to few hundred) after several days, when additional manpower was sent from around the country, the pseudonym stayed – to underline the sacrifice of the frontline workers and their solitary fight. And as one may expect, Setsuro Wakamatsu’s feature covers the events which followed the fateful earthquake and tsunami focusing on the people factor.
Fukushima 50 is screening at Japan Cuts
The screenplay is based on the non-fiction well-researched book by the journalist Ryūshō Katoda “On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi”, giving the insight into the matter through around 100 interviews with e.
Fukushima 50 is screening at Japan Cuts
The screenplay is based on the non-fiction well-researched book by the journalist Ryūshō Katoda “On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi”, giving the insight into the matter through around 100 interviews with e.
- 7/27/2020
- by Joanna Kończak
- AsianMoviePulse
The international box office this weekend was again led by Korea, with major local release #Alive taking a 70% share of the market. The zombie horror thriller from Spackman Entertainment’s Zip Cinema sold 1.06M tickets in its first five days for a gross of $7.4M through Sunday, again demonstrating the strength of new offerings, particularly in Korea which has been at the forefront of comebacks. The movie, directed by Cho Il-hyeong, instantly becomes one of the most successful releases amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and is the first title in Korea to break the 1M admissions threshold since February.
#Alive, co-produced by Perspective Pictures, is based on an original screenplay by Hollywood writer Matt Taylor. It tells the timely story of two isolated survivors in a city under lockdown that gets out of control as a consequence of a sudden spread of an unknown infection. Yoo Ah-in and Park Shin-hye star.
#Alive, co-produced by Perspective Pictures, is based on an original screenplay by Hollywood writer Matt Taylor. It tells the timely story of two isolated survivors in a city under lockdown that gets out of control as a consequence of a sudden spread of an unknown infection. Yoo Ah-in and Park Shin-hye star.
- 6/30/2020
- by Nancy Tartaglione
- Deadline Film + TV
Ken Watanabe and Koichi Sato star in the film.
Japanese studio Kadokawa Corp is arriving in Cannes with a busy slate headed by action drama Fukushima 50, starring Ken Watanabe and Koichi Sato, and also including new titles from Takahisa Zeze, Koji Fukada and Michihito Fujii.
Directed by Setsuro Wakamatsu (The Unbroken), Fukushima 50 tells the story of the courageous group of workers who remained on site to stabilise the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant during its meltdown following the 2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami.
Based on Ryusho Kadota’s book On The Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi, the...
Japanese studio Kadokawa Corp is arriving in Cannes with a busy slate headed by action drama Fukushima 50, starring Ken Watanabe and Koichi Sato, and also including new titles from Takahisa Zeze, Koji Fukada and Michihito Fujii.
Directed by Setsuro Wakamatsu (The Unbroken), Fukushima 50 tells the story of the courageous group of workers who remained on site to stabilise the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant during its meltdown following the 2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami.
Based on Ryusho Kadota’s book On The Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi, the...
- 5/14/2019
- by Liz Shackleton
- ScreenDaily
Japan’s Koichi Sato and Ken Watanabe star in “Fukushima 50,” a forthcoming film recounting the events of the East Japan earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdown of 2011. The survival action drama is directed by Wakamatsu Setsuro.
Based on the book “On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi,” by Ryusho Kadota, the film’s narrative follows 50 workers who risked their lives by staying at the plant, in order to prevent total destruction of the overheating atomic reactors and minimise devastation. The adapted screenplay was written by Yoichi Maekawa, writer of “Gunji Kanbei,” “Shuhei Nozaki,” and “The Auditor.” Salo plays a power station supervisor, Watanabe plays a site superintendant.
Backed by the Kadokawa Corporation, the film shot in Japan from November 2018 to April. It is due for release in 2020.
“The Fukushima accident shook not only the people of Japan but also around the world. This film is about the powerplant workers...
Based on the book “On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi,” by Ryusho Kadota, the film’s narrative follows 50 workers who risked their lives by staying at the plant, in order to prevent total destruction of the overheating atomic reactors and minimise devastation. The adapted screenplay was written by Yoichi Maekawa, writer of “Gunji Kanbei,” “Shuhei Nozaki,” and “The Auditor.” Salo plays a power station supervisor, Watanabe plays a site superintendant.
Backed by the Kadokawa Corporation, the film shot in Japan from November 2018 to April. It is due for release in 2020.
“The Fukushima accident shook not only the people of Japan but also around the world. This film is about the powerplant workers...
- 4/30/2019
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
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