All posts by Kenna
“Ghosted” Trailer, Film Clips, Poster
Written by Rhett Reese, Paul Wernick, Chris McKenna, and Erik Sommers, Dexter Fletcher directed Ghosted.
A decent guy, Cole, played by Chris Evans, falls head over heels for enigmatic Sadie, played by Ana de Armas. In the romantic comedy, Cole discovers that Sadie is a secret agent.
Cole and Sadie become swept away on an international adventure to save the world before deciding on a second date.
“Migration” Featurette, Poster, Trailers
“Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken” Trailer
Sometimes the hero you are lies just beneath the surface.
This summer, DreamWorks Animation dives into the turbulent waters of high school with a hilarious, heartfelt action comedy about a shy teenager who discovers that she’s part of a legendary royal lineage of mythical sea krakens and that her destiny, in the depths of the oceans, is bigger than she ever dreamed.
Sweet, awkward 16-year-old Ruby Gillman, voiced by Lana Condor, is desperate to fit in at Oceanside High but mostly feels invisible.
She’s math-tutoring her skater-boy crush, voiced by Jaboukie Young-White, who only seems to admire her for her fractals, and she’s prevented from hanging out with the cool kids at the beach because her over-protective supermom, voiced by Toni Collette, has forbidden Ruby from ever getting in the water.
But when she breaks her mom’s #1 rule, Ruby will discover that she is a direct descendant of the warrior Kraken queens and is destined to inherit the throne from her commanding grandmother, voiced by Jane Fonda, the Warrior Queen of the Seven Seas.
The Krakens have sworn to protect the world’s oceans against the vain, power-hungry mermaids. One significant and immediate problem: The school’s beautiful, popular new girl, Chelsea, voiced by Annie Murphy, is a mermaid. Ruby must ultimately embrace who she is and go big to protect those she loves most.
“Secret Invasion” Trailer
Secret Invasion is an episodic series on Disney+ directed by Thomas Bezucha and developed by Kyle Bradstreet. It’s a program that is a significant event in Marvel Comics Universe.
The inside scoop is Secret Invasion intends to have several prominent movie stars. In the trailer are Olivia Coleman and Martin Freeman.
Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury and Ben Mendelsohn as Talos — the Skrull in Captain Marvel.
The Disney+ series explores the idea that some MCU characters are replacements by Skrull, a shifting of the alien race.
In the comic books, the Skrulls threaten Earth and its superheroes. They can mimic the appearance and talents of anyone they encounter.
“Blue Beetle” Trailers and Posters
Blue Beetle is a DC character developed by Charles Wojtkowski and first appeared in Mystery Men Comics #1 in 1939. The character has developed into various iterations over the decades.
Written by Gareth Dunnet-Alcocer and directed by Angel Manuel Soto, Blue Beetle is the first DC film to feature a Latino superhero.
The film follows Jaime Reyes, a teenager from El Paso, Texas. He’s given a scarab that gives him superhero abilities, transforming him into the Blue Beetle.
Wes Anderson’s “Asteroid City” Trailer, Posters, Featurettes, Clips and Images
Wes Anderson directed Asteroid City and co-wrote the screenplay with Roman Coppola. Anderson produced the film with his long-time collaborators, Jeremy Dawson and Steven Rales.

The film takes place in 1955 in a fictional town called Asteroid City. Parents and students from across the country gather for a scholarly competition. During the Junior Stargazer competition, there is recreation, rest, drama, comedy and romance. World-changing events disrupt the event.

The film headlines an impressive ensemble cast: Scarlett Johansson, Jason Schwartzman, Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Tilda Swinton, Jeffrey Wright, Ed Norton, Adrien Brody, Liev Schreiber, Hope Davis, Steve Carell, Matt Dillon, Willem Dafoe, Rupert Friend, Margot Robbie and Jeff Goldblum.

Thank you, Comic Book and IMDB, for the information.

“Trolls Band Together” Trailer, A Look Side, Opening Title Medley
After two films of genuine friendship and relentless flirting, Poppy, voiced by Anna Kendrick, and Branch, voiced by Justin Timberlake, are now officially a couple!
As they grow closer, Poppy discovers Branch has a secret past. He was once part of her favorite boy band phenomenon, BroZone, with his four brothers: Floyd, voiced by Troye Sivan; John Dory, voiced by Eric André; Spruce, voiced by Daveed Diggs; and Clay, voiced by Kid Cudi. BroZone disbanded when Branch was still a baby, as did the family, and Branch hadn’t seen his brothers since.
But when nefarious pop-star villains kidnap Branch’s bro Floyd for his musical talents, they embark on a harrowing and emotional journey.
The villains are Velvet, voiced by Amy Schumer, and Veneer, voiced by Andrew Rannells.
Poppy and Branch reunite the other brothers and rescue Floyd from a fate worse than pop-culture obscurity.
Disney and Pixar’s “Elemental” Trailers
An animated romantic drama and some comedy, Elemental is a journey of self-discovery between two unlikely friends — fire and water.
Peter Sohn directed and co-wrote the Pixar and Disney movie that takes place in a city where residents of fire, water, air, and land live together. A fiery young woman and a go-with-the-flow guy discover something elemental in common despite their vast differences.
“The Covenant” Trailer, Featurettes, Clip, Images and Poster
Set in war-torn Afghanistan in 2018, Guy Richie directs The Covenant. The film follows U.S. Army Special Forces Sergeant John Kinley, played by Gyllenhaal. Kinley leads an elite unit tasked with finding Taliban munitions. “He has been deployed numerous times and has a tremendous amount of experience. He has relied on many different Afghan interpreters and has found himself in many different situations,” says Gyllenhaal. “His unit is constantly under threat and in very dangerous situations, and at the beginning of the movie, he seems to be striking out over and over. He’s going through a lot of red tape and is struggling to find any munition sites.”

On a mission with a new interpreter, Ahmed, Dar Salim, after an I.E.D. kills his regular interpreter. Kinley’s unit is all but wiped out by Taliban fighters when they raid an abandoned mine to house explosives.
Only Kinley and Ahmed manage to escape the attack, the pair stranded in Taliban territory with dozens of armed men after them. Ahmed carried John, who had been shot and seriously wounded, to safety through the desert and over a mountain.
But that’s only half the battle.
The Taliban forced Ahmed and his family into hiding, putting a heavy price on his head as Kinley returned home to the U.S.
Feeling an overwhelming sense of obligation to get Ahmed the visas the U.S. government promised his family, Kinley finds himself mired in bureaucracy and red tape. With his wife’s blessing, he returns to Afghanistan to find Ahmed and his family and bring them back to the U.S.
Guy Ritchie also directed Sherlock Holmes and its sequel, Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows, the live-action adaptation of Disney’s Aladdin, had always wanted to make a war film. “It’s probably my favorite genre of movies, but we couldn’t find a story that appealed for a long time,” he says.
Ironically, while developing another war movie, Ritchie watched several documentaries about the conflict, and one about interpreters and what they go through struck a chord. “I’d heard various anecdotes about Afghanistan that all sounded, in equal measure, horrifying and inspiring,” says Ritchie. “That was the genesis of the idea that you could see humanity in this traumatized environment, and it still managed to express itself. And this was an amalgam of the different stories, documentaries, anecdotes that I was aware of. And, obviously, the story of one man’s selflessness for another was what I found inspiring about the premise.”

“He thought it was an important story to tell and thought he could tell it through his lens,” says producer John Friedberg, “so he came up with this idea.” Gyllenhaal’s character in The Covenant is on his last tour of duty, trying to make a difference in Afghanistan but also desperate to get home to his wife and family in Santa Clarita, CA. “He represents the boots on the ground, the practical reality of the disparity between how we think things work at an administrative level and how they work at a practical level,” says Ritchie. “He is a good, old-fashioned classical, decent, brave soldier who’s loyal to his country and loyal to his men.”
“What I loved about John Kinley is he’s a good man,” says Gyllenhaal. “Over the past number of years, I’ve tended to move towards characters people would define as ‘complex’ in how they walk the line between good and bad. I don’t know if I fully believe in that. I think we are all very complex, very fascinating human beings put in many different trying circumstances. To me, John Kinley is a character who, through those trials, pulls out morality and humanity, despite himself.”









