Adoring Sandra Bullock

Warner Bros In Talks With Susanne Bier To Direct ‘Practical Magic 2’

EXCLUSIVE: We understand that Oscar-winning filmmaker Susanne Bier is in negations to helm Warner Bros‘ Practical Magic 2 for the studio. A deal isn’t done quite yet.

The movie would reteam Bier with both Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock, who starred in the original film and are set to return. The helmer worked with Bullock on Netflix’s Bird Box, and with Kidman on both the HBO series The Undoing and the Netflix miniseries The Perfect Couple.

In Practical Magic 2, Bullock is reprising her role as Sally Owens, while Kidman is coming back as Gillian Owens.

The original 1998 movie, which was directed by Griffin Dunne and grossed more than $47 million stateside, followed two witch sisters, raised by their eccentric aunts in a small town, who are faced with closed-minded prejudice and a curse that threatens to prevent them from finding lasting love.

Akiva Goldsman, who co-wrote the original, is returning to write the screenplay. Bullock and Kidman are producing with Denise Di Novi.

Bier’s collaboration with Bullock, Bird Box, is one of the most watched movies ever on Netflix with 157.4M global views. She is an Oscar/Emmy/DGA winning filmmaker who won the 2011 International Feature Academy Award for her film In a Better World and was the architect behind The Night Manager, The Undoing, The First Lady and the recent hit The Perfect Couple. For each of these shows, she has directed the entire run of the series.

Bier’s movie After the Wedding received an Oscar nomination for International Film in 2007. She also directed Brothers and Open Hearts. She is the first female director to win a Golden Globe, Emmy and European Film Award, collectively.

She is repped by CAA, Brillstein and Jackoway Austen Tyerman.

written by Joshua on January 25, 2025

Sandra Bullock, Nicole Kidman Returning for ‘Practical Magic’ Sequel

Get the midnight margaritas ready.

Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman are in talks to return for a sequel to the 1998 classic Practical Magic.

Akiva Goldsman, one of the writers behind the original, will pen the screenplay. Plot details are not yet known. Bullock and Kidman are expected to produce alongside Denise Di Novi, who produced the original.

Practical Magic starred Kidman and Bullock as two orphaned sisters who come from a long line of witches. Raised by their eccentric aunts in a prejudiced Massachusetts town, they had to contend with a curse that kept them from never finding love.

At the time of release, the movie received generally negative reviews and failed to make a mark at the box office, but it has achieved cult status among audiences. Since the film’s release, Kidman and Bullock have also become the two biggest stars in Hollywood with awards recognition and box office acclaim.

This isn’t the first time Warners has tried to expand the Practical Magic universe. A prequel series, Rules of Magic, was in the works at HBO Max from Melissa Rosenberg and was described as an epic, generational family drama that is set in 1960s New York City. It would have revolved around three troubled siblings — Franny, Jet and Vincent Owens — who wrestle with “abnormalities” that have kept them isolated.

Bullock was last in theaters with Paramount adventure rom-com The Lost City, grossing over $100 million at the domestic box office. Kidman was most recently onscreen in Amazon series Expats and the Paramount series Lioness from Yellowstone creator Taylor Sheridan. 

The Oscar winner confirmed the news in an interview with PEOPLE on Thursday, telling the outlet she and Bullock will return to their roles as sister witches Gillian and Sally Owens, respectively. “Yes I will be in it. And Sandy will be in it. And that’s that,” she said. “There’s a lot more to tell which is why we go, ‘OK, this is kind of interesting now to be able to do this.'”

Kidman added, “[We] found a way in.”

Warner Bros. first announce that a sequel to the 1998 witchy film was in the works earlier this week, and Entertainment Weekly confirmed that Kidman and Bullock were in talks to return to their roles, as well as produce alongside the original’s producer Denise Di Novi.

The sequel film is based on a screenplay by Akiva Goldsman, who co-wrote the screenplay for the first Practical Magic with Robin Swicord and Adam Brooks, based on the novel of the same name by author Alice Hoffman. The beloved film followed sister witches Sally and Gillian, who were raised by their eccentric aunts (played by Stockard Channing and Dianne Wiest) after their parents died. They faced ages-old prejudices and one resurrection gone wrong, all while trying to find happiness in the face of a family curse that keeps killing their lovers.

Plot details about the sequel are being kept under wraps for now, but there is plenty of material to potentially pull from. In addition to the original 1995 novel, there are three other books in the Practical Magicseries: prequels The Rules of Magic (2017) and Magic Lessons (2020), and sequel The Book of Magic (2021).

Additionally, in 2019, HBO Max (since rebranded to Max) ordered a 1960s-set pilot for a Practical Magic prequel series focusing on the aunts, Franny and Jet. However, that project ultimately never materialized.

In addition to Kidman, Bullock, Channing, and Wiest, the original film also starred Evan Rachel Wood, Aidan Quinn, and Goran Višnji?. Further casting for the sequel has not yet been announced.

Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman will also executive produce the sequel as well.

written by Joshua on June 16, 2024

Sandra Bullock True Story Takes Heartbreaking Real World Turn

The 2009 film The Blind Side, starring Sandra Bullock, about now-retired NFL lineman Michael Oher, was a seemingly feel-good based on a true story account of Oher’s burgeoning football career and his adoption by the affluent Tuohy family. However, it turns out that there is a darker side to this story.

Oher has filed a suit against Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy, played by Tim McGraw and Sandra Bullock, that alleges that not only did they trick him into signing a conservatorship rather than adopting him, but they used that power to make financial deals and earn money off his name. Oher reportedly learned of the conservatorship in February (via ESPN).

The Blind Side also depicted Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy in the film, with Sandra Bullock earning an Oscar for playing the latter. The film earned more than $300 million at the box office and was also nominated for a Best Picture Oscar. Michael Oher’s petition also states that Sean and Leigh Anne put together a deal that paid them and their birth children royalties for the film while Oher received nothing.

While the Sandra Bullock roles in The Blind Side depicts the Tuohys as adopting Michael Oher, Oher has since stated that he signed conservatorship papers as a rising high school athlete, which the Tuohys allegedly indicated was no different than adoption papers.

However, there is quite a large legal distinction between the two, as adoption papers would have made Oher a legal member of the Tuohy family and would have allowed him power over his own financial affairs. Under a conservatorship, that financial authority would be given to the Tuohys despite the fact that Oher displayed no physical or mental disabilities to be unable to handle his own affairs. This wasn’t the case with the way Sandra Bullock and company played things in the flick.

Since The Blind Side was released, Michael Oher has since voiced his discontent with how he was portrayed in the movie, though was previously okay with letting the inspirational method outweigh the film’s effects on his own life.

As Oher has indicated in the past, he didn’t like how he was portrayed as unintelligent in the film and that his portrayal would ultimately affect how some decision-makers in the NFL viewed him.

After learning about his lack of royalties (Sandra Bullock was reportedly paid $5 million) for the film based on his life story and the fact that he was under a conservatorship and not actually adopted, his relationship with the Tuohys was “permanently fractured,” according to his attorney.

After learning about his lack of royalties for the film based on his (Michael Oher’s) life story and the fact that he was under a conservatorship and not actually adopted, his relationship with the Tuohys was “permanently fractured,”

The suit filed by Michael Oher and his attorney seeks to have the court end the Tuohy’s conservatorship and issue an injunction that bars them from using his name and likeness in the future.

Additionally, the suit seeks to get a full accounting of the profits the family has made from The Blind Side and any other monies that have been made using his story. The suit seeks to get Michael Oher his fair of the profits alongside compensatory and punitive damages. This would obviously give the Sandra Bullock movie a significantly different feeling on a rewatch.

At this time, the Tuohy family had not returned phone calls made to them by ESPN (and presumably other publications). The family’s attorney also declined to comment and stated that the family would be filing a legal response to the allegations in the coming weeks. We’ll keep you updated as Michael Oher’s suit progresses in the legal system.

written by Joshua on August 15, 2023

New Layout + ‘Bullet Train’ Screencaptures Added

First off, Sam did an amazing job on this design that I had a hard time deciding which theme I wanted to match this with. Finally after months of not posting it and delaying it, I’ve decided to go with this amazing theme by Carol.

Bullet Train will be released on digital and later on blu-ray & dvd and I’ve managed to add screencaptures of Sandra’s brief appearance in the movie. I definitely recommend it as I was blown away by Aaron Taylor-Johnson‘s performance.

written by Joshua on October 12, 2022

Bullock’s Main Priority Is ‘Being a Great Mom’ to Her Kids: Quality Time Makes Her ‘Truly Happy’

After decades in the spotlight making blockbuster films, Sandra Bullock is happiest at home with her two children.

“Sandra hates being away from them for days or weeks at a time,” an insider exclusively explains in the new issue of Us Weekly. “The only real challenge she has in front of her is being a great mom, and to her, that requires being away from Hollywood. The one resource she can’t just write a check and buy is quality time with her kids, and that’s the thing that makes her truly happy.”

The Lost City star, 57, made headlines earlier this year when she announced her intentions to take an acting hiatus.

“I take my job very seriously when I’m at work. … And I just want to be 24/7 with my babies and my family. That’s where I’m gonna be for a while,” Bullock — who adopted son Louis, 12, and daughter Laila, 10, in 2010 and 2015, respectively — told Entertainment Tonight in March, noting that she plans to “service [their] every need” and manage their “social calendars.”

The Virginia native — who coparents her two children with boyfriend Bryan Randall — has frequently gushed about her kids and her parenting styles through the years.

“When I finished [making Bird Box], I said [to them], ‘Here, Mommy made this for you. And even though you can’t see it until you’re 21 because apparently, a movie about being a mommy is a horror film, you will know when you see it that there isn’t anything I wouldn’t do for you,’” Bullock said at the MTV Movie & TV Awards in June 2019. “I wanted you to see what a family looks like. Sometimes you are born into a family and sometimes you need to go find it. Sometimes it finds you. No matter how it comes together, when it does, family is what you fight for, family is what you protect.”

She continued at the time: “You are my first thought in the morning. You are my last thought at night. I was put on this Earth to protect you. You are my world. I love you so much, and I will move mountains to make sure that you are safe.”

As Louis and Laila get older, it’s become increasingly important for the Hope Floats actress to spend this “special” time with them, according to a second insider.

For more on Bullock’s life as a doting mother of two, watch the video above and pick up the new issue of Us Weekly, on stands now.

written by Joshua on July 04, 2022

‘Bullet Train’ Moves A Week Later This Summer

The Brad Pitt original action movie, Bullet Train, is moving from July 29 to Aug. 5.

Exhibitors got a look at the David Leitch directed movie’s opening montage at CinemaCon last month.

The movie based on the Kôtarô Isaka novel Maria Beetle follows trained assassin Ladybug (Pitt) who wants to give up his career, but is pulled back in by his handler Maria Beetle in order to collect a briefcase on a bullet train heading from Tokyo to Kyoto. Once onboard, he and other rival assassins learn that their objectives are connected.

Previously, Bullet Train moved into Black Adam‘s old date. However, now it’s facing off against Paramount’s Owen Wilson comedy Secret Headquarters and Universal’s Jo Koy family comedy Easter Sunday.

Why the move? We hear Sony is positioning Bullet Train as the last big event film of the summer in that first August weekend slot.

Leitch’s Fast & Furious spinoff Hobbs & Shaw debuted in that frame to $60M back in August 2019 and legged out to $174M stateside.

written by Joshua on May 14, 2022
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