The sequel to “Gladiator” will resume shooting in Malta on Dec. 4, sources tell Variety. Shooting on the historical epic was delayed when the actors went on strike in July. But the Nov. 8 announcement that SAG-AFTRA, the actors union, had reached a tentative agreement on a new three-year contract has enabled studios to move forward on several productions. The actors strike lasted for 118 days and was resolved after studios gave the union first-ever protections for the use of artificial intelligence in film and television shows, along with a historic pay increase.
The “Gladiator” sequel stars Paul Mescal, the Oscar-nominated “Aftersun” leading man, as well as Denzel Washington and “The Last of Us” actor Pedro Pascal. Connie Nielsen and Derek Jacobi, who appeared in the 2000 original, reprise their roles. Russell Crowe, who headlined the first “Gladiator,” isn’t in this one, because, well, his character dies in that movie. The first film was a massive hit and won an Oscar for best picture.
Scott’s latest movie, “Napoleon,” debuted in theaters last week. In an interview with the New Yorker tied to that movie’s release, Scott said he’s spent the strike editing 90 minutes of footage for “Gladiator 2.” It apparently includes “… a scene in which the hero fights a pack of baboons.” Scott said he got the idea for the sequence after watching a video of baboons attacking tourists in South Africa. “Baboons are carnivores,” Scott told the magazine. “Can you hang from that roof for two hours by your left leg? No! A baboon can.”
Paramount Pictures is distributing the sequel to “Gladiator” globally. The film will open on Nov. 22, 2024.
A bold new chapter in Northern Ireland’s production landscape begins this week with the official opening of Studio Ulster—a state-of-the-art virtual production facility designed to compete on a global...
As lawmakers weigh a $750 million expansion to California’s tax credit program, insiders argue the clock is running out on the state’s production future. On June 11, a cross-section of Hollywood creat...
The longest-operating film studio in Los Angeles is now for sale—offering not just a rare slice of industry real estate, but a stark test of the current demand for production space in Hollywood’s post...
In response to a dramatic slowdown in scripted television production across Los Angeles, major soundstage owner Hackman Capital Partners is taking a bold new direction — opening facilities to social m...
In a significant move that further cements Georgia’s status as a film and television production powerhouse, the Georgia Film Academy (GFA) has announced a new partnership with Assembly Studios that wi...
High-volume drama, rapid production, and local filming set the series apart
As streaming giants recalibrate for a post-peak TV era, Max’s The Pitt has quietly established itself as a prototype for a ...
Paramount’s ‘Y: Marshals’ Leads $57M Production Wave in the Beehive State
A wave of fresh productions is heading to Utah, as the state doubles down on its film incentive strategy. Among the newly app...
In the middle of the U.K.'s surging production boom, one company has quietly become indispensable to some of the world’s biggest blockbusters. Clear Angle Studios, a global leader in 3D capture and ph...
It took 18 months, but the second shoe has finally dropped. After months of watching news outlets, authors, and niche publishers sue AI companies for training models on copyrighted work, two of Hollyw...
Walmart has officially thrown its hat into the virtual production ring with the launch of its new state-of-the-art TV studio—complete with a 32-foot curved LED wall—located at the heart of its newly o...