
'Coyote vs. Acme' finds a new home after being shelved by Warner Bros.
After being shelved by Warner Bros. in 2023, the Looney Tunes film 'Coyote vs. Acme' has found a new home. Ketchup Entertainment announced Monday that it acquired worldwide distribution rights to the film for an undisclosed sum.
The deal gives new life to one of the three fully completed films that Warner Bros. elected to take a tax write-off on rather than release. The tactic, which followed a change in leadership at Warner Bros. coming out of the pandemic, was widely disparaged by creatives and fans, alike. The other two shelved movies — the $90 million DC Studios production 'Batgirl' and the animated 'Scoob! Holiday Haunt' — remain unreleased.
But 'Coyote vs. Acme' will be salvaged from the dustbin. Ketchup Entertainment plans a theatrical release at an unspecified future date.
'We're thrilled to have made a deal with Warner Bros. Pictures to bring this film to audiences worldwide,' Gareth West, chief executive of Ketchup Entertainment, said in a statement. ''Coyote vs Acme' is a perfect blend of nostalgia and modern storytelling, capturing the essence of the beloved Looney Tunes characters while introducing them to a new generation.'
Directed by Dave Green and based on a New Yorker article by Ian Frazier, 'Coyote vs. Acme' follows Wile E. Coyote in a lawsuit against Acme Corporation for the many faulty products that failed to catch him the Road Runner. The live-action animated hybrid stars John Cena and Will Forte.
Deadline earlier reported that Ketchup paid about $50 million for the film, which cost $70 million to produce. Ketchup, a distribution company launched in 2012, also recently released another Looney Tunes film jettisoned by Warner Bros.: 'The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie.' In three weeks of release, it's grossed $8.2 million in domestic ticket sales.
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Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Spreading like magic: Why Harry Potter gift shops accused of selling 'poor quality and overpriced' souvenirs are springing up around England - as new HBO series gets set to give franchise fresh lease of life
Unofficial Harry Potter shops are spreading from London to other tourist cities across England as retailers try to cash in ahead of the hotly-anticipated new TV series. Many of the stores sell a range of expensive but genuine merchandise based on the books and films despite being unaffiliated with Warner Bros or author JK Rowling. They are most prevalent in London's West End where there are at least six, with names such as 'Magical Platform', 'Spellbound Emporium' and 'House of Wonders'. But others can now be found in towns and cities popular with tourists such as York, Oxford, Cambridge, Canterbury, Liverpool, Alnwick and Stratford-upon-Avon. While some are respected local businesses that have existed for years, others are relatively new openings which are being compared to the candy stores phenomenon - with experts accusing them of selling poor quality and overpriced souvenirs. Names for the independent stores range from 'The Shop That Must Not Be Named' and 'House of Wizard' to 'The Department of Magic Gifts' and 'The Potions Cauldron'. Now, nearly 25 years after the first film came out, shop owners will be hoping that the popularity of the boy wizard is about to be turbo-charged again - with new ranges of merchandise expected when the new HBO series is set to be released in 2027. The original Harry Potter movies starring Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint grossed nearly $10billion - but it has been 14 years since the last one came out. Many of the products on sale at the stores are inspired by the films, with visitors eager to spend their holiday money on Hogwarts-themed paraphernalia – and the new TV series therefore represents another huge merchandising opportunity. The first unofficial store to open in England was The Shop That Must Not Be Named in York in May 2017, located on The Shambles which is said to be one the inspirations for Diagon Alley in the Potter films. This store was a spin-off from a general gift shop called Give The Dog A Bone, with the owners opening the dedicated Potter store as their range continued to grow. Soon after, the first Potter store in Cambridge - The Department of Magical Gifts - opened in 2018 after the founder Roger Lefever was inspired by what he saw in York. This remained the only Potter store in Cambridge for six years until two more opened in 2024 to cash in on the growing popularity - House of Wonders and House of Wizard. Speaking about his competitors, Mr Lefever told the Sunday Times last week: 'You go in there and you can see they don't care. It's just a money-making exercise.' A pattern of multiple shops in the same city is being repeated across the country – with other stores popping up in York, including The Potions Cauldron which also opened in 2018 and specialises in magical-themed soft drinks. In Oxford, where some Potter movie scenes were filmed, The Shop of Secrets opened in 2019 – with two other stores opening since, named House of Wonders and Wizards Emporium. Other Potter shops to have opened in further towns or cities in recent years include Bowring Hepple Black in Alnwick – close to Alnwick Castle in Northumberland, another filming location. Meanwhile a House of Secrets can be found in Canterbury, Kent; and a House of Spells in both Liverpool and Stratford-upon-Avon in Warwickshire. In Central London, there are at least six such shops – including Magical Platform on Whitehall; Wizards & Spells on Oxford Street; and House of Wonders on Buckingham Palace Road. The others are House of Spells on Charing Cross Road; another House of Spells on Henley Street; and Spellbound Emporium on Southampton Row. Proponents of the stores point to this being part of the positive economic impact of the Potter brand, after a study in 2016 by the London School of Economics estimated that it was worth £4billion to the UK tourism industry. But others have raised fears that they are another example of an increasing trend of poor quality shops selling overpriced tat, amid ongoing concerns about the proliferation of US-style candy stores opening in empty retail units since the pandemic. Retail expert Jonathan De Mello told MailOnline: 'I suppose it's filling a need of some sort where these shops are located in tourist destinations like Oxford Street, West End, Victoria, and also Oxford, Cambridge and anywhere where there's a significant amount of tourists. 'It's supply and demand. Harry Potter is very much a British thing and JK Rowling and the rest of it, so it makes sense that it fills that need for people who want that sort of merchandise in the home. 'But if you look at the structure and who's behind it, and it's quite nebulous really in the same way that the candy shops were structured in a particularly convoluted way.' He added: 'Most of them are fairly low quality fit outs, minimal investments. They are certainly a bit more expensive to fit out than the candy shops which are literally bare bones. 'These shops have a bit more about them than that, but it's marginal really because inside the products are displayed in a very poor way. It's just trying to entice young kids to come in with their parents and get them to buy whatever products are in there.' An investigation by the Daily Mail in March discovered that many of the Potter shops, especially those in London, are the latest incarnation of a murky retail network that also includes the candy stores and tacky tourist souvenir outlets. Some of these candy stores have been accused of peddling illegal or unsafe goods, with seizures made by Westminster Council - although trading standards have not found any evidence of improper merchandise being sold at the Potter shops. Speaking about the candy stores, Mr De Mello - founder and chief executive of JDM Retail - said that business rates evasion was a particular problem. He explained: 'As soon as they become due, then the shop closes, another one springs up under a different name and the directors are different. 'I think the landlords that own those properties, from their perspective, they just want to rent the shop out because business rates are so high and by having an occupant in place, they avoid paying the business rates - the tenant pays the business rates in theory. But actually in practice I don't think that's happening.' Directing his attention to the Potter shops, Mr De Mello added: 'These are for me the new candy shops. There might be some that are genuine, I think some of them do have genuine merchandise in them, so I don't want to tar them all with the same brush. 'But to me, there's definitely a significant amount of them that are potentially engaged in questionable business practices, let's say.' Some of the unofficial Potter shops empire is thought to be run by a network of at least nine Indian nationals through a series of 30 companies which regularly change names and locations and exchange directors. A third of the companies have been struck off, wound up or dissolved, often owing debts – including four related companies which owe £400,000 to Westminster City Council. Married couple Safoora Shafeeq and Shafeeq Pallivalappil, who live in Oxford, are directors of 11 retail companies, five of which have previous addresses linked to current Potter shops. But they told the London Centric news site last year that previous legal operators are responsible for the unpaid rates and they were 'awaiting the updated bill to make payments accordingly', and were 'strictly adhering to all legal requirements'. Mr De Mello explained that the Potter shops have become one of 'many examples of brands over-proliferating their products'. The interior of the Harry Potter store at London King's Cross station following a refurbishment Speaking about Warner Bros, he explained: 'What they do is sell their products through wholesalers and then those products are popping up everywhere. 'What these businesses are doing is buying it as cheaply as possible from maybe a more challenged market and then selling it in a higher, affluent market like the UK at a much higher price. 'Warner Bros will be responsible for how they wholesale their products. So you can buy their products through their official stores but also they'll be selling them online to third parties. That's where I think it goes. 'Especially if they're selling into China or somewhere like that – if they get bulk orders from a Chinese website, for example, then who knows where it goes to after that. 'Wholesale margins can be quite high, but they have to sell them for a low price because then the retailer that takes it on sells it for a mark-up. What I think they're doing it is they're not knowingly selling it to these shops directly. 'They're selling it to a wholesaler that's then selling it to somebody else and then these shops are buying or getting these products somehow. So they might be official, from Warner Bros originally, but they've changed hands a number of times - I would have thought - in between.' The proliferation of unofficial Potter shops across England is in stark contrast to the low number of official stores. There is only one official public Potter store in London called the 'Shop at Platform 9 3/4' at King's Cross station. Elsewhere there is also the House of Minalima on Wardour Street which sells the official graphic artwork from the movies. In addition, there is the huge shop at the Warner Bros Studio Tour just outside the capital in Leavesden, selling souvenirs for those going on the £56-a-head experience. Large official Potter ranges can also be found in the capital within the Hamley's toy store on Regent Street; the Lego Store in Leicester Square; and the Palace Theatre where the Cursed Child play is performed. There is also a small shop at London's Heathrow Terminal Five departure lounge - but this can only be accessed when travelling through the airport. The oldest unofficial Harry Potter store in England is the respected The Shop That Must Not Be Named on The Shambles in York, which opened in May 2017 - and others have since copied Mr De Mello said: 'Universal Studios obviously has a big Harry Potter element to it in the US and people love that and go and buy their wands there and that sort of thing. 'Because Warner Bros are so tight with the distribution of their products from their own stores, you have to go to those [unofficial] sorts of places. 'That's why these shops have sprung up, because if the only place you can get a wand is from Universal Studios in the US, and some people are choosing not to do that and getting it from these sorts of places instead. 'Surely Warner Bros don't want that? It means their own shops do less well because they are proliferating their products too much. I would have thought that would impact them. And if everyone's got one it becomes less desirable – that's the kind of mindset people have.' Warner Bros is understood to employ an agency to look at suspected counterfeit products, so they can protect their brand and avoid customers being duped.


Daily Mail
14 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Brad Pitt drives fans WILD as he whips up tacos while suffering a major kitchen fail in viral F1 promo video
Brad Pitt sent fans into a frenzy after showing off his unexpected culinary chops in a new promo for his race car blockbuster F1. The 61-year-old Oscar winner — whose red-hot romance with Ines de Ramon has been heating up the red carpets — appeared in a now-viral clip making tacos alongside his star-studded cast. Joined by co-stars Kerry Condon and Damson Idris, as well as director Joseph Kosinski, Pitt was seen slicing meat from a traditional trompo — a vertical spit — to serve up fresh tacos. But the heartthrob hilariously knocked over the trompo mid-cutting. After the group managed to set it back up, Brad quipped, 'I got to redeem myself,' before getting back to work on the spit. Still, it wasn't the fumble that got fans talking — it was the fact that the world's biggest movie star looked downright irresistible doing it. But the heartthrob hilariously knocked over the trompo mid-cutting 'I didn't know Brad Pitt could be more perfect, until I saw him eating tacos,' gushed one fan. Another marveled, 'Brad Pitt and tacos … what more can we ask for?' 'I never imagined Brad Pitt making tacos,' one incredulous fan admitted. Even Warner Bros. got cheeky, commenting, 'Can we get 5 to go (and the taco boy too)?' Another added, 'Here for those who want to try Brad Pitt's tacos al pastor.' The lighthearted moment surfaced just days after reports claimed Pitt's luxury Los Angeles home was burglarized last Wednesday. Brad was not home at the time, and it remains unclear whether his girlfriend Ines de Ramon was inside when the suspects struck. The LAPD has not confirmed whether Pitt was specifically targeted or if the break-in was random. Joined by co-stars Kerry Condon and Damson Idris , as well as director Joseph Kosinski, Pitt was seen slicing meat from a traditional trompo — a vertical spit — to serve up fresh tacos Investigators told NBC News the thieves climbed over Pitt's front fence and ransacked the home, stealing an unknown amount of property. It comes after a string of celebrities have seen their Los Angeles-area homes broken into in recent years. This includes Pitt's ex-girlfriend Jennifer Aniston, as well as couples Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban and Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson. Meanwhile, Pitt has been busy promoting F1, and was most recently spotted with de Ramon at the London premiere earlier this week. F1 was made in collaboration with Formula One's governing body, the FIA, with seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton being one of the producers. In the films, Pitt plays the troubled race car driver Sonny Hayes, who races against rookie rival Joshua Pearce (Damson Idris) as they battle it out at various Grand Prixes around the world. The movie's red carpet premiere was the first time the couple made have taken their relationship super public. It comes after Pitt recently settled his painful eight-year divorce battle with ex wife Angelina Jolie. Still, it wasn't the fumble that got fans talking — it was the fact that the world's biggest movie star looked downright irresistible doing it A source previously told the Daily Mail that despite being as happy as could be together, Pitt and de Ramon have no plans to wed. 'Brad is totally in love with Ines, but he doesn't want to go down the road of marriage and kids,' they said. 'He's been burned badly by the divorce from Angelina and his kids wanting little if nothing to do with him. He's 61 and loving his life just the way it is.' Pitt and Jolie are gearing for a trial over their shared property Château Miraval, the sprawling French estate where they tied the knot in 2014. The property, known for its award-winning rosé, has become ground zero in the stars' years-long legal war. Jolie, 49, tried to shut down Pitt's claims that she sold her stake in the estate behind his back, despite what he says was a verbal agreement to hold onto their 50-50 split. But now that her motion's been denied, the case is moving full speed ahead. The trial date hasn't been locked in yet, and several key motions are still on the table. Brad and the 32-year-old jewelry designer were linked back in 2022 after they were spotted together at a Bono concert. The couple has kept their relationship mostly private, only making their public debut in July 2024 at the British Grand Prix, while Pitt was filming his Formula 1 movie. In a new interview with GQ for the magazine's 2025 Summer Issue — alongside F1 co-stars Damson Idris and Lewis Hamilton — Pitt was asked whether their appearance at a Formula 1 race was intentionally timed to promote the film. 'No, dude, it's not that calculated,' Pitt replied bluntly. 'If you're living—oh my God, how exhausting would that be? If you're living with making those kinds of calculations? No, life just evolves. Relationships evolve.' He also addressed the constant scrutiny over his private life, noting it's been part of his reality for decades. 'My personal life is always in the news. It's been in the news for 30 years, bro. Or some version of my personal life, let's put it that way.' One example of that media scrutiny, of course, is his split from ex-wife Jolie.


Scottish Sun
20 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Who was Amy Bradley? Woman who went missing on Royal Caribbean Rhapsody of the Seas cruise
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) AMY Lynn Bradley was on a cruise with her parents and brother in March 1998, before she vanished without a trace. Here's everything we know about Amy and her disappearance, which are featured in a new true crime documentary. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Amy Lynn Bradley, 23, vanished from a cruise ship Credit: FBI 3 Amy was celebrating graduating and her new job with her mum, dad and brother Credit: FBI Who is Amy Bradley? Amy Lynn Bradley is a woman from Petersburg, Virginia, who disappeared in March 1998 while she was on a cruise with her family. She was 23 years old at the time. Amy grew up in Chesterfield County and attended Longwood University on a basketball scholarship, graduating with a degree in physical education. She was known for her athleticism, having also worked as a lifeguard. Amy's family was described as being close-knit — her parents and brother joined her on the cruise to celebrate her graduation and new job at a computer consulting firm. What happened? On March 21, 1998, Amy boarded the Royal Caribbean Rhapsody of the Seas with her parents Ron and Iva, and her younger brother Brad, for a vacation to Curaçao. The journey started in the tropical paradise of Puerto Rico, stopping first in Aruba — but things took a sinister turn just three days later. On the night of March 23, Amy and Brad spent time dancing at the ship's nightclub, socializing with other passengers and members of the ship's band. Amy was last sighted asleep in the early hours of the morning on March 24. At 5.30 am, she was spotted asleep on a chair in her private balcony —but half an hour later, her dad Ron couldn't find her. The Royal Caribbean crew searched every inch of the vessel, but Amy was nowhere to be found, despite having a host of distinctive tattoos including the Tasmanian Devil from Looney Tunes, a Chinese symbol, a sun and a gecko, as well as a belly button piercing. Despite her disappearance, the vessel continued its journey to St Martin, and then travelled to St Thomas, in the US Virgin Islands. Despite a four-day search by the Netherlands Antilles Coast Guard and subsequent FBI involvement, Amy was never found. Over the years, there have been multiple reported sightings of Amy in the Caribbean, including a woman matching her description seen on a beach. A US Navy sailor also claimed a woman in a brothel identified herself as Amy and asked for help. Theories about her fate have ranged from accidental overboard fall to abduction and human trafficking — but no definitive evidence has ever emerged. But seven years later in 2005, the Bradleys received a chilling tip-off — images indicating Amy may have been sex trafficked. 3 The haunting images, publicly revealed on Dr Phil, showed a woman strongly resembling the 23-year-old, scantily-clad and posing uncomfortably in lingerie. What have authorities said? The authorities have kept Amy's case open for well over two decades. The FBI initially investigated the possibility that she had fallen overboard, but her family questioned this theory, citing her strong swimming ability and the lack of evidence. American authorities asked anyone with leads on the case to come forward with answers, offering a reward of $25,000. Despite periodic leads and reported sightings, authorities have not located Amy, with the case remaining unsolved. Anyone with information should contact their local FBI office, nearest American Embassy or Consulate. Netflix's Amy Bradley Is Missing The sad story of Amy Bradley's disappearance is the focus of a new three-part true crime documentary. The series features interviews with Amy's family, eyewitnesses from the cruise and investigators. It explores the events leading up to her disappearance and the decades-long search for answers. The documentary aims to shed new light on the case and provide a comprehensive account of the haunting unsolved mystery. Amy Bradley is Missing drops on Netflix on July 16, 2025.