logo
James Gunn Confirms Matt Reeves' ‘The Batman II' Script Is Finished: 'It's Great'

James Gunn Confirms Matt Reeves' ‘The Batman II' Script Is Finished: 'It's Great'

Yahoo18 hours ago
As the Man of Steel takes to the sky in James Gunn's DCU debut, Matt Reeves' The Batman is ready to emerge from the shadows.
On the red carpet of Monday's Superman world premiere, the writer and director kept it brief as he confirmed to reporters that he's read Reeves' long-anticipated script for The Batman Part II.
More from Deadline
Matt Reeves Completes 'The Batman 2' Script
'Superman' World Premiere: The Best Of The Red Carpet
James Gunn Wants To Bring "Color And Joy" Back To 'Superman': "In Some Ways, It's Lighter"
'It's great,' said Gunn after Reeves shared a photo of the completed script's cover page last month, donning the Batman symbol.
The DC Studios boss previously told fans to 'get off Matt's nuts' about the sequel to his 2022 take on the Dark Knight.
Premiering July 11 in theaters, Gunn's Superman will launch a new DCU with the 'Gods and Monsters' phase, separate from Reeves' 'Batman Epic Crime Saga', which includes The Batman (2022) and last year's Max series spin-off The Penguin.
James Gunn on 'The Batman Part II' script pic.twitter.com/mGzKObkvgw
— Deadline (@DEADLINE) July 8, 2025
After Gunn previously defended the delays on The Batman Part II, which is set to premiere on Oct. 1, 2027 following a year-long postponement, Reeves said in January that the sequel will film this year.
'We're doing something where the story continues from, but I hope that people will be surprised by,' he told Deadline.
Best of Deadline
Everything We Know About Christopher Nolan's Next Film – 'The Odyssey': Release Date, Cast And More
2025-26 Awards Season Calendar: Dates For Tonys, Emmys, Oscars & More
2025 TV Cancellations: Photo Gallery
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Latest ‘Tiger King' twist finds ‘Doc' Antle sentenced to 1 year in prison for animal traffickin
Latest ‘Tiger King' twist finds ‘Doc' Antle sentenced to 1 year in prison for animal traffickin

CNN

time20 minutes ago

  • CNN

Latest ‘Tiger King' twist finds ‘Doc' Antle sentenced to 1 year in prison for animal traffickin

Animal stories Endangered lifeFacebookTweetLink Follow 'Tiger King' star Bhagavan 'Doc' Antle was sentenced on Tuesday to one year and a day in federal prison and fined $55,000 for trafficking in exotic animals and money laundering after pleading guilty in November 2023. Antle's fate was resolved in a federal courtroom in Charleston, South Carolina, five years after the true crime documentary 'Tiger King' captivated a country shut down by COVID-19. Three others who pleaded guilty in his investigation received either probation or a four-month prison sentence. Antle's sentence is the final true-life chapter of the Tiger King saga. The Netflix series debuted in March 2020 near the peak of COVID-19 restrictions. The show centered on dealers and conservationists of big cats, focusing on disputes between Joe Exotic, a collector and private zookeeper from Oklahoma, and Carole Baskin, who runs Big Cat Rescue in Florida. Exotic, whose real name is Joseph Maldonado-Passage, is serving a 21-year federal prison sentence for trying to hire two different men to kill Baskin. Antle, who owns a private zoo called Myrtle Beach Safari, appeared in the first season of the documentary and was the star of the third season. Antle's zoo was known for charging hundreds or thousands of dollars to let people pet and hold baby animals like lions, tigers and monkeys that were so young they were still being bottle-fed. Customers could have photos or videos made. Antle would sometimes ride into tours on an elephant. Myrtle Beach Safari remains open by reservation only, according to its website. Antle had remained out on bail since his arrest in June 2022. Antle's federal charges were brought after the 'Tiger King' series. Prosecutors said he sold or bought cheetahs, lions, tigers and a chimpanzee without the proper paperwork. And they said in a separate scheme, Antle laundered more than $500,000 that an informant told him was being used to get people into the U.S. illegally to work. Antle was used to having large amounts of money he could move around quickly, investigators said. The FBI was listening to Antle's phone calls with the informant as he explained a baby chimpanzee could easily cost $200,000. Private zookeepers can charge hundreds of dollars for photos with docile young primates or other animals, but the profit window is only open for a few years before the growing animals can no longer be safely handled. 'I had to get a monkey, but the people won't take a check. They only take cash. So what do you do?' Antle said according to a transcript of the phone call in court papers. Two of Antle's employees have already been sentenced for their roles in his schemes. Meredith Bybee was given a year of probation for selling a chimpanzee while Andrew 'Omar' Sawyer, who prosecutors said helped Antle launder money, was given two years of probation. Jason Clay, a Texas private zoo owner, pleaded guilty to illegally selling a primate and was sentenced to four months in prison, while charges were dropped against California ranch owner Charles Sammut. Antle was also convicted in 2023 in a Virginia court of four counts of wildlife trafficking over sales of lions and was sentenced to two years of prison suspended 'upon five years of good behavior.' An appeals court overturned two of the convictions, ruling that Virginia law bans the sale of endangered species but not their purchase. Antle was found not guilty of five counts of animal cruelty at that same Virginia trial.

Lukas Nelson's New Album Is ‘A Love Letter To The Country That Raised Me'
Lukas Nelson's New Album Is ‘A Love Letter To The Country That Raised Me'

Forbes

time20 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Lukas Nelson's New Album Is ‘A Love Letter To The Country That Raised Me'

Lukas Nelson performs onstage for day one of the 2024 Pilgrimage Music & Cultural Festival at The ... More Park at Harlinsdale Farm on September 28, 2024 in Franklin, Tennessee. Lukas Nelson took his first steps on a tour bus. He grew up on highways shadowed by towering grain silos and roads that twisted through ragged hills. He's not sure there's an interstate in the U.S. that he hasn't seen. Sometimes people ask where he grew up. He's not sure how to answer. 'I grew up traveling on the roads since I was a baby,' said Nelson, a Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter and the 36-year-old son of Willie Nelson. 'I feel like America really raised me." Nelson decided to write about his experience of being raised on the road for American Romance, a 12-song solo album that debuted last month via Sony Music Nashville. A departure from his longtime band Promise of the Real, American Romance comes billed as the solo debut for Nelson, a tenured musician who's worked with Neil Young, Lady Gaga and Lainey Wilson, among others. For the album, Nelson wanted to write 'a John Steinbeck-equse narrtive of my upbringing and travels,' he said. Listeners hear the result on a collection of rich, detailed songs that chronicle restless life lessons and open-hearted adventures. 'The diners and truck stops, Thanksgiving dinners away from home … I wanted it to feel like each song is a chapter in a great American novel. A love letter to the country that raised me," Nelson said. For American Romance, Nelson recorded at Sunset Sound Recording Studio in Hollywood alongside another second-generation song-maker – Shooter Jennings, a sought-after producer who was behind the board for standout releases from Brandi Carlile, Charley Crockett and others. Working with Jennings? It's comfortable, Nelson said. 'He brought out what I feel like what the best sonic quality you can get,' Nelson said. He continued, 'The ideas he had, in terms of how to present the music, and to bring out the best in me, performance-wise … I felt really grateful for his influence.' The album blends shades of undeniable country influence (on the fiddle-drenched number 'Outsmarted') with ambitious heartland rock ("Runnin' Out of Time") and time-tested folk storytelling (none more evident than the title track, 'American Romance'). He enlists guest features from troubadour Stephen Wilson Jr. – on the sobering cut 'Disappearing Light' – and Sierra Ferrell, who harmonizes on 'Friend In The End,' an endearing number where the two sing 'I guess I just found me a friend/ I think I can call you my friend in the end.' American Romance begins with a declaration from Nelson. In the chorus of the robust opening number 'Ain't Done,' he sings 'God ain't done with you" – five words that remind listeners of the highs and lows that come with living another day. Nelson co-wrote 'Ain't Done' with sought-after Nashville songwriter Aaron Raitiere. 'We fleshed that [song] out in an hour or less. It really wrote itself," Nelson said. He added, 'Sometimes, the good ones come quick and easy and you don't really overthink it too much.' And the album ends with 'You Were It,' a tender-to-the-touch country tune that Nelson said he wrote as an 11-year-old learning his way around a song. 'That song, when I wrote it, my dad heard it and Kris Kristofferson heard it,' Nelson. 'My dad loved it so much he recorded it. He put it on his album It Always Will Be. That really got me the confidence I needed to be a songwriter. That and Kris said, 'Are you going to be a songwriter?' I said, 'I don't know.' He said, 'well, you don't have a choice after that song.''

‘Superman' director faces backlash for calling the Man of Steel an ‘immigrant': ‘Superwoke'
‘Superman' director faces backlash for calling the Man of Steel an ‘immigrant': ‘Superwoke'

New York Post

time31 minutes ago

  • New York Post

‘Superman' director faces backlash for calling the Man of Steel an ‘immigrant': ‘Superwoke'

'Superman' director and DC Studios co-head James Gunn is facing backlash for calling the Man of Steel 'an immigrant that came from other places' in a new interview. Ahead of the release of Warner Bros.' superhero reboot on July 11, Gunn, 58, told The Sunday Times of London that ''Superman' is the story of America… An immigrant that came from other places and populated the country.' The 'Guardians of the Galaxy,' the director added: 'But for me it is mostly a story that says basic human kindness is a value and is something we have lost.' Advertisement 'Superman' director James Gunn called the Clark Kent 'an immigrant.' AP Clark Kent is, of course, not human. Named Kal-El, he's an alien from planet Krypton who lands on Earth as a baby and is adopted by a couple in Smallville, Kansas. In the new movie, the iconic red cape is donned by 32-year-old actor David Corenswet. Advertisement Gunn said that some audience members who watch the action movie through a political lens could have a negative reaction to it. Driving home that point, the Sunday Times' headline is: 'Some people will take offense at my new 'Superman.'' 'Yes, it plays differently,' Gunn said. 'But it's about human kindness and obviously there will be jerks out there who are just not kind and will take it as offensive just because it is about kindness. But screw them.' Several media personalities bristled at Gunn's remarks. 'He's creating a moat of woke, enlightened opinion around him. He's got a woke shield,' said Fox News' Greg Gutfeld, with a graphic on the screen that read 'Superwoke.' Advertisement James Gunn said 'there will be jerks out there' who criticize his film's immigrant themes. WireImage Kellyanne Conway said, 'We don't go to the movie theater to be lectured to and to have somebody throw their ideology onto us.' The cast stood by Gunn's interview on Monday's red carpet in Los Angeles. 'My reaction to [the backlash] is that it is exactly what the movie is about,' Sean Gunn, James Gunn's brother who plays Maxwell Lord, told Variety. Advertisement 'We support our people, you know? We love our immigrants. Yes, Superman is an immigrant, and yes, the people that we support in this country are immigrants and if you don't like that, you're not American. People who say no to immigrants are against the American way.' Nathan Fillion, who plays the Green Lantern, put it more succinctly. 'Aw, somebody needs a hug,' the actor said. 'Just a movie, guys.' 'Superman' hits theaters on July 11.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store