Movies
Jamie Lee Curtis Steps Into Angela Lansbury’s Iconic Role For ‘Murder, She Wrote’ Film
Universal is officially cracking the case on Murder, She Wrote, and it looks like Jamie Lee Curtis is ready to pick up the magnifying glass.
According to sources, the studio is moving forward with a feature film adaptation of the beloved classic TV series, with Pitch Perfect director Jason Moore set to take the helm. Curtis, an Oscar winner and genre icon in her own right, is attached to star as Jessica Fletcher, the role made legendary by the late Angela Lansbury.
The screenplay comes from Lauren Schuker Blum and Rebecca Angelo, based on the long-running CBS series created by Peter S. Fischer along with Richard Levinson and William Link. Producing duties will be handled by Amy Pascal, with Phil Lord, Chris Miller, and Aditya Sood also on board via Lord Miller’s first-look deal with Universal. The project is being overseen at the studio by SVP of Development Lexi Barta and Director of Production Development Jacqueline Garell.
For anyone even casually familiar with television history, Murder, She Wrote is about as iconic as it gets. Lansbury starred as Jessica Fletcher from 1984 to 1996 in one of the most successful and enduring shows ever made. Her character—a retired schoolteacher turned bestselling mystery author—just happened to have an uncanny ability to stumble into murders and solve them with sharp intuition and quiet determination. While Cabot Cove, Maine served as the show’s home base, Fletcher’s travels often expanded the series well beyond its cozy seaside roots.
The show was a ratings juggernaut and an awards darling, earning 41 Emmy nominations over its run. Lansbury herself was nominated for Lead Actress in a Drama Series every single year the show aired—an astonishing feat, made even more baffling by the fact that she never actually won. She would later reprise the role in four TV movies, cementing Jessica Fletcher as one of television’s most beloved characters.
Jason Moore seems like an interesting and potentially inspired choice to direct. Best known for comedies like Pitch Perfect and Sisters, Moore has a busy slate ahead. He’s directing the pilot and executive producing Elle, the Legally Blonde prequel series for Prime Video, and in April will stage the revival of the Tony-winning Avenue Q in London’s West End. He’s also attached to direct adaptations of Steven Rowley’s The Guncle and Emma Straub’s This Time Tomorrow.
As for writers Angelo and Schuker Blum, they previously penned Dumb Money, the 2023 film about the GameStop short squeeze, and have more projects on the way, including Rise, which centers on the trailblazing U.S. women’s national basketball team.
No release date has been announced yet, but between Curtis stepping into a legendary role and Universal backing the project, this Murder, She Wrote revival is already shaping up to be one mystery worth solving.
Movies
Jason Momoa to Star in Sony’s ‘Helldivers’ Movie, Justin Lin Directing
Jason Momoa is heading to the front lines.
The actor has signed on to star in Sony Pictures’ feature adaptation of Helldivers, the hit video game franchise from Arrowhead Game Studios. Justin Lin is set to direct the project, which hails from PlayStation Productions and is slated for a theatrical release on Nov. 10, 2027.
Launched in 2015, the original Helldivers built a devoted following, but it was 2024’s Helldivers 2 that became a breakout phenomenon. The sequel sold more than 12 million units across PlayStation 5 and PC within its first four months and has continued to expand its footprint, recently launching on Xbox. The game’s narrative centers on an elite military unit known as the Helldivers, tasked with defending the fictional Super Earth from deadly alien threats in a satirical, high-intensity sci-fi war.
Hutch Parker is producing alongside PlayStation Productions head Asad Qizilbash, with Lin producing through his Perfect Storm Entertainment banner.
The project adds to an already packed slate for Momoa, who remains one of Hollywood’s most in-demand action stars. He will next portray intergalactic bounty hunter Lobo in Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, set for release June 26. He currently stars opposite Dave Bautista in Amazon MGM Studios’ The Wrecking Crew for Prime Video and will appear alongside Ryan Reynolds in Warner Bros. and Legendary’s hybrid animated feature Animal Friends, debuting May 1.
Momoa is also set to take on the role of Blanka in Legendary and Paramount’s Street Fighter, scheduled for Oct. 16, and will reprise Duncan Idaho in Dune: Part Three, due Dec. 18 from Warner Bros. and Legendary.
The actor previously anchored Warner Bros.’ DC franchise as Aquaman in two films directed by James Wan and appeared as the villain Dante in Fast X, which Lin wrote and produced. Among his recent credits is Warner Bros. and Legendary’s A Minecraft Movie, which approached $1 billion at the global box office, as well as HBO’s Game of Thrones, where he broke out as Khal Drogo. Most recently, Momoa starred in and co-created Apple TV+’s limited series Chief of War.
Movies
James Van Der Beek, ‘Dawson’s Creek’ Star, Dies at 48
James Van Der Beek, the actor who became a defining face of late-’90s teen television as earnest aspiring filmmaker Dawson Leery on The WB’s Dawson’s Creek, died Wednesday following a prolonged battle with colorectal cancer. He was 48. His family confirmed the news on social media.
Van Der Beek publicly disclosed his diagnosis in November 2024. In a statement posted to Instagram, his family wrote, “Our beloved James David Van Der Beek passed peacefully this morning. He met his final days with courage, faith, and grace. There is much to share regarding his wishes, love for humanity and the sacredness of time. Those days will come. For now we ask for peaceful privacy as we grieve our loving husband, father, son, brother, and friend.”
In the months after revealing his illness, the actor auctioned memorabilia from Dawson’s Creek and Varsity Blues to help offset treatment costs. He also withdrew from a one-night Dawson’s Creek reunion benefiting F Cancer; Lin-Manuel Miranda stepped in for the live stage reading of the pilot. Van Der Beek had recently been cast in a recurring role as a mayoral candidate in Prime Video’s upcoming Legally Blonde prequel series, Elle.
Born March 8, 1977, in Cheshire, Connecticut, Van Der Beek began his professional acting career at 16, appearing off-Broadway in Edward Albee’s Finding the Sun, directed by Albee. Though he would become synonymous with television, he often described himself as “a theater kid” at heart.
That changed in 1997 when he was cast in Dawson’s Creek, Kevin Williamson’s coming-of-age drama that premiered in January 1998 to record ratings for The WB. The series, which also launched the careers of Katie Holmes, Joshua Jackson and Michelle Williams, became a cultural touchstone, dominating among teenage viewers and running for six seasons through 2003. It later found new life on streaming, introducing Van Der Beek’s performance to another generation.
As his television fame grew, Van Der Beek headlined the 1999 high school football drama Varsity Blues and later starred in the Bret Easton Ellis adaptation The Rules of Attraction (2002). Though neither film was a blockbuster on release, both became emblematic of the era and earned enduring cult followings.
His later work included a starring role opposite Patricia Arquette on CBS’ CSI: Cyber and a self-aware turn playing a heightened version of himself on ABC’s Don’t Trust the B—- in Apartment 23. He also voiced a lead role on Disney Channel’s animated series Vampirina and appeared on shows ranging from One Tree Hill to Modern Family and Law & Order: SVU.
Van Der Beek is survived by his wife of more than 25 years, Kimberly, and their six children — four daughters and two sons. A GoFundMe page has been established to assist his family with living expenses.
Movies
Franz Rogowski and Benedict Wong Join A24’s The Masque of the Red Death
Franz Rogowski and Benedict Wong are boarding A24’s The Masque of the Red Death, joining previously announced stars Mikey Madison and Léa Seydoux in Charlie Polinger’s revisionist take on the Edgar Allan Poe classic.
Rogowski (Passages) and Wong (Weapons) have closed deals for the feature, which Polinger will direct from his own screenplay. The project is described as a wildly reimagined and darkly comedic interpretation of Poe’s 1842 short story. Specific character details are being kept under wraps.
In Poe’s original tale, Prince Prospero retreats with a circle of aristocrats to a fortified abbey as a devastating plague sweeps the land. Sealed off from the suffering outside, the nobles attempt to outlast the contagion by hosting a lavish masquerade ball. As the festivities unfold, a mysterious and ominous figure infiltrates the celebration, forcing the revelers to confront the inescapable reality they believed they had successfully walled off.
Polinger, a DGA Award winner, is expected to bring a contemporary lens to the material, blending horror and satire in a manner that aligns with A24’s penchant for auteur-driven genre fare.
Julia Hammer and Erik Feig are producing for Picturestart, alongside James Presson and Lucy McKendrick. Polinger will executive produce. A24 is set to distribute the film worldwide.
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