Movies
Three New Images From ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’
Warner Bros. International has released three brand new images from the Platinum Dunes remake of A Nightmare on Elm Street (trailer) that feature Jackie Earle Haley as your new Freddy Krueger, Kyle Gallner and Rooney Mara. Below you’ll find the three images, while Omelete has also posted the following International synopsis: “Freddy Krueger (Jackie Earle Haley) returns in “A Nightmare on Elm Street”, a contemporary re-imagining of the horror classic. A group of suburban teenagers share one common bond: they are all being stalked by Freddy Krueger, a horribly disfigured killer who hunts them in their dreams. As long as they stay awake, they can protect one another…but when they sleep, there is no escape.” Directed by Samuel Bayer, the reboot will arrive in theaters April 30, 2010. Talk about the new photos below.
Check out hi-res versions over at Omelete.



Visit our image gallery for hi-res stills from the trailer.
Movies
‘Heart of the Beast’ – First Images of Brad Pitt in David Ayer’s Survival Thriller
From director David Ayer (Suicide Squad, Fury), Heart of the Beast will hit theaters on September 25 from Paramount Pictures, and GQ shares first look images this week.
In the film, a former Army Special Forces soldier and his retired combat dog attempt to return to civilization after suffering a catastrophic accident deep in the Alaskan wilderness.
Brad Pitt stars in the survival thriller Heart of the Beast, with J.K. Simmons (Whiplash) and Anna Lambe (“True Detective: Night Country”) also starring.
Cameron Alexander wrote the screenplay for Heart of the Beast. Academy Award winner Mauro Fiore (Avatar, Spider-Man: No Way Home) serves as director of photography.
“I’ll just be really honest: it made me cry,” Ayer tells GQ of the script. “Reading the script, it’s like a tone poem, in a sense. It’s so sparse—just a guy, a dog, mountains, and the calamities and triumphs that unfold, but what’s fascinating about the script is they’re constantly rescuing each other. It’s not like a guy and his pet—they felt like co-equals in this story. Brad wanted to be No. 2 on the call sheet, and rightly so. There was just something profound in the script. It felt like a study in grief, in healing, and of the human heart. So I had to do it.”
Ayer promises, “Don’t worry, the dog lives.”



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