Movies
‘The Devil’s Carnival’ Cast Revealing Themselves

Update: Check out vids on Flanery’s Twitter page too!
Those of you trolling the forums for Darren Lynn Bousman’s The Devil’s Carnival will have found speculation that the cast now consists of Repo! The Genetic Opera co-creator Terrance Zdunich, as well as Repo! stars Alexa Vega, Ogre (from Skinny Puppy) and Paul Sorvino. The members also state that Emilie Autumn and Sean Patrick Flanery have also joined previously announced Taryn Manning, Bill Moseley and Briana Evigan.
Bousman, who directed Repo!, Mother’s Day, Saw II-IV and The Barrens, wraps production today on the 45-minute experimental short about a carnival run by the devil.
The forum also was hiding a slew of banners (on display below) and behind-the-scenes imagery. There are also those who propose the short takes place in a 1930’s-themed hell, which is pretty rad.
Movies
Joe Wright to Direct Post-Apocalyptic Thriller ‘Juice’ Adaptation
Two-time BAFTA winning filmmaker Joe Wright (Hanna, “Black Mirror“) is set to direct the feature adaptation of post-apocalyptic thriller novel, Juice, Deadline reports today.
Emmy winner Abi Morgan (Shame, “Eric”) will adapt Tim Winton‘s novel for Working Title Films.
In Juice, “A young husband and father is recruited into a top-secret resistance organization, to join the ranks of militia men tasked with targeting the isolated and wealthy culprits responsible for this global catastrophe. When a mission goes wrong, he finds himself on the run, having to fight to the end to survive in this hostile world.”
It’s set in a world ravaged by climate-change disaster.
“I couldn’t be more thrilled that Tim Winton has entrusted us with his extraordinary epic,” Wright told Deadline. “The story is both a thrilling modern family saga and an urgent call to action. I cannot wait for audiences to experience it on the big screen.”
Winton added, “I’m pleased to know a filmmaker of Joe Wright’s calibre has chosen to adapt Juice for the screen. His capacity to portray the turmoil and the turning points of nations and peoples as well as private individuals distinguishes his work as a director and I’m confident that Juice is in good hands.”
Juice was initially published in October 2024 and longlisted for The Climate Fiction Prize 2026.

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