- [Tiffany] Here, today's top stories.
First, "Resident Evil" television series
is coming to Netflix, following
months of development,
making it the latest video
game to get the TV treatment.
THR's Neha Joy has more.
- [Neha] Supernatural
co-showrunner Andrew Dabb
will oversee the video game
turned TV series for Netflix
after wrapping the delayed final season
of the CW's iconic drama, "Supernatural,"
which recently resumed production
following a month long shutdown.
Dabb spoke out about the news, saying,
"Resident Evil is my
favorite game of all time.
I'm incredibly excited
to tell a new chapter
in this amazing story
and bring the first ever
Resident Evil series to Netflix
members around the world.
For every type of Resident Evil fan,
including those joining
us for the first time,
this series will be complete
with a lot of old friends
and some things,
bloodthirsty, insane things,
people have never seen before."
- [Tiffany] Sad news for
fans of "Grey's Anatomy"
and more of ABC's scripted shows,
the network has revealed premiere dates
for it's unscripted fare
for the 2020 to 2021 season.
And thanks to the pandemic, it's slotting
"Press Your Luck" for
where the 17th season
of "Grey's Anatomy" was to have been.
ABC had planned to have three
hours of scripted dramas
on Thursday, but now new seasons
of "Celebrity Family Feud,"
"Press Your Luck" and "Match Game"
will fill in for "Station
19," "Grey's Anatomy,"
and "A Million Little
Things," respectively.
Sources say the network's scripted fare
could return to the
schedule as soon as October,
with the majority likely back in November,
but which shows remains unclear.
Additional details
involving scripted returns
are expected to be announced later.
And we now have a better
idea of what to expect
from the highly anticipated
Christopher Nolan film, "Tenet."
Thanks to a new behind
the scenes featurette,
Neha has more on that story, too.
- [Neha] Nearly 10 minutes long,
the video which dropped Wednesday
on the Warner brothers YouTube page
shows some new footage along
with cast and crew interviews.
The film deals with this
concept of inversion,
which is the idea that the
entropy of an object or person
could be reversed.
- [Male Speaker] But to make
it sing to today's audiences,
I sort of felt like for me
to really engage with it,
I wanted it to have bigger possibilities.
- In another section of the feature,
the actors and crew talk
about the experience
and importance of filming
with IMAX cameras.
- It's a very imposing camera.
Feels very important when you're
shooting something on IMAX.
- For more on all these stories,
head to thr.com.
For the Hollywood reporter news,
I'm Tiffany Taylor.
