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10 must-see movies coming out this summer, from ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ to ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’

Nicole Kidman being wowed by the movies haven’t enticed you back into a theater yet, then a summer movie season packed with Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, Elvis, Thor and a heap of dinosaurs should do the trick.

Let’s not even go into 2020’s COVID-19 closures or last year’s dip back into normalcy. With adults and many kids vaxxed and the box office ready to roll, studios are releasing a stacked slate of films between now and Labor Day guaranteed to keep everyone entertained, starting next weekend with the Marvel superhero sequel “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.”

Whether you’ve been waiting two years for the “Top Gun” sequel or your kids are ready to watch Pixar films on a big screen again, Hollywood is hooking everybody up. Plus, streaming services like Netflix and Apple TV+ are also debuting at-home options for those who enjoy watching new flicks on their couch.

Here are the 10 movies you absolutely, positively must see this summer:

‘Top Gun: Maverick’ (May 27)

Stars: Tom Cruise, Miles Teller, Glen Powell

Director: Joseph Kosinski

The skinny: Three decades after the original 1986 classic, test pilot Maverick (Cruise) trains a new crop of Top Gun graduates (including Powell and Monica Barbaro) for a dangerous mission. However, Maverick also revisits a past tragedy when one of the aviators is Rooster (Teller), the son of Maverick’s late best friend and wingman Goose.

Where to watch: In theaters

‘Top Gun’:New flyboy Glen Powell talks that Oscar ‘insanity’ and Tom Cruise

‘Jurassic World Dominion’ (June 10)

Stars: Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Sam Neill

Director: Colin Trevorrow

The skinny: “Jurassic Park” characters past and present, from Pratt’s recent hero Owen Grady to Neill’s scientist Alan Grant, converge in a new adventure set four years after the destructive last film in 2018, in which humans try to keep their spot on the food chain co-existing in the same world with dinosaurs, including the deadly new Atrociraptor.

Where to watch: In theaters

‘Jurassic Park: Dominion’:Bryce Dallas Howard shows off ‘crazy sick’ bruises from stunt work

‘Cha Cha Real Smooth’ (June 17)

Stars: Cooper Raiff, Dakota Johnson, Leslie Mann

Director: Cooper Raiff

The skinny: The heartfelt coming-of-age drama took the same Sundance Film Festival audience award this year as Oscar best-picture winner “CODA” did last year. “Cha Cha” centers on a 22-year-old bar mitzvah party-starter (Raiff) who forms a strong connection to an older woman (Johnson) with a teenage daughter on the autism spectrum.

Where to watch: Apple TV+ 

Sundance Film Festival:Dakota Johnson’s ‘Cha Cha,’ horror film ‘Nanny’ win top prizes

‘Lightyear’ (June 17)

Stars: Chris Evans, Keke Palmer, Taika Waititi

Director: Angus MacLane 

The skinny: The Pixar animated sci-fi adventure acts as an origin story for Buzz Lightyear (voiced by Evans), the hero who inspired the plastic “Toy Story” icon. The square-jawed space ranger tries to get back to Earth after being stranded on an alien planet with his commander (Uzo Aduba) and leads a motley crew of wannabe heroes against the evil Zurg (Josh Brolin).

Where to watch: In theaters

‘Lightyear’:New trailer for ‘Toy Story’ spinoff arrives with Buzz’s hilarious robot cat

‘Elvis’ (June 24)

Stars: Austin Butler, Tom Hanks, Olivia DeJonge

Director: Baz Luhrmann

The skinny: The stylish music drama digs into the influential life and hip-shaking music of Elvis Presley (Butler), including his rise to superstardom under the management of the enigmatic Colonel Tom Parker (Hanks) as well as the important relationship between the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll and his wife Priscilla (DeJonge).

Where to watch: In theaters

First ‘Elvis’ trailer:Austin Butler explodes to life as Presley in Baz Luhrmann’s new movie

‘Marcel the Shell With Shoes On’ (June 24)

Stars: Jenny Slate, Rosa Salazar, Thomas Mann

Director: Dean Fleischer-Camp

The skinny: The 1-inch-tall, sneaker-wearing shell star of Slate and Fleischer-Camp’s animated short film and children’s book now hits the big screen in an adorable comedy. The soft-spoken Marcel (voiced by Slate) decides he wants to find his family and, with the help of a documentary filmmaker, becomes a social-media sensation.

Where to watch: In theaters

‘Marcel the Shell’:Jenny Slate finding herself after motherhood ‘really caught me by surprise’

‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ (July 8)

Stars: Chris Hemsworth, Tessa Thompson, Natalie Portman

Director: Taika Waititi

The skinny: After saving the universe, Marvel’s resident thunder god just wants to find inner peace, man. But when vengeful villain Gorr the God Butcher (Christian Bale) appears on the cosmic scene, Thor enlists the help of King Valkyrie (Thompson) and ex-girlfriend Jane Foster (Portman), who now wields the magical hammer Mjolnir.

Where to watch: In theaters

‘Thor: Love and Thunder’:Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman flex in new trailer

‘The Gray Man’ (July 15)

Stars: Ryan Gosling, Chris Evans, Ana de Armas

Directors: Anthony and Joe Russo

The skinny: Based on the 2009 Mark Greaney novel, the “Avengers” filmmakers’ international action thriller stars Gosling as a CIA operative with a bounty on his head after accidentally uncovering dark agency secrets. Evans plays his psychopathic ex-colleague leading the global manhunt.

Where to watch: In theaters (and on Netflix July 22)

‘Nope’ (July 22)

Stars: Daniel Kaluuya, Keke Palmer, Steven Yeun

Director: Jordan Peele

The skinny: Following “Get Out” and “Us,” Peele’s back to scare us all again with a new film starring Kaluuya and Palmer as horse trainers living in a California gulch who make a strange and unsettling discovery, plus witness some seriously bad news coming out of the sky.

Where to watch: In theaters

Scary movies:From ‘Halloween Ends’ to ‘Nope,’ here’s every horror movie you need to see in 2022

‘Bullet Train’ (July 29)

Stars: Brad Pitt, Zazie Beetz, Sandra Bullock 

Director: David Leitch

The skinny: Pitt headlines the ensemble action comedy as an assassin hired to retrieve a mysterious briefcase from a high-speed train going from Tokyo to Kyoto but becomes embroiled in violent high jinks with a bunch of other colorful killers (including Beetz, Joey King, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Bad Bunny) onboard.

Where to watch: In theaters

‘Bullet Train’:Andrew Koji eagerly awaits an invite to Brad Pitt’s house

Tom Cruise: Hollywood’s last real movie star | Entertainment News

Mr. Cruise came of age in Hollywood in the shadow of movie stars like Mr. Schwarzenegger and Mr. Stallone, where the name above the title meant everything. Show up to see Mr. Schwarzenegger play a cyborg assassin? Sure. How about a cop forced to play with kindergartners? Absolutely. What about a twin separated at birth from an unlikely Danny DeVito? Why not? In those days, the genre didn’t matter. Moviegoers showed up for the actors.

That is not the case today.

“We don’t create movie stars anymore,” said Mr. Godfrey, adding that studios have been pulling back on marketing and publicity commitments for years. “As a result, there are less and less meaningful names who will help open a movie.”

Mr. Robbins agreed that it was much more difficult today to become a global star in the vein of Mr. Cruise, not because of the studios’ commitments but rather the state of the industry.

“It’s Batman. It’s Spiderman. It’s very different,” he said in an interview from Cannes. “And it’s not just because a lot of these characters are hidden by a mask and tights and a cape. It’s a very different type of filmmaking. And the world is different because of streaming, and all of the other content, the fight for attention is just much more fierce than ever before. Thirty-six years ago when Top Gun came out, there was no streaming, there was no cellphone. There was no internet. We went to the theater to be entertained. There’s just so much choice now.”

The entertainment world has undergone seismic change. But Mr. Cruise’s success also owes a debt to his tirelessness. Will Smith, in his 2021 memoir, affectionately called Mr. Cruise a “cyborg” when it came to his endurance on the promotional circuit. Reminiscing about his own efforts to reach the pinnacle of stardom, Mr. Smith said that whenever he’d land in a country to hype a new movie, he would ask the local executives for Mr. Cruise’s promotional schedule, which often included four-and-a-half-hour stretches on a red carpet. “And I vowed to do two hours more than whatever he did in every country,” Mr. Smith wrote.

Mr. Smith wasn’t the only one to notice. Studio executives have come to rely on Mr. Cruise’s commitment to promotion as his superpower.

“He’s one of a dying breed that will literally work the world and treat the world as though each region is massively important. Because it is,” said Chris Aronson, paramount’s president of domestic distribution. “So many others roll their eyes. ‘I don’t want to do that.’ With Tom, it’s always built in. It’s a massive undertaking. But it pays off. It’s why he has legions of fans around the world.”

Some would argue that the age of the movie star died when the Marvel Cinematic Universe took over pop culture and movies based on known intellectual property seemed to be the only way to get large numbers of people into theatres. Mr. Cruise has not been immune to these changes.

In the past decade, Mr. Cruise starred in original titles like American Made, Oblivion, and Edge of Tomorrow— all movies that played up his action bona fides. None were hits. His reboot of The Mummy, which was supposed to jump start Universal Pictures’ monster movie series, was a disappointment for the studio, generating only $80 million in domestic receipts. The series never took off.

But while not taking part in any superhero franchises, Mr. Cruise has managed to capitalize on intellectual property that he’s already successfully exploited. Roles like the homicide investigator Jack Reacher, and the secret agent Ethan Hunt in Mission Impossible, have performed well at the box office. He’s hoping to pull that off again with Top Gun: Maverick.

“I think there is so much choice in the world right now with the amount of content that is produced that every movie has turned into a bull’s-eye movie,” said David Ellison, chief executive of Skydance, the producer of Top Gun: Maverick and a number of other films with Mr. Cruise. “The opportunity to have something work and be anything less than A-plus is simply not the marketplace that we’re living in.”

Glen Powell, one of Mr. Cruise’s co-stars in Top Gun: Maverick, cites him as one of the reasons he pursued acting. Mr. Cruise is also the reason Mr. Powell is in the film. Mr. Powell initially tried out for the role of Rooster, the tough guy son of Maverick’s former wingman Goose — a part that went to Miles Teller. Disappointed when he was offered the role of the cocksure daredevil Hangman instead, Mr. Powell only took the part after Mr. Cruise gave him some advice: Don’t pick the best parts, pick the best movies and make the parts the best you can.

“I will never forget that moment,” Mr. Powell said in an interview. “He asked me, ‘What kind of career do you want?’ And I’m like, ‘You man, I’m trying to be you.’”

As such, he’s studied Mr. Cruise’s career and is trying to emulate it. He’s shied away from the superhero genre, so far, and has some theories on what makes Mr. Cruise unique.

“He is the guy that’s not trying to occupy the I.P. He’s trying to tell a compelling story that just ends up becoming the I.P. because it’s so good,” Mr. Powell said. He sees a substantive difference there — the difference between going to the movies to see Tom Cruise, the movie star, or going to see other I.P. Or, as Mr. Powell puts it: “There’s a difference between stepping into fandom rather than creating your own fandom.”

He knows he’s learned from the master. “Even if I pick up a little of what Tom taught me,” he said, “I’m going to be way more prepared than any other actor out there.”

He might. Or he might be learning from an outdated playbook.

There is a moment in Top Gun: Maverick where Ed Harris, playing Maverick’s superior, tells him, “The end is inevitable. Your kind is headed to extinction.”

And Mr. Cruise, still holding on to that brash self-confidence that made him a movie star four decades ago, grins at him and replies, “Maybe so, sir. But not today.”

There are plenty of people in the movie industry who hope he’s right.

RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat on Samrat Prithviraj: Were now looking at history from Indias perspective

RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat on Friday watched Bollywood movie Samrat Prithviraj and said, “We are now looking at history from India’s perspective”.

He also described the movie, starring Akshay Kumar and Manushi Chhillar in lead roles, as “world class”.

“It is a fact-based movie and rightly sends out the message the country needs today. We used to read our history written by others. Now, we are looking at history from India’s perspective,” Bhagwat, who watched the movie along with other top Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh leaders, said.

Chandraprakash Dwivedi, the movie’s director, works closely with the Sangh-affiliate Sanskar Bharti. The movie has earned Rs 10.70 crore on the opening day, the film’s producers announced Saturday. In a statement, Dwivedi said the film’s day one collection proves that viewers have connected with the story of courage and sacrifice.

“The Samrat believed that India is for Indians and fought till his last breathe to keep India free from invaders. Our goal was to tell his story to as many Indians as possible and with audiences calling our tribute a ‘must watch visual spectacle’ already, we are hoping that we entertain our countrymen to the fullest in the days to come,” he added.

BJP-ruled Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Uttarakhand have already made the movie tax-free.

The film also stars Sanjay Dutt and Sonu Sood in pivotal roles. A Yash Raj Films production, the movie has been released in Hindi, Tamil and Telugu.

(With agency inputs)

A Streets of Rage movie is reportedly being developed by the team behind Sonic | VGC

A film adaptation of the arcade Sega classic Streets of Rage is in development, according to a new report.

Deadline claims that dj2 Entertainment, the company behind the Sonic film series, is working on the project.

A spec script for the project was written by Derek Kolstad, the man behind the John Wick franchise, it’s claimed.

Sega has yet to confirm the project, but following the record-breaking success of the Sonic the Hedgehog film adaptation, it’s likely that Sega will want to continue to capitalise on bringing its classic titles to the big screen.

The original Sonic the Hedgehog was a surprise success, with it becoming the top-grossing video game adaptation of all time in the US. paramount Pictures and Sega revealed in February that a third Sonic film and a live-action TV series have entered production.

VGC’s Sonic the Hedgehog 2 movie review called it a much better film than the original and said there’s a pleasant surprise to be found in the chemistry between its new characters, which include Tails and Knuckles.

Following the success of Sonic, it’s likely that video game movie adaptations will increase in prominence at the box office.

A Ghost of Tsushima film is currently in development at Sony, while on the small screen, The Last of Us’ HBO TV adaptation is in the process of filming. 

The director of both Sonic films has even said that he’d love to direct a Super Smash Bros. film but conceded that it would be logistically difficult. 

HC rejects plea for CBI probe into killing of RSS worker Sanjith in Palakkad

Subsequently, the police, during its investigation into the recent murder of PFI leader Subair (43) in Palakkad, had found that he was killed to allegedly avenge the murder of Sanjith.

The scrapped ‘Ugly Sonic’ movie design has a cameo in the new Chip ‘n Dale film | VGC

The original version of Sonic from the Sonic the Hedgehog movie makes a cameo appearance in the new Disney+ film Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers.

The original Sonic design, which had a more ‘realistic’ appearance, was scrapped following a backlash after the first Sonic movie trailer (which can be seen embedded below) was shown.

Sonic was redesigned into something more aesthetically pleasing, and the movie went on to enjoy the best opening weekend of any video game adaptation at the time.

That original design has become internet legend, however, hence its appearance in Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers, which arrives on Disney+ today.

In the new Disney+ movie, ‘Ugly Sonic’ has his own guest booth at a comic convention, and is trying to make the most of his infamy by selling signed photos of himself.

Talking about the convention-goers, Ugly Sonic says: “They’ll like me for who I am, not like last time when the internet got one look at my human teeth and burned the place down.”

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He then signs an autograph for a teenager, who chuckles to his friend.

“Oh, they’re laughing at me,” Ugly Sonic reacts. “I know that. You can’t hurt my feelings if I’m in on the joke.”

He then claims to have been offered a job on a reality show called Ugly Sonic, Uglier Crimes where he accompanies the FBI on ‘ride-alongs’.

The director of Rescue Rangers explained how the Ugly Sonic cameo came about on Friday, and said he’d like to “thank the lawyers”.

The scrapped ‘Ugly Sonic’ movie design has a cameo in the new Chip ‘n Dale film
Ugly Sonic is seen at a comic convention in the movie

The original Sonic the Hedgehog trailer was first shown online in April 2019 and was instantly met with widespread displeasure from the Sonic fanbase.

After the trailer’s release the less exaggerated, more realistic Sonic design came under heavy criticism on social media, with even the character’s co-creator Yuji Naka acknowledging the unpopular design.

Sonic movie director Jeff Fowler then took to Twitter to reassure fans that their message had been received.

“Thank you for the support. And the criticism,” he wrote. “The message is loud and clear… you aren’t happy with the design you want changes. It’s going to happen.”

Adding the hashtag #GottaFixFast, he promised: “Everyone at paramount and Sega are fully committed to making this character the best he can be.”

The resulting redesign was a clear success for paramount. The first film performed well enough to justify a sequel, which has now become the highest-grossing video game movie of all time in the US.

paramount and Sega also announced in February that a third Sonic the Hedgehog film and a live-action TV series focusing on Knuckles have already entered production.

‘Attack’ movie review: John Abraham doesn’t disappoint as the last man standing

Action always works best when it is backed by emotion. Who knows it better than John Abraham who  Force-d his way into the genre in 2011 with the Nishikant Kamat film? With  Action, he aims for level 2… and doesn’t disappoint.

In action films, the emotion is usually revenge, and in debutant director Lakshya Raj Anand’s film, it’s very much the fulcrum. But there is more. For a film whose title explains its intentions in one word, it is not as brutish as the title suggests.  Attack plays out like a smart video game designed for teenagers of all age groups where the soldier — sorry — super soldier hasn’t lost his heart yet in the web of artificial intelligence.  

Propelled by the nationalist narrative, the premise doesn’t even test the average intelligence. A terror group with Muslim names has mounted an attack on India. The target is our Parliament. The good thing is Anand doesn’t load us with explainers and hits the ground running. He remains focused on the task at hand in this hostage drama. As the romantic angle is intertwined with action, he doesn’t digress into love songs, and there’s not even an item number to catch the breath.

Arjun (John), an Army major, who has been almost reduced to a vegetable in a terror attack, is asked by his mentor Subramanium (Prakash Raj) to undergo a risky experiment that would transform him into a one-man army and provide him an opportunity to save his country and avenge the death of his beloved (Jacqueline Fernandez). Unlike the cyborgs that Hollywood factories unleash on us, Arjun retains some human emotions beneath a chiseled body.

When he grapples to live with his artificial robotic assistant IRA, the film gets some refreshing light moments. When he struggles with his inner demons, we sense what it could have been. This solider carries a chip in his cerebellum, not on his shoulder. The potential has not been fully realised, and leaves a lot of scope for a sequel.

Taut and fast-paced, the action choreography is closer to the stuff that Hollywood offers and the electric background score provides reason for the adrenaline glands to make their presence felt. The best part is whenever Lakshya takes a leap of faith, it doesn’t look fake, particularly, when the action shifts to the Parliament House. The cinematography is fluid as the camera judiciously moves from tight close-ups to the long shots. Drone cameras have become a fad these days, but cinematographers Will Humpris, P.S. Vinod and Soumik Mukherjee don’t go for the overkill.

The politics of the war room is at times problematic, sometimes even juvenile, but good fun in the context of the film. When Prakash Raj says yesterday’s fiction is today’s fact, we know what it means.

The writers (John is one of them) have loaded Arjun with so much trauma that John doesn’t need to express much. We are just expected to get it! When John, who has also co-produced the film, is with Jacqueline in the frame, we know who has the greater possibility to have an acting muscle. And the moment action becomes a one-dimensional word, John is our man. He is credible as the last man standing. 

Prakash Raj is solid as ever. Rakul Preet Singh as the scientist is saddled with an under-written part, as is veteran Kiran Kumar. As the crude North Indian politician, Rajat Kapoor attempts to play against the type, but falters. It is Elham Ehsas as the counter force Hamid Gul, who is also fighting a personal battle in the guise of faith, that provides meat to the action. The London-based actor has played variants of Gul in international productions. Here, he is believable as the face of terror who perhaps carries a pusillanimous heart.

Overall, if the audience can suspend their disbelief after the pandemic for two hours,  Action is a nationalist substitute for PubG, plus a heart that hasn’t stopped beating, yet.

Attack is currently playing in theatres. 

‘Radhe Shyam’ movie review: Visual aesthetics and little else

At the end of Radhe Shyam, what stayed with me were its picture perfect frames that were painstakingly made to look like paintings. Cinematographer Manoj Paramahamsa, production designer Raveender Reddy and costume designers Thota Vijayabhaskar and Eka Lakhani create the mood for an epic fairytale. But how long can one soak in the atmosphere, admiring the columns of light that pour through tall windows and the long corridors of the hospital and the homes in Italy? Sure, the film boasts of Prabhas and Pooja Hegde who have a good screen presence. But the soul of the film, the story, is flaky. What is meant to be an aching romance of two people racing against destiny turns out to be bland and listless. 

In this period drama set in the 1970s, the protagonist Vikramaditya (Prabhas) is positioned as ‘the Einstein of palmistry’. His guru Paramahamsa (Krishnam Raju in the Telugu version; Sathyaraj in other versions) is consulted by a team of Indian space scientists before a mission. The guru understands a scientist’s scepticism of palmistry, astrology and related practices. He cites the example of Arundhati and Vashista stars being known long before they were discovered by modern science; there are things beyond human comprehension, he says, thus setting the tone for events that unfold later.

Vikramaditya carries forward the guru’s legacy and early on in the film, reads Indira Gandhi’s palm and predicts that she is going to declare Emergency! Later, there is a passing photographic reference of John Lennon taking Vikramaditya’s autograph. Radhe Shyam might have done away with stunt sequences one would find in a star film, but tries to create a halo around Prabhas’s character through such sketchy sequences. 

Scratch beneath this layer of heroism and Vikramaditya comes across as a guy who has surrendered to the diktats of destiny. The way he indulges in casual relationships, which he terms as ‘flirtationships’, is a clue that he is commitment phobic with good reason. Ultimately, of course, he falls in love when he meets the exuberant but mysterious Dr Prerna (Pooja Hegde), who also runs a mile from relationships. 

The beautifully mounted ‘Ee Rathale’ (composed by Justin Prabhakaran) serves to show how the two who are destined to not meet or fall in love, continue to cross paths. In portions like this, the film manages to create some magic. Vikramaditya and Prerna’s courtship happens amid hints being dropped about what makes them the way they are. It is also punctuated by banal comic portions in a hospital ward. 

The film wastes a bunch of talented actors, making them merely stand by and utter a line or two. Sachin Khedekar at least gets something to do. Jayaram, Jagapathi Babu and Priyadarshi are wasted. The one who is wasted the most is Murali Sharma, and that too saddled with a bad wig. Kunaal Roy Kapur and Bhagyashree also have nothing much to do and were perhaps roped in to have familiar faces for the Hindi audiences. 

For the first hour or so, the aesthetic visuals, the music (background score by S S Thaman) and the lead actors who are made to look picture-perfect, accentuate the dreamy setting. Pooja Hegde looks every bit the princess and in later portions, shows a glimpse of her acting potential that is waiting to be tapped. Prabhas is effective in his portrayal, but there isn’t much in the story or characterisation that challenges him as an actor.

When the conflict between destiny and love takes centrestage, the film begins to lose whatever little charm it had. The biggest issue with Radhe Shyam is that it never sucks you in. The ship sequence at the fag end of the film sinks an already shaky film, despite Prabhas being made to scale a tall ship in a Baahubalian manner.

The parallels with Mani Ratnam’s Geethanjali are also tough to shake off. The journeys of the two lovers against what destiny has in store for them can be viewed as a hat tip to that iconic romance. While Geethanjali also rode on a premise that required suspension of disbelief, it was all heart and made us root for the protagonists. Radhe Shyam could have benefited with some of that soul in its writing.

Drive to Survive’s reach goes beyond F1 fans. Now, other sports want to copy show’s success

As a kid, Mike Janik could be found spending his days crashing Hot Wheels cars together and playing racing games. 

Now, two decades later, he’s “giddy” knowing he’s attending this weekend’s 2022 Formula One Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal — and can check watching “the pinnacle of motorsports” off his bucket list.

Growing up, Janik had always followed more of the rally scene. Until one day, he stumbled upon F1 highlights on YouTube and his interest went “from zero to 100.”

“I went from having no knowledge of it to … at the drop of a hat, at the snap of a finger, I tune in for every race weekend,” Janik said. “I don’t miss a beat.”

Ralf Schumacher, centre, of BMW Williams team reacts as his brother Michael Schumacher, left, and Mika Hakkinen pour champagne down his back following his victory at the Canadian Grand Prix Montreal in 2001. Since this victory, the sport’s fans have grown, much of it due to new movies and TV shows. (Reuters)

Since the Netflix series Drive to Survive — featuring behind-the-scenes footage of the usually secretive racing teams — debuted in 2019, the audience for F1 has skyrocketed. In May, the show was confirmed for fifth and sixth seasons. And Apple Studios confirmed it’s producing a racing film starring Brad Pitt co-produced by champion driver Lewis Hamilton.

But it’s more than other studios trying to cash in on the new audience for F1. Other sports, like the PGA Tour, want to see if they can too.

While F1 focuses on high-octane racing, the show lifts the curtain on the drama and complexity about what goes into making a livelihood as a Formula One driver.

“I think the most revealing part of that series … was just sort of understanding the real team effort behind it,” Janik said. “Seeing these teams put everything they can to eke out thousandths of a second and just perform at this superhuman level, I think that’s really what sold me.”

Mike Janik can be seen playing racing games as a child. As an adult, he’s become a huge fan of Formula One. (Submitted by Mike Janik)

Popularity as driving force behind new content

The humanity of the show is part of its winning formula, says Adam Seaborn, a sports media analyst and head of partnerships at Playmakers Capital.

It takes audiences beyond the track, giving people the chance to connect with the drivers and teams — and it breaks down the complexity of racing for people who might otherwise not watch sports, he said.

“You can get a storyline,” he said. “You can know their back stories, you know the rivalries, where they grew up … So it’s easy to understand who versus whom every single week.”

The popularity of the sport and its Netflix show has driven the streaming platform into a bidding war for the broadcast rights to F1 series racing — hoping to unseat ESPN, whose TV rights end next season.

People are also watching the show outside of primetime hours, with an average of 200,000 to 400,000 viewers per race between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m., Seaborn said. In Canada alone, the show’s ratings doubled from the previous year, he said.

Netflix is in millions and millions of homes in Canada,” Seaborn said. “I think [Formula One] hit an intersection of digital media, of social media and of sport all at the perfect time.” 

A car can be seen from the stands during the Formula One free practice session at Gilles Villeneuve circuit in Montreal. Janik will be among those watching this weekend. (Eric Bolte/USA TODAY Sports)

Steering into stardom

In the past, films like Rush and Ford v Ferrari marked a starting point of racing’s growing media presence. But reality TV boosted Formula One’s visibility, straddling the line between sports and entertainment.

“What we are currently obsessed with and interested in is actually driving the content, which I think is so exciting,” said Alexandra Nikolajev, who began watching the series during the pandemic.

Since the Netflix series Drive to Survive — featuring behind-the-scenes footage of the usually secretive racing teams — debuted in 2019, the audience for F1 has skyrocketed. In May, it was confirmed for fifth and sixth seasons.  (Netflix)

She became fascinated with the sport and its level of luxury and exclusivity. Only 20 drivers can compete, creating a world of drama, politics and teamwork between the drivers and vehicle creators behind the scenes.

And F1 stars themselves are embracing new media, said Nikolajev, who shares pop culture analysis on TikTok with her more than 92,000 followers.

“They’re starting to go on podcasts, they’re starting to do interviews,” she said, adding that fans are “starting to be invested.” 

Not everyone agrees with bringing F1 racing to the masses, Nikolajev said. There’s been backlash from legacy fans who would prefer the sport maintain its air of exclusivity.

“But I think that the whole point of content in this day and age is accessibility — and bringing us all together. And I think it’s … amazing that we’re continuing to push that boundary.”

Drivers advocate for social change

Reaching that larger audience has given drivers a chance to push other boundaries. 

Drivers are using their celebrity status to champion human rights issues — and other causes they’re connected to, said Shanika Abeysinghe, co-host of Get Checkered, a Canadian Formula One podcast. 

“The drivers are advocating for changes, whether it’s in their own little world or publicly or whatever that looks like,” said Abeysinghe.

Sebastian Vettel has advocated for the inclusion of an LGBTQ driver in the Formula One, wearing a rainbow shirt with the words “Same Love” on it at the 2021 Hungarian Grand Prix. Hamilton is the only Black Formula One driver, and has created a non-profit organization to identify and reduce the barriers to Black people in U.K. motorsports.

Drive to Survive fan Alexandra Nikolajev shares pop culture analysis on TikTok with her more than 92,000 followers. She’s seen here with some amazing cars. (Submitted by Alexandra Nikolajev)

But for all the sport has risen in popularity, Abeysinghe said, it still fails to reflect the diversity of its growing fan base. 

“It’s the powers that be, which is the FIA, that need to realize that we need a woman to drive, we need someone that identifies as LGBTQ to drive,” she said. “There’s only 20 seats — so how do we create equity in a sport that’s inherently inequitable?”

Inspiring copycat shows

As Drive to Survive looks to its next season, other sporting bodies are exploring the possibility of using the show as a template to develop sports media. 

Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton walks through the paddock at the Canadian Grand Prix on Thursday. Hamilton is one of the world’s best drivers and has created a non-profit to reduce barriers for other Black people to enter the sport. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

The PGA tour has commissioned a deal with Netflix to provide behind-the-scenes access to the sport, attempting to recreate Drive to Survive’s success. 

“In many ways there’s a lot of similarities. It’s athletes who are independent contractors who have great storylines,” said Seaborn.

“You get them in with the entertainment piece. It’s exciting; it should be fun. And if you become a real fan, you get hardcore.”

Sonic 2 is now the highest-grossing video game movie of all time in the US | VGC

Sonic the Hedgehog 2 is now the highest-grossing video game movie of all time in the United States.

In its third week in US cinemas, the movie held firm at second place in the box office charts, grossing a further $15.6 million on top of its existing earnings.

According to Box Office Mojo, this means the movie has now grossed a total of $146,258,543 in the US.

As noted by Sonic news site Tails’ Channel, this extra $15.6 million takes Sonic 2 above the total US box office of Pokémon Detective Pikachu, Uncharted and the original Sonic movie, making it the highest-grossing video game movie ever in the US box office.

It’s important to note, however, that this only relates to the domestic US box office, and that the film still has some way to go before it can be considered the highest-grossing video game movie worldwide.

Box Office Mojo states that Sonic 2’s total worldwide gross currently stands at $288 million, which makes it just the 10th highest-grossing video game movie worldwide behind the likes of the original Sonic movie, The Angry Birds Movie, Uncharted, Detective Pikachu and, the current number one, Warcraft (which grossed $439 million worldwide).

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It will be some time before Sonic 2’s final worldwide domestic gross is known. The movie won’t be released in Japan until August 19, for example, while paramount suspended its release in Russia following its invasion of Ukraine, with no indication of when (or if) it will ever release in that country.

It’s clear, however, that paramount considers the Sonic movie franchise a success, and wants to continue it going forward.

paramount and Sega announced in February that a third Sonic the Hedgehog film and a live-action TV series focusing on Knuckles have already entered production.

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