The final trailer for the auteur's next film has revealed what's hanging in the sky above stars Keke Palmer and Daniel Kaluuya.
The last shot of the trailer features Kaluuya on horseback with a massive UFO just behind him. “This could be an opportunity,” Palmer tells Kaluuya, convincing him they need to film the UFO. “I'm talking rich and famous for life.” She promises that they'll capture what no one else has captured before: “Undeniable proof of aliens on camera," she says. In the new trailer, Kaluuya says he saw “something big above the clouds,” while Palmer wonders whether what he saw was responsible for the death of Pops, an elder relative of theirs we see fall off a horse.
As promised, the final trailer for Jordan Peele's third horror movie Nope has arrived, and it's loaded up with all kinds of new footage and additional ...
On that note, the film’s cinematographer is Hoyte van Hoytema, whose previous work includes Let the Right One In, Spectre, and the Christopher Nolan films Interstellar, Dunkirk, and Tenet. Universal will be releasing Nope in theaters on July 22, 2022. The good news?
Keke Palmer and Daniel Kaluuya are on the hunt for UFOs in Peele's latest horror flick.
“I think we pissed them off,” Emerald admits after the house appears to be doused in blood (!!!). Forget being filmed, whoever’s flying this UFO doesn’t even want to be seen: “I don’t think they take you if you don’t look at it,” OJ theorizes. Being of enterprising spirit, the pair sets out to get “undeniable proof of aliens on camera” as a money-making scheme: “I’m talking rich and famous for life,” Emerald assures her brother. Still, though we may not be convinced that aliens are the true horror behind Peele’s latest, Emerald and OJ Hayward (Keke Palmer and Daniel Kaluuya, respectively) sure are.
Jordan Peele's "Nope," in theaters July 22, teased alien hunting and extraterrestrial adventures with Daniel Kaluuya and Keke Palmer.
Peele writes and directs “Nope” as well as produces under his Monkeypaw Productions banner. Ian Cooper also produces “Nope,” with Robert Graf serving as the executive producer. The Haywoods look to venture into filmmaking themselves after James (Kaluuya) spots “something above the clouds,” and the siblings set out to sell footage of a UFO. The only issue? Their great-great-great-grandfather was also the man in the iconic image of a jockey on a horse that made history in a 19th-century study of how to make images “move,” marking the start of motion pictures. We used some new techniques that we’ve never seen before.” After haunting teasers and much debate over what exactly “Nope” means, the summary of the film has been unveiled ahead of its July 22 theatrical release.
If Get Out was a “social thriller” and Us was more supernatural horror, I might guess that Nope is Peele's chance to make something closer to an adventure ...
Even a “disappointing” $160 million worldwide cume would be four times a theoretical (shooting with IMAX cameras is expense) $40 million budget in raw theatrical alone. This discussion is mostly academic considering the straight-out-of-the-gate success that will likely greet Nope. Get Out opened with $33 million and legged out to $176 million domestic and $255 million worldwide on a $5 million budget in early 2017. It does have a genuine marquee director in Jordan Peele, whose last movie broke the opening day record ($28 million on Friday) for a live-action original.
Jordan Peele's Nope stars Daniel Kaluuya and Keke Palmer in its latest trailer, along with Steven Yeun and Michael Wincott. The movie will be released in ...
Nope is set to be released in theaters on July 22. Based on the trailer, it seems that Kaluuya and Palmer are ranchers and Hollywood animal trainers who are always up for a good hustle. Nope is Peele’s first movie since 2019’s Us, and the director’s third movie overall.
The film reunites Peele with Oscar® winner Daniel Kaluuya (Get Out, Judas and the Black Messiah), who is joined by Keke Palmer (Hustlers, Alice) and Oscar® ...
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nopemovie Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nopemovie/ “What’s a bad miracle?” Oscar® winner Jordan Peele disrupted and redefined modern horror with Get Out and then Us. Now, he reimagines the summer movie with a new pop nightmare: the expansive horror epic, Nope. The film reunites Peele with Oscar® winner Daniel Kaluuya (Get Out, Judas and the Black Messiah), who is joined by Keke Palmer (Hustlers, Alice) and Oscar® nominee Steven Yeun (Minari, Okja) as residents in a lonely gulch of inland California who bear witness to an uncanny and chilling discovery.
You know the drill by now. The marketing for the latest Jordan Peele film drums up excitement among horror fans and general audiences alike, ...
Is this merely an attempt to appeal to an even more wide-ranging group of audiences or will the film truly end up a tonally-balanced blend of everything we've seen to this point? Granted, it's dangerous to rely too much on the tone that a piece of marketing is selling, given how adept trailer editors are at using music or carefully selected shots to make a movie seem more comedic or more serious than it may actually be in context. That said, I'm digging how much more overtly Peele seems to be trading in comedy and horror, blending the two despite how many moviegoers seem convinced that multiple tones can't coexist in the same movie. "Right here, you are going to witness absolute spectacle," obviously referring to the surprise under wraps behind him (which we know to be a horse in a big glass box, based on what we've seen before), but easily applicable on a meta-textual level to what seems more and more like another quintessential Jordan Peele event movie. It's big enough that when parked directly over the Haywood ranch, it blocks out any rain from landing on the house and instead sends it streaming off its edges to land in a neat circumference around the property. We now know that the scope and scale will be considerably larger than we may have first thought, based on the early trailers that appeared to tease a largely one-location thriller along the lines of M. Night Shyamalan's "Signs." That comparison only felt even more relevant once everyone stopped playing coy about the presence of UFOs in the story, but what other information can we glean from the latest trailer? "I'm talking rich and famous for life," Emerald excitedly tells her brother as she formulates their scheme to turn these traumatizing events to their advantage and capture that sweet "Oprah shot" of the UFO. Right after the Haywood siblings commiserate over what must have killed their "Pops," we get our first look (in this particular trailer, at least) at Yeun's character named Ricky "Jupe" Park, who is talking to a small but dedicated group of onlookers at his desert rodeo of sorts. Now, based on how every new piece of footage we've seen from "Nope" lights the internet on fire as everyone attempts to figure out what's really going on underneath the surface, it sure seems as if Peele will have back-to-back-to-back hits on his hands once his latest film finally releases. With today's release of the 3-minute final trailer, we got our best and most revealing look yet at the upcoming movie ... and, honestly, it's still difficult to tell exactly what the movie will be about. "Nope" only marks the third Peele movie to this point, but already the horror director has managed to build a brand all of his own. The marketing for the latest Jordan Peele film drums up excitement among horror fans and general audiences alike, we all spend the intervening months until release coming up with theories and rampant speculation about what the visionary filmmaker might have in store, and then the movie comes out and somehow lives up to (if not exceeds) all the hype to deliver a fresh, original, and sorely-needed box office hit.
Bay Area viewers were all over the new trailer released Thursday when they discovered Jordan Peele had brought a beloved local retail chain back from the ...
(SFGATE reached out to Universal for confirmation but did not hear back by time of publication.) Founded in Silicon Valley in 1985, Fry’s Electronics announced it would close all 30 of its existing locations in February 2021, and filming for “Nope” was underway later that summer. But when objects start to fall from the sky and other strange events occur, they attempt to cash in on the unexplained phenomenon and record evidence of suspected extraterrestrial activity with the help of — who else?