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Read preview"Oppenheimer" star Cillian Murphy has reunited with director Danny Boyle for the long-awaited horror sequel "28 Years Later," two decades after his breakout role in "28 Days Later." In the original film, Murphy played Jim, a bicycle courier who wakes up from a coma to find that the UK has been hit by the "Rage" virus, which turns people into zombies. While Boyle produced the 2007 sequel, "28 Weeks Later," the Juan Carlos Fresnadillo-directed film focused more on gory action, than the suspense-driven horror of the original. Related storiesIn January 2024, The Hollywood Reporter confirmed that "28 Years Later" is in the works by Boyle and "28 Days Later" writer Alex Garland. In May, Sony Motion Pictures Group chairman Tom Rothman confirmed to Deadline that the "Oppenheimer" star will reprise his role as Jim in "28 Years Later."
Persons: , Oppenheimer, Cillian Murphy, Danny Boyle, Murphy, Jim, Boyle, Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, Alex Garland, Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor, Johnson Jodie Comer, Johnson, Guy, Steve Granitz, Gareth Cattermole, I've, Alex, Danny, I'm, we'll, Tom Rothman, Rothman, Jack O'Connell, Ralph Fiennes, Erin Kellyman, Comer, Anthony Dod Mantle, It's Danny, he's, Nia DaCosta, Karwai Tang, Garland Organizations: Service, Business, Office, Hollywood Reporter, Angeles, Sony Motion Pictures, United States Copyright Office Locations: Britain, British, London
The boss is back in charge
  + stars: | 2023-09-17 | by ( Beatrice Nolan | Sarah Jackson | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +7 min
After a brief transition of power to workers, it feels like bosses are back in charge. Between the rise of AI, return-to-office mandates, and layoffs — employee anxiety is high. Between the rise of job-threatening AI, strict return-to-office mandates, and sweeping layoffs, it feels like bosses are clawing back what little remains of employees' power . The economic trend began in early 2021 in the wake of the pandemic and saw millions of workers quit their jobs . AdvertisementAdvertisementThe charge is largely being led by Big Tech and banks, with varying degrees of severity and pushback.
Persons: didn't, Peter Cappelli, Cappelli, Erin Kelly, Stanford, Nick Bloom, they're, Raj Choudhury, OpenAI's ChatGPT Organizations: Service, Companies, Wharton Business School, MIT Sloan, Big Tech, Amazon, Web Services, Harvard Business School, Octopus Energy Locations: Wall, Silicon
Setting that aside, a Disney+ revival series isn’t without its charms, in a more contemporary narrative that brings back Warwick Davis while focusing on the next generation. The latter were played by Val Kilmer and Joanne Whalley, respectively, who as an off-screen bonus got married after the film. Jonathan Kasdan (who also worked on “Solo”) serves as showrunner, collaborating with four directors who each oversaw back-to-back episodes. While that combination doesn’t add up into making “Willow” significantly worthier of the “beloved” label than its late-’80s predecessor, consumed on its own unpretentious terms, it’s easy enough to like. “Willow” premieres November 30 on Disney+.
It’s a refreshing turn against recent trends that a cult classic without the sizable built-in fanbase of, say, a “Star Wars” or Marvel property would receive the fancy reboot treatment. “You could be walking around a convention floor, and in a sea of Harley Quinns, you’ll spot a Willow,” Delaney observed. High hopesThe arrival of the new 8-episode series comes with high hopes from the small but mighty fanbase. Bob Dolman, who wrote the screenplay for the original film, also acted as supervising producer on the first episode. Kilmer’s ex-wife Joanne Whalley, who he met on the original film, will be back in the series as warrior Sorsha.
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