Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Total Recall 2070 was created by Art Monterastelli. [2] The series is named after the 1990 film Total Recall, [3] loosely based on Philip K. Dick's short story "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale", but it has been noted as sharing no major plot points or characters with it, other than the Rekall company and the concept of virtual vacations.
Actor Bryan Cranston was cast as the film's villain. [9] [25] Ethan Hawke was cast in a cameo role, and commented that his character had a monologue about five pages long; [26] [27] however, this role was cut from the theatrical version of film, but is part of the extended Director’s Cut. [28] Later cast additions included Bill Nighy [29] and ...
After the show was originally aired on Channel 4, it was made available by Netflix, who then commissioned a second season globally on 17 November 2016, billed as a Netflix Original. [8] [9] The show concluded with a third season, which was released exclusively on Netflix on 1 January 2018. The show was removed from the platform in January 2025.
Let the "RoboFlop" jokes fly -- MGM and Sony's Columbia Pictures remake of 1987's "RoboCop" looks to be a dud at the United States box office. The film, which cost a reported $100 million to make ...
Kate Hudson is facing the pressure in the first trailer for Netflix’s new show “Running Point, which will premiere on Feb. 27. After a scandal leads to her brother’s forced resignation, Isla ...
Total Recall was released on VHS and LaserDisc on November 1, 1990; it was rushed out to take advantage of the Christmas season. [ x ] It was priced at $24.99, a relatively low figure compared to standard prices closer to $90, because audience research had shown a willingness to purchase the film due to its rewatchability.
Netflix jumped ahead of Thursday’s planned release by Nielsen of monthly viewership through TV sets, revealed in its second-quarter shareholder letter today that its share of total TV viewing in ...
The new adaptation was not a remake of the original film but a "much more faithful" adaptation of the source material. Simon Kinberg and Audrey Chon were announced as producers under Kinberg's Genre Films, alongside Nira Park of Wright's British production company Complete Fiction. [15] In April 2024, Glen Powell was cast in the lead role. [1]