Filters Showing 1– 20 of 140 movies
The continued adventures of double-agent Evelyn Salt. Kurt Wimmer, the writer on Salt, has not written a script, but "has ideas for how to advance the story of the spy thriller" according to L.A. Times. Sony will or will not greenlight the sequel based on the worldwide box office success of Salt.
Dudley Frank (William H. Macy) is due to marry Maggie. The boys decide to take Dudley out for one last ride.
Sequel to the 2011 blockbuster comedy. The studio has yet to hire a writer so no plot details are available yet.
A forth installment in the Madagascar franchise.
In the original, directed by Chris Columbus, Robin Williams played an estranged father who poses as a Scottish nanny, Euphegenia Doubtfire, in order to get access to his children and successfully bypass his ex-wife (Sally Field). The film grossed $219 million domestically.
A sequel to the 2004 comedy White Chicks, which will see Marlon and Shawn Wayans reprise their roles as sibling FBI agents posing as a pair of white ladies.
The films will take place 20 years after the original, when reinforcements of the original alien race return to Earth after finally receiving a distress call.
Sequel to the 1988 comedy in which Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito discovered that they were siblings. This time, they discover a third sibling.
Revolves around former United Nations investigator Gerry Lane and his continuing efforts to help battle the zombie hoards.
The story follows Baltimore's Turnblad family in the 1960's.
The final chapter in the Wonder Woman trilogy.
A dark comedy about 14 year-old Jesse Urchin, an ambitious yet overweight ballerina with an overbearing mother (Kristen Bell) who will stop at nothing to become a star. The girl enters a "Mean Girls"-type environment when she has to prove her worth in class.
A small time hood is framed and sent to prison, only to exact revenge years later.
The fourth installment of the Star Trek franchise.
A re-imagining of the classic King Arthur tale.
One half of a lesbian couple trying to have a baby via artificial insemination hooks up with her last boyfriend in order to get pregnant.
The fifth installment of J.K. Rowling's Fantastic Beasts trilogy (the first film hits theaters in 2016).
What happens when the last remaining male and female blue-footed newts on the planet are forced together by science to save the species, and they can't stand each other? That's the problem facing Newt and Brooke, heroes of "newt," the Pixar film by seven-time Academy Award winner for sound Gary Rydstrom, and director of Pixar's Oscar-nominated short, "Lifted." Newt and Brooke embark on a perilous, unpredictable adventure and discover that finding a mate never goes as planned, even when you only have one choice. Love, it turns out, is not a science.
The film follows the main character, Art (Topher Hall), the grandson of animator Oswald Jebediah Coleman (Ernie Hudson). When Art and his brother, Evan (Yasha Rayzberg) go on a journey to track down his family lineage, it quickly turns into a bloodcurdling nightmare. They are transported to a place lost in time, shrouded by dark Hollywood magic.
Travis McGee, a free-living bachelor and reluctant hero who lives on a houseboat in Florida, works as a "salvage consultant," recovering property and money for clients and taking half the fee in return. McGee takes on tracking down a treasure that a solider escaped with and hid after World War II.