charlie's angels

Kristen Stewart Wanted for Elizabeth Banks’ ‘Charlie’s Angels’ Reboot
Kristen Stewart Wanted for Elizabeth Banks’ ‘Charlie’s Angels’ Reboot
Kristen Stewart Wanted for Elizabeth Banks’ ‘Charlie’s Angels’ Reboot
You can’t really deny prospective appeal of Kristen Stewart playing a gun-wielding, gadget-toting, ass-kicking super detective, which makes today’s potential casting news pretty exciting. Elizabeth Banks and Sony are reportedly eyeing Stewart to play one of the three leads in their upcoming big screen reboot of Charlie’s Angels, but she’s not the only awesome name under consideration — obviously.
Elizabeth Banks-Led ‘Charlie’s Angels’ Reboot Now Slated for Summer 2019
Elizabeth Banks-Led ‘Charlie’s Angels’ Reboot Now Slated for Summer 2019
Elizabeth Banks-Led ‘Charlie’s Angels’ Reboot Now Slated for Summer 2019
As noted in a new item at Variety today, Sony has been on something of a roll when it comes to getting female talent behind the camera. They’ve put together a respectable slate of films directed by women: Catherine Hardwicke was tapped to translate narco thriller Miss Bala for American audiences, Broad City mastermind Lucia Aniello wrote-directed the upcoming bachelorette-shenanigans comedy Rough Night, Michelle MacLaren landed the Sam Claflin-led thriller Nightingale, and perhaps most intriguingly of all, Elizabeth Banks has taken her next directorial project with a reboot of Charlie’s Angels. And for the latter two, today brings concrete news of impending developments.
‘Charlie’s Angels’ Reboot Hires Pulitzer Prize-Winning Writer So Maybe Now You’ll Take This Thing Seriously
‘Charlie’s Angels’ Reboot Hires Pulitzer Prize-Winning Writer So Maybe Now You’ll Take This Thing Seriously
‘Charlie’s Angels’ Reboot Hires Pulitzer Prize-Winning Writer So Maybe Now You’ll Take This Thing Seriously
Elizabeth Banks may not be directing Pitch Perfect 3, but she is tackling another female-centric franchise with a big screen reboot of Charlie’s Angels. Unlike previous iterations of the iconic characters, Banks’ version has something a little extra: Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright David Auburn, who has been tasked with making sure we take these women a little more seriously this time.