The long-awaited return of the undead avenger The Crow will be arriving in the US with the Lionsgateās backing.
The reboot of 1994ās gothic-tinged supernatural revenge movie,
The Crow (pictured above) has been about to happen for forever (or at least 15 years), something you can read about
here. Thereās been so many false dawns and could-have-beens that nobody was taking the latest attempt to get the project off the ground for granted, even when the film went into production in Prague
just under a year ago.
The Crow has been directed by
Snow White and the Huntsman's Rupert Sanders and is set to feature Bill Skarsgard, FKA Twigs, and Danny Huston. With the film now in the can, the rights to it have been picked up (in the US at least) for an eight figure sum by Lionsgate, who know a thing or two about how to successfully market this kind of $50m mid-budget action movie.
Apparently, the original graphic novel has once again provided the source material for the tale of āa man brutally murdered who comes back to life as an undead avenger of his and his fiancee’s deaths.ā The film is expected to release sometime in 2024 with Lionsgate’s executive VP of Acquisitions and co-Productions, Charlotte Koh, stating:
“We appreciate what
The Crow character and original movie mean to legions of fans and believe this new film will offer audiences an authentic and visceral reinterpretation of its emotional power and mythology.
To work with a creative team led by Rupert’s unparalleled visual style and storytelling and with a producing team who have made some of the most popular and impactful films of the last several decades is a true privilege.”
No news yet on which company will be picking up the international rights to the film but
The Crow just flew a little closer to its big screen return.
Deadline
ā
Thank you for visiting! If youād like to support our attempts to make a non-clickbaity movie website:
Follow Film Stories on Twitter here, and on Facebook here.
Buy our Film Stories and Film Junior print magazines here.
Become a Patron here.
Related Stories
- Saw at 20 | Looking back at James Wan and Leigh Whannellās seminal horror thriller
James Wan’s Saw turns 20 this year and is back in cinemas. A look at one of the most influential horror films of all time:
There's a comparitively small group of horror films that have, one way or another, changed the genre. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, Night Of The Living Dead, The Blair Witch Project [...]
- New trailer arrives for Den Of Thieves 2: Pantera
Heist thriller sequel Den Of Thieves 2: Pantera, starring Gerard Butler, is out in January. Here's a new trailer:
Den Of Thieves 2: Pantera clearly means business. Why else would its title so confidently stride into the world of colon and incomprehensible word combinations unless it wanted to throw down with the likes of John Wick; [...]
- Michael Jackson biopic pushed back to autumn 2025
The Antoine Fuqua-directed biopic of Michael Jackson - Michael - has moved to autumn 2025, presumably with an awards run in mind.
Lionsgate has made one significant alteration to its 2025 slate, pushing back the release of Michael from April of next year back by six months. That means that the Michael Jackson biopic will now [...]
- Michael | Michael Jackson biopic is again scheduled for October 2025
After rumours of delays, director Antoine Fuqua's Michael Jackson biopic is again scheduled for an October 2025 release.
Update 7th February 2025: Since the post below was written, Michael's release date has reappeared on Box Office Mojo. According to that site's listing, the biopic is again scheduled for the 3rd October 2025. How will this fit [...]
- Joker: Folie A Deux and Borderlands | Studio heads reflect on disappointments
The studio bosses overseeing Joker 2 and Borderlands have been talking about their respective box office disappointments.
2024 has seen a some big hit movies on the big screen, but also some sizeable swings that didn’t quite pay off. In Warner Bros’ corner, there’s the recent Joker sequel, Joker: Folie A Deux. For Lionsgate meanwhile, it [...]