Once Upon a Time in HollywoodThe Academy Award-Winning Film Released in 2019, Will Received A Sequel, This time Filtered Through the Lens of Director David Fincher Rather Than Its Original Writer-Director Quentin Tarantino. Fincher Will Helm The Currently Untitled Follow-up Under His Recently Extended First Look Deal at Netflix, for Varietywith a script from tarantino for which brad pitt will reprise as role as cliff booth.
The sequel will reportly be built Around the script Tarantino Wrote for The Movie Criticwhich was meant to be the director's Final Film in His 10-Movie Career Plan Before He Scrapped it last year. In Allawing Fincher to take the Reins, Tarantino Buys Himself Some More Time To Figure Out What He Wants His Grand Final Film To Be.
Pitt Gets a Good Deal Either Way. He Won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood In 2020 After Previously Working with Tarantino on Inclourious basterds In 2009. His History with Fincher Stutches Back Three Decades to Se7enThe 1995 Film That Proved Pivotal For His Career. Pitt and Fincher Also teamed up for Fight Club in 1999 and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button In 2008, Which Resulted in His First Best Actor nomination.
Tarantino Told Deadline in 2023 that The Movie Critic would be set in 1977 California and center Around “A Guy Who Really Lived, But Was Never Really Famous, And He Used To Write Movie Reviews for A Porn Rag.” He was Unclear at the time preciseness in the role, adding: “I hace't decided year but it's going to be something in the 35 year-class Ball Park. It'll Defintely Be a New Leading Man for Me.” Tarantino Confitred in 2024 That Pitt would be in the film, but didn't specific to Role for Him. His Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Character Was Notably at Stuntman.
The Upcoming Sequel, in Whatever Shape It Ends Up Taking, Will Be Fincher's First Since The Killer in 2023 F1in Which He Plays a Once-Creded Formula One Driver. Tarantino, on the other hand, isn'T rush to do much of anytying Until His Son Is Old Enough to Form a core memory Around it.
“I Kind of Want to Not do Whatever Movie I End Up Ding Until My Son is at Least Six. That way He'll Know What's Going On, He'll Be there, and It Will Be a Memory for the rest of his life,” he said earlier this year. The Director Has Been Working on a play that will “well probably the next THING I ending doing,” depending on how it performes. “IF It's a Fiaco I probably won'T turne it into a movie,” he aided. “But If It's a Smash Hit? It's MY Last Movie.”