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{blackbabes} Naomie Harris Joins Mahershala Ali In Apple Original Film ‘Swan Song’

Oscar-nominated actress Naomie Harris is set to reunite with Moonlight co-star and Oscar winner Mahershala Ali in the Apple TV+ original film Swan Song, which hails from Apple Studios and Anonymous Content.

Benjamin Cleary, also an Oscar winner for his short film Stutterer, wrote the screenplay and is directing the pic. It's described as a genre-bending drama set in the near future that explores how far someone will go, and how much they'll sacrifice, to make a happier life for the people they love.

Harris will play Poppy, Milo's (Ali) wife and true soulmate.

Adam Shulman (Defending Jacob) and Jacob Perlin (The Amazing Johnathan Documentary) will produce for Anonymous Content with Jonathan King on behalf of Concordia Studios, as well as Ali.

Harris will soon be seen reprising her role as Eve Moneypenny in the upcoming Bond installment No Time To Die and currently co-stars opposite Jude Law in the HBO/ Sky Atlantic miniseries, The Third Day. She's repped by Untitled Entertainment, WME and The Artists Partnership.

Apple TV+ has been building up an impressive film slate with some Hollywood heavyweights. This includes the Martin Scorsese, Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro project Killers of the Flower Moon, the soon-to-released On The Rocks, from director Sofia Coppola and starring Rashida Jones and Bill Murray, as well as Anthony and Joe Russo's crime drama Cherry, starring Tom Holland, the Antoine Fuqua and Will Smith project, Emancipation, snd the Jake Gyllenhaal-starrer Snow Blind.

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{blackbabes} ‘Queen Sugar’ Resumes Production On Revamped Season 5 With COVID-19, Black Lives Matter & Election Storylines

 

OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network is set to resume production in New Orleans on the remainder of the 10-episode season 5 of Queen Sugar, shut down in March due to COVID-19.

Since filming came to a halt nearly seven months ago, creator Ava DuVernay decided to completely revamp the remainder of the season to reflect the very real issues our country is facing through the lens of the Bordelon family and the fictional community of St. Josephine. Working alongside returning showrunner Anthony Sparks and co-executive producer Norman Vance, DuVernay has reconceived the character arcs and storylines, writing alongside returning showrunner Anthony Sparks and co-executive producer Norman Vance to tackle the COVID-19 pandemic, the Black Lives Matter protest movement that has swept the country and the lead-up to elections to showcase the specific impact and ramifications these issues have on communities and people of color. The series is slated to return to air on OWN in 2021.

DuVernay also has solidified the season 5 all-female directorial lineup with previous Queen Sugar episodic director Lauren Wolkstein, who has been promoted to producing director, alongside helmers Lisa France and Cierra Glaude.

Queen Sugar was recently recognized by the Television Academy Honors for its powerful portrayal of an African-American family in the Deep South that sheds light on complex issues and challenges facing our society. Led by cast members Rutina Wesley, Dawn-Lyen Gardner and Kofi Siriboe, Queen Sugar storylines have delved into important topics such as police brutality, addiction and recovery, and systemic racism.

Queen Sugar
is produced by Warner Bros. Television and DuVernay's Array Filmworks.

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{blackbabes} ‘Lockdown’: Ben Stiller, Lily James, Stephen Merchant, Dulé Hill, Jazmyn Simon & Mark Gatiss Set To Join Doug Liman’s Harrods Heist Movie Underway In London

Production is underway in London on Doug Liman's heist dramedy Lockdown, which will star Anne Hathaway and Chiwetel Ejiofor.

Producers are in advanced talks with Ben Stiller, Lily James, Stephen Merchant, Dulé Hill, Jazmyn Simon and Mark Gatiss to join the cast.

Set against the backdrop of the Covid-19 lockdown, the film will tell the story of how sparring couple Linda (Hathaway) and Paxton (Ejiofor) call a truce to attempt a high-risk, high-stakes jewellery heist at one of the world's most exclusive department store, Harrods. The iconic London landmark is granting its glamorous backdrop to the shoot. We first broke news of the project earlier this month, though plot details were under wraps and Oscar-nominee Ejiofor has subsequently joined.

The Steven Knight-scripted film, which is shooting under strict pandemic protocols, was originated by Storyteller Productions and its producers P.J. van Sandwijk and Michael Lesslie, who approached Doug Liman and Steven Knight and pushed the project from conception to filming within a ninety day timeframe.

Stuart Ford's AGC Studios came aboard after CAA Media Finance led a competitive bidding process. P.J. van Sandwijk is producing with Alison Winter and Michael Lesslie, with AGC's Ford and Miguel Palos onboard as executive producers. CAA Media Finance is co-repping worldwide rights with AGC.

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{blackbabes} Serena Williams pulls out of French Open with hurt Achilles

PARIS (AP) -- Saying she is ''struggling to walk,'' Serena Williams ended her latest bid for a 24th Grand Slam title and withdrew from the French Open before her second-round match Wednesday because of an injured Achilles heel.

Williams hurt herself during her semifinal loss at the U.S. Open three weeks ago, which she called ''bad timing'' and ''bad luck,'' and went to lengths to make clear she didn't think this was any sort of sign that she can't continue to pursue trophies in the future.

More simply, Williams said, she hasn't had ''enough time to properly heal'' and needs ''four to six weeks of sitting, doing nothing.''

The sudden announcement came roughly an hour before the 39-year-old American was supposed to head out onto Court Philippe Chatrier to face Tsvetana Pironkova.

Williams said it is ''more than likely'' she will not play another tournament in 2020.

She said she tried warming up for the match but knew she wasn't able to compete. She spoke to coach Patrick Mouratoglou and, she said, ''We kind of both thought about it and we decided it wasn't the best for me to try and play today.''

This is Williams' earliest exit at any Grand Slam tournament since a second-round loss in Paris in 2014.

She also pulled out of the French Open in 2018 prior to what would have been a fourth-round match against Maria Sharapova, citing a pulled muscle in her chest.

That was Williams' first major tournament back on tour after having a baby.

She would go on to reach the finals at four of the next six Slams, losing each time, as she tries to add to her professional-era record of 23 major singles trophies and equal Margaret Court's all-era mark.

''I love playing tennis, obviously. I love competing. And I love being out here. It's my job; been my job. And I'm pretty good at it still,'' Williams said. ''So until I feel like I'm not good at it - then I'll be like, 'Oh, OK.' And I'm so close to some things, I just feel like I'm almost there, so I think that's what keeps me going.''

Earlier this month in New York, Williams made it to the semifinals before bowing out 1-6, 6-3, 6-3 against Victoria Azarenka.

It was in the third set of that match that Williams stretched her Achilles during a point and then leaned over, clutched at her lower left leg and asked for a trainer. She took a medical timeout for a tape job and continued to play but was unable to pull off a win.

''I was able to get it somewhat better, but just looking long-term: In this tournament, will I be able to get through on enough matches? And so for me, I don't think I could,'' Williams said Wednesday. ''And struggling to walk, so that's kind of a tell-tale sign that I should try to recover.''

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{blackbabes} Nadal, Serena on guard at French Open as Halep plays compatriot

Rafael Nadal looks to build on a promising start to his quest to match Roger Federer's 20 Grand Slam titles at the French Open on Wednesday while Serena Williams faces a familiar foe in round two of her latest push to equal Margaret Court's all-time mark.

Top seed and women's favourite Simona Halep puts her 15-match winning streak on the line as she targets another run at a second Roland Garros crown in three years.

Nadal needs one more major to pull level with long-time rival Federer and owns an astonishing 94-2 record in Paris going back to his triumph on debut in 2005.

The Spaniard showed little trouble in handling the heavier conditions in his opening win over Egor Gerasimov at a tournament postponed four months by the coronavirus pandemic.

However, the 34-year-old is wary of an untimely slip-up having made serene progress on his return to action in Rome before running aground in the quarter-finals.

"Six months without playing a single tennis match is not easy," said 12-time French Open winner Nadal, who touched down in Paris without a clay title to his name for the first time.

"I said in Rome when I played the first two matches well, I said, 'Okay, don't believe things are going to be like this.'

"I know how difficult are the comebacks. I had to stop playing tennis for more than two months, so situation is difficult. It's normal, some up and downs."

A first-time opponent again awaits Nadal in 236th-ranked American Mackenzie McDonald, whose lone tour win this season came against Yusutaka Uchiyama at Delray Beach in February.

In the women's draw, Williams heads into another encounter with Tsvetana Pironkova after the pair squared off in the last eight of the US Open earlier this month.


- Serena braces for 'long match' -

Williams came from a set down in New York to beat fellow mother Pironkova, in the Bulgarian's first tournament appearance since the 2017 Wimbledon championships.

"She's playing well, but I am too," said Williams, imploring herself to play with more confidence after a slow start against Kristie Ahn in round one.

"I'm ready to play her. She'll be ready to play me. It will be a long match, she will get a lot of balls back, but so will I. I'll be ready."

Williams, seeded sixth, is still chasing an elusive 24th Slam title, but clay is her least successful surface.

She has not gone beyond the last 16 in Paris since her defeat to Garbine Muguruza in the 2016 final. Her last major came at the 2017 Australian Open while pregnant.

With defending champion Ashleigh Barty skipping the event over Covid-19 concerns, world number two Halep appears well set for a tilt at a third major.

She battles fellow Romanian Irina-Camelia Begu on Court Suzanne Lenglen, having been spared the grim weather by playing under the new retractable roof in her opener.

Halep has won each of her past three tournaments, resuming the interrupted season with titles on clay in Prague and Rome following her victory at Dubai in February.

US Open champion Dominic Thiem plays American qualifier Jack Sock, a former top 10 player, in the second round while 2015 French Open winner Stan Wawrinka takes on Dominik Koepfer following his mauling of Andy Murray.

Elina Svitolina faces Renata Zarazua, Mexico's first representative in the main draw of a Slam in 20 years, with Victoria Azarenka meeting Anna Karolina Schmiedlova.

Sixth seed Alexander Zverev will come up against Pierre-Hugues Herbert in the final match scheduled on Court Philippe Chatrier.

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{blackbabes} ‘Riverdale’: Erinn Westbrook Joins Season 5 Cast As New Series Regular

Erinn Westbrook

There soon will be a new face in Riverdale. Erinn Westbrook (The Resident) has joined the cast of the CW's Riverdale as a new series regular for the upcoming fifth season.

Westbrook will play Tabitha Tate, the ambitious, entrepreneurial granddaughter of Pop Tate, who has come to Riverdale to take over Pop's Chock'lit Shoppe in the hopes of franchising the iconic diner, even as the town around it struggles to survive.

Riverdale resumed production September 14 in Vancouver amid strict COVID-19 safety guidelines. The series shut down production in mid-March in the middle of the fourth season, which was cut short due to the pandemic.

KJ Apa, Cole Sprouse Lili Reinhart, Camila Mendes, Casey Cott and Madelaine Petsch star in the CW series based on the characters from Archie Comics. Riverdale is produced by Warner Bros. Television and CBS Television Studios, in association with Berlanti Productions.

Westbrook can currently be seen in a recurring role on the Fox series The Resident. She previously portrayed Magnolia on both seasons of Netflix' Insatiable. Westbrook recently completed a run in New York of Clueless The Musical and appeared on Awkward and Glee. She also recurred on Jane the Virgin for the CW. She's repped by APA, Treadwell Entertainment and Myman Greenspan Fox Rosenberg Mobasser Younger & Light.

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{blackbabes} 'A runaway train': Serena Williams wins opener in Paris

PARIS (AP) -- Serena Williams went from a 72-minute struggle of a first set that required a tiebreaker to resolve in her first-round match at the French Open to a lopsided second set in which she did not drop a game.

''I just need to play with more confidence,'' Williams said, by way of explanation for how her 7-6 (2), 6-0 victory over 102nd-ranked Kristie Ahn unfolded Monday, ''like I'm Serena.''

Well, yes, she was more herself for the latter half of the contest, which by the end really wasn't much of a contest.

And this is how Ahn described the sensation of being across the net from that version of Williams, the one where she is at her very best.

''It feels like you're trying to push a runaway train in the opposite direction,'' Ahn said. ''It's very difficult to try and stop, to stop her momentum when she's going, when she's feeling it.''

Imagine Ahn's (bad) luck of the draw: She is the first player to face Williams in the first round at two consecutive Grand Slam tournaments, having also lost their matchup at the U.S. Open.

''I mean, I laughed,'' Ahn said. ''I mean, what are the odds?''

They were followed onto Court Philippe Chartier by 12-time French Open champion Rafael Nadal.

The man Nadal beat in the last two finals, Dominic Thiem, won his first match since winning the U.S. Open, advancing to the second round with a 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 victory over 2014 U.S. Open champion Marin Cilic.

This, too, was a recent rematch from New York.

Thiem will next face American qualifier Jack Sock, who beat Reilly Opelka 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 and was one of six men from the U.S. to get to the second round; only one did a year ago in Paris.

Among the key results on Day 2 of a chilly, pandemic-postponed French Open were losses by 2019 runner-up Marketa Vondrousova, who was beaten 6-1, 6-2 by Polish teengarr Iga Swiatek; 2017 U.S. Open finalist and 2018 French Open semifinalist Madison Keys; and men's seeds No. 14 Fabio Fognini and No. 19 Felix Auger-Aliassime.

Williams now gets another rematch, facing Tsvetana Pironkova, the player the 39-year-old American beat in the quarterfinals in New York earlier this month.

''It's always exciting to face her,'' Pironkova said.

Williams has won three of her professional-era record 23 Grand Slam singles titles in Paris; add one more and she'll equal Margaret Court's all-era mark.

She keeps coming close: Williams has made it to the final at four of the past eight major tournaments, losing each time. At the U.S. Open, she exited in the semifinals against Victoria Azarenka, slowed a bit down the stretch after hurting her left Achilles tendon.

Williams wore a strip of black athletic tape on the lower portion of that leg Monday. Asked after the match what she's done to take care of herself, she replied: ''A ton of prayer.''

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{blackbabes} BET Orders Paula Patton's Sacrifice to Series, Based on 2019 TV-Movie

BET Sacrifice Series Order

BET has ordered to series Sacrifice, a legal thriller starring Paula Patton (Somewhere Between) and based on a BET+ TV-movie/backdoor pilot that premiered last December.

Set in Los Angeles, Sacrifice follows Daniella Hernandez (played by Patton), a highly sought-after entertainment lawyer, as she navigates the nefarious lives of her rich and famous clients.

As a series, Sacrifice will delve deeper into Daniella's complicated personal life as "a recovering alcoholic who compensates for her suppressed addiction with men and the adrenaline of defending the worst in the entertainment world against an over-zealous D.A. sworn to bring them all to justice.

"Daniella's unimpeachable clients need her help, wisdom and resourcefulness – as do all the corrupt ones," the official synopsis continues. "She is the classic conundrum of doing good for bad reasons and doing bad for good reasons. Maybe it's luck, maybe it's skill, maybe it's because she's beautiful, but Daniella gets away with it… so far."

"I am excited to reprise the role of Daniella Hernandez, her strength and ability to overcome incredible challenges is inspiring, and I am grateful for the opportunity to continue working with BET," Patton said in a statement. "It is a wonderful experience to work with our cast and crew to create characters and stories that entertain and move people."

Other returning cast members include Marques Houston (Sister, Sister), James Trevena Brown (The Shannara Chronicles), Veronika Bozeman (Empire), Altonio Jackson (Treme), Liliana Montenegro, Michael Toland (1st and Ten) and Nelson Bonilla (Ozark).

It is not yet clear if Sacrifice will air on BET or stream on BET+.

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{blackbabes} Serena Williams battles, then rolls into French Open second round

 

Serena Williams overcame early struggles, sweeping past countrywoman Kristie Ahn 7-6 (2), 6-0 to reach the French Open second round.

Williams, again eyeing a record-tying 24th Grand Slam singles title, started out like somebody who went 16 months between clay-court matches. She needed 74 minutes to take the first set from the 102nd-ranked Ahn, recovering twice after having her serve broken.

She dominated the second set in 27 minutes, advancing to play Bulgarian and fellow mom Tsvetana Pironkova, a rematch of their three-set U.S. Open quarterfinal three weeks ago.

Williams, in long sleeves and tights, had 15 winners to 28 unforced errors in the first set in cloudy, sub-60-degree weather on Monday.

"I hate the cold. I'm from L.A. and I live in Florida," Williams said before the tournament, which was postponed from its usual May/June slot due to the coronavirus pandemic. "For half my life I've never seen snow. Cold weather and me do not mix."

Victoria Azarenka," data-reactid="25">Williams also noted before the tournament that she was "not at 100 percent physically" and spent most of her time in France "rehabbing" without giving specifics. She took a medical timeout with a left Achilles injury in her last match, a U.S. Open semifinal loss to Victoria Azarenka,

"I wouldn't be playing if I didn't think I could perform," Williams said Saturday. "I don't know any athlete that ever plays physically when they're feeling perfect. That's just something I think as athletes we have to play with."

Earlier Monday, newly crowned U.S. Open champion Dominic Thiem rolled 2014 U.S. Open winner Marin Cilic 6-4, 6-3, 6-3.

Thiem, the 2018 and 2019 French Open runner-up, next gets American Jack Sock, a former top-10 player now ranked No. 310. Sock took out countryman Reilly Opelka 6-4, 6-4, 6-3 for his first main draw win at the French Open in four years.

Rafael Nadal begins his quest for a record-extending 13th French Open title and male record-tying 20th Grand Slam singles title later Monday.

The French Open first round concludes Tuesday with top-ranked Novak Djokovic in action.

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{blackbabes} Venus coy on future after early Roland Garros exit

Venus coy on future after early Roland Garros exit

Venus Williams said she was "not looking forward yet" to 2021 after suffering a third successive first round exit at the French Open on Sunday with a loss in straight sets to Slovakia's Anna Karolina Schmiedlova.

The 40-year-old Williams, runner-up at Roland Garros to sister Serena in 2002, lost 6-4, 6-4 to an opponent who snapped a 12-match Grand Slam losing streak.

It marked Williams' third first round defeat in a row at a Slam after exiting the US Open and Australian Open at the same stage.

"It's been a very long year of quarantine. Now I'll get to rest. So I'm looking forward to that," said Williams, insisting she would not play again this season.

"I'm going home from here. I'm done. If there is somewhere to play, I won't be there."

Williams dropped serve six times in cold, blustery conditions in Paris as Schmiedlova registered her first main-draw victory at a Slam since the 2015 US Open.

Her reward is a second round tie against two-time Australian Open winner Victoria Azarenka.

Williams, a seven-time Grand Slam champion, has not been past the third round at a major since 2017. She has lost eight of nine matches on tour this year.

"I just stepped off the court. So even though it hasn't been a ton of tournaments, it's still been a very long year. So, yeah, I'm not looking forward yet," she said.

Williams in 2011 revealed she had been diagnosed with Sjogren's syndrome, an auto-immune disease whose symptoms include joint pain and fatigue.

Everyone at this year's French Open, including players if they are not in action or in practice, is masked amid surging rates of Covid-19 infections in the country. Those competing are holed up exclusively in two hotels.

Despite being at a higher risk at the tournament, Williams said she had learned to live with the situation.

"I think at this point I have accepted that anyone can get it at any time, so I try my best not to," she said.

"I think, in the beginning, I was definitely a lot more nervous, but now I'm a little more accepting that it could happen and these are the risks you take when you leave your home."

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{blackbabes} Venus Williams slumps to opening defeat in Paris

Venus Williams slumps to opening defeat in Paris

PARIS (Reuters) - Former French Open runner-up Venus Williams suffered her second successive first-round loss in a Grand Slam as she went down 6-4 6-4 to Slovakia's Anna Karolina Schmiedlova on Sunday.

With a chill wind blowing and drizzle falling on the Simonne-Mathieu arena, the 40-year-old Williams began strongly but got bogged down in a baseline battle on a slow surface.

The American has now fallen in the opening round at the French Open for the past three years.

Williams led 3-1 and 4-2 in the first set against the 26-year-old who is playing under a special ranking after undergoing knee surgery, but lost a series of lengthy games as a first set lasting 68 minutes slipped away.

Unable to hold her once mighty serve, Williams, the oldest player in the draw, fell 4-1 down in the second set as Schmiedlova moved within sight of snapping a streak of 12 successive Grand Slam first-round defeats since 2016.

Williams, who played in black leggings and a bodywarmer, finally held serve after being broken six times in a row to close to 3-4 in the second as Schmiedlova began to look a little nervy but the Slovak edged 5-3 in front.

Seven-times Grand Slam champion Williams fought ferociously until the end, saving two match points on serve, but Schmiedlova showed great composure to serve it out, sealing victory with a forehand down the line.

Williams, playing her 87th Grand Slam and now ranked 76th in the world, also lost in the opening round at the U.S Open, the first time she had fallen at the first hurdle at her home Slam in major in 22 appearances.

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{blackbabes} Serena finds it weird to stay in hotel instead of her Paris home

Serena finds it weird to stay in hotel instead of her Paris home

PARIS (Reuters) - Serena Williams finds it 'weird' having to stay in a hotel during the French Open despite owning an apartment in Paris but the American is keeping a positive attitude as she continues her chase of a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam title.

As part of the COVID-19 protocols, the French Open organisers have told all participants to stay in two designated hotels, unlike the U.S. Open which allowed staying in private accommodation.

Williams was one of the players who rented a private home for the tournament at Flushing Meadows.

"It's definitely weird. This has always been my home away from home. I always loved being here," Williams told reporters on Saturday.

"It has been really different for me staying at a hotel when I'm like, 'Oh, this is what we normally do'. I guess it's a must."

This year's claycourt Grand Slam was moved back from its regular May-June slot to the end of September due to the pandemic. The weather during this year's event, therefore, is much cooler.

"I hate the cold. I'm from Los Angeles and I live in Florida. For half my life I've never seen snow. Cold weather and me do not mix. That's my Achilles' heel," Williams said before breaking into a smile.

"But I'm dealing with it. I'm having a positive attitude about it."

Williams won the last of her 23 Grand Slam titles in Melbourne in 2017 and has since lost in four finals in her bid to equal Australian Margaret Court's record of 24 major singles titles.

She lost to Victoria Azarenka in the semi-finals at her home Grand Slam this month.

"I think a semi-final is always great. Is it great for me? Absolutely not," said Williams, adding that she was not 100% physically but had recovered sufficiently from an Achilles problem she suffered during the U.S. Open.

"That's just how I feel. That's how I always feel. It is what it is. I'm happy that I can feel that way. I'm in a position in my career where I cannot be satisfied. I don't want to sit here and say, 'Oh, I'm happy'. Because I'm not."

Williams, who took a break in 2017 to give birth to her daughter, has not played any competitive matches ahead of the claycourt event at Roland Garros which starts on Sunday.

Following the U.S. Open, the American, who turned 39 on Saturday, travelled to her coach's academy in Nice and concentrated on training and rehabilitation.

"I honestly never thought I would be playing at my age. I mean, I don't quite look 39," she said, grinning again.

"But yeah I don't know when it's going to stop for me. I just have fun. When I feel it's over, it's over. But I could have guaranteed and pretty much bet my life that I would not have been playing at 39.

"I'm in general just a happy, positive person. You just have to be really excited about each moment that life gives you because you don't know if it's going to be your last personally."

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{blackbabes} Chris Hemsworth, Miles Teller, Jurnee Smollett Set By Netflix For Joseph Kosinski-Directed ‘Spiderhead’

Chris Hemsworth, Jurnee Smollett, Miles Teller.

Netflix has set a killer cast for Spiderhead, landing Chris Hemsworth, Miles Teller and Lovecraft Country breakout Jurnee Smollett to star in the Joseph Kosinski-directed adaptation of the George Saunders short story. Script is by Zombieland and Deadpool scribes Rhett Reese & Paul Wernick.

Kosinski is making this his next film after directing Top Gun: Maverick with Tom Cruise, which boasts Teller as one of its stars.

Spiderhead is set in the near future, when convicts are offered the chance to volunteer as medical subjects in hopes of shortening their sentences. The focus is on two prisoners who become the test patients for emotion-altering drugs that force the prisoners to grapple with their pasts in a facility run by a brilliant visionary who supervises the program.

The film will be produced by Eric Newman for Screen Arcade through the producer's first-look deal at Netflix, along with Chris Hemsworth; Oren Katzeff and Geneva Wasserman for The New Yorker Studios; Reese & Wernick, Tommy Harper and Jeremy Steckler

Saunders' short story first ran in The New Yorker and was later collected in his bestselling anthology, Tenth Of December.

Hemsworth just toplined Extraction, the AGBO-produced action film that became Netflix's most watched feature ever, with a sequel coming. Smollett, who burst on the scene in the latter seasons of Friday Night Lights, most recently co-starred on the big screen in Harley Quinn: Birds Of Prey.

Besides Top Gun: Maverick, Teller's other credits include Whiplash and Only the Brave.

Hemsworth, Teller, Smollett and Kosinski are all repped by CAA. Hemsworth is also repped by Fourward and Morrissey Management and Smollett is also repped by Management 360 and Del, Shaw, Moonves, Tanaka, Finkelstein & Lezcano. Teller is also repped by Chad Christopher at Goodman, Genow, Schenkman, Smelkinson & Christopher.

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{blackbabes} FRENCH OPEN 2020: Serena wants more; Djokovic under scrutiny

 

Serena Williams won her first Grand Slam title at age 17 and now that she's pushing 40, she's still making it to the late stages of major tournaments.

Impressive as that might be, it's not enough for her. She wants a 24th Grand Slam singles trophy.

''A semifinal is always great. Is it great for me? Absolutely not. That's just how I feel. That's how I always feel,'' Williams said in Paris on Saturday, her 39th birthday and the day before the pandemic-postponed French Open begins.

''I mean, I'm in a position in my career where I cannot be satisfied,'' she said. ''I don't want to sit here and say, 'Oh, I'm happy.' Because I'm not.''

Since setting an Open-era record with her 23rd major singles championship at the 2017 Australian Open while pregnant, Williams has reached four Grand Slam finals, losing each. She made it to the semifinals at the U.S. Open two weeks ago, when she stretched her left Achilles tendon and lost in three sets to Victoria Azarenka.

Only one player in tennis history has won more Grand Slam singles titles: Margaret Court, who collected 24 across the amateur and professional eras.

''I wouldn't be playing if I didn't think I could perform,'' said Williams, who flew from New York to Paris to rehab her Achilles and train on clay courts at her coach's academy. ''I'm not at 100%, physically. But I don't know any athlete that ever plays ... when they're feeling perfect.''

As for turning 39?

''I honestly never thought I would be playing at my age. I mean, I don't quite look 39,'' Williams joked. ''But, yeah, I don't know when it's going to stop for me. I just have fun. When I feel it's over, it's over. But I could have guaranteed and pretty much bet my life that I would not have been playing at 39. This is why I don't bet.''

Here are other things to know about the 2020 French Open:

DJOKOVIC'S EMOTIONS

Novak Djokovic already would have been closely watched in Paris - he is, after all, ranked No. 1 and seeded No. 1 and won five of seven Grand Slam tournaments to raise his total to 17 major titles, closing the gap with Roger Federer (20) and Rafael Nadal (19).

Now Djokovic's every emotion could be scrutinized at a tournament he won in 2016, because it his first Grand Slam appearance since getting disqualified at the U.S. Open this month for accidentally hitting a line judge with a ball hit in anger after dropping a game in the fourth round.

''That's something that is obviously staying in my mind after what happened in New York. It's going to stay there for a long time. Of course, I will make sure I don't make the same mistake twice. It happened. Whatever happened, happened. I had to accept it and move on. Of course, it was a shock for me and a lot of people. But that's life, that's sport. These things can happen,'' Djokovic said Saturday.

''But I don't think that this will have any significant negative impact on how I feel on the tennis court.''

He noted his title last week at the Italian Open in his return to to action.

''I did not feel any kind of emotional disturbance or difficulty to actually be able to play or still express my emotions in whatever way,'' Djokovic said. ''Of course, I try to keep my negative reactions on the court as (few) as possible. But I guess it happens as well. I'm not going to be down on myself because of that.''

COVID AND FEWER FANS

It seems quite clear that the coronavirus will hover over the French Open much like it did the U.S. Open, with test results as newsworthy as tennis results. After all, the COVID-19 outbreak is why the tournament was moved from May until now. More than a half-dozen players already were dropped from competition - qualifying or the main draw - either because they tested positive in Paris or came in contact with someone who did. One former member of the Top 10 and a past Grand Slam semifinalist, Fernando Verdasco, said he was kicked out of the French Open because of what he believes was a false positive. With the number of virus cases in France growing, daily spectators will be limited to 1,000, with 750 ticket-holders (who will be selected by lottery) and 250 people in VIP or sponsor seating. ''It's not the tournament I played in before,'' eighth-seeded Frenchman Gael Monfils said. ''It won't be the same tournament I dreamed of.''

RAIN AND CHILL

Brrrr. With a fall-time French Open replacing the usual spring-time setting, the forecast calls for near-daily rain - good thing there is finally a $55 million retractable roof on Court Philippe Chatrier - and temperatures in the low 60s Fahrenheit (around 16-18 Celsius) during Week 1. ''A little bit weird,'' 2018 champion Simona Halep said. ''It is a little bit too cold, to be honest.'' She and other players have noted that the chill can affect play, too, making balls zip through the air less quickly. On the other hand, this was 2016 French Open champion Garbine Muguruza's take on the circumstances: ''I don't really care (about) the weather or the month. I'm just happy to be here competing.''

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