Pop Culture

Cruella Can’t Be Stopped: Disney Sequel Already in Works

It looks like Emma Stone has her first franchise lead all sewn up. 

Before it even entered its second week at the box office, Disney was working on a deal for a sequel for the Emma Stone-led hit villain’s tale, Cruella. The studio has secured director Craig Gillespie and screenwriter Tony McNamara, according to The Hollywood Reporter. As Variety points out, there’s no word yet about Stone’s involvement in this Cruella 2 (2uella?), but the trade newspaper wisely observes that it is “unclear how a sequel would work without her.”

The London-set PG-13 flick was not, as it happens, the leader at the box office last weekend. That honor went to A Quiet Place Part II. But the two films in tandem made for a Memorial Day holiday that was almost normal in terms of domestic grosses, crossing the $100-million threshold with a little help from enduring titles such as Spiral: From the Book of Saw and Raya and the Last Dragon. It was the best box office showing since the pandemic shut theaters down in March 2020.

While a sequel-to-a-prequel is not entirely without precedent — let us not forget a little picture called Alien: Covenant — this will assuredly make history as the first live-action sequel to an origin story based on a character initially seen in an animated film. By the time it’s all done, there may be 101 different iterations of this dog-hating, sartorially-extravagant woman with a demonic last name.

While the reviews of Gillespie’s film are mixed-positive, with a 74 percent at Rotten Tomatoes and a 59 at Metacritic, CinemaScore, which polls exiting ticket buyers, awarded it an A. (The New Yorker’s Anthony Lane, meanwhile, wrote that “there are passages of ‘Cruella’ that seem like scraps of music videos, loosely stitched together.”)

In addition to theaters, Cruella is available to Disney + subscribers at a $30 premium through its premiere access program. Those who fork over the extra dough can watch the film as many times as they wish until it joins the streaming service’s main archive on August 27.

More Great Stories From Vanity Fair

— A First Look at Leonardo DiCaprio in Killers of the Flower Moon
— 15 Summer Movies Worth Returning to Theaters For
— Why Evan Peters Needed a Hug After His Big Mare of Easttown Scene
Shadow and Bone Creators Break Down Those Big Book Changes
— The Particular Bravery of Elliot Page’s Oprah Interview
— Inside the Collapse of the Golden Globes
Watch Justin Theroux Break Down His Career
— For the Love of Real Housewives: An Obsession That Never Quits
From the Archive: The Sky’s the Limit for Leonardo DiCaprio
— Not a subscriber? Join Vanity Fair to receive full access to VF.com and the complete online archive now.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Donald Trump Praises Prince William as a “Good Man”
Yasiin Bey Announces Livestream for New EP Money Christmas
How To Wear A Cardigan – Style And Fashion Guide 2024
Those Two Lines on Your Denim Jacket: A Levi’s Denim Jacket History
Gracie Abrams’ 2025 Tour Dates: How To Get Tickets