Life

Fanning and Jolie reunite for Disney's 'Maleficent II'

May 30, 2018
Actress Elle Fanning, left, and Angelina Jolie.
Actress Elle Fanning, left, and Angelina Jolie.



LOS ANGELES - Production has begun on the sequel to smash hit "Maleficent," Disney announced Wednesday, with Elle Fanning and Angelina Jolie reprising their roles as Sleeping Beauty and her conflicted surrogate mother.

The movie is being filmed at Pinewood Studios, near London and in locations around Britain, the world's largest movie studio said in statement.

"It's bring your mom to work day on the Maleficent2 set," 20-year-old Fanning ("Trumbo," "The Beguiled") joked in an Instagram post that had been shared a quarter of a million times within an hour.

Alongside the message, she posted a picture of her in front of a laughing Jolie, who was in the famous "Maleficent" horns, as well as a pair of sunglasses and a toweling bathrobe.

"Maleficent," a modern retelling of the life of Sleeping Beauty's arch-nemesis, cast an instant spell on audiences in 2014, debuting at the top of the North American box office and going on to gross more than $750 million worldwide.

Joining Fanning and Jolie for the latest adventure are Oscar nominees Michelle Pfeiffer ("Dangerous Liaisons," "Ant-Man and the Wasp") and Chiwetel Ejiofor ("12 Years a Slave," "Doctor Strange").

Disney also confirmed that acclaimed British stage and screen actor Robert Lindsay ("Wimbledon") would be among the newcomers, while Sam Riley, Imelda Staunton, Juno Temple and Lesley Manville return from the original movie.

In the sequel, directed by Joachim Ronning ("Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales"), Disney's most notorious villain continues to explore her complex relationship with Princess Aurora, the soon to be queen, as they form alliances against new adversaries. - AFP


May 30, 2018
200 views
HIGHLIGHTS
Life
2 days ago

Babies made using three people's DNA are born free of hereditary disease

Life
3 days ago

Harry Potter actress Emma Watson banned from driving for speeding

Life
3 days ago

Scientists recover proteins from a 24 million-year-old rhino fossil