Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Legacy Archives

Will Smith, Ryan Gosling, others approached for WB’s DC Comics Suicide Squad movie

Add as a preferred source on Google

With the news that Warner Bros. is planning a live-action Suicide Squad movie set in its burgeoning DC Comics cinematic universe, speculation has naturally turned to which characters — and actors, of course — will be cast in director David Ayer’s first foray into comic book movies.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, the project is courting an impressive group of well-known actors that includes Will Smith, Ryan Gosling, Tom Hardy, and Margot Robbie. Given the film’s source material — the modern iteration of the comic followed a team of supervillains tasked with carrying out difficult missions for the government — the project makes sense as an ensemble film, and the studio seems intent on assembling an all-star cast.

Recommended Videos

Created in 1959 by Robert Kanigher and Ross Andru, the team known as The Suicide Squad began as a fairly typical team of monster-fighting characters, but was remade in 1987 by writer John Ostrander, who shaped its current and most popular incarnation. Over the course of several series featuring the team, its roster has included well-known villains Bane, Deadshot, Harley Quinn, Deathstroke, and Poison Ivy, among others.

With Hardy already known to superhero movie audiences as the actor who portrayed Bane in The Dark Knight Rises, it’s reasonable to wonder whether the studio would consider having him reprise the role as the popular Batman villain.

Adding to the distance Warner Bros. is putting between its cinematic universe and the television side of its DC Comics properties, The Suicide Squad was recently introduced in the popular Arrow television series and it isn’t expected to have any connection with its big-screen counterpart. A different version of the team was also introduced in the recent Batman: Assault On Arkham animated movie.

Suicide Squad is scheduled to hit theaters August 5, 2016.

Rick Marshall
Former Contributing Editor, Entertainment
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Spotify’s streaming fraud issue runs so deep that Kalshi traders are profiting from rigged charts
Spotify removed over 500,000 streams from Malcolm Todd’s “Earrings” after suspected bot activity
spotify

Spotify has removed more than half a million streams from Malcolm Todd’s song “Earrings” after finding suspected bot activity, according to a report by Financial Times.

The track, first released in 2024, suddenly rose to No. 1 on Spotify’s daily U.S. chart after a sharp jump in streams. At the same time, traders on prediction market Kalshi had been betting on whether Todd would land a No. 1 song on Spotify USA before the end of June. There is no suggestion Todd or his team were involved in any attempt to boost the song’s numbers. Kalshi has said it is investigating the matter.

Read more
EXCLUSIVE: Lockbox Cast and Director Reveal How They Adapted the Knifepoint Horror Podcast for the Big Screen
Daniel Stamm, Lou Taylor Pucci, and Katharine Isabelle discuss creating Lockbox and collaborating with Carla Gugino
Katherine Isabelle screaming with white eyes in the horror film, Lockbox.

Director Daniel Stamm's new movie Lockbox adapts the acclaimed Knifepoint Horror podcast into a feature-length nightmare. Produced by Capstone Pictures (Obsession), the movie sees The Haunting of Hill House star Carla Gugino as a woman fighting to protect her veteran cousin, played by Lou Taylor Pucci (Evil Dead), from a demonic presence linked to her mysterious neighbor, portrayed by Katharine Isabelle (Backrooms)

In an interview with Digital Trends, Stamm, Pucci, and Isabelle discussed collaborating with each other and Carla Gugino in taking a popular podcast and turning it into an unsettling and unpredictable horror film.

Read more
You can make the Ghostface do whatever you want on this Scary Movie website
The Subservient Ghostface website for Scary Movie lets fans boss around the masked killer on screen.
scary-movie-6-subservient-ghostface-website

Scary Movie 6 returned after more than a decade, and the gamble paid off at the box office. The sixth installment debuted to $55 million domestically, the best opening weekend in the series' history, and went on to gross over $215 million worldwide as of late June.

Ahead of the movie's June 5 theatrical release, Wayans Bros. Entertainment launched a website called Subservient Ghostface, where you type a command and watch the masked killer carry it out on screen. It's a clever campaign that borrows directly from Burger King's famous Subservient Chicken stunt from 2004, swapping the chicken suit for the horror icon Ghostface from Scream.

Read more