Entertainment Roundup: 'Fauda' season three; Godzilla collection; Blackbeard's case


Devdiscourse News Desk | Updated: 04-06-2019 13:03 IST | Created: 04-06-2019 10:31 IST
Entertainment Roundup: 'Fauda' season three; Godzilla collection; Blackbeard's case
Warner Bros. and Legendary's "Godzilla: King of the Monsters" may be king of the box office, but it only managed a meek roar.

Following is a summary of current entertainment news briefs.

Israeli thriller series 'Fauda' digs in for the darker third season

"Fauda", an Israeli TV series that has become a Netflix hit for its unsparing portrayal of undercover commandos who pose as Palestinians to pursue Hamas guerrillas, promises to dig deeper into the conflict in its third season. The first two seasons took place mostly in the occupied West Bank. This time, showrunners Avi Issacharoff and Lior Raz have set much of it in the Gaza Strip, where the armed Islamist faction rules and has fought three wars against Israel.

Box Office: 'Godzilla: King of the Monsters' debuts with mediocre $49 million

Warner Bros. and Legendary's "Godzilla: King of the Monsters" may be king of the box office, but it only managed a meek roar. The monster sequel brought in $49 million when it debuted in 4,108 locations, a disappointing start given its $200 million price tag. "Godzilla: King of the Monsters" is the third instalment in Legendary's MonsterVerse, launched well behind its predecessors, 2014's "Godzilla" ($93 million) and 2017's "Kong: Skull Island" ($61 million).

Like those films, the latest tentpole is expecting to make the majority of its ticket sales overseas, where the eponymous other-worldly creature is a huge hit. "King of the Monsters" bowed with $130 million at the international box office for a global opening weekend of $179 million.

Blackbeard's ship embarks for Supreme Court in video piracy case

The nine black-robed justices of the U.S. Supreme Court will soon navigate the treacherous legal waters around a sailing ship made famous in the 18th century by the notorious English pirate known as Blackbeard. The court on Monday agreed to hear a bid by a documentary filmmaker to revive his lawsuit against state officials in North Carolina who he accused of unlawfully pirating his footage of the wrecked pirate ship named the Queen Anne's Revenge, which went down in 1718.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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