Jordan Peele’’s 'Us'

The social commentary is such a vital part of why the dark humor and dread in Get Out work, removing that aspect would be like asking Kubrick to make The Shining without all the creepy atmosphere.

Maybe Peele goes down a different path with his future projects, but I get the feeling that social criticism/insight is always going to be a part of his work to some degree. And I think that's probably as it should be.
 
Really curious about this one. I really enjoyed Get Out and the cast they got lined up for this is great, especially Moss is so damn good on The Handsmaid's Tale. I hope Peele is able to do something special with here.
 
Trailer is arriving on Christmas Day.
 
Lupita needs more starring roles. I hope she continues with the remake of The Killer with John Woo as well as that female spy film with Jessica Chastain.
 
SO this happen to a few lucky people.
Germain Lussier‏Verified account @GermainLussier
Just got a super creepy delivery courtesy of @JordanPeele and #UsMovie. The URL doesn’t work yet but wow this is cool.

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10:51 AM - 15 Dec 2018
 
I wonder if she's onto something?

ëboñī Ęÿés‏ @Blaquepower
Replying to @maxevry @JordanPeele
Yo #Us was my favorite poem by Shel Silverstein as a child and it’s about two guys that was born stuck together is he gonna cut them apart with these scissors
 
Know someone who went to a screening for this and it was.....interesting to say the least...not as good as Get Out.
 
why isn't Lupita a bigger star? I hope this film helps boost her career higher
 
LOL, I hope SNL does a joke trailer for the new season of "This is US" that's a mashup of that show and this movie.

Next week... on a special, all new episode of This Is Us... JACK MURDERS HIS ENTIRE FAMILY!!!
 
'Us' first look: See exclusive photos from Jordan's Peele's 'Get Out' follow-up
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“For my second feature, I wanted to create a monster mythology,” Peele tells EW. “I wanted to do something that was more firmly in the horror genre but still held on to my love of movies that are twisted but fun.”

Details are very, very vague about Peele’s upcoming film Us. The story is set in the present day and follows Adelaide and Gabe Wilson (Lupita Nyong’o and Winston Duke) as they take their kids to Adelaide’s old childhood beachside home in Northern California for the summer. After a day at the beach with the Tyler family (which includes Elisabeth Moss and Tim Heidecker), Adelaide — who’s haunted by a lingering trauma from her past — becomes increasingly more paranoid that something bad will happen to her family. As night falls, the Wilsons see four figures holding hands and standing silently at the bottom of their driveway… (Did shivers just go up your spine?)


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Peele didn’t have to give a hard sell to recruit Oscar winner Nyong’o for his leading role. “He was on my wish list of people to work with,” Nyong’o tells EW, adding that she was a huge fan of Get Out. “The very fact that I have not done anything like it was appealing, because it promised growth and excitement and new territory.”

To prepare, Peele gave Nyong’o 10 classic horror films to watch so they would have “a shared language” when filming: Dead Again, The Shining, The Babadook, It Follows, A Tale of Two Sisters, The Birds, Funny Games, Martyrs, Let the Right One In, and The Sixth Sense.

Then the filmmaker had some fun bringing Nyong’o together with her Black Panther costar and former Yale University classmate Duke to play his all-American couple. “I could see signs of them flirting online — they’re both flirts in general — you could see the couple in them who would want to be together, so the chemistry is just on,” the filmmaker says.

Duke, best known as the brawny, imposing M’Baku in Black Panther, laughs when he hears Peele’s description of his relationship with Nyong’o, but does agree that their shared history allowed them a natural closeness and shorthand when portraying the Wilsons. “It was important for me to not come off as a warrior in this film,” Duke says, and he describes Gabe as a Homer Simpson-esque patriarch — a lovable dad, but flawed. “He’s very sporadic and impulsive, he’s the husband and the alpha, and I think that leads to some of the conflict that is in the marriage when we meet the Wilsons.”

Nyong’o and Duke are accompanied by Shahadi Wright Joseph and Evan Alex, who play Adelaide and Gabe’s children; Peele describes the young actors as having a “relative fearlessness when it comes to horror and dark, creepy stuff.” Peele and his cast are tight-lipped about the horrors that befall the Wilsons, but Peele does reveal one key detail: The monsters in his movie are called the Tethered.

All we know is that the Wilsons most certainly suffer a holiday from hell. Nyong’o says “it turns into this relentless nightmare that taps into [Adelaide’s] deepest fears and ours as well — the idea that we might be our own worst enemies.” Catch us biting our fingernails as we eagerly wait for March.
 
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Looks that way. Invasion of the Body Snatchers type deal. Social commentary on how society expects black people to be "black" but in a way that is acceptable to white people.
 
Apparently the trailer is already playing in cinemas and those who saw it say it's really cool
 
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“This image captures Adelaide as she approaches the threshold of a nightmarish journey, prepared to kill anything everything in her way,”

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Peele is staying tight-lipped about plot details for Us, with a trailer not set to debut until Christmas Day, but he does shed a small amount of light for Total Film. Given some context to the above pic, he explains, “In this scene, our hero family’s vacation home is being invaded by a group of terrifying and shadowy individuals.”
 
The doppelgänger theory seems sound. That appears to be Duke and Nyongo in the group of four there.
 
Very interesting.
 
The doppelganger theory would be correct
 
Looks that way. Invasion of the Body Snatchers type deal. Social commentary on how society expects black people to be "black" but in a way that is acceptable to white people.

Deon Cole- "managing your blackness". I'm not sure I can post the youtube video on here.
 
Saw a screening of it a couple of weeks ago. Although I can't disclose much, it was quite a ride.
 

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