There's a dark twist with Cher that will make this series very different from the 1995 film or '90s TV series.
like the original film was. As Deadline put it,"the newis described as a baby pink and bisexual blue-tinted, tiny sunglasses-wearing, oat milk latté and Adderal-fueled look at what happens when the high school queen bee Cher disappears and her lifelong No. 2 Dionne steps into Cher’s vacant Air Jordans.
Canada Latest News, Canada Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
‘Clueless’ Series Reboot Focused on Dionne in Development at Peacock (EXCLUSIVE)Peacock has landed the series reboot of “Clueless” centered on the character Dionne for development, Variety has learned exclusively. The untitled comedy series is described a baby pink…
Read more »
‘Clueless’ Series Reboot Lands At PeacockA Clueless TV series, based on the hit 1995 feature, is in development at Peacock. As Deadline reported exclusively, the project, which hails from writers Jordan Reddout and Gus Hickey (Will & …
Read more »
A 'Clueless' Series Reboot Is Coming to Peacock, and It'll Be Centered on DionneThere's a dark twist with Cher that will make this series very different from the 1995 film or '90s TV series.
Read more »
FilmRise Sets Nancy Grace True Crime Series ‘Bloodline Detective’ As First OriginalEXCLUSIVE: FilmRise, the Brooklyn-based film and TV distributor, is launching its first original production, forensic investigative series Bloodline Detectives hosted by Nancy Grace with Peninsula …
Read more »
‘All Or Nothing: Tottenham Hotspur’: Amazon Drops Trailer For Premier League SeriesAmazon has released a trailer for its latest All Or Nothing series, which will feature the travails of Premier League team Tottenham Hotspur during a tumultuous coronavirus-interrupted season. Prod…
Read more »
Bryant Park’s Piano Series Offers Hopeful Note to New YorkersNew Yorkers have few opportunities to hear live music during the coronavirus pandemic. But for three afternoons a week, audiences still gather in Midtown Manhattan’s Bryant Park to hear some jazz piano.
Read more »