>
'KICKBACK' SCHEME: Nick Shirley EXPOSES alleged NYC senior daycare center fraud
Oil prices are in free fall and could keep going to $40. Which implies $2 gasoline.
Can 'Spaceballs 2' Be As Good As Its Marketing Campaign?
He Risked Everything To Warn You: No One Is Ready For What's Coming...
Modular Reactors To Solve Data Center Hysteria?
DeepSeek Developing In-House AI Chip In Bid To Cut Nvidia Reliance
America just took three brand-new nuclear reactors critical in thirty days, a first for any...
Your brain doesn't peak in your 20s after all: Study reveals your mind is at its sharpest betwee
Compasses, not maps: China is building a different type of AI
Farewell, atom-smashing Large Hadron Collider
It's Not a Conspiracy Anymore: Med Beds Exist and Trump Knows It

That line either conjures a goofy smile or a blank stare.
If you're in the former camp, "Spaceballs: The New One" is for you. The film, a sequel to Mel Brooks' "Star Wars" spoof, is coming next April. And while it's normal for studios to tease a potential blockbuster, the marketing effort behind "Spaceballs: The New One" has been unusual.
Smart. Aggressive. Funny. Silly. Dripping with nostalgia.
Now, we have a new teaser poster for the 2027 release along with silly new messaging.
Somehow, Dark Helmet has returned! Forty years after the events of the first Spaceballs, fifty years after the events of Star Wars: A New Hope, and one year after the events of The Devil Wears Prada 2, the galaxy is once again under threat. A threat so evil, so unstoppable, so completely lacking in any original ideas, that it has vowed to bring back the past… every last bit of it.
With Lone Starr in hiding, Queen Vespa on the throne, and the Schwartz stretched thinner than a franchise releasing TV episodes theatrically, the only hope for the galaxy is Vespa's undisciplined son, Prince Starburst, and a mysterious Palace advisor named Destiny. Together, they must find Lone Starr, Yogurt, and any other iconic legacy characters fans are demanding before they discover the hard way that, while some threats you can fight, the reboot is not one of them.
The only thing wrong with the film's slow-motion rollout? That title. Here's guessing they'll change it before the film's release date, unless Brooks is truly as invested in it as he suggests.
Either way, the hype for the new film will be gargantuan by that April 2027 release date.
Heck, it already is.
Brooks' film career, filled with classics like "Young Frankenstein," "The Producers" and "Blazing Saddles," fizzled out with lesser works over time.
Think "Dracula: Dead and Loving It" and "Robin Hood: Men in Tights."
It would be grand to see the comedy maestro cap his career with another winner. Brooks isn't a writer or director on "The New One." He's serving as a producer.
The screenwriters are Josh Gad ("Central Park"), Dan Hernandez ("Pokémon: Detective Pikachu") and Benji Samit ("Koala Man"). Not exactly a murderer's row of talent.
Another red flag? Hollywood recently revived another Brooks comedy, "History of the World: Part One" with forgettable results.
Maybe the Schwartz will be the game changer with "Spaceballs: The New One."