
What is the The Curse of La Llorona about? Who is in the cast of The Curse of La Llorona? You can watch the trailer at the top of this article.

The age rating is yet to be confirmed, but it is likely to be an 18. When is The Curse of La Llorona released in the UK? I had to deliver.We have everything you need to know about this film that will make you jump… "It required singing - really belting it out and being inspired by the words, and the emotions that came through the words. "I knew that it required more than just singing," Blige says. Blige's musical numbers include Pat Benatar's 1982 hit "Shadows of the Night" and Quarterflash's "Harden My Heart," from 1981. Blige plays the mother-hen manager of the fictional nudie bar the Venus Club, where a down-and-out Sherrie waits tables. "It seemed a shame not to capitalize on the reality of the era." Justice Played by Catherine Zeta-Jones, Whitmore is the wife of the Los Angeles mayor ( Bryan Cranston) and an ambitious politico in her own right who wants to ban rock music and "take Satan off the streets." To create the character, "I went back to the source, when Tipper Gore was running around telling people music was filth and putting warning labels on records," says Theroux. Shankman credits L.A.-raised production designer Jon Hutman for including it. Look quickly for its distinctive sign (orange lettering on a white background) around the time Drew gets his big break. Along with the so-called Rock 'n' Roll Denny's at 7373 Sunset, the now-ĭefunct Ben Frank's was an after-hours must for musicians, groupies and scenesters. In the 1980s, Los Angeles was still a treasure trove of post- World War II coffee shops with atomic architecture and Cadillac-style detailing. SEE PHOTOSOur critic's top movies of all time countdown Ben Frank's My booty was a lot bigger! And so was the top half of my body." "I ran but didn't do as much cardio, and I lifted more weights and did more squats. "I did a whole different kind of workout regimen to make my body look more '80s, more curvaceous," Hough says. Hough bears some similarities to her role - she left Utah for Los Angeles at 18 and became a country singer - but needed a physical makeover to play the part. (Her name combines Journey's single "Oh Sherrie" and Night Ranger's power ballad "Sister Christian," both released in 1984). Played by Julianne Hough ("Footloose"), this fictional heroine flees Kansas for Los Angeles in the hopes of becoming a singer. You threw mattresses and television sets out of the hotel window and people would just cheer. There were mountains of drugs and no rehab.

"In that period, there were no consequences," says Shankman, who grew up in Los Angeles. Director Shankman says he envisioned the character as the tragic product of a famously self-indulgent era.

He totes a bottle of Scotch (much like Guns N' Roses guitarist Slash once did), but he talks like a spaced-out Jim Morrison ("I ask you - have these people even met themselves?"). The singer of the fictional band Arsenal, Jaxx is an irresistible sex god, but also a cautionary tale. A minor character in the play, Jaxx is now a major character played by Cruise.
