4/11/2024 0 Comments Breaking quiet pt 3![]() ![]() While he won't direct the third movie in the A Quiet Place franchise, he's still on board as a producer. John Krasinski Starts A Quiet Place PrequelĪ Quiet Place director John Krasinski shared the first images from the set of A Quiet Place: Day One, the prequel to his original movies, in a new post on Instagram.ĭonning a Boston Red Sox cap, Krasinksi holds up a clapperboard from the set of this prequel. Now, as fans get ready to jump back into this spook-filled story, Krasinski has given fans a first look into his next major project in development. He'll now serve as a producer on this unique prequel alongside Transformers' Michael Bay as this movie takes a look at how the blind aliens from the original movies found their way to Earth. These two movies earned rave reviews as two of the best horror movies in recent memory, with Krasinski being praised for his, eventually leading to A Quiet Place: Day One being greenlit for production. But over the last few years, the former Jim Halpert actor solidified his place as one of Hollywood's rising stars in the directing world, flexing his creative muscle on 2018's A Quiet Place and its 2021 sequel. Krasinski has been in the headlines often over the past year, largely thanks to his shocking casting as Reed Richards in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and the many stories regarding his potential casting in Fantastic Four. ![]() ![]() Millions of people in the West depend on a melting snowpack in the warmer months for hydropower, irrigation and drinking water, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency.ĬNN’s Stephanie Elam contributed to this report.After the wild success of his first two A Quiet Place movies, director/star John Krasinski pulled back the curtain on the latest addition to the franchise, A Quiet Place: Day One. The survey showed snowpack was 70% of the April average. The April survey is viewed as the most consequential since officials use the measurement to forecast the state’s water resources for the rest of the year. The storm currently hitting the Sierra, will be factored into the April snow survey. Given the colossal amount of snow forecast to entomb the Sierra through the weekend, there’s a “good chance” to close the snowpack gap or exceed what’s typical, Lindaman said. Snow is disappearing as the planet warms. Larry Clouse/CSM(Credit Image: © Larry Clouse/CSM via ZUMA Wire) (Cal Sport Media via AP Images) Larry Clouse/Cal Sport Media/AP January 2019: The Colorado River winds its way along Utah Highway128 and always provides a relaxing and scenic drive into the red sandstone canyons leading toward Moab, Utah. Parts of major roadways like I-80 could be shut down for long stretches. Travel will remain “extremely dangerous to impossible” across the Sierra through the weekend, the weather service warned. The intense conditions at lower elevations increase the risk of danger on the road. Wind gusts of up to 60 mph will continue to blow through the lower elevations alongside snow. Several inches are also possible for even lower elevations, including Reno, Nevada. Close to a foot of snow is expected through the weekend for areas as low as 5,000 feet. Unlike other storms this winter, snow is falling well below pass levels for all impacted ranges. Yosemite National Park, which is under a blizzard warning through the weekend, is closed Friday through at least Sunday afternoon, the National Park Service said. B9BiHMH216- UC Berkeley Central Sierra Snow Lab March 1, 2024 ![]() The next 24 hours will be the heaviest portion of the storm. Snowpack at the lab is now 102% of median to date.Ĭonditions have already deteriorated this morning with gusty winds and significantly reduced visibility. We have received 19.1" (48.5 cm) of #snow in the last day. Given these conditions, there is a “high chance of substantial, long-lasting disruptions to daily life in the higher elevations of the Sierra Nevada Friday through Saturday,” the Weather Prediction Center warned. Strong winds whipped up snow along elevated portions of I-80 early Friday, creating challenging visibility as tractor-trailers struggled to navigate snow-covered roads. Visibility plummeted to near-zero, meaning it’s impossible to see farther than a few feet – or at all – early Friday. Heavy snow and roaring winds are expected to combine to produce rare and long-lasting blizzard conditions for much of the Sierra and parts of the northern ranges. Twenty inches of snow fell from Thursday to Friday morning at Donner Peak while a foot or more buried other parts of the Sierra. Winds started to roar Thursday with widespread gusts of 60 to 80 mph reported for elevations above 3,000 feet. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |