Category: The Nightingale

Deadline: TriStar Reignites ‘The Nightingale’ Movie For 2027 Release; ‘To Leslie’s Michael Morris To Direct Fanning Sisters In Adaptation Of Kristin Hannah Novel

EXCLUSIVE: TriStar has set a new February 12, 2027 release date for The Nightingale, its anticipated feature adaptation of Kristin Hannah‘s global bestselling work of historical fiction. Gestating for some time, the project has regained traction for the first time since the pandemic, enlisting To Leslie‘s Michael Morris to direct.

Dakota and Elle Fanning are still set to star and produce, starring together on film for the first time, having first attached to the project in 2019. Dana Stevens (The Woman King) penned the script, and Elizabeth Cantillon will produce for The Cantillon Company, alongside the Fannings and Brittany Kahan Ward for Lewellen Pictures, and Reese Witherspoon and Lauren Neustadter for Hello Sunshine. Nicole Brown and Shary Shirazi are overseeing for TriStar Pictures.

Sources attributed the February 12, 2027 date to the fact that it’s a huge event weekend, with the double holiday of Valentine’s Day that Sunday and President’s Day on Monday. Sunday, February 14 is also Super Bowl Sunday, which presents an opportunity to counterprogram with a film that already has a substantial built-in fanbase. The Nightingale will also be the first big female-skewing title of the year as the schedule currently stands.

Selling more than 11 million copies worldwide since its 2015 debut after being translated into 45 languages, The Nightingale tells the story of two sisters who dare to embark on separate, dangerous paths during World War II in the fight for survival, love and freedom in German-occupied, war-torn France.

The book hit No. 1 on the New York Times Best Sellers list and has spent a combined 165 weeks on the list across formats, also dominating NPR’s fiction chart for 45 weeks and being named a Reese’s Book Club Pick. In March 2025, a special 10th Anniversary Edition got to No. 2 on the NYT hardcover list, and already this year, the book has sold a million copies.

The Nightingale has had a decently long journey to the screen, beginning with TriStar’s move to lock down film rights in 2015, with Ann Peacock coming on to write and Cantillon to produce. (The latter has been with the project ever since.) Writer-director Michelle MacLaren and co-writer John Sayles attached to a later iteration, with the Fannings initially coming on to star in a version helmed by Mélanie Laurent from Stevens’ script. Just when it looked like the project would get off the ground, the Covid pandemic resulted in numerous delays, with Laurent stepping back to attend to other projects in the interim.

A two-time Emmy nominee known for his directing on series like Better Call Saul, 13 Reasons Why and Kingdom, Morris directed Andrea Riseborough to her first Oscar nomination with his feature directorial debut, the indie drama To Leslie. His follow-up project on the feature side was Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy, which enjoyed acclaim as well as international box office success, surpassing $100M globally while premiering on Peacock only in the U.S. He is repped by UTA and attorney Erik Hyman at Paul Hastings.

Dakota Fanning will next be seen starring opposite Sarah Snook in Peacock’s upcoming series All Her Fault. Elle Fanning, meanwhile, is next set to appear in dual roles in Dan Trachtenberg’s Predator: Badlands, out November 7, and in a starring role alongside Renate Reinsve and Stellan Skarsgard in Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value, the winner of Cannes’ Grand Prix, which is out in limited release via Neon on the same day.

The Fannings are repped by UTA, TFC Management and HJTH. Hannah is represented by CAA and Jane Rotrosen Agency.

Source: Deadline

‘The Nightingale’: Elle And Dakota Fanning’s WWII Sisters Pic Pushed Another Year – Again

Those wishing to see Elle and Dakota Fanning in WWII drama The Nightingale will have to wait even longer. Sony is pushing the film to Dec. 23, 2022. It previously had been moved to December 22 of this year. Elle Fanning currently is in production on Hulu/MRC’s second season of The Great.

Christmas falls on a Sunday that year, and Nightingale will square off against Paramount’s Babylon on Dec. 25 and an untitled Illumination and Universal title on Wednesday Dec. 21, 2022. Pic is produced by Elizabeth Cantillon.

In addition, Sony is dating Stage 6 Films’ R-rated romantic comedy Long Weekend for March 12. Pic follows Bart’s (Finn Wittrock of American Horror Story) chance encounter with the enigmatic Vienna (Zoë Chao), which leads to a whirlwind weekend together. The two fall fast and hard, but both carry secrets that could be their undoing or the chance for a fresh start.

Steve Basilone is making his directorial debut off his script. Pic is produced by Deanna Barillari, Laura Lewis, Theodora Dunlap, Sam Bisbee, Audrey Rosenberg and Jess Jacobs. Executive Producers are Franklin Carson, Lance Acord and Jackie Kelman Bisbee. The film stars Finn Wittrock, Zoë Chao, Casey Wilson, Jim Rash and with Damon Wayans, Jr. The film is produced by Invisible Pictures, Park Pictures, Fifty Seventh Street Productions, and Rebelle Media.

PREVIOUSLY, April 30: Sony’s The Nightingale WWII drama starring Elle and Dakota Fanning, which was suppose to come out at the end of this year, has been pushed to Dec. 22, 2021 due to the COVID-19 production shutdown.

Real-life sisters Elle and Dakota Fanning will play on-screen sisters in the coming-of-age story adapted from Kristin Hannah’s international bestseller. Pic, which is being directed by Melanie Laurent, is set on the eve of World War II and follows the sisters’ struggle to survive and resist the German occupation of France. The story was inspired by the courageous women of the French Resistance who helped downed Allied airmen escape Nazi-occupied territory and hid Jewish children.

The project reteams Laurent with Elle Fanning after the duo worked on the 2018 movie Galveston together.

The Nightingale has been published in 45 languages, and went on to sell 3.5 million copies in the U.S. alone and became a No. 1 New York Times Bestseller for a total of 114 weeks on the list.

Source: Deadline Hollywood