Marvel-ous lineup

A few weeks back, it was Warner Bros. making the splashy 10-film announcement; now it's Marvel's turn. The studio laid out this slate: "Avengers, Age of Ultron" (2015); "Ant Man" (2015); "Captain America 3: Civil War" (2016); "Doctor Strange" (2016), which may or may not star Benedict Cumberbatch in the title role; "Guardians of the Galaxy 2" (2017); "Thor: Ragnarok" (2017); "Black Panther," starring Chadwick Boseman (2017); "Captain Marvel" (2018); "Inhumans" (2018), and "Avengers: Infinity War Part I" (2018) and "Part II" (2019).

Pull up a Chairy

Paul Reubens confirmed that another "Pee-wee Herman" movie, produced by Judd Apatow, is in the works. … Ben Whishaw has replaced Colin Firth as the voice of "Paddington." … Endless legal battles have been resolved, paving the way for the release of Orson Welles' "lost" 1971 film, "The Other Side of the Wind." … Michael Bay is in talks to direct "13 Hours," the story of the attack on Benghazi. … Hugh Jackman, Nicole Kidman and Dev Patel star in "Lion," based on a Vanity Fair article. … "The Hunger Games: Mockingjay — Part 1," out Nov. 21, has set a 2014 record for first-day presale tickets. … The Coens' all-star Hollywood satire "Hail, Caesar!" will open in February 2016.

Amy & Tina, signing off

Citing "the law of diminishing returns," Amy Poehler says January's Golden Globes telecast will be the last one she and Tina Fey will host. … Bob Odenkirk reports that the "Breaking Bad" spinoff "Better Call Saul" will be "85% drama, 15% comedy." … Neil Patrick Harris and his husband, David Burtka, will appear on "American Horror Story: Freak Show." … The cast and creator of "Sons of Anarchy" will appear on the Nov. 11 episode of "Conan." … Hulu has ordered the 10-episode comedy series "Casual" from director Jason Reitman.

Kinda stellar

The experts at Gold Derby have predicted that Christopher Nolan's "Interstellar" will win five Oscars. That's the good news. The bad news: None of them (editing, sound editing, sound mixing, visual effects and score) are what you'd call high-profile.

CYNTHIA DICKISON