"Once Upon a Time in Hollywood" sequel adds Elizabeth Debicki, Scott Kane

Elizabeth Debicki and Scott Caan join David Fincher type confirm. The couple will star with Brad Pitt, who is reprimanding his Oscars as Zen stuntman Cliff Booth, a script written by the original film's writer-director Quentin Tarantino.

While the continuation of “Once Upon a Time” still seems to be an unreal prospect for many fans of Tarantino and Fenchel, adding more casts shows that it does indeed become thriving when potential summer production in California begins.

Netflix has no comments.

The project remains highly secretive, although Tarantino first appeared after canceling his tenth (and last) plan for the 10th (and last) of The Movie Critical. A script has been written with Brad Pitt as the lead role. The story of the 70s is said to follow a film critic who wrote for a porn magazine. Rumors say that Pete will play some version of his “formerly” character’s cliff booth, in Tarantino’s novel work on his own function, he is revealed as a movie fan (but don’t let him start on the movie “Akira Kurosawa,” which is after “Red Beard.”

While Tarantino's reputation as a writer-director, he wrote several scripts that did not end up abandoning, including Tony Scott's "Real Romance" and Robert Rodriguez's "From Dusk to Dawn." For Fincher, this will be the third consecutive performance of the filmmaker on Netflix, second only to Oscar-nominated Hollywood-era productions Mank and Workday Black Comedy "The Killer."

Interestingly, Debicki was last seen in the mid-20th century entertainment-era work, with Ti West's Slasher Thrasher Thrasher Thrasher "Maxxxine" released last summer. She is also an Emmy winner, who plays Princess Diana in Netflix's "Crown." Meanwhile, Caan performed with Pitt in Steven Soderbergh’s “Ocean” heist trilogy. He currently starred in Fox's Alert: Missing Persons Department, which has just aired the finale of the third season.

Content on Netflix first reported that Debicki was negotiating for the film, while Caan's cast was first reported by the Hollywood Reporter.