Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

This beloved kids movie is getting a gender-swapped reboot TV show at Disney+

A group of boys in orange jumpsuits stand together in Holes.
Walt Disney Pictures

Grab your shovels and get ready to dig again. According to a Variety report, Disney+ has ordered a pilot for a Holes TV series.

The show would be a reimagining of Louis Sachar’s 1998 novel. Instead of focusing on a boy, the Disney+ series will follow a teenage girl sent to a camp where the ruthless Warden forces the campers to dig holes for a “mysterious purpose.”

Recommended Videos
Per Variety, Alina Mankin will write and executive produce the Holes TV show, while Liz Phang will be an executive producer and the showrunner. Drew Goddard, who directed The Cabin in the Woods, will executive produce with Sarah Esberg. Mike Medavoy, the movie’s executive producer, returns to the series in the same role. The film’s producer, Walden Media, will produce the TV show for 20th Television.
Holes (2003) Trailer
Please enable Javascript to view this content

Sachar wrote the script for the 2003 feature film adaptation of Holes, directed by Andrew Davis. The movie stars Shia LaBeouf as Stanley Yelnats IV, a teenager wrongfully convicted of stealing a pair of sneakers. As punishment, Stanley is sentenced to work for 18 months at Camp Green Lake, a juvenile detention camp. There is no body of water at Camp Green Lake. Instead, the campers dig holes for the heartless warden Louise Walker (Sigourney Weaver), who is searching for a notorious outlaw’s buried treasure.

The rest of the ensemble included Khleo Thomas, Brenden Jefferson, Henry Winkler, Tim Blake Nelson, and Jon Voight. Released in April 2003, Holes received positive reviews and holds a 78% on Rotten TomatoesHoles grossed over $71 million worldwide on an estimated $17 million budget.

The original Holes is now streaming on Disney+.

Dan Girolamo
Dan is a passionate and multitalented content creator with experience in pop culture, entertainment, and sports. Throughout…
BritBox unveils 2025 slate of new and returning TV shows
Matthew Rhys stands on a rocky plateau in Agatha Christie's Towards Zero.

With several weeks left to go in 2024, BritBox, the go-to streaming service for all British TV obsessives, has unveiled its 2025 slate of new and returning TV shows. The platform also released a 90-second preview featuring footage from many of its forthcoming additions, including the Hugh Bonneville and Karen Gillan-starring Douglas is Cancelled and the Anjelica Huston and Matthew Rhys-led Agatha Christie adaptation Towards Zero. The sizzle reel also features footage from the new seasons of beloved returning shows like Vera, Karen Pirie, and Blue Lights.

“BritBox anticipates our most electrifying year yet, delivering a slate of premium television to delight BritBox fans and new audiences," said Robert Schildhouse, president of BritBox North America and GM BritBox International. "From inspired reimaginings of well-known tales to dramas filled with surprise, intrigue, and emotional resonance, BritBox presents gripping narratives, complex challenges, and dynamic characters, crafted by powerhouse talent in front of and behind the camera. We can’t wait for everyone to experience the next chapter of BritBox’s story onscreen in 2025.”

Read more
Christmas and holiday TV guide 2024: The best movies and shows to watch this season
Tim Allen sits in a sleigh with a boy.

It's the most wonderful time of the year on television. In December, broadcast networks and streaming services will curate lineups with Christmas movies and holiday TV specials. Nearly every night in December will feature a Christmas movie, a holiday-themed TV episode, live music events, or an animated classic.

Several programs on this list are traditions. It's a Wonderful Life, the quintessential holiday movie, always airs on Christmas Eve night on NBC. The Rockefeller Center Christmas tree always lights up on NBC at the beginning of the month. It wouldn't be the holiday season without Home Alone, The Santa Clause, and Frozen, which will all air on NBC.

Read more
Star Wars: Skeleton Crew was originally supposed to be a movie
Jude Law sits in a starship's pilot seat in Star Wars: Skeleton Crew.

Lucasfilm is on the verge of debuting its second live-action Star Wars series of the year, Skeleton Crew. Set after the events of Star Wars: Episode VI — Return of the Jedi, the show follows a group of adventure-seeking kids who end up stranded in space with a starship of unknown origin and are joined on their journey home by a mysterious, potentially untrustworthy adult Force-user (Jude Law). The new series comes from the minds of Christopher Ford and Spider-Man: No Way Home director Jon Watts, and it has the potential to be the Disney+ hit that Lucasfilm has been in desperate need of over the past two years.

As well-suited as it may seem for the studio's Disney+ model, though, Skeleton Crew was originally pitched to Lucasfilm years ago as a movie, Watts recently revealed. "I pitched it right after the first Spider-Man [Homecoming] movie. It was initially pitched to Lucasfilm as a film, and then I had to go make two Spider-Man movies, because the first one did all right," the filmmaker told TVLine. "Over time, [Jon] Favreau made The Mandalorian and Disney+ came into existence, so it evolved, as the Spider-Man movies were being made, into a show."

Read more