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Comcast launched a new destination with Black content, endorsed by the African American Film Critics Association, which is available to customers on Xfinity X1, Flex and Stream App at no additional cost.

Dubbed “Black Experience,” the content hub at launch comprises more than 100 titles (and growing). It’s a mix of programming from across the Xfinity content catalog, spanning networks, free and ad-supported video streaming services, and streaming music providers.

Comcast customers have access to a selection of sample content from existing partners like TVOne, Cleo, AspireTV, Revolt, Afro, KweliTV, the Africa Channel, BET, Bet Her, Impact TV, Up Faith & Family and OWN. In addition, Black Experience includes films such as “Pursuit of Happyness,” “Jumping the Broom,” “Poetic Justice,” “Two Can Play That Game,” “Death at a Funeral,” “Guess Who,” “Blue Streak” and “Lakeview Terrace.”

  

According to Comcast, the Xfinity Black Experience section will feature all-new premium content by new and up-and-coming Black content creators, available only to Xfinity customers included with their service.

“The launch of Black Experience on Xfinity is a major investment in the Black creative community and one of the many ways we are leveraging the scale and reach of our platforms to amplify voices that need to be heard,” said Keesha Boyd, executive director, multicultural video and entertainment, Comcast’s Xfinity Consumer Services. The Black Experience channel on Xfinity “will allow us to further highlight our fantastic content partners, while also premiering original programming from emerging Black content creators and Black-owned production companies.”

Starting this month, timed for Black History Month, Comcast will feature curated selections by AAFCA including films and TV shows that have been honored by the association’s film and TV awards programs.

“As the largest organization of Black film critics in the world, we are in a very unique position to offer a broad overview of the Black experience,” AAFCA president/CEO Gil Robertson said in a statement. “In addition to presenting classic, overlooked or forgotten titles, we are super eager to help give emerging voices and next-gen content creators a boost by spotlighting their work via our AAFCA Collection on Xfinity.”

The Black Experience hub is available on Xfinity X1 video set-stops and Flex (Comcast’s video service for broadband-only subs) as well as the Xfinity Stream mobile app. On X1 and Flex, subscribers can find it on channel 1622 or say “Black Experience” into their voice-enabled remote.

More info on Xfinity’s Black Experience is available at xfinity.com/blackexperience.

Article by: Todd Spangler for Variety

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The attorneys and professionals in the Weinstein Co. bankruptcy case have received $26 million in fees thus far, considerably more than the $17.1 million that Harvey Weinstein’s victims will receive.

The legal bills are still coming in, and will likely exhaust the $3.3 million remaining in the company’s accounts, according to testimony from Robert Peck, the company’s former controller.

The fees represent a sizable chunk of the cost of resolving the case, but have received far less attention than the payouts to other stakeholders.

Last Monday, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Mary Walrath approved a $35.2 million settlement, which includes the $17.1 million fund that will be paid out to more than 50 of Weinstein’s sexual misconduct accusers. The plan, which is funded by insurance policies, will also pay $9.7 million to cover defense costs for Weinstein Co. directors and officers, and $8.4 million to the company’s trade creditors, including law firms and other entertainment companies.

The women with the most serious allegations — rape or sexual assault — will be paid something in the range of $500,000 to $1 million. While not insignificant, that is much less than they would receive if the company were solvent. Likewise, the trade creditors will get just a small fraction of what they are owed.

But under bankruptcy law, the lawyers and professionals who worked on the case will be paid close to the full amount billed. Experts in the field said they were not surprised by the fee amount.

“Is it a staggeringly high number? Absolutely,” said Nancy Rapoport, a law professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. “Does it shock me for a big case? Absolutely not.”

Lynn LoPucki, a law professor at UCLA, has tracked fees in bankruptcy cases for decades, and waged a lonely battle to try to rein them in. Asked about the Weinstein Co. fees, he said, “They’re high. They are high in all bankruptcy cases, because there’s no one controlling them.”

Cravath, Swaine & Moore, the debtor’s lead counsel, has billed more than $12.4 million in fees and expenses. Paul Zumbro, the firm partner who has done most of the talking in Delaware bankruptcy court, has billed the debtor at the rate of $1,725 an hour — a substantial hike from the $1,360 an hour he was billing when the case began nearly three years ago. In total, Cravath has billed more than $12.4 million in fees and expenses.

The relationship between Cravath and the Weinstein Co. dates from before the company’s collapse. In 2017, two Cravath attorneys — Karin DeMasi and Evan Chesler — represented the company in a distribution dispute. The firm continued to represent the company in litigation against Harvey Weinstein after he was fired in October 2017.

Richards, Layton and Finger, based in Wilmington, was brought in to represent the company as “local counsel” in the Delaware bankruptcy court. That firm, which advertises itself as Delaware’s largest, has billed another $4.4 million. And Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones has billed more than $4.8 million to represent the committee of unsecured creditors, which included three trade creditors and two sexual misconduct claimants.

 

Debra Grassgreen, a senior partner at Pachulski Stang who billed at the rate of $1,095 an hour, told the court at the confirmation hearing that she had had emotional conversations with many of the women. She argued that the settlement was best deal the victims were likely to get.

“These women need closure,” she said.

But the opponents of the deal argued that it offered protection to Weinstein and his cohorts, who otherwise could face civil liability for allegations that they enabled his abuses. The settlement bars anyone — even those who opposed the bankruptcy plan — from suing Weinstein Co. board members Bob Weinstein, Tarak Ben Ammar, James Dolan, Richard Koenigsberg, Marc Lasry, Lance Maerov, Jeff Sackman, Tim Sarnoff, Paul Tudor Jones, and Dirk Ziff. It also protects ex-Weinstein Co. employees Frank Gil, David Glasser, and Barbara Schneeweiss from liability.

The deal also also offers accusers a powerful inducement to settle their claims against Weinstein. A claims examiner will review each woman’s allegations and divide up the victim’s fund based on a point scale. But in order to get the full amount, the accusers must relinquish any civil claims against Harvey Weinstein. If they refuse, they will forfeit 75% of the award.

The objectors argued the deal granted Weinstein the benefit of discharging a liability, without forcing him to declare personal bankruptcy or forfeit his own assets.

“They’re effectively protecting Harvey Weinstein. That’s what the whole bottom line in this situation is,” LoPucki said. “Why is the bankruptcy court protecting Harvey Weinstein? Harvey’s not in bankruptcy. Why is he getting the same benefits he would get if he did file bankruptcy?”

Article by: Gene Maddaus for Variety

 

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Everything Coming to Netflix in February 2021

Despite being the shortest month of the year, Netflix has a big round of fresh movies and TV shows arriving this month.

In preparation for Valentine’s Day, Netflix will be releasing some new original romantic dramas, including the third and final installment of the “To All The Boys” trilogy. “To All The Boys: Always and Forever,” starring Lana Condor and Noah Centineo, premieres on Feb. 12. Also, the awards season contender “Malcolm and Marie,” starring Zendaya and John David Washington, will make its streaming debut on Feb. 5.

Two of Leonardo DiCaprio’s most iconic films, “Inception” and “Shutter Island,” are also streaming right now. Other critically-acclaimed films such as “Captain Fantastic,” “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation,” “The Patriot” and “War Dogs” will be making their way onto Netflix this month.

Fans of “The Conjuring” can revisit the first two films before the third installment of the franchise releases on June 4 in theaters and on HBO Max. Other horror installments being added are the second season of “Two Sentence Horror Stories” and the first season of “The Unsetting.”

See the full list of titles below:

Feb. 1

The Bank Job (2008)
Beverly Hills Ninja (1997)
Eat Pray Love (2010)
Inception (2010)
Love Daily (Season 1)
My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997)
My Dead Ex (Season 1)
National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (1989)
The Patriot (2000)
Rocks (2019)
Shutter Island (2010)
The Unsetting (Season 1)
Zac and Mia (Seasons 1-2)
Zathura: A Space Adventure (2005)

Feb. 2

Kid Cosmic (Season 1)
Mighty Express (Season 2)
Tiffany Haddish Presents: They Ready (Season 2)
Feb. 3
All My Friends Are Dead (2021)
Black Beach (2021)
Firefly Lane (Season 1)

Feb. 5

Hache (Season 2)
Invisible City (Season 1)
The Last Paradiso (2021)
Little Big Women (2021)
Malcolm & Marie (2021)
Space Sweepers (2021)
Strip Down, Rise Up (2021)
The Yin-Yang Master: Dream of Eternity (2021)

Feb. 6

The Sinner: Jamie (Season 3)

Feb. 8

iCarly (Seasons 1-2)
War Dogs (2016)

Feb. 10

Crime Scene: The Vanishing at Cecil Hotel (2021)
The Misadventures of Hedi and Cokeman (2021)

Feb. 11

Capitani (Season 1)
Layla Majnun (2021)
Middle of Nowhere (2012)
Red Dot (2021)
Squared Love (2021)

Feb. 12

Buried by the Bernards (Season 1)
Nadiya Bakes (Season 1)
Hate by Dani Rovira (2021)
To All The Boys: Always And Forever (2021)
Xico’s Journey (2021)

Feb. 13

Monsoon (2019)

Feb. 15

The Crew (Season 1)

Feb. 16

Animals on the Loose: A You vs. Wild Movie (2021)
Good Girls (Season 3)

Feb. 17

Behind Her Eyes (Season 1)
Hello, Me! (Season 1)
MeatEater (Season 9 Part 2)

Feb. 18

Thus Spoke Kishibe Rohan (Season 1)

Feb. 19

I Care A Lot (2021)
Tribes of Europa (Season 1)

Feb. 20

Classmates Minus (2021)

Feb. 21

The Conjuring (2013)
The Conjuring 2 (2016)

Feb. 23

Brian Regan: On The Rocks (2021)
Pelé (2021)

Feb. 24

Canine Intervention (2021)
Ginny & Georgia (Season 1)
Two Sentence Horror Stories (Season 2)

Feb. 25

Geez & Ann (2021)
High-Rise Invasion (Season 1)

Feb. 26

Bigfoot Family (2020)
Captain Fantastic (2016)
Caught by a Wave (2021)
Crazy About Her (2021)
No Escape (2015)
Our Idiot Brother (2011)

Article by: Antonio Ferme for Variety

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Would audiences pay to see a new movie on the big screen if they could watch the same title at home from the comfort of their couch? Prior to the pandemic, the response from theater operators and cinema purists would have been a resounding “no.”

Yet Hollywood is finding that, at least while a plague of Biblical proportion rages, the answer is: sorta.

The Little Things,” a crime thriller starring Denzel Washington and Rami Malek, topped domestic box office charts, debuting to $4.8 million from 2,171 venues in North America. At the same time, it was available to HBO Max subscribers for a monthly fee that’s less than a single movie ticket in some parts of the country. “The Little Things” is one of 17 films from Warner Bros. that will premiere simultaneously in cinemas and on the HBO Max streaming service.

In normal times, those box office receipts would spell disaster. But today, it actually ranks as one of the stronger COVID-era opening weekends. HBO Max didn’t report how many viewers opted to stream “The Little Things.” However, Warner Bros. and its parent company WarnerMedia said the film “immediately shot up to No. 1” on HBO Max. It’s unclear what that benchmark means.

“We are absolutely thrilled by how Warner Bros.’ ‘The Little Things’ is performing on HBO Max — it immediately shot up to number one, where it currently remains,” said HBO Max executive VP and general manager Andy Forssell. “Following the breakthrough success of ‘Wonder Woman 1984,’ ‘The Little Things’ shows the insatiable appetite our audience has for high quality, feature films.”

John Lee Hancock directed “The Little Things,” which centers on two police officers trying to catch a serial killer. Overseas, where HBO Max is not yet available, “The Little Things” kicked off with $2.8 million from 18 countries. The R-rated action film had the strongest showing in Russia with $1.1 million in sales, followed by Saudi Arabia with $871,000.

Still, these are bleak times for movie theater operators. Any film exhibitors hoping that ticket sales could return to pre-pandemic levels in 2021 were stymied by another round of release date delays. Earlier in January, MGM postponed the James Bond sequel “No Time to Die” from April to October. That prompted rival studios to once again push their films scheduled for early 2021, such as “Morbius,” “Ghostbusters Afterlife,” “Cinderella,” and “A Quiet Place Part II.” It’s also widely expected that Universal will delay “Fast & Furious” installment “F9” (set for May 28) and Disney may bump the Marvel adventure “Black Widow” (set for May 7), which would clear the film calendar until at least June. Should that come to pass, it would be devastating to those in the business of showing movies on the big screen. By summer, it’ll have been over a year since theaters have operated at normal levels. Most U.S. venues have already gone 10 months without much — if any — revenue.

In some ways, the theatrical market is equally as impaired as it was last March when theaters were entirely closed. As of late January, around 65% of theaters remain shuttered and those that reopened have been running at limited capacity. It seems that conversations about reopening theaters in major markets like New York City and Los Angeles have been all but abandoned. A botched COVID-19 vaccine rollout, combined with new strains of the virus, have only further complicated plans to get people back to the movies.

 

 

Box office analysts predict the theatrical business will get back to normal in 2022. David A. Gross, who runs the movie consulting firm Franchise Entertainment Research, says that timeline is based on “heathy demand for quality, reasonably priced, out-of-home entertainment.”

“The vaccination process will pick up through the spring as the supply bottlenecks open up,” Gross said. “The government will spend whatever it takes to make the vaccination campaign successful, including overcoming the new COVID variants.”

Elsewhere at the domestic box office, Universal and DreamWorks Animation’s “The Croods: A New Age” collected $1.84 million in its 10th week of release, enough for second place. Those ticket sales represent a 2% increase from last weekend, which is impressive because the animated family film has been available to rent on home entertainment for almost two months. It has made $43.9 million in North America. Overseas, “The Croods” sequel made $1.3 million, bringing it past the $100 million mark for a global total of $144.38 million.

“Wonder Woman 1984” came in third place with $1.3 million from 1,864 locations. The Warner Bros. superhero adaptation, which premiered concurrently on HBO Max, has brought in $39.2 million after six weeks in North American theaters. To illustrate how depreciated the box office is, the original “Wonder Woman” grossed $38 million in its first day in theaters in 2017. Internationally, “Wonder Woman 1984” added another $1.1 million, bringing box office receipts to $112.8 million overseas and $152 million gloablly.

Liam Neeson’s action thriller “The Marksman” plunged to the No. 4 spot after leading the box office the last two weekends. It made $1.25 million in its third outing for a domestic tally of $7.8 million. The movie is currently playing in 2,018 theaters.

Rounding out the top five was Sony’s “Monster Hunter” with $740,000 in its seventh week of release. The film, an adaptation of a popular video game, has generated $11.1 million to date.

At the indie box office, Bleecker Street’s drama “Supernova” opened with $98,670 from 330 screens for a bleak $299 per-screen-average. Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth star in the emotional film about a longtime couple who find a way to cope after one is diagnosed with early onset dementia. It’s gotten strong reviews (Variety’s critic Guy Lodge called it “delicately heart-crushing”), yet the film’s target audience of older adults is one that’s been especially reluctant to return to the movies. In today’s theatrical landscape, it’s that much harder for movies from specialty studios to find their footing.

But, notes Paul Dergarabedian, a senior media analyst with Comscore, “with great reviews and an excellent cast, ‘Supernova’ should find favor over the long haul.” And it’ll help that indie films won’t have notable competition in the coming weeks.

Article by Rebecca Rubin for Variety
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Film composers may be accustomed to working alone, but they weren't immune to the tumult of 2020. Six film music specialists came together — virtually — to discuss the key to writing an effective score, even when creatively challenged by the pandemic: "What I really miss is playing music with human beings."

2020 was a year like no other, so it’s fitting that The Hollywood Reporter’s Composer Roundtable was unlike any that had gone before.

On Jan. 8, six of Hollywood’s leading film composers came together via Zoom, across three continents, to talk shop: Ludwig Göransson followed up his Oscar-winning Black Panther score with a thumping, time-shifting soundtrack to Christopher Nolan’s Tenet; Tamar-kali offered up a dissonant, daring soundscape for Shirley that won praise from the likes of Iggy Pop; Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross had a busy year with work that included the wall-to-wall 1940s orchestral score for David Fincher’s Mank and the ethereal, synthetic sound of Pixar feature Soul; Terence Blanchard, Spike Lee's go-to composer, delivered the majestic musical backdrop for the war drama Da 5 Bloods; and Emile Mosseri, who has quickly established himself as one of indie cinema's most in-demand music makers, created an affecting, ethereal soundscape for Lee Isaac Chung's Minari.

In a lively discussion, this eclectic group of film music veterans and newer talents who find themselves — and their music — in the awards-season conversation discussed the art and craft of film composing, the value of defying expectations and how each of them would score 2020.

What was your greatest musical challenge on the projects that you worked on last year?

TAMAR-KALI To be perfectly honest, I can't think of anything in the process of writing the score for Shirley that was a challenge because I was collaborating with an artist [director Josephine Decker] who literally wanted me to swing for the fences. And so I feel, if anything, that was probably a once-in-a-lifetime experience. It never happened to me before, and I don't expect to have that type of experience again any time soon.

TRENT REZNOR With Soul, working with Pixar, the biggest challenge for us was getting over our own intimidation. We'd never worked with Pixar or in an animated film before, and we were a bit intimidated. We had a lot of time to work on it, but it took a little time for us to work it out, because we didn't want to imitate Pixar movie music. At first, we were creating some pretty mediocre stuff. The biggest challenge was getting out of our own way.

ATTICUS ROSS Actually, that's my greatest fear before starting anything, writing a score or even going to the store: It's, "Will I be able to do this? Am I good enough?" Then once we start actually creating, everything becomes OK.

Emile, Minari was just your third feature film score. How challenging was it to work with director Lee Isaac Chung?

EMILE MOSSERI For me, it was an easier project than on previous films because I was able to write music at an early stage before they started shooting. But I think the challenge was the flip side of that: Because I had so much time to demo, I became too attached to things that I recorded and wrote before they started shooting and lived with for months and months. So the problem came at the back end of scoring the film, on being able to give things up, or replace things that I'd lived with for so long.

Terence, Da 5 Bloods is your 15th film score with Spike Lee. What challenge is there left for you two?

TERENCE BLANCHARD Well, I think the biggest challenge was upping the ante. I mean, Spike came up to me right after the [2018] Oscars, I mean, right literally at the ceremony, and he was telling me he had a great new idea for a movie. I was like, "We ought to take a break, you know?" But when he sent me the script, I thought it was amazing. We had the chance to score it right before COVID became a big problem. We were just really happy to get a chance to get it done right before everything went crazy. We wanted to have a massive orchestra, and if it would have been a month later, then it would have been a catastrophe.

What about you, Ludwig? In scoring Tenet, you were stepping into some big shoes: replacing Hans Zimmer.

LUDWIG GöRANSSON It was very exciting, and it was a challenge. I grew up as an avid fan of Christopher Nolan's films and Hans' work. There's no doubt that they changed the world of film scores and the film world. Stepping into this part as a composer was really a dream come true, to be able to get insight into how [Nolan's] brain works and how it works with music. Because music is such an integral part of this film, and it's always been [with his movies].

My wife had just delivered our baby, and I remember driving from the hospital to Nolan's office and watching the prologue for the first time. That was the first time I saw footage. It was incredible. I did this track four months earlier — and we'd worked on it for four months. And [Nolan] had just put this track over the prologue. I was just blown away by how his visuals worked with my music. It was a crazy, out-of-body experience. That's when I understood: OK, this is how he puts music with images. Now it's game on.

The Tenet soundtrack opens with the sound of an orchestra tuning up, a sound that feels nostalgic in lockdown, since it's been a long time since anyone has been in a concert hall. What part of your job do you miss most from working under COVID-19?

MOSSERI I think it's a great question. Off the top of my head, I'd say the vibe of being in the room with your collaborators, it's just something intangible; it's also irreplaceable. Another part of lockdown is that people are watching our movies in their homes. We've all spent so much time designing this music with the theatrical experience in mind. So it's like an adjustment, a pill to swallow, realizing that most people will be experiencing it at home. But what I really miss most is just playing music with other human beings in the same room. There's nothing like it.

BLANCHARD You can have the greatest sample library on the planet, but there's something about having musicians in the same room, something about the physics of everything happening all at one time. There's something emotional about that. On the sessions I did with Spike [pre-COVID], I found out later there were young men who drove in from all over the country, who drove from Chicago, Detroit, Seattle and New York, to come to L.A. to be a part of them. When you get together in that room, they feel such a connection to what it is that you're doing, they give 110 percent.

I'm always trying to encourage people to bring whatever they feel to the music, you know, because sometimes the guys sitting in the back playing cello might say, "Hey, man, have you ever thought of this?" And you go, "Wow, no. Let's do that." I miss that type of learning atmosphere, even for me, after all these years. I get excited being around great musicians.

TAMAR-KALI I definitely miss live music, not just playing, but even going to a gig. At this point, I'm definitely feeling that loss. Initially, because so much of my work as an independent composer is working in a room by myself, it wasn't such a big change. But one thing that's cool about the situation is that a certain amount of creativity comes into play because people can't lean on how they usually do things.

Atticus, you and Trent recorded Mank in lockdown. Do you see any advantages in working that way?

ROSS When it got time to record the orchestra and the big band, it was literally each musician in their kitchen or living room or whatever, and then assembling those parts together into what you hear in the film. All in all, I'm incredibly proud of how it turned out. But we were already in a bizarre experience, and then it became more bizarre on top of that. Personally speaking, it's hard for me to think of too many advantages, you know, apart from more time with my family.

BLANCHARD If there's one thing that COVID has done for me, it's allowed me to go back and delve into the technology and learn more about it. I've been wanting to do that for a long time, to learn more about programming and stuff like that. But between touring and teaching, I just didn't have the time. So these past few months I've been delving into the computer. That part has been great.

How do you find the right tone for a film? Ludwig, with Tenet, you were tasked with creating a sound for this idea of time inversion. How did you go about creating that?

GöRANSSON There's a scene where the protagonist, [played by] John David Washington, is stepping into a puddle of water, and you see it all in reverse. You see the water coming up to reach his foot. We wanted the music to sound like that: inverse. Today, with modern technology, there are so many different ways in the computer to reverse a sound, you can do it with a mouse click. But one of the elements that I thought was extremely interesting to experiment with was live performance. How can you make the audio of a live performance sound like it is in reverse? It's impossible. You can play something on paper in reverse, but you can't actually have an instrument play in reverse. So one thing I did was to have three percussion players. I had this main rhythm, and I asked them to record it. Then I put it on my computer and I reversed it. Then I played it for them and asked them to emulate that reverse recording as well as they could. Then I took that recording and reversed it again. The result was as close as you can get to a real-life sound of something being inversed.

Fortunately, I recorded about 80 percent of the score before the pandemic hit. But in March last year, in the beginning stages of the pandemic, I moved my studio back to my house and into my bedroom. The only difference was that on the other side of the wall, I had a baby. He was exposed to the Tenet score like 15 hours a day. Playing really loud. But he's fine.

Trent, Mank was your first big orchestral score. What was it like to record it entirely — and virtually?

REZNOR When picture was locked on Mank and we were ready to record, we were already deep into the pandemic. So we made a few decisions that I think were pretty smart. A lot were made by Conrad Pope, because he was going to conduct. Conrad made a series of videos with very clear instructions to everyone, and then we sent out a physical package with the equipment and mics and instructions on where to put them. It was a real testament to the quality of musicians and the band and Conrad that when we got these session files and assembled them back together, it actually felt like a performance with a bunch of people watching a conductor in a room.

The mind-set we adopted to the orchestral material was that of [Citizen Kane composer] Bernard Herrmann — what kind of experimental techniques might he have deployed. Fincher's idea was that the film should feel like it was something from the 1940s that was found on a shelf, that it have the spirit of the era without having to be provably of that era.

Can I ask about your instrumentation choices? Tamar, what is that sound on Shirley, a plucked cello?

TAMAR-KALI So I used a string quartet, piano and my voice. I got the initial cut from [Decker], and she definitely has a style. This film is like a fever dream. It's one of those movies where you're not sure: Did I watch that or was it a dream? It has a mystical quality to it. So what I was trying to accomplish and trying to convey emotionally with the music was that there was a veil between the scene and the viewer, a space between the conscious and unconscious.

 

[Decker] had spoken to me about using female voice as a lead instrument in the film. And so I went about voicing the main characters, Shirley Jackson [played by Elisabeth Moss], who, for me, was an alto; Rose, the woman staying in the house with her and her husband, who was a mezzo; and Paula, the missing girl, a soprano.

So I went about just creating these shapes, these different women's voices. There was this theme of initiation, possession and initiation in the film. So there's a sound that accompanies Rose when she kind of becomes possessed by the spirit of Shirley, even though Shirley is alive. But she's under her influence. So I used these little motifs, adding a little sound here and there to create these women in their voices. It's so funny, Ludwig, talking about inversion. Because there is a vocal passage in the film that I created basically by simulating or mimicking singing backward. As a teen, I listened to a good amount of music, some stuff on Prince albums, that was backward. So it's like you have an idea of what that sounds like.

GöRANSSON I remember hearing the beginning of And Justice for All, the Metallica album, as a kid, but I didn't know it was backward. It's one minute all backward, and it kind of blew my mind because I had no idea how it was created. It felt like this magical thing.

From-left-Minari%E2%80%99s-Emile-Mosseri-also-worked-on-the-Amazon-TV-series-Homecoming-John-David-Washington-and-Ludwig-Go%CC%88ransson-on-Tenet-EMBED-2021-1611341087-compressed.jpghttps://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/From-left-Minari%E2%80%99s-Emile-Mosseri-also-worked-on-the-Amazon-TV-series-Homecoming-John-David-Washington-and-Ludwig-Go%CC%88ransson-on-Tenet-EMBED-2021-1611341087-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/From-left-Minari%E2%80%99s-Emile-Mosseri-also-worked-on-the-Amazon-TV-series-Homecoming-John-David-Washington-and-Ludwig-Go%CC%88ransson-on-Tenet-EMBED-2021-1611341087-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/From-left-Minari%E2%80%99s-Emile-Mosseri-also-worked-on-the-Amazon-TV-series-Homecoming-John-David-Washington-and-Ludwig-Go%CC%88ransson-on-Tenet-EMBED-2021-1611341087-compressed.jpg 1047w" alt="(From left) 'Minari''s Emile Mosseri also worked on the Amazon TV series 'Homecoming'. John David Washington and Ludwig Göransson on 'Tenet.'" />
Mosseri/Warner Bros. Entertainment
From left: 'Minari''s Emile Mosseri also worked on the Amazon TV series 'Homecoming'; John David Washington and Ludwig Göransson on the set of 'Tenet.'

Emile, your score for Minari is quite restrained. Was that the strategy from the get-go?

MOSSERI It's a very intimate story about a family of five characters in a small space. So when I started writing music at the script stage, it was in that intimate spirit, with just my voice and the piano. Then I had this old acoustic guitar to give the score more grounding. And then, because it takes place in the '80s, I tried to sneak in some synthesizer, just a bit without announcing itself on the score.

But for this particular film, the exciting challenge was finding places to get big with the music. Because it's a small story, but it's also very emotional. It has grand, sweeping moments. We recorded 40 strings, in Macedonia, because the budget didn't allow us to record in L.A.

I think [the strategy] was trying to find a way to strike the balance of this more intimate personal score and also have these bigger, emotional, sweeping moments — but to lean into those moments sparingly.

When you write music, is there a deliberate effort to not sound like a typical film score?

ROSS Well, I don't know about intention. But if you think of Taxi Driver — to me, that is one of the great scores of all time. I can't hear that music without thinking of the film, and I can't see a bit of that film without thinking of the music. That's always the goal: to create a world that feels part of the DNA of the story. It's only logical that you come to a place that feels unique, because otherwise you sound like another story. So it's not like we want to be weird for weird's sake. We're just trying to support the emotional journey of the story and the characters in the way that feels the most authentic. And it takes a long time and there's a lot of thought and a lot of experimentation. But I don't think we've ever let anything leave the studio that we haven't felt, "This is the best that we can do."

Are the studios more open to experimentation on film scores these days?

BLANCHARD The studios want to make money. That's always been the case. I think what has changed is that the public is more accepting of more unique projects. Look at what Ludwig did with [his score to] Black Panther. That was something that kind of changed the landscape, you know, for a lot of moviegoers. It changed the landscape of what is acceptable for a movie score. The directors have always had vision. That's never been the issue. The issue has always been, "What's the flavor of what's going on?" I remember being on a panel one time with Thomas Newman. I used to feel sorry for Thomas because he's like the most temped guy on the planet, you know? [Temping refers to the practice of adding music to a scene during editing as a guide for composers.] At one point you couldn't work on a show without his music being temped over a shot. That doesn't happen as much now.

And part of the reason is that people who buy the tickets are changing. When those folks go out and vote, they say, "This is what we want to see." I'm happy to see that Spike finally got his Oscar. I'm happy to see that Regina King did a movie that's getting attention [the Blanchard-scored One Night in Miami]. I'm happy to see this young Black woman [Tamar-kali] interviewed here on this panel. I'm happy to see a diverse array of people starting to get attention, because that only makes it better for everybody.

I've been in this business for 30 years, and it's not that long ago that there was just one type of sound, one type of voice that was being heard every year. So [2020] was a beautiful thing. It's only going to make things better, getting a more diverse array of stories being told. You know the attack on the Capitol [on Jan. 6] happened because of ignorance and intolerance. That's all based out of fear. And that's the thing we have to fight against. The thing that helps us to move forward from that is the world of art. We have to be the ones to show people how we come together to create these things. Look at this group of people here all talking, collaboration, appreciating each other's contributions. That's a very positive thing.

When Tenet came out, some complained the score was too loud, that it drowned out the dialogue.

GöRANSSON I found that an interesting discussion. What is new is that speakers and the sound is getting better and better every year. There are so many things we can do with sound now. We can have these really low frequencies, we can give audiences crazy new experiences. Nolan is all for that. For a lot of audience members, how we incorporated the sound design into the score was jarring, because it is heavily manipulated. A lot of times you think you know what you're listening to, but you don't. The idea you have in your head, your expectation of what you are going to hear is thrown completely off. And you get confused.

REZNOR You know, when I think back on how we landed with The Social Network 10 years ago: an A-list filmmaker [Fincher] engaging us, putting faith in our ability to do something we'd never done before. From Nine Inch Nails, songwriting was something I kind of knew how to do. But what started to be attractive to me over time was less about creating the great song — you know, the Beatles structure with the perfect melody and the clever chord changes in the bridge. It became more interesting to me to focus on the feeling, the emotional feeling of a song, and then almost deliberately try to break away from the structure and focus just on how the song makes you feel. When it came to writing music to pictures, it was really trying to hone in on empathy and feeling the story. That may be obvious, but it was trying to get our egos, our choice of instruments, and all our techniques out of the way and try to focus solely on the emotional content of the story. That's what we focus on initially and then treat the style of recording, or the choice of instrumentation, as a choice of tool that will help us.

There's often talk about how a good score can save a bad performance, but what about the opposite? Does a great performance influence your music? Tamar, did Elisabeth Moss' performance in Shirley influence your score?

TAMAR-KALI Absolutely. The film was pretty much locked when I got it. But I really love writing to picture. I love reacting to the work. Particularly like here when the work is very strong. I can be inspired by anything: the colors and tone of the cinematography, the atmospheric sound and ambient noise, even the intonation of the actors' voices.

I think it was particularly that case with this film because so much of the score has to do with the psychological underpinnings of the characters. The relationship that Shirley has with her husband [Stanley Edgar Hyman, played by Michael Stuhlbarg], for example. They have this very sadistic intellectual relationship. When they are interacting with each other onscreen, I gave their score what I would call a demonic playfulness, because there's a certain amount of destruction that's happening underneath the general, basic dysfunction. I was able to really tap into some of that in terms of what I was doing with the strings and the piano. There's a certain unraveling that's happening onscreen. And I really wanted to convey that in the development of the score.

If 2020 was a film, what kind of score would you write?

MOSSERI I would try to have some combination of a glowing beating heart, to try to put some love into it, but with some dissonance and pain. I think it would have to contain both.

ROSS I mean, we'll spend a couple of months trying to find the sound on a film that we know exists, so to spend 30 seconds coming up with something clever to say is a bit … The thing with 2020 is: What story would the film be? Because there are so many different ones. If we're scoring the political story, it's just noise. If it was my internal journey, it's probably something else.

TAMAR-KALI As soon as you asked that, what I thought was: a 20-minute primal scream, followed by 20 seconds of real guttural hollows in the vocal fry. If there was any instrumentation, it would be on the extremes of like what your body could process and what you could hear, like the highest frequencies that only like 12-year-olds can hear, and then the deep stuff that goes right into the bones behind your ear. That's what 2020 feels like to me.

BLANCHARD I know exactly how I would do it. I would start with the most angelic child singing with the most optimistic view of what we thought 2020 would be. And it would shift into something that would be dark, you know, maybe played with just a trumpet. The entire thing would be scored with a full orchestra. Then, at the moment of the George Floyd killing, that's when the trumpet and just an open snare drum would commence and it would shift into something dark because of COVID as well. Then brass would come in because, you know, we need to understand there's an underpinning of righteous people who are trying to push forward what this country is really supposed to be about. And the youth in this country stepped forward and came together in a way that we've never seen before. Then, at the point of the election, an optimistic version of that song, with full orchestra, with a sudden, dark, sadistic, unexpected shift because of what happened [Jan. 6] all the way down to some solo instrument as a last beacon of hope trying to move into 2021.

REZNOR I'd maybe take a different tack. Just a simple experimental score of the bowel movement frequency on full blast for a whole year.

GöRANSSON I think I would just inverse myself and go back through the pandemic and score Tenet again.

 

Article by: Scott Roxborough for The Hollywood Reporter

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'WandaVision' and Marvel's Next Big Villain

There are countless clues in the Disney+ show that a bad guy that rivals Thanos is just waiting in the wings.

 

[This story contains spoilers for the first three episodes of WandaVision.]

Marvel Studios appears to be courting the devil. While the studio’s head honcho, Kevin Feige, has been typically reticent to give away too many of the MCU’s future plans, it would seem an arc is starting to take shape, if not throughout the entirety of Phase 4’s film and Disney+ streaming projects, then at least through the MCU’s magic-tinged projects: WandaVisionLoki, the untitled Spider-Man 3, and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. And within that arc, a new threat seems to be on the rise, one whose villainy could rival that of Thanos, or maybe even surpass it.

If the apparent clues in WandaVision are to be believed, then the Marvel Universe’s very own version of the devil, Mephisto, may be right around the corner.

A little background: Mephisto, created by Stan Lee and John Buscema, first appeared in The Silver Surfer No. 3 (1968). Much like his literary namesake, Mephistopheles, the demon served as a tempter, and made the bargaining rounds with nearly every hero in the Marvel Universe at one point or another, vying for their desires in exchange for a piece of themselves. When it comes to the MCU, Mephisto fits perfectly into a post-Infinity Saga landscape, given that his comic book origins have strong ties to the Infinity Gems. According to Mephisto, as told in The Silver Surfer Vol. 3 No. 45 (1991), the being of pure evil was born when the One-Above-All, a supreme cosmic being, died by suicide. That act resulted in the creation of the Marvel multiverse, the Infinity Gems, and Mephisto. During the iconic storyline The Infinity Gauntlet (1991), Mephisto guides Thanos in the use of the Infinity Gems as part of his plan to acquire them for himself. It’s later revealed, in Avengers Vol. 8 No. 38 (2020), that Mephisto has been whispering in Thanos’ ear since the Mad Titan was young, setting his sights on Earth in prehistoric times and starting Thanos’ ongoing war against humanity’s greatest heroes. While Mephisto’s attempt to claim the stones in The Infinity Gauntlet failed, he has recently acquired the Time Stone, as of Avengers Vol. 8 No. 31 (2020), allowing him to travel through time, and change certain events, such as pitting Thanos against Earth earlier than the previously established continuity. To further complicate matters, Mephisto’s possession of the time stone has allowed him to cheat death more efficiently than ever before. His travels through time have created alternate universe versions of himself that can supplant his deceased form. Talk about a multiverse of madness.

Given that Mephisto and the stones are comprised of the same energy in the comics, it’s conceivable that in the MCU the stones’ cycle of use and destruction awoke Mephisto to the goings on of Earth. While it’s unlikely that the MCU would find Mephisto undergoing the same quest as Thanos, to collect all the stones, it does seem that not all of the Infinity Stones are entirely out of the picture. In fact, the audition synopsis for Sam Raimi’s Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness makes reference to the fact that Stephen Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) will still be researching the Time Stone following the events of Avengers: Endgame (2019). While the Doctor Strange sequel seems to be the culmination of the MCU’s magic-focused arc, WandaVision is its beginning. And even with only three of the nine episodes having premiered so far, Mephisto’s shadow is already growing.

The shape of a hexagon has been a reoccurring motif in the first batch of WandaVision episodes, the shape is prevalent in the three different theme songs that set that stage for the series’ shifting timeline. The root word for hexagon is hex, which in Greek means six, but in German means witchcraft. Six, of course has significance in the MCU, with there being six Infinity Stones. Biblically, it took the Judeo-Christian God six days to create the world. And, as all horror-loving fans know from The Omen (1976) and various demon-centric movies, 666 is the number of the beast, the devil, and yes, Mephisto. Interestingly enough, subsequent translations of the New Testament, in Arabic and Greek, note the number of the beast as 616, which is the designation of Marvel’s main comic book continuity. The number six is notably absent from all the clocks, radios, and dials in WandaVision. Additionally, six promotional posters were released for the show, each pertaining to a decade of television the show would reference — the '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s and '00s.

Not to go entirely into LOST territory, but there’s definitely a significance to the use of that number in the show and larger MCU. And as for hex, as in witchcraft, Feige revealed that WandaVision would see Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) earn her moniker, Scarlet Witch. During the theme song of the second episode, six stars are shown around the moon. The moon is known as the symbol of the witch goddess Hecate in Greek mythology. And in Egyptian mythology, Khonshu is the God of the moon. So at this point we might as well go full-LOST.

In Marvel Comics, Khonshu’s avatar on Earth is Moon Knight, set to be introduced in the MCU and played by Oscar Isaac next year. Recently, in Jason Aaron’s Avengers run, Khonshu has been pitted against Mephisto, but has found him unbeatable as the demon has used the Time Stone to create an army of versions of himself from across the multiverse. This wouldn’t be the first time Marvel Comics has sought to synchronize itself with the MCU in advance, and Jason Aaron’s run, in which Mephisto is the big bad, may hold quite a few clues about the character’s cinematic future.

In the comics, Wanda’s mutation gave her “hex powers,” but she learned to achieve greater control of these through actual magic, taught to her by her mentor Agatha Harkness. A contraction of the name Agatha Harkness is Agnes, which of course is the name of Kathryn Hahn’s nosy neighbor in WandaVision. Agnes seems to know more than she’s letting on, and that’s become increasingly apparent in the most recent episode. There’s a reoccurring mention of her husband, Ralph, who is never seen but only mentioned. Agnes, if the theory about her truly being Agatha Harkness is correct, and I can’t imagine it isn’t, has delivered a few lines that lead me to believe she has quite the intimate relationship with Mephisto. Wanda’s snobby neighbor, Dottie (Emma Caulfield Ford) says, “the devil’s in the details.” To which, Agnes responds, “that’s not the only place he is,” with a wink. And in the third episode, Agnes says that her husband Ralph “looks better in the dark.”

VHW2390_106_comp_v002_r709.1044-EMBED-2021-1610387715-compressed.jpghttps://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/VHW2390_106_comp_v002_r709.1044-EMBED-2021-1610387715-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/VHW2390_106_comp_v002_r709.1044-EMBED-2021-1610387715-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/VHW2390_106_comp_v002_r709.1044-EMBED-2021-1610387715-compressed.jpg 1047w" alt="WANDAVISION - Kathryn Hahn" />Courtesy of Marvel Studios/Disney+
 
https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/VHW2390_106_comp_v002_r709.1044-EMBED-2021-1610387715-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/VHW2390_106_comp_v002_r709.1044-EMBED-2021-1610387715-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/VHW2390_106_comp_v002_r709.1044-EMBED-2021-1610387715-compressed.jpg 1047w" data-alt-text="WANDAVISION - Kathryn Hahn"> 

Obviously, these are meant to be possibly innocuous sitcom lines, but given the whole mystery approach to the show, there seems to be something sinister at play. While Agnes isn’t married to Mephisto in the comics, and she isn’t a villain, she does have a long history of secret agendas, and is very familiar with the devil and the darker aspects of magic. And Harkness played a crucial role in altering Wanda’s memories when she discovered that her children, Billy and Tommy, were fragments of Mephisto’s soul in John Byrne’s controversial “Vision Quest” and “Darker Than Scarlet” arcs in Avengers West Coast in 1989 and 1990. As for more evidence that Agnes is not who she seems? If you look closely at the brooch, which she’s worn in every episode, there is what appears to be a scythe-wielding figure. While this may conjure up thoughts of Thanos’ paramour, Death, who stood with Mephisto against the Mad Titan in The Infinity Gauntlet, the truth may lie in a more obscure figure, but one that holds great importance to the history of Wanda and Vision.

Feige has mentioned that Bill Mantlo and Rick Leonardi’s four-issue miniseries, Vision and the Scarlet Witch (1982), which saw the couple move to the suburbs, served as a primary inspiration for WandaVision. In the first issue of that series, Wanda faces off against, “He Who Would Live,” also known as Samhain, a scythe-wielding demonic druid who captured Agatha Harkness’ soul, and sought to use Wanda’s powers to give him dominion over Earth’s magical forces once again. Samhain also serves as an ally to Salem’s Seven, a group of evil sorcerers who tempted Wanda to join their coven. They also happen to be the grandchildren of Agatha Harkness. It’s possible that some of the denizens of Westview are practitioners of magic as well, working in the service of Samhain, who in turn is a disciple of Mephisto. All signs point to the sixth episode of WandaVision, that’s right sixth, being set on Halloween, also known as Samhain Day, and the date in the comics in which Wanda encountered the druid. While it seems Wanda is responsible for much of the reality-altering in WandaVision, as she searches for a perfect life, one born of the imported American TV shows she was raised on, Mephisto could be pulling the strings.

The bargain for Vision’s (Paul Bettany) resurrection could have dire consequences, especially if it’s a means for Mephisto to open the multiverse and escape from one into another. But Wanda’s powers might not be enough. If Mephisto has grand plans for the multiverse, then time would be a way to open up further universes or even erase others from existence. And this brings us to Loki. The series, set to debut on Disney+ in May, will introduce the Time Variance Authority, an organization that monitors the multiverse, and erases those they deem too dangerous to remain in existence, perhaps realities overrun by Mephisto. The teaser trailer for the series contained a curious-looking stained glass window, one that depicted a figure who looks strikingly similar to Mephisto. There are also two images of the moon in that image, perhaps one symbolizes Khonshu, and the other Hecate. And with two moons, and three stars in the image, Mephisto himself is the sixth cosmic creation in that picture.

The third MCU Spider-Man film, starring Tom Holland, and what could be a conceivably huge cast if rumors hold true, appears to be laying some groundwork for the multiverse. The casting of Jamie Foxx as Electro and Alfred Molina as Otto Octavius points in that direction. But beyond the multiverse, there’s also the threat of Peter Parker’s exposed identity hanging over his head. As discussed in October, there’s a chance that the upcoming film will take cues from the Spider-Man storylines One More Day (2007) and One Moment in Time (2010), and will find Spider-Man denied help in restoring his identity from Doctor Strange and turning to the devil in disguise, Mephisto. Given the “Parker Luck” there’s a likelihood that Peter’s meddling in the world of magic have severe consequences. But what Peter might not know is that Mephisto’s plan was already long set in motion.

These threads will likely culminate in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, which is set to feature Wanda in a substantial role. The logline for the film mentions a friend-turned-enemy, leading to speculation that the returning Karl Mordo (Chiwetel Ejiofor) will be fulfilling that role, much as he does in the comics. But it’s possible that is a misdirect, with Scarlet Witch being the friend-turned-enemy, especially if Strange is partly responsible for ending her domestic bliss in Westview. There’s a decent chance that Wanda’s communion with Mephisto doesn’t end with WandaVision, and her earning the mantle of Scarlet Witch has just as much to do with her coming into her own as it does her with ties to the red devil, Mephisto.

Beyond the Multiverse of Madness, Mephisto presents an opportunity to expand the MCU even further, given his ties to both the cosmic and supernatural side of the MCU. From his creation of Ghost Rider, and his torment of the Silver Surfer, to his claim over the soul of Cynthia Von Doom, setting her son, Victor on the path to becoming Doctor Doom, Mephisto may be the Marvel multiverse’s most well-traveled villain. And, if even half of these theories are correct, he may entirely change the landscape of the MCU and open up more possibilities than were ever anticipated when the franchise began in 2008.

Oh, and if we’re still playing the numbers game and WandaVision is indeed set a year after the events of Avengers: Endgame, than means it’s six years following Thanos’ snap, and the “blip” that may have sent a signal out to the demon waiting in the dark cosmos.

Article by: Richard Newby for Hollywood Reporter

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It was lucky for the filmmakers behind the self-financed “Malcolm & Marie” that they didn’t have a studio behind them, said Zendaya, the movie’s star and producer, because it took them two days of shooting to figure out what they were doing. After they had shot — and thrown out — “two days of unusable footage,” Zendaya said, its writer-director-producer Sam Levinson told her that if they were filming a big-budget movie, “we would have been fired.”

Instead, they made “Malcolm & Marie” — a black-and-white drama set over the course of one long night, starring Zendaya and John David Washington — on spec, and ended up selling it to Netflix for $30 million. And because of the unusual way they financed the movie, Zendaya said, it wasn’t only the producers who benefited from that sale: “It was really special for us, because we were able to offer our key crew members points on the movie.”

“It just felt like the right thing to do,” Zendaya continued. “These are the people that are laying all the tracks and were with us through the whole thing — and literally putting their blood, sweat and tears into it.”

During Zendaya’s conversation with Carey Mulligan for Variety’s Actors on Actors series, presented by Amazon Studios, they talked about their creative passions for “Malcolm & Marie,” “Euphoria” (also created by Levinson) and Mulligan’s “Promising Young Woman.”

They also delved into how “Malcolm & Marie” came together, and became one of the first movies to film after production came to a halt because of the coronavirus pandemic. The film shot in Carmel, Calif., in June and July, under COVID-19 protocols that at that time had not yet been agreed upon by studios or the unions — according to Zendaya, the film’s producers created their own.

Our producers really did the hard work of consulting with different medical professionals and making sure that we had a very, very strict protocol,” she said. “Because if we were going to do this, the No. 1 thing is that people were safe. And so we kind of created a bubble, essentially.”

That part was easy to do, because they were filming at a compound in Carmel, which doubled as the couple’s house in which they argue and find their way back to one another. “We brought everything we needed, and we stayed there,” Zendaya said.

When Mulligan pointed out that “Malcolm & Marie” feels like theater because of its long takes, Zendaya agreed. She said her love of acting “came from the stage because my mom worked at the California Shakespeare Theater when I was a kid.”

“I think it’s always like an actor’s dream kind of a little bit to do something like a play,” she added.

As they filmed, she and Washington worked together to find their characters’ relationship: “What they’ve been through together, and what they mean to each other,” Zendaya said.

When Season 2 of “Euphoria” was shut down before filming even started in the spring, Zendaya and Levinson put their heads together to create something else. “I had this thought of like, ‘Could we just do something in my house?’” Zendaya remembered. As they discussed different ideas, Levinson called her one day and said, “‘Yo, Z, I got a good one’  — and he starts telling me this concept.”

The shoot was only 14 days start to finish, Zendaya said. “There were tough days, and it was exhausting,” she said. “But here was so much family around us, it felt like. We created this set family of support.”

Article by: Kate Arthur for Variety

 

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Movies and art are still the pillars for our survival during the COVID-19 pandemic. As one awards season is currently underway, we look ahead to films that shifted from their original dates, features coming soon to theaters and streaming, and films that don’t have a date but have compelling directors attached.

Variety assembled a robust list of the biggest movies coming in 2021. But which filmmakers are bringing their signature styles or offering new perspectives this year? There’s plenty of material to choose from, whether it be the juicy source material of a beloved composer like Leonard Bernstein, the science fiction story of a futuristic hero or an upcoming superhero film that in a typical year would likely see a woman helm the highest-grossing motion picture of the year for the first time (on top of possibly being in the Oscars race).

The year looks to be very promising for inclusive voices, both on the mainstream and in the independent realm, which always breathes new life and energy into the art of filmmaking.

Other notable filmmakers with anticipated films set for 2021: Hollywood heavyweights Paul Thomas Anderson, George Miller, Steven Soderbergh, Baz Luhrmann, Terrence Malick and David O. Russell, and newcomers Kay Cannon, Rebecca Hall and Nia DeCosta are among the directors also releasing buzzy films this year.

NOTE: There are many projects still in development, others we’re unsure about in terms of timing and, even some that are on this list may not see the light of day this calendar year.

Here are the directors we’re looking forward to hearing from in 2021.

“The French Dispatch” (Searchlight Pictures)

The imagination and creative vision of Wes Anderson are undeniable and utterly recognizable. Anderson has racked up seven Oscar nominations, over four separate categories (picture, director, original screenplay and animated feature), beginning with 2001’s “The Royal Tenenbaums” and most recently with 2018’s “Isle of Dogs.” His next venture, which was originally scheduled to play at last year’s Cannes Film Festival before it was canceled due to COVID-19, is shuffling to a still-to-be-determined date this year. With many of his familiar cast members returning, we are sure to be in for another whimsical outing that’s described as a love letter to journalists.

Starring: Timothée Chalamet, Saoirse Ronan, Elisabeth Moss, Léa Seydoux, Owen Wilson, Frances McDormand, Tilda Swinton, Edward Norton, Bill Murray, Christoph Waltz, Willem Dafoe, Adrien Brody, Benicio del Toro, Rupert Friend, Liev Schreiber, Anjelica Huston, Fisher Stevens, Jason Schwartzman, Jeffrey Wright, Lois Smith, Jeffrey Wright

Written by: Wes Anderson, Jason Schwartzman, Roman Coppola, Hugo Guinness

Synopsis: A love letter to journalists set in an outpost of an American newspaper in a fictional twentieth-century French city that brings to life a collection of stories published in The French Dispatch Magazine.

“Cow”

British filmmaker Andrea Arnold has an Oscar in the best live action short category for 2005’s “Wasp.” Since then, her work in features like “Fish Tank” and “American Honey” have garnered respect and acclaim. It’s a rarity to see a documentary make an appearance on lists for anticipated films, and her first doc that looks at two cows’ daily lives. (The internet is sure to dub this one “Second Cow.”) It could be beautifully poignant with a filmmaker of Arnold’s stature.

Written by: Andrea Arnold

Synopsis: A close-up portrait of the daily lives of two cows.

“Bruised” (Netflix)

The only Black woman to ever win the best actress Oscar has jumped into the driver’s seat and is ready to bring her filmmaking vision to the world. Picked at the Toronto International Film Festival by Netflix, it’s said to show her natural touch behind the camera, even managing some very high acting moments. It’s also lovely to see her tap composer Terence Blanchard, long-time composer of Spike Lee, to score the film, along with a rumored solid turn from Stephen McKinley Henderson (“Fences”).

Starring: Halle Berry, Adan Canto, Stephen McKinley Henderson

Written by: Michelle Rosenfarb

Synopsis: Follows a former MMA fighter struggling to regain custody of her son and restart her athletic career.

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Frank Abney says the idea for his animated short feature and Oscar hopeful “Canvas” was born out of a need to make a film that was personal.

Six years ago, the animator, whose credits include Pixar titles “Soul,” “Coco,” “Toy Story 4” and “Incredibles 2,” felt he was nevertheless experiencing a rough patch creatively. “I was trying to navigate the industry, and we struggle as artists,” Abney says. “I knew when I created something, I wanted it to be unique to my situation.”

Watching his young niece and observing her carefree nature, he devised a family film in which generations help each other. Abney lost his father when he was 5 and witnessed his mother sharing his grief, his grandfather at her side. “I was curious [about my grandfather] because he was always quiet and withdrawn when I was around him,” Abney says.

The nine-minute “Canvas” tells the story of an older wheelchair user who is withdrawn after the death of a loved one. The film, which is dialogue free, relies on a score by composer Jermaine Stegall. Absent speech, Abney approached the story from a visual perspective. That meant conceiving “subjects rather than what the characters were saying,” he explains. “I wanted to get into what they were thinking and what was motivating them on that journey. We communicate [best] with each other when we look at each other, by body language and by our eyes.”

While “Canvas” deals with loss, there’s also hope through the character of the granddaughter, Aura. It’s a concept reflected in her musical theme. “She brings energy, joy and light,” says the filmmaker. “So when you see her presence, it’s coupled with what you’re hearing.”

Canvas-2.jpg?w=1000https://variety.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Canvas-2.jpg?resize=150,47 150w, https://variety.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Canvas-2.jpg?resize=300,95 300w" alt="Lazy loaded image" width="1000" height="315" data-lazy-loaded="true" />
Courtesy of Netflix

Abney paid particular attention to Aura’s hair, using Maya XGen software to render an authentic hairstyle that’s richly realistic. “I needed to look at the texture of the frizz, how light reacts to it and how it clumps together,” he says, noting that he referenced actor Kimberly Elise and other Black women who have worn their hair naturally. Abney says he wouldn’t be able to comment on how studios approach inclusive looks “if I’m not going to put the work in when it’s my turn.” He adds, “It was important to bring that representation to the forefront.”

“Canvas” began as a Kickstarter project, then drew interest from Netflix. “It’s been so nice to see it resonate with people and how it has been affecting people around the world,” says the film’s producer, Paige Johnstone.

Having made his mark, Abney is working to elevate other Black animators, collaborating with Trent Correy and Bobby Pontillas to establish Rise Up Animation. “The goal was to bring the idea of working in this industry closer to your doorstep,” Abney says. “Working in Hollywood can be unobtainable when you’re coming up in an area that isn’t geared toward artistic growth.” He hopes Rise Up can offer support to people aiming to have careers in animation by providing free industry feedback sessions and workshops. “We have something for everyone to get closer to breaking into this field.”

 

Article by: Jazz Tangcay for Variety

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When composer Emile Mosseri and director Lee Isaac Chung began talking about the music for “Minari,” Chung’s reminiscence about his Korean family’s struggle to succeed at farming in Arkansas, they decided what the score shouldn’t be: overtly Korean or American in style.

“No twangy guitars or harmonicas,” says Mosseri of the A24 film, which had an Oscar-qualifying run last month and will get a wider rollout starting Feb. 12. “It wasn’t specifically the immigrant story that we were trying to evoke. It was more the idea of childhood memory. Isaac wrote a deeply personal film: an immigration story, an American story, but also just a story about his childhood. So the music has this dream-memory kind of quality.”

Producer Christina Oh, with whom Mosseri had worked on the 2019 film “The Last Black Man in San Francisco,” for which he delivered a breakthrough score, introduced him to Chung and offered him an early reading of “Minari.” “I fell in love with it,” Mosseri says, “an incredibly beautiful, poetic script.” He would eventually visit the movie’s Oklahoma locations (his wife, by coincidence, is from Tulsa).

He began writing before shooting, “just melodies and themes that were in the spirit of the film, that felt emotionally connected.” Chung was listening to those early demos during shooting, and editor Harry Yoon began to cut them into the film, which stars Steven Yeun as Jacob, Yeri Han as his wife and Noel Kate Cho and Alan S. Kim as their children. “They were extending certain scenes to fit my music, and the music has room to breathe as a result,” the composer says.

The “Minari” soundscape is unique. Mosseri’s early piano and voice demos wound up in the film, he reports. He then doubled his piano with a detuned acoustic guitar, which provided “a more organic, earthy feel,” and added a strange and unexpected sound to the mix: the theremin-like tones of a 1980s Korg synthesizer.

“I wanted to combine organic elements with synthetic ones,” he explains. “It also gives us an instability. There’s a bit of a struggle with this wobbly kind of unsturdy sound. The film has this undertone of love and family, but also [a] deep struggle and frustration and pain that is so powerful and so real.

“The goal was to have this warm beating heart — sort of the glow of the human soul — but also dissonance and strain,” Mosseri continues. He added a 40-piece string orchestra (recorded remotely in Macedonia) so “the strings, the synth and the voice helped round out that approach.”

The film concludes with the lullaby “Rain Song,” also written by Mosseri and sung in Korean by Han, who plays Monica in the film. It conveys “a hopeful message of rain creating a new day,” Mosseri says. And the idea of a lullaby to Monica’s son, David — through whose eyes so much of the film unfolds — felt right to both composer and filmmaker.

Mosseri’s fondest moment? Watching an early cut of the movie with Chung and Yoon and thinking, “Oh wow, he made a movie about his mother, about his father, his grandmother. I wasn’t prepared, emotionally, for how hard the film was going to hit me. That was a profound life experience.”

 

Article by: Jon Burlingame for Variety

 

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If time is a flat circle, then it’s only fitting that a second under-the-radar Liam Neeson movie is ruling over the U.S. box office during the pandemic. Months after his action thriller “Honest Thief” led domestic charts, another Neeson (you guessed it!) action thriller “The Marksman” has debuted at No. 1 with $3.2 million in ticket sales.

Robert Lorenz directed “The Marksman,” about a rancher and retired Marine living in Arizona who helps a young boy escape a Mexican drug cartel. The film, which premiered in 1,975 locations, should rake in $3.7 million through the Martin Luther King holiday on Monday. Open Road, the distributor behind “The Marksman,” also backed “Honest Thief.” That film bowed to $3.7 million last October and ended its theatrical run with $14 million in the U.S. and $28 million globally.

“The Marksman” joins the company of “Honest Thief” and Robert De Niro’s “The War With Grandpa” as some of the lowest-grossing box office toppers in modern history, highlighting the bleak reality that movie theaters are facing amid the country’s latest COVID-19 surge. Overall, around 65% of U.S. theaters remain closed due to the pandemic.

Meanwhile, “Wonder Woman 1984” slid to second place after besting the (albeit muted) competition for three straight weekends. Warner Bros. did not provide a three-day total, but the studio projects the superhero sequel will generate $2.6 million through the extended holiday weekend. However, “Wonder Woman 1984” could drop to third place behind “The Croods: A New Age” when Martin Luther King day sales are finalized on Monday. Since it touched down on Christmas Day, Gal Gadot’s latest outing as Diana Prince has earned $35 million in the U.S.

“Wonder Woman 1984,” a DC Comics adaptation that cost $200 million to produce, released simultaneously on the fledgling streaming service HBO Max. It will be taken off the platform next Sunday, and the film will only be available to watch in theaters until it reaches its traditional home entertainment window. It’s expected to return to the streamer a few months later. Internationally, where HBO Max has yet to launch, the fantastical follow-up brought in $5.2 million, boosting foreign revenues to $105.9 million for a worldwide total of $141.7 million.

For now, Universal and DreamWorks’ sequel to “The Croods” placed third, amassing $2.04 million this weekend and looking to cross the long weekend with $2.9 million. The animated family film actually improved upon last week’s grosses by 13%, which is impressive considering it’s currently available to watch on home entertainment. Last year, Universal forged an agreement with major theater chains such as AMC and Cinemark to allow the studio to put new releases on demand after 17 days in theaters. In return, select exhibitors are getting an undisclosed cut of digital profits. After two months in theaters, “The Croods: A New Age” has made $40 million at the domestic box office. Overseas, the movie added another $2.2 million from 17 countries for an international total of $94.7 million and a global haul of $134.8 million.

Another Universal title, “News of the World” with Tom Hanks, landed in fourth place with a three-day total of $1.05 million and an expected four-day tally of $1.27 million. The Western drama, which is also available to watch on-demand, has collected $8.72 million on the big screen. Rounding out the top five is Sony’s thriller “Monster Hunter.” The video game adaptation with Milla Jovovich generated $920,000 over the weekend and should reach $1.09 million through MLK day. By Monday, it will have made $9.2 million to date.

Though “Promising Young Woman” fell to seventh place on box office charts, the film all but dominated social media chatter as the acclaimed revenge thriller hit premium-on-demand platforms this weekend. (Focus Features, the company distributing the movie, falls under its parent company Universal’s early VOD agreement.) It played in more than 1,000 theaters and collected $430,000 over the weekend, most of which came from drive-in locations. Directed by Emerald Fennell and starring Carey Mulligan, “Promising Young Woman” has grossed $3.4 million in theaters so far. The studio has not reported how many rented the film online.

At the specialty box office, IFC Films opened “MLK/ FBI” — a documentary directed by Sam Pollard — on demand and in more than 120 theaters nationwide. The film scraped together $27,500 over the three-day weekend and expects to make $33,250 through Monday. Though IFC didn’t provide tangible rental stats, the company said the documentary ranked within the top 10 on Apple Movies’ independent charts and on the top 5 for documentaries.

“We are so thrilled that the best reviewed and most important documentary of the year is connecting so strongly with audiences on all platforms,” said IFC Films president Arianna Bocco.

Overseas, Disney and Pixar’s “Soul” continued to chug along at the international box office, particularly in China where it now stands as the third highest-grossing Pixar movie of all time with $43.1 million. The critically beloved animated family film isn’t playing in U.S. theaters. Instead, it premiered on the company’s streaming service Disney Plus on Christmas Day. In total, “Soul” has made $57.4 million from 11 countries.

 

Article by: Rebecca Rubin for Variety

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Tom Holland (“Cherry”) and Daniel Kaluuya (“Judas and the Black Messiah”) sat down for a virtual chat for Variety‘s Actors on Actors, presented by Amazon Studios. For more, click here

In “Cherry,” Tom Holland transforms into a war veteran-turned-bank robber, broken by PTSD and drug addiction. The role is intentional counter-programming from Holland’s heroic Peter Parker, although it comes from the same team that brought you several Marvel movies, including “Avengers: Endgame.” The Russo brothers — directors Anthony and Joe — recruited Holland for this Apple TV Plus indie, which unspools in vignettes.

It was a Marvel connection, too, that brought Daniel Kaluuya his next great role. While shooting “Black Panther” — in which Kaluuya plays warrior W’Kabi — director Ryan Coogler approached him about a movie he was producing. The project became “Judas and the Black Messiah” (soon to launch in theaters and on HBO Max), a film about Fred Hampton, a leader of the Black Panther movement during the civil rights era. Two days before Christmas, both in lockdown in London, Holland and Kaluuya spoke to each other about their past superhero adventures and the gritty departures they recently took.

Daniel Kaluuya: What’s happening, bro?

Tom Holland: I’m good, mate. I’m home with the family. It’s weird to not have anything to do in the daytime. I get to about 4 o’clock in the afternoon, and I’m like, “I guess I’ll just have a drink.”

Kaluuya: What’s your pandemic go-to?

Holland: I was lucky, because I love golf, which is the most boring sport for people who don’t play golf. But for me, golf is my favorite thing. The reason I love it is because I turn my phone off and can kind of disconnect from everything else, so I basically just play golf every day. What about you? 

 

Kaluuya: At the beginning, I would watch a film a day. There were so many films that people had mentioned that I had never seen, and I was like, let me do that. By the way, I loved your film. I thought it was insane. I can see a lot of work went into it, in terms of your head space. Obviously, you’re known as Spider-Man, and a number of other things, but Spider-Man at the moment. And you’ve worked with the Russo brothers before. How did this come to you?

Holland: I was doing ADR for “Avengers: Endgame,” and at the end of the session they sort of took me aside and said, “We want to make this movie. It’s about a kid who suffers from PTSD and falls into drug addiction and ends up robbing banks. Would you be interested?” When they offered me the job, I was just really excited. And then when I read the script for the first time, I was like, “There’s no way I can make this film. I’ll fall apart. I can’t hold onto a character like this for so long.” It was all about preparation, and really setting out the character beats and figuring out how I was going to get from A to B in each section. The hardest part was trying to merge the sections, because the character changes so much throughout the film.

Kaluuya: A really difficult scene to watch was — I don’t want to spoil it for people. It’s you with a needle and you’re in a car. How did you approach getting there?

Holland: We’d finished the drug portion of the movie, and then we had sort of progressed into him falling in love, and then the Russos wrote this sequence of the movie, which is the sequence that you’re talking about. We had to revisit going back to his life as a drug addict. I remember sitting in the car, and Joe and Ant sort of came into the window, and they were like, “Don’t hold back. There’s no such thing as doing too much in this instance.” And I just went mental, really. I don’t know how else there is to describe it. I beat the crap out of my leg with that needle, which broke every time. It wasn’t a real needle — it would retract — but I was always worried that one time it wouldn’t and I would just stab myself in the leg. I bust my nose up really bad on the steering wheel, and I had a really bad bloody nose, but you can’t see it on camera, which really annoys me. But for you, with “Judas and the Black Messiah” — when did that come to your lap?

Kaluuya: Funnily enough, I got approached doing these reshoots for “Black Panther.” Ryan Coogler pulled me to the side and was like, “We’re making the Fred Hampton film, and we’d love you to play Fred Hampton.” And then they sent me a two-page treatment, and it was one of the best treatments I’ve ever seen, because it was so clear and it knew what it was. Then I sat down with Shaka King, the director, in New York, because I was still promoting “Get Out.” That was probably two years before we started shooting. It was a long process before we got the green light.

Holland: I was like, I’m going to go and watch one of his speeches to see what he was like in real life. And I could not believe how much you sounded like him.

Kaluuya: Oh wow. Thank you so much. It was just a process that we played around with certain cadences. Sounding exactly like him was a bit odd. It didn’t sit in me like it sat in Chairman Fred because we’re different people. It was watching his videos and watching his stuff and taking in how he was moving me, and going — well, how can I move someone the way he’s moving me? And replicating that energy and that spirit. And then I workshopped with Shaka. We sat down for four days and we studied his speeches.

Holland: I was going to say, did you find — especially with the current climate in which we’re in now, politically, about race — the weight of telling the story of a real-life character must be quite heavy, and something that a lot of people probably couldn’t handle. How did you deal with the pressure of doing justice to the character, and also educating people?

Kaluuya: It’s a fine balance to go for. It was a lot of pressure, and the only moment where I let it go was when I realized it’s bigger than me. I’m a vessel, and this is coming through me and it’s honoring that. And then I was able to let go and just be in it. There’s a point when you have him as a figure, as an icon and a leader in the community in Chicago. But then, there’s a point where you have to see him as a character in order to portray him in the story that you’re telling. It’s kind of cool: What does he want here? Are you being true to what he wants? That helped me look at every day, day by day, and just go through the scene. [In “Cherry,”] what was the bankrobbing scenes like?

Holland: I was going to ask you about that, because you did bank-robbing scenes in “Widows,” right? It was strange, because it was such a small crew, it really did feel like I was robbing a bank. And when the alarm would go, and I’d be pointing the gun at this poor lady’s face, I could not shake that what I was doing was wrong. There’s a scene that’s not in the film where I get arrested, and I’ve never been arrested before. And I was really thinking, “Fuck, I’m going to have to call my lawyer, and I’m going to have to figure out how to get out of this.” The thing that I didn’t do very well: I would just blow my voice out all the time. They learned very quickly that they would have to start with all the talking stuff, and at the end of the day, I’d have to shout, because I would have no voice.

Kaluuya: I had that experience of blowing my voice out on “Judas.” I asked them not to do two speeches in the same week, because I’m literally probably doing 12 hours of me speaking to a crowd. And there was a day where I was on the steps with the Rainbow Coalition, the Young Patriots and the Young Lords, and my voice is like — I can’t. I couldn’t do it.

Holland: It’s crazy, man. It’s mad that two lads from London are doing all this shit in Hollywood.

Kaluuya: So you’re “Spider-Man.” It’s the elephant in the room. What’s that like? Come on. How has your life changed in a real way?

Holland: Yeah, there’s three stages of life changing. It’s weird. The audition process was horrible. It was seven months of auditioning. I must’ve done six auditions, and they don’t tell you anything. You’re waiting and waiting, and then, eventually, I got a screen Tom Holland and Daniel Kaluuya on ‘Spider-Man,’ ‘Black Panther’ and the Magic of Marveltest in Atlanta. I flew out to Atlanta, and there was me and six other kids, and [Robert] Downey [Jr.] was there, so we all tested with Downey, which was crazy. It went so well. It’s the best audition I’ve ever done, him and I were riffing off each other. My agents told me that Marvel likes you to learn the words exactly — you can’t improvise. And then, on the first take, Downey just completely changed the scene. We started riffing with each other, and I mean, to sound like a bit of a dick, I rang my mum afterward and was like, “I think I’ve got it.” And then six weeks go by and I didn’t hear anything, so I predicted that I didn’t get it, and there were all these polls online, and I was definitely not the favorite to get the part from the public. Then they called us back, and we had to do a fight with Chris Evans. They flew us back to Atlanta, me and one other guy, and we did this scene, which was so surreal. By that point, it had been an amazing enough of an experience that if I hadn’t got the part, I would’ve felt like I’d at least achieved something to get to that point. I went out to play golf with my dad. I lost and I was upset, and I remember going on my phone and checking Instagram, and Marvel had posted a picture of “Spider-Man,” of the cartoon. And by this point, I kind of had assumed I hadn’t got it, because no one had called me.

Kaluuya: You found out in the press?

Holland: Yeah. I got my computer, and my dog was sitting next to me. I type in “Marvel.” I’ve still got the article saved on my computer. It said, “We would like to introduce our new Spider-Man, Tom Holland.” I broke my computer, because I flipped it up in the air. It fell off my bed; my dog went nuts. I ran downstairs. I was telling my family, “I got the part! I got the part!” And obviously, that was right about the time when Sony had got hacked, so my brother, Harry, who’s quite tech savvy, was like, “No. There’s no way that’s real. They would have called you. They’ve been hacked.” And then the studio called me and gave me the news. It was so bizarre how it happened. I shot “Civil War,” which was a week’s work, and from the moment of shooting “Civil War” to “Spider-Man: Homecoming,” I was convinced they were going to fire me. I don’t know why. “Civil War” hadn’t come out yet, and I just didn’t hear anything from anyone. I can’t really explain it. It was awful, but they didn’t — obviously. It’s been crazy, mate. I’ve loved every minute of it.

Kaluuya: You’re a great Spider-Man. Amazing, amazing Spider-Man. “Avengers: Endgame” was a cultural event. What’s it like shooting a film post that?

Holland: The film I shot afterwards was “Cherry,” but with the same directors, which was really bizarre. And now we’re shooting “Spider-Man 3.” It’s weird being back in Atlanta, because we’re shooting in one of the stages where I did my audition. Every time I walked in, I’m like, “Oh God, I don’t know my lines. I’m going to ruin my audition.” And then I remind myself that I’ve already got the job. But how about for you? My question for “Black Panther” is when you were making that film, you must have been aware that you guys were sitting on one of the biggest and most culturally enriching blockbuster movies of all time. Or was it a surprise when it came out?

Kaluuya: I think it’s something that we were aware that was bubbling. There was one day, we did the waterfall scene, and obviously in between takes, everyone just stays on set, and there were hundreds of people on set. And we had actual drummers in between the takes. They would play the beat for Snoop Dogg’s “Drop It Like It’s Hot.”

Holland: No way.

Kaluuya: And then everyone would go, “Snoop!” Like, hundreds of people would literally do that, and when I saw that, I was like — yeah, this isn’t going to be quiet. There was just an energy. Everyone was so privileged to be part of this moment. It felt like a moment. We’re able to show this world in a way that we see us, and it being a Marvel film. You’re bringing something into the world that doesn’t exist, and that’s just really difficult because there’s no blueprint, there’s no template. And there’s some pains in doing that. But when people receive it and people take it as their own, and kids and families are going dressed to the cinemas, it makes everything worth it. You’re in this kind of really fascinating position in your career, where you could be a movie star, and then you’ve got this “Cherry” lane where you’ve got this indie, personal story. Is it your aspiration to do both?

Holland: I think I will try and do both. I’d like to do a horror film, but I’m so terrified of it. “Get Out” is one of the only horror films I’ve ever really seen, and I love that film, but I can’t tell you how much sleep you stole from me.

Kaluuya: I had babysitters who used to play “Nightmare on Elm Street” to me, and I used to watch that as a kid, and that gave me nightmares. So I wouldn’t go out of my way to watch a horror movie, but Jordan Peele killed it.

Holland: We had a joke in my house, because, obviously, being English we drink loads of tea. And you’d be stirring the tea. “Why are you doing it like that? Are you trying to hypnotize me? What the hell?”

Kaluuya: Bro, going to London and getting a cup of tea after “Get Out” was interesting.

 

Article by:Ramin Setoodeh for Variety

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"I call this a black-belt level of moviemaking because it's just so fast and it's so intricate," says Ryan Watson of the Disney+ show's action scenes. "I've never done anything this intricate and this vast."

 

Season two of hit Disney+ series The Mandalorian sees its two breakout stars, the title character bounty hunter (played by Pedro Pascal) and Grogu (better known on the internet as Baby Yoda), heading deeper into the Star Wars universe — and with greater exploration comes greater stunts.

"We knew what we were getting into, but we couldn't help it," says Ryan Watson, the Emmy-winning stunt coordinator for the series, which saw its second season bring a "bigger scope of action" with harder fights, more complex sets and higher-flying villains. Watson, who won an Emmy for his work on The Mandalorian's first season and handled stunts on Wonder Woman and Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, says that despite his ample experience with big-budget projects, "I call this a black-belt level of moviemaking because it's just so fast and it's so intricate. I've never done anything this intricate and this vast."

A prime example of that comes in the season two finale, when The Mandalorian and Moff Gideon (played by Giancarlo Esposito) face off aboard an Imperial ship after Gideon's Dark Troopers have captured Grogu. Brazilian stuntman Lateef Crowder takes over for Pascal during such scenes; he is trained in a martial arts style called capoeira, which combines elements of dance, acrobatics and music, and allows him to "have the ability to duck extra far," says Watson. "We watched the playback and you would see how the sword went by and he's moving his head and it's missing by 2 inches, and that's a testament to him."

HUC2-FF-004214-EMBED-2021-1610752443-compressed.jpghttps://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004214-EMBED-2021-1610752443-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004214-EMBED-2021-1610752443-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004214-EMBED-2021-1610752443-compressed.jpg 1047w" alt="Giancarlo Esposito (left, as Moff Gideon) broke several Darksabers during a fight with The Mandalorian (stuntman Lateef Crowder pictured)." />Giancarlo Esposito (left, as Moff Gideon) broke several Darksabers during a fight with The Mandalorian (stuntman Lateef Crowder pictured).   |   Courtesy of Lucasfilm Ltd.
 
https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004214-EMBED-2021-1610752443-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004214-EMBED-2021-1610752443-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004214-EMBED-2021-1610752443-compressed.jpg 1047w" data-alt-text="Giancarlo Esposito (left, as Moff Gideon) broke several Darksabers during a fight with The Mandalorian (stuntman Lateef Crowder pictured)."> 

That fight, which the coordinator says is one of his very favorites, also saw Esposito bringing his A-game, and resulted in a battle that was "literally real." During the monthlong rehearsals, Crowder and Esposito had been sparring with bamboo swords in place of Gideon's signature weapon, the Darksaber, because it had not yet been constructed by the prop department. Then, during filming, while the cast typically fights with half-swords for safety and visual reasons — with the full weapon added in later with CGI — Esposito's half-saber broke.

"We had to end up using the full sword, which makes the top end even heavier, so now the swings are a little bit harder. The intensity of that fight was probably the highest of both seasons. Giancarlo brought some real intensity to that fight," Watson remembers. "Lateef finished one time and was like, 'That was like a real fight.' Lateef was truly ducking for his life."

The fight was so intense that it resulted in breaking two or three of the swords "completely, like the Darksaber went down. And they're very expensive."

HUC2-FF-004543-EMBED-2021-1610752451-compressed.jpghttps://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004543-EMBED-2021-1610752451-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004543-EMBED-2021-1610752451-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004543-EMBED-2021-1610752451-compressed.jpg 1047w" alt="Rosario Dawson (left) training with Crowder and stunt coordinator Ryan Watson." />From left: Rosario Dawson (left) training with Crowder and stunt coordinator Ryan Watson.   |   Courtesy of Lucasfilm Ltd.
 
https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004543-EMBED-2021-1610752451-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004543-EMBED-2021-1610752451-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-004543-EMBED-2021-1610752451-compressed.jpg 1047w" data-alt-text="Rosario Dawson (left) training with Crowder and stunt coordinator Ryan Watson."> 

That same episode also saw Fennec Shand (Ming-Na Wen), Bo-Katan (Katee Sackhoff), Koska Reeves (Mercedes Varnado) and Cara Dune (Gina Carano) taking on dozens of Stormtroopers with "a smorgasbord of all the different weapons." Though he says those scenes, with fighting happening in different places with so many people, are easier to coordinate than a one-on-one scene, it can be very intimidating and confusing for all involved with "all the sets and the costumes and everything. It's probably the highest level of stunt work when you add those factors into it."

And another uniquely Star Wars challenge: how best to handle a lightsaber.

In the fight between Ahsoka Tano (Rosario Dawson) and the Magistrate (aka Morgan Elsbeth, played by Diana Lee Inosanto) in the season's fifth episode, the two face off as Tano wields a pair of white lightsabers. Watson says the battle was the most high-pressure of the season because of fan expectations, and resulted in long conversations with showrunner Jon Favreau and director Dave Filoni about lightsaber styles, opting for clean and traditional rather than flowery.

HUC2-058221_R-EMBED-2021-1610752421-compressed.jpghttps://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-058221_R-EMBED-2021-1610752421-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-058221_R-EMBED-2021-1610752421-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-058221_R-EMBED-2021-1610752421-compressed.jpg 1047w" alt="Dawson wields two white lightsabers in a highly anticipated fight scene in Chapter 13." />Dawson wields two white lightsabers in a highly anticipated fight scene in Chapter 13.   |   Justin Lubin /Lucasfilm Ltd.
 
https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-058221_R-EMBED-2021-1610752421-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-058221_R-EMBED-2021-1610752421-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-058221_R-EMBED-2021-1610752421-compressed.jpg 1047w" data-alt-text="Dawson wields two white lightsabers in a highly anticipated fight scene in Chapter 13."> 

Taking inspiration from Akira Kurosawa's films, "we wanted to keep it really old-school samurai, but still entertaining enough to where it has more than two or three moves," Watson says, aided by the fact that Inosanto — the daughter of Dan Inosanto, who helped Bruce Lee develop his fighting style — is a skilled martial artist in her own right. Watson incorporated Filipino martial arts style kali into the moves and gave extra thought to how one would actually fight with a lightsaber.

"That changes a little bit of the dynamics. With a samurai sword, you can touch the blade and you're not going to get hurt," Watson says, joking that the lightsaber is "like a bug zapper."

He adds, "That's why that fight feels very clean and very direct. There's not a lot of wasted movements — when they start to fight, they explode. It's from stillness to 100 miles an hour in the blink of an eye." Watson also credits Dawson's and Inosanto's natural sword abilities, and says stunts are such an important part of the show that a person's experience with weapons and fighting is considered as part of the casting process.

HUC2-FF-003627-EMBED-2021-1610752428-compressed.jpghttps://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-003627-EMBED-2021-1610752428-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-003627-EMBED-2021-1610752428-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-003627-EMBED-2021-1610752428-compressed.jpg 1047w" alt="In Chapter 15, The Mandalorian and Mayfeld come under attack by pirates in one of the season’s trickiest fight scenes to produce, which involved challenging wirework." />In Chapter 15, The Mandalorian and Mayfeld come under attack by pirates in one of the season’s trickiest fight scenes to produce, which involved challenging wirework.   |   Courtesy of Lucasfilm Ltd.
 
https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-003627-EMBED-2021-1610752428-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-003627-EMBED-2021-1610752428-compressed.jpg 1047w, https://static.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/HUC2-FF-003627-EMBED-2021-1610752428-compressed.jpg 1047w" data-alt-text="In Chapter 15, The Mandalorian and Mayfeld come under attack by pirates in one of the season’s trickiest fight scenes to produce, which involved challenging wirework."> 

And though CGI does play a significant role in the show, Watson says that from jetpacks to space vehicles and everything in between, "we had to do all this stuff," like the episode seven scene that saw Migs Mayfeld (Bill Burr) driving a transport into an Imperial mining facility while The Mandalorian fought off pirates on top of the speeding vehicle. The coordinator cites this as the most difficult stunt of the season, with stuntmen hanging from wires and filming both with the transport moving and with it stationary, for more intricate choreography.

At the end of the day, though, Watson says, all the stunt work means nothing if the actors don't make it authentic.

"You can train the moves and have them down perfectly, but if you don't have that acting backing behind it and the intensity that you would have in a fight — that's probably the most tricky thing," he says. "You have the costume on and all these different cameras in there … It's a very, very tough thing to act and to get through the choreography knowing all these different changes that you have to do at that moment, and where the camera is for it to look like a real hit."

 

Article by: Kirsten Chuba for Variety

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'Paddington' filmmaker Paul King will direct the project exploring the early life of the famed chocolatier.

 

Warner Bros. has set a date for Wonka, an origin story focusing on the storied chocolate factory owner.

Wonka, which will hit theaters on March 17, 2023, hails from Paddington director Paul King and Harry Potter producer David Heyman. The studio describes it as focusing on "a young Willy Wonka and his adventures prior to opening the world’s most famous chocolate factory."

Simon Rich wrote the original draft, with Simon Farnaby and King penning the current draft.

In the books by Roald Dahl, Willy Wonka is the eccentric owner of a chocolate factory, with the character debuting in the 1964 book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. The character also appeared in Dahl's sequel, Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator, published in 1972.

Gene Wilder portrayed Wonka in the 1971 film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, helping make the character and the Oompa-Loompas who work in his factory indelible parts of pop culture. Johnny Depp later stepped into the role of Wonka for Tim Burton's 2005 remake.

Wonka has been in the works for several years, with THR reporting King's involvement back in 2018. So far, Wonka has the March 17, 2023, date to itself.

 

Article by: Aaron Couch for the Hollywood Reporter

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Prolific casting director Carmen Cuba has become known for casting fresh faces. Even in the last couple of years, her numerous projects span the spectrum of genre, with casts full of actors of all types. From “Stranger Things” and “The Chi” to “Devs” and the upcoming “Matrix 4,” Cuba’s résumé is packed with exciting and boundary-breaking projects. In a Backstage webinar on The Slate, Cuba talked about her work on “Stranger Things,” casting during the COVID-19 quarantine, and where she finds new talent. 

How to get cast in “Stranger Things”

Quarantine doesn’t mean projects aren’t moving forward.
“On the front end of sheltering at home, I continued work on Season 4 of ‘Stranger Things,’ mostly because they were kid roles which are the easiest thing to do from home because everyone’s self-taping in the first round anyway. Then my projects from before quarantine started ramping up. I honestly have no idea if they are or aren’t going to film soon, but I’m happy to play along and do what I can. Agents and actors all seem very motivated to engage so it’s happening. The good news is that everybody really wants to find a way to make this happen in a safe manner. I’m the translator to the agents and the actors of what our plans are for moving forward, too. That’s been added on top of my work, trying to figure out the logistics of how we move ahead.”

Self-tapes were a big factor in casting “Stranger Things.”
“[Self-tapes] have increased over the years, and certainly now with COVID, that’s all there is. Also because we’re getting [actors] from all over the world. Finn [Wolfhard] came from Canada, Caleb [McLaughlin] and Noah [Schnapp] came from New York, Millie [Bobby Brown] came from London. In the semi-final group, there were some kids from L.A., but mostly they were from all over the place. Even back then, a lot of it already was self-tapes and Skype where I’d speak to them first to get to know them and I can talk to the Duffers about them as people, and then we’d get the Duffers with them, and maybe we’d have them do more material.”

“The original cast members are all real individuals. None of those kids cross over into the same space as another, energetically and emotionally. To add to that and add more singular types was challenging, but I always go back to the writing of the show and the truth is that the writing helps in lots”

Carmen Cuba

Casting Director“Stranger Things”

 

The show’s success changed casting.
“For ‘Stranger Things’ it was bananas because the show was so huge and well-loved and widely received, and then also because the kids became so famous, it sort of elevated. It made me feel like I needed to find someone who could be as famous, could live in that fame themselves because they were clearly going to be thrust into it. They needed to be as good as the kids were because those kids were amazing. There were also famous people who were reaching out offering to be on the show. That was very exciting, when a famous person who isn’t even doing TV says, “I’ll do anything.” That became a hurdle for us because we wanted to keep the show feeling authentic to what it was. If we were to lose ourselves and get super excited and put someone that didn’t make sense in it, it would be pretty obvious what we were doing. We had to practice restraint and still look for that authenticity and uniqueness that made the original cast work. The original cast members are all real individuals. None of those kids cross over into the same space as another, energetically and emotionally. To add to that and add more singular types was challenging, but I always go back to the writing of the show and the truth is that the writing helps in lots of ways because it is just so strong.”

The key to cracking the “Stranger Things” cast was individuality.
They first did material that wasn’t even from ‘Stranger Things.’ I think it was from ‘Stand By Me.’ Then they were all reading the same thing, so that actually was helpful in seeing how different they all were. We didn’t actively talk about it, but that’s something inherent to what casting directors do in general because no one’s happy when they look at their cast and people feel the same as each other.”

Why “Stranger Things” has one of the best acting ensembles.

Cuba is always looking for new faces to potentially cast.
“I think because I started out as a journalist, I’m very curious about humans. I’m constantly reading things. If I read something in the New York Times about like the first African-American dancer in the Joffrey Ballet then usually the following week I go into my office and ask to Skype with that person. Then I’m Skyping with all these people who interest me, and things come out of that. Janet Mock was just a writer when I was casting ‘Sense8,’ and I really was impressed by her. I had never met her, but I reached out to her and said, ‘Hey, you’ve never acted, but would you be interested in trying out for this?’ I paired her with this acting coach in New York City and after one session he was like, ‘She’s a natural.’ When I have breakdowns, I often send them to theater actor friends to send to actors who don’t have agents who I should know about. I reach out to theater schools, to alumni. Heidi Marshall, who’s an acting coach in New York City, was actually a casting scout for the original cast of ‘Rent’—she has a real special eye and she’s someone I reach out to often. I definitely want to try to access people who don’t have agents, but it’s challenging. Once I’ve seen them, I keep them in my records and go back to them and try to pursue that. I also have favorite casting directors who I steal from, who do their own work. Like any time I see an Ellen Lewis film, I am so amazed that she finds these people I’ve never seen. Laray MayfieldNina Gold. When I see their work, I’m always slightly jealous and I take what I can from their projects.” 

Casting a show outside of L.A. requires collaboration with local CDs.
I work with Feldstein|Paris in Atlanta, and they’re fantastic. We work very closely with them, and then everything goes through me. I narrow things down, and I present to the Duffers, and the Duffers and I go over everything. We keep finding great talent in Atlanta. If there are certain parts that we know might be challenging to find in Atlanta, we look simultaneously. Even Joe Keery in Season 1, we got him through local casting even though he was in Chicago. We cover territories. Generally, most recurring guest stars come from L.A., but we have found more and more that we can find talent for guest star roles in Atlanta as well. That’s actually evolved. Atlanta in general has so much work; if I were an actor starting out, I would go to Atlanta.”

How “Stranger Things” got made.

 
“Atlanta in general has so much work; if I were an actor starting out, I would go to Atlanta.”

Carmen Cuba

Casting Director“Stranger Things”

The key to a great self-tape is still all about the performance.
“I think the bottom line is that if a performance is great then nothing matters and it’s pretty clear. I can say things like don’t come up with some stunt-y kind of thing but then you look at Dacre Montgomery’s audition for Billy on ‘Stranger Things’ Season 2 and he’s topless with sunglasses on and dancing to this music, which normally I would say don’t do that but it was amazing, it totally worked with the character. But also his performance was fantastic, so it was undeniable. I think if he had done that and the performance was terrible, I would’ve been like, ‘Ugh, he shouldn’t have done that dancing thing at the beginning.’ Things that I appreciate about actors who really move me on self-tape and now on Zoom is considering the depth of field of the camera and actually being able to come in closer and move away. I think there’s real power in a self-tape when you use the space between the camera and where you would normally stand because it’s really engaging and takes away from the stuff you can’t do outside the scope of the [screen]. And a blank wall behind you, if possible, so I’m not distracted trying to see what books you have on your bookshelf or food in your kitchen. But even if that’s not possible, and I understand in many cases that it’s not, it’s not that big of a deal. My job is to create the best piece of material to send to the director in the way that I know the director will respond to it.”

Casting is more than just auditioning actors, and you need to know that to work in the field.
“The entry-level job in casting is a casting assistant, but the problem with that being the entry-level job is that you sort of have to have already done it to know the process. There are various programs that are paid internships that then place you with casting offices, and if you’re still in school, you can do internships. Having been through that process as an intern at least once, you know what it even is. I think unless you do that, you think it’s, ‘I’m auditioning people, and then they’re in the movie.’ I would look into those programs [if you’re interested in casting], for sure.”

 

 

 

 

 

Article by: Isabelle Saraff for Backstage

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With A.I. techniques, artists put the soccer great in a short created by Ridley Scott Creative Group about putting an end to malaria.

Thanks to cutting-edge digital trickery, David Beckham, 45, appears as his future self  in his 70s, in a new short titled "Malaria Must Die — So Millions can Live."

The digital Beckham was created by VFX house Digital Domain, whose pioneering work in digital humans, including aging and de-aging, won an Oscar for The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and more recently was tapped to contribute its latest techniques to Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: End Game.

The new short PSA was created by Ridley Scott Creative Group and Scott's RSA Films Amsterdam. It begins in the future with an aged Beckham delivering a speech on the day malaria has finally been defeated. As he speaks, he returns to his present-day self and make a plea for a malaria-free future.

To make the transformation, Digital Domain received clips of both Beckham and an older stand-in delivering the speech on a stage in a London theater. It then used its Charlatan face-swapping technology that applied machine learning and artificial intelligence to blend the nuance of the the two performances, without requiring a 3D scan of Beckham. Charlatan was developed by Digital Domain's in-house Digital Human research group.

The company explains that its artists then further defined key parts of the aging process, from hair to the skin, largely using compositing techniques. “As an artist, what you are really looking for is control. Details matter when it comes to faces, especially when your subject is known all over the world,” said Dan Bartolucci, VFX supervisor at Digital Domain.

This short PSA is the next phase of the global Malaria Must Die campaign from Malaria No More UK. According to the organization, progress to end the disease has stalled over recent years and countries need to maintain funding. It reported that two decades of action have shown that progress is possible, cutting deaths by more than 60 percent and saving more than 7 million lives since 2000. At the beginning of 2020 malaria mortality rates were at the lowest point ever, but the impact of COVID-19 on malaria responses may not be known for some time.

Said Beckham, a founding member of the Malaria No More UK leadership council, in a released statement: “I’ve worked with Malaria No More UK for over a decade and their campaigns always use great innovation and creativity to attract attention to the issue of this disease. It was really interesting working with the teams at Digital Domain and Ridley Scott Creative Group, using tech in a meaningful way to highlight and raise awareness for such an important cause.”

Beckham and Digital Domain also appear as part of a behind the scenes video.

 

Article by: Carolyn Giardina for The Hollywood Reporter

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What’s Coming to Disney Plus in December 2020

Rejoice, “Star Wars” fans! That Baby Yoda-sized hole in your heart will soon be filled.

Disney Plus’ “The Mandalorian” (and its lovable Child) will wrap its second season on Dec. 18. Pixar’s “Soul” will hit the streamer on Christmas Day. The existential toon is the latest film to skip a theatrical release due to the coronavirus pandemic. Meanwhile, the live-action “Mulan” reboot — originally available through Premier Access — will be accessible to all subscribers starting on Dec. 4.

During the month of December, hits from the 2000s will also be released for streaming on the platform. “Sky High,” about the son of two superheroes who attends a school for teens with superpowers, will also debut on Disney Plus on Dec. 4. The movie stars Kelly Preston, Kurt Russell, Michael Angarano, Danielle Panabaker and Mary Elizabeth Winstead. And 2001’s “Max Keeble’s Big Move” will be streamable on Christmas Day.

Director Justin Baldoni’s “Clouds,” released in October, will get various new documentary shorts throughout the month about the making of the film about young musician Zach Sobiech.

Read below for a list of films and shows coming to Disney Plus in December.

Dec. 4

Mulan (For All Subscribers)

Godmothered

Star Wars: The Mandalorian (Season 2, Episode 6)

The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse (Episodes 5 & 6)

Beyond the Clouds: Where It All Began

Anastasia

Big Sharks Rule

Man vs. Shark

Big

The Nutcracker and the Four Realms

Sky High

Dec. 11

Safety

High School Musical: The Musical: The Holiday Special

Star Wars: The Mandalorian (Season 2, Episode 7)

The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse (Episodes 7 & 8)

Disney Channel’s Epic Holiday Showdown

Disney Holiday Magic Quest

Gender Revolution: A Journey with Katie Couric

Beyond the Clouds: Meet the Sobiechs

Ralph Breaks The Internet

Dec. 18

Star Wars: The Mandalorian (Season 2, Episode 8)

The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse (Episodes 9 & 10)

On Pointe

Into The Woods

Buried Truth of the Maya

Cosmos: Possible Worlds (Season 1)

Disney Channel Holiday House Party

Disney Parks Sunrise Series (Season 1)

Eddie the Eagle

Miraculous World: New York, United Heroez

Arendelle Castle Yule Log

Dory’s Reef Cam

Beyond the Clouds: Creating Zach’s World

Dec. 25

Soul

Pixar SparkShort Burrow

Max Keeble’s Big Move

Beyond the Clouds: A Musical Miracle

 

 

Article by:Janet W. Lee for Variety 

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It was a call that took Diane Keaton by surprise.

Three decades after “Godfather Part III” opened to middling reviews and box office grosses, Francis Ford Coppola returned to the editing bay to tinker with a film that was largely dismissed as a disappointment. Coppola shuffled scenes around, changed music cues, and affixed a new beginning and ending to the three hour epic, now rechristened “Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone.” Now, he was inviting Keaton, along with co-stars Al Pacino, Talia Shire, and George Hamilton to see the finished product at a private screening on the Paramount lot.

“It was one of the best moments of my life to watch it,” says Keaton. “To me it was a dream come true. I saw the movie in a completely different light. When I saw it way back, it was like ‘Oh, I don’t know.’ It didn’t seem to do that well and the reviews weren’t great. But Francis restructured the beginning and the end and man, I’m telling you it worked.”

It wasn’t just critics and audiences who were cool to “The Godfather Part III” when it opened in 1990. Keaton was one of the people who found the initial film lacking.

“I don’t know why people didn’t appreciate it, but I was one of them,” she admits. “What was wrong with me? Why didn’t I like this before? But I didn’t. I kind of just dismissed it and thought, ‘oh well.'”

She’s convinced that Coppola’s re-edit will make people reconsider the film, as well as one of its most maligned elements, Sofia Coppola’s performance as Michael Corleone’s daughter, Mary. The knives were out for Sofia Coppola when the movie premiered. She had barely any acting experience when she stepped in for an ailing Winona Ryder just prior to shooting, and reviewers excoriated her performance, calling it flat, amateurish and unconvincing.

“That’s not going to happen anymore,” Keaton says, arguing the new edit gives Sofia Coppola’s performance more of a chance to shine. “She’s what a daughter would be like if you had this guy as your dad, the head of a criminal organization. She was not so sure of herself and is kind of quiet. Kind of haunted. I thought she was fantastic.”

Keaton said re-watching the film reminded her of the fun she had during its production.

“It took me back,” says Keaton “At that time, I was kind of with Al. I really liked [co-star] Andy Garcia. We were shooting in Italy. It was a special time.”

The actress was even able to put aside her long-standing aversion to watching herself on screen.

“It’s never fun to see me,” says Keaton. “I live with me. I don’t want to see me on screen. Enough’s enough. A little of me goes a long way.”

Despite being her own harshest critic, Keaton sees her work as Kay Corleone, Michael’s estranged wife, as one of the highlights of a career that includes beloved films such as “Reds,” “Annie Hall” and “Something’s Gotta Give.”

“These are really powerful films,” says Keaton. “They’re filled with this criminal world. There’s an intensity and family issues. I think it’s pretty easy to understand why they’re loved.”

 

“Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone” will be available on-demand and on Blu-ray on Dec. 8. However, Keaton hopes people will eventually be able to see it on the big screen, as she did that day on the Paramount lot.

“I just hope people can see it in a theater with great music and great sound, so it can sweep you away,” she says. “I like movies big. I like them in my face. You’re engrossed in them that way. It takes you out of your mundane, idiot life. I speak for myself, of course.”

 

Article by: Brent Lang for Variety

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Josh Brolin, Sean Astin, Martha Plimpton, Corey Feldman, Kerri Green, Jonathan Ke Quan and Joe Pantoliano are among the cast members who will log on for the Dec. 5 event.

The Goonies gang is getting back together.

Stars of the classic 1985 adventure film — Josh Brolin, Sean Astin, Martha Plimpton, Corey Feldman, Kerri Green, Jonathan Ke Quan, Jeff Cohen, Joe Pantoliano, and Robert Davi — are reuniting for a virtual fundraiser on Dec. 5 to benefit No Kid Hungry and its work feeding kids and families amid the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. The event is free to stream and donations will be encouraged.

The Richard Donner film, which was penned by Chris Columbus from a story by Steven Spielberg,  follows a ragtag group of kids, aka "the Goonies," as they hunt for buried pirate treasure. Along the way, they run into trouble when they come face-to-face with the Fratelli crime family.

The upcoming event will mark the second high-profile Goonies reunion this year. Brolin, Astin, Plimpton, Feldman, Green, Quan, Cohen, Davi, Pantoliano, Donner, Columbus, Spielberg and theme song singer Cyndi Lauper previously joined Josh Gad for his series Reunited Apart With Josh Gad. That fundraiser has since been viewed more than 3 million times on YouTube.

In a statement announcing the new Goonies gathering, Donner said the group is "honored" to have the opportunity to help No Kid Hungry. "The same spirit of bravery, sacrifice, and camaraderie that the Goonies showed in our movie is what families all over the world are experiencing as we all face this pandemic," he said.

Added Tom Nelson, CEO of Share Our Strength, the organization behind the No Kid Hungry campaign: "With more students learning virtually than ever before and with record jobs and wages lost, an unprecedented number of kids are going hungry during this crisis. Amidst this increased need and an uncertain school year, kids need our support more than ever. We’re grateful to the cast of The Goonies, Warner Bros., and Warner Media and those tuning in to the reunion special to help ensure kids have access to the food they need."

 

 

Article by: Chris Gardner for The Hollywood Reporter

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The Best Thanksgiving Movies to Stream

These films will bring the holiday’s food and family traditions right to your screen.

 

The Thanksgiving film is not that big of a genre. It turns out watching people pass the yams onscreen is a pale substitute for sharing an actual meal with family and friends.

But this unusual Thanksgiving season, when many people will break with tradition whether they want to or not, cinema can provide a genuinely comforting taste of normal. Just be careful. Search Google for “Thanksgiving movies” and some results — “The Ice Storm,” “Krisha” — will have the flavor of gravy thickened with resentment and spite.

The good news is that most Thanksgiving films, even those with complicated family dynamics at play, are uplifting entertainment. May the following options — heavy on comedy and camaraderie — give your spirits a bounce to rival a Jell-O mold centerpiece.

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THE FAMILY COMEDY

Stream it for free on Tubi.

Gurinder Chadha’s warm ensemble comedy offers a multicultural snapshot of Thanksgiving through the eyes and stomachs of four families — Black, Jewish, Latino and Asian — as they prepare and share Thanksgiving dinner. The story is anchored by four moms — played by Lainie Kazan, Alfre Woodard, Mercedes Ruehl and Joan Chen — who try to hold the holiday together despite lingering family tensions and spats over sexuality and cultural assimilation.

 
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Central to all four stories is food, and the camera lovingly ogles ingredients being chopped, spiced and roasted according to the families’ culinary traditions. It’s best not to watch this one on an empty stomach. In his review for The Times, A.O. Scott called this a “generous and charming” film that “breathes new life into its secondhand premise.”

THE BUDDY COMEDY

Rent it on Amazon, Google Play and Vudu.

 

This beloved John Hughes comedy is not a Christmas movie, contrary to its candy cane-colored advertising. It’s actually an attempt to celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday that sends the uptight executive Neal Page (Steve Martin) and the yokel salesman Del Griffith (John Candy) bumbling their way through the snow and single-bed motel rooms.

Hughes, who died in 2009, had a soft spot for oddball pairings of oddball humans, and here that affinity shines through in his joyful, jocular script. As the odd couple on an absurdist voyage through the frigid Midwest, Martin and Candy give hilarious, yet touching performances that are master classes in artful horseplay. If the words “those aren’t pillows” don’t brighten your Thanksgiving, you’re a Scrooge.

 
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But it’s the peerless comic actress Edie McClurg who briefly steals the show as an unflappable car rental agent who delivers one of the film’s funniest (and unprintable) smackdowns. It’s safe to assume that without this magnificently profane scene, the film would not have gotten an R rating.

THE ANIMATED ROMP

Stream it on Hulu.

 
Image
Two turkeys go back to the first Thanksgiving in “Free Birds.”Credit...Relativity Media

Critics didn’t exactly gobble up this computer-animated film about two turkeys (voiced by Owen Wilson and Woody Harrelson) who take a time machine back to the first Thanksgiving in a history-altering quest to prevent turkey from becoming the traditional holiday dish. (“Is Hollywood scheming to turn your little ones into strident vegetarians?” panicked The New York Post.) The movie, directed by Jimmy Hayward, also got mixed reviews for its marketing partnership with Chuck E. Cheese’s and its questionable treatment of Native American characters.

Despite the criticism, this PETA-approved film has a soft spot in the hearts of parents who opt for a meat-free Thanksgiving, and who won’t mind a bedtime chat about where meat comes from. Like a movie about a killer Santa Claus, “Free Birds” scores points for a “Babe”-like rebellious message — who needs turkey for Thanksgiving? — that calls out a hallowed holiday tradition with kid-friendly sass. It’s a misfit film that’s a great pick for families — carnivores and vegans alike — who would enjoy, as one critic put it, “one of the strangest and most unlikely family entertainments in a long, long time.”

 

 

Stream it on Amazon Prime.

This touching indie dramedy stars Katie Holmes as April, a punky black sheep who invites her estranged family from the suburbs to have Thanksgiving dinner with her and her boyfriend (Derek Luke) at her rinky-dink Manhattan apartment. Here’s the thing: April’s cooking skills are better suited to “Nailed It!” than “The Great British Baking Show” and, even worse, her mother (Patricia Clarkson) is dying of cancer and may be celebrating her last Thanksgiving.

Written and directed by Peter Hedges, the film divided critics for relying too heavily on the Dysfunctional Family Holiday playbook. But the comedy keenly veers from broad and physical to tragic and angry as emotions and mishaps threaten to upend what’s supposed to be a conciliatory family visit. The strong cast, which also includes Oliver Platt, Alison Pill and Sean Hayes, effortlessly finds real humans inside the gags. The film was shot on turn-of-the-millennium digital video, giving it a scrappy look that will thrill 2000s nostalgia geeks.

THE ENSEMBLE ESCAPADE

Rent it on Amazon, Google Play and Redbox.

 
 

An old-fashioned Thanksgiving dinner calls for turkey, stuffing and pumpkin pie. What it doesn’t need is family, at least not the one you’re born with. That’s the premise behind this new comedy, written and directed by Nicol Paone, about a wildly dysfunctional “friendsgiving,” a portmanteau that describes a pre-Thanksgiving Day meal shared by friends, usually before they trek home to see the parents.

Kat Dennings and Malin Akerman star as gal pals who break bread with a sexually and racially diverse assortment of eccentric friends, bewildered newcomers and party crashers. In her Times review, Lovia Gyarkye said the film “takes a surprisingly charming and hilarious approach to a traditional holiday.” Watch for Jane Seymour as a sexpot mom on the prowl and cameos from Fortune Feimster, Wanda Sykes and Margaret Cho as wizened “fairy gay mothers.”

 Article by: Erik Piepenburg for NY Times
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