Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys spoke with Matthew Sardo about the film “Love Mercy.”
The film was made with the full cooperation of Wilson and his wife Melinda , Love & Mercy offers a never-before-seen glimpse of Wilson, the boy genius who co-wrote such ebullient pop hits as “Surfer Girl” and “Fun, Fun, Fun” and the game-changing masterpieces “Good Vibrations” and “God Only Knows” before disappearing from the public eye for years. Actors Paul Dano and John Cusack share the role of the troubled musical virtuoso who defined the “California sound” with sumptuous harmonies and visions of endless summers of surf and sand.
The full-length trailer for Legend, starring Tom Hardy and… Tom Hardy, has been released. Hardy will play both notorious Kray twins as they rise to power in the London underworld in the 60s.
Here is the Legend trailer. Click on the lower right below the time bar to go full screen:
This looks like a special film, something entirely unique to the gangster genre. Humor seems to play a large role, and Hardy appears to be able to flex his acting muscles in two different roles in the same film. With Reggie Kray, Hardy plays the buttoned-down gangster, and with Ronald Kray, the slightly unhinged heavy with some strange tics that are becoming signature Hardy.
The film, directed by L.A. Confidential screenwriter Brian Helgeland, also has a smooth, gliding style and looks to capture the surface joys of a swinging 60s London.
There are few things better than Tom Hardy, except maybe twice the Hardy in the same films. Legend hits theaters October 2.
William Hurt was out promoting AMC’s Humans and talked with The Wall Street Journal about his part in Captain America: Civil War.
Hurt was sporting his General Thaddeus ‘Thunderbolt’ Ross mustache.
On the difference between The Incredible Hulk and Captain America: Civil War.
“It’s very very different from the other, from the Hulk. It’s real different, cause it’s done different The style is completely modernized. I’m not playing the graphic novel version of Thaddeus, I’m playing a better suit,” said Hurt.
When asked if we will see the Red Hulk on screen.
“I don’t know… I wouldn’t mind feeling I had that much power I created Thaddeus originally as an ego the same size as the monsters. With the same degree of messed-up-ness. I would love to have a shot at it,” said Hurt.
Set for release in the United States on May 6, 2016, “Captain America: Civil War” is directed by Anthony and Joe Russo (Marvel’s “Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Community”) from a screenplay by Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely (“Captain America: The Winter Solider,” Marvel’s “Captain America: The First Avenger”). The film returns Chris Evans (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” Marvel’s “Avengers: Age of Ultron”) as the iconic Super Hero character Steve Rogers/Captain America along with Robert Downey Jr. (“Avengers: Age of Ultron,” Marvel’s “Iron Man 3”) as Tony Stark/Iron Man, Scarlett Johansson (“Avengers: Age of Ultron,” “Captain America: The Winter Soldier”) as Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow, Sebastian Stan (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Captain America: The First Avenger”) as Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier, Anthony Mackie (“Avengers: Age of Ultron,” “Captain America: The Winter Soldier”) as Sam Wilson/Falcon, Paul Bettany (“Avengers: Age of Ultron,” “Iron Man 3”) as The Vision, Jeremy Renner (“Avengers: Age of Ultron,” Marvel’s “The Avengers”) as Clint Barton/Hawkeye, Don Cheadle (“Avengers: Age of Ultron,” “Iron Man 3”) as Jim Rhodes/War Machine and Elizabeth Olsen (“Avengers: Age of Ultron,” “Godzilla”) as Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch.
After his debut in Marvel’s “Ant-Man” on July 17, 2015, Paul Rudd (“Ant-Man,” ”Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues”) will make his first appearance alongside the Avengers as Scott Lang/Ant-Man in “Captain America: Civil War.”
The film also includes outstanding additional cast, including Chadwick Boseman (“42,” “Get on Up”) as T’Challa/Black Panther, Emily VanCamp (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Revenge”) as Sharon Carter/Agent 13, Daniel Brühl (“Inglourious Basterds,” “Bourne Ultimatum”), Frank Grillo (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Warrior”) as Brock Rumlow/Crossbones, William Hurt (“A History of Violence,” Marvel’s “The Incredible Hulk”) as General Thaddeus “Thunderbolt” Ross and Martin Freeman (“The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,” “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies”).
“Captain America: Civil War” picks up where “Avengers: Age of Ultron” left off, as Steve Rogers leads the new team of Avengers in their continued efforts to safeguard humanity. After another international incident involving the Avengers results in collateral damage, political pressure mounts to install a system of accountability and a governing body to determine when to enlist the services of the team. The new status quo fractures the Avengers while they try to protect the world from a new and nefarious villain.
Marvel’s “Captain America: Civil War” is produced by Marvel Studios’ president, Kevin Feige, with Louis D’Esposito, Alan Fine, Victoria Alonso, Patricia Whitcher, Nate Moore and Stan Lee serving as executive producers.
Directors Joe and Anthony Russo’s creative team also includes director of photography Trent Opaloch (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Elysium”), production designer Owen Paterson (“Godzilla,” “Matrix”), and three time Oscar®-nominated costume designer Judianna Makovsky (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone”).
Based on the Marvel comic character first published in 1941, “Captain America: Civil War ” continues the lineage of epic big-screen adventures chronicled in “Iron Man,” “The Incredible Hulk,” “Iron Man 2,” “Thor,” “Captain America: The First Avenger,” “Marvel’s The Avengers,” “Iron Man 3,” “Thor: The Dark World,” “Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Guardians of the Galaxy,” “Avengers: Age of Ultron” and the upcoming release schedule, which includes Marvel’s “Ant-Man” on July 17, 2015, Marvel’s “Doctor Strange,” on November 4, 2016, Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy 2,” on May 5, 2017, and Marvel’s “Thor: Ragnarok,” on November 3, 2017.
The Sony hack has reached Marvel and now we can interpret what direction the Marvel Cinematic Universe will go.
Kevin Feige is the President of Marvel Studios and mastermind behind the MCU, some of his emails have surfaced following the Sony hack. As we all sadly know, Robert Downey Jr. can not play Tony Stark forever. There will come a time when another actor will take up the mantle of Iron Man and we now know what that film will be based on.
“In a million years I would not advocate rebooting the Iron Man MCU. To me it’s James Bond and we can keep telling new stories for decades even with different actors,” said Feige.
This second quote is why fans love the MCU and have absolute faith that they will put the best product in theaters. Marvel respects the audience.
“I think that is very risky thing to do with a movie audience following. Okay for comic books but I wouldn’t even do it with cartoon animation,” said Alan Fine.
When the time comes to cast a new Iron Man who would like to see? The earliest an Iron Man film would come out is late 2019 or the summer of 2020. That would put Downey at 55, Leonardo DiCaprio would be 45, Adrien Brody 46, Zac Efron 33, Gerard Butler 50, and Jamie Dornan 38.
AMC released a video off Michael Cudlitz (Abraham) as he gives a behind-the-scenes look at Season 6 of The Walking Dead with cast and crew. Cudlitz talks with Lauren Cohan (Maggie), Lennie James (Morgan), Sonequa Martin-Green (Sasha), Christian Serratos (Rosita) and Danai Gurira (Michonne).
Cudlitz and James go in depth about the return of Morgan and his new skill set.
The Walking Dead at Comic Con
AMC also released the banner they will use for San Diego Comic Con 2015.
It’s not long into Mr. Robot’s premiere episode, that you realize that it’s far better than any show on the USA Network has any right to be. Granted, I haven’t watched USA–the home to generally-liked shows such as Monk and Psych–since the network was showing Wings reruns in the 90’s. Mr. Robot isn’t Monk and it isn’t Psych and it definitely isn’t Wings. Instead, this series from television newbie Sam Esmail, follows a much darker path, reveling in the paranoid world of cyber security and hacking in the post-Snowden era.
Mr. Robot drops us in the mind of Elliot, a cyber security engineer who serves numerous gigantic corporations in their security needs, including E-Corp, whom he refers to in perpetuity as “Evil Corp”. If Elliot’s moral proclivities weren’t apparent in his not-so-clever naming–or his inner monologues born straight out of the “Occupy” movement–then his weekend hactivism should get the idea across. When a strange hacker group reaches out to Elliot, the world he’s always wanted and the one he’s settled in come face to face, forcing him into his greatest moral dilemma yet.
In it’s series premiere, Mr. Robot does an excellent job of endearing us to a difficult and unique character in Elliot, and of guiding us through a well-constructed storyline that has us hooked by the end of the episode. Elliot, for one, represents a kind of character–the tech genius–that up until this point, has mainly been portrayed as inventive and entrepreneurial on the best of days, and disturbingly greedy on the worst. Elliot, on the other hand, is a creature built purely on his own ideals of morality, not caring one bit about the pursuit of money. While he does exhibit many of the same “techie” character tropes that we’ve become accustomed to–bet you didn’t see this one coming, but he’s not particularly great at socializing–Elliot’s interest in helping out the “little guy” brings a decidedly Marxian view to the realm of the digital power struggle. The episode is strewn with moments of Elliot receding into his own mind, dropping an angry soliloquy on the imbalance of power in the modern world and the average Joe’s inability to act against it–or willing ignorance towards it. It’s admittedly heavy handed at times, but the way in which Mr. Robot points out Elliot’s own submissions to the power of societal norms, pushes his thoughts–and their overall meaning to his character–in a much more interesting direction. There may be a few scenes that don’t quite land–in particular, one between Elliot and a newly minted “Evil Corp” big wig, sees the two having an unnatural conversation about Linux and GNOME, as if to say, “You better believe this big wig knows computers TOO.”–but the majority of this first episode, does an incredible job of riding the fine line between on-the-nose rambling and well thought-out societal critique.
A good portion of the dramatic gravitas that Mr. Robot is able to pull off here, comes from the fine performance of Rami Malek, who very carefully crafts a complex character that we root for from the beginning. Giving Elliot’s social anxiety issues, Malek could play this role with much more of a focus on those traits, as we’ve classically seen in other series and films, but he doesn’t. Instead, Malek accepts those qualities in Elliot and absorbs them, showing the character’s social problems through small ticks and eye glances, rather than big and broad sweeps that whack the viewer in the face. Malek also imbues the character with a thoughtful duality; the way he talks to himself and the way he interacts with the outside world, is completely separate but flow from scene to scene smoothly, truly placing the audience in Elliot’s shoes for the hour. Malek’s cohorts on the show aren’t slouches either. The clear love interest, Angela–played by Portia Doubleday–was seemingly written just to serve a “will they, won’t they” side story, but Doubleday takes what could be another “female in need of saving”, and turns her into a nice foil for Elliot; a woman who’s troubled sassiness plays well against his own relative shyness. Meanwhile Christian Slater–as Mr. Robot, the leader of the hacker group that attempts to recruit Elliot–is given some decent monologues, but isn’t yet bringing much more to the table than a casual performance. So far it works for the character, as the audience needs to feel as unsure of where the group leader stands as Elliot does, but I’m hopeful that Slater will get to showcase some of his more dramatic flair ups in the future.
The directing and cinematography raise the quality of the episode to the next level, in the capable hands of Swedish director Niels Arden Oplev, who helmed the original The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Tight, claustrophobic shots throw us in Elliot’s head space, playing up both his paranoia with the external world and the countless times that he’s left talking with himself, in some ways a prisoner of his own mind. Unique camera angles–Elliot barely in the frame in the bottom-right corner of the screen, for instance–also work to emphasize his differing outlook on modern day life and the societal norms that he’s confined within. In one scene in particular, Elliot comes upon a group of high-powered corporate execs, the one percent if you will. Cleverly, the men remain out of focus throughout the short scene, pointing out Elliot’s own inability to understand or comprehend what these men are all about and where their greed and lust for power comes from. When one of them–the Linux guy from earlier–finally comes into focus, we’re left wondering if there isn’t some point of connection between Elliot and this horde of formless blobs.
Mr. Robot‘s premiere does plenty to impress, including setting up an interesting path for the rest of the series. The characters are fairly well-executed, the writing is sharp on social critique and the stylistic choices push the narrative forward while dragging us further into the depths of this world. Most enticing of all, is the fact that Elliot could go either way with his allegiance from here, playing into our own ambiguity with the increasingly polarized society springing up around us. Elliot is Fight Club‘s unnamed narrator–sans Tyler Durden–mixed with Edward Snowden’s need to empower those around him. He wants to bring the world down, but for all the right reasons. Elliot may in fact hold the keys to his own destiny–the character’s driving desire–but his own naiveté is sure to play a role in things, before it’s all said and done. That’s a story for our times.
The epic dark comedy series The Brink focuses on a geopolitical crisis and its effect on three disparate, desperate men: Secretary of State Walter Larson (Tim Robbins, Best Supporting Actor Oscar® winner for Mystic River), lowly Foreign Service officer Alex Talbot (Jack Black, Golden Globe nominee for “Bernie”) and ace Navy fighter pilot Zeke Tilson (Pablo Schreiber, HBO’s The Wire®). The series was executive produced by Jerry Weintraub, Roberto Benabib and Jay Roach, who also directed the pilot, and was created by Roberto Benabib and Kim Benabib.
"If you help me save the world, I'll be nicer to your sister."Jack Black, Tim Robbins and the cast of The Brink present their 'Tips for Healthy Relationships.'
Ema Watson has signed on to join Tom Hanks in the new tech thriller, The Circle. The film, which has been in development for many months, appears to finally have its cast together, with James Ponsoldt adapting the Dave Eggers novel.
The Circle deals with the current state of privacy and security, among many other hot topics. Watson will play Mae, an employee at a cutting exe technology company who ties together emails, social media pages, bank accounts and various other online accounts into one online identity for its clients. Hanks will play the company’s CEO. Naturally, the dark side of the endeavor at the company shines through.
Director Ponsoldt (The Spectacular Now) spoke to Variety about casting Emma Watson, saying ““Emma Watson is one of my favorite actors, and her incredible talent, sensitivity and deep intelligence will bring an electric energy to The Circle.”
Seeing Hanks take on a role that will potentially be dark and villainous will be a welcome change from his standard everyman hero roles. The Circle will begin shooting this fall.
When you first look at the title of this review and you see the word “joy”, how does that make you feel? I’m sure some of you are downright confused because how exactly can a film that involves a girl who is dying actually be something that would elicit joy? The joy that I am referring to is Me and Earl and the Dying Girl is one the very few movies that I have ever seen that has dealt with the terrible disease of cancer and told it like it is. How many times have we gone to the movies and sat through a film in which in the end somehow that character we love has cancer but is showing no ill effects throughout the film? Me and Earl and the Dying Girl shows just the profound effect a cancer diagnosis can have, not only on the person’s health, but on the interpersonal relationships that person has in his/her everyday lives.
This movie tells the story of Greg (Thomas Mann), who’s mom forces him to interact with a girl named Rachel (Olivia Cooke) who was just diagnosed with Leukemia. Earl (R.J. Cuyler) who’s Greg’s co-worker (his best friend but Greg has commitment issues) lets it slip when they are hanging out that he and Greg love to shoot horrible remakes of even worse movies. They start a bond over these films that provide a much-needed distraction as Rachel heads down a very tough road of Chemotherapy. Let me be clear about this -Me and Earl and the Dying Girl doesn’t hold anything back but even through the horrors that Rachel endures (loss of hair, getting weaker by the day, and barf buckets) we still feel the warmth, compassion, and even humor even during Rachel’s darkest times.
Me and Earl and The Dying Girl won both the Grand Jury Prize and Audience Prize at the Sundance Film Festival this year and I can see why. It is simply one of the very best movies I have seen so far in 2015 and right now would be in my personal top 3. The brilliance of this movie doesn’t come from what was necessarily said but was n’t. Director Alfonso Gomez-Rejon’s use of silence and calling upon the actors to convey parts of the movie using facial expression really created an authentic moment for everyone in theater. We all felt like we were right there with Rachel as she painfully went down this journey (both on a personal and interpersonal level). I was sitting in the theater with thoughts of all the people I knew who have bravely battled cancer-my mom,my father in-law,my grandmother, and my good friend Tara at work. Through brilliant acting and tremendous cinematography, the movie shows us that when the people closest to us are facing the most dire of diagnoses, the prudent thing to do is to just be you (even if that you is weird from time to time).
Joy can be found in a movie whose title includes the Dying Girl.
Rachel forcing Greg to have lunch in the cafeteria.
IronE Singleton will be at Walker Stalker Con in Orlando this weekend and he talked with Matthew Sardo about the convention, the over whelming support of the fans, a “Vatos” spinoff, his quest to be cast as a super hero, and his one-man play “Blindsided by the Walking Dead.”
Singleton who was born in raise in Georgia also weighed in on the debate over the confederate flag.
— Walker Stalker Con (@WalkrStalkrCon) June 23, 2015
ABOUT IRONE SINGLETON: IronE Singleton is best known to audiences as the menacing kingpin Alton in the Academy® Oscar Award-nominated film The Blind Side; the biggest box office grossing sports movie of all time. He is also known as the compassionate tough guy, T-Dog, in the Emmy, AFI & WGA Award winning, Golden Globe nominated TV show The Walking Dead; one of basic cable’s highest rated shows for viewership. IronE’s unusual name depicts his life story, his ability to play strong, multidimensional characters and has made him a memorable actor in both film and television.
Singleton appears on the big screen alongside Bow Wow and Ice Cube in Lottery Ticket. He stars alongside Nicolas Cage, Guy Pearce and January Jones in the feature film Seeking Justice and will soon captivate the Lifetime audience in his leading role as “Glock” Nichols with Neve Campbell in AN Amish Murder. Singleton’s talent is on display in several television pilots, including ABC’s Detroit 1-8-7, VH1’s Single Ladies, and TNT’s Franklin & Bash. Among his other television credits are CW’s One Tree Hill and BET’s Somebodies. As a result of IronE’s success on The Walking Dead, IronE has been sought to write an introduction for two zombie theme anthologies; Zombie Survival Crew: Undead Is Not An Option and Appalachia Undead.
Born and raised in Atlanta, GA, Singleton’s story embodies everything we have come to understand about the lives of many inner city youth growing up in low-income housing projects. Fatherless and having lost his mother to HIV/AIDS when he was a senior in high school and watched his brother spend most of his life in Georgia’s prison system, IronE fought to have a life far different from the one he knew growing up. The “irony” of his story is that, while all the odds were stacked against him, IronE Singleton still overcame his troubled childhood to attend the University of Georgia on academic and football scholarships where he completed a double major in Theater and Speech Communications.
Prior to breaking into film and television, Singleton wrote, directed and performed a critically acclaimed One Man Stage production entitled IronE . . . The Resurrected which garnered rave reviews inspiring IronE to transcribe the production into his autobiography Blindsided by The Walking Dead which chronicles his life from poverty to fame. His ambition is to have it produced as a movie along with his current screenplay Volleyball Vixens. IronE is also overly enthusiastic about incorporating his non-profit performing arts school, IronE School of The Arts (ISA) which will provide youth with a performing arts program that is intellectually stimulating, emotionally compelling, aesthetically enriching and personally relevant with a strong emphasis on truth, purpose, respect for self and others and love for all of humanity. In his spare time, Singleton is a motivational speaker and lyricist.