Tag: alessandro-nivola

  • ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’ Cast Interview

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    Opening in theaters on September 12th is the third and final movie in the ‘Downton Abbey’ franchise entitled ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale‘, which was directed by Simon Curtis (‘My Week with Marilyn’).

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    The film stars Hugh Bonneville (‘Paddington’), Michelle Dockery (‘The Gentlemen’), Elizabeth McGovern (‘Ordinary People’), Allen Leech (‘Bohemian Rhapsody’), Kevin Doyle (‘Good’), Dominic West (‘The Wire’), Alessandro Nivola (‘Kraven the Hunter’), Joely Richardson (‘The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’), and Paul Giamatti (‘The Holdovers’).

    (L to R) Hugh Bonneville, Allen Leech, and Kevin Doyle star in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale'.
    (L to R) Hugh Bonneville, Allen Leech, and Kevin Doyle star in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Hugh Bonneville. Allen Leech and Kevin Doyle about their work on ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, Bonneville’s first reaction to the final screenplay, ending the franchise, what the series has meant to Leech personally, how Doyle’s character has changed since the last film, and the genius of series creator Julian Fellowes.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch the interview.

    Related Article: Beloved Acting Icon And Oscar Winner Dame Maggie Smith has Died Aged 89

    Hugh Bonneville stars as Robert Grantham in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    Hugh Bonneville stars as Robert Grantham in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Hugh, what was your first reaction to reading the final screenplay and was it bittersweet making this movie knowing that it would be the last time you would play this character?

    Hugh Bonneville: Well, we always knew that this was going to be the third and final film. The script went through many changes during its development. Julian was batting it back and forth, and the final iteration seemed the appropriate one. Where there are so many farewells within the story, so many elements of regime change, if you like, both upstairs and down, with the changing of the guard. It just felt like a good farewell to our audience who have been the real driving force in sustaining us for so long.

    Allen Leech stars as Tom Branson in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    Allen Leech stars as Tom Branson in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Allen, as an actor, what has it meant to you personally to work with this cast and to be a part of this franchise?

    Allen Leach: It’s been an absolute joy and a pleasure to be part of it, and something I don’t think any of us have expected. Certainly, for myself and Kevin, with our roles, we were only hired for a couple of episodes. So, it’s very surreal after fifteen years and the whole six seasons and three movies, to be here talking to you about this final part of it. It really has been such an incredibly important part of my life and I’m very grateful to Julian for including an Irish character first off, and then also not killing him off in the first couple of seasons. So, it’s been wonderful and it’s something I will miss terribly and that’s only really hitting home now as we do these last couple of days of the press tour that I won’t get to annoy Hugh as much as I normally would or Kevin.

    (L to R) Kevin Doyle stars as Mr. Molesley and Michael Fox as Andy Parker in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Kevin Doyle stars as Mr. Molesley and Michael Fox as Andy Parker in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Kevin, can you talk about how your character has changed since the last movie and where we find him when this movie begins?

    Kevin Doyle: Well, he’s got a lot wealthier. He’s got a nice house, he’s got a lovely car, he’s got a beautiful wife. Yet, dot, dot, dot, there’s a lot of anxiety, there’s a lot of pressure on him to get these scripts out. He’s a bit of a perfectionist, and nothing has ever quite right for him, and so there’s a lot of self-imposed pressure, and he’s finding it difficult to live with.

    (L to R) Producer Liz Trubridge, director Simon Curtis and writer/creator/producer Julian Fellowes on the set of 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Producer Liz Trubridge, director Simon Curtis and writer/creator/producer Julian Fellowes on the set of ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Hugh, can you talk about the genius of Julian Fellows and this incredible international phenomenon that he has created?

    HB: Well, Julian, as an actor by his initial trade, has a good ear for dialogue, clearly. I can remember reading the very first script and finding all these characters so vivid. They really sprung into my mind’s eye, and I could see each of them well, before they were cast, and so that doesn’t always happen. Often, you can find the characters are interchangeable in a script, but these all had their own voice, and the narrative had such forward momentum that, like everyone who then came to watch the show, I wanted to know what happened next. So, I think that is what is part of the genius of Julian. Not only does he write great lines, but he inhabits these characters. He really cares about them, each of them, and they are complex and three dimensional. But they all come from a place of inherent goodness or a generosity of spirit, and I think that’s been the underlying tone of the show, that there is a warmth about it. It is a world of fiction. I mean, some UK journalists used to get a bit uppity that it wasn’t a documentary and wasn’t correct about the social injustices of the aristocracy. But nevertheless, millions of people have enjoyed visiting this fictional world and taking part in its stories and that they’ve been universal stories. So that’s what Julian’s knack has been to create a fast-paced narrative, but with characters with whom you want to spend time.

    (L to R) Allen Leech stars as Tom Branson, Dominic West as Guy Dexter and Robert James-Collier as Thomas Barrow in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Allen Leech stars as Tom Branson, Dominic West as Guy Dexter and Robert James-Collier as Thomas Barrow in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    MF: Finally, Kevin, what has your experience been like working with Julian on this franchise?

    KD: In terms of Julian’s craft, it’s astonishing that he’s been able to sustain twenty odd characters for this length of time, and quite honestly, to keep all those actors happy as well with good storylines and within this one movie, he’s had to wrap it up. Well, not so much wrap up, but he’s had to suggest an ongoing life for twenty odd characters, which is an extraordinary achievement, I think.

    (L to R) Laura Carmichael stars as Lady Edith, Harry Hadden-Paton as Bertie Hexham, Elizabeth McGovern as Cora Grantham, Hugh Bonneville stars as Robert Grantham and Michelle Dockery as Lady Mary in 'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale', a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.
    (L to R) Laura Carmichael stars as Lady Edith, Harry Hadden-Paton as Bertie Hexham, Elizabeth McGovern as Cora Grantham, Hugh Bonneville stars as Robert Grantham and Michelle Dockery as Lady Mary in ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Rory Mulvey / © 2025 Focus Features LLC.

    What is the plot of ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’?

    The film follows the Crawley family and the Downton Abbey staff as they enter the 1930s. When Mary (Michelle Dockery) finds herself at the center of a public scandal caused by her divorce and the family faces financial trouble, the entire household grapples with the threat of social disgrace. The Crawleys must embrace change as the staff prepare for a new chapter with the next generation leading Downton Abbey into the future.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’?

    'Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale' opens in theaters on September 12th.
    ‘Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale’ opens in theaters on September 12th.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Downton Abbey’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Downton Abbey’ Movies On Amazon

  • Movie Review: ‘The Room Next Door’

    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    ‘The Room Next Door’ receives 5.5 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in wide release in theaters on January 18th, ‘The Room Next Door’ represents something that would ordinarily be cause for celebration among cineastes –– it marks the English-language debut of accomplished and rightly celebrated writer/director Pedro Almodóvar working in the sort of low-key yet meaning-packed drama genre he has shone in in the past.

    And it also feature another key element of the filmmaker’s career –– superb female actors in the lead roles. The problem is that with this latest effort, the switch to entirely English has somehow resulted in the life of the piece getting lost in translation.

    Related Article: Oscar Winners Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore Talk ‘The Room Next Door’

    Does ‘The Room Next Door’ house quality filmmaking?

    (L to R) Julianne Moore and Tilda Swinton in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L to R) Julianne Moore and Tilda Swinton in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Perhaps the biggest issue with ‘The Room Next Door’ is quite how stilted and staid it all feels. While you don’t necessarily look to Almodóvar for genre-smashing fireworks, you might hope for some real level of passion, and that simply doesn’t really come through here.

    While the cast acquits themselves adequately, the dialogue they have to deliver sounds more like something out of a film school effort, with labored exposition in the early going (pity poor Tilda Swinton having to explain how she worked late nights and didn’t get to see much of her daughter to the very woman who worked the long shifts with her all those years ago), or Julianne Moore doing her best to breathe life into a sequence where the two women look around a rented house deciding which room to each take.

    The film is full of moments that feel like they were excised from other, better dramas and though the main pair are still at the top of their game, nothing in the script is worthy of their talents.

    Script and Direction

    Director Pedro Almodóvar in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Director Pedro Almodóvar in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Almodóvar is here adapting Sigrid Nunez’ novel ‘What Are You Going Through’ and you do rather wonder whether the novel had deeper layers that Almodóvar somehow didn’t manage to transfer into his screenplay.

    While the early portions feature Moore’s Ingrid and Swinton’s Martha reminiscing about old times, the disjointed nature of Martha’s recollections in particular make the movie tough going. The story jumps around in time, but with little consequence or real impact, and editor Teresa Font doesn’t do too much to help, sequences ending abruptly or feeling choppy.

    Visually, the film has more to recommend it as Almodóvar floods the screen with color and keeps the locales beautiful –– it’s just a shame that the actual filmmaking is so timid and staid, cutting from one average, locked-down shot to another, and rarely finding much in the way of natural rhythm.

    ‘The Room Next Door’: performances

    Beyond Julianne Moore, Tilda Swinton and later arrival John Turturro, there’s little to recommend on the performance front.

    Julianne Moore as Ingrid

    Julianne Moore in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Julianne Moore in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    A reporter-turned-novelist, Ingrid is our focal point, but despite Moore giving her some spirit, she’s honestly so bland and first base that it’s hard to argue she’s worth spending time with. Her exchanges with Swinton’s characters only ever work because of the two performers’ consummate skill.

    Tilda Swinton as Martha

    Tilda Swinton in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Tilda Swinton in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Swinton has more to play given that her character, who spent years reporting on conflicts, now finds herself at war with cancer. There are layers and depth to Martha and Swinton naturally finds them all, keeping her composure when necessary but hinting at darker depths.

    Yet, like Moore, she struggles to do much with the first-base scripting.

    John Turturro as Damian

    (L to R) Julianne Moore and John Turturro in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L to R) Julianne Moore and John Turturro in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Memorably talked about before he ever arrives on screen (since he’s someone both women slept with and recall as an enthusiastic lover), Turturro’s Damian is possibly the only supporting cast member who really makes much of an impact.

    He fully commits to his quirky yet quiet character and his scenes are watchable.

    Alessandro Nivola as Policeman

    Alessandro Nivola in 'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    Alessandro Nivola in ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    Honestly, the less said about Nivola’s character the better, since he’s more of a stereotype than an actual functioning human being. A police officer who interrogates Ingrid over the circumstances of Martha’s self-administered euthanasia, he’s in one scene and comes across as a plot point –– a religious fanatic who has serious issues with what Martha has done and is threatening Ingrid with punishment for her part in supporting her friend.

    Between this and ‘Kraven the Hunter,’ Nivola isn’t having a great time of it lately, though he can thank a great performance in ‘The Brutalist’ for helping keep his cine-ledger balanced between disappointment and success.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    If this is what happens when the great Pedro Almodóvar switches to working entirely in English, he might be better served sticking to Spanish-language movies. He has nothing to prove given his hefty past of successful movies and full awards cabinet, but this feels like a stumble.

    If a movie with two of the best actors around and the seemingly compelling twin subjects of friendship and assisted suicide can’t bring the drama, you know something is very wrong.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Room Next Door’?

    Ingrid (Julianne Moore) and Martha (Tilda Swinton) were close friends in their youth, when they worked together at the same magazine. Ingrid went on to become an autofiction novelist while Martha became a war reporter, and they were separated by the circumstances of life. After years of being out of touch, they meet again in an extreme but strangely sweet situation.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Room Next Door’?

    • Tilda Swinton as Martha / Michelle
    • Julianne Moore as Ingrid
    • John Turturro as Damian
    • Alessandro Nivola as Policeman
    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and director Pedro Almodóvar in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and director Pedro Almodóvar in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Other Pedro Almodóvar Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Room Next Door’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Pedro Almodóvar Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘The Room Next Door’ – Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore

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    Opening in theaters in wide release on January 17th is the new drama from acclaimed director Pedro Almodóvar (‘Pain and Glory’) entitled ‘The Room Next Door’. The movie stars Oscar winners Tilda Swinton (‘Michael Clayton’) and Julianne Moore (‘May December’), as well as John Turturro (‘The Batman’) and Alessandro Nivola (‘Kraven the Hunter’).

    Related Article: Julianne Moore and Natalie Portman Talk Todd Haynes’ ‘May December’

    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore star in 'The Room Next Door'.
    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore star in ‘The Room Next Door’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore about their work on ‘The Room Next Door’, their first reactions to the screenplay, working together to form their characters’ friendship, and collaborating on set with director Pedro Almodóvar.

    You can watch the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews.

    Julianne Moore in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Julianne Moore in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Julianne, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and what were some of the aspects of this character that you were excited to explore on screen?

    Julianne Moore: Well, I think one of the things that was really thrilling about reading Pedro’s screenplay was that it was centered around this female friendship, and so that is something that I was anxious to bring to the screen. So often, women in films, when you see two women on screen, they’re a relationship that’s like a familiar relationship, their mother and daughter, or it’s a love story, or they’re antagonists, and those things have not been my experience. In my life, my female friendships have been incredibly important to me, and I think it’s such a profound honor to be able to witness another human being as they move through their life. So, the fact that that was what this screenplay was about was incredibly moving to me.

    Tilda Swinton in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Tilda Swinton in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    MF: Tilda, what was your first reaction to the screenplay and why did you want to play this character?

    Tilda Swinton: I was so grateful to Pedro for sending me this script. I mean, I was so grateful to him to know that he wanted to make a film about this subject, it’s a subject that’s extremely personal to me, and that he asked me to make it with him, it was a very happy day. I would say that he wanted me to play Martha because I’ve had the privilege, I would say in my life, to be in what I call the Ingrid position many times, the position of being in support to loved ones who are facing the end of their lives. So, to have the opportunity to download and step into the impulses of someone in the Martha position, I’ve learned so much from the Martha’s in my life, was an amazing gift, a highly personal gift. So, I was beyond thrilled, and its pure happiness for me. The film is all about happiness, and about life and the living of it.

    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    MF: Julianne, can you talk about the process of creating this friendship on screen with Tilda?

    JM: We didn’t know each other, really, before we started this. She’s someone whose work I’d always admired tremendously, and I loved how she was in the world. We’d always say hi to each other when we were at a film festival, or a press event, or somewhere, or if I saw her in a restaurant, and I’d always wanted to work with her. Then, suddenly, we had this wonderful opportunity, and what was great for us is that is I think our friendship developed in real time. As we spent time together on the set, and talked about our lives, and talked about our work, and talked about our kids and our relationships, I think what you saw on screen was happening. We became real friends.

    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L to R) Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    MF: Tilda, Martha makes a big request of her friend Ingrid, can you talk about that and working with Julianne?

    TS: Well, their friendship is a very old one. They’ve known each other since they were very young, they were both writers, and they both still are writers. But originally, they were journalists working together at a magazine, in their 20s we assume. Then they drifted apart, mainly because Martha became a war correspondent, and Ingrid became a novelist. They haven’t seen each other in probably 20 maybe even longer years. They haven’t seen each other at all. I mean, they’re aware of what they’ve been doing because they’re both very celebrated and they have a kind of public profile, but they haven’t seen each other. So, this thing of coming back together, knowing someone so well for so long, not seeing them for maybe 20 years, coming back together in this very particular moment, a moment where truth draws on that ancient bond. I know this myself; I’ve had the experience of seeing people again that I hadn’t seen for years, and it’s such a wonderful thing because you just don’t sweat the small stuff. You sort of gloss over the details of the last couple of decades, and then you get down to having a good time again like you are in your 20s. Julianne and I, the great miracle is, we didn’t know each other at all. We’d met each other and we knew of each other, and we both liked the look of each other, but we became old friends within an afternoon, and we are now very old friends who’ve known each other for one year, we’ve been making up for lost time ever since. It was a huge blessing that she came on the film and that we really have that bond. So, there was no acting required, we were truly happy to be in each other’s presence.

    Julianne Moore in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Julianne Moore in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    MF: Julianne, can you talk about Ingrid’s reaction to Martha’s request, and how do you think you would react to something like that in your own life?

    JM: One of the wonderful ways that this is introduced, I think, is that initially, when Ingrid hears that Martha is sick, the first thing she does is rush to the hospital to see how she’s doing, and she’s the kind of person who shows up. She shows up day after day after day just to keep her company, to talk to her, to make her feel better. Certainly, Ingrid was not expecting this situation, but I think one of the reasons that Martha ends up relying on her is that she sees that Ingrid is reliable, that no matter what, she’s going to try to be there as a real friend and do what her friend needs. It’s painful. I think Ingrid is very honest about it and says that this is not something that she’s comfortable with, but she also realizes that Martha is in need, that this is what she needs at that moment, and she feels like that’s the right thing to do. So, yes, I’d like to think that I would be like Ingrid because I think that’s the kind of friend, we all want to be, and we all want to have.

    (L to R) Director Pedro Almodóvar, Julianne Moore and Tilda Swinton in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L to R) Director Pedro Almodóvar, Julianne Moore and Tilda Swinton in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    MF: Finally, Julianne, what was it like working with director Pedro Almodóvar and was it everything that you expected?

    JM: He’s a true artist. Everything that you see in his films is in him. The colors, and the composition, and the music, and the point of view. You walk into his apartment in Madrid, and you realize, “Oh my gosh, I’ve seen everything in this apartment on screen in his films.” That’s what’s so wonderful is that it’s intensely personal to him. It’s very meaningful. The books that he’s read and the films that he’s seen, the art that he’s loved, all of it is present there, the people that he’s cared about. After, I met a lot of the members of his crew, and I realized I had seen them in several of his movies before. I was like, “Oh my gosh, she played that part.” So, I love that about him. I love that his films are him. They’re him turned inside out on the screen.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Room Next Door’?

    Ingrid (Julianne Moore) and Martha (Tilda Swinton) were close friends in their youth, when they worked together at the same magazine. Ingrid went on to become an autofiction novelist while Martha became a war reporter, and they were separated by the circumstances of life. After years of being out of touch, they meet again in an extreme but strangely sweet situation.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Room Next Door’?

    • Tilda Swinton as Martha / Michelle
    • Julianne Moore as Ingrid
    • John Turturro as Damian
    • Alessandro Nivola as Policeman
    Director Pedro Almodóvar in 'The Room Next Door'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Director Pedro Almodóvar in ‘The Room Next Door’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Other Pedro Almodóvar Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Room Next Door’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Pedro Almodóvar Movies on Amazon

     

  • Movie Review: ‘The Brutalist’

    Adrien Brody in 'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    Adrien Brody in ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    Opening in limited theatrical release on December 20th, ‘The Brutalist’ seems sure to challenge notions of how long is too long, even when the writer/director in charge is the prodigiously talented Brady Corbet.

    Since switching from acting to directing with 2015’s ‘The Childhood of a Leader,’ Brady Corbet has labored away on ‘Vox Lux’ and now this story of one man’s eventful voyage to America, where he strives to build a new life while falling prey to his own vices and other people’s avaricious attitudes. The question is, is there a huge audience for a movie that runs 3 hours and 45 minutes, including a 15 minute intermission?

    Related Article: Oscar Winner Adrien Brody Talks ‘Clean’

    Will ‘The Brutalist’s Story of an Architect Build an Audience?

    Adrien Brody in 'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    Adrien Brody in ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    Mimicking movies from a bygone era, Corbet’s latest features an overture and an epilogue bookending its giant two-part main runtime. There are certainly times when it all feels like an overblown exercise in experimental filmmaking, but the story and performances are strong enough to shoulder the expectations brought on by that running time.

    It doesn’t hurt that it’s all built around a supremely compelling central performance from Adrien Brody and enough incident to actually fill the story, though you can certainly see chunks where Corbet might have benefitted from tightening the whole thing up. Still, it’s a remarkable achievement, and all the more impressive give that the budget was just $6 million –– compare that to ‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ which did a lot less with $190 million.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Joe Alwyn, Guy Pearce, Adrien Brody, and Felicity Jones in 'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Joe Alwyn, Guy Pearce, Adrien Brody, and Felicity Jones in ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    Corbet wrote his latest with regular creative (and real-life) partner Mona Fastvold and while their screenplay swings between authentic and wildly melodramatic, it serves the movie well enough, powering the performances and creating an impressively sweeping story given the resources available.

    While Brody’s central character naturally scores the lion’s share of dialogue, one or two others get the chance to shine, but it’s much more weighted towards one man’s story than building truly rounded portrayals of everyone, which few movies can attempt, even when they have the sort of mammoth running time on display here.

    Corbet has certainly learned a lot from his previous directorial efforts, and he stretches those dollars impressively, blending archive footage with small intimate moments in chambers and the stark, sweeping Pennsylvania hills where Brody’s László Tóth does his celebrated work.

    Cast and Performances

    Brody’s is our core character through the story, but there is also room for other actors to shine in support.

    Adrien Brody as László Tóth

    Adrien Brody in 'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    Adrien Brody in ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    Playing the architect whose concrete-heavy work gives the film its title, Brody is predictably wonderful, showing the character’s humanity in all its various shades. A Jewish refugee from post-World War II Budapest, he arrives in the United States desperate to find his own version of the American Dream, initially indulging in all the pleasures it has to offer.

    His immigrant story is far from an easy one –– initially forced to rely on the charity of relatives already established in the States, he’s then in an even worse situation, reduced to construction work and shoveling coal to make ends meet, a far cry from his heyday as an architect at home before the war.

    But when he scores the patronage of a wealthy Pennsylvania magnate and learns his wife has survived the Nazis, his life is seemingly made –– if only he could avoid giving in to his own demons. This is a tour de force for Brody, who commits fully to the role and keeps you watching even as his director indulges in long stretches that try the patience.

    Felicity Jones as Erzsébet Tóth

    Felicity Jones in 'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    Felicity Jones in ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    Reduced to simply a voice in letters in the first half of the film, Jones is a revelation when her character properly arrives in the second. Tóth’s determined wife, sickened by her circumstances, energizes the later stages of the film and Jones is great all through her section, with one incredible scene we won’t spoil near the end.

    Guy Pearce as Harrison Lee Van Buren

    Guy Pearce in 'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    Guy Pearce in ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    As the flinty, shrewd businessman and property magnate, Pearce does great work with what could have been a one-note performance. He makes an impact from his first entrance, and Van Buren is a force through the movie, for both good and ill.

    Supporting cast

    Isaach de Bankolé in 'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    Isaach de Bankolé in ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    One or two other parts make an impact beyond the central three –– Raffey Cassidy as the main couple’s nervy niece Zsófia is all wide-eyed, deer-in-headlights energy (which hides a spine of steel), while Isaach De Bankolé is more than simply Tóth’s best friend, a dedicated single father he meets on the Pennsylvania breadlines.

    And in a smaller but pivotal part, we have Jonathan Hyde as Leslie, the project manager assigned to oversee Tóth’s big build for Van Buren, who is practically tearing his hair out working with (or for, if you see it Tóth’s way) the mercurial architect.

    Final Thoughts

    Adrien Brody in 'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    Adrien Brody in ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    Corbet’s meditation on immigration, survivor’s guilt, and the dangers of pursuing your personal ambitions will not be for everyone. If the idea of nearly four hours in the cinema (admittedly with a break in the middle) watching someone struggle and suffer is appealing, then ‘The Brutalist’ represents one of the best examples of the genre.

    It’s ambitious, thoughtful and will likely be in the awards conversation this year.

    ‘The Brutalist’ receives 7 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the plot of ‘The Brutalist’?

    Fleeing from post-war Europe in 1947, a visionary architect (Adrien Brody) and his wife (Felicity Jones) settle in Pennsylvania where a wealthy and mysterious client (Guy Pearce) changes their lives forever.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Brutalist’?

    'The Brutalist'. Photo: A24.
    ‘The Brutalist’. Photo: A24.

    List of Brady Corbet Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Brutalist’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Adrien Brody Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Kraven The Hunter’

    Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven the Hunter in 'Kraven the Hunter.'
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven the Hunter in ‘Kraven the Hunter.’

    Opening in theaters December 13th is ‘Kraven The Hunter,’ directed by J.C. Chandor and starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ariana DeBose, Fred Hechinger, Alessandro Nivola, Christopher Abbott, and Russell Crowe.

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Madame Web’

    Initial Thoughts

    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Are we finally done with of the Sony Universe of Spider-Man Movies Not Featuring Spider-Man for good? We can only hope, because 2024 has surely brought us the nadir of this cash-grabbing MCU-adjacent nonsense with ‘Madame Web’ and now ‘Kraven The Hunter.’ Yet another pointless origin story for a Spider-Man villain that really serves no purpose without Spider-Man to fight against, ‘Kraven The Hunter’ wastes a serviceable performance from Aaron Taylor-Johnson (playing his second Marvel character in less than 10 years following his appearance as Quicksilver in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’) and smashes any hope of a real Kraven-Spidey face-off in the foreseeable future.

    Like ‘Madame Web,’ ‘Morbius,’ and the ‘Venom’ movies, ‘Kraven The Hunter’ is dragged down by a laziness that infects every aspect of the production. A badly written script, lousy editing, miserable-looking CG, underwhelming acting, and even sloppy dialogue looping (yes, just like in ‘Madame Web’) hinder the film’s modest attributes, like Taylor-Johnson’s work and the occasional flash of electrifying violence. And it’s all directed by J.C. Chandor – who’s made some good movies, like ‘A Most Violent Year’ – with the energy of a weak wind blowing across a desolate Siberian plain (where much of the film takes place).

    Story and Direction

    'Kraven the Hunter' director J. C. Chandor.
    ‘Kraven the Hunter’ director J. C. Chandor.

    ‘Kraven The Hunter’ makes its points with such thudding heavy-handedness that the movie produces unintentional laughter almost from the start. Russian martial music blares over the opening scene to make sure we know we’re deep in the Russian countryside, as a transport brings the title character (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) to a prison that would make Rikers Island look like the Four Seasons.

    Kraven is there on purpose, however, to execute a Russian gangster operating within its walls, a plot point that will make more sense later as we first must endure an extended flashback from 16 years earlier. Here we meet the younger Kraven, real name Sergei Kravinoff (Levi Miller), who is pulled out of school along with his half-brother Dmitri by their brutish father Nikolai (Russell Crowe), who informs his sons that their mother has taken her own life because she was “weak.”

    Dad decides that accompanying him on a hunt is just what the grieving boys need, although the rather timid Dmitri prefers singing and doing uncanny vocal impressions of Nikolai and others (he’s a “real chameleon,” as he and others tell us two or three times, just in case we don’t get the hint). Sergei is gravely injured by a legendary lion his dad has been tracking, and although he nearly succumbs to his wounds, a combination of the lion’s blood with a mystical potion given to him by a young African girl named Calypso — who just happens to be there with her parents — brings the young man back from the brink and imbues him with a range of special powers (enhanced strength and speed, better hearing, and eyes that change color).

    Also bestowed somehow with a new moral code by that heady brew, Sergei decides he’s not going to join his father’s business and takes off for the Siberian wilderness, where he sets up house in a dome-like cabin left behind by his mother and protects the local animals from poachers. Now grown into the impressive shape of Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Kraven hunts bad guys as a sort of mercenary but is soon called back to help defend his estranged father, who’s being threatened by a man he once dismissed named Aleksei Sytsevich (Alessandro Nivola), whose bizarre skin condition and own monstrous powers have led him to be called the Rhino.

    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    “A man who kills a legend becomes a legend himself,” gravely intones Nikolai at one point, as ‘Kraven’ deploys all the usual cliches about fathers and sons and the definition of “real” masculinity. Perhaps J.C. Chandor envisions this all as some sort of operatic Russian crime epic, but he’s undercut every step of the way by a ludicrous, coincidence-filled script from Richard Wenk, Art Marcum, and Matt Holloway (the latter two are credited on the first ‘Iron Man’ for Marvel Studios). Kraven/Sergei steps out of his brother’s apartment for a nap just as a bunch of the Rhino’s thugs come to kidnap him; Kraven calls a now-grown Calypso (Ariana DeBose) to warn her that the Rhino is coming for her just as she happens to look outside her office and see those same thugs bursting in. Plot points are simply stacked atop each other without any real development just to clumsily get people from point A to point B.

    Speaking of Calypso, who works as a lawyer, why does Kraven need her help in tracing bad guys if he’s supposedly the world’s greatest hunter? Why does her one notable fighting skill happen to come in handy just when Kraven needs it most? Does she even need to be in the story? And why the hell is the Foreigner (Christopher Abbott), an assassin who can hypnotize people by staring at them and counting to three, necessary here when the plot is already weighed down with multiple villains?

    In the end, these questions don’t matter because the rest of the film is so haphazardly done. For starters, there’s a CG lion that looks like it was discarded on a zip drive by someone at Disney and found by somebody else working on ‘Kraven.’ In fact, all the animals look terribly fake, a common problem in CG that’s exacerbated here by the sheer amount of them. And let’s not get started on the final version of the Rhino, who looks like the VFX folks just digitally stuck a horn and some rough gray skin over the superstructure of Rhys Ifans’ Lizard and called it a day.

    We can harp on the film’s other problems – shockingly sloppy dialogue looping (especially when Chameleon, I mean Dmitri, sings in different voices), shockingly dumb dialogue, and unshockingly predictable plot turns like Sergei getting his powers from magic blood, an idea that goes back to the Andrew Garfield era of Spider-Man. But all these other issues pale next to the movie’s main drawback: it’s just dull. Chandor can’t wring anything resembling real energy out of these tired old tropes, and the movie just grinds along for better than two hours like a broken-down train groaning into its final station.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Aaron Taylor Johnson and Russell Crowe in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Aaron Taylor Johnson and Russell Crowe in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    If there is a saving grace to ‘Kraven The Hunter,’ it’s the title character himself. Aaron Taylor-Johnson does a very commendable job against the odds; even though this is a far cry from the Kraven of the comics in many ways, he does have a moral code, a sense of honor, and a thread of compassion that’s in conflict with his naturally violent tendencies. Taylor-Johnson is also quite physically suited for the role, even if the editing of the fight scenes leaves something to be desired (maybe he just said the hell with it and figured he’d use this for his James Bond audition tape). Kraven’s ultimate objectives are vague and kind of muddled, but that’s the script’s fault.

    Fred Hechinger (seen this fall as the mad emperor Caracalla in ‘Gladiator II’ and the sadistic Harper in ‘Nickel Boys’) also does a decent job as Dmitri, although his eventual transformation into the Chameleon at the end is rushed and jarringly handled. One great shame about this movie is that it wastes three classic members of Spidey’s rogues gallery – Rhino, Chameleon (the very first villain Spider-Man ever faced!), and Kraven himself – on a movie that does these illustrious villains little justice.

    The rest of the cast doesn’t fare very well. Alessandro Nivola ingests the scenery as the Rhino, camping it up and all but twirling his moustache, while Russell Crowe alternates between phoning it in and chewing the sets around him as well, his heavy Russian accent like something out of a Cold War movie. As for Ariana DeBose, there’s no nice way to say it: she’s just bad here, spouting every line in flatly declarative fashion as if she’s reading them for the first time. She seems lost at sea, but again, that may be a function of the script, which offers no real function for Calypso.

    Final Thoughts

    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    The sad part about ‘Kraven The Hunter’ is that Aaron Taylor-Johnson’s fur-clad killer might have made a formidable nemesis for the current Tom Holland iteration of Spider-Man (in fact, Kraven was allegedly the back-up plan for ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ if the multiversal thing didn’t work out). But this laughable movie all but ensures that this version of Kraven won’t cross over into Spidey’s corner of the MCU, despite the handful of painfully obvious Easter eggs scattered throughout the film.

    As we noted above, we can only hope that the seven-year excursion into mediocrity that was the Sony Spider-Man Universe Not Featuring Spider-Man, which began in 2018 with ‘Venom,’ ends here with Kraven’s first and last hunt. The whole idea – to create a universe of movies starring Spider-Man villains without having Spider-Man show up in them – was a misfire from the beginning, the brainchild of two producers (Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach) desperate to hang onto whatever piece of the Marvel pie they could. Nearly half a billion dollars in production costs and six films later, their slice of that pie is moldy and spoiled and needs to go into the trash.

    ‘Kraven The Hunter’ receives 2.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘Kraven The Hunter’?

    The son (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) of a Russian crime lord (Russell Crowe) rejects his father’s empire and sets out to track down criminals on his own and enact justice upon them, using his enhanced powers to make himself a feared and powerful hunter of men.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Kraven The Hunter’?

    • Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven
    • Ariana DeBose as Calypso Ezili
    • Fred Hechinger as Dmitri Smerdyakov / The Chameleon
    • Alessandro Nivola as Aleksei Sytsevich / Rhino
    • Christopher Abbott as the Foreigner
    • Russell Crowe as Nikolai Kravinoff
    'Kraven the Hunter' opens in theaters in October.
    ‘Kraven the Hunter’ opens in theaters in October.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in Sony’s Spider-Man Universe:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Kraven the Hunter’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Aaron Taylor-Johnson Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Boston Strangler’

    Keira Knightley as Loretta McLaughlin in 20th Century Studios' 'Boston Strangler,' exclusively on Hulu.
    Keira Knightley as Loretta McLaughlin in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Boston Strangler,’ exclusively on Hulu. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2022 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Released on Hulu today, ‘Boston Strangler’ faces the pressure of being both a true crime story and a crusading journalist narrative, which have been brought to screens in compelling and memorable form by stories such as Netflix‘s ‘Mindhunter’ and ‘Spotlight’. We bring up those two titles in particular, because this new movie comes across as a mash-up of both, even if it’s not quite playing on their level.

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    What’s the story of ‘Boston Strangler’

    One of the most infamous crime cases in history, the story of the Boston Strangler has already inspired several movies and TV series. Between 1962 and 1964, more than a dozen single women, ranging in age from 19 to 85, were killed in the Boston area, all of them strangled, their bodies posed provocatively by a mysterious attacker who came to be known as the “Boston Strangler.”

    Although convicted sex offender Alberto DeSalvo confessed to the crimes, there was no physical evidence tying him to the victims; he instead received a life sentence for a separate series of rapes and sexual assaults and was stabbed to death in prison years after his conviction. Speculation remains whether he was the sole perpetrator of the Strangler murders — decades later, the case is the subject of widespread fascination for many armchair sleuths and true-crime aficionados.

    Written and directed by Matt Ruskin, ‘Boston Strangler’ follows Loretta McLaughlin (Keira Knightley), a reporter for the Record-American newspaper, who becomes the first journalist to connect the murders.

    When we first meet her, Loretta is assigned to the lifestyle section, she pushes to do more crime reporting, even as her hard-bitten bosses think she’s not up to the job. Early stumbles don’t help with that impression, but she’s soon making progress.

    As the mysterious killer claims more and more victims and fear spreads across the city, Loretta attempts to continue her investigation alongside colleague and confidante Jean Cole (Carrie Coon), yet the duo finds themselves stymied by the rampant sexism of the era.

    Nevertheless, McLaughlin and Cole bravely pursue the story at great personal risk, putting their own lives on the line in their quest to uncover the truth.

    Carrie Coon as Jean Cole in 20th Century Studios' 'Boston Strangler,' exclusively on Hulu.
    Carrie Coon as Jean Cole in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Boston Strangler,’ exclusively on Hulu. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2022 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Related Article: ‘Prey’s Amber Midthunder Discusses Hulu’s New ‘Predator’ Prequel

    What works about ‘Boston Strangler’?

    Ruskin, no stranger to true crime tales after ‘Crown Heights’ and a wealth of documentary experience, brings a sure touch to the new movie, which does convincingly follow in the footsteps of ‘Zodiac’ and other serial killer thrillers.

    Knightley and Coon of course bring great performances to the central roles, convincingly embodying women who are battling their bosses and trying to juggle family life even as they dig into the complicated case.

    Unlike, say, the recent ‘She Said’, which slightly suffered from showing the journalists digging into a case that was largely in the past, ‘Boston Strangler’ –– despite its period setting –– throws you right into the heart of the case as the murders are still happening, and the two women are under threat even as they work to find the truth.

    And that 1960s setting also means that the difficulties the pair face in convincing anyone to take them seriously are deeper and more shocking when viewed through today’s lens. When you have cops falsely claiming that a journalist was flirting with one of their officers to get information, you know the stakes are higher than just dealing with the crime.

    Refreshingly, Ruskin doesn’t shy away from the divisions that crept in between the two as the case continued, as their differing ideas on the investigation began to drag them apart (though they still remained friends afterwards). And despite a clear passion for their work, he crafts the characters as fallible humans, not just crusading angels.

    Around the central pair, the writer/director also builds a classy ensemble of veterans including Chris Cooper as editor Jack MacLaine, the man who reluctantly gives McLaughlin her shot at the crime desk. He’s a boozy, old school newspaper man who has connections to the cops that she’s frustrating but finds it within himself to back her when he realizes that she’s truly on to something.

    There’s also the likes of Alessandro Nivola as driven cop Detective Conley, who figures out that it’s better to work with McLaughlin rather than stonewall her, and Bill Camp as Commissioner McNamara, who resents her stories painting his department in a bad light, however true it might be.

    Alessandro Nivola as Detective Conley in 20th Century Studios' 'Boston Strangler,' exclusively on Hulu.
    Alessandro Nivola as Detective Conley in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Boston Strangler,’ exclusively on Hulu. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Are there problems with the movie?

    One major issue with the film late on is the pace, which slackens noticeably even as it should be ramping up. True, Ruskin is largely bound by the true story –– which can be both a blessing and a curse when you’re trying to make a compelling movie.

    Part of the frustration of this case, with none of the authorities able to pin down a suspect (and being massively negligent when it comes to digging into the case) translates to the screen as the story starts to drag a little.

    And Knightley, while breathing convincing life into McLaughlin, manages an American accent, but it’s not one you’d quite describe as “Bostonian” (especially given the real McLaughlin was born in Massachusetts) and it stands out even more given the accents around her (Coon, for example, sounds convincingly like she comes from the area). But it’s not a huge issue as you’re too busy following the journalists’ story.

    Though it’s a shame that Disney decided to put the movie on to Hulu rather than giving it a shot in theaters, you can see why it might be considered a risk –– unless you have the likes of David Fincher aboard, there’s a chance audiences won’t show up for such a dark, moody thriller in an age of giant franchise movies.

    Ably telling its story with just a few issues of its own, ‘Boston Strangler’ is a worthy addition to the genre blending journalism and crime.

    ‘Boston Strangler’ receives 8 out of 10 stars.

    Chris Cooper as Jack MacLaine in 20th Century Studios' 'Boston Strangler,' exclusively on Hulu.
    Chris Cooper as Jack MacLaine in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Boston Strangler,’ exclusively on Hulu. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Boston Strangler:’

    Buy Keira Knightley Movies On Amazon

  • ‘Amsterdam’ Interview: Christian Bale Talks New Movie

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    Opening in theaters on October 7th is the third movie from Oscar-nominated director David O. Russell and Oscar-winning actor Christian Bale following ‘The Fighter’ and ‘American Hustle,’ entitled ‘Amsterdam.’

    Set in the 1930’s, the new movie stars Bale as Burt Berendsen, a doctor with a prosthetic eye, who along with his friends Harold Woodsman (John David Washington), a lawyer, and Valerie Voze (Margot Robbie), a nurse, become the prime suspects in the murder of US Senator Bill Meekins (Ed Begley Jr.).

    In addition to Bale, Robbie, and Washington, the movie also features an all-star cast that includes Chris Rock, Anya Taylor-Joy, Zoe Saldana, Mike Myers, Michael Shannon, Timothy Olyphant, Andrea Riseborough, Matthias Schoenaerts, Alessandro Nivola, Rami Malek, Taylor Swift, and Robert De Niro.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Christian Bale about his work on ‘Amsterdam,’ why he likes collaborating with filmmaker David O. Russell, how he creates a character, and what ‘Amsterdam’ means to him.

    Christian Bale and his wife, Sibi Blažić ​at the Los Angeles premiere of director David O. Russell's 'Amsterdam.'
    (L to R) Christian Bale and his wife, Sibi Blažić ​at the Los Angeles premiere of director David O. Russell’s ‘Amsterdam.’

    You can read the full interview below or click on the player above to watch a video of our interview with Christian Bale about ‘Amsterdam.’

    Moviefone: To begin with, this is your third film with director David O. Russell, what is it about working with David that brings out the best in your performances?

    Christian Bale: He’s a real circular thinker and I love the way that he does think. He doesn’t forget a thing. He’s very passionate about what he does. We just have a good dynamic. I think it’s a good yin and yang. We complement each other. On this one we decided to get much more involved than any other previous project. We started putting this together, it was five, six years ago, and just building it right from nothing. I just enjoy working with him so much, and it’s always fun.

    You never know exactly what’s going to happen on the day. I wouldn’t call it improvisation so much, as he just likes you to know the character so much that he can chuck out different ideas. Sometimes I’d riff, but most of the time he’s chucking out lines or kicking me in the leg or something. It’s just something that creates a very lively, colorful, beautiful but unpolished look at humanity. He loves people. He loves people and characters and so do I, so telling stories with him is just a joy.

    Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, and John David Washington in 20th Century Studios' 'Amsterdam.'
    (L-R): Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, and John David Washington in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Amsterdam.’ Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Where does the creation of a character begin for you? Is it in the voice? Is it the hair, the facial hair, the accent? What is it?

    CB: I don’t know what I do. I don’t have any particular way of doing it. I make it up each time with every job. I begin each job going, “Oh my God, someone hired me again.” I don’t even know what I’m doing. I never really trained, so I don’t really have a particular technique. People often say, “Oh, Bale, he’s a method actor.” I’m not a method actor. I would’ve had to train to do that. I just do whatever is necessary for each and every day.

    But gradually all the bits and pieces come together. I don’t have a particular order. But, of course you’ve got the history, the mannerisms, the voice, the body language and the walk, and when you prep something as much as David and I did on this, that was what was great. David would suggest storylines and then ask me, “What do you think Burt would do with that?” I knew it well enough by that point that I’d be able to help him out. It really gives you a nice sense of freedom, of total ownership when you’re making the film.

    Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, and John David Washington in 20th Century Studios' 'Amsterdam.'
    (L-R): Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, and John David Washington in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Amsterdam.’ Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Finally, in the movie, Amsterdam is a very important place for the characters. Where is your Amsterdam?

    CB: Well, I mean, obviously in the film, Amsterdam is the halcyon days for these people, when life is as it is meant to be, and how they dreamed it to be, and what they’re striving for life to become like. For me it’s any moment when you’re totally dedicated to what you’re doing.

    That’s when you’re so absorbed in what you’re doing that you can’t think of anything else. I get that kick out of acting. When I was allowed to before accidents, I used to get that out of motorcycles and racing them and stuff. I get that kick out of my family as well.

    Christian Bale stars in director David O. Russell's 'Amsterdam.'
    Christian Bale stars in director David O. Russell’s ‘Amsterdam.’
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  • Alison Brie Talks Writing and Starring in ‘Spin Me Round’

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    Opening in theaters, VOD, and streaming on AMC+ beginning August 19th is the new romantic comedy ‘Spin Me Round,’ which was co-written by actress Alison Brie (‘Promising Young Woman’), and co-written and directed by Jeff Baena (‘Horse Girl’).

    The new movie follows Amber (Brie), the manager of an Italian restaurant chain who wins the opportunity to attend the franchise’s educational immersion program in Italy.

    But what she thought would be an exciting getaway devolves into chaos when she begins a romantic triangle with the restaurant chain’s wealthy owner Nick (Alessandro Nivola) and his assistant, Kat (Aubrey Plaza).

    In addition to Brie, Nivola, and Plaza, the cast also includes Molly Shannon (‘Me and Earl and the Dying Girl’), Lil Rel Howery (‘I Love My Dad’), Tim Heidecker (‘Ant-Man and the Wasp’), Tricia Helfer (‘Battlestar Galactica’), and Fred Armisen (‘The Bubble’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Alison Brie about her work on ‘Spin Me Around,’ writing the screenplay with director Jeff Baena, her character’s journey and romance with Nick, and working with Aubrey Plaza.

    Alison Brie as Amber in 'Spin Me Round.'
    Alison Brie as Amber in ‘Spin Me Round.’

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Alison Brie and co-writer and director Jeff Baena.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about the genesis of the idea for the film and the process of writing the screenplay with director Jeff Baena?

    Alison Brie: So, Jeff brought the idea to me, and it was something that he had been thinking about since we shot ‘The Little Hours’ in Italy. I think he had a strong desire to get back to Italy. He had read some articles about a similar immersive management program that may exist in real life, and how lackluster it might have been, or how Americanized it might have been.

    He saw a great idea in bringing a fun ensemble together to watch them navigate that kind of program. When he brought me into the fold, I think I was really drawn to the idea that the movie is going to take this journey through a bunch of different genres, and that we’re following a character who doesn’t take a lot of action in her life.

    She just lets things happen to her, but over the course of this movie, she tries to take her destiny into her own hands, but it ends in total chaos. I also really liked the idea of unfulfilled expectation. Something we were playing with is that sometimes when you take a big trip, you think it’s going to be really life changing and that you’re going to get back on the other side as a totally different person, and often, that doesn’t happen.

    In life versus the movies, you get home and your life is kind of the same. I think we wanted to show that there actually can be an internal shift, however subtle, even if there’s not an external shift.

    MF: Can you talk about the journey that Amber goes on and how it changes her through the course of the movie?

    AB: We’re watching Amber become a more self-empowered person, ultimately. At the start of the film, you get the sense that she’s really stuck. She’s been a manager at this Italian restaurant chain for nine years. She is a bit of a pushover. She tried to start another restaurant with her boyfriend, but that wasn’t really her idea. She has trouble saying no to people. She goes with the flow too much. She’s not going to take her life into her own hands.

    Through her experiences on this trip, and the people that she meets, specifically Aubrey Plaza’s character, I think she kind of sees a different type of dangerous person and is a little bit inspired by that. At the end of the film, it’s like the trip isn’t going to change the fact that she works at this restaurant. So, it doesn’t get her out of debt, but I do think there is a subtle enough shift of her starting to empower herself, have a voice and say the things that she wants.

    Aubrey Plaza as Kat and Alison Brie as Amber in 'Spin Me Round.'
    (L to R) Aubrey Plaza as Kat and Alison Brie as Amber in ‘Spin Me Round.’

    MF: Can you talk about Amber’s sudden friendship with Kat and working on that odd relationship with Aubrey Plaza?

    AB: We always had Aubrey in mind for the role. So, it’s always nice when you get to write a character for an actor. But it’s so fun to work with Aubrey. She’s such a great actress, and she brings a really exciting, impulsive kind of energy to all of her roles that is really unexpected.

    So, it’s really easy to shoot scenes with her, and she and I have worked together a bunch before. So, it’s really comfortable and fun. I think, with those scenes, it’s sort of the rawest that you see my character. She goes into this trip being fed movies like ‘Eat, Pray, Love,’ and you get the sense that maybe she watches ‘The Bachelorette’ and ‘The Bachelor’ a lot, and that’s kind of what she has in mind for this trip.

    Aubrey’s character shakes it up, and you see her feeling real things in the moment that she hasn’t maybe felt before. She gets a bit of inspiration from her character, and the way that she just is unabashedly who she is.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about Amber and Nick’s relationship, how he is able to win her over, and how she feels when she discovers his true intentions?

    AB: Poor Amber is so naive, but I also think there’s a sense to her that is just too polite also. Some of the interactions that she has early on in the movie with Nick are based on real interactions that I’ve had with men in life when I was much younger. I think that she wants to be naive, because the prospect of this rich, handsome, restaurateur sweeping her off her feet is very exciting. She’s able to ignore the red flags, because she’s just the type of person who is uncomfortable with rocking the boat, no pun intended.

    So, it takes her a little while longer to realize what’s going on with Nick. It really takes a lot of courage from her, again, not being a person who ever speaks up for herself or asserts herself. It takes a lot to get her to say anything. She almost would rather think that a whole different set of things were going on than admit what was in front of her.

    Alessandro Nivola as Nick Martucci and Alison Brie as Amber in 'Spin Me Round.'
    (L to R) Alessandro Nivola as Nick Martucci and Alison Brie as Amber in ‘Spin Me Round.’
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  • ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ Cast Talks About The Movie

    ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ Cast Talks About The Movie

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    The Many Saints of Newark’ gives us a glimpse at the Sopranos and Moltisanti families decades before the events of ‘The Sopranos’ TV series. The stars of the movie, Michael Gandolfini, Vera Farmiga, Jon Bernthal, Leslie Odom Jr., Alessandro Nivola and Michela de Rossi joined director Alan Taylor to talk to Moviefone about the production.

    Michael Gandolfini and Alessandro Nivola in 'The Many Saints of Newark'
    Michael Gandolfini and Alessandro Nivola in ‘The Many Saints of Newark’

    Michael Gandolfini talks about how he joined the movie, and Vera Farmiga and Jon Bernthal talk about whether they’d watched the TV series.

    Moviefone: You guys play members of the Soprano family. I’m going to start with you, Michael, you are playing a young Tony Soprano was a role made iconic by your father. When they asked you to do this role, what went through your mind?

    Michael Gandolfini: Well, it wasn’t like a phone call of like, you have the role, do you want it, yes or no? Which was very helpful. It was like a slow burn, they want you to audition. And at first I was really hesitant, but I thought I’m not really in a position to not audition and go up in front of Douglas Aibel who is a great casting director and get used to it. So-

    Vera Farmiga: You had to work for it! You guys are earnest!

    Gandolfini: Yeah, that was my first audition. And then I had a second, and then I had a third. So it was like three months of convincing myself. Okay, I have a point of view, I have an idea of how I can do this differently and like sort of… By the end, I’d fallen in love with this Tony and had a real kind of excitement to play him.

    MF: Oh my God. If that had been me, I feel like by the end of it, I would’ve been like, what if I didn’t get the role after going by?

    Gandolfini: I had nightmares of like, David sitting behind. I had an actual… I remember having nightmares of like talking to David and being like, what are you going to tell? What are we…? Actually, this is crazy, but I had a dream, I remember it was David looking at me, and I was in the audition. I was doing it. And I looked down, and my hands are my dad’s hands.

    Farmiga: Oh, wow.

    Gandolfini: And I woke up, and I was like, that’s such a Soprano dream. Like it’s just such a yeah. Yeah.

    MF: Is it true, Michael, that you hadn’t seen ‘The Sopranos’ prior to getting the role, you then binged it, right?

    Gandolfini: That’s true.

    MF: So then, Vera and John, had you seen ‘The Sopranos’ before?

    Farmiga: I had not.

    Jon Bernthal: I had.

    MF: You had?

    Bernthal: I very much have.

    MF: So then, Vera, did you do a binge as well?

    Farmiga: I did, but after accepting the role. Because my decision was based on who my compadres were going to be, and the strength of the words on the written page as a whole, as a film, what the film was about, toxic masculinity, depression, American Dream, blah, blah, blah, blah. I knew that it was a good standalone film. I didn’t know how it tied into the original and I didn’t… and so yeah, after I grounded, and I knew what I was in for, I was petrified. Yes.

    MF: And real quick, John, can you tell me a little bit about the character that you play for those who don’t know?

    Bernthal: Sure. I play Johnny Boy, Tony’s dad, Livia’s husband. He’s a character that very much lives in flashbacks and I think in lore in the show. It’s somebody the people talk about a lot and this sort of larger than life character. So I think he kind of pops up in the movie here and there. And I think this sort of job for me and what I tried to hook into was a guy who has this huge reputation and has this huge sort of life and this energy about him. But deep inside I think that there’s something very different going on than I think what, sort of, comes across. And that was an interesting challenge for me. Yeah.


    Alessandro Nivola, Leslie Odom Jr., and Michela de Rossi talk about playing characters in the Moltisanti family.

    Moviefone: I want each of you to tell me about the characters you play, for those of you who don’t know, but we’ll kick it off with Leslie.

    Leslie Odom Jr: I play Harold McBrayer and I work for the family. And fans of the show, you’ll know what I mean.

    MF: Very big. It’s like a secret.

    Michela de Rossi: I am Michela de Rossi and I play Giuseppina Bruno, which is the negative one.

    Alessandro Nivola: She’s my stepmother, and then my mistress.

    MF: That’s not weird at all.

    Nivola: No, no nothing Oedipal going on, I promise. I am Alessandro Nivola and I play Dickie Moltisanti, who was the father of Christopher Moltisanti in the show, famously played by Michael Imperioli, brilliantly. He was a mentor figure to Tony Soprano when Tony was a kid growing up who didn’t really have his parents very present. And this was the guy who took a real interest in him, for better and for worse.

    MF: The Sopranos was one of the greatest TV series of all time. So many fans. And I was interested to learn that Michael Gandolfini, James’ son, had never seen ‘The Sopranos,’ even though James was his dad. Had you guys watched ‘The Sopranos’ prior to?

    Nivola: None of us.

    MF: Really? So then did, did you guys do binges like he did?

    Odom: Yeah, I did. I did over the pandemic, like so many people. I watched it from top to bottom and you know, I get it.

    de Rossi: I watched it, the whole thing, when I got the role before shooting.

    Nivola: Yeah. I guess I watched the first season of it in the two weeks that I was asked to prepare these five auditions scenes to tape and send in. So I’ve seen all three season in that time. And then when I was offered the job, I watched the rest.

    MF: I have moments when I watched the movie where I just felt chills because there are those little Easter eggs that pay homage to the original series. But what was it like for you guys being on set with James Gandolfini’s actual son?

    Odom: I mean, it was for all these people, David included, Al included, it was more than just a TV show. You know, it’s years of their life. It changed their lives. Michael tells stories about being a little kid and taking naps in Tony and Carmella’s bed. So anyway, there’s a spiritual thing happening there too. I just felt like we just all wanted to support him and just make sure he was all right and felt loved.

    Nivola: Or have him support us and tell us that we were okay. Because he surely was an authority, even though he wouldn’t claim he was.

    MF: And actually, Alessandro, would you mind describing the relationship between your character and the young Tony Soprano?

    Nivola: Yeah, Dickie hasn’t had a child of his own and he as the movie begins, he’s in his forties, and in Italian American culture, having a child is like a sign of manhood. And so he was really, I think, upset about that. And he latched on to Tony as a kind of surrogate son, as a surrogate father. And I think he really loves him and believes in him in a way that no one else in the world of the movie does. And yet he’s a totally hopeless role model for him and keeps flailing around every time he tries to give him discipline or send him on some path other than outside the life of crime. And one of the tragedies of the film is the fact that he wants to do that and can’t figure out how.


    Director Alan Taylor talks about returning to the world of ‘The Sopranos.’

    Moviefone: In 2007, you won the Emmy for Outstanding Director for Drama for ‘The Sopranos.’ Here we are 14 years later, you’ve now directed the prequel film. Where did the journey for this movie start for you?

    Alan Taylor: Wow. Okay, boy, you’ve got your dates and facts down. I sort of feel I grew up on Sopranos. I was not that long out of film school when I first entered that show in the first season. And then over the course of it, I learned a lot from the actors and from David Chase’s writing. So it sort of felt like home to me in a way. So when David called and said he had a script, it felt very good. Partly because in my career had gone various places, and I’d done a couple of big movies where I didn’t really feel I was home and getting a chance to go back to this world felt very right. Felt like a return to a landscape I knew and a voice that I knew. And so it was a chance to sort of take my movie life and my TV life and bring them together.

    MF: Right. So when you first read that screenplay, how did you envision ‘The Many Saints of Newark’?

    Taylor: Well, as soon as you read it, you hear that same voice, different characters. Dicky never appears in the show, but he is the main guy in our movie, but it’s the same voice. And that’s the main thing. It’s the same ideas, the same questions that never get quite answered. The same themes that are driving it. The same sense of humor, the same relationship to violence. So to me, it was like, yes, we’re back in the world. And then there was work going on in the script. It kept evolving during the period where we were casting and building it. David was adding things that I think really helped shape it until very late in the game. But from the first read it was, oh yes, I remember this voice.

    MF: For major ‘Sopranos’ fans. What do you think that they will love most about this film?

    Taylor: I think there’s little things that I guess people refer to as Easter eggs that will play for them, moments that will probably get a laugh and stuff like that. But there’s a big emotional connection to the show. If you know the relationship between… Our movie is very much about fathers and sons and if you know the relationship between our main character, Dickie’s son, Christopher, and his relationship to Tony, there’s a really rich resonance in this movie because here we see that character being born, and I was the director who finished him in the show. So there’s a real echo between the movie and what it’s setting up and how darkly it goes for these characters later on.

    MF: I will say the main last shot gave me chills.

    Taylor: Good.

    MF: And I felt, okay, now I need to now start the whole series from this point.

    Taylor: Yeah. I’m pretty curious to people who watch the series and now watch the movie, how they will respond to things. Also, people who are seeing the movie first and then seeing the series for the first time. It’d be interesting to see how those two… I do think they speak to each other, but it’s a very different experience depending on what order you get them in, probably.

    MF: Of course. I have to ask you about working with Michael Gandolfini, who is of course the son of James Gandolfini, who originally played Tony Soprano. What was it like having him on set?

    Taylor: Delightful. First of all, he’s like this sweet, sensitive, thoughtful, generous, warm guy. So that helps. But I think we all knew that we were asking a tremendous amount of him to go into this dark world his father had sort of defined. And having lost his father to go back there. We had a dinner right before we started shooting where Michael stood up and said, I want to thank everybody here for giving me a chance to say hello to my dad again and goodbye again. And there wasn’t a dry eye in the house, but I think from that moment on, everyone sort of gathered around him, the cast, but also the crew. And he was sort of the beating heart of the movie. He’s not the main character, but he was sort of, it felt like a family thing.

    The Many Saints of Newark‘ is now in theaters and on HBO Max.

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  • Ethan Hawke, Alessandro Nivola to Play Country Music Brothers in ‘Satan is Real’

    Ethan Hawke, Alessandro Nivola to Play Country Music Brothers in ‘Satan is Real’

    Blumhouse/Broad Green Pictures

    Real-life best friends Ethan Hawke and Alessandro Nivola (who knew?) will play country music duo the Louvin Brothers in an upcoming biopic.

    In “Satan is Real,” they’ll portray influential country musicians Charlie and Ira Louvin.

    Hawke described the brothers’ sound as “both violent and beautiful… It’s aggressive, it’s electric, it’s strange.. It’s not wannabe cool guy country. It’s hillbilly gospel music.”

    It’s not clear who’ll be playing which brother, but Charlie was the upright, churchgoing man while brother Ira “had the devil in him” and was known for smashing his mandolin to splinters onstage.

    “They’re singing these songs and then backstage they’re taking speed and hitting on girls and beating the s**t out of each other,” said Hawke. He compared the Louvin brothers’ dynamic to that of the LaMotta brothers in “Raging Bull.”

    Besides their music, the Louvin Brothers are known for the meme-able cover of their 1959 album “Satan is Real.”

    Capitol Records

    Phil Morrison, who previously worked with Nivola on “Junebug” will direct.

    The two actors have been recording some of the Louvin Brothers songs ahead of Cannes.: “We wanted to show the financiers that we can do it and it will be good,” said Hawke.

    The two became friends in 2010 when Nivola starred in the Off Broadway revival of a Sam Shepard play that Hawke directed. Now, they’re neighbors in Brooklyn. “We like to drink beer and play guitar,” said Nivola. “Now we’ll be doing it for work.”

    Last year, Hawke directed the movie “Blaze,” about unsung Texas songwriter Blaze Foley. He’s played musicians both real (jazz trumpeter Chet Baker in “Born to be Blue“) and fictitious (reclusive indie rocker Tucker Crowe in “Juliet, Naked“).

    Nissola is currently filming “The Sopranos” prequel, “The Many Saints of Newark.”

    [Via Variety]