Tag: amazon

  • ‘Transparent’ Season 3: Sarah Has a Rocky Road, But Amy Landecker’s Is Rock-Solid

    Premiere Of HBO's "All The Way" - Arrivals“Transparent’s” restless and oft-dissatisfied daughter Sarah Pfefferman may still be on struggling in her search for self-fulfillment, sampling everything from sexual spanking to a spiritual salvation, but actress Amy Landecker knows she’s doing exactly what she’s supposed to be doing.

    As the acclaimed and award-winning Amazon streaming series returns for its third season, many of the Pfefferman clan and their intimates find themselves on the road toward a greater sense of themselves, but Landecker promises that Sarah’s path will be predictably pothole-laden as she dabbles in her diverse new interests in a season she says feels lighter while still true to the serious issues of transformation, literal and figurative, at its core.

    On the opposite side of the camera, Landecker tells Moviefone that she’s definitely found her own way — and not without her own wobbliness — as a part of a show that’s had not only a profound effect on its audience but on the actress herself as well.

    Moviefone: You look great — rested and relaxed!

    Amy Landecker: I have to say, this is the first [press tour] that I’ve enjoyed. I realized in Season 3, because the whole thing started as kind of a — it was a shock to the system! I had never been a part of anything like this. And I think you’re terrified the first year; the second year you kind of have that, I don’t know, hangover — I don’t know how to describe it.

    This is the first year where I’m like, “Oh you can be yourself, and it’s all okay. You can wear comfortable shoes. You’re not going to say something that’s going to destroy your life, and you’re not going to say something that’s going to make the world change.”

    And I just really love the people on my show. These days are, like, a day to get to see each other, you know? And really, we don’t get to see each other enough. We wrapped in May and I’m like, “Oh my God, I get to hang out with everybody today!” So I’m actually having a really nice time.

    And you finally get to let some little secrets out about the show! Now that you can talk about it, tell me what you’re excited about as far as what the audience is going to get out of Season 3.

    I feel like Season 3, for whatever reason — and I could be wrong because I haven’t seen it in its entirety — feels lighter and deeper at the same time. It felt like Season 2 was really intense. I remember watching Season 2 all at once. I was in London shooting something, and we were sent the season and I was like “Oh my!”

    I was almost just emotionally sort of wrecked by it, a little bit. And I feel [Season] 3 feels sort of like a coming out, and I think even the theme is coming out of your shell, and being more comfortable in the world. It just feels a little lighter. That’s not to say there’s still not incredible depth, because the show just carries that. But to me, as an actress, it felt more joyful.

    Following that overall theme of moving into yourself, she clearly is taking further steps into this new BDSM subculture that she’s discovered.

    Well, it’s interesting: that’s sort of the beginning of the arc of the season for her. So my exploration of BDSM actually doesn’t go very well — like all things that Sarah tries! Let me just say it doesn’t go that well. I won’t give away what happens, but she even manages to ruin a relationship with someone that she hires to take care of her needs.

    I think what Sarah’s path this year seems to me to be like a spiritual exploration into her Judaism, and into the idea of God, and into the idea of community. So I think she’s trying to find something outside of personal relationships, or family relationships, to fulfill herself. So she goes more into Raquel and the temple, and trying to find a purpose.

    You and your cast mates are constantly learning as actors as you explore the topics that the show brings to you. So tell me what was the interesting thing to learn about the BDSM community?

    What’s interesting to me is — and I hope I say this correctly — I think there’s an idea that, “those people,” the BDSM people, the people who are sexually exploratory are somehow scary, and I as a “normal person,” are safe. And what I’m finding is actually the repressed safe person is way more screwed up than the person who’s exploring of sexuality. That’s been my experience.

    I look at our culture and sexuality, our fear and our repression and how it manifests in rage and hatred, and there’s something about a group of people and what they taught me — and I’m obviously on expert on this, but I got to meet some. Actually, I was also dealing mostly with the queer BDSM community, so that might be different, but there’s a safety net. There’s a safety zone. And so there’s this freedom to explore that’s very, very safe.

    I never thought of it that way: that it would be safer than a normal sexual experience because you would have these rules, you would have safe words, and I was told that if you misbehaved in any way, you were kicked out of the community. The community was very protective of other people in the community.

    So it’s been a real education, including Jiz Lee who was my scene partner in that stuff and comes from queer porn, which was a world I knew nothing about. They were like one of the nicest, gentlest people I’ve been in a sex scene with. So I don’t know — I think the truth is often things are not what they seem.

    About the faith side, what’s been interesting to you to take Sarah into that territory?

    Oh, it’s been so fun, just because in her typical fashion, she wants so desperately for things to not be about her, and yet it always kind of ends up being about her. So even her religious experience becomes something that her ego can twist a little bit.

    She’s still trying. She’s trying. She’s really trying. I think she’s really well-intentioned, but she gets carried away with herself, and what her perceived spirituality — “Oh, that’s God” — could very much just be her ego.

    We hear Jeffrey Tambor in particular speak very openly about how this show has transformed him. Tell me about you: What this show and being part of the subject matter, what has it done to you over the last three years?

    I mean, it’s funny: I was at the table today, we were having a conversation. I used to work for the AIDS Foundation of Chicago, so it’s not like I’m totally new, that was my day job before I made my living as an actor, fundraising and working in the LGBT community in Chicago, so I’m not totally new to the issues on the table. But what’s new for me is this full integration into parts of the community that a lot of us have been separated from.

    I don’t think a lot of cisgender people have gotten to really get to know a lot of trans people. Most people I talk to, that’s their experience. I am so fully in with that part of the show, that when I hear about discrimination against, I mean, one of our writers just said today … I mean, I’m sorry, it’s really upsetting — just name-calling. So the hatred in the world that maybe wants … I didn’t feel it so acutely personally, I feel so intensely, and the show feels so important.

    I don’t want to, like, be pretentious because it’s a comedy and it’s entertainment, but, like, the world, this cruelty and separation, it’s got to stop. When you really get to know people, it will break your heart. And that’s why it doesn’t happen, is because people don’t know each other. But when we really know each other, you realize it’s just a difference of pigmentation and the spectrum of you genitals. I’m sorry, but that’s it.

    So that’s been the biggest probably change. And I met the love of my life, but other than that…[Laughs]

    “Transparent” Season 3 premieres today (September 23rd) on Amazon.

  • Study Shows Binge-Watching Is Actually Good for Relationships

    PortlandiaFeel free to Netflix and chill the weekend away, because, as it turns out, binge-watching is good for relationships!

    A study conducted by the University of Aberdeen showed that watching TV or movies together can make a couple feel closer and more connected. Researchers likened it to the kind of closeness a couple has if they have shared friends. But for couples without mutual friends, TV shows can fill in the gap.

    In one experiment, the researchers examined 259 students in committed relationships over an average of 16.7 months. Those with mutual friends and those with fewer friends but shared media consumption were the happiest.

    “Our findings showed that when people lack shared friends with their romantic partners, sharing media predicts greater relationship quality and people become motivated to share media with their partners,” the researchers wrote.

    It’s just like that “Portlandia” episode when Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein binged on “Battlestar Galactica.” #RelationshipGoals!

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  • Woody Allen’s First TV Series Looks Like His Movies in ‘Crisis in Six Scenes’ Trailer

    Crisis in Six ScenesWoody Allen’s movies have a distinctive look, tone, rhythm, and characterizations, so it’s no surprise that his first-ever television series has all of the quintessential Allen trademarks.

    Amazon debuted the first trailer for “Crisis in Six Scenes,” which is set in the 1960s and stars Allen as a television writer and longtime collaborator Elaine May as his psychiatrist wife. Their family is turned upside down by the arrival of a counterculture hippie played by Miley Cyrus. As she tells Allen, “I don’t dislike you — just everything that you stand for.”
    “Crisis in Six Scenes” is, as its title suggests, six episodes long, with each installment running at 30 minutes. Judging by the trailer, everything you’d expect from a Woody Allen film is present in his first TV series — the stammering, neurotic male lead (Allen, acting in one of his own projects for the first time since 2012’s “To Rome With Love”); May’s ballsy, brash female lead; quirky side characters, like Max Casella’s barber; and the themes of bourgeois angst and liberal handwringing.

    “Crisis in Six Scenes” will begin streaming Sept. 30 on Amazon.

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  • Billy Bob Thornton Battles ‘Goliath’ in First Trailer for Amazon Drama

    GoliathGoliath, meet your new David — a boozy, down-and-out dumpster fire of a lawyer named Billy McBride.

    Entertainment Weekly debuted the first trailer for “Goliath,” Amazon’s new legal drama from David E. Kelley (“Boston Legal,” “Ally McBeal”). Billy Bob Thornton stars as the aforementioned Billy, who’s on an alcohol-fueled downward spiral that drove away his wife (Maria Bello) and child. Now, he’s seeking redemption in a wrongful death suit against a big corporation. The case pits him against his powerhouse old firm, led by former partner William Hurt.

    The show marks Kelley’s return to television after three years (his last project was the short-lived “The Crazy Ones,” starring Robin Williams and Sarah Michelle Gellar). Thornton, meanwhile, is coming off an Emmy-nominated turn on FX’s “Fargo.”

    The trailer is intense and compelling, and the series promises to be darker and twist-ier than Kelley’s previous fare. And the show boasts an outstanding cast, including Molly Parker, Sarah Wynter, and Jason Ritter.

    “Goliath” begins streaming Oct. 14 on Amazon.

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  • Amazon Is Turning ‘The Departed’ Into a TV Series

    the departed, tv series, amazon, jack nicholson, leonardo dicaprioMob thriller “The Departed” will soon make its mark on the small screen, with Amazon developing a new TV series based on the Oscar-winning flick.

    Deadline reports that the series will put “a new, updated spin on the two-way-undercover concept” that played out between Jack Nicholson, Matt Damon, and Leonardo DiCaprio in the 2006 Martin Scorsese movie. One of the key elements that’s being changed is the location: While the film was set in Boston and focused on the Irish Mafia, the series will be set in Chicago. “The Departed” was itself was based on another film, the Hong Kong-set thriller “Internal Affairs.” Both movies will serve as inspiration for the series.

    Here’s the synopsis, per Deadline:

    “The Departed” TV series is set [in] present-day Chicago, amidst the shifting tides of warring ethnic drug gangs. In it, a young cop goes undercover to infiltrate a ruthless Latino gang, which simultaneously plants its own man in the police department. The show follows these two embattled moles as they attempt to fulfill their mission and stay alive.

    A bunch of producers from the film are boarding the series in the same role, so despite the update on the location and premise, it sounds like the show’s creative team will try to keep the spirit of the flick very much intact. And with its awards pedigree (the movie took home Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Editing, in addition to netting Mark Wahlberg a nod for Best Supporting Actor), producers are no doubt eager to repeat the film’s critical success on the small screen, too.

    We’re curious to see how this one works out. Stay tuned.

    [via: Deadline]

  • Alan Rickman’s Death Stopped the ‘Galaxy Quest’ Sequel That Would Be Filming Now

    We did not need another example of how the entire galaxy is worse off without the great but, lucky us, here’s a fresh one: told Nerdist the band was going to get back together this year for a “Galaxy Quest” sequel, and then Alan Rickman died in January. So they lost their Alexander Dane and the whole thing fell apart.

    As Rockwell explained (via Entertainment Weekly):

    “They were going to do a sequel on Amazon. We were ready to sign up, and [then] Alan Rickman passed away and Tim Allen wasn’t available – he has a show – and everybody’s schedule was all weird. It was going to shoot, like, right now. And how do you fill that void of Alan Rickman? That’s a hard void to fill.”

    It’s impossible to fill, but by Grabthar’s Hammer they should avenge his untimely death and do it anyway! Tim Allen should make himself available — come on, Jason Nesmith owes Alexander Dane. Sigourney Weaver, Tony Shalhoub, Enrico Colantoni, Daryl Mitchell, Missi Pyle — they all need to come back and honor Dane/Rickman. If not now, then maybe they can schedule something for the 20th anniversary of the 1999 comedy? Please?

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  • Miley Cyrus Starring in Woody Allen’s Upcoming Amazon Series

    "A Very Murray Christmas" New York PremiereGuess who’s coming in like a wrecking ball to Woody Allen’s upcoming Amazon comedy?

    Deadline reports the veteran filmmaker has cast Miley Cyrus in the untitled project. Allen himself and “Small Time Crooks” actress Elaine May will also star. This marks Allen’s first time creating a television show and Cyrus’s first return to “television” since her “Hannah Montana” days.

    Cyrus confirmed the news on Instagram:


    The six-episode half-hour comedy series is set in the 1960s but that is all that is known about the show. Last year, Allen told Deadline that he “regretted every second since I said OK” to the Amazon deal.

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  • Here’s What’s Coming to Amazon Prime in February 2016

    February can be kind of a pill — it’s dark, it’s cold, you have to deal with or avoid Valentine’s Day — but at least it gives you a good excuse to stay home and binge-watch. Amazon just listed its February offerings for Prime Video streaming and Amazon Video purchase. For example, fans of “The Americans” can steam Season 3 (yay!), and you can check out Amazon Studios’ first-major film, “Chi-Raq,” from director Spike Lee.

    It was recently announced that Prime Members can now add Showtime, STARZ, and more video subscriptions to their Prime memberships for $8.99 per month. In February, members can use that feature to see the new seasons of “Billions,” “Shameless,” and “Black Sails,” among others.

    Here’s the February 2016 lineup:

    New in February – Available for Streaming on Prime

    TV

    2/2/16
    Poldark 2015

    2/11/16
    Girls Season 2

    2/15/16
    Newsroom Season 3
    The Americans Season 3

    2/16/16
    The New Yorker Presents

    MOVIES

    2/1/16
    A Better Life
    Amy
    Batman 1989 (Michael Keaton)
    Deliver Us from Evil 2014
    How To Steal A Million
    Kings of Summer
    Like Sunday, Like Rain
    Lost in Translation
    Men In Black 1997 (Original)
    Night Watch (2004)
    Nintendo Quest
    The Fifth Element 1997
    The Fury
    The Karate Kid 1984
    The Truth About Emanuel
    To Be Or Not To Be 1983
    Twelve O’Clock High
    Waking Ned Devine

    2/2/16
    Adaline
    Myanmar: Bridges to Change
    The Identity Theft Of Mitch Mustain

    2/4/16
    Talladega Nights: The Ballad Of Ricky Bobby

    2/5/16
    Chi-Raq (AMAZON ORIGINAL)
    Fire City: End of Days
    Ouija Exorcism

    2/15/16
    Solomon Kane

    New in February – Available for Purchase on Amazon Video

    TV

    2/1/16
    Broad City

    2/3/16
    American Crime Story: The People vs. OJ Simpson

    2/9/16
    The Leftovers Season 2

    2/15/16
    Togetherness Season 1
    The Walking Dead Season 6 Second Half

    2/16/15
    Better Call Saul Season 2

    2/17/16
    Rizzoli & Isles Season 7

    MOVIES

    2/2/16
    Steve Jobs
    Truth

    2/9/16
    Grandma

    2/16/16
    Thomas & Friends: Start Your Engines

    New in February – Subscriptions for Prime Video

    TV

    Billions Season 1
    Shameless Season 6
    Black Sails Season 3

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  • Amazon’s ‘Man in the High Castle’ Renewed For Season 2

    Man in the High CastleAmazon is bringing “The Man in the High Castle” back for a second season. The streaming service renewed the dystopian drama, based on Philip K. Dick’s novel, set in an alternate history in which the United States lost World War II.

    The series takes place 20 years after the conclusion of the war, with America’s East Coast controlled by Nazis and the West Coast ruled by Japan. San Francisco resident Juliana Crain (Alexa Davalos) is caught up in the resistance movement when she comes into possession of a film that shows what the world would’ve been like had the U.S. won the war. Along the way, she meets Joe Blake (Luke Kleintank), a Nazi agent posing as a resistance fighter, who reports on their dealings to his commander (Rufus Sewell).

    The first season ended on an intriguing note with — SPOILER ALERT — Juliana’s boss, the Japanese trade minister Tagomi (Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa) meditating and waking up to America in the 1960s as we knew it.

    The series received generally positive reviews, and the pilot was one of Amazon’s most-watched. Season 2 is set to premiere sometime in 2016.

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  • Mazel Tov! Here’s the First ‘Transparent’ Season 2 Teaser Trailer

    TransparentIt’s a big, crazy Pfefferman wedding!

    Amazon released the first teaser for “Transparent” season 2, and it looks like the award-winning dramedy hasn’t missed a beat from its celebrated first season.


    The whole family appears to be gathering for the wedding of Sarah and Tammy, who left their spouses for each other last season. Maura (Jeffrey Tambor) looks fabulous decked out in a dreamy white gown, but things go a little awry with the wedding photographer. Who are you calling “sir,” sir?!

    It should be an exciting season for “Transparent,” with Anjelica Houston and Cherry Jones guest starring. Maura continues her personal discovery journey, while Josh figures out his new life with Rabbi Raquel and his grown surprise son, Colton.

    “Transparent” season 2 will be available to stream on Amazon in December 11.

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