Tag: andie macdowell

  • Samara Weaving to Return for ‘Ready or Not’ Sequel

    Samara Weaving in 'Ready or Not'. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    Samara Weaving in ‘Ready or Not’. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Preview:

    • Samara Weaving will return for a sequel to 2019’s ‘Ready or Not.’
    • Directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett are also back.
    • The script will be by the original’s Guy Busick and R. Christopher Murphy.

    Since their first collaboration with ‘Ready or Not,’ directors Tyler Gillett and Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and their star, Samara Weaving, have all seen their careers skyrocket.

    The filmmakers in particular have been busy, making the leap from the 2019 effort to the two most recent ‘Scream’ installments and this year’s vampire thriller ‘Abigail.’

    Now, though, at a screening of ‘Ready or Not’, the directors announced that a sequel is in the works, with Weaving once again starring.

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    What was the story of ‘Ready or Not’?

    (L to R) Mark O’Brien and Samara Weaving in 'Ready or Not'. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    (L to R) Mark O’Brien and Samara Weaving in ‘Ready or Not’. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    The horror comedy thriller followed a young bride (Weaving) as she joined her new husband’s (Mark O’Brien) rich, eccentric family (Adam Brody, Henry Czerny, Andie MacDowell) in a time-honored tradition: Pulling a card from a puzzle game.

    It seems innocent enough, but if someone draws the Hide and Seek card, as she does, then a murderous game is played, all in order to appease an ancient family deal with the devil. And so begins a fight for survival…

    Spoiler alert at this point for anyone who has yet to see the movie: Weaving’s Grace makes it out, while mostly everyone else either ends up dead from a weapon or exploding in a geyser of blood when the curse inherent in the deal is carried out.

    The movie, made for only $6 million, grossed over $28 million domestically and was the widest release for Searchlight at the time.

    What has been happening with a ‘Ready or Not’ sequel?

    Samara Weaving in 'Ready or Not'. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    Samara Weaving in ‘Ready or Not’. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    All involved have said they want to come back for more, but it’s been a question of timing: the directors have been off doing their other movies, while Weaving has been in demand for the likes of ‘Chevalier,’ ‘Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins,’ ‘Bill & Ted Face the Music’ and ‘Babylon‘.

    She also found time to squeeze in a cameo as –– again, spoiler alert –– the initial victim in last year’s ‘Scream VI.’

    Weaving had previously told Comicbook.com that she was committed to returning:

    “I’m all in. I think we’re all in, I don’t know. I think we’re all in…I don’t know if we’ve had our blood handshake, but pretty much. We’ve done the spit handshake, but we haven’t cut each other’s hands and rubbed our blood together.”

    Looks like that has now happened –– or, you know, they’ve just made deals in the regular way.

    As to what will happen in the movie itself, that’s anyone’s guess at this point. Given Weaving’s return, a prequel about the family appears unlikely, more her Grace getting into another tricky and potentially bloody situation.

    Whatever it turns out to be, the script will come from original writers Guy Busick and R. Christopher Murphy.

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Abigail’

    When will ‘Ready or Not 2’ be in theaters?

    Searchlight has yet to confirm when the movie will be shooting, let alone when it’ll be released.

    Director Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, left, and Director Tyler Gillett on the set of Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group's 'Scream VI.'
    Director Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, left, and Director Tyler Gillett on the set of Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group’s ‘Scream VI.’

    Other Movies Directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett:

    Buy Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Goodrich’ Interview: Michael Keaton and Mila Kunis

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    Opening in theaters on October 18th is the new dark-comedy ‘Goodrich’, which was written and directed by Hallie Meyers-Shyer (‘Home Again’), and stars Michael Keaton (‘Batman’, ‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’), Mila Kunis (‘Black Swan’), Carmen Ejogo (‘Alien Covenant’), Kevin Pollak (‘A Few Good Men’), and Andie MacDowell (‘Groundhog Day’).

    Related Article: Michael Keaton’s Best Movies

    (L to R) Mila Kunis and Michael Keaton star in 'Goodrich'.
    (L to R) Mila Kunis and Michael Keaton star in ‘Goodrich’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Michael Keaton and Mila Kunis about their work on ‘Goodrich’, Keaton’s first reaction to the screenplay, Kunis’ approach to her character, working together, collaborating on set with director Hallie Meyers-Shyer, and how the movie has similar themes to Keaton’s 1988 classic, ‘Clean and Sober’.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Keaton, Kunis, and director Hallie Meyers-Shyer.

    (L to R) Michael Keaton and Mila Kunis in 'Goodrich'. Photo: Ketchup Entertainment.
    (L to R) Michael Keaton and Mila Kunis in ‘Goodrich’. Photo: Ketchup Entertainment.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Michael what was your first reaction to Hallie Meyers-Shyer’s screenplay and playing this character?

    Michael Keaton: I knew I was halfway in already once I read it because I thought, “This is really good writing. I just really enjoy this.” I also hadn’t played anything like that for a while, which was not a big stretch as they say. It’s not that terribly far from me. I mean, on one hand, this is totally unlike me for the most part, not that big a deal. After a couple meetings with her, maybe even truthfully, after one meeting with her, I was even more inclined to do it. Then it was a question of is this going to work out in my schedule, and then all those practical things. But being able to shoot in LA was a huge thing for me. I liked what it was about, too. It’s universal and it’s a contemporary comedy/drama. I knew what her taste was like. She has good taste, not just in comedy, not just in movie making, but in life. We were talking about it earlier. She’s very stylish, but in a kind of clean, classic kind of way for a woman her age. She’s young. Normally, that comes later.

    MF: Mila, can you talk about Grace’s relationship with her father, the resentment she has and how she masks it from him?

    Mila Kunis: I think that that’s one of the things that I found to be the most intriguing about the character was the idea of playing her with, you almost have guilt over the resentment because you have the resentment, but you also know that in this world that your dad was probably busy doing other things and you can’t really hold him accountable for doing the best that he could with what he had at the time, but you can’t argue your own feelings and your end result. So, I love the idea of playing the push and pull of her own wanting to accept the dad for who he is, and still resenting him for who he used to be, even though who he used to be was still a pretty okay guy. He wasn’t that bad. He just wasn’t who she wanted him to be or who she needed him to be. I think sometimes, it’s fun to play characters that have their own set of expectations that aren’t always met.

    (L to R) Michael Keaton and Mila Kunis in 'Goodrich'. Photo: Ketchup Entertainment.
    (L to R) Michael Keaton and Mila Kunis in ‘Goodrich’. Photo: Ketchup Entertainment.

    MF: Michael, what was it like working with Mila to create this complicated father and daughter relationship?

    Michael Keaton: She played it in a way that she wasn’t, she never, and this is her, too, in life, there’s no element of whining about anything. Everybody has the right to complain and state your case and tell people how you feel. But I grew up in a house where, oh, boy, whining, that wasn’t going to go down too well. And her character and the way she played it, there’s never that sense. She’s the best, this one. She’s just ridiculously down to earth, refreshingly, frankly. It’s fun. Just easy, and a lot of laughs. I always thought it’d be nice to have a daughter. This one would be a great one to have.

    MF: Mila, what was it like acting opposite Michael?

    Mila Kunis: Every night I would dream about Michael. I was like, “Is he thinking of me the way that I’m thinking of him?” I love working with Michael. Everybody loves working with Michael. Find one person that’s ever going to be like, “Michael’s awful”. Find one. I dare you. It’s not going to happen. One of the loveliest, most fun humans to work with.

    'Goodrich' director Hallie Meyers-Shyer.
    ‘Goodrich’ director Hallie Meyers-Shyer.

    MF: Michael, can you talk about collaborating with director Hallie Meyers-Shyer on set?

    Michael Keaton: Hallie makes for a really nice atmosphere. She stayed really calm for this when you think back because that’s a lot of pressure. I think it’s only her second feature. Then you must live up to the “mom and dad” thing, and that’s a lot, and she never really seemed under pressure. Because when you direct a movie, it’s pressure from the time you start until now, and finally going out and promoting it because that’s just life. That’s how it is. But it was never freak out time at all. She’s ridiculously organized.

    MF: Mila, what was your experience like working with Hallie?

    Mila Kunis: She’s very young. She’s younger than me. But she’s very calm, very cool and she knew what she wanted. Some directors shoot endlessly because they don’t have the movie edited in their head yet, so they don’t really know what they’re going to need. She had the movie edited, so it was all very structured. Her and the DP had everything outlined. When they knew they got it, they got it, and they moved on.

    Michael Keaton in 'Clean and Sober'. Photo: Warner Bros.
    Michael Keaton in ‘Clean and Sober’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    MF: Finally, Michael, one of my favorite performances of yours was in ‘Clean and Sober’. While I was watching ‘Goodrich’ it struck me that this is really the other side of that story. Instead of playing someone with an addiction, you are playing the husband of a person dealing with addiction. Did that ever cross your mind and what was it like playing the other side of that?

    Michael Keaton: Wow. What a great observation/question. Yeah. Boy, that’s interesting way to look at it. I can’t honestly say. No, I didn’t think of it like that specifically, but I have a fair, everybody these days has an experience with addiction to some degree now. After I did ‘Dopesick’, someone made a statement, I hate to even talk like this, but “It’s the new cancer, everybody’s been touched by it”. It’s like at that point now. So, when I did ‘Clean and Sober’, I did a lot of research and asked a lot and had seen it. My grandfather, my mom’s mom was an alcoholic. So, I didn’t think about it like that, but how it affects families, or addiction, and how easily it happens now, and how you deal with that. This guy, by the way, what I loved about the beginning is how for a person living today, how clueless he kind of was about it. How does a guy not go, “Whoa, I think we might have a problem here”. It was just right over his head. He never saw it. I mean, dark is often funny. It’s dark, but kind of fun. I love that scene, and I just watched it recently when I was watching the trailer, where I immediately call (Mila’s character) being kind of a baby in a way if you ask me, depending on her again, going to her again. She’s going, “How could you have not seen this?” She’s probably been watching it for years going, “Oh, boy, there’s a problem”. Sometimes I love stupid people. That’s another thing I like to play because it’s easy for me to play stupid.

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    What is the plot of ‘Goodrich’?

    After his younger second wife (Laura Benanti) leaves him and enters a 90-day rehab program, Los Angeles art dealer Andy Goodrich (Michael Keaton) seeks out his adult pregnant daughter Grace (Mila Kunis) for help with raising his nine-year-old twins.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Goodrich’?

    (L to R) Mila Kunis and Michael Keaton in 'Goodrich'. Photo: Ketchup Entertainment.
    (L to R) Mila Kunis and Michael Keaton in ‘Goodrich’. Photo: Ketchup Entertainment.

    List of Michael Keaton Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Goodrich’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Michael Keaton Movies on Amazon

     

     

  • Matt Damon Says He’s Pushing for a ‘Rounders’ Sequel

    Matt Damon in 'Rounders'.
    Matt Damon in ‘Rounders’. Photo: Miramax Films.

    Preview:

    • Matt Damon says the ‘Rounders’ team want to make a sequel to the 1998 cult classic.
    • He mentions having discussed it recently with co-star Edward Norton.
    • Rob Lowe, meanwhile, reports there’s new smoke where a St. Elmo’s Fire sequel might be.

    Matt Damon will be back on our screens next week in ‘The Instigators’, a new Apple TV+ movie about two unlikely partners in a heist.

    But he’s also been thinking about his movie past, and which of them he might re-visit. Turns out, the 1998 cult classic poker drama ‘Rounders’ is ever on his mind. And, if he and the rest of the team behind the movie –– especially writers David Levien and Brian Koppelman –– have their way, we could actually see one.

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    What was the story of ‘Rounders’?

    Matt Damon and Edward Norton in 'Rounders'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Edward Norton in ‘Rounders’. Photo: Miramax Films.

    The original movie, which starred Damon, Edward Norton and John Malkovich, explores the underground world of high-stakes poker.

    It follows two friends who need to win at high-stakes poker to quickly pay off a large debt –– and for those who don’t know their poker terminology, a rounder is a person seeking high-stakes card games.

    Matt Damon on the chances of a ‘Rounders’ sequel

    Matt Damon in 'Rounders'.
    Matt Damon in ‘Rounders’. Photo: Miramax Films.

    This is what Damon told the Rich Eisen Show about his hopes for a new movie:

    “The one we’ve been talking about for years, and we’re trying to, and I just saw Edward Norton a few weeks ago, like all of us want to do it is a second ‘Rounders’ movie. So much has happened in the poker world in the last 25 years, it would be fun to catch up with those guys. They had a whole movie ready to go then, but now there’s been a whole another change in the poker world since then, so I haven’t talked to them about what it would be, but I know what they had 10 years ago was fantastic, and I’m sure they could augment and roll with the times and update it to where we are today and make something great.”

    No official word yet, of course, so don’t bet on anything happening immediately, or you hopes could fold.

    Related Article: 40 Best Underrated Movies Worth Another Watch!

    Rob Lowe on a potential ‘St. Elmo’s Fire’ sequel

    Ally Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Emilio Estevez, Demi Moore, Rob Lowe, Mare Winningham and Andrew McCarthy in 'St. Elmo's Fire'.
    (L to R) Ally Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Emilio Estevez, Demi Moore, Rob Lowe, Mare Winningham and Andrew McCarthy in ‘St. Elmo’s Fire’. Photo: Columbia Pictures.

    While we’re all in a sequel state of mind, there is some news –– albeit very tentative at this point as he admits –– from Rob Lowe about a potential sequel to 1985’s ‘St. Elmo’s Fire‘.

    The original film, co-written and directed by Joel Schumacher, also starred Emilio Estevez, Andrew McCarthy, Demi Moore, Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Andie MacDowell and Mare Winningham in the story of recent graduates from Washington, D.C.’s Georgetown University and how they adjusted to adulthood.

    It was one of the classic “Brat Pack” films, and while there have been attempts by Sony in the past to re-visit the story on TV, interest has spiked with the release of McCarthy’s Hulu documentary ‘Brats’ about the titular pack. Sony has reportedly been more actively developing a cinematic return for the characters.

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    Here’s what Lowe told Entertainment Tonight in an interview:

    “We’ve met with the studio, and I have been talking about doing it for about four months. “But it’s very, very, very, very, very early stages. So we will see.”

    So, yes… there is development, but don’t break out the suit jackets, knit sweaters and saxophone just yet.

    Andrew McCarthy, Mare Winningham, Rob Lowe, Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Demi Moore and Emilio Estevez in 'St. Elmo's Fire'.
    (L to R) Andrew McCarthy, Mare Winningham, Rob Lowe, Judd Nelson, Ally Sheedy, Demi Moore and Emilio Estevez in ‘St. Elmo’s Fire’. Photo: Columbia Pictures.

    List of “Brat Pack” Movies:

    Buy ‘St. Elmo’s Fire’ Movie On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Red Right Hand’

    Orlando Bloom in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Orlando Bloom in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    In theaters and on VOD February 23rd is ‘Red Right Hand,’ starring Orlando Bloom, Scott Haze, Andie MacDowell, Garret Dillahunt, Brian Geraghty, and Chapel Oaks.

    Related Article: Garret Dillahunt Talks ‘Red Right Hand’ and Working with Orlando Bloom

    Initial Thoughts

    Directing duo Ian and Eshom Nelms’ previous outing, ‘Fatman,’ was a flawed yet original – and often amusing – reinvention of the Santa Claus myth, shot through with humor and cynicism. The Nelms play it straight this time around, telling a grim story of a family fighting to stay alive in a town overrun and corrupted by a psychotic drug lord. The movie overcomes its ‘direct-to-VOD’ imprimatur by being both surprisingly heartfelt and anchored by a strong performance from Orlando Bloom.

    Story and Direction

    Eshom Nelms and Ian Nelms, co-directors of 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    (L to R) Eshom Nelms and Ian Nelms, co-directors of ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Cash (Orlando Bloom) is a former criminal who has worked to escape that life while also staying sober and taking care of his recently widowed, still-grieving brother Finney (Scott Haze) and his niece Savannah (Chapel Oaks). The three live quietly on Finney’s late wife’s farm, which Finney has unfortunately kept afloat by taking a loan from Big Cat (Andie MacDowell), a ruthless local drug lord.

    Big Cat has an iron grip on their rural Kentucky community, including its banks and law enforcement, as well as the meth labs buried deep in the woods around the area. She’s also Cash’s former employer, and in an attempt to settle Finney’s account before Cat comes after the farm and his family, Cash agrees to perform three tasks for Cat that pull him back into his previous life. But Cash also knows that Cat won’t stop there, and he’s forced to make his own plans to save the farm and his family without raising Cat’s suspicions.

    ‘Red Right Hand’ spins out this tight if somewhat predictable story in lean, economical fashion, and directors Ian and Eshom Nelms (‘Small Town Crime’) manage to pull off both some strikingly lovely images of the landscape in which the story is set – where natural beauty sits right next to grinding poverty – as well as a steadily building sense of dread. You know where this story is going for the most part, but the Nelms still tighten the screws in suspenseful fashion and add a few unpredictable wrinkles to the story that raise the stakes even higher.

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    We’ve seen the story before – reformed bad guy gets pulled back into his old life against his wishes, with his soul in the balance – but there is enough detail about Cash and his family, and the community in which they live, to make one care about what happens and make the violent payoff feel earned. While one could question the morality of seemingly pious if troubled folks like Cash, his family, and a surprise ally – whose third-act involvement in the proceedings, to be fair, feels a bit forced and out of the blue – engaging in vigilante justice, that’s an argument for another movie.

    ‘Red Right Hand’ touches on that idea, and also touches on the social conditions that set up rural communities like this for destruction at the hands of the drug trade, but only glancingly. This is a B-movie crime thriller, a bit of a throwback to movies like this that proliferated in the ‘70s, and on that level it works pretty well.

    Playing Against Type

    Orlando Bloom in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Orlando Bloom in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Whatever happened to Orlando Bloom? Coming off ‘The Lord of the Rings’ and the ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ franchises in the 2000s, he was being positioned as the next big action star and dream hunk at the same time. But his career has sputtered since, exemplified by a disappointingly stiff turn in last year’s ‘Gran Turismo.’

    ‘Red Right Hand,’ however, is another matter. From his accent to his grizzled appearance, the British actor pulls off a character that could have been a Southern stereotype but ends up showing more range and depth of feeling than a movie like this usually provides. The boyish charm of his Legolas is long gone, and Cash’s conflicted nature – he knows what will happen once he gets mixed up with Cat again but is resigned to do what he must do – is believably portrayed. Bloom also sells the action scenes quite well, fighting with rugged determination yet still vulnerable to pain and injury.

    Andie MacDowell in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Andie MacDowell in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    While Bloom’s work is more subtle than one might expect, Andie MacDowell – long a presence in rom-coms and ensemble dramas – goes for all-out villainy here with a big performance that borders on camp, and occasionally dips into it. But she also provides a wildly sinister complement to the more grounded work done by Bloom, Scott Haze as Finney, and the remarkable Chapel Oaks as Savannah. The tone of her performance sometimes clashes with the overall atmosphere of the movie, but she also brings a malevolent, sadistic, and even seductive streak that keeps Big Cat unpredictable and dangerous.

    Final Thoughts

    Orlando Bloom in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Orlando Bloom in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Let’s make no mistake: ‘Red Right Hand’ is very much what they used to call a B-movie, and is now the kind of picture that may get a cursory, limited theatrical release before showing up on your favorite VOD and streaming platforms. But there’s no shame in that: films cut from the same cloth, like ‘Rolling Thunder’ or ‘Walking Tall,’ became cult classics long after they played the drive-in circuits of the 1970s.

    And ‘Red Right Hand’ is as earnest as it can be, even if its mix of family values and vigilante violence doesn’t always sit well. You come to care about Orlando Bloom’s Cash and his family, and there’s a real sense of the stakes as they go up against Big Cat and her organization. The film may hurtle too quickly toward its conclusion and end on a pat note, but ‘Red Right Hand’ is an effective thriller nevertheless.

    ‘Red Right Hand’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the Plot of ‘Red Right Hand’?

    Cash (Orlando Bloom) is trying to live an honest and quiet life taking care of his recently orphaned niece Savannah (Chapel Oaks) in the Appalachian town of Odim County. When the sadistic kingpin Big Cat (Andie MacDowell) who runs the town forces him back into her services, Cash learns he’s capable of anything – even killing – to protect the town and the only family he has left. As the journey gets harder, Cash is drawn into a nightmare that blurs the lines between good and evil.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Red Right Hand’?

    • Orlando Bloom as Cash
    • Andie MacDowell as Big Cat
    • Scott Haze as Finney
    • Garret Dillahunt as Wilder
    • Mo McRae as Deputy Duke Parks
    • Brian Geraghty as Sheriff Hollister
    • Chapel Oaks as Savannah
    • Kenneth Miller as The Buck
    • Nicholas Logan as The Doe
    Andie MacDowell and Brian Geraghty in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    (L to R) Andie MacDowell and Brian Geraghty in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Other Orlando Bloom Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Red Right Hand’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Orlando Bloom Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Red Right Hand’ Exclusive Interview: Garret Dillahunt

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    Opening in theaters and on digital February 23rd is the new action thriller ‘Right Hand Man,’ which stars Orlando Bloom (‘Black Hawk Down’), Andie MacDowell (‘Hudson Hawk’), Scott Haze (‘Venom’) and Garret Dillahunt (‘No Country for Old Men’) and was directed by Ian and Eshom Nelms (‘Fatman’).

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with veteran actor Garret Dillahunt about his work on ‘Red Right Hand,’ his first reaction to the screenplay, his approach to playing a preacher, his character’s struggle with his faith, why he helps Cash, working with Orlando Bloom, Andie MacDowell’s villain, and working with the Nelms brothers, as well as taking a look back at his work on the groundbreaking short-lived series ‘Life’ starring Damian Lewis.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Dillahunt, Scott Haze, and Ian and Eshom Nelms.

    Related Article: Andie MacDowell and Sadie Laflamme-Snow Talk ‘The Way Home’ Season 2

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and why you wanted to be part of this project?

    Garret Dillahunt: Well, this was one of those cool ones where someone just gives you a call and says, “Hey, you want to be in this thing?” That saves us all a lot of time and eases a poor actor’s mind when he is wondering what’s next. I’d heard of the Nelms brothers, I’d seen a few of their movies and I’ve had some friends work with them. John Hawkes, who I knew from ‘Deadwood,’ worked with them and Walton Goggins did. They both had really nice things to say about them, Ian and Eshom. I was looking forward to it and I liked this character. I thought he was complex. I thought it was weird, and I was a little scared to play a preacher who preaches, so that was very nerve wracking. I had to talk to a few of those guys. He’s also a guy that does some violence and that’s a hard thing to reconcile. What are we saying here? Are we trying to justify this violence? I thought it was a good challenge to play this guy who’s flawed. This could be a mistake he’s making, but it’s still part of the old person he was. His main goal was to protect his flock, and I was anxious to see if I could pull that off in a human manner.

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: Can you talk about your approach to playing the character?

    GD: I’ve always been drawn to themes of shame, guilt and redemption. I don’t know what that says about me, maybe I need some kind of therapy. I’m always excited when people get another shot, and they get a chance and often fail again. But it’s about the getting up, isn’t it? I think this guy has failed a lot in his life, but if there’s one thing you could say about him, it’s that he takes care of his friends. He probably had a drug problem. He probably was a real addictive personality. He certainly had a rage problem and a violence problem, but he’s trying to be a different person. The way that he is doing that is through religion. A lot of people find religion and become a different person. I don’t know that it would work for me, but you must find something to hang your hat on to keep your demons at bay, don’t you? Sometimes this guy’s demons come out still, but that’s interesting to me.

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: While not a lot is said about your character’s backstory in the movie, his history and personality does come across in your performance. Did you create an extensive backstory for your character or just go off what was written in the script?

    GD: Well, certainly I look to the script for most of the clues but it kind of depends on the parts. Some people you just know what to do, you’re like, “I know this guy.” I always try to make a chronological outline of what happens to me, so I know what I know and what I don’t know in each scene because you don’t want to play the end. There are some people I never meet, so I can’t pretend I know something that’s not in my character’s orbit. For this one, like I said, I did work with a few preachers, more Pentecostal kind of preachers, just to learn the way they think and the way they talk to their people. I tried to draw on my own childhood. I remember different churches my family would go to and how it would make me feel or the tone they would take when they talk to us. There are some scenes that were cut that were very informative to me as a character. Just for time I’m sure, you never know why things don’t make it in, and you can’t worry about it. But those, even though they’re not there, I’m sure inform what is. It just depends on the project. Usually if there’s a scene, there’s just one incident maybe you need to come up with on your own that will just be reflective in your eyes, just to have something else going on that makes him a rounded person and not just some kind of cutout.

    Andie MacDowell in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Andie MacDowell in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: Can you talk about the power that Big Cat has over this town, as well as Andie MacDowell’s surprising performance?

    GD: Yeah, it was a nice departure for her. I think she was nervous about it a little bit. I didn’t get to work with her as much as I hoped, but there was obviously that one section where we all meet. You asked about her grip on this whole community, and particularly on Cash. I think Cash was very special to her. Cash is Orlando Bloom’s character. You saw what happens to us all when we leave her service. She marks us with the red right hand. That’s a bond that Orlando and I share in the movie is we’re both former employees. I think his character is one that she really misses having around because he was capable, he was scary, he was good at his job, and so she’s doing anything in her power to get him back in the fold, including blackmailing him with the safety of his own family. But he won’t put up with that, so he calls his friends, and we go get them.

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: Can you talk about Wilder’s struggle with his own faith and why he ultimately decides to help Cash?

    GD: I don’t know if it would hold up in a court of law. He puts on a ski mask and kidnaps. It’s not any kind of behavior that we would ever put up with outside of a movie, is it? But for some reason we like this kind of thing in our entertainment. I’m justifying it in the way that it’s a mistake in a lot of ways. This is not the way to go about it probably, but he’s a simple man by his own words. He’s an Old Testament kind of preacher, and he’s not afraid to throw a punch or a kick or pick up a gun. I think he’s also really upset that he failed. He failed in protecting this girl. He failed in protecting his friend’s family. That’s something he prides himself on, so he’s determined to go get them back. Cash is like, “I like your plan”, which is no plan at all. I think he’s one of those people. There’s a little bit of the zealot in him, isn’t there, which is dangerous because they’re not afraid to die. He’s like an old Ford pickup. He’s not a Ferrari but are you ready to redline your Ferrari because I’m ready to redline my Ford truck. He’s a hammer. In his world if he stands before the maker I don’t know if he’ll have good words to say about his actions, but I know he believes he’s doing what’s right.

    Orlando Bloom in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Orlando Bloom in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: What was it like working with Orlando Bloom?

    GD: Orlando’s great. I’d never met him before, but I found him to be really kind and really welcoming. Look, I work all the time and I get recognized plenty, but I don’t have to alter my life really. I can walk down the street; I can eat in a restaurant. I don’t know what it must be like for him and Katy (Perry) to move through the world. Two people, just massive stars, who everyone knows their names and their faces, and knows an awful lot about them. For him to still be patient, kind and giving with everybody else, it was cool. We talked a lot about the accent. He’s British, and so he’s playing a Kentucky guy, and he’s just the best kind of star to work with because he wants you to be good. He wants the whole thing to be good, and he surrounds himself with good people to make that happen. He doesn’t care where the good idea comes from, just that it’s a good idea and that it helps the film, and that just takes a lot of pressure off everybody else. We don’t have to change our behavior around him. We just got to be good at our jobs because he’s bringing it, so we better bring it too. He’s a good number one.

    Eshom Nelms and Ian Nelms, co-directors of 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    (L to R) Eshom Nelms and Ian Nelms, co-directors of ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: What was it like collaborating on set with the Nelms brothers and watching them execute their vision for this film?

    GD: I really liked them. I work a lot and sometimes I’m a workaholic a bit. There’s a downside. Not only you don’t see your own family a ton, but you’re such a pro that you start to feel alone in a way, almost like you don’t need anything else. It’s a mistake, but it’s how you start feeling. You start feeling like, “Ah, what’s this? Okay, got it. Roll it. Let’s go. I got to be on a plane at 2:00pm for the next on.” It becomes this thing, and you don’t know everybody’s name. I expect the worst sometimes when I show up, which is unfair but there’s a lot of actors that don’t know what they’re doing. There’s a lot of directors that don’t know what they’re doing. You develop a thick skin, calluses and techniques so that you can survive and thrive even if you have no help. Sometimes you get to a place where you start expecting to have no help, and you’re like, “Okay, I’m on my own here. If I don’t want to show my ass public on this thing, then I better come up with a good idea.” It’s a great relief and reminder to sometimes let other people in and maybe you don’t know everything and let a new idea in. There was something about these two guys that I just trusted immediately. I don’t know if it’s because there’s two of them and they seemed like their strengths were both parts of my own personality, I thought. They’re very different, Ian and Eshom, but they’re great together. I think I like working with brother combos. The Cohen brothers were kind of similar. You have two minds. It’s like there’s this extra brain on set also coming up with ideas. They’re like comic book nerds who are also kind of jocks. Eshom is this incredible, almost pro-level paintballer. All the gunfight sequences make sense, and he knows about finding cover, so that was a load off. Ian was a former MMA fighter, so he did all the hand-to-hand stuff. He has a good eye. He’s got good things to say. But on top of that, they love making movies. They’re like cinephiles. They’re always watching movies. They’re always talking about movies. They’re excited about movies. I was like, “Oh yeah, this is fun. They’re having fun, aren’t they?” And they are. It makes you want to please them. It makes you want to do good for them. I just found myself totally at ease. You want to come up with ways to help them solve a problem, and they’re receptive to that. I look forward to working with them again.

    Adam Arkin, Damian Lewis, Sarah Shahi, Donal Logue and Brent Sexton on 'Life.'
    (L to R) Adam Arkin, Damian Lewis, Sarah Shahi, Donal Logue and Brent Sexton on ‘Life.’ Photo: NBC Universal Television Studio.

    MF: Finally, you had a pivotal role in a groundbreaking, yet short-lived TV series called ‘Life’ starring Damian Lewis, where you played the main villain, a Russian gangster named Roman Nevikov. What are your memories of making that series and working with Lewis and the rest of the cast?

    GD: It’s funny. That’s one of my wife’s favorite characters. I’m a shy person, especially when I was younger, and that came along at a time where I still was a little uncomfortable playing people with power. I always say, “I’m a good first mate. I’m not sure I’m a good captain.” Then when someone finally gives you an opportunity to lead, you’re like, “Oh, I don’t know if anyone’s going to buy this”, because you have an opinion of yourself that no one else has, but you believe that. It was a real breakthrough moment for me to play someone powerful like that. He was evil, but he was powerful, assured and calm. I had a style that I’d never had with this white outfit, but I had a good dialogue coach, and I felt good about the Russian accent. Some Russians were asking me where I was from on set, and I was like, “I’m from Yakima, Washington.” They’re like, “Oh, I thought you were Russian.” That made me feel good. But for just having a few episodes, a lot of people remember that and Damian Lewis, he’s a great actor. I haven’t seen him in a long time, but I really like him. I’ve stayed in touch with Sarah Shahi, probably the most gorgeous person on the planet, and we keep trying to work together and find something else to do, but it hasn’t worked out yet, but I hope we can. I think that was a good show.

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    What is the Plot of ‘Red Right Hand’?

    Cash (Orlando Bloom) is trying to live an honest and quiet life taking care of his recently orphaned niece Savannah (Chapel Oaks) in the Appalachian town of Odim County. When the sadistic kingpin Big Cat (Andie MacDowell) who runs the town forces him back into her services, Cash learns he’s capable of anything – even killing – to protect the town and the only family he has left. As the journey gets harder, Cash is drawn into a nightmare that blurs the lines between good and evil.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Red Right Hand’?

    Orlando Bloom in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Orlando Bloom in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Other Garret Dillahunt Movies:

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  • ‘The Way Home’ Season 2: Andie MacDowell and Sadie Laflamme-Snow

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    Premiering on the Hallmark Channel January 21st is the second season of the popular series ‘The Way Home,’ which stars Chyler Leigh (‘Supergirl’), Sadie Laflamme-Snow (‘Cascade’), and Andie MacDowell (‘Hudson Hawk,’ ‘Groundhog Day’).

    Andie MacDowell and Sadie Laflamme-Snow star in 'The Way Home' season 2.
    (L to R) Andie MacDowell and Sadie Laflamme-Snow star in ‘The Way Home’ season 2.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Andie MacDowell and Sadie Laflamme-Snow about their work on ‘The Way Home’ season 2, where season one left off for their characters, the consequences of time-travel, and what fans can expect from the new season.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with MacDowell and Laflamme-Snow, as well as Chyler Leigh and Evan Williams.

    Sadie Laflamme-Snow and Andie MacDowell at the premiere of 'The Way Home' season 2.
    (L to R) Sadie Laflamme-Snow and Andie MacDowell at the premiere of ‘The Way Home’ season 2. Photo: Hallmark Channel.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Sadie, can you talk about where season one left off for Alice and where we’ll find her at the beginning of season two?

    Sadie Laflamme-Snow: So, at the beginning of season one, Kat receives a letter from Del, her mother, saying, “Why don’t you come home?” So, she picks up and moves her teenage daughter Alice to Port Haven. That letter is what brings them together and starts unfolding this saga of trying to figure out what happened to Jacob, Del’s son who disappeared as a child. So, the whole time Del keeps saying, “I never sent that letter,” and they keep brushing it off. Then at the end, Alice is trying to get back to the past and to her friends and she arrives in the months leading up to when she first arrived in Port Haven. So, she realizes that her purpose there was to take the letter that Del has thrown in the trash thinking, “I’m not going to reach out to my daughter. I can’t do it. It’s too painful.” I take the letter from the trash and bring it to the mailbox. That letter is what sets us up for the start of season one. So, at the end of season one, we realized there’s still some hope left for finding Jacob. Kat has an idea of where he might be. Season two picks up right from where we left off. Not a moment passes. We see the fallout of Kat making that statement of, “I know where Jacob is,” and we just jump right off from there and it picks up with that momentum that we had at the end of season one.

    Related Article: Andie MacDowell, Chyler Leigh and Sadie Laflamme-Snow Talk ‘The Way Home’

    Andie MacDowell at the premiere of 'The Way Home' season 2.
    Andie MacDowell at the premiere of ‘The Way Home’ season 2. Photo: Hallmark Channel.

    MF: Andie, can you talk about what Del went through emotionally in season one and what fans can expect from her in season two?

    Andie MacDowell: For me, I feel like Del has put on a suit of armor because she doesn’t have anyone. She’s lost everyone. She lost her husband, she lost her son, she lost her daughter, and she never got to meet her granddaughter. So, I think that strength comes from severe loneliness. I think underneath it all, she’s a very lonely soul. When we end the season, she can’t even open her heart to this man, though I don’t think he was the right man for her anyway. So that’s where you end up with her at the end of season one. In season two, I was hoping there was going to be something a bit lighter for her, but I loved what they gave me. I was really surprised with what they gave me. I have some strong, powerful moments as a 65-year-old woman that I think are interesting to see for other women my age. They’ll be intrigued, I think, to see the opportunities that they gave me.

    Sadie Laflamme-Snow at the premiere of 'The Way Home' season 2.
    Sadie Laflamme-Snow at the premiere of ‘The Way Home’ season 2. Photo: Hallmark Channel.

    MF: Finally, Sadie can you talk about the time-travel component to the show, and will the series get a bit darker in season two?

    SLS: There’s a part of the pond that we haven’t discovered yet in season one. We kick off season two with the pond showing Kat and Alice whose boss, I guess. They realize that on top of the consequences of going back and integrating yourself in times that have already happened and what that means for your family, and especially with them, the way they tried to intervene with Colton’s death and how they realized that they ended up causing it. There are also just things about the pond, the way that it works, where it can send you and what it’s capable of that are unexpected and unfamiliar. So, there is, I guess you could say a dark side, but at the same time it adds an interesting layer of adventure. I think you realize that these women are strong, courageous and determined to get the answers that they need, even though there’s a certain amount of risk involved. So, it makes it super exciting, and I think it’s just nice to take the pond in an even more profound place.

    Sadie Laflamme-Snow and Andie MacDowell at the premiere of 'The Way Home' season 2.
    (L to R) Sadie Laflamme-Snow and Andie MacDowell at the premiere of ‘The Way Home’ season 2. Photo: Hallmark Channel.

    What is the plot of ‘The Way Home’ Season 2?

    In the first season, the multigenerational family drama introduced viewers to Kat Landry (Chyler Leigh), her teen daughter Alice (Sadie Laflamme-Snow) and Kat’s mother Del (Andie MacDowell), three generations of women who are strong, willful and independent. After being estranged for nearly two decades following the unsolved disappearance of Kat’s eight-year-old brother Jacob (Remy Smith) and untimely death of family patriarch Colton Landry (Jefferson Brown) that prompted Kat to move away from her Canadian farm town of Port Haven, Kat moves back with Alice when she finds herself at a crossroads in life. Shortly after arriving, Alice unwittingly discovers the ability to travel between the past and present via a pond on the family’s land. Soon, Kat and Alice become determined to unearth the truth about these past tragedies and attempt to change the course of events. Elliot (Evan Williams), Kat’s childhood friend who always held a torch for her, is there in the present to help guide both in their journey, as well as in the past for Alice as his teen self (David Webster).

    Season two starts where the shocking season one finale left off and had viewers on the edge of their seats – with Kat exclaiming to Del that she knows what happened to Jacob. As Kat continues her quest to find Jacob and bring him home, she and Alice uncover unexpected revelations about their origins that bring answers to some questions while new ones are raised.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Way Home’ Season 2?

    • Chyler Leigh as Katherine “Kat” Landry Dhawan
    • Alex Hook as teenage Katherine Landry
    • Evan Williams as Elliot “El” Augustine
    • David Webster as teenage Elliot Augustine
    • Sadie Laflamme-Snow as Alice “Ali” Dhawan
    • Andie MacDowell as Delilah “Del” Landry
    • Jefferson Brown as Colton “Cole” Landry
    • Al Mukadam as Brayden “Brady” Dhawan
    Andie MacDowell, Chyler Leigh and Sadie Laflamme-Snow at the premiere of 'The Way Home' season 2.
    (L to R) Andie MacDowell, Chyler Leigh and Sadie Laflamme-Snow at the premiere of ‘The Way Home’ season 2. Photo: Hallmark Channel.

    Andie MacDowell Movies:

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  • Kate Bosworth Talks ‘Along for the Ride’

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    Kate Bosworth at the premiere of ‘Netflix’s Along for the Ride.’

    Premiering on Netflix beginning May 6th is the new drama ‘Along for the Ride,’ which is based on the novel by Sarah Dessen.

    The movie was written and directed by Sofia Alvarez. and follows Auden (Emma Pasarow), the summer before college, as she meets the mysterious Eli (Belmont Cameli), a fellow insomniac. While the seaside town of Colby sleeps, the two embark on a nightly quest to help Auden experience the fun, carefree teen life she never knew she wanted.

    In addition to Pasarow and Cameli, the movie also features Kate Bosworth (‘Superman Returns’), Andie MacDowell (‘Groundhog Day’), and Dermot Mulroney (‘About Schmidt’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with actress Kate Bosworth about her work on ‘Along for the Ride.’

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    You can read our full interview with Kate Bosworth below or watch our interview with Bosworth, Emma Pasarow, and Belmont Cameli by clicking on the video player above.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your character, Heidi and how you approached playing the role?

    Kate Bosworth: Well, you know what was interesting was that one of the thrills for me in being a part of this movie is that in many ways the relationships had sort of paralleled my real life. I’m a stepmom to a beautiful now 24-year-old young woman named Jasper. I met her when she was about 12. So, I saw her through all the teen stuff, all the stuff that Auden goes through.

    I’m no longer with her father, but he was about 13 years older than me so there was an age difference there as there is with me and Dermot. I became very close to Jasper’s biological mom, which my character ultimately has such a significant relationship with Andie MacDowell’s character.

    For me, the very interesting and important messaging behind the movie was to shatter the stereotypical evil stepmother relationship because my stepdaughter will say all the time, “Oh my gosh, I had two moms. It was the best experience. And I had a dad,” and they all kind of rallied to different roles of significance in her life. In that way, I think we were able to all pitch in and really lead with love to help fortify a very, I hope, healthy and happy young lady.

    MF: So, your real-life experience really prepared you to play this part, is that correct?

    KB: Well, it was amazing how many similarities we have. I mean, even to play Heidi, she’s such a fun character to play. I haven’t had the opportunity to do much comedy in a while, and so to be able to inhabit her was great. She’s so spazzy, you know what I mean? So much of it is lack of sleep and she wants so badly to be liked by Auden.

    I remember I was about 28 years old when I met Jasper and she was 12. It meant so much to me for her to just like me, you know what I mean? To feel loved by me. So, I’m sure that there were quite a few experiences when I first met her where I was like, “Hi, how are you? Oh my God, I’m Kate. Blah, blah, blah.” You kind of are this person that’s taken over.

    I remember taking her to a store. We’d had lunch the first time then we met, and I looked at her and I was like, “Should we go get some candy?” She was like, “Yes.” So, we went to a store and just bought so much candy and then ended up coming home and eating all the candy and watching funny movies.

    So, I really understood where Heidi was coming from. I think always the challenge with playing anybody who’s kind of bigger comedically, is to find the place of grounding even within that spastic nature. I got it. I totally understood. I lived that life. So, in many ways, this was my nod to my relationship with my own stepdaughter.

    Kate Bosworth in 'Along for the Ride.'
    Kate Bosworth in ‘Along for the Ride.’ Photo: Emily V. Aragones/NETFLIX.

    MF: Can you talk about the family dynamics in the film between the different characters, and working with Dermot Mulroney?

    KB: It’s so funny when Dermot and I were shooting the movie, he’s like, “Audiences are not going to like me.” I laughed, and I was like, “No, you have your redemption.” But I do think what’s so nice about this story that is, and again, this is so significant in my own life, was overcoming the traditional stereotypes that a biological mother and stepmother should be at odds with one another. I’m so lucky that I was able to have such a close relationship with Christmases together, Jasper’s graduation, and the big moments in life.

    I believe as long as you’re leading with love and your focus is on that next generation, and creating the healthiest, happiest and safest place for the kid, then you’re doing something right. I think there’s a lot of people that get quite selfish, and the truth is it really does need to be about the kid. I think we were all very committed to raising her that way.

    So, while I think all the characters have a lot going on, I liked that there were flaws. I like that Andie MacDowell, who plays Auden’s mom, is real, flawed and has these crazy expectations of her biological kid and the kid just feels all this pressure. Then she goes to Colby, and her dad’s kind of there but not really there. He should be more present and he’s definitely self-obsessed and definitely selfish.

    Then you have Heidi who has a newborn and she’s trying to make it all work, and she’s trying to make everybody happy. Then ultimately, she’s like, “I can’t do this anymore.” I mean, I think that there is something very real about those dynamics in today’s world. So many people experience a blended family in one way or another.

    I think Sofia Alvarez, the filmmaker, just did such a beautiful job, obviously, honoring the book. But we talked a lot about wanting to make very defined, fun characters, but also keeping them very real and grounded.

    Kate Bosworth and Dermot Mulroney
    (L to R) Kate Bosworth and Dermot Mulroney in ‘Along for the Ride.’ Photo: Emily V. Aragones/NETFLIX.
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  • 12 Things You Never Knew About ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’ on its 25th Anniversary

    12 Things You Never Knew About ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’ on its 25th Anniversary

    Four Weddings and a Funeral” is one of the most important comedies of the ’90s, helping to spark a rom-com craze in Hollywood and turning star Hugh Grant into an international sex symbol. As the film celebrates its 25th anniversary, here are some fun behind-the-scenes facts you might not know.

    1. Writer Richard Curtis conceived the film after attending over 60 weddings in the span of a decade. He based it on his own experience being propositioned by a fellow wedding guest.

    2. Curtis was initially against the idea of casting Hugh Grant as Charles, fearing he was too handsome for the part.

    Warner Bros.

    3. Curtis campaigned for Alan Rickman to star as Charles, but eventually it was decided Rickman was too old for the part.

    4. Grant earned a fee of about $100,000, well above the rest of the cast. However, Andie MacDowell wound up with a much larger payday, taking home about $2 million thanks to her decision to take percentage points rather than an upfront fee.

    HBO

    5. Marisa Tomei, Brooke Shields and Sarah Jessica Parker were all considered for the role of Carrie. Parker, naturally, went on to play a very different Carrie on “Sex and the City“.

    6. The Chinese version of the film lists Rowan Atkinson‘s character as “Mr. Bean,” even though he’s obviously not playing that comedy icon here.

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    7. The film’s budget was so tight that most of the extras were required to bring their own wedding attire.

    8. Kristin Scott Thomas dubbed over her own lines for the French language version.

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    9. Despite its penny-pinching budget, “Four Weddings and a Funeral” went on to become the highest-grossing British film in history (at the time).

    10. “Four Weddings and a Funeral” became the first of five romantic comedies to pair Hugh Grant with writer Richard Curtis. It was followed by “Notting Hill,” “Love Actually” and the first two “Bridget Jones” movies.

    11. Hulu is currently developing an anthology series based on the film, with Mindy Kaling and Matt Warburton writing and producing. Curtis is serving  as executive producer.

    NBC

    12. There’s a sequel… sort of. A short film called “One Red Nose Day and a Wedding” will be released on Red Nose Day 2019 (March 15 in the UK and May 23 in the US) and reunites director Mike Newell with most of the film’s surviving cast.

  • ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’ Cast Reuniting for Special Film

    ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’ Cast Reuniting for Special Film

    Working Title

    The “Four Weddings and a Funeral” gang is reuniting!

    The cast and creators of the 1994 British romantic comedy are coming together to make a charity short film for Red Nose Day.

    Screenwriter Richard Curtis, who is the co-founder of the charity telethon, has penned “One Red Nose Day And A Wedding.” Original director Mike Newell is also on board to helm the short, which will premiere March 15 on BBC One and then air on NBC in May for Red Nose USA.

    Returning cast members include Hugh Grant, Andie MacDowell, Kristin Scott Thomas, John Hannah, Rowan Atkinson, and Anna Chancellor, among others. They will be joined by special guests.

    Curtis said, “We’re all definitely older — I suspect no wiser. It’s been really enjoyable working out what’s happened to all the characters – and now they get back together for the 5th wedding. Where, as usual, not everything will go as planned.”

  • Andie MacDowell Says It’s OK to Ogle Shirtless Men

    Andie MacDowell wants “Magic Mike XXL” fans to know there is nothing wrong with shamelessly feasting your eyes on the hot crop of shirtless men featured in the movie.

    “It was not controlling or totally objectifying them,” the actress tells “Made in Hollywood” of Channing Tatum, Matt Bomer and the other actors who play strippers in the film. “It’s more about enjoying them.”

    MacDowell plays Nancy, a recent divorcee, who encounters Tatum’s Magic Mike character and his posse of male strippers.

    Talking about the “Magic Mike” sequel’s girls-night-out-appeal, the actress refers to it as a “role reversal,” adding, “It’s great fun that we can get that excited about a bunch of guys entertaining us … Everything’s in good fun. There’s nothing demeaning about it.” — Written by Dahvi Shira

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