Tag: appletv+

  • ‘The Last Frontier’ Exclusive Interview: Jason Clarke

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    Premiering on Apple TV October 10th is the new thriller series ‘The Last Frontier’, which was created by Jon Bokenkamp (‘The Blacklist’) and Richard D’Ovidio, and stars Jason Clarke (‘Dawn of the Planet of the Apes’), Dominic Cooper (‘Captain America: The First Avenger’), Haley Bennett (‘The Magnificent Seven’), Simone Kessell (‘Yellowjackets’), and Alfre Woodard (‘Captain America: Civil War’).

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    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Jason Clarke about his work on ‘The Last Frontier’, his first reaction to the screenplay for the pilot episode, his character’s pursuit of escaped convict Havlock, Frank’s reluctant partnership with CIA agent Sidney, and working with actress Haley Bennett.

    Jason Clarke stars in Apple TV+'s 'The Last Frontier'.
    Jason Clarke stars in Apple TV+’s ‘The Last Frontier’.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Clarke, Dominic Cooper, Haley Bennett, Simone Kessell, and Jon Bokenkamp.

    Related Article: Jason Clarke Talks Apple TV+’s New Thriller Series ‘The Last Frontier’

    Jason Clarke in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jason Clarke in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Moviefone: To begin with, this is a fantastic series! Can you talk about your first reaction to reading the screenplay for the pilot and did you recognize immediately that Frank Remnick would be a great role for you to play in particular?

    Jason Clarke: Thank you, mate. I do too and I love hearing that kind of response, man. We had a great time making it. I watch it when I don’t normally watch a lot of things, and I kept watching it. I’ve loved it, I really did. Dude, when they send you a script and they send you the pilot, you read it, and of course, that’s draft after draft. I’m now smart enough to go, “Well, this is, of course, their best foot forward” and I did love it. The plane crashing, the size and the scope, I thought, this is where Apple should be, and I want to be part of this. You know what I mean? I really did. I’ve been on a lot of sets in my career. So then, you know, it’s set in snow. I thought, “Well, that’s not easy.” I remember ‘The Revenant’ and I’m friends with Tom (Hardy) and Leo (DiCaprio), and I knew what they went through. So, I said, “Guys, how about the rest of them?” They sent me all 10 episodes, which was like, okay, they’ve done their work, because we’re going to have to shoot out of order. Then you read through and you’re just waiting with bated breath of when it’s going to fall down the hole. Because now, your hopes are up, and I read all 10 in like no time at all. Normally I go through with a marker on my iPad, and I’ll just mark that this doesn’t make sense in orange, and red is like that’s just not good. But I didn’t have any. I just read it straight through. I thought, “Man, he took me on a wild ride and brought me up the other side.” Sure, there’s a few things, I think some dialog, but I’m with that ride. That’s what it felt like to me, and then it was like, let’s get this 50 something year old body into shape and get on this roller coaster.

    'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Can you talk about the cat and mouse game that takes place between Frank and escaped convict Havlock and how Frank navigates that?

    JC: Frank in a way, he’s a very real person. You know, he’s not a superhero. He’s not the best fighter or the fastest gun. He doesn’t have the level of training and abilities that Havlock has, and you find it out when you realize things. But he’s cunning and his dogged, and he’s decent, and he’s going to get up more times and he gets knocked down. You know, you’re going to have to finish Frank off if you want to beat him, and I love those parts. They’re very human and it enables you to bring the audience in closer to the reality of who he is. I mean, when we talked about the fight sequences with (director) Sam (Hargrave), I was like, “I’m not going to be, you know, Chris Hemsworth or Spider-Man or something here”. Frank’s going be beaten more times that he beats, but he’s going to come back and that’s how we leaned into that. So, he’s learning from Havlock, and he doesn’t realize just how far down the rabbit hole and into the dark that Havlock has led him. Then it starts to dawn on him. I love “No Country for Old Men’ that speech that Tommy Lee Jones makes about the dream. Frank starts to realize, he’s seen a lot of bad and dark in Chicago, and he knows what criminals can do, and big organized criminals. So, he starts to realize, “Oh, man, I’m in some dangerous territory.” Then his family’s involved in it, too. That gets to the heart of it.

    (L to R) Jason Clarke and Haley Bennett in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Jason Clarke and Haley Bennett in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about Frank’s reluctant partnership with CIA agent Sidney and what it was like working on that relationship with actress Haley Bennett?

    JC: Well, Hayley bought a great, like a mist in terms of you couldn’t tell where she’s at. You know, I wanted to hold her, but then the next minute I feared her. You feel like with Frank, you’re trying to work out what her involvement is, what she is hiding, and then you’re also aware that she’s super dangerous. Even though she’s an alone operative, an alone agent and a woman in this foreign place, there’s something about the way she operates. She makes you lean into her and frank leans into her, and then he needs her as well. You just you realize he’s on a lake of ice, with her as well, too.

    Jason Clarke in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jason Clarke in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    What is the plot of ‘The Last Frontier’?

    A U.S. Marshal (Jason Clarke) in the outskirts of Alaska must protect his town while he investigates the plane crash that set free multiple fugitives, now on the loose.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Last Frontier’?

    • Jason Clarke as Frank Remnick
    • Dominic Cooper as Havlock
    • Haley Bennett as Sidney
    • Simone Kessell as Sarah Remnick
    • Tait Blum as Luke Remnick
    • Dallas Goldtooth as Hutch
    • Alfre Woodard as Bradford
    • Rusty Schwimmer as Kitty Van Horn
    Jason Clarke in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jason Clarke in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    List of Jason Clarke Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Jason Clarke Movies on Amazon

  • TV Review: ‘Smoke’

    Taron Egerton in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Taron Egerton in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    ‘Smoke’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

    Released on Apple TV+ on June 27th with its first two episodes, ‘Smoke’ marks the reunion of ‘Black Bird’ creator Dennis Lehane and star/producer Taron Egerton for a new drama adapted from the Truth Media podcast ‘Firebug’.

    The cast for the new crime drama also includes Jurnee Smollett (‘The Order’), Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine (‘The Lincoln Lawyer’), Hannah Emily Anderson (‘Jigsaw’), Rafe Spall (‘The Big Short’), John Leguizamo (‘Encanto’) and Greg Kinnear (‘Little Miss Sunshine’).

    Related Article: Taron Egerton Investigates Arson in First Images from TV Drama ‘Smoke’

    Initial Thoughts

    Taron Egerton in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Taron Egerton in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    When Egerton and novelist/screenwriter/showrunner Lehane last teamed up, it was for the aforementioned ‘Black Bird’, an adaptation of James Keene’s and Hillel Levin’s book book ‘In with the Devil’, which saw a prisoner (Egerton) tasked with gathering intel on a serial killer fellow inmate (Paul Walter Hauser).

    The result was a critical success, and won several awards, including both an Emmy and a Golden Globe for Hauser.

    Hopes are therefore high for the reunion of writer and star, with the pair this time targeting Truth Media podcast ‘Firebug’ as the inspiration for a new limited series set in the world of serial arsonists. But can it live up to the pressure of prior expectations?

    Script and Direction

    Taron Egerton in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Taron Egerton in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    ‘Smoke’ features Lehane running the show again, sharing script duties with fellow writers Adriane McCray (‘War for the Planet of the Apes’) and Molly Anne Miller (‘Long Slow Exhale’).

    Here’s the big problem with writing about the limited series: it’s hard to get into its exact issues without diving into spoiler territory. If you’ve heard the podcast or the case that it follows, you’ll know what actually happens, though Lehane and his team have only used the real-life story as loose inspiration, moving the narrative from California to the Pacific Northwest and inventing plenty to supplement it.

    In keeping with much of prestige TV, this is a slow burn story, one that initially coasts on the sheer charisma of Egerton and Smollett, and only hinting at the darker story to come. It takes a while to really come to life, but once the plot kicks in around episode five (of nine), things take a more satisfying turn.

    Greg Kinnear in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Greg Kinnear in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    This is certainly moody and thoughtful, and goes to some shocking places later on, but it requires some patience.

    “Dark” might also describe the directorial style of the show, which opts for shadowy interiors and misty, dreary treescapes and industrial sites (despite its Pacific Northwest setting, it was shot in Vancouver).

    But directors Jim McKay, Joe Chappelle and Kari Skogland do manage to fan the flames of interest, and guide the cast towards some memorable performances.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Taron Egerton and Jurnee Smollett in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Taron Egerton and Jurnee Smollett in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Initially, this feels like the Taron and Jurnee show (with a few supporting turns, more on them below), but as the limited series opens out, the rest of the cast get their chance.

    Egerton is naturally strong in this sort of conflicted, dramatic role, showing the same chops as he did in ‘Black Bird’ (and some of his movie performances), and playing Gundersen also allows him to have a little fun in a warped sort of way.

    He’s just as good whether he’s giving egotistical speeches about how fires can spread as when he’s trying to knuckle down into domestic life with his wife and step-son. One moment that will sear itself into your brain involves Egerton’s character dancing in his underwear to a David Bowie song.

    As cop Michelle Calderone, Smollett is easily his equal, her own conflicted personal life spilling into her professional world. She brings a seething, quiet power to the part, and when she launches an investigation later in the series, it feels like the performance really kicks in.

    Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine is excellent as Freddy Fasano, one of the fire-starters on the loose. While his story initially seems to be siloed from the rest of the cast, it doesn’t diminish his pure dramatic power. And an interaction with Egerton is memorable for its chaos.

    (L to R) John Leguizamo and Anna Chlumsky in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) John Leguizamo and Anna Chlumsky in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Elsewhere, there’s the likes of John Leguizamo, who is fantastic as Esposito, Dave’s bitter former partner who has an axe to grind against him, while Greg Kinnear offers plenty as Harvey Englehart, Dave’s boss. He’s both convinced that Dave is an ace arson, but also somewhat checked out, planning his retirement.

    Hannah Emily Anderson as Ashley, Dave’s wife, has less to do but does enjoy a few decent moments.

    Finally, Rafe Spall likewise has a smaller role (at least in the early going), but is superbly snippy as Calderone’s boss/boyfriend and in his antagonistic professional relationship with Englehart.

    Final Thoughts

    Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine in 'Smoke', premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine in ‘Smoke’, premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    ‘Smoke’ is a show that might end up severely testing the patience of some, but if you stick with it, the series catches fire in a way that, while many will predict how, is still worth watching.

    It may not be on the level of ‘Black Bird,’ but it still works.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Smoke’?

    ‘Smoke’ follows a troubled detective and an enigmatic arson investigator as they pursue the trails of two serial arsonists.

    Taron Egerton stars as Dave Gudsen, the man with the talent for digging into fire crimes, while Jurnee Smollett is police detective Michelle Calderone.

    Who stars in ‘Smoke’?

    • Taron Egerton
    • Jurnee Smollett
    • Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine
    • Hannah Emily Anderson
    • Rafe Spall
    • John Leguizamo
    • Greg Kinnear
    Taron Egerton in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Taron Egerton in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    List of Taron Egerton Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Taron Egerton Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Smoke’ Exclusive Interview: Taron Egerton

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    Premiering on Apple TV+ beginning June 27th is the new series ‘Smoke’, which is based on the popular podcast, ‘Firebug’. Created by Dennis Lehane (‘Mystic River’), the show stars Taron Egerton (‘Kingsman: The Secret Service’), Jurnee Smollett (‘Birds of Prey’), John Leguizamo (‘John Wick’), and Greg Kinnear (‘As Good as It Gets’).

    Related Article: Taron Egerton Talks ‘Tetris’ and Playing Video Game Designer Henk Rogers

    Taron Egerton stars in 'Smoke'.
    Taron Egerton stars in ‘Smoke’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Taron Egerton about his work on ‘Smoke’, the podcast it is based on, what fascinated him about the character, and working with actress Jurnee Smollett.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Egerton, Jurnee Smollett, Greg Kinnear, Rafe Spall, Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine, and series creator Dennis Lehane.

    Taron Egerton in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Taron Egerton in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Moviefone: To begin with, what was it about the podcast, ‘Firebug’, that made you think this would make an interesting series?

    Taron Egerton: Well, I think the podcast ‘Firebug’ that you mentioned, it is such an intriguing, unnerving, and arresting story. It has this kind of central conundrum to it, which is what is going on with this guy? The real guy is called John, although my character in this is called Dave Goodson. He defies figuring out, really, and that, of course, is a hugely interesting and fertile territory to spin a drama out from. I remember when Kary (Antholis), the host of that podcast and the producer of ‘Black Bird’ and this, when he and Dennis first started discussing things, it was amazing to watch Dennis ignite his creativity over it and start spinning it off in different directions and suddenly to create these other characters, some of whom are rooted in real people, but very greatly expanded on. I think in answer to your question, he’s just such a mad, fascinating character. Why would somebody do this?

    (L to R) Taron Egerton and Jurnee Smollett in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Taron Egerton and Jurnee Smollett in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Finally, what was it like working with Jurnee Smollett and building the relationship between those two characters?

    TE: A delight. Acting is always a very cyclical thing, so you give and receive energy. The best actors are the ones that are most alive to each other, I think. Jurnee does an incredible job of playing a character with tremendous weight and trauma, but also staying very available, alive and creative and bringing lightness to that in the moment. We had a time building this bizarre relationship, because it’s very complicated. On the one hand, I think, certainly in the first instance, they are intrigued and charmed by one another, and then it becomes competitive, and then it becomes very charged and adversarial. By the end of the show, it’s strange and bitter and dark. I can’t imagine anyone better or more talented to have done that with. It was great to have such a great, talented partner in Jurnee.

    Editorial Note: James White conducted this interview and contributed to this article.

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    What is the plot of ‘Smoke’?

    A detective (Jurnee Smollett) and an arson investigator (Taron Egerton) work together to stop two serial arsonists in the Pacific Northwest.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Smoke’?

    Taron Egerton in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Taron Egerton in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    List of Taron Egerton Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Taron Egerton Movies on Amazon

  • Sam Neill Joins the ‘Godzilla x Kong’ Sequel

    (Left) Sam Neill in 'Jurassic Park'. Photo: Universal Pictures. (Right) 2021's 'Godzilla vs. Kong.' Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (Left) Sam Neill in ‘Jurassic Park’. Photo: Universal Pictures. (Right) 2021’s ‘Godzilla vs. Kong.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Preview:

    • Sam Neill is the latest recruit for the latest Godzilla and King Kong ‘Monsterverse’ movie.
    • Grant Sputore is directing the new movie.
    • Dan Stevens will be back as vet Trapper.

    Given that he’s one of the key figures in the ‘Jurassic Park’ franchise (and who popped back up for ‘Jurassic World: Dominion,’ you might think that Sam Neill would want to avoid trouble with giant beasties in his cinematic career.

    Yet here he is again, not back with the genetically returned dinosaurs this time, but instead taking his chances running around with another massive reptile –– Godzilla, who will be back on screens with best pal/frenemy King Kong for the next, still-to-be-officially-titled Monsterverse movie from Legendary and Warner Bros.

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    Deadline reports that Neill has joined the cast of the new movie, which is now in production.

    Related Article: 12 Best Godzilla and/or King Kong Movies

    What was the story of ‘Godzilla x Kong’?

    (L to R) Godzilla and Kong in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2024 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Godzilla and Kong in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2024 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    The movie followed up the explosive showdown of ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ with an all-new cinematic adventure, pitting the almighty Kong and the fearsome Godzilla against a colossal undiscovered threat of a monstrous white ape hidden within our world, challenging their very existence –– and our own.

    It delved further into the histories of these Titans, their origins, and the mysteries of Skull Island and beyond, while uncovering the mythic battle that helped forge these extraordinary beings and tied them to humankind forever.

    The new, untitled effort is still mostly being kept under wraps, but according to the first official details, it’ll follow “several new human characters alongside the beloved and iconic Titans Godzilla and Kong as they face off against a cataclysmic world-ending threat.”

    Yep, apparently, there are still some giant threats lurking out there; so the big ape and the giant lizard will have to spring into action once again. But at least they have new some human friends (and potentially foes) to spend time with!

    Who is working on the new movie?

    Kong in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Kong in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Alongside director Grant Sputore (who made his directorial debut with Netflix sci-fi thriller ‘I Am Mother’), the film will have a script from ‘Shang-Chi’ and ‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse’ writer Dave Callaham.

    And back in January, Deadline reported that the movie saw its first piece of casting as Kaitlyn Dever locked in a deal to star.

    Best known for her roles in TV limited series ‘Dopesick’ and the 2019 movie ‘Booksmart,’ Dever has a key role in the second season of HBO’s ‘The Last of Us,’ which just returned to screens.

    Kaitlyn Dever in 'The Last of Us' Season 2. Photograph by Liane Hentscher/HBO.
    Kaitlyn Dever in ‘The Last of Us’ Season 2. Photograph by Liane Hentscher/HBO.

    Details on her character are also, like much of the movie, a mystery, though apparently it represents a renewed push to add in solid characters, which has been a common complaint of especially some of the more recent Monsterverse efforts.

    We can also add to the new recruit list the likes of ‘Unbroken’ and ‘Back to Black’s Jack O’Connell and Delroy Lindo, most recently seen in ‘The Harder They Fall’ and headed our way in Ryan Coogler’s ‘Sinners’ this week. Also aboard? Alycia Debnam-Carey, who last appeared in Netflix wellness scam drama ‘Apple Cider Vinegar,’ which coincidentally starred Dever.

    As with Dever and Modine, we don’t yet know anyone is playing, but Dan Stevens is confirmed to reprise his role as Trapper, the cocky, thrill-seeking veterinarian who helps Kong when the giant ape is injured.

    Where else have I seen Sam Neill?

    (L to R) Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill), Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern), Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), Owen Grady (Chris Pratt), Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) and Kayla Watts (DeWanda Wise) in 'Jurassic World Dominion,' co-written and directed by Colin Trevorrow.
    (from left) Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill), Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern), Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), Owen Grady (Chris Pratt), Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) and Kayla Watts (DeWanda Wise) in Jurassic World Dominion, co-written and directed by Colin Trevorrow.

    As we mentioned above, Neill may still be best known for his role as warm-but-grouchy paleontologist Alan Grant in various ‘Jurassic’ movies.

    Yet the versatile actor has enjoyed a long, successful career hopping between the giant likes of those blockbusters and more indie work.

    In the last few years alone, he’s been seen in movies such as ‘Bring Him to Me,’ ‘The Portable Door’ and ‘Thor: Love and Thunder.’

    Further back, he’s been part of the cast for ‘The Piano,’ ‘The Dish’ and ‘Event Horizon.’ On TV, his back catalogue includes Apple TV+ series ‘Invasion,’ ‘Apples Never Fall’ and ‘Peaky Blinders.’

    What has happened with the Monsterverse so far?

    (L to R) Godzilla and Kong in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2024 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Godzilla and Kong in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2024 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Already around for a decade, Legendary’s Monsterverse follows humanity’s battle to survive in a world facing a catastrophic new reality –– the monsters of our myths and legends are real.

    It all kicked off with ‘Godzilla’ in 2014 and continued through 2017’s ‘Kong: Skull Island,’ 2019’s ‘Godzilla: King of the Monsters,’ 2021’s ‘Godzilla Vs. Kong’ and last year’s record-breaking ‘Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire.’

    The Monsterverse has grossed more than $2.5 billion at the global box office and has expanded onto smaller screens via ‘Monarch: Legacy of Monsters’ for Apple TV+, which has been renewed for a second season.

    When will the new Monsterverse movie be on screens?

    The movie is currently scheduled for release on March 26th, 2027. Let’s hope theaters have time to reinforce their walls. And that it doesn’t inspire kaiju to start their own version of the ‘Minecraft’ audience chaos when it opens.

    Godzilla in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure 'Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2024 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Godzilla in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure ‘Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2024 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in the Monsterverse Franchise:

    Buy ‘King Kong’ Movies on Amazon

    Buy ‘Godzilla’ Movies on Amazon

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  • First Images of Taron Egerton in Crime Drama ‘Smoke’

    (L to R) Taron Egerton and Jurnee Smollett in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Taron Egerton and Jurnee Smollett in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Preview:

    • Taron Egerton and Jurnee Smollett feature in the first images from new Apple TV+ drama ‘Smoke.’
    • Dennis Lehane is writing the show.
    • It adapts the acclaimed podcast ‘Firebug.’

    Taron Egerton continues to be a busy man, and has been adding more projects where he’s a producer as well as star.

    He’s also back with Apple TV+, where he found success with ‘Black Bird,’ and this time he’s found a project that is –– pun entirely intended and unapologetically deployed –– hot.

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    ‘Smoke’ is a new crime drama that will see Egerton in a lead role alongside ‘The Order’s Jurnee Smollett.

    The eight-episode new series will see them digging into a complicated arson case (more on that below).

    Related Article: Taron Egerton Talks ‘Tetris’ and Playing Video Game Designer Henk Rogers

    What’s the story of ‘Smoke’?

    Greg Kinnear in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Greg Kinnear in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    ‘Smoke’ follows a troubled detective and an enigmatic arson investigator as they pursue the trails of two serial arsonists.

    Egerton stars as the man with the talent for digging into fire crimes, Dave Gudsen, while Smollett is police detective Michelle Calderone.

    Perhaps most excitingly, especially to crime genre fans, the show has writing legend Dennis Lehane crafting all the episodes. Lehane, of course, already worked on ‘Black Bird’ with Egerton.

    And like that, this is inspired by a true story. Here, it’s a fictional tale inspired by truth.media’s acclaimed ‘Firebug’ podcast, which was hosted by Oscar and Emmy-winner Kary Antholis.

    On the directing side of things, Kari Skogland (who produces alongside Egerton and Lehane), Joe Chappelle, and Jim McKay will call the shots.

    Who else appears in ‘Smoke’?

    (L to R) John Leguizamo and Anna Chlumsky in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) John Leguizamo and Anna Chlumsky in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    The cast of also features Rafe Spall, Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine, Hannah Emily Anderson, Anna Chlumsky, Adina Porter, Greg Kinnear and John Leguizamo.

    What else is Taron Egerton working on?

    Taron Egerton in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Taron Egerton in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Egerton is typically in demand at the moment –– he was last on screens in Netflix airport thriller ‘Carry-On’ and has a few projects on the go in addition to ‘Smoke.’

    He recently shot director Nick Rowland’s movie ‘She Rides Shotgun,’ about a girl who is marked for death and must fight and steal to stay alive, learning from the most frightening man she knows: her father.

    The film, an adaptation of Jordan Harper’s award-winning novel, will see Egerton as Nate the father figure, a former gang member whose old cohorts put a hit on his family when he gets out of prison.

    There’s also a new action movie from filmmaker Baltasar Kormákur called ‘Apex’, with Charlize Theron as an adrenaline junkie who sets out to conquer a menacing river, only to discover that nature isn’t the only thing out for blood. Egerton is filming that one right now, with Eric Bana also in the cast.

    And finally, we have the ever-present possibility of a third ‘Kingsman’ movie, with Matthew Vaughn aiming to wrap up his spy trilogy with ‘Kingsman: The Blue Blood.’

    Yet following some financial flops for the director, the 20th Century Studios team seemed to indicate that we might not see the final ride for Egerton’s Eggsy and Colin Firth’s Harry Hart.

    But Egerton has been more positive on the subject, saying this to Screen Rant:

    “I don’t know, and I don’t want to speak out of school, but I don’t think that necessarily means that we won;t do it. I think Matthew and I very much want to do one more. I want to do one more. And so while, you know, we don’t have a shoot date yet, I think it could still happen.”

    That said, we’ve yet to see real forward movement, so file this under “maybe” for now.

    Where else can we see Jurnee Smollett?

    Jurnee Smollett in 'Smoke,' premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jurnee Smollett in ‘Smoke,’ premiering June 27, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Smollett, who was most recently found in another law enforcement role, this time with the FBI, in ‘The Order.’

    Coming up, she is preparing to work on ‘Sunflower,’ a new thriller about two women struggling to escape from a college professor who holds them hostage on a prison-like sunflower farm.

    Scott Speedman is co-starring in that movie, which comes from writer/director Misha Green, who worked with Smollett on ‘Lovecraft Country.’

    When will ‘Smoke’ arrive on the Apple TV+ service?

    Apple has confirmed that the first two episodes will launch on Friday, June 27th, with a new episode weekly until the finale on August 8th.

    Taron Egerton stars in 'Tetris,' premiering March 31, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Taron Egerton stars in ‘Tetris,’ premiering March 31, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    List of Taron Egerton Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Taron Egerton Movies on Amazon

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  • TV Review: ‘Severance’ Season 2

    Adam Scott in 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Adam Scott in ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    ‘Severance’ Season 2 receives 9 out of 10 stars.

    Returning to Apple TV+ for its second season with the first episode on January 17th, ‘Severance’ once is here again to interrogate the concept of work/life balance and spin more corporate mysteries around the worker drones of the weird, cult-like Lumon corporation.

    It has been a long wait, but as the second season picks up the dangling story threads with an accomplished, confident first episode, a worthwhile test of fans’ collective patience.

    Related Article: Patricia Arquette Talks ‘Severance’ and the show’s SAG Awards Nominations

    Does ‘Severance’ Season 2 meet its entertainment quota?

    (L to R) Tramell Tillman, Alia Shawkat, Stefano Carannante and Bob Balaban in 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Tramell Tillman, Alia Shawkat, Stefano Carannante and Bob Balaban in ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    ‘Severance’ first slid on to screens back in February 2022, and the stylish, unusual series immediately grabbed the public consciousness. With its unsettlingly stark visuals and science fiction take on the idea that your work life can, in the wrong situation, be a ceaseless slog, it almost immediately joined the ranks of shows such as ‘The Twilight Zone’ and ‘Black Mirror’ that explore such territory through fantastical means with just the lingering suspicion that it’s all too terrifyingly possible.

    The concept of “severance,” where employs seemingly agree to have their personalities cleaved in two so their work selves no nothing of what goes on in the outside world and vice-versa is such a fascinating one and here handled so effectively. It doesn’t hurt that the show boasts an excellent cast and superior creative team.

    You can almost imagine a secure set up such as the Pentagon wondering how it can employ this in real life, though the true strength of the show is in its delivery of metaphor and psychological thrills.

    Script and Direction

    Dan Erickson on set of 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Dan Erickson on set of ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Creator Dan Erickson came up with the basic idea for the show while working the sort of mind-numbing day job mirrored here. The real joy of ‘Severance’ is that Erickson and his writing team have spun that into all manner of creative territories. The show isn’t just about its mystery elements –– the characters are empathetic (and in some of the management, utterly creepy) and the sheer level of deep thought about every aspect of the Lumon company and its employees is worthy of applause.

    This is a corporation that is part factory, part data processing center and part near-religious cult, based around one legacy family. It’s almost surprising that a company such as Apple –– famously known for its own quirksome attitude to work and the cultish devotion of its customers –– would be the one to put this on screens.

    Ben Stiller on set of 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Ben Stiller on set of ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    The directorial team, led by Ben Stiller –– who is absolutely doing some of his best work here behind the camera –– has keyed into a visual style that is both clever and completely unsettling. Dividing the palette between the outside world and the sterile corporate shell of Lumon, it all helps tell the story. And Theodore Shapiro’s offbeat score amplifies it all, gliding between cheery tones and an eerie, winsome slide into melancholy that keeps you off-kilter.

    Season 2’s first episode picks up in the wake of the “innies” trying to break free and makes the interesting choice to focus on them at the expense of their outside world counterparts. But it works well, and episode 2 promises to explore more of the fallout for those who know them away from Lumon.

    ‘Severance’ Season 2: Performances

    Around star Adam Scott, the ‘Severance’ team has built a superb cast.

    Adam Scott as Mark Scout

    Adam Scott in 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Adam Scott in ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    The focus of the show is on Scott’s character and his decision to undergo the procedure partly because of the death of his wife (even as –– spoiler alert in case you haven’t yet caught up with the first season –– he learns she might actually be alive) left him wanting to shut out the pain and grief.

    Scott’s low-key delivery is perfectly suited to the tone of the show; you buy him as a man who seems to have accepted his lot… until he starts to worry there’s something he’s simply not being told.

    Zach Cherry as Dylan George

    (L to R) John Turturro and Zach Cherry in 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) John Turturro and Zach Cherry in ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Cherry has been a great supporting performer for years, and ‘Severance’ gives him a meatier part to play as Dylan, who along with Mark, becomes one of the “innies” to try and break free of the company’s control.

    Britt Lower as Helly Riggs

    Britt Lower in 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Britt Lower in ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    In the first season, Helly is our way of exploring the weird world of Lumon as she decides early on that she’s made a mistake. The latter part of Season 1 gave her more depth and a surprising twist, and while the first episode of Season 2 doesn’t directly explore that, it still gives Lower plenty to do, and she’s superb in the role.

    John Turturro as Irving Bailiff

    John Turturro in 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    John Turturro in ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    There’s no doubting Turturro’s chops at this stage of his career and sparked by the script, Irving’s a great character, initially loyal to Lumon, but quickly conflicted an angst-ridden. Turturro delivers a masterclass every episode.

    Tramell Tillman as Seth Milchick

    Tramell Tillman in 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Tramell Tillman in ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Following the ouster of Patricia Arquette’s Harmony Cobel in the latter part of Season 1, Tillman’s Milchick has moved into the role of smooth-yet-threatening corporate middle manager. And he’s got just the right level of smarm and deceit to twist our leads’ expectations and keep them guessing.

    Final Thoughts

    Patricia Arquette in 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Patricia Arquette in ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    It has been three years since the first season landed on Apple’s servers, and since then, the second has had to weather delays, strikes and a long post-production process, the gap between seasons causing fans some frustration.

    But like seeing a friendly colleague again after they’ve been away, it’s a very welcome return for a distinctive and well-crafted show. Step into the televisual elevator and let your “innie” enjoy sinking back into the world of the series.

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    What’s the story of ‘Severance’ Season 2?

    Mark Scout (Adam Scott) leads a team at Lumon Industries, whose employees have undergone a severance procedure that surgically divides their memories between their work and personal lives.

    This daring experiment in “work-life balance” is called into question as Mark finds himself at the center of an unraveling mystery that will force him to confront the true nature of his work… and of himself.

    In season two, Mark and his friends learn the dire consequences of trifling with the severance barrier, leading them further down a path of woe.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Severance’ Season 2?

    Adam Scott in 'Severance', now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Adam Scott in ‘Severance’, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Movies Directed By Ben Stiller:

    Buy Ben Stiller Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Catching Dust’ Interview: Erin Moriarty and Stuart Gatt

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    Opening in select theaters, as well as available on Apple TV and Prime Video on August 23rd is the new drama ‘Catching Dust’, which was written and directed by Stuart Gatt and stars Erin Moriarty (‘The Boys’), Jai Courtney (‘The Suicide Squad’), Dina Shihabi (‘Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan’) and Ryan Corr (‘Hacksaw Ridge’).

    Related Article: Antony Starr and Chace Crawford Talk ‘The Boys’ Season 4 and The Seven

    Erin Moriarty in 'Catching Dust'. Photo: Vertical.
    Erin Moriarty in ‘Catching Dust’. Photo: Vertical.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with actress Erin Moriarty and filmmaker Stuart Gatt about their work on ‘Catching Dust’, developing the screenplay, Moriarty’s approach to playing her character, her relationship with her husband, symbolic vultures, and the movie’s ambiguous ending.

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

    Director Stuart Gatt on the set of 'Catching Dust'. Photo: Vertical.
    Director Stuart Gatt on the set of ‘Catching Dust’. Photo: Vertical.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Stuart, can you talk about developing the screenplay and the themes that you wanted to explore as a director?

    Stuart Gatt: I had this idea of setting something in the American west, something that felt very expansive but also very isolated in terms of the story. This was one of those films, I think where it is not always like that, but you write, and you let the characters guide you in a way. A lot of the themes presented themselves to me as I got to know the script more and the story more. I realized that many of the themes were dealing with stuff that I’d grown up with like a single mom and understanding her journey with my dad. I think there’s elements of my mom in Geena and my dad in Clyde that felt in some ways like this film was some kind of therapy for me without realizing it when I was writing it. But it is interesting. I think when I look at it now, I’ve really taken a very personal thing and just transposed it on a world that’s totally different. Maybe that makes it a little bit easier for me to take in and process. The universal themes, I think because we do live in a world now where everyone feels so connected, but we’re probably the most disconnected we’ve ever been as a race. That was interesting to me that you had this character with Geena who was trying to understand who she was, she’s trying to understand her place in the world, her value, but she’s totally disconnected from it and it’s almost like an inverse of what we feel now. People are very connected but feel so disillusioned and so disconnected. I think it was an interesting way to explore it. I think what you’re trying to do when you’re writing really is you’re asking yourself, “Who can you put around this character right now? What’s the worst thing that can happen to her? Or the best thing that can happen to her in terms of these people that you put around her?” I think with Geena really trying to figure out who she is and these dreams of what the big city offers, she meets these people that have come from that place, and she seemingly believes that they’re the answers to all their prayers. She has this intense development with them, and all her beliefs are challenged so that by the end of the story, she’s not the same Geena that we met in those opening moments

    Erin Moriarty in 'Catching Dust'. Photo: Vertical.
    Erin Moriarty in ‘Catching Dust’. Photo: Vertical.

    MF: Erin, what was your first reaction to the screenplay and what was your approach to playing this character?

    Erin Moriarty: The screenplay and my approach to Geena, were very similar. I honestly was like, “Thank God,” because even the concept of this script having themes, which it does, of course it has motifs, it has all these components that any film does. I just love a film and a character that breaks all the boxes that you want to put it into. I felt like it did that. I just felt like any placement in this industry, however small, however large, that this can play, we just need to keep those projects going. Then with Geena, I just felt this feeling with her that I haven’t felt with many characters. It was a credit to Stuart. She’s written in a way where my heart is breaking for her but not in the typical way where she’s the ingenue and she’s the victim. It was for very complicated reasons that are almost ineffable. I knew that I needed to do a project and I’m going to get so much out of character when I feel like the stakes are high and I get nervous about making sure that I make every single moment of her emotional experience not drop. I needed everything to land even in an understated way, if not in an overt way, but she’s so complicated. For me I just love this new exploration of the paradoxical nature of being human, but also being a woman. I love that Stuart wrote a character that does, she surprises you and she’s paradoxical. That doesn’t mean she’s a bad person, it’s all in the gray, but it’s that paradoxical element to every character and the script itself and the psychological and emotional density that was present and dark. I liked that it was dark. I like a mess. I like playing messy characters. I remember talking to the boss (Eric Kripke) that I work with so often on ‘The Boys’ who created ‘The Boys’ and he taught me something, which is we think that by making a story broader and a character more generic, we’re going to have that character be more relatable. But the more specific the character and the storyline is, the more it will resonate with us. The fact that Stuart infused those specificities is what translates into a film that resonates. I think that’s why we think generic or general or reductive is the safer choice and it will apply to more people, but ironically it doesn’t.

    (L to R) Erin Moriarty and Jai Courtney in 'Catching Dust'. Photo: Vertical.
    (L to R) Erin Moriarty and Jai Courtney in ‘Catching Dust’. Photo: Vertical.

    MF: Can you talk about Geena’s marriage to Clyde and how that relationship changes when Andy and Amaya come into their lives?

    EM: It’s interesting because we’re conditioned to believe that we should not rely on extrinsically motivated opinions or just influences in general from others that we need to intrinsically define ourselves. Comparison is the thief of joy. I do believe that. Yet all these things are said, but there’s always something to contradict them. There must be a balance. I think we meet Geena, and I think it’s very powerful from the beginning that there’s something growing in her that is just an inherent curiosity. But the combination of that coexisting with her love for Clyde, which is painful because A, her curiosity means that she might need to ultimately depart the person she thought she would be with for the rest of her life, but also confront who he is. I think that’s one of the hardest things we can do. We tried to make very present in her that she comes from a suppressed background. When she falls madly in love, that’s enough. He does allow her to see so much. I will say that someone would otherwise label him as a suppressor, but he’s hurt. Hurt people, hurt people. I think he heals her in a way with how much he loves her, but to a certain point. I think that that dynamic and her relationship with Clyde is ultimately the thing that is so heartbreaking because she loves him so much and because she knows that she must confront the reality of who he is while she confronts the reality of who she is. To learn that the person you’ve loved and who has changed your life, and your life has been defined by this love, is not quite the person you thought they were, it doesn’t mean that it was all fake, and I don’t think it was at all. But it’s really complicated, and it brings up a lot of questions that I don’t think we often ask when it comes to love, because we usually start at the point at which the breakup is over, or the breakup is happening. But we were very intent on wanting to feel the love before it happened because that was just the mandatory precursor to feeling any of the emotional states. I’ll just quickly say that it’s so cool to me to explore a female character whose eyes are open via other characters, but it doesn’t negate the strength that she finds in the end or the power of her story just, it’s about how we metabolize these situations. She could have not done anything, but she did something and it was huge, and it took a lot more bravery than just being passive. I think it presents the fact that just because other people open your eyes it doesn’t mean that that’s what determines your strength or how you behave in reaction to those moments in your life. She behaves in a way that is, I think, so painful for her, but so necessary. She puts her oxygen mask on for the first time in her life.

    Jai Courtney in 'Catching Dust'. Photo: Vertical.
    Jai Courtney in ‘Catching Dust’. Photo: Vertical.

    MF: Finally, Stuart, can you talk about the symbolism of the vultures that are seen in the movie, and the choice to make the ending ambiguous?

    SG: With the birds, it’s more than just the birds, I wanted to play with this idea that nature understood there was this impending death and destruction and this cataclysmic event that’s developing there. It starts with Clyde, and he says he went hunting and everything had buried itself away. We see the vultures that are circling early on, the sense of death. By the end, when we’re close to the end, it’s huge amounts of vultures circling. But we also see it with the tortoise, we see it with the snake, everything is slowly gravitating towards or away from the one little nucleus in the middle of Big Bend Texas. Regarding the end, you will never have me explain certain things. The one thing I will say though is of course there’s an element of ambiguity to it because it’s not a very spoon-fed ending. But I think it’s one of those things that I would not be doing my job if I was trying to spoon-feed the audience what they take away from it. That’s all I’ll say.

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    What is the plot of ‘Catching Dust’?

    Geena (Erin Moriarty) and her outlaw spouse Clyde (Jai Courtney) have taken refuge in a solitary trailer on a deserted community in Texas’ Big Bend. Tired of his autocratic ways, Geena plans to escape, when a new trailer shows up with a pair from New York (Dina Shihabi and Ryan Corr). Geena persuades Clyde to let them stay, despite the dangers they will bring, a choice that leads to serious trouble for everyone.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Catching Dust’?

    • Erin Moriarty as Geena
    • Jai Courtney as Clyde
    • Dina Shihabi as Amaya
    • Ryan Corr as Andy
    'Catching Dust' opens in select theaters on August 23rd.
    ‘Catching Dust’ opens in select theaters on August 23rd.

    Erin Moriarty Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Catching Dust’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Erin Moriarty 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: ‘The Instigators’

    Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    In theaters now and streaming on Apple TV+ on August 9 is ‘The Instigators,’ directed by Doug Liman and starring Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau, Michael Stuhlbarg, Alfred Molina, Ving Rhames, Paul Walter Hauser, Toby Jones, and Ron Perlman.

    Related Article: First look at Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’ Pictures

    Initial Thoughts

    Matt Damon and Casey Affleck promoting 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Casey Affleck promoting ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Doug Liman hasn’t had a good time with his chosen profession in recent years. The director’s last three efforts, ‘Chaos Walking,’ ‘Locked Down,’ and ‘Road House,’ have all ranged somewhere between mediocre and unwatchable, a steep fall for the filmmaker who once brought us ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ and ‘The Bourne Identity.’ His latest outing, the crime caper comedy ‘The Instigators,’ isn’t a great piece of work, but it’s considerably more entertaining that his previous few films even if it runs into its own problems.

    Much of the entertainment value comes from stars Matt Damon and Casey Affleck (the latter of whom also co-wrote the screenplay with fellow Bostonian Chuck Maclean), whose longtime real-life friendship translates easily into an onscreen chemistry even as their characters are mostly at odds with each other. The two leads are backed up by a generously stacked cast, including the likes of Hong Chau, Ron Perlman, Alfred Molina, Michael Stuhlbarg, and others, all of whom are terrific to watch even if some of them get short-changed by the shaggy script. Like Affleck’s character, a cynical ex-con who’s smarter and has a bigger mouth than everyone else in the room, ‘The Instigators’ is fun until it becomes irritating.

    Story and Direction

    Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Casey Affleck, director Doug Liman and Matt Damon on the set of ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Damon plays Rory, a divorced ex-Marine who has fallen on hard times and is hinting enough at suicide to alarm his therapist, Dr. Rivera (Chau). But before Rory can “cash in his ticket,” as he says, he has one thing left to do: he wants to see his son, but in order to make that happen he needs to settle exactly $32,480 in child support and other payments. And the only way for him to do that is to participate in a heist being orchestrated by lower-tier mob boss Mr. Besegai (Stuhlbarg) and his right-hand man Richie (Molina), who operate out of a local bakery.

    Besegai’s plan is for a small group of thieves to infiltrate the election headquarters of the corrupt Mayor Miccelli (Perlman), whose re-election is all but reassured and who collects a staggering amount of cash “gifts” every election night from stakeholders who want to curry favor with him. The idea is to go in after the election night party is over and stick the place up, grabbing the cash from the mayor and escaping by boat behind the building. In addition to Rory, the crew will consist of Cobby (Affleck) and Scalvo (Jack Harlow), the latter a hot-headed hood who Mr. Besegai puts in charge of the operation.

    Aside from Scalvo being trigger-happy and Rory being utterly inexperienced at crime (plus depressed and none-too-bright), a series of other variables – such as Miccelli losing the election in an upset – turns the plan completely upside-down. This is the best part of ‘The Instigators’: normally a film like this leads up to the big heist in the third act, and even if things go wrong, the crew improvises their way through it. Here the caper goes sideways in the first half-hour, with every carefully laid-out aspect of the plan going completely in the opposite direction.

    Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau and director Doug Liman from Apple Original Films’ “The Instigators” make an appearance at View Boston.
    (L to R) Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau and director Doug Liman from Apple Original Films’ “The Instigators” make an appearance at View Boston. Photo: Marion Curtis / Starpix for Apple Original Films.

    That leaves Rory and an injured Cobby as unlikely partners and fugitives, fleeing the scene with little cash but with a piece of personal property that’s extremely valuable to the bellowing mayor. After its offbeat first third, ‘The Instigators’ becomes more episodic and unbelievable as Rory and Cobby go on the run, evading hitmen and corrupt cops (including one menacing Special Ops officer played by Ving Rhames) through a series of chases, explosions, and narrow escapes — with Dr. Rivera somehow hitching along as a fake hostage.

    The contrivances necessary to get Rivera into and out of the situation, then back in it again later, also lead to some of the most tonally off moments in the movie. One extended, destructive chase sequence finds Rivera dispensing cliched therapeutic bromides to Rory (“Think about the person you want to be,” she offers improbably) as they careen through the streets of Beantown with a dozen police cars in pursuit. Because this is essentially a comedy, the stakes never feel as real as they could – even with compromised cops, seedy lowlife thugs, and political corruption rampant throughout the story, the script and Liman’s freewheeling direction keep this light and all on a surface level, leading to a somewhat tiresome finale.

    The Cast

    Hong Chau, Casey Affleck and Matt Damon in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Hong Chau, Casey Affleck and Matt Damon in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Even as the air starts to seep out of the script, ‘The Instigators’ (an odd title, since Rory and Cobby don’t instigate anything, but merely react to their changing circumstances) is kept buoyant through its ensemble of sturdy, always reliable players. As mentioned earlier, Damon and Affleck provide most of the appeal here: the way that Damon’s morose straight man and Affleck’s jaded, seen-it-all crook bounce off each other provides most of the movie’s fun. Damon’s Rory has a wounded working-class decency, a guy who’s been pushed to the edge both by his own mistakes and things not in his control who only gradually retakes command of his own destiny as best he can.

    Affleck’s Cobby is the source of most of the movie’s humor, as his disaffected demeanor, rogue-ish charm, and constant barrage of jokes, pokes, and non-sequiturs hide a street-level, quick-on-his-feet intelligence that gets him and Rory both into and out of every scrape. He becomes irritating not just to his targets but to us as well, and we’re kind of onboard when some of those targets tell him to shut the f**k up.

    Hong Chau is always superb even though she has the least plausible material to work with and a character who verges in the edge of “therapist stereotype.” The rest, especially Stuhlbarg, Molina, Toby Jones (as Miccelli’s mild-mannered accountant), and Perlman as his Trumpy, self-serving boss, are all a pleasure to watch even if their characters are paper-thin.

    Final Thoughts

    Casey Affleck and Matt Damon promoting 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Casey Affleck and Matt Damon promoting ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    “Paper-thin” is a good way to describe ‘The Instigators’: it all operates on a surface level, never resonating emotionally too much and not quite settling on the right balance of comedy, action, and crime thriller. It will make you laugh – or perhaps chuckle quietly – without building to a real comic crescendo.

    Yet Liman keeps it all moving (only the extended finale drags out a bit), gets us in and out of the story in 90 minutes, and provides ample opportunity to watch Damon and Affleck have some fun. There are far worse ways to spend an hour-and-a-half – including a few that Doug Liman has provided before this.

    ‘The Instigators’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Instigators’?

    A desperate, depressed dad (Matt Damon) and a cynical, wisecracking ex-con (Casey Affleck) find themselves roped into a brazen robbery that quickly goes sideways, with the unlikely duo soon hunted by hitmen, the police, the corrupt mayor of Boston, and the dad’s very concerned therapist (Hong Chau).

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Instigators’?

    • Matt Damon as Rory
    • Casey Affleck as Cobby
    • Hong Chau as Dr. Donna Rivera
    • Paul Walter Hauser as Booch
    • Michael Stuhlbarg as Mr. Besegai
    • Ving Rhames as Frank Toomey
    • Alfred Molina as Richie Dechico
    • Toby Jones as Alan Flynn
    • Jack Harlow as Scalvo
    • Ron Perlman as Mayor Miccelli
    Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in 'The Instigators'.
    (L to R) Matt Damon and Casey Affleck in ‘The Instigators’. Photo: Apple TV+.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The Instigators’:

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  • TV Review: ‘Presumed Innocent’

    Jake Gyllenhaal and Renate Reinsve in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Jake Gyllenhaal and Renate Reinsve in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Launching on Apple TV+ on Wednesday June 12th with its first two episodes (before arriving weekly), ‘Presumed Innocent’ represents the latest attempt to capture a story in a new medium.

    While not a direct remake of the 1990 Harrison Ford movie (co-written and directed by Alan J. Pakula), this new adaptation of Scott Turow’s 1987 novel finds Jake Gyllenhaal taking over the role of Rusty Sabich, a prosecutor who finds himself in the middle of a legal firestorm when he becomes the prime suspect in the murder of a colleague with whom he used to have a passionate affair.

    Related Article: Actor Manuel Garcia-Rulfo Talks Legal Drama ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’

    Does ‘Presumed Innocent’ Acquit Itself Effectively?

    Jake Gyllenhaal and Bill Camp in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Jake Gyllenhaal and Bill Camp in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    ‘Presumed Innocent’ both benefits and finds a disadvantage in the expanded runtime offered by a series adaptation. It has the scope and space to explore the story more fully than a movie might, yet in places tends to instead plump for filler that doesn’t always add much in the way of value.

    Storylines beyond Gyllenhaal’s central narrative tend to suffer somewhat from that bloat; while it’s good to see the role of his wife (played by Ruth Negga) given more shading, what the producers choose to highlight isn’t always as compelling as it might have been.

    ‘Presumed Innocent’: Script and Direction

    O-T Fagbenle and Peter Sarsgaard in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) O-T Fagbenle and Peter Sarsgaard in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Legal thrillers that feature a hefty chunk of courtroom time can be tough to pull off, yet ‘Presumed Innocent’ is in the seemingly safe hands of David E. Kelley, the man behind such shows as ‘The Practice’, ‘Ally McBeal’ and, more recently, Netflix’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’.

    Yet even he has proved to not always be quite so reliable, the likes of another Netflix effort, ‘A Man in Full’ proving to have gotten away from him. ‘Presumed Innocent’ is certainly more effective than that rambling effort, especially when focused on Gyllenhaal’s character’s legal dilemma.

    There are still issues –– including the brutality of the murder and the inclusion of sex scenes that go beyond simply helping to tell the story and becoming gratuitous at times.

    Nana Mensah and Noma Dumezweni in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Nana Mensah and Noma Dumezweni in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Director Anne Sewitsky (‘Castle Rock’, ‘Black Mirror’) is among the executive producers and handles the first two episodes and episode eight, while Emmy Greg Yaitanes (‘House’, ‘House of the Dragon’) holds a similar producer role and directs episodes three through seven.

    In true Apple style, the result is stylish and clearly expensive (check out some of the houses on display, and there is a solid chunk of location work), but it’s also sometimes a little overly grim and washed out in terms of color. While the show is naturally serious in tone, it’s sometimes less than thrilling directorially.

    ‘Presumed Innocent’: Performances

    Jake Gyllenhaal in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Jake Gyllenhaal in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Gyllenhaal is here credited as an executive producer, so he’s obviously had some impact on the role. He plays Sabich with typical, slightly smug intensity and it’s hard not to wonder in the early going whether he was the wrong choice for the role, especially given the stamp Harrison Ford put on it in the movie version.

    Yet as he eases into the part and Sabich’s world starts to disintegrate in the wake of the accusation, things certainly improve, and he brings plenty to the central part. Sabich is a watchable character to follow as he becomes more and more desperate, ever more willing to stretch the bounds of the law to help his case.

    Ruth Negga as Barbara Sabich

    Ruth Negga and Jake Gyllenhaal in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Ruth Negga and Jake Gyllenhaal in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Negga, a veteran of roles in shows and movies including ‘Preacher’ and ‘Loving’, is always impressive, though here she’s sometimes hamstrung by the material the show gives her to work with. As her connection to her husband becomes distant upon learning what he’s suspected of, she spirals. Though her therapy sessions with Dr. Liz Rush (Lily Rabe) are effective, her own explorations of a relationship outside her marriage are less well considered. Still, Negga gives it her all.

    Bill Camp as District Attorney Raymond Horgan

    Jake Gyllenhaal and Bill Camp in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Jake Gyllenhaal and Bill Camp in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Bill Camp is, of course, a workhorse character actor and if we started to list his credits, we’d be writing a novel. But suffice to say he’s predictably excellent as Sabich’s mentor and a conflicted DA who soon finds his own job at risk. Camp plays rumpled, smart, cynical characters like no other, and here, he’s on his A game.

    Peter Sarsgaard as Chief Deputy Prosecutor Tommy Molto

    Peter Sarsgaard in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Peter Sarsgaard in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    Peter Sarsgaard gives good creep as the smug, driven lawyer who replaces Sabich on his case and then starts to make him the focus of the murder investigation. He and Gyllenhaal have good, spiky chemistry as rivals.

    O-T Fagbenle as DA Nico Della Guardia

    O-T Fagbenle and Jake Gyllenhaal in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) O-T Fagbenle and Jake Gyllenhaal in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    O-T Fagbenle is perhaps one of the more confounding chances of the show –– not the actor, but the voice he chose (or the producers landed upon for him). He sounds for all the world like Walter Peck from ‘Ghostbusters’ and his weird, raspy delivery is off-putting, even as the actor does good work as an ambitious, scuzzy DA.

    ‘Presumed Innocent’: Final Thoughts

    Lily Rabe in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Lily Rabe in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

    ‘Presumed Innocent’ holds up well compared to the movie version despite its challenges. Naturally concerned about spoilers, Apple didn’t offer up the final episode, so we can’t say for sure if it sticks the landing, but from what was provided, it’s certainly an entertaining, if flawed legal drama that boasts a fine central performance.

    It’s gripping in places and makes for a captivating watch, which says something in the crowded field of legal drama.

    ‘Presumed Innocent’: Receives 5.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the story of ‘Presumed Innocent’?

    ‘Presumed Innocent’ stars Gyllenhaal as chief deputy prosecutor Rusty Sabich, as a horrific murder that upends the Chicago Prosecuting Attorney’s office when one of its own is suspected of the crime.

    The series explores obsession, sex, politics, and the power and limits of love, as the accused fights to hold his family and marriage together.

    Who else stars in ‘Presumed Innocent’?

    The cast for ‘Presumed Innocent’ also includes Ruth Negga, Bill Camp, Elizabeth Marvel, Peter Sarsgaard, O-T Fagbenle and Renate Reinsve.

    Jake Gyllenhaal in 'Presumed Innocent,' premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.
    Jake Gyllenhaal in ‘Presumed Innocent,’ premiering June 12, 2024 on Apple TV+.

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