Tag: armie-hammer

  • ‘Frontier Crucible’ Interview: Thomas Jane

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    Opening in theaters and digital on December 5th is the new Western ‘Frontier Crucible‘, which was based on the book ‘Desert Stake-Out’ by author Harry Whittington and directed by Travis Mills (‘The Five’).

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    The film stars Myles Clohessy (‘Blue Bloods’), Mary Stickley (‘Harvest’), Ryan Masson (‘The Last of Us’), Thomas Jane (‘Boogie Nights’ and ‘The Punisher‘), Armie Hammer (‘The Social Network’), and William H. Macy (‘Fargo’).

    Thomas Jane as “‘Mule’ Charlie McKee” in the western/thriller/drama film, 'Frontier Crucible', a Well Go USA film. Photo courtesy of Well Go USA.
    Thomas Jane as “‘Mule’ Charlie McKee” in the western/thriller/drama film, ‘Frontier Crucible’, a Well Go USA film. Photo courtesy of Well Go USA.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Thomas Jane about his work on ‘Frontier Crucible’, his first reaction to the screenplay, the challenges of making a Western, his character, working with the cast, and collaborating with director Travis Mills on set.

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

    Related Article: Actor Thomas Jane Talks New Western ‘Murder at Yellowstone City’

    Thomas Jane stars in 'Frontier Crucible'.
    Thomas Jane stars in ‘Frontier Crucible’.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and the adaption of author Harry Whittington’s novel?

    Thomas Jane: Well, Whittington was known as the “King of the Pulps”, and he wrote in the 1950s and’60s. They called him the “King of Pulps”, because I think he’s got the world record for the greatest number of pulp novels ever written by an author. Out of the hundreds of novels that he wrote about six are good, which is a good record. He’s got six strong novels that are worth anybody’s time who loves the Pulp stuff. One of them is ‘Desert Stakeout’, and the screenplay was adapted by S. Craig Zahler who wrote ‘Bone Tomahawk’, and I don’t even know if I’m supposed to say that. Nobody told me not to say it. But he’s an uncredited writer, and he borrowed heavily from the book, and no surprise, Whittington had a knack for great dialogue and great characters. It was really his thing. Every story that he approached, he didn’t come through the plot, he came through the character. So, for adaptations, it’s perfect, and they’ve adapted a few Harry Whittington novels over the years. This one, you read it and you’re like, “Why wasn’t this done like 30 years ago?” It really sings. So, we had a lot of fun. We had a lot to work with. We had great dialogue.

    MF: I know you have appeared in quite a few Westerns in the past, what do you enjoy about the genre and what are the biggest challenges of making a movie like this?

    TJ: Well, the challenges are always like, we need to make more Westerns, and trying to keep the fan base alive in 2025 is difficult. It’s difficult with all movies, but now, with a good Western, people will watch it. They like it. I produced a Western called ‘Murder at Yellowstone City’, which made it the number one on Netflix. So, if you do a good Western, people will watch it, and there is an audience. It’s just getting a great story. It’s getting people that really know the genre and love the genre. Travis Mills certainly loves the genre, I think he wrote a book where he’s got like 200 Western movies that he reviewed, and now he’s releasing a book on all his Western reviews. So, he’s a real student of the genre. That was fun. It’s always good when your director knows his stuff. I loved that Travis wanted to recreate the way Westerns used to be made in the ’50s and ’60s. This movie has a look that feels like it could have been made in 1965. So that was fun. I’m a fan, in other words. The challenges for an actor are really the positives, the things that I love about Westerns. I love the fact that most Westerns either implicitly or explicitly deal with the civilization of man, and there are laws and are rules, and then the wild West is the lawless land where you must make up these rules. You’re guided by a moral code. Everyone has their own moral code and their own interpretation of the moral code. Like, “Thou shalt not kill”, although that’s negotiable in certain circumstances for some people. That makes it fun.

    (Center) Armie Hammer as “Edmund Fisher” in the western/thriller/drama film, 'Frontier Crucible', a Well Go USA film. Photo courtesy of Well Go USA.
    (Center) Armie Hammer as “Edmund Fisher” in the western/thriller/drama film, ‘Frontier Crucible’, a Well Go USA film. Photo courtesy of Well Go USA.

    MF: Can you talk about your character’s gang and creating those relationships with your scene partners, Armie Hammer and Ryan Masson?

    TJ: My character thinks he’s a good guy, and I think 98% of him is a decent man. I think some bad things happen to him, and he lost his way a little bit. But the darkness of his heart is revealed by the company that he keeps. You find that’s true with most people in life. It’s the company that you keep that tells you something about who they are, and who they think they are. So, that’s Armie’s role in the thing. He’s the dark heart of the gang, and we’re constantly having trouble reining him in. It’s a lot of fun. Armie had a lot of fun. He leaned into all of that. I really had a good time working with everybody. Armie’s are an intelligent guy, and a soulful guy. He’s done a lot of work on himself, and it shows, he’s stepped up. People step up or they step down and Armie stepped up. So, I’d worked with the guy again in a heartbeat. I think he’s terrific. Everybody else is young. finding their way. We, as the old pros, tried to help them as best we could.

    MF: I was not familiar with Myles Clohessy or Mary Stickley’s work before seeing this film. What was your experience like working with them on this movie?

    TJ: Myles came from another project (producer) Dallas Sonnier had done, and he certainly looks like a leading man, and he’s learning what that entails. It’s a very different set of rules when you’re the leading man or the leading lady than it is if you’re a supporting character. I like the supporting characters. I’ve gotten a chance to play a lot of leads and I’m grateful for that. But I love the character stuff. It’s what got me into this thing in the first place. Now I’m getting a little older and I’m finding more opportunities to flex those muscles. It gives me a little more freedom. I don’t have the movie that I’m carrying on my back, and I get to have a little more fun.

    (Center Foreground) Director Travis Mills behind the scenes on the western/thriller/drama film, 'Frontier Crucible', a Well Go USA film. Photo courtesy of Gene Page.
    (Center Foreground) Director Travis Mills behind the scenes on the western/thriller/drama film, ‘Frontier Crucible’, a Well Go USA film. Photo courtesy of Gene Page.

    MF: Finally, what was it like collaborating with director Travis Mills on set, particularly in the remote locations that you were shooting in?

    TJ: Director Anthony Mann did a bunch of Westerns in the ’50s and ’60s, and he says, “Anytime you can get on location, you got to do it”. It brings the show to life, and it brings the actors to life. They feel grounded. They’re in the world that the characters live in, and that was certainly true for this. We had one location, we showed up there every day. We got into our costumes, and we were staying at a hotel. It was about a half hour away and our dressing room was in the hotel. They took a couple of hotel rooms and turned them into a dressing room. So, we would show up, we’d roll out of bed, stumble downstairs, grab a cup of coffee, and then hit the dressing room, where all the actors would change together, which is exactly what you do in theater. There’s one place, it’s called backstage, and that’s where you got into your outfit. So, we had that morning ritual of everybody putting on their costumes, at usually 4:30am because we had to capture the daylight. We had to be out there at the crack of dawn. Then we’d shoot until we couldn’t shoot anymore. So that community, that camaraderie, and the fact that our characters were also stuck together waiting for bad things to happen, that was fun. I got to tell you; it was unique. Normally, you hit set, you hit your trailer, you get your coffee, and you have those moments alone. We didn’t have any trailers on this. Another great thing about making a lower budget movie is the locations. We never would have been able to shoot there if it were a bigger film because there’s nowhere to put all the trucks. You’d have to put them way far away and then shuttle everybody. But we were able to just show up and me and Armie started building fires and making our own coffee over a campfire. We were making cowboy coffee. We would do that all day. We’d keep the fire going, and other actors would come around, and throw wood on the fire. We just had a little fire going all day. So, it was a unique experience. Travis created that. We all signed up. We knew what we were getting into. He’s like, “This is what I want to do.” He wanted to create that period feel to everything and I think he did a darn good job with that.

    You can pre-order the ‘Frontier Crucible’ here

    (L to R) William H. Macy as “Major O’Rourke” and Director Travis Mills behind the scenes on the western/thriller/drama film, 'Frontier Crucible', a Well Go USA film. Photo courtesy of Gene Page.
    (L to R) William H. Macy as “Major O’Rourke” and Director Travis Mills behind the scenes on the western/thriller/drama film, ‘Frontier Crucible’, a Well Go USA film. Photo courtesy of Gene Page.

    What is the plot of ‘Frontier Crucible’?

    In 1870s Arizona Territory, a desperately needed wagon full of medical supplies falls victim to an Apache attack. The only man who can guide it through is Merrick Beckford (Myles Clohessy), but to get there, he’ll need to enlist the help of a trio of dangerous outlaws (Thomas Jane, Arie Hammer and Ryan Masson) hellbent on survival. When they accidentally kill an Apache scout, all bets are off, and survival is the name of the game.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Frontier Crucible’?

    'Frontier Crucible' opens in theaters and digital on December 5th.
    ‘Frontier Crucible’ opens in theaters and digital on December 5th.

    List of Western Movies and TV Shows:’

    Buy Thomas Jane Movies On Amazon

  • Armie Hammer to Star in Vigilante Movie ‘The Dark Knight’

    Armie Hammer attends the Academy’s 2018 Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, CA, on Sunday, November 18, 2018. Credit/Provider: Troy Harvey / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Armie Hammer attends the Academy’s 2018 Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, CA, on Sunday, November 18, 2018. Credit/Provider: Troy Harvey / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Preview:

    • Armie Hammer is starring in ‘The Dark Knight.’
    • He’ll play a man who becomes a social media vigilante.
    • Uwe Boll’s in the director’s chair.

    There was a time when Armie Hammer was one of the hottest rising stars around. After a few years paying his dues, he scored a notable role in David Fincher’s ‘The Social Network’ playing (thanks to some effects trickery and an assist from Josh Pence) both entitled twins Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss.

    Other parts followed, and he began to juggle respected indies (‘Call Me by Your Name’) with big-budget studio work (including ‘The Man from U.N.C.L.E.’ and ‘The Lone Ranger,’ even if neither one truly set the box office alight).

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    Then came the seeming flame-out. In February 2021, woman identified as Effie reported Hammer to the police, alleging that he had been physically abusive during an on-and-off relationship that spanned four years, and that he had violently raped her in 2017. Hammer vehemently denied her allegations.

    Allegations against Hammer first exploded on social media via an Instagram account run by the initial accuser. Other women soon joined with their own allegations on social media, creating a flurry of viral headlines, including accusations of cannibalistic and BDSM fetishes that women said were used as a smokescreen for emotional and physical abuse.

    Armie Hammer arrives on the red carpet of The 90th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, March 4, 2018. Credit/Provider: Matt Petit / A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: A.M.P.A.S.
    Armie Hammer arrives on the red carpet of The 90th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, March 4, 2018. Credit/Provider: Matt Petit / A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: A.M.P.A.S.

    It torpedoed Hammer’s career and the work began to dry up –– Disney went as far as minimizing his presence in trailers for 2022’s Poirot movie ‘Death on the Nile’ and he’s had little opportunities since, pleading poverty (despite coming from a very wealthy family) and saying he’s had to take jobs outside the industry.

    But following a lengthy probe, Los Angeles prosecutors in 2023 declined to charge the actor with any crime, and now it appears he’s being offered acting roles again.

    During a recent podcast interview, Hammer said that his acting career has picked up so much that he’s started to turn jobs down:

    “My dance card’s getting pretty full. That first job that I turned down after four years of this shit, I mean, it was the best feeling I’ve ever had.”

    And following on from one completed gig, Travis Mills’ forthcoming western ‘Frontier Crucible,’ which also stars Thomas Jane and William H. Macy, he’s now signed to star for a director who knows a little something about controversy –– Uwe Boll.

    Boll is putting together a new movie called ‘The Dark Knight’ –– no, nothing to do with Batman, though it shares some similar themes with DC’s brooding hero (and it’s a weird coincidence that one of Hammer’s pre-scandal jobs was as Batman in George Miller’s cancelled ‘Justice League’ movie.)

    Related Article: Armie Hammer’s Aunt Casey Hammer Talks New Discovery+ Series

    What’s the story of ‘The Dark Knight’?

    Armie Hammer in 2015's 'The Man from U.N.C.L.E.' Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Armie Hammer in 2015’s ‘The Man from U.N.C.L.E.’ Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Boll’s latest, based on his own script, will see Hammer playing a man named Sanders, who takes justice into his own hands as he sets out to hunt down criminals.

    While his crusade transforms him into a social media sensation and a hero in the eyes of the public, the local police chief sees him as a menace to society and aims to take him down.

    Here’s what Boll told Variety about the new film:

    “The story of ‘The Dark Knight’ couldn’t be a more current topic, and I’m excited to bring it to life with this excellent cast.

    Producer Michael Roesch, meanwhile, was quick to point out that they’re not making a Batman pic:

    “Our movie is very different from Chris Nolan’s movie, so there is no danger of confusion.”

    No, Batman is only the story of a man named Bruce Wayne, who takes justice into his own hands as he sets out to hunt down criminals. His (caped) crusade transforms him into a folk legend in the eyes of the public, but the police (beyond one friendly commissioner) aren’t always so sure. Completely different. Will “Sanders” have wonderful toys? The people demand to know.

    Boll intends to start filming later this month in Croatia.

    What else has Uwe Boll made?

    Uwe Boll in 'Raging Boll'.
    Uwe Boll in ‘Raging Boll’.

    Boll is best known as the troublemaking German filmmaker behind movies such as marks Boll’s 37th film. ‘In the Name of the King’ starring Jason Statham, ‘Postal’ and the ‘Rampage’ trilogy (nothing to do with the giant beasts fighting film), and such socially conscious (though it’s stretching things to describe them as that) output as ‘Attack on Darfur’ and ‘Assault on Wall Street.’

    He’s a man who will go to any lengths to promote his work, including getting in the boxing ring to take on critics. His movies rarely seem to score great reviews, but he keeps on churning them out –– ‘The Dark Knight’ will mark his 37th film.

    He most recently saw cop thriller ‘First Shift,’ starring Gino Anthony Pesi and Kristen Renton become a surprise hit on Paramount+ this past December, and that will be followed by ‘Run,’ the story of migrants arriving in a small Italian town, which stars Amanda Plummer, James Russo, Ulrich Thomsen and Barkhad Abdi, and is locking down domestic distribution.

    When will ‘The Dark Knight’ be in cinemas?

    Though shooting is kicking off soon, Boll has yet to set a date –– or indeed a distribution home yet.

    Armie Hammer arrives on the red carpet of The 90th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, March 4, 2018. Credit/Provider: Michael Baker / A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: A.M.P.A.S.
    Armie Hammer arrives on the red carpet of The 90th Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, March 4, 2018. Credit/Provider: Michael Baker / A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: A.M.P.A.S.

    List of Armie Hammer Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Armie Hammer Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘House of Hammer’ Interview: Casey Hammer Talks New Docuseries

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    Premiering on Discovery+ beginning September 2nd is the new three-part documentary series ‘House of Hammer,’ which was directed by Elli Hakami and Julian P. Hobbs.

    The series revolves around the life of disgraced American actor Armie Hammer and the alleged crimes of his famous wealthy family. In 2021 the actor was accused of sexual abuse and cannibalistic fetishism by several of his ex-girlfriends, which has derailed his successful career, marriage, and overall life.

    Hammer’s Aunt, Casey Hammer, serves as a consultant on the project and is also interviewed in the series.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Casey Hammer about ‘House of Hammer,’ how she got involved in the project, the shocking truth about her powerful family, and her nephew’s public downfall.

    Armie Hammer in 2015's 'The Man from U.N.C.L.E.'
    Armie Hammer in 2015’s ‘The Man from U.N.C.L.E.’

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interview with Casey Hammer about ‘House of Hammer.’

    Moviefone: To begin with, how were you approached to be part of this documentary series?

    Casey Hammer: So, how this all kind of happened was about eight years ago I wrote an autobiography called “Surviving My Birthright,” and I self-published it. It was more of a healing journal for me and to make sense of how I grew up in the process, and that it wasn’t okay. When I received the first copy, I was holding it, and it’s like I manifested it, my story is real. “I’m validated, right?” Every now and then someone might find it, because again it was self-published on Amazon.

    Then fast forward last year, I’m working as a kitchen designer at Home Depot in San Diego and one of my coworkers are like, “Casey you better get on TikTok, someone by the name of “The Zen Blonde” is blowing up your life.” I was like, “What?” I’m social media challenged anyway. So, we get online and I watch Lauren Skae read my book and in two hours I went from 500 followers to 5,000. I saw the power of social media and I was like, “What is happening?”

    All of a sudden everything was out of control. I didn’t choose to put any of that out there or want to come forward, and it was like being on a death drop of a rollercoaster. In that moment, I really believe the universe said to me, “Casey, you have an opportunity.” As Armie was imploding, I was getting calls from the media once they found out he had an aunt, and they wanted a sound bite.

    I didn’t want to participate in his implosion. It was like, how can I turn this into something positive? So, it was to be an advocate for victims and survivors, and that’s kind of how that happened. Then the producers reached out to me and said, “We read your book, and we want to tell your story.” I thought, this is how it continues.

    It’s through my eyes. In a sense of you may tune in to watch it because of Armie or the entertainment value, but by the time you finish watching three hours of my family, you are going to be incensed and furious. You’re going to see multi-generational abuse and how none of them have ever been held accountable. It’s a pattern. You don’t just wake up one day and become a monster, it’s a learned behavior.

    But again, I had no idea that the victims were going to come forward and speak, or that other people would corroborate my story. I take my hat off to them because they’re doing real time. I lived with this for 62 years, but the victims are probably being attacked on social media. I know how harsh that can be. So again, for them to bravely speak, it just means the world to me and hopefully helps other people come forward.

    MF: Since the subject of the series is your own family, was there ever any hesitancy on your part to be involved with this project?

    CH: Absolutely. I think that when you’re on the right path, again, I have self-medicated my whole life, and it’s only been the last year and a half that I have not. So, I’m sitting with emotions and triggers, and trying to figure out my life. I think when you’re on your path, it happens very quickly.

    It doesn’t give you time to process and be like, is this a good idea or not? It’s kind of like, okay, check in with your gut. This feels good, I’m helping people, and you keep going. You don’t have time to necessarily stop and say, “Wow, was that the right choice?” I try not to live with regrets. So, I try and choose in the moment. And again, with me, you make a choice, and if you don’t like the way it feels or what it’s doing, you can choose something else.

    So, it’s all new. Like I said, I didn’t go looking for it. I just know that my family is very powerful, and still has a lot of money and fame behind them. The way I grew up, when you walked out the front door, you were camera ready. You lived a perfect life. You were controlled by my grandfather who controlled the narrative, and you didn’t mess up or you were punished and threatened of being disowned or abused.

    There’re all kinds of things that I detail a lot more in my book that we didn’t have time to go into because we only had three hours. But it’s pretty horrific to know that the men get away with this and continue to get away with it.

    MF: Can you talk about the behavior you noticed growing up from the men in your family? Was their disrespectful treatment of women something that was taught to each new generation of male heirs, or rather just witnessed behavior that they eventually learned?

    CH: I mean, again, my mom left my father, and my father was an only child. When my mom left my father, my grandfather destroyed her in court. So, at a very early age, I saw what he was capable of doing. So, you lived in fear. I know that I was put in a lot of situations that as a child I shouldn’t be. I mean in ‘House of Hammer’ you see I’m 11 years old holding a phone book while my father shot at it (with a gun) in front of people. It’s like I was a party trick.

    But again, I kept going back thinking that my father loved me, that my mom loved me, and that all of this is normal and what normal families do. Without social media, you can’t Google, “What do wealthy families act like?” You just kind of existed. It wasn’t like I could go to the neighbors and ask if that was normal, because if my grandfather caught wind that I was asking, misbehaving or talking, I was in big trouble.

    So again, you’re groomed in a way because that’s your reality, that’s your normal. I mean people watch the docuseries and they’re like, “Oh my God. That’s so horrifying.” But to me it was like, that’s how I grew up.

    Growing up and being an adult woman, you don’t think anything’s wrong until people start pointing things out and you kind of go, “Well maybe I guess that is true.” But that’s because other people are talking. So, it makes me see part of my story in someone else, and hopefully that’s what I’m doing, if that makes sense.

    MF: According to the series, because your family was so powerful and wealthy, you felt that you were unable to report the crimes you witnessed growing up because they would just be able to pay off the authorities and cover it up. Can you talk about how you dealt with that at such a young age?

    CH: Again, as you saw in the docuseries, my father murdered someone, and my grandfather bought him off as self-defense. My mother told me, “I was standing right there.” My father just pulled out a gun and shot the guy, it was like no self-defense! So, I saw murders covered up and I think the power is in the fact. It’s not necessarily that they committed the crime, but they got away with it and covered it up very publicly.

    So, my grandfather believed that everyone had a price, and he blackmailed everybody. It’s not that you have this helpless feeling, but again, women were disposable in my family. So, I was told be pretty, don’t say anything that’ll embarrass us, and you’ll be taken care of the rest of your life. I was never taken seriously. No matter how smart or successful I was, it didn’t matter. But you try to get their attention because you want to be validated.

    Even as an adult now, I find myself again with the docuseries, and yes, I participated in it, but when I finally sat down to watch it, I got triggered. It’s horrific because that’s my life. Again, they only had three hours, there’s a lot more that can be told.

    MF: As you just mentioned, you were told growing up, “Don’t say anything that’ll embarrass us, and you’ll be taken care of the rest of your life.” But you endured so much mental and physical abuse from your own family, how is that “taking care of you?”

    CH: Again, it’s growing up with threats, and you see in the last episode what I’m up against. I refuse to live in fear because then I’m giving my power away, and that’s something that I won’t do ever again. It stops now, and I want to feel empowered that I take back my own life and my healing.

    And if something happens, we’ve got a docuseries out there now. They shined a light on it. I used to make jokes that if something ever happens to me, look at my family first. But now it’s crazy because it’s a reality.

    Casey Hammer appears in Discovery+'s documentary series 'House of Hammer.'
    Casey Hammer appears in Discovery+’s documentary series ‘House of Hammer.’

    MF: We live in such a fractured world now, and with social media, anybody can threaten or bully anyone else very easily. Did you have any concerns making this series that you would be harassed, not just by your family members for telling the truth, but by online trolls as well?

    CH: Again, my conversations are basically based on my experiences growing up. I knew Armie as a child up until about 15 years ago when my mom passed away. We were all still held together by her, the “fake family.” We pretended to all love each other and hangout kind of like ‘Succession,’ but a million times worse. We all spent a week together with her as she was dying, and then afterwards everyone went their separate ways. It was just, so this is the way it’s going to be, and you kind of make peace with that.

    So, I don’t care to have conversations with any of them. It’s one of those things where I’m just going to continue to live my life and to speak my truth, and hopefully, by bringing awareness, people will still talk about it, and they’ll shine a light on consent, accountability, and advocacy for victims and survivors. I hope to continue talking about it or write another book to just keep saying, “There’s a problem.”

    Because again with the MeToo movement, it shined a light on businesses, so people can’t necessarily get away with things in the work environment anymore. But there has to be a MeToo for the home also. Just because your parents give birth to you and you think they love you, it doesn’t mean that it’s true, right?

    MF: The series is not a tabloid show about a disgraced movie star, but rather seems to use Armie’s story as a vehicle to empower women to be strong in the face of abuse. Can you talk about that?

    CH: I didn’t look for this. I mean Armie got careless and he started this downfall and implosion all on his own. But because that happened, it shined a light on my family. I mean there was a documentary about their fraudulent art last year on Netflix. I mean there’s been stories, but people are choosing not to listen to them because again, the men in my family, they enter a room and they’re like politicians. Everyone loves them, they’re charming.

    So, when they look at someone like me and say, “Well you fell out of graces with the family, you must have done something wrong.” They don’t know the real story. So, a lot of my friends are like, “I had no idea that you went through all that.” I was like, “I’ve been saying that, but no one listened.” So again, it’s one of those moments where I didn’t choose this and for whatever reason, the universe had chosen it for me and wanted to see what I would do with it.

    MF: How much input did you have with the producers to decide what was actually going to be included in the three-hour series?

    CH: None. I basically was just like the other people that contributed in a sense, where I just talked on camera about my experiences. I gave them access to the photos and videos that were in my storage unit, just so that they could get a history. There were a couple authors that had worked with my grandfather and wrote books about my grandfather that came forward and were happy to share their situations.

    Then again, with my father, there was a lot of information that I could pass on to the producers. I really believe that out of all the people that I was approached by, they would take care of my story because they wanted to go through my book and talk about my version, my story, and my feelings. They really did take care of it. I’m so proud of ‘House of Hammer.’ I watch it as a person, and I’m like, wow. But when I watch it as a family member, I get triggered because it is hard. It’s one of those strange things.

    It’s like Space Mountain at Disneyland, where you go one way seven or eight turns and then all of a sudden, the last one is a different way and you’re like, “Oh my God.” You’re laughing hysterically and crying because it was so much fun. I’m just saying that’s how I feel right now. Kind of out of control, in the dark, fun, and wild. If any of that makes sense?

    MF: Through the course of making this series, did the directors discover anything about your family that came as a surprise to even you?

    CH: Yeah, or that I had forgotten about. Because again, it was my twenties and thirties where I was pretty much medicated a lot. Then the fact that the authors came forward, and some of the family friends that were in it as well. Again, it wasn’t like we all talked about it back then or continue to talk about it, but when it’s on camera in your face, you’re like, “I didn’t know that.”

    I knew my grandfather was powerful. I knew that when I asked him why he didn’t want to be president and he said, “There wasn’t enough power in it.” But hearing President Kennedy’s voice on the series, I mean there were things that just take you back a bit. Because again, my grandfather always controlled the narrative. So, we knew the fairytale version of what he wanted to portray out in the public.

    MF: Finally, speculating about your nephew’s acting career moving forward, do you think he has a road to redemption in Hollywood, or in your opinion, is he done being a movie star?

    CH: My experience growing up was that my father was in and out of mental institutions, and he was in and out of rehab per my grandfather. So, my father never got well. Until the person holds himself accountable and makes amends with the survivors, the victims, and the people they’ve wronged and choose to get well or healed, it’s not going to happen. It’s not going to work.

    So, for me, I have the image that just reminds me that here we are with another Hammer man in the press messing up, and the only difference is my grandfather’s not here to cover it up or buy his way out. But again, the Hammers feel that they’re basically not accountable for anything, like they’re above it all. That’s what money, power and fame does to people. As you see, it’s multi-generational, so it’s a learned behavior and an expectancy.

    Armie Hammer in 2018's 'Sorry to Bother You.'
    Armie Hammer in 2018’s ‘Sorry to Bother You.’
  • ‘Shotgun Wedding’ Trailer Blends Comedy and Action

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    It’s already difficult to organize a wedding – especially one that features squabbling families, a bride and groom who are starting to wonder whether they really want to get hitched, and all the little extra details that go into the day.

    And it’s even tougher when the glitzy affair is crashed by pirates, who proceed to take the various relatives and other guests hostage, leaving the couple to save the day.

    That’s the basic set up for ‘Shotgun Wedding’, which stars Jennifer Lopez and Josh Duhamel and has its first trailer online.

    The mix of romance, comedy and action comes courtesy of Jason Moore, who made the first ‘Pitch Perfect’ and here is working from a script by Mark Hammer.

    ‘Shotgun Wedding’s story follows Darcy (Lopez) and Tom (Duhamel), who gather their lovable but very opinionated families for the ultimate destination wedding, just as the couple begin to get cold feet.

    Jennifer Lopez as Darcy Rivera and Josh Duhamel as Tom Fowler in 'Shotgun Wedding.'
    (L to R) Jennifer Lopez as Darcy Rivera and Josh Duhamel as Tom Fowler in ‘Shotgun Wedding.’ Photo Credit: Ana Carballosa.

    And if that wasn’t enough of a threat to the celebration, suddenly everyone’s lives are in danger when the entire party is held at gunpoint.

    “’Til Death Do Us Part” takes on a whole new meaning in this hilarious, adrenaline-fueled adventure as Darcy and Tom must save their loved ones — if they don’t kill each other first.

    On its way through development to the altar, the movie itself also has been through some wobbles. It was announced back in 2019 as a project to star Ryan Reynolds.

    “I haven’t done a romantic comedy since ‘The Proposal’ but I just fell in love with Shotgun Wedding,” said Reynolds at the time. “It’s so refreshing and surprising. I can’t wait to bring it to life with Jason, Todd, Dave and the great team at Lionsgate.”

    Yeah… except he did wait and then dropped it altogether (though remains attached as a producer).

    Josh Duhamel as Tom Fowler and Jennifer Lopez as Darcy Rivera in 'Shotgun Wedding.'
    (L to R) Josh Duhamel as Tom Fowler and Jennifer Lopez as Darcy Rivera in ‘Shotgun Wedding.’ Photo Credit: Ana Carballosa.

    Still, the filmmakers pushed onwards and ended up with the seemingly perfect combo of Lopez and Armie Hammer. Who, if anyone has ready anything about him in the intervening years knows, didn’t stick around.

    Josh Duhamel was brought in as replacement, and the cast also includes the likes of Jennifer Coolidge (who is a definite highlight in the trailer) Sônia Braga, Cheech Marin, Selena Tan, D’Arcy Carden, Callie Hernandez, Desmin Borges, Steve Coulter, Alberto Isaac and Lenny Kravitz.

    It all appears to be a fun comedy/action/romance romp, full of J.Lo taking charge and the supporting cast helping the lead pair bring the funny. Plus the movie doesn’t slack on the action quotient either.

    And who knows? Maybe Reynolds pops up for a tiny cameo, dropping some Aviation Gin off at the ceremony for the guests to enjoy.

    RSVP with your choice of chicken, fish or a hand grenade sandwich to Prime Video, where the movie will launch on January 27th.

    Cheech Marin as Robert Rivera and Lenny Kravitz as Sean Hawkins in 'Shotgun Wedding.'
    (L to R) Cheech Marin as Robert Rivera and Lenny Kravitz as Sean Hawkins in ‘Shotgun Wedding.’ Photo Credit: Ana Carballosa.
    Jennifer Coolidge as Carol Fowler in 'Shotgun Wedding.'
    Jennifer Coolidge as Carol Fowler in ‘Shotgun Wedding.’ Photo Credit: Ana Carballosa.
    D'Arcy Carden as Harriet and Cheech Marin as Robert Rivera in 'Shotgun Wedding.'
    (L to R) D’Arcy Carden as Harriet and Cheech Marin as Robert Rivera in ‘Shotgun Wedding.’ Photo Credit: Ana Carballosa.
    Jennifer Lopez and Josh Duhamel star in 'Shotgun Wedding.'
    Jennifer Lopez and Josh Duhamel star in ‘Shotgun Wedding.’ Photo Credit: Ana Carballosa.
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  • Gal Gadot & Armie Hammer join a star-studded cast in the ‘Death on the Nile’ trailer

    Gal Gadot & Armie Hammer join a star-studded cast in the ‘Death on the Nile’ trailer

    This fall, Kenneth Branagh returns as the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot in the latest adaptation of Agatha Christie’s iconic mystery ‘Death on the Nile.’ And in case you were wondering, yes, Branagh has also returned to direct this film after havign directed 2017’s ‘Murder on the Orient Express.’

    And like Branagh’s first outing as Poirot, this new film has no shortage of stars in various roles, including Gal Gadot, Armie Hammer, Annette Bening, Russell Brand, and Letitia Wright, just to name a few.

    Here’s the official synopsis:

    Belgian sleuth Hercule Poirot’s Egyptian vacation aboard a glamorous river steamer turns into a terrifying search for a murderer when a picture-perfect couple’s idyllic honeymoon is tragically cut short. Set against an epic landscape of sweeping desert vistas and the majestic Giza pyramids, this tale of unbridled passion and incapacitating jealousy features a cosmopolitan group of impeccably dressed travelers, and enough wicked twists and turns to leave audiences guessing until the final, shocking denouement. “Death on the Nile” reunites the filmmaking team behind 2017’s global hit “Murder on the Orient Express,” and stars five-time Academy Award® nominee Kenneth Branagh as the iconic detective Hercule Poirot. He is joined by an all-star cast of suspects, including: Tom Bateman, four-time Oscar® nominee Annette Bening, Russell Brand, Ali Fazal, Dawn French, Gal Gadot, Armie Hammer, Rose Leslie, Emma Mackey, Sophie Okonedo, Jennifer Saunders and Letitia Wright.

    ‘Death on the Nile’ will open in theaters on October 23.

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  • Armie Hammer Isn’t Sure They Should Make a ‘Call Me By Your Name’ Sequel

    Armie Hammer Isn’t Sure They Should Make a ‘Call Me By Your Name’ Sequel

    Armie Hammer in Call Me by Your Name
    Sony Pictures Classics

    The wheels are in motion for a possible “Call Me by Your Name” sequel, but star Armie Hammer has hesitations.

    While discussing the prospect during a recent Vulture interview, the actor shared that there have been “really loose conversations” about a followup. He then expressed his concerns — namely, that any sequel won’t be able to “match up with the first.”

    The 2017 romantic drama starring Hammer and Timothée Chalamet did certainly set a high bar. Among its accolades was an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. Hammer described the project to Vulure as “a perfect storm” (a good one) and suggested they should perhaps “leave that alone.”

    “If we do make a second one, I think we’re setting ourselves up for disappointment,” Hammer said.

    That doesn’t mean he’s unwilling to reprise his role, though. Director Luca Guadagnino already has an idea for the story, and Hammer indicated an “incredible script” could sway him.

    “If we end up with an incredible script, and Timmy’s in, and Luca’s in, I’d be an asshole to say no,” he said.

    We don’t know yet what story a “Call Me by Your Name” followup would tell, especially considering the André Aciman novel it’s based on doesn’t have a sequel. The author is, however, writing one, as he tweeted in December. Prior to that, Guadagnino told USA Today that he and Aciman were “conceiving the story” and it would take place five or six years after the events of “Call Me by Your Name.”

    We’ll see if a sequel does indeed happen — and whether or not it can allay Hammer’s doubts.

    [via: Vulture]

  • Every Gore Verbinski Movie, Ranked

    Every Gore Verbinski Movie, Ranked

    Disney/DreamWorks/Paramount

    Gore Verbinski is one of those filmmakers whose name is always floated when there’s some new superhero or tentpole project that is trying to rise out of the ground (he was briefly attached to “Gambit” but like everyone else who flirted with the project, he quickly left). The reasons are clear: he has a technical mastery and has made movies that have earned billions of dollars. But he’s also an auteur, somebody whose point-of-view and personality can be felt in every frame of the films he does. (Those frames, by the way, are cannily constructed.) It’s with this in mind that we go through his entire filmography, delighting in all the darkness and absurdism.

    10. ‘Mouse Hunt’ (1997)

    DreamWorks

    A wacky, gag-a-minute comedy about a pair of bumbling brothers (Nathan Lane and Lee Evans) trying to get rid of a mouse that has taken up residence in their family’s ramshackle mansion, “Mouse Hunt” is more or less a live-action cartoon. (Oddly enough, the least effective moments are when the rudimentary CGI mouse takes center stage; it looks like of ghostly all these years later.) For his debut feature (he was hired off the strength of his Budweiser frog commercial) that doubled as the first “family film” from the nascent DreamWorks (it was only their third film ever; you can tell by the Disney jab), Verbinski really went there. Under Verbinski’s assured vision, what could have easily been reduced to “Home Alone with a mouse,” became something far stranger, far bawdier, and yes, far darker (there’s both a funeral and an accidental death in the first fifteen minutes). While it’s far from his greatest accomplishment, it is a terrific indicator of where he’d go, particularly when crafting supposed all-ages entertainment with a sharply subversive edge. Christopher Walken’s cameo (as a deranged exterminator)? *Chef’s kiss*

    9. ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest’ (2006)

    Disney

    The most profitable film in Verbinski’s “Pirates of the Caribbean” trilogy (and, for half a decade, Disney’s most successful film ever) is also the weakest, an opulent, more-is-more mess that is the ultimate example of mid-trilogy wheel-spinning (literally, rascally pirate Jack Sparrow winds up in some sort of wheel twice). How much of this is Verbinski’s fault remains unclear, especially considering they embarked on the production of two back-to-back sequels without a single completed script (this after Disney threatened to cancel both films). Everything that made the first film so charming (Johnny Depp’s off-kilter performance, the sea-chanty-worthy nautical mythology, shout-outs to the original attraction) becomes embellished to the point of overkill in “Dead Man’s Chest.” And while Verbinski does a great job making everything look lush and believable (particularly when it comes to the villainous Davy Jones and his monstrous crew), it’s not enough to make the movie compelling. It was pretty ballsy to kill Depp off in the movie’s final moments, a harbinger of the darkness to come in part 3.

    8. ‘The Mexican’ (2001)

    DreamWorks

    For a while “The Mexican” was the hottest script in Hollywood that nobody could get made. That was before Brad Pitt and Julia Roberts expressed interest. “The Mexican” seems, on paper, like the perfect Verbinski vehicle — it’s a darkly comic fable about a low-level leg-breaker (Pitt) who travels to Mexico to retrieved a cursed pistol for an unscrupulous mob boss. Not only would it allow the filmmaker to engage with his darker inclinations thanks to the movie’s hard-R rating but it’d allow him to indulge in some classic western stylistic flourishes. Unfortunately, the movie is painfully dated (Roberts’ chunky heels and VW Bug, Pitt’s thick necklace and general vibe, plus the movie’s treatment of homosexuality) and often so bleak that it blots out the chance of any actual joy from getting through. It’s worth a single viewing for Verbinski completists, but not much else.

    7. ‘The Ring’ (2002)

    DreamWorks

    Verbinski jump-started the American-remake-of-Asian-horror-movies trend with “The Ring,” an atmospheric remake of the 1998 Japanese film “Ring.” (Just think about how many parodies there were of the movie’s opening sequence alone.) Naomi Watts, wearing some very 2002 lipstick shades, plays a journalist chasing down the story of a haunted videotape that kills whoever watches it seven days later (so many rules!) While this version of the story does present a more linear and “western” narrative, Verbinski still manages to add in some surrealistic flourishes and the big set pieces are, as expected, total gangbusters – particularly the iconic moment where the little ghost girl emerges from the television. (He also wisely cut an entirely subplot about Watts showing the videotape to a child murderer played by Chris Cooper.) Unfortunately, the movie hasn’t aged well, and even though it was first, many of its tropes (rainy Seattle backdrop, preternaturally all-knowing child) have become tiresome clichés in the years since.

    6. ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End’ (2007)

    Disney

    Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End,” the big Disney release for the summer of 2007 and the sequel to the most profitable movie in the company’s history … begins with a small child being hung. Now that takes guts. This sequence (and, really, the rest of the movie) is a testament to Verbinski’s utter willingness to go there and his absolute disinterest in making a conventional cookie-cutter sequel. From the trippy voyage beyond death to rescue Captain Jack Sparrow (those rock/crab guys are great) to the climactic ship versus ship battle in the middle of a mystical typhoon (a set piece he would only get to top, in terms of complexity and visual aplomb, years later), this is Verbinski firing on all cylinders and not living anything behind. He thought this was the end of the series so he went all out; the mediocrity of the films that followed are a testament to how much of himself he put into the franchise.

    5. ‘Rango’ (2011)

    Paramount

    The lone animated feature in his filmography, “Rango” is an ultra-smart western send-up that’s equal parts “Blazing Saddles” and “Chinatown.” Depp (again) plays a chameleon with an identity crisis, who winds up in a dusty western town and assumes the role of a fearsome gunslinger. Verbinski, working with the animation wizards at Industrial Light & Magic (at the time it was their first fully animated feature) and creature designer “Crash” McCreery, is at the top of his game, squeezing the most visual pizzazz out of each and every scene. (The movie’s big sequence, a chase through a canyon with hillbilly varmints riding on the back of bats, while a banjo-embossed “Ride of the Valkyries” plays, is one of the director’s all-time best.) Extra points should be awarded for the filmmaker’s willingness to push out the boundaries of what is considered a conventional, “western” animated film into territories far stranger and more challenging (he ended up winning the Best Animated Feature Oscar for the trouble).

    4. ‘The Lone Ranger’ (2013)

    Disney

    Whereas “Pirates of the Caribbean” was a total surprise, “The Lone Ranger,” which re-teamed many of the people that made those films so successful (Verbinski, Depp, ILM), seemed like a foregone conclusion. This, along with an unprecedented level of media scrutiny (about everything from the questionable nature of Depp playing Native American Tonto to the film’s huge budget), made its box office and critical downfall seem even more spectacular. (Disney wound up with a whopping write-down of around $150 million.) And all this is a real shame, because “The Lone Ranger” is a terrific movie, fearless and artful, wherein the progress of the 20th century is the main villain and fearless tonal shifts can swing from the massacre of an entire Native American tribe to a joke about Armie Hammer getting dragged through horse poop. It’s unfathomable that the movie was given the go-ahead (it was canceled at least once before production began), much less allowed to arrive in theaters with splashes of extreme violence (a main character’s heart gets eaten) and a running time of 149 minutes. It exists in defiance of conventional studio norms, which makes it even more of a treasure. And the climactic train chase might just be the greatest thing Verbinski has ever pulled off, a heart-stopping, virtuosic set piece that makes my jaw drop every time I watch it.

    3. ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl’ (2003)

    Disney

    It’s hard to properly convey what an outlier “Pirates of the Caribbean” was back when it premiered in 2003. It was a pirate movie, in a climate where notorious bomb “Cutthroat Island” was still a sore subject, and it was based on a Disney theme park attraction, a dicey proposition if there ever was one (hello, “The Country Bears!”), hence the awkward subtitle. It was also so dark that Disney chief Michael Eisner left the castle logo off the film — watch it again, it just starts. And yet, it was an absolute phenomenon. People went back again and again. That’s everything to do with Verbinski, who gave a tactile feeling to the supernatural world of pirates and cursed treasure. He was the one who defended Depp’s approach to the Captain Jack Sparrow character when executives got jittery (a performance that would ultimately result in an Oscar nomination). He was also the one whose mastery of visual effects helped ILM pull off the amazing “ghost pirates” stuff. It’s easy to call someone a visionary when they don’t really deserve the title, but Verbinski should totally own it. Nobody could have pulled off “Pirates of the Caribbean.” But he did. It should never have worked. But it did.

    2. ‘A Cure for Wellness’ (2016)

    New Regency

    An almost indescribably odd film, “A Cure for Wellness” was Verbinski’s return to relatively low budget filmmaking. It’s a horror film but doesn’t follow any current tropes. Instead, it’s a throwback to a simpler time, a kind of Hammer movie about a young man (a totally game Dane DeHaan) who goes to a European health spa to retrieve his boss, only to get sucked into a conspiracy involving the occult and an ageless man holding his daughter prisoner and eels (lots and lots of eels). This is Verbinski at his most outrageous. You can feel that he’s an artist who had been shackled by the restrictions of studio filmmaking and big budget obligations for a very long time and was positively liberated by the experience of getting to make a movie on his own terms. The film was divisive and had a dismal box office return, but it’s hard to not feel like, in a few short years, it will be seen as the cult classic that it is.

    1. ‘The Weather Man’ (2005)

    Paramount

    Verbinski’s smallest feature, made in between “Pirates of the Caribbean” movies and seen by hardly anyone, is also his most affecting and personal. Nicolas Cage plays the titular weather man, a Chicago screw-up dealing with his overweight daughter, dying father (Michael Caine), contentious ex-wife (Hope Davis) and addict son (a young Nicholas Hoult). Oh and everyone hates him and throws giant sodas at him (it’s a recurring gag and a very good one). Steve Conrad’s meticulous, multilayered script is the perfect basis for Verbinski’s equally obsessive visuals (try counting the number of fast food logos appear throughout the film), embroidered by Hans Zimmer’s delicate electronic score (one of his best ever). Everything in the movie is icy; reflective and shimmery and cracked. As melancholy as it is insightful, “The Weather Man” only hits false notes when engaging in a subplot about a pedophilic mentor (Gil Bellows). It has not aged well. Oh well. Sometimes “The Weather Man” gets it wrong.

  • Armie Hammer Denies ‘Batman’ Casting Rumor

    Armie Hammer Denies ‘Batman’ Casting Rumor

    Warner Bros.

    Don’t start fitting Armie Hammer for a cape just yet.

    After rumors floated that the “Call Me By Your Name” and “On the Basis of Sex” actor was in final talks to star in “The Batman” for director Matt Reeves, Hammer himself denied those reports.

    “No one who can actually give me the job has asked me if I’m interested,” he told Yahoo! UK.

    “I don’t even know if they’re done – I think they’re still working on a script. I don’t think that they’re close to production but I can conclusively tell you that no one has checked my availability, which is a bummer.”

    Ben Affleck, who played Gotham City’s Caped Crusader in “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” and “Justice League,” recently confirmed he had stepped down from the role.

    Warner Bros. has set a release date of June 25, 2021, but little is known about Reeves’ plans for the next Bruce Wayne. He is definitely not adapting Frank Miller’s comic “Batman: Year One,” though he reportedly is looking for a younger actor to play the character.

  • ‘Dreamland’: Gary Oldman, Evangeline Lilly, and Armie Hammer Join Opiod Crisis Film

    ‘Dreamland’: Gary Oldman, Evangeline Lilly, and Armie Hammer Join Opiod Crisis Film

    Gary Oldman, Evangeline Lilly, and Armie Hammer
    Focus Features and Universal Pictures; Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures; Focus Pictures

    Big-name actors will take on the opioid crisis together on the big screen.

    The thriller “Dreamland” is putting together quite the cast. The film will star Gary Oldman, Evangeline Lilly, and Armie Hammer, Deadline reports. They join German actress Veronica Ferres.

    The film, which aims to show the wide-ranging impact of the opioid crisis, reportedly tells three overlapping stories. One centers on a drug trafficker who coordinates a smuggling operation, while another centers on a recovering addict who digs into her son’s ties to narcotics. The third story follows a professor who must contend with his drug company employer’s move to introduce a “non-addictive” painkiller. Character details haven’t been revealed.

    The cast is a stellar one. Oldman comes to the film having won the 2018 Academy Award for Best Actor for his role in the war drama “Darkest Hour.” His other recent work includes roles in “Hunter Killer,” “Tau,” and “The Hitman’s Bodyguard.” Meanwhile, Lilly became the first female superhero to headline an MCU film in “Ant-Man and the Wasp,” and Hammer most recently starred in the biopic “On the Basis of Sex.”

    “Dreamland” is currently in production in Montreal and Detroit. Nicholas Jarecki (“Arbitage”) is directing from a script he wrote himself. Green Room Films is producing in association with Tuesday Films, Matisse Pictures, Construction Film, GmbH, and Burn Later Productions. Les Productions LOD and Bideford Productions are producing as well. The executive producers are Michael Suppes, Tony Hseih, Douglas Urbanski, Mohammed Al Turki, Lisa Wilson, William Rosenfeld, Sam Slater, and David Bernon.

    [via: Deadline]

  • ‘Call Me By Your Name’ Author Is Writing a Sequel

    ‘Call Me By Your Name’ Author Is Writing a Sequel

    Sony Pictures Classics

    While the director of Oscar winner “Call Me By Your Name” has already shared his idea for a sequel, the author of the book on which the film was based has announced that he’s currently writing a follow-up of his own.

    In a tweet shared on Monday night, André Aciman revealed the exciting news.

    https://twitter.com/aaciman/status/1069745030473109504

    “I would actually love a sequel to Call Me by Your Name,” the author said. “In fact I am writing one.”

    That statement seems to be a direct response to previous comments from “Call Me” screenwriter James Ivory, who took home an Oscar earlier this year for adapting Aciman’s novel. In an interview with The Film Stage just last week, Ivory said that he didn’t want to be involved with a potential big screen follow-up, and claimed that Aciman “laughed at the idea” of making a sequel. Guess Aciman isn’t laughing anymore.

    Director Luca Guadagnino has a very specific vision for a second “Call Me” movie, and it’s currently unclear if he discussed the idea with Aciman, or if the two projects will be entirely separate. Maybe Aciman is writing the screenplay, and not a novel?

    Either way, original stars Timothée Chalamet and Armie Hammer both appear to be on board, with Chalamet liking Aciman’s tweet, and Hammer sharing an enthusiastic response.

    https://twitter.com/armiehammer/status/1069929240622231552?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1069929240622231552&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fnews.avclub.com%2Fajax%2Finset%2Fiframe%3Fid%3Dtwitter-1069929240622231552%26autosize%3D1

    Maybe Ivory will change his tune, too. We’ll see. Whatever the outcome, we predict this film will also get plenty of awards season love — and possibly give fans a new fruit to lust over.

    [h/t The A.V. Club]