Tag: ashley judd

  • ‘Lazareth’ Exclusive Interview: Ashley Judd

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    Opening in select theaters and On Demand May 10th is the new post-apocalyptic thriller ‘Lazareth‘, which was written and directed by Alec Tibaldi (‘The Daphne Project’) and stars Ashley Judd (‘Heat’), Sarah Pidgeon (‘Tiny Beautiful Things’), Katie Douglas (‘Ginny & Georgia’), and Asher Angel (‘Shazam!’).

    Related Article: Jaeden Martell and Maxwell Jenkins Talk ‘Arcadian’ and Nicolas Cage

    Ashley Judd Talks 'Lazareth'.
    Ashley Judd Talks ‘Lazareth’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with acclaimed actress Ashley Judd about her work on ‘Lazareth’, her first reaction to the screenplay, how COVID informed her performance, her character’s devotion to her home, working with Sarah Pidgeon and Katie Douglas, and collaborating with director Alec Tibaldi on set.

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

    Ashley Judd in 'Lazareth.'
    Ashley Judd in ‘Lazareth.’ Photo: Vertical.

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

    Ashley Judd: I love that question. So, when I read the screenplay for ‘Lazareth’, which the director Alec Tibaldi co-wrote, I found it very quirky and original. Things that stood out to me were, for example, my two nieces with whom I live in this remote, isolated cabin in the woods, apart from society, were that we were egalitarian. We all have voice and vote on matters affecting our food supply, provisions for the winter. When we vote, we tap our fingers on the table, and the girls forage and we hunt fish and trap to sustain ourselves. We dress for dinner formally every night. There’s a sense of place, there’s a sense of home, there’s a sense of ritual. It reminded me of Wendell Berry, this great Kentuckian. So, I just thought it was very fresh, which I liked. Of course, Alec was prescient because he was writing about a pandemic before the global pandemic.

    MF: Can you talk about how living through the Covid pandemic helped inform your performance and do you think you would have given the same performance if Covid had never happened?

    AJ: That’s an interesting question. I think that the themes of fear, freedom, isolation, and protection are universal, and they’re hardwired into our DNA. For our survival, we have a fundamental need for connection, safety and belonging, because if we were cut off from our people, we couldn’t make it without our tribe. So, what I’ve done is I’ve created this tribe and othered and scapegoated everybody else. Then when one of the others arrives, my sense of threat is so heightened and so aroused and so escalated, but it’s totally switching that up for my nieces and there’s all this rupture. It’s just very emotionally dysregulating for everybody, which hopefully makes for very interesting watching.

    Ashley Judd, Katie Douglas and Sarah Pidgeon in 'Lazareth.'
    (L to R) Ashley Judd, Katie Douglas and Sarah Pidgeon in ‘Lazareth.’ Photo: Vertical.

    MF: Can you talk about what Lazareth means to Lee and what she’s willing to do to protect it and her nieces?

    AJ: So, Lazareth of course is the name of our home, and it’s a profound sense of place and belonging. It is safety, it’s legacy, it’s heritage, it’s connection to the girls’ parents, my sister, who is now deceased, and it’s security because it’s the future. It’s where we are going to be able to sustain ourselves and stay safe from catastrophic harm. So, it’s really everything.

    MF: What was it like working with Sarah Pidgeon and Katie Douglas?

    AJ: Yeah, they are so wonderful. I got to see Sarah Pidgeon last night in her dynamite play, ‘Stereophonic’, the hit of Broadway, nominated for the most Tonys ever in the history of Broadway. She is just so natural and alive and real and human, and so is Katie. They’re just emotionally full and wonderful young women with whom to spend time. We gathered in my tiny house on the Green River where I lived during filming and sat on the floor and just had that courageous vulnerability to really drop into a pretty intimate friendship our first night.

    Sarah Pidgeon and Katie Douglas in 'Lazareth.'
    (L to R) Sarah Pidgeon and Katie Douglas in ‘Lazareth.’ Photo: Vertical.

    MF: Finally, what was it like collaborating with writer and director Alec Tibaldi on set?

    AJ: Alec is a very confident performance director. I mean, he really had a strong voice. He asked for a lot of takes, which really thrilled me because it was fun to be nimble and pivot. When I’m doing the reading at the beginning, the voiceover, he’d say, “Try it like you’re imparting to children a moral fable. Try it like you’re a kindergarten teacher with a history. Make it very ominous.” He just had all these different ideas, one take to the next, and it was great to just have a lot of freedom on set.

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    What is the plot of ‘Lazareth’?

    Lee (Ashley Judd) protects her orphaned nieces Imogen (Katie Douglas) and Maeve (Sarah Pidgeon) from a self-destructing world, raising them in isolation until an outsider threatens their peaceful existence.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Lazareth’?

    • Ashley Judd as Lee
    • Katie Douglas as Imogen
    • Sarah Pidgeon as Maeve
    • Asher Angel as Owen
    Asher Angel and Katie Douglas in 'Lazareth.'
    (L to R) Asher Angel and Katie Douglas in ‘Lazareth.’ Photo: Vertical.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Arcadian’:

    Buy Ashley Judd Movies On Amazon

  • Movie Review: ‘She Said’

    Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan in 'She Said,' directed by Maria Schrader.
    (L to R) Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan in ‘She Said,’ directed by Maria Schrader.

    One of the toughest genres of movie to get right is the based-on-truth investigative dig into a big story. It’s not just that reporters hunched over keyboards or waiting for phones to ring can be singularly uncinematic, more that the heaviest hitters in the field – ‘All the President’s Men’, for example, or ‘Spotlight’ – boast a compelling subject, watchable performers as the dogged journalists and belief in the need for such work.

    Fortunately, ‘She Said’ has all three. And if it doesn’t quite match those bastions of the form, then it certainly offers a hard-hitting, emotional and difficult probe into a world where too many people kept horrifying actions quiet for too long, with a variety of women’s lives and careers either destroyed or profoundly affected.

    Directed by Maria Schrader (‘I’m Your Man’) and written by Rebecca Lenkiewicz (‘Disobedience’, ‘Colette’), ‘She Said’ follows the real-life investigation by New York Times journalists Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey into the Harvey Weinstein sexual misconduct story, a bombshell piece which detailed a tapestry of allegations against the powerhouse producer, helped launch the #MeToo movement and assisted in sending Weinstein to prison for his actions.

    Originally tipped off by accusations made by actress Rose McGowan (played in voice form only here by Keilly McQuail), Kantor and then Twohey began to peel the toxic onion of Weinstein’s world, revealing any number of accusations of gross sexual and abusive behavior towards subordinates, actresses and others.

    Zoe Kazan and Carey Mulligan in 'She Said,' directed by Maria Schrader.
    (L to R) Zoe Kazan and Carey Mulligan in ‘She Said,’ directed by Maria Schrader.

    It’s a painful subject to bring to life and Schrader never shies from showing the effect it had on everyone who was affected – at least, those who would go on the record initially. The trickiest aspect was finding sources who would agree to be quoted, since Miramax and others and arranged settlements with a number of victims that included strict gagging orders.

    With dogged determination, the two reporters (aided by senior journalist Rebecca Corbett) dug away at the cone of silence, finding people – including Ashley Judd, who plays herself – willing to let their names be used in the initial piece.

    Lenkiewicz, meanwhile, adapts the book that the three reporters wrote documenting their work, carefully charting the wide-ranging investigation that ended up taking them to London, Wales, Silicon Valley and beyond in search of reliable and willing witnesses and victims.

    Kazan brings a quietly persistent flavor to Kantor, a seemingly unassuming woman who held the line even when threatened and followed. Likewise, Mulligan imbues Twohey with a world-weariness drawn from previous years covering scandals; she’s introduced on the trail of accusations against Donald Trump during the 2016 election year. There are death and rape threats randomly flooding her phone and conversations with the subject himself rife with threats of legal action and poisonous personal attacks.

    Zoe Kazan, Carey Mulligan, Andre Braugher, and Patricia Clarkson in 'She Said,' directed by Maria Schrader.
    (L to R) Zoe Kazan, Carey Mulligan, Andre Braugher, and Patricia Clarkson in ‘She Said,’ directed by Maria Schrader.

    Both of the leads are excellent, pushing the narrative along without flashy drama. These are complicated, driven women with the backbone to keep following the truth despite incredible pressure and resistance. Patricia Clarkson, for her part, makes the smaller role of Corbett into a mentor and colleague to be admired.

    Around them, Schrader has built a supporting ensemble that shines almost to the same level – Jennifer Ehle will break your heart as Laura Madden, one of Weinstein’s victims who agrees to share her story even as she’s preparing to undergo major surgery. Andre Braugher brings gravelly power to Times executive editor Dean Baquet, snapping down the phone to recalcitrant lawyers and executives, and keeping his colleagues on the right track. And there are the various former studio workers and other victims who are quietly nudged into offering up their accounts or checking facts even if they won’t speak publicly.

    Lest you think that it’s a grinding trudge through fetid soup, there are the moments of triumph, the calls to let Kantor or Twohey know that someone is willing to speak. Finding documents to back up the accusations. The reporters’ family lives also help to balance out the bleakness, moments of joy – but leavened with real-life challenges – as they dig ever deeper.

    And though Weinstein is the subject here, he’s more a shadowy presence, heard over phones and glimpsed from behind when arriving at the Times office with his legal team to hammer out a statement to add to the story shortly before it’s published.

    Hywel Madden (Wesley Holloway), Laura Madden (Jennifer Ehle) and Iris Madden (Justine Colan) in 'She Said.'
    (L to R) Hywel Madden (Wesley Holloway), Laura Madden (Jennifer Ehle) and Iris Madden (Justine Colan) in ‘She Said,’ directed by Maria Schrader. © Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘She Said’ is the sort of important story that it’s vital to get right. Tone is everything, and while Schrader sometimes lets the momentum lag, it’s almost always gripping. There is a measured feel to the movie that pushes it beyond feeling like someone is simply reading a Wikipedia entry about the investigation to you while you’re trapped in your chair.

    And though not every scene of the journalists pouring through pages or squinting at screens to make sure the facts are straight work as well as the door-knocking encounters with former Weinstein assistants whose pain is written across their face, it doesn’t dilute what ‘She Said’ has to offer. True, a few scenes could easily have been snipped (we’re not sure we needed to have Kantor and Twohey show up at Gwyneth Paltrow’s beautiful home for a conversation we never get to watch) and there are flashbacks that flip between powerful and filler, but the whole holds together beautifully and the result is an urgent, engrossing look at the positive impact that good, professional journalism can have on the world, which is something more relevant than ever.

    Given the extensive coverage – sadly, this is a story as old as time and one in which the revelations, far beyond Weinstein, will just keep arriving – it would be easy to think that you already know what happened. ‘She Said’ is here to assure you, with heartbreaking authority, that you most definitely do not.

    ‘She Said’ receives 4 out of 5 stars.

    Cast of 'She Said,' directed by Maria Schrader.
    Cast of ‘She Said,’ directed by Maria Schrader.
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  • ‘She Said’ Interviews: Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan

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    Opening in theaters on November 18th is the new biographical drama ‘She Said,’ which tells the true story of the New York Times journalists that broke the story of Harvey Weinstein‘s sexual misconduct allegations.

    Directed by Maria Schrader (‘I’m Your Man’), the film stars Carey Mulligan (‘Promising Young Woman’) and Zoe Kazan (‘The Big Sick’) as New York Times journalists Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor, respectively.

    In addition to Mulligan and Kazan, the cast also includes Patricia Clarkson, Andre Braugher, Jennifer Ehle, Samantha Morton, and Ashley Judd as herself.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan about their work on ‘She Said,’ the true story it is based on, the journalists that reported the story, and the courageous women that came forward to tell the truth.

    Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan star in 'She Said.'
    Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan star in ‘She Said.’

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Mulligan, Kazan, Patricia Clarkson, Andre Braugher, Jennifer Ehle, and director Maria Schrader.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Carey, can you talk about playing Megan Twohey and what did you learn about her that surprised you?

    Carey Mulligan: I mean there were so many reasons I wanted to be a part of the story in general, I think. The import of what these women achieved is something that we’ll learn about in the history books in years to come because of the courage of the survivors who came forward. So, I think it deserves a film about it, and about the women who spoke up.

    But with Megan particularly, I think I was so interested in just the psychological makeup of someone who can do that job, of an investigative journalist. Who can ring someone up in the middle of the day, ask them maybe the most difficult thing that’s ever happened to that person, and try and start a relationship with that person to share that information with the world, with the sole conviction that it’s for the right reasons.

    I think that’s a really extraordinary skill. I think we both felt from the beginning so in awe of them as women. They’re really extraordinary. They’re really impressive, and we just wanted to do that justice, and try to portray them honestly.

    Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan in 'She Said,' directed by Maria Schrader.
    (L to R) Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan in ‘She Said,’ directed by Maria Schrader.

    MF: Finally, Zoe, there is a pivotal scene in the film where Jody receives a call from Ashley Judd saying that she is willing to go on the record. Can you talk about filming that scene and how Judd’s courage really broke the story wide open?

    Zoe Kazan: I think Carey and I both feel just this enormous debt of gratitude to all the women who spoke with Jody and Megan, either on or off the record. Carey has said, time and again, and I think it’s true, it takes so much courage and so much bravery to speak even in private about something traumatic that has happened to you, let alone with a reporter who’s going to use that story to tell the world.

    I think knowing that Ashley had been so brave and that her going on the record had really made such an enormous difference within our industry and within the world, I think the emotion of that was very easy for me to access.

    It was also just really meaningful to me to have Carey there. We’ve been friends for 14 years and I think getting to look into her eyes and say, “She’s going on the record,” and have that sort of connection between us, it really brought our partnership into the room at the same time as it was honoring Megan and Jody’s partnership and the sisterhood of all these women.

    Carey Mulligan, Zoe Kazan, Patricia Clarkson and Andre Braugher in 'She Said,' directed by Maria Schrader.
    (L to R) Carey Mulligan, Zoe Kazan, Patricia Clarkson and Andre Braugher in ‘She Said,’ directed by Maria Schrader.
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  • Ashley Judd Sues Harvey Weinstein for Harming Her Career

    Actress Ashley Judd is suing Harvey Weinstein, claiming the disgraced producer harmed her career when he spread lies about her after she rejected his sexual advances.

    Judd’s lawsuit charges Weinstein with defamation, sexual harassment, intentional interference with prospective economic advantage and unfair competition.

    On “Good Morning America,” the actress said, “I lost opportunity, I lost money, I lost status and prestige and power in my career as a direct result of having been sexually harassed and rebuffing the sexual harassment.”

    The suit says Judd did not realize “something unseen was holding her back from obtaining the work she wanted, and had been doing so for decades.”

    Then, in December, “Lord of the Rings” director Peter Jackson came forward to admit that he was warned by Weinstein not to cast Judd or Mira Sorvino in the movies.

    “I recall Miramax telling us [Judd and Sorvino] were a nightmare to work with and we should avoid them at all costs,” he said.

    “At the time, we had no reason to question what these guys were telling us, but in hindsight, I realize that this was very likely the Miramax smear campaign in full swing,” Jackson continued. “I now suspect we were fed false information about both of these talented women, and as a direct result their names were removed from our casting list.”

    Judd’s suit alleges that Weinstein bad-mouthed her as payback for refusing his sexual advances, which she detailed to the New York Times last fall.

    The actress said any compensation she wins will be donated to the Times Up Legal Defense Fund.

    Weinstein spokesman Juda Engelmayer refuted the suit’s claims in a statement: “The most basic investigation of the facts will reveal that Mr. Weinstein neither defamed Ms. Judd nor ever interfered with Ms. Judd’s career, and instead not only championed her work but also repeatedly approved her casting for two of his movies over the next decade. The actual facts will show that Mr. Weinstein was widely known for having fought for Ms. Judd as his first choice for the lead role in ‘Good Will Hunting’ and, in fact, arranged for Ms. Judd to fly to New York to be considered for the role. Thereafter, Ms. Judd was hired for not one, but two of Mr. Weinstein’s movies, Frida in 2002 and ‘Crossing Over’ with Harrison Ford in 2009. We look forward to a vigorous defense of these claims.”

  • Harvey Weinstein Accused of Decades of Sexual Harassment, Ashley Judd Among Alleged Victims

    Brooks Brothers With The Cinema Society Host The Premiere Of 'House Of Z'The New York Times published a searing expose on film executive Harvey Weinstein on Thursday, accusing the head of The Weinstein Company of a decades-long pattern of sexual harassment.

    According to the Times, Weinstein allegedly used his sway as a powerful movie mogul to pressure young women — many of them employees at his company, or fresh-faced models and actresses — into engaging in sexual activity in exchange for furthering their careers, in addition to other bizarre behavior. Over a nearly three-decade span, the Times uncovered that Weinstein had paid out at least eight settlements to women, some of whom had accused the executive of “appearing nearly or fully naked in front of them, requiring them to be present while he bathed or repeatedly asking for a massage or initiating one himself.”

    Actress Ashley Judd went on record with the Times to describe similar behavior from Weinstein, including a bizarre string of incidents around the time she was shooting “Kiss the Girls” for Weinstein’s former company, Miramax, back in 1997.

    From the Times:

    … [H]e appeared in a bathrobe and asked if he could give her a massage or she could watch him shower, she recalled in an interview.

    Mr. Weinstein soon issued invitation after invitation, she said. Could he give her a massage? When she refused, he suggested a shoulder rub. She rejected that too, she recalled. He steered her toward a closet, asking her to help pick out his clothing for the day, and then toward the bathroom. Would she watch him take a shower? she remembered him saying.

    “I said no, a lot of ways, a lot of times, and he always came back at me with some new ask,” Ms. Judd said. “It was all this bargaining, this coercive bargaining.”

    To get out of the room, she said, she quipped that if Mr. Weinstein wanted to touch her, she would first have to win an Oscar in one of his movies. She recalled feeling “panicky, trapped,” she said in the interview. “There’s a lot on the line, the cachet that came with Miramax.”

    Lisa Bloom, a lawyer advising Weinstein, told the Times that the executive “denies many of the accusations as patently false,” though Weinstein did acknowledge some past poor behavior. In a lengthy statement to the Times, he apologized, and said he would be taking a leave of absence from The Weinstein Company to focus on bettering himself.

    His statement said in part:

    I came of age in the 60’s and 70’s, when all the rules about behavior and workplaces were different. That was the culture then.

    I have since learned it’s not an excuse, in the office – or out of it. To anyone.

    I realized some time ago that I needed to be a better person and my interactions with the people I work with have changed.

    I appreciate the way I’ve behaved with colleagues in the past has caused a lot of pain, and I sincerely apologize for it.

    I want a second chance in the community but I know I’ve got work to do to earn it. I have goals that are now priorities. … I cannot be more remorseful about the people I hurt and I plan to do right by all of them.

    For more, read the entire, blistering report at The New York Times. Weinstein’s entire statement can be found here.