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  • TV Review: ‘Zero Day’

    Robert De Niro as George Mullen in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    Robert De Niro as George Mullen in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    ‘Zero Day’ receives 7 out of 10 stars.

    Premiering on Netflix on February 20th, ‘Zero Day’ ponders how America might react to a catastrophic cyber-attack on its services, transport and technology, with the lingering threat of another.

    Big questions are asked, as they always are, about how personal freedom could be compromised in the search for safety, and how much the country’s elected leaders must answer to the general public for their actions in times of crisis and beyond.

    Related Article: Robert De Niro and Sebastian Maniscalco Talk Comedy ‘About My Father’

    Will ‘Zero Day’ keep you enthralled?

    Robert De Niro as George Mullen in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    Robert De Niro as George Mullen in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    Beyond a TV movie about Bernie Madoff and a quirky, little-seen Italian comedy series from a couple of years ago, Robert De Niro’s primary contributions to TV have been as an executive producer on a handful of shows.

    But we live in an age when actors of any stature are lured by prestige small screen productions (and we’re sure the healthy paycheck from Netflix’s deep pockets didn’t hurt). Here, the man who made his name playing angry young men and his since transitioned to acting as compromised authority figures or senior mob figures, takes on a timely and careworn role as a former politician forced into an impossible situation.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Angela Bassett as President Mitchell, Executive Producer Noah Oppenheim, Executive Producer Eric Newman and Director Lesli Linka Glatter behind the scenes of 'Zero Day'. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    (L to R) Angela Bassett as President Mitchell, Executive Producer Noah Oppenheim, Executive Producer Eric Newman and Director Lesli Linka Glatter behind the scenes of ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    Boasting Eric Newman, Noah Oppenheim and Michael S. Schmidt as its co-creators and executive producers, you knew the shows wasn’t completely going to be a first-base exploration of the issues surrounding presidential (or in this case former presidential) power and the sacrifices in morals and ethics that are made in the name of patriotism and safety.

    With the space to breathe that a limited series provides in place of a movie, there is the chance to explore more about the central figure especially, and De Niro’s Mullen is a complicated man, a decorated veteran and (mostly) beloved former President who resigned after the death of his son –– but if you thought that was all there was to it, you’ve clearly never seen a movie or show such as this before.

    And yet if we’re honest, this show is more about the driving plot that truly deep characterizations. We learn some about other players on the show (including Mullen’s wife and bitter politico daughter), but for the most part it’s getting us to the next revelation. Which is also a key element of these sorts of stories.

    (L to R) Robert De Niro, Executive Producer Eric Newman, Director Lesli Linka Glatter and Executive Producer Noah Oppenheim behind the scenes of 'Zero Day'. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    (L to R) Robert De Niro, Executive Producer Eric Newman, Director Lesli Linka Glatter and Executive Producer Noah Oppenheim behind the scenes of ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    It’s smartly told, though at least one “surprise” was something you’ll see coming from several miles away, not least because of the casting. And the actual plot line, about a one-minute-long attack on vital services that has echoes of 9/11, is perfunctory, but works well enough.

    Homeland’ veteran Lesli Linka Glatter, meanwhile, is show’s only director and also executive producer and brings a sense of steel and weight to the proceedings.

    Netflix certainly gave the team the budget to make this one look slick, though if you’re after pulse-pounding action, that’ s again not really what the show is about. There are a few set pieces, but the driving force here is people in offices talking about the next step or accusing each other of cover-ups/betrayals.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Robert De Niro as George Mullen and Connie Britton as Valerie Whitesell in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    (L to R) Robert De Niro as George Mullen and Connie Britton as Valerie Whitesell in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    If you’ve got Robert De Niro agreeing to star in your limited series, of course you’re going to give him something meaty to chew on. President Mullen here is a layered character, a man who tried to do the right thing in office, but here finds himself much more compromised given the shifting political tones of the day.

    And he’s also someone who is starting to suffer the maladies of his age –– while he’s concerned about someone using a secretive weapon against him that is disrupting his mind, the series is smart enough to keep us guessing as to whether it’s just someone whose faculties are going.

    Around De Niro we have Joan Allen as his wife, Sheila, who mostly has the steadfast role to play in his life, but does have some shades of her own, including the fact that she’s running for a supreme court role. Then there’s Alexandra Mullen (Lizzy Caplan), who has a troubled relationship with her father, especially since he tried to stop her going into politics herself (she’s a congressional representative these days). Caplan is good in the role, though her character is written in somewhat predictable fashion.

    Lizzy Caplan as Alexandra Mullen in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    Lizzy Caplan as Alexandra Mullen in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    Then we have the fixer characters, particularly Connie Britton as Valerie Whitesell (who once served in the White House) and Roger Carlson (Jesse Plemons), who is close to Mullen but also has dodgy business connections. They’re both excellent in their roles, calculated and charming in equal measure.

    Angela Bassett, meanwhile, is President Evelyn Mitchell, the current head of state, but though she has a couple of decent scenes (which Bassett naturally knocks out of the park), it’s not much of a role.

    Finally, there is ambitious Speaker of the House Richard Dreyer, played by Matthew Modine. No fan of Mullen’s, he’s pushing for further action to be taken and has his own agenda.

    Final Thoughts

    Angela Bassett as President Mitchell in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    Angela Bassett as President Mitchell in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    Released at a time when the federal government is not, shall we say operating at peak efficiency (despite what the people in charge might say), ‘Zero Day’ feels like an eerily prescient peek into what could happen (though we don’t see Joe Biden stepping up to run an investigative commission if it did) and a decently diverting thriller series that has its share of genre tropes but doesn’t lean too heavily into them.

    As Robert De Niro’s first big American TV series (well, miniseries), it’s not always worthy of his presence, but it works when it needs to.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Zero Day’?

    Robert De Niro stars as respected former U.S. President George Mullen, who, as head of the Zero Day Commission, is charged with finding the perpetrators of a devastating cyber-attack that has caused chaos around the country and thousands of fatalities.

    As disinformation runs rampant and the personal ambition of power brokers in technology, Wall Street, and government collide, Mullen’s unwavering search for the truth forces him to confront his own dark secrets while risking all he holds dear.

    Who stars is in ‘Zero Day’?

    • Robert De Niro as George Mullen
    • Lizzy Caplan as Alexandra Mullen
    • Jesse Plemons as Roger Carlson
    • Joan Allen as Sheila Mullen
    • Connie Britton as Valerie Whitesell
    • Bill Camp as Director Lasch
    • Dan Stevens as Evan Green
    • Angela Bassett as President Evelyn Mitchell
    • Matthew Modine as Richard Dreyer
    • McKinley Belcher III as Carl Otieno
    (L to R) Robert De Niro as George Mullen and Jesse Plemons as Roger Carlson in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    (L to R) Robert De Niro as George Mullen and Jesse Plemons as Roger Carlson in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    List of Robert De Niro Movies:

    Buy Robert De Niro Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Zero Day’ Exclusive Interview: Joan Allen

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    Premiering on Netflix February 20th is the new political thriller ‘Zero Day’, which was created by Eric Newman (‘Narcos’), Noah Oppenheim (‘Jackie’), and journalist Michael Schmidt, and was directed by Lesli Linka Glatter (‘Homeland’).

    The series features an all-star cast that includes two-time Oscar winner Robert De Niro (‘The Godfather: Part II’ and ‘Raging Bull’), Lizzy Caplan (‘Now You See Me 2’), Jesse Plemons (‘Kinds of Kindness’), Joan Allen (‘The Contender’), Connie Britton (‘Friday Night Lights‘), Bill Camp (‘Joker’), Dan Stevens (‘Beauty and the Beast’), Matthew Modine (‘Full Metal Jacket’), Clark Gregg (‘Iron Man’), Gaby Hoffman (‘Field of Dreams’), and Angela Bassett (‘Black Panther’).

    Related Article: Robert De Niro and Sebastian Maniscalco Talk Comedy ‘About My Father’

    Joan Allen stars in Netflix's 'Zero Day'.
    Joan Allen stars in Netflix’s ‘Zero Day’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Joan Allen about her work on ‘Zero Day’, his first reaction to the project, her character’s relationship with her husband, working with Robert De Niro and the rest of the cast, and the importance of having one director for the entire series.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Allen, Matthew Modine, director by Lesli Linka Glatter, and showrunners Eric Newman and Noah Oppenheim.

    Joan Allen as Sheila Mullen in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Netflix © 2024.
    Joan Allen as Sheila Mullen in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Netflix © 2024.

    Moviefone: To begin with, what was your first reaction to this project and the opportunity to play this character?

    Joan Allen: I thought the writing was terrific and that Robert De Niro was playing the main character, who I had admired so much for all my years as an actor. It was very exciting, and I loved our wonderful director, Lesli Glatter. When I met and spoke with her, she was incredibly inspiring and I was like, “I want to work with that lady.”

    MF: Can you talk about George and Sheila’s marriage and how she supports him throughout the series?

    JA: They are a team and Lesli emphasized that, and I really liked that as we were playing the scenes. He trusts her as maybe his most trusted confidant and adviser. I think she believes she’s not afraid to share her opinions with him. She also respects and admires him and believed in his presidency and the policies that he put forth. So, I think they’re a team and I would say not even that she supports him, they support each other. They work together is what it felt like and it’s a great relationship.

    Robert De Niro as George Mullen in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    Robert De Niro as George Mullen in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    MF: What is Robert De Niro like to have as a scene partner?

    JA: He’s just the best. I mean, there were wonderful actors in the entire series and he’s just incredibly generous, open, giving, and very obviously incredibly smart in terms of what the scene is about and he’s just a wonderful collaborator. It was just a joy to be with him every day.

    MF: The series features an extraordinary cast of actors. What was it like for you to work with this ensemble?

    JA: I just was so happy every day. I was so happy to come to work. They are lovely, wonderful actors, terrific human beings and great people. We just had had a fantastic time working. It was just a joy. They were all such fine actors, and I was glad to be to be working with them. I was very grateful.

    (L to R) Director Lesli Linka Glatter and Dan Stevens as Evan Green behind the scenes of 'Zero Day'. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    (L to R) Director Lesli Linka Glatter and Dan Stevens as Evan Green behind the scenes of ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    MF: Finally, what was it like working with director Lesli Linka Glatter and was it helpful to have the same person directing the entire series?

    JA: It was very grounding for me, very grounding and made me feel extremely safe because it was cohesive. So, you’re not going back and forth and dealing with talking with showrunners, et cetera. It’s like, there’s an anchor. She’s always going to be there. She’s incredibly prepared, knowledgeable, and on her game. It’s great to go to work knowing my director is there and you build a communication. It builds as you spend more time together and knowing that she was going to be there for the whole duration, made an enormous difference to me.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Zero Day’?

    Robert De Niro stars as respected former U.S. President George Mullen, who, as head of the Zero Day Commission, is charged with finding the perpetrators of a devastating cyber-attack that has caused chaos around the country and thousands of fatalities.

    As disinformation runs rampant and the personal ambition of power brokers in technology, Wall Street, and government collide, Mullen’s unwavering search for the truth forces him to confront his own dark secrets while risking all he holds dear.

    Who stars is in ‘Zero Day’?

    • Robert De Niro as George Mullen
    • Lizzy Caplan as Alexandra Mullen
    • Jesse Plemons as Roger Carlson
    • Joan Allen as Sheila Mullen
    • Connie Britton as Valerie Whitesell
    • Bill Camp as Director Lasch
    • Dan Stevens as Evan Green
    • Angela Bassett as President Evelyn Mitchell
    • Matthew Modine as Richard Dreyer
    • McKinley Belcher III as Carl Otieno
    (L to R) Robert De Niro as George Mullen and Joan Allen as Sheila Mullen in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    (L to R) Robert De Niro as George Mullen and Joan Allen as Sheila Mullen in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    List of Joan Allen Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Joan Allen Movies On Amazon

     

  • First Images of Robert De Niro in TV Thriller ‘Zero Day’

    Robert De Niro as George Mullen in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    Robert De Niro as George Mullen in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    Preview:

    • The first pictures of Robert De Niro in ‘Zero Day’ have arrived.
    • He’s playing a former President who must investigate a cyber-attack.
    • Eric Newman and Noah Oppenheim created the show, with Lesli Linka Glatter directing.

    While movie icon Robert De Niro has certainly guested on his fair share of TV series (‘30 Rock,’ ‘Extras’) and more recently had a bigger role in Argentinian miniseries ‘Nada,’ he’s better known for producing a variety of shows.

    But with ‘Zero Day,’ a new Netflix thriller series, he’s stepping up to star in his first Stateside show, agreeing to both lead and serve as an executive producer on the show.

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    Created by Eric Newman (who has produced a metric ton of movies and shows and worked on the likes of ‘Griselda’ and the ‘Narcos’ series for Netflix), Noah Oppenheim (who swapped a career in TV news to work on shows and movies) and Pulitzer Prize winner Michael S. Schmidt, it tracks the aftermath of a devastating attack on the United States, and the man leading the investigation into what was really behind it.

    Lesli Linka Glatter, a veteran of series such as ‘Homeland,’ ‘Mad Men’ and ‘True Blood’ directed all six episodes.

    Here’s what Newman told Netflix’s Tudum sight about the collaboration with the acting legend that is De Niro:

    “As a lifelong fan of American cinema, no actor looms larger for me than Robert De Niro. To have him as a producing partner and star in this show is beyond our wildest dreams. I’m grateful to Netflix for their continued faith and support and thrilled to be in business with the amazing creative team of Noah, Lesli, and Jonathan [Glickman] on this timely (and terrifying) series.”

    Related Article: Robert De Niro and Sebastian Maniscalco Talk Comedy ‘About My Father’

    What’s the story of ‘Zero Day’?

    (L to R) McKinley Belcher III as Carl Otieno, Mozhan Navabi as Melissa Kornblau, Robert De Niro as George Mullen, Jesse Plemons as Roger Carlson and Connie Britton as Valerie Whitesell in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    (L to R) McKinley Belcher III as Carl Otieno, Mozhan Navabi as Melissa Kornblau, Robert De Niro as George Mullen, Jesse Plemons as Roger Carlson and Connie Britton as Valerie Whitesell in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    The new series follows respected former U.S. President George Mullen (De Niro), who, as head of the Zero Day Commission, is charged with finding the perpetrators of a devastating cyber-attack that has caused chaos around the country and thousands of fatalities.

    As disinformation runs rampant and the personal ambition of power brokers in technology, Wall Street, and government collide, Mullen’s unwavering search for the truth forces him to confront his own dark secrets while risking all he holds dear.

    Lest you think he’s just picking up a paycheck on this one, De Niro was, according to Newman, truly involved:

    “De Niro very much became our partner in this process — very hands-on, very involved, read everything at every stage, and it’s been an incredible honor and privilege. You can count on one hand the actors and actresses in history who bring this level of gravitas, pedigree, and talent to their work.”

    Who else appears in ‘Zero Day’?

    Angela Bassett as President Mitchell in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    Angela Bassett as President Mitchell in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    The rest of the cast are as follows…

    Angela Bassett is President Evelyn Mitchell, the current president of the United States. Mitchell is a brilliant and perceptive political tactician who hires Mullen to take on an unprecedented role in American history.

    Jesse Plemons is Roger Carlson, George Mullen’s former aide. Roger is now a trusted fixer and an unabashed hustler who’s seeking a return to the national stage alongside Mullen.

    Lizzy Caplan is Alexandra Mullen, a young congresswoman from New York who’s worked hard to distance herself from her father’s political legacy and establish herself in her own right.

    Lizzy Caplan as Alexandra Mullen in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    Lizzy Caplan as Alexandra Mullen in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    Connie Britton is Valerie Whitesell, a savvy, intelligent political operative and Mullen’s former chief of staff who returns to public life to oversee Mullen’s new role back in the spotlight.

    Joan Allen is Sheila Mullen, former first lady and nominee to the federal bench. Elegant and always poised, Sheila is a supportive and present wife and mother with strong professional ambitions of her own — and she’s nobody’s fool.

    Matthew Modine is Richard Dreyer, a confident, colorful public figure. As the speaker of the house, he’s an adept politician.

    Bill Camp is CIA Director Jeremy Lasch, the ultimate insider who seems to know everyone’s secret. He can either be a dangerous enemy or a valuable friend to Mullen and everyone in his circle.

    Dan Stevens as Evan Green in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    Dan Stevens as Evan Green in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    Dan Stevens is Evan Green, the charismatic, calculating, and divisive host of a wildly popular political TV show who becomes a thorn in George Mullen’s side as his loudest critic and chief public antagonist.

    Gaby Hoffmann is Monica Kidder, a controversial Silicon Valley billionaire whose brilliant vision and technological domination has the power to help or hinder Mullen’s investigation.

    Clark Gregg is Robert Lyndon, a corporate raider, provocateur, and billionaire who has mastered the dark arts of political manipulation.

    Mark Ivanir is Natan, an intelligence operative and Mullen confidant from an era when intelligence — and trust — still mattered.

    When will ‘Zero Day’ be on screens?

    Netflix will launch all six hour-long episodes of the show on February 20th next year.

    (L to R) Robert De Niro as George Mullen and Angela Bassett as President Mitchell in 'Zero Day'. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.
    (L to R) Robert De Niro as George Mullen and Angela Bassett as President Mitchell in ‘Zero Day’. Photo: Courtesy of Jojo Whilden/Netflix © 2024.

    List of Robert De Niro Movies:

    Buy Robert De Niro Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Salem’s Lot’

    (L to R) Alfre Woodard, John Benjamin Hickey, Makenzie Leigh, Lewis Pullman, and Jordan Preston Carter in 'Salem's Lot'. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    (L to R) Alfre Woodard, John Benjamin Hickey, Makenzie Leigh, Lewis Pullman, and Jordan Preston Carter in ‘Salem’s Lot’. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    Landing on Max on October 3rd, ‘Salem’s Lot’ is hoping to entice the Halloween movie crowd with its old-school Stephen King chills.

    Yet the movie, which has been sitting completed on a shelf at Warner Bros.’ New Line arm, struggles with its less-than-entirely fresh treatment of the genre and some predictable characters.

    Related Article: J.J. Abrams Will Produce and may Direct Stephen King Film Billy Summers

    Does ‘Salem’s Lot’ get its teeth into you?

    John Benjamin Hickey in 'Salem's Lot'. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    John Benjamin Hickey in ‘Salem’s Lot’. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    It says something when a film by a writer who has been partly responsible for some of the biggest recent horror hits can’t secure a solid theatrical release. Admittedly, we live in an age where studios and other companies are seemingly quick to banish anything to their streaming services in hopes of propping up their flagging subscriber counts.

    Yet the move also does cause you to worry about the quality of the movie itself –– even with Gary Dauberman, who worked on ‘It’, that film’s sequel and several of the ‘Conjuring’ universe entries (including directing ‘Annabelle Comes Home’) –– at the helm, the result is something caught between two stools.

    Script and Direction

    'Salem's Lot'. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    ‘Salem’s Lot’. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    Dauberman certainly has the credits and drawing from one of Stephen King’s other classic novels might be cause to think this one is a slam dunk. And yet… ‘Salem’s Lot’ has some big issues in both tone and plotting.

    While the movie certainly boasts an impressively retro style (it evokes the 1970s setting very well, with song choices, art direction and cinematography all doing their job on that front), the throwback nature of the plotting is a problem. This is a movie that feels, even though it runs close to two hours, like chunks have been chopped out of it, characters knowing information you’re not sure how they gleaned, and plot developments skipping ahead with key connective tissue missing.

    Filmmakers place value in “show, don’t tell,” but here the occasionally extra moment of “tell” would not have gone amiss. Vampire lore is apparently something everyone is well versed in, but there’s little reason to suspect why.

    The style also extends to the effects work, and while some imagery, such as crosses that seem to glow with angelic light when they come into contact with vampires is cool, it’s also distracting in places. Dauberman seemingly has a handle on what makes King’s stories creepy to begin with but falls down when it comes to more climactic moments.

    Performances

    With Lewis Pullman scoring a well-earned starring role, the film also features some good work from respected character performers, though one or two from the cast let the side down.

    Lewis Pullman as Ben Mears

    Lewis Pullman in 'Salem's Lot'. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    Lewis Pullman in ‘Salem’s Lot’. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    Pullman has been a supporting actor for years, waiting in the wings for lead roles. Mears offers him one (though the movie was shot in 2021, so he’s been waiting longer than planned), the King stand-in who anchors the movie.

    Mears is a troubled yet likeable type, with an easy charm that Pullman can handle with grace and attitude, the everyman archetype coming naturally to him. And the role puts the actor through the wringer, having to deal with the growing supernatural threat. A large part of what works about ‘Salem’s Lot’ hangs firmly on his shoulders.

    Makenzie Leigh as Susan Norton

    Makenzie Leigh in 'Salem's Lot'. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    Makenzie Leigh in ‘Salem’s Lot’. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    Leigh manages to infuse what could be a relatively standard love interest with some spirit. A wannabe realtor stuck working as the secretary for a scummy local agent, she quickly bonds with Ben. And when they are drawn into the mystery of what’s happening around time, Leigh makes her paranoia and fear believable.

    Bill Camp as Matthew Burke

    (L to R) Jordan Preston Carter and Bill Camp in 'Salem's Lot'. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    (L to R) Jordan Preston Carter and Bill Camp in ‘Salem’s Lot’. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    Camp is an actor I appreciate in pretty much everything –– he brings a grumpy gravitas wherever he goes. Here, as local teacher Matt Burke, he’s allowed to more than just sit at desks and deliver speeches; and he grasps the opportunity with both hands.

    Alfre Woodard as Dr. Cody

    Alfre Woodard in 'Salem's Lot'. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    Alfre Woodard in ‘Salem’s Lot’. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    Woodard, just as accomplished as Camp, doesn’t get as fair a shake, though her doctor certainly has a few moments that stand out, her foul-mouthed reactions to vampires rising from the dead as entertaining as her calm medical demeanor.

    Pilou Asbæk as Richard Straker

    Pilou Asbaek in 'Salem's Lot'. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    Pilou Asbaek in ‘Salem’s Lot’. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    Asbæk gives good villain, though here he’s mostly the manservant to the actual threat newly moved to town. Still, for what he gets to do, he’s certainly watchable, even if he’s introduced in slightly clumsy, ‘Dracula’-referencing fashion (as much King’s issue as it is Dauberman’s.)

    Supporting cast

    A few other performances pop –– Spencer Treat Clark is good as local handyman/grave digger Mike Ryerson, who becomes one of the early victims of the vampiric plague that begins to sweep the town. John Benjamin Hickey does well as Father Callahan, the local priest who also happens to be the town drunk. And Alexander Ward, though his role is limited to playing the main vamp, Kurt Barlow, is solid as the creature causing the chaos.

    If there are weaker links among the cast, it’s in some of the other supporting players, who rarely break out of the stereotypical roles they’re handed. Though credit to Jordan Preston Carter as Mark Petrie, who gives the most memorable performance from the town’s kids.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Alfre Woodard, John Benjamin Hickey, Makenzie Leigh, Lewis Pullman, and Jordan Preston Carter in 'Salem's Lot'. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    (L to R) Alfre Woodard, John Benjamin Hickey, Makenzie Leigh, Lewis Pullman, and Jordan Preston Carter in ‘Salem’s Lot’. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    Dauberman certainly deserved better than to have his movie sit in limbo and then get shunted straight to Max. ‘Salem’s Lot’ is far from perfect, but it’s an entirely watchable adaptation of King’s novel, and might well have rustled up some business were in released in cinemas.

    ‘Salem’s Lot’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Salem’s Lot’?

    Author Ben Mears (Lewis Pullman) returns to his childhood home of Jerusalem’s Lot, still haunted by a family tragedy.

    He’s hit town in search of inspiration for his next book only to discover the place where he grew up is being preyed upon by a bloodthirsty vampire.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Salem’s Lot’?

    • Lewis Pullman as Ben Mears
    • Makenzie Leigh as Susan Norton
    • Alfre Woodard as Dr. Cody
    • William Sadler as Parkins Gillespie
    • Bill Camp as Matthew Burke
    • Pilou Asbæk as Richard Straker
    • John Benjamin Hickey as Father Callahan
    • Jordan Preston Carter as Mark Petrie
    • Spencer Treat Clark as Mike Ryerson
    • Nicholas Crovetti as Danny Glick
    • Cade Woodward as Ralph Glick
    • Alexander Ward as Kurt Barlow
    'Salem's Lot' premieres October 3rd on Max. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.
    ‘Salem’s Lot’ premieres October 3rd on Max. Photo: Courtesy of New Line Cinema/Max.

    Other Steven King Movies:

    Buy Stephen King Movies On Amazon

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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+.

    Movies and TV Shows Similar to ‘Presumed Innocent’:

    Buy ‘Presumed Innocent‘ Movie On Amazon

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  • ‘American Rust: Broken Justice’ – Jeff Daniels and Maura Tierney

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    Premiering on Prime Video beginning March 28th is ‘American Rust: Broken Justice,’ which is the second season of the popular crime series starring Jeff Daniels (‘The Martian’) and Maura Tierney (‘Primal Fear’).

    Related Article: Jeff Daniels to Star in Showtime’s Family Drama ‘Rust’

    Jeff Daniels and Maura Tierney Talk 'American Rust: Broken Justice'
    (L to R) Jeff Daniels and Maura Tierney Talk ‘American Rust: Broken Justice’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Jeff Daniels and Maura Tierney about the second season of their popular series ‘American Rust: Broken Justice,’ where it picks up, Grace and Dell’s relationship, and the themes of the series.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Daniels, Tierney, Mark Pellegrino, Alex Neustaedter, Julie Mayorga, Luna Lauren Velez, Rob Yang, and executive producers Dan Futterman and Adam Rapp.

    Jeff Daniels (Detective Del Harris) in 'American Rust: Broken Justice.'
    Jeff Daniels (Detective Del Harris) in ‘American Rust: Broken Justice.’ Credit: Dennis Mong/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Jeff, can you talk about where Dell is and what he is doing when the new season starts?

    Jeff Daniels: Well, we’re in Buell, Pennsylvania for some of it. Dell is now in Pittsburgh working with the Pittsburgh Police Department. We’re about four months after the end of season one, four months later I think it was. Dell has moved into the police department, and he is working again as an investigator or detective and has a new partner. He has a new bunch of people in his life, including Grace, who is now, I mean we’re basically together in Dell’s cabin down in Buell. So, on weekends Dell kind of goes down to the cabin to see Grace. So that’s still there and then a whole bunch of stuff starts happening. Buckle up.

    MF: Maura, can you talk about Grace’s relationship with Dell this season and her devotion to him?

    Maura Tierney: I mean I think that will be born out in this season as well. I think she even steps up in her commitment to protecting him or having his back. So, she’s starting from physically a different place because she’s living with Dell, but he’s spending a lot of time in Pittsburgh. So, it’s really a brand-new start for her this season.

    Maura Tierney (Grace Poe) in 'American Rust: Broken Justice.'
    Maura Tierney (Grace Poe) in ‘American Rust: Broken Justice.’ Credit: Dennis Mong/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    MF: Jeff, how would you describe the themes explored in ‘American Rust: Broken Justice’?

    JD: I will say that it’s whatever your definition of the American dream is. For these people in this show, maybe it’s just like a stress-free life. Maybe it’s just peace. Maybe it’s just a peaceful relationship between Dell and Grace, which is all they really want. I keep going back to, we’re in the Midwest, you’re constantly told how simple and basic you are compared to the coasts. But underneath and inside these simple and basic people in Pittsburgh are some very complicated feelings, emotions, circumstances, and I like that. If there’s a theme in complicated behind the simple, it’s not everything’s what you think it is, just on the surface, but all that plays into what we’re trying to do with the show.

    MF: Finally, Maura, what were some of the themes of the series that you were excited to explore this season?

    MT: Peace is not all easy to come by if you don’t have any money or a job. It’s a luxury in a lot of ways. So, I think if you say the “American Dream,” I think that is a goal to have some sense of peace, contentment or safety, which is not achievable for everybody in the show or in our country right now.

    Maura Tierney (Grace Poe), Jon Osbeck (Billy’s Lawyer) and Mark Pellegrino (Virgil Poe) in 'American Rust: Broken Justice.'
    (L to R) Maura Tierney (Grace Poe), Jon Osbeck (Billy’s Lawyer) and Mark Pellegrino (Virgil Poe) in ‘American Rust: Broken Justice.’ Credit: Dennis Mong/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    What is the Plot of ‘American Rust: Broken Justice’?

    American Rust: Broken Justice takes us back to the fictional small town of Buell, Pennsylvania. Del Harris (Jeff Daniels) and Grace Poe (Maura Tierney) try to rebuild their lives after the harrowing events of Season One. Season Two picks up with a string of seemingly unrelated murders, hinting at a much larger conspiracy that threatens everyone in this small, tight-knit town.

    Who is in the Cast of ‘American Rust: Broken Justice’?

    Kyle Beltran (Detective Fisher) and Jeff Daniels (Detective Del Harris) in 'American Rust: Broken Justice.'
    (L to R) Kyle Beltran (Detective Fisher) and Jeff Daniels (Detective Del Harris) in ‘American Rust: Broken Justice.’ Credit: Dennis Mong/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘American Rust: Broken Justice’:

    Buy Jeff Daniels Movies On Amazon

  • Movie Review: ‘Drive-Away Dolls’

    Margaret Qualley as "Jamie" and Geraldine Viswanathan as "Marian" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Margaret Qualley as “Jamie” and Geraldine Viswanathan as “Marian” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    In theaters now is ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ starring Margaret Qualley, Geraldine Viswanathan, Beanie Feldstein, Colman Domingo, Bill Camp, Pedro Pascal, Joey Slotnick, C.J. Wilson, and Matt Damon.

    Related Article: Geraldine Viswanathan, Margaret Qualley and Beanie Feldstein Talk ‘Drive-Away Dolls’

    Initial Thoughts

    With the Coen brothers taking some time off from each other after more than three decades of making films together, Joel Coen directed the eerie, intense ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’ with Denzel Washington, while Ethan Coen has gone in a decidedly different – if also somewhat more familiar — direction.

    Writing with his wife (and occasional Coens editor) Tricia Cooke, Ethan has come up with ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a combination of road movie, comedic caper, and lesbian romance that comes across in the style of earlier Coen brothers laughers like ‘Raising Arizona’ or ‘The Big Lebowski.’ But while the two leads have a sweet and even sexy chemistry, the laughs are only intermittent and the movie ends up as a trifle more than anything else.

    Story and Direction

    Actor Margaret Qualley, actor Geraldine Viswanathan and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Actor Margaret Qualley, actor Geraldine Viswanathan and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Jamie (Margaret Qualley) and Marian (Geraldine Viswanathan) are two young women who are part of Philadelphia’s lesbian community circa December 1999. Jamie is spur-of-the-moment, unfiltered, and endlessly horny, wrecking her latest relationship with cop Sukie (Beanie Feldstein) when she is caught cheating on her. Marian, on the other hand, is uptight and generally unhappy with her life, which Jamie sees as a cue that her friend needs to get out in the world and get some action.

    The two decide to reboot their lives with a road trip to Tallahassee, Florida, where Marian wants to do some reading and bird-watching while Jamie wants to stop at every lesbian bar they can find along the way and get them both laid. The pair hit the road in a one-way rental courtesy of drive-away agency operator Curlie (Bill Camp) – except that Curlie has given them the wrong car.

    Unbeknownst to the ladies, the trunk contains cargo both strange and decidedly illegal, and the two women find themselves soon pursued by two goons (C.J. Wilson and Joey Slotnick) sent in hot pursuit by their boss (Colman Domingo), who answers to an even higher, more sensitive authority. How Jamie and Marian deal with the situation could either shatter their friendship, end their lives, or both.

    Actor Geraldine Viswanathan, actor Margaret Qualley, and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Actor Geraldine Viswanathan, actor Margaret Qualley, and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    As one might ascertain, ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ (the original title, ‘Drive-Away Dykes,’ was deemed not marketable by the studio) sounds a lot like it’s in the vein of the deadpan, surreal comedies that Joel and Ethan Coen were perhaps best-known for during their 34 years of making films together. While the siblings have made more somber films together as well, like the brilliant ‘No Country for Old Men,’ as well as drama/comedy hybrids like ‘Fargo’ and ‘A Serious Man,’ it’s their zanier work like ‘Raising Arizona,’ ‘The Big Lebowski,’ and ‘O Brother Where Are Thou?’ that audiences arguably associate most with them.

    ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ is squarely in the latter tradition, with a slightly different spin. In addition to directing (this is Ethan’s first narrative feature on his own, following a 2022 Jerry Lee Lewis documentary), Ethan also wrote the script with his wife Tricia Cooke, who identifies as queer. Perhaps the freshest aspect of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ is that its leads, Jamie and Marian, are not solely characterized by their sexuality; yes, the movie features a heaping of sex, and Jamie is determined to get some nookie for both herself and Marian, but it’s not the driving factor of the story or part of its overall themes. It’s just part of who they are.

    The relationship between Jamie and Marian is at first caustic, of course – these two couldn’t be more opposite – but it soon unveils a sweeter undertone as they (somewhat predictably) begin to realize that their feelings for each other run deeper than suspected. Qualley and Viswanathan are great together in that regard, and the strongest element of the movie. But the plot – a mishmash of ‘60s and ‘70s road trip B-movies with a dash of psychedelia – is so slight, the ultimate mystery so silly, and the humor so intermittent that ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ ends up feeling like a lark more than anything else. It has its fun moments, but it dissolves from one’s mind the minute it’s over.

    Characters With No Names

    Colman Domingo as "The Chief", C.J. Wilson and Joey Slotnick as "The Goons" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Colman Domingo as “The Chief”, C.J. Wilson and Joey Slotnick as “The Goons” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features

    Part of the problem with ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ is that it feels almost like a rough draft version of a Coen brothers film (since Cooke, a film editor by trade, frequently edited the movies made by her husband and brother-in-law, she was an integral part of that process as well). The Coens’ comedies are often fizzy in nature, but the best of them have had either incredibly compelling characters or either a darker or more emotional underpinning that helped turn them into classics.

    There’s little of that in ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ outside of the chemistry between Qualley (who looks a lot like her mom, Andie MacDowell, in this film) and Viswanathan, both of whom have great timing, highly expressive faces and effortless presence. Qualley is particularly strong here. But once you get beyond them, the rest of the characters are barely sketched in.

    Pedro Pascal stars as "The Collector" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    Pedro Pascal stars as “The Collector” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Most of them don’t even have names, in fact. Domingo, always excellent, is just called the Chief; his goons are literally listed as The Goons in the credits. A cameoing Pedro Pascal is known simply as the Collector (there are a couple of other cameos as well, from Matt Damon and a star we won’t name). We’re always a little suspicious when we see cast lists like this: it’s often a clear sign that these characters are nothing more than stock figures, and little attempt is made to give them any more depth than that (the Goons’ scenes together – one of them constantly yammering and the other mostly silent – also feel like reheated leftovers from two similar characters in ‘Fargo,’ played in that film by Steve Buscemi and Peter Stormare).

    But that’s the nature of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’: it’s so sketchily pulled together that despite the warmth of its leads and a few fleeting jokes than land well, it feels like half the movie is missing in a way. And in one sense, it is.

    Final Thoughts

    Geraldine Viswanathan as "Marian", Margaret Qualley as "Jamie" and Beanie Feldstein as "Sukie" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Geraldine Viswanathan as “Marian”, Margaret Qualley as “Jamie” and Beanie Feldstein as “Sukie” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    The Coen brothers have made some of the most memorable movies of the last 40 years, from their still-stunning debut ‘Blood Simple’ to some of the later masterpieces we mentioned earlier. But from the two narrative movies we’ve seen them make separately – Joel’s ‘Macbeth’ and Ethan’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ — it seems like they have very different sensibilities. Based on watching the latter, it almost seems that Ethan needs his brother’s sense of gravitas to balance out his goofier impulses.

    We certainly admire the lead performances and the film’s successful attempt to make a queer-centric movie that doesn’t feel like exploitation (not the good kind) or heavy-handed social commentary. But we wish those were in service of something that was funnier in a more organic way and less of a one-dimensional pastiche.

    ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ receives 5.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the Plot of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’?

    This comedy caper follows Jamie (Margaret Qualley), an uninhibited free spirit bemoaning yet another breakup with a girlfriend, and her demure friend Marian (Geraldine Viswanathan) who desperately needs to loosen up. In search of a fresh start, the two embark on an impromptu road trip to Tallahassee, but things quickly go awry when they cross paths with a group of inept criminals along the way.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’?

    • Margaret Qualley as Jamie
    • Geraldine Viswanathan as Marian
    • Beanie Feldstein as Sukie
    • Colman Domingo as Chief
    • Pedro Pascal as Santos
    • Bill Camp as Curlie
    • Matt Damon as Senator Channel
    • Joey Slotnick as Arliss
    Margaret Qualley as "Jamie" and Geraldine Viswanathan as "Marian" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Margaret Qualley as “Jamie” and Geraldine Viswanathan as “Marian” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Other Ethan Coen Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Coen brothers Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ Cast Interview

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    Opening in theaters on February 23rd is the new film from director Ethan Coen (‘The Big Lebowski’) called ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ which he co-wrote with Tricia Cooke and stars Geraldine Viswanathan (‘Blockers’), Margaret Qualley (‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’), Beanie Feldstein (‘Book Smart’), Colman Domingo (‘Rustin’), Matt Damon (‘The Martian’) and Pedro Pascal (‘The Last of Us’).

    Geraldine Viswanathan, Margaret Qualley and Beanie Feldstein talk director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls.'
    (L to R) Geraldine Viswanathan, Margaret Qualley and Beanie Feldstein talk director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Geraldine Viswanathan, Margaret Qualley and Beanie Feldstein about their work on ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ their quirky characters, and working with director Ethan Coen.

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

    Related Article: Marvel’s ‘Thunderbolts’: Geraldine Viswanathan Replacing Ayo Edebiri

    Geraldine Viswanathan stars as "Marian" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    Geraldine Viswanathan stars as “Marian” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Geraldine, can you talk about your first reaction to Ethan Coen and Trisha Cooke’s screenplay and the aspects of this character you were excited to explore on screen?

    Geraldine Viswanathan: I think getting the script was just so exciting. I feel like Ethan and Trish are some of the greatest writers of our time. It was just such an original and fresh script with so many cool elements and so many surprising turns, and I really fell in love with the character, Marian. I feel like at first, I thought I was really different from her, but I also kind of understood her and related to her and the way that I get introverted or sensitive and shy. I felt excited to play into those parts of myself a little bit more.

    Margaret Qualley stars as "Jamie" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    Margaret Qualley stars as “Jamie” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    MF: Margaret, Jamie is really a free spirit, can you talk about your approach to playing her?

    Margaret Qualley: Playing Jamie, she’s a total free spirit. It was very inspiring. I would like to have a little bit more of Jamie in my everyday life because I’m somebody that can be a little in my head, go home a little bit anxious, and I think that’s not really a big part of her experience. I imagine her kind of like a teenage boy. Not that teenage boys aren’t in their head, but there maybe is kind of like a puppy spirit.

    Beanie Feldstein stars as "Sukie" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    Beanie Feldstein stars as “Sukie” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    MF: Beanie, can you talk about Sukie’s breakup with Jamie and how that anger really fuels her journey through the movie?

    Beanie Feldstein: I mean, I think you hit it that she’s so heartbroken, but that kind of takes a turn into just tunnel vision, that she’s just, no matter whether they’re together or not together, she’s focused on Jamie. That was the note that Ethan and Tricia gave me in my Zoom audition. They were just like, “You cannot be more obsessed with her, and nothing takes your focus away from her.” So, I think that’s kind of Sukie’s motives the entire time, and to play someone who was just unapologetically angry, and abrasive is the opposite of my personality. So that was fun to jump full speed ahead. I think Ethan and Tricia saw something in me that I don’t see in myself. So, it was fun to play.

    Actor Geraldine Viswanathan, actor Margaret Qualley, and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Actor Geraldine Viswanathan, actor Margaret Qualley, and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    MF: Finally, Geraldine, what was it like being on set with Ethan Coen and collaborating with him on this movie?

    GV: I mean, incredible. He is one of the best filmmakers of our time and really is a wonderful person. He has every right to be an asshole, but he’s just not. He’s so great and special, and he’s just a genius. I just relished being around him. Anytime he spoke I was like, “Yes.” I just wanted to learn from him as much as I could. He’s even better than you could imagine.

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    What is the Plot of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’?

    This comedy caper follows Jamie (Margaret Qualley), an uninhibited free spirit bemoaning yet another breakup with a girlfriend, and her demure friend Marian (Geraldine Viswanathan) who desperately needs to loosen up. In search of a fresh start, the two embark on an impromptu road trip to Tallahassee, but things quickly go awry when they cross paths with a group of inept criminals along the way.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’?

    • Margaret Qualley as Jamie
    • Geraldine Viswanathan as Marian
    • Beanie Feldstein as Sukie
    • Colman Domingo as Chief
    • Pedro Pascal as Santos
    • Bill Camp as Curlie
    • Matt Damon as Senator Channel
    • Joey Slotnick as Arliss
    Geraldine Viswanathan as "Marian", Margaret Qualley as "Jamie" and Beanie Feldstein as "Sukie" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Geraldine Viswanathan as “Marian”, Margaret Qualley as “Jamie” and Beanie Feldstein as “Sukie” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Other Ethan Coen Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Coen brothers Movies on Amazon

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Boston Strangler’

    Keira Knightley as Loretta McLaughlin in 20th Century Studios' 'Boston Strangler,' exclusively on Hulu.
    Keira Knightley as Loretta McLaughlin in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Boston Strangler,’ exclusively on Hulu. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2022 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Released on Hulu today, ‘Boston Strangler’ faces the pressure of being both a true crime story and a crusading journalist narrative, which have been brought to screens in compelling and memorable form by stories such as Netflix‘s ‘Mindhunter’ and ‘Spotlight’. We bring up those two titles in particular, because this new movie comes across as a mash-up of both, even if it’s not quite playing on their level.

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    What’s the story of ‘Boston Strangler’

    One of the most infamous crime cases in history, the story of the Boston Strangler has already inspired several movies and TV series. Between 1962 and 1964, more than a dozen single women, ranging in age from 19 to 85, were killed in the Boston area, all of them strangled, their bodies posed provocatively by a mysterious attacker who came to be known as the “Boston Strangler.”

    Although convicted sex offender Alberto DeSalvo confessed to the crimes, there was no physical evidence tying him to the victims; he instead received a life sentence for a separate series of rapes and sexual assaults and was stabbed to death in prison years after his conviction. Speculation remains whether he was the sole perpetrator of the Strangler murders — decades later, the case is the subject of widespread fascination for many armchair sleuths and true-crime aficionados.

    Written and directed by Matt Ruskin, ‘Boston Strangler’ follows Loretta McLaughlin (Keira Knightley), a reporter for the Record-American newspaper, who becomes the first journalist to connect the murders.

    When we first meet her, Loretta is assigned to the lifestyle section, she pushes to do more crime reporting, even as her hard-bitten bosses think she’s not up to the job. Early stumbles don’t help with that impression, but she’s soon making progress.

    As the mysterious killer claims more and more victims and fear spreads across the city, Loretta attempts to continue her investigation alongside colleague and confidante Jean Cole (Carrie Coon), yet the duo finds themselves stymied by the rampant sexism of the era.

    Nevertheless, McLaughlin and Cole bravely pursue the story at great personal risk, putting their own lives on the line in their quest to uncover the truth.

    Carrie Coon as Jean Cole in 20th Century Studios' 'Boston Strangler,' exclusively on Hulu.
    Carrie Coon as Jean Cole in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Boston Strangler,’ exclusively on Hulu. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2022 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

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    What works about ‘Boston Strangler’?

    Ruskin, no stranger to true crime tales after ‘Crown Heights’ and a wealth of documentary experience, brings a sure touch to the new movie, which does convincingly follow in the footsteps of ‘Zodiac’ and other serial killer thrillers.

    Knightley and Coon of course bring great performances to the central roles, convincingly embodying women who are battling their bosses and trying to juggle family life even as they dig into the complicated case.

    Unlike, say, the recent ‘She Said’, which slightly suffered from showing the journalists digging into a case that was largely in the past, ‘Boston Strangler’ –– despite its period setting –– throws you right into the heart of the case as the murders are still happening, and the two women are under threat even as they work to find the truth.

    And that 1960s setting also means that the difficulties the pair face in convincing anyone to take them seriously are deeper and more shocking when viewed through today’s lens. When you have cops falsely claiming that a journalist was flirting with one of their officers to get information, you know the stakes are higher than just dealing with the crime.

    Refreshingly, Ruskin doesn’t shy away from the divisions that crept in between the two as the case continued, as their differing ideas on the investigation began to drag them apart (though they still remained friends afterwards). And despite a clear passion for their work, he crafts the characters as fallible humans, not just crusading angels.

    Around the central pair, the writer/director also builds a classy ensemble of veterans including Chris Cooper as editor Jack MacLaine, the man who reluctantly gives McLaughlin her shot at the crime desk. He’s a boozy, old school newspaper man who has connections to the cops that she’s frustrating but finds it within himself to back her when he realizes that she’s truly on to something.

    There’s also the likes of Alessandro Nivola as driven cop Detective Conley, who figures out that it’s better to work with McLaughlin rather than stonewall her, and Bill Camp as Commissioner McNamara, who resents her stories painting his department in a bad light, however true it might be.

    Alessandro Nivola as Detective Conley in 20th Century Studios' 'Boston Strangler,' exclusively on Hulu.
    Alessandro Nivola as Detective Conley in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Boston Strangler,’ exclusively on Hulu. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Are there problems with the movie?

    One major issue with the film late on is the pace, which slackens noticeably even as it should be ramping up. True, Ruskin is largely bound by the true story –– which can be both a blessing and a curse when you’re trying to make a compelling movie.

    Part of the frustration of this case, with none of the authorities able to pin down a suspect (and being massively negligent when it comes to digging into the case) translates to the screen as the story starts to drag a little.

    And Knightley, while breathing convincing life into McLaughlin, manages an American accent, but it’s not one you’d quite describe as “Bostonian” (especially given the real McLaughlin was born in Massachusetts) and it stands out even more given the accents around her (Coon, for example, sounds convincingly like she comes from the area). But it’s not a huge issue as you’re too busy following the journalists’ story.

    Though it’s a shame that Disney decided to put the movie on to Hulu rather than giving it a shot in theaters, you can see why it might be considered a risk –– unless you have the likes of David Fincher aboard, there’s a chance audiences won’t show up for such a dark, moody thriller in an age of giant franchise movies.

    Ably telling its story with just a few issues of its own, ‘Boston Strangler’ is a worthy addition to the genre blending journalism and crime.

    ‘Boston Strangler’ receives 8 out of 10 stars.

    Chris Cooper as Jack MacLaine in 20th Century Studios' 'Boston Strangler,' exclusively on Hulu.
    Chris Cooper as Jack MacLaine in 20th Century Studios’ ‘Boston Strangler,’ exclusively on Hulu. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2023 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

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