Tag: billy-barratt

  • Movie Review: ‘Bring Her Back’

    (L to R) Sally Hawkins and Billy Barratt in 'Bring Her Back'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Sally Hawkins and Jonah Wren Phillips in ‘Bring Her Back’. Photo: A24.

    ‘Bring Her Back’ receives 9 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters May 30 is ‘Bring Her Back,’ directed by Danny and Michael Philippou and starring Sally Hawkins, Billy Barratt, Sora Wong, Sally-Anne Upton and Jonah Wren Phillips.

    Related Article: A24 has Ordered a Sequel to Successful, Spirit-Contacting Horror Movie ‘Talk to Me’

    Initial Thoughts

    Jonah Wren Phillips in 'Bring Her Back'. Photo: A24.
    Jonah Wren Phillips in ‘Bring Her Back’. Photo: A24.

    Australian brothers Danny and Michael Philippou made their directing debut in 2022 with ‘Talk to Me,’ a teen-centric horror tale about a group of bored suburban youths who unleash an ancient horror through the use of a relic that can communicate with the dead. It was a striking debut that, while relying on the manic energy of teens getting themselves into trouble via partying and forbidden behavior, also tapped into some surprisingly deep emotional wells as it examined themes of grief and responsibility.

    Now the Philippous, working again with co-writer Bill Hinzman (who co-wrote ‘Talk to Me’ as well), have leaped forward in terms of their evolution as filmmakers with the frightening, powerful, and emotionally blistering ‘Bring Her Back,’ which addresses many of the same themes as their first feature yet in a different scenario with more complex characters and textures. They’ve also made a film that’s also more horrific and unsettling than their debut, but the plentiful blood, gore, and violence are more resonant because of the nerve this film strikes. No sophomore slump here.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Jonah Wren Phillips and Sally Hawkins in 'Bring Her Back'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Jonah Wren Phillips and Sally Hawkins in ‘Bring Her Back’. Photo: A24.

    ‘Bring Her Back’ gets the viewer off-balance from the start with a harrowing glimpse of the worst home movie you’ve ever seen: a grainy, spasmodic account of a terrifying ritual that almost defies description. The details of that rite are spelled out to some extent later on, but the Philippous are also keenly aware that the best horror stories leave a lot either unexplained or up to the viewer to connect the dots.

    We then meet teenager Andy (Billy Barratt) and his vision-impaired younger stepsister Piper (Sora Wong), who have lost their mother not long ago and now face the trauma of their father’s sudden passing as well. With Andy not quite 18 years old, the pair must stay in foster care for several months, so social services places them in the care of Laura (Sally Hawkins), a psychologist who is already caring for a little boy named Oliver (Jonah Wren Phillips) who is non-verbal and given to extreme behavioral swings, while Laura herself is still grieving the death of her daughter, who like Piper was also vision-impaired.

    Andy is naturally protective of Piper and suspicious of people who even seemingly want to help them, while Piper herself wants to experience the world and not let her impairment get in the way. Laura takes an uncomfortably motherly attachment to Piper while being almost deliberately cold to Andy, a coldness that curdles quickly into outright cruelty. And not just cruelty; Laura slyly manipulates both children, both to lure them into her web of deceit and slowly turn them against each other, while she takes steps to enact the hidden, utterly grotesque agenda she’s had in mind all along.

    What that agenda is – and how the mental and physical deterioration of Oliver plays into it – is best left discovered by the viewer. As we said earlier, the Philippous are not interested in spelling out every “why and how” for the audience, but the picture gradually comes into focus if one is paying attention. Some aspects of the plot are left enigmatic, which only adds to the feeling of dislocation that the directors establish right from the start.

    They’re also superb at keeping the film intimate yet decidedly uneasy (two non-horror scenes, one in which Laura insists that Andy kiss his dead father on the lips at his wake, and another in which she and the children get drunk, are among its most unpleasant), letting it burn relatively slowly at first as we get to know the players, and then unleashing one horror after another as the tension between Andy and Laura escalates into a full-blown nightmare. But then the filmmakers pull the rug out from under the characters and the viewer again, as more secrets come to light and the vast reservoirs of pain and grief that all the characters carry come fully to the surface – much in the way that the empty swimming pool in Laura’s yard is finally filled up.

    And if you thought that the ritual glimpsed in that grainy videotape was bad, there are scenes here down the stretch that will send you crawling under your seat – including a sequence in the kitchen that is almost impossible to watch.

    Cast and Performances

    Sally Hawkins in 'Bring Her Back'. Photo: A24.
    Sally Hawkins in ‘Bring Her Back’. Photo: A24.

    There is a force of nature in this movie and her name is Sally Hawkins. Usually cast as earnest, compassionate, or at least amiable protagonists, Hawkins hasn’t often been given the opportunity to play a character like Laura and she digs into it with verve, complexity, and an aura of true menace. Laura is cagey, manipulative, emotionally abusive, and corrupted down to her soul by the evil she’s manifested to enact her awful plan. Yet as portrayed by this inimitable actor, she is also deeply wounded by grief, tormented by loss, and even – to the degree it’s possible – empathetic despite the horrors she inflicts.

    Hawkins pivots through Laura’s many psychological states sometimes within a single scene, and the effect keeps the children – and the audience – constantly off-balance. The character, as written, is another sign of the Philippou brothers’ evolution, as the adult figures in ‘Talk to Me’ were largely one-dimensional. But this woman goes to a different level altogether and is fleshed out bracingly by Hawkins’ incredible work.

    And speaking of the children, there are three of them in this film and all are equally sensational. Billy Barratt is impressive as Andy, a teenager forced to take on adult responsibilities before he should, yet willing to take on those duties when it comes to his stepsister. Their relationship is sweet and believable, which makes what happens even more horrific. And Andy finds himself no match for Laura, with the boy fighting to keep his composure and sanity in a world that doesn’t want to hear him.

    Sora Wong is just as sympathetic as Piper, Andy’s visually impaired younger step-sibling, who has a grace and wisdom beyond her years and a genuine desire to be part of the world that she can only glimpse in shadows. As with Barratt, the Philippous coax a tremendously warm and authentic performance from this young actor, who makes her screen debut here. And then there is Jonah Wren Phillips as the mysterious Oliver: the less we say about what he goes through, the more shocking it will be for the viewer, but this littlest of the three kids in the movies delivers stunning physical and psychological work as the living avatar of the grief and madness that possess Laura and drive her to unspeakable actions.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Sora Wong and Billy Barratt in 'Bring Her Back'. Photo: A24.
    (L to R) Sora Wong and Billy Barratt in ‘Bring Her Back’. Photo: A24.

    While ‘Talk to Me’ had a certain youthful hip factor and manic energy to it that perhaps lessened the impact of its weighty themes to some degree, ‘Bring Her Back’ dispenses with that for a darker, more menacing, and more emotionally devastating tale with deeper characterizations and an even more bleak, despairing outlook on how we handle grief and what lengths loss and heartbreak can drive us to.

    On the other hand, ‘Bring Her Back’ also amps up the sheer terror that the Philippous are capable of delivering onscreen. ‘Talk to Me’ had its share of genuine scares and unpleasant gore, but ‘Bring Her Back’ doles out both in even more intense fashion, thanks especially to the unnerving work of Sally Hawkins and Jonah Wren Phillips. There is a palpable sense of unease throughout the entire movie that’s punctuated by some of the most frightening sequences we’ve seen so far this year. Not only are the Philippous maturing in their dramatic sensibilities, but they’re also quickly becoming breakout horror auteurs who know how to make the genre work for them. We look forward to what they bring next time around.

    6DAzYE7HUMnT6TPuSbvm91

    What is the plot of ‘Bring Her Back’?

    Reeling from the loss of both parents, a teenage boy and his younger sister find themselves in the care of an eccentric foster mother who has a sinister agenda of her own.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Bring Her Back’?

    • Sally Hawkins as Laura
    • Billy Barratt as Andy
    • Sora Wong as Piper
    • Jonah Wren Phillips as Oliver
    • Sally-Anne Upton as Wendy
    Jonah Wren Phillips in 'Bring Her Back'. Photo: A24.
    Jonah Wren Phillips in ‘Bring Her Back’. Photo: A24.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Bring Her Back’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Bring Her Back’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Sally Hawkins Movies on Amazon

    4Om1ClCH
  • ‘Invasion’ Season 2 Interview: Simon Kinberg

    hZaVgp0w

    Premiering its final episode of its second season on Apple TV+ October 25th is the popular sci-fi series ‘Invasion,’ which was created by Simon Kinberg (‘Dark Phoenix’), who also wrote the episode, and David Well (‘Hunters’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with series creator Simon Kinberg about the season 2 finale of ‘Invasion,’ telling a different alien invasion story, the scope of the series, working with the new season 2 directors, and as a producer on ‘Deadpool’ and ‘Logan,’ how he feels about Hugh Jackman reprising his role as Wolverine opposite Ryan Reynolds in the MCU’s ‘Deadpool 3.’

    Shioli Kutsuna in 'Invasion' season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Shioli Kutsuna in ‘Invasion’ season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.

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

    Moviefone: To begin with, what would you say to fans of the show to tease them about the season 2 finale, and will it act as a satisfying ending to the overall story or will there be a cliffhanger for a possible season 3?

    Simon Kinberg: I think what people can expect from the last episode is certainly bigger action than they’ve seen so far in season two. There’s been a lot of action in season two, obviously a lot more than there was in season one. But really it culminates in episode 9 and gets massive in episode 10. The other thing I would say about the last episode is, in many ways, the first two seasons have been obviously about these different characters from all over the world, but they’ve been slowly coming together in terms of their storylines over now 19 episodes and going into 20. The last episode brings them together in some surprising ways, and you see in some ways why we chose these particular stories to tell. It wasn’t completely random. I hope that the end of episode 10 is satisfying to people because it’s got a big battle and it has a measure of closure to it. But like all of my favorite television and certainly my favorite science fiction and mystery television, there’s still whole worlds to unfold beyond this season.

    Azhy Robertson and Golshifteh Farahani in 'Invasion' season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Azhy Robertson and Golshifteh Farahani in ‘Invasion’ season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    MF: Can you talk about developing the series and what you wanted to do differently with the alien invasion concept?

    SK: In general, from the beginning, what I felt was missing from the alien invasion genre was a truly global perspective, that it was often or always told from the perspective of one character and that character was usually American. If it was an ensemble, they were all Americans, like in ‘Independence Day.’ So if the whole planet came under attack, America’s not the only place that’s dealing with the problem, everywhere is and I wanted to see what the different reactions from different types of characters in different types of societies would be. That was the thing that was the spark of inspiration for me, and if you were to do a mashup of ‘War of the Worlds’ with a movie like ‘Babel,’ that was the North Star from the beginning.

    Shioli Kutsuna in 'Invasion' season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Shioli Kutsuna in ‘Invasion’ season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    MF: Can you talk about the scope of the series and the challenges of telling an international story about an alien invasion?

    SK: It’s an incredibly ambitious television show, and I have to applaud and just get on my knees with gratitude to Apple. They really believed in the show from the very beginning, despite the fact that it’s not based on a huge piece of IP. It doesn’t have huge stars in it. They just believed in the concept and quality of the show, and they backed it in a way that was really extraordinary. The first season was incredibly challenging because we were filming in Tokyo, London, Morocco, New York, and other places I think I’m forgetting, but those were our main hubs, in the middle of the pandemic. So that was really a challenge unlike anything I’ve ever experienced in my career, having made some really big movies all over the world. The second season had different challenges, and I would say the biggest challenge was less about the physical production, though the production is really big, and more about the visual effects. We really amped up the aliens, the action and the world building in season two. I wanted the visual effects to feel like it was the same level quality as you’d see in big budget movies I’ve worked on in the past, like the ‘Star Wars’ movies, the ‘X-Men’ movies, those kinds of films. So designing all of that with a lot of the geniuses I’ve worked with in my feature film life, designing all of those worlds was a whole lot of fun. And trying to find new designs for aliens, motherships and things we’ve seen in lots of movies done extremely well, trying to find new versions of that. So there was a conceptual challenge and then there was the execution challenge of those visual effects.

    Related Article:  Director Alik Sakharov Talks Apple TV+’s ‘Invasion’ Season 2

    Shamier Anderson in 'Invasion' season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.
    Shamier Anderson in ‘Invasion’ season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    MF: As a director yourself, what has it been like for you to collaborate with other directors on this series?

    SK: It’s really fun working in television with directors. It’s so different than features. With features, you’re working with one director and you’re living for years with that director telling that story. I’ve had some amazing relationships with filmmakers on films. In TV, you’re working with a director and they’re in and out, if they’re doing one episode. We had incredible filmmakers in season two. I mean, from really seasoned people, like Alik Sakharov who directed episodes of ‘The Sopranos’ and ‘Ozark’ and I mean he is truly one of the greatest television directors. No exaggeration, obviously, because those are among the greatest shows of all time. He was the DP on the pilot of ‘The Sopranos.’ I mean, the guy has seen and done everything you could possibly do in TV. I learned an immense amount from him actually about TV storytelling and production. Then we had people that were less experienced come in for an episode. So it was really fun just working with such a diverse group of people, diverse in terms of their personal experience and their professional experience.

    Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool and Hugh Jackman as Wolverine in 'Deadpool 3.'
    (L to R) Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool and Hugh Jackman as Wolverine in ‘Deadpool 3.’ Photo courtesy of Ryan Reynolds Instagram account.

    MF: Finally, since you were a producer on both ‘Deadpool’ and ‘Logan,’ I have to ask how you feel about Hugh Jackman returning to the role of Wolverine in ‘Deadpool 3’ and having those characters now exist in the Marvel Cinematic Universe?

    SK: I love Hugh so much. I mean, he’s somebody who’s really been a huge part of my life. I’ve made six or seven movies with him, even a movie outside the ‘X-Men’ universe. He’s one of the kindest, just sweetest humans, let alone movie stars, I’ve ever met. I love him as Wolverine, and it’s really hard for me to imagine another actor playing Wolverine. That’s not true for every comic book character, but I can’t imagine anyone else playing that part. So as much as I really love what we did with ‘Logan’ and really feel like we gave that character and Hugh’s journey as that character a fitting goodbye, I’m really excited to see him do it again. I’m really excited to see him do it in a different toned story. I adore Ryan and I adore what Ryan does with Deadpool, so I’m just really excited to see those two guys together.

    'Invasion' series creator Simon Kinberg.
    ‘Invasion’ series creator Simon Kinberg.

    ‘Invasion’ Season 1 Recap

    An alien invasion is seen through the different perspectives of various people on different continents across the world.

    What is the plot of ‘Invasion’ season 2?

    Season 2 picks up just months after the events of season 1, with the aliens escalating their attacks in an all-out war against the humans. As the aliens continue their land grab, pockets of resistance across the world join the World Defense Coalition searching for ways to destroy the enemy, including the grassroots vigilante alien hunters, The Movement, and the experiments being done at the Alien Research Facility.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Invasion’ season 2?

    'Invasion' season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.
    ‘Invasion’ season 2, now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Invasion’:

    Buy Simon Kinberg Movies On Amazon

  • ‘Invasion’ Season 2 Interview: Director Alik Sakharov

    XwUyGeRE

    Premiering on Apple TV+ on August 23rd is the second season of the popular sci-fi series ‘Invasion,’ which was created by Simon Kinberg (‘Dark Phoenix’) and David Well (‘Hunters’).

    ‘Invasion’ Season 1 Recap

    An alien invasion is seen through the different perspectives of various people on different continents across the world.

    What is the plot of ‘Invasion’ season 2?

    Season 2 picks up just months after the events of season 1, with the aliens escalating their attacks in an all-out war against the humans. As the aliens continue their land grab, pockets of resistance across the world join the World Defense Coalition searching for ways to destroy the enemy, including the grassroots vigilante alien hunters, The Movement, and the experiments being done at the Alien Research Facility.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Invasion’ season 2?

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure speaking with director Alik Sakharov (‘Game of Thrones,’ ‘The Witcher’) about his work on season 2 of ‘Invasion,’ where he directed the first three episode as well as episode five. Sakharov discussed the pressure of joining a series in the second season, how his previous work as a cinematographer informs his work as a director, the most challenging aspect of directing ‘Invasion,’ and bringing something fresh to the genre.

    Shioli Kutsuna in 'Invasion,' premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Shioli Kutsuna in ‘Invasion,’ premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.

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

    Moviefone: To begin with, as a director, when you join a series that is already in progress, do you feel pressure to continue the success of the show, or is that something that you’ve gotten use to at this point in your career?

    Alik Sakharov: I don’t think I had the pressure, to be honest with you. I mean, as a seasoned pro, I didn’t feel pressure. I just felt responsibility of delivering good product. I had a very wonderful set of meetings with Simon Kinberg, and (executive producer) Audrey Chon, and with Apple executives. I felt, it was a wonderful dynamic, if you will, it was very friendly atmosphere, and very encouraging. Obviously, I read the scripts beforehand. So, we started talking about concept, about this and that, and the design, and it all felt very natural. The reason why it felt natural to me is because, although it’s sci-fi, it’s based on character and based on drama. It’s based on very important universal things that virtually everyone can relate to. We’re talking about, if Anisha is on the run with her kids, trying to protect them and save them, then we understand what that is. So the universality of it is very palatable and very palpable. So, relating to it wasn’t very complicated. For me personally, it was great to have this drama against the sweeping backdrop of this huge canvas of aliens invading.

    Golshifteh Farahani in 'Invasion,' premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Golshifteh Farahani in ‘Invasion,’ premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    MF: You began your career as a cinematographer, how does that experience inform your work as a director?

    AS: To answer your question, as a director of photography, coming to directing, is really, for me, a crucial thing, because you understand the language, you understand how to tell the story, by way of where the camera is going to be. It’s not to say that every director has to do that, not at all. But, most accomplished directors that I really respect, Stanley Kubrick, David Fincher, the Coen Brothers, Christopher Nolan, they understand what lenses can do. They understand what photography can do. So, you don’t usually want to give way for someone to set up the shot. You either bring them on board, the director of photography, the camera operators, and discuss what needs to get accomplished, as opposed to just farming it all out, because then, you’re immediately losing a bit of the language that you’ve been designing to tell the story. So, very important to engage everybody, to bring everybody together, and to set shots up, such that, everyone’s happy. So usually, I know exactly what the lens is going to be. I know exactly what the camera angle is going to be. I don’t try to be fascistic about it, but I would suggest where it would be, and then I’d say to my crew, “Guys, go crazy. Enhance it. Make it great.” So, everyone participates in it, and finds their own, and they’re all fulfilled. That’s, to me, key to a great collaboration on set. So, if I communicate my ideas to the director of photography and he communicates his ideas to his lighting crew, and grip department, and his camera operator, and then we’re all discussing how it’s going to resolve itself on the screen, then the resulting image, or images, or set of storylines through visuals can invoke some reaction from you as a viewer. So if the camera is too high, you go, “Guys, the camera is too high.” If the verticals are not correct, you go, “Verticals are not correct.” If the camera is too low, “It’s too expressive. Let’s bring it up to the human perspective.” You have to choose all those things. You have to, not dictate it, but propose it, such that, it’s much more humanized.

    Related Article: Director Cory Finley Talks ‘Landscape with Invisible Hand’

    Cache Vanderpuye, India Brown and Louis Toghill in 'Invasion,' premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Cache Vanderpuye, India Brown and Louis Toghill in ‘Invasion,’ premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    MF: ‘Invasion’ is a series that is very large in scope and told from several different perspectives. How did your work on shows like ‘Game of Thrones’ and ‘Rome’ prepare you to direct this series?

    AS: Well, because of the scope, I could see why you are comparing it to ‘Game of Thrones.’ But, I mean, I was involved in big scope shows like ‘Rome’ for instance, and ‘Marco Polo’ for instance. Those are very scopey shows. I mean, the dictate of this particular show, of this particular parameters is grand scale. So, you need to approach it in grand scale. It’s not so much a TV mentality. You have to approach it like a cinematic event, because of the cinematic event, it could be compared to these shows that you’re proposing.

    Azhy Robertson, Tara Moayedi and Golshifteh Farahani in 'Invasion,' premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Azhy Robertson, Tara Moayedi and Golshifteh Farahani in ‘Invasion,’ premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    MF: You directed the first three episodes of season 2, what was the most challenging scene to shoot in those first couple of episodes?

    AS: The most challenging was, believe it or not, was the very first scene of episode one, where we’re just thrown into the invasion. The challenge of it was basically that we needed to shoot it fast. I mean, it’s a huge scene. Initially, we planned to shoot it over the course of five days. We needed to find a location which would be able to guide us through, basically the timeline of the scene. In order for us to do that, we needed to find a particular set of streets that one street would lead into the other, into the other, and into the other. So, it’s all making sense, because it was not a backlight. We found a little section in the Woodstock area of Cape Town, where it was basically one and two-story buildings with tin roofs. From a bird’s eye view, it felt like the right way of approaching the scene. So, our production designer, Simon Rogers, was basically instrumental in dressing the streets. Then, I started discussing with my crew how are we going to approach it, and how we’re going to break down the scene, such that, we would have absolutely everything, broken down into, not only just shots, but also into little segments that would segue from one to the other because there’s a very propulsive energy throughout that scene. So, the challenge was to accomplish everything in set time and the allotted time to rehearse everything. It was involving 200 extras. We had six cameras. We had to deal with the weather. We had to deal with a helicopter landing. We had to deal with so many elements. It became like a feature film, yet, we needed to do it as a television schedule. I think we actually did tremendously well. We shot the whole thing that was designed to be shot in five days, in four days, and we were able to accomplish everything.

    Shamier Anderson in 'Invasion,' premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Shamier Anderson in ‘Invasion,’ premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about finding a way to bring something fresh to a genre that has seen a lot of entries? How did you go about finding something fresh, even for season two compared to season one?

    AS: I’ll be honest with you, I don’t think about that. What I think about is the human perspective, the drama. Look, if I sit in my chair, and I react to the acting, and it works, and it feels right, then your audience is going to react that way too. If you feel that it’s false, you go for another take. Because, if you’re going to move on and you have a false take, your audience is not going to buy it. So, I always come from a perspective of it’s not to design the most fresh, the most interesting, the most this, and that, look, we’re not going to be reinventing the wheel. It’s been invented. So, what you’re going to go for is the performance. What you’re going to go for is for the trueness. The value of whether or not it is good. It has a capability to hook you, to appeal to you, to convince you that this is what’s happening, and this is the right thing, and it’s the honesty.

    'Invasion,' premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    ‘Invasion,’ premiering August 23, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Invasion’:

    Buy Simon Kinberg Movies On Amazon

  • Anna Faris joins ‘My Spy’ Sequel

    Anna Faris in 'The Dictator,' from Paramount Pictures.
    Anna Faris in ‘The Dictator,’ from Paramount Pictures.

    Released in 2020, ‘My Spy’ represented a key stage in Dave Bautista’s career, particularly as a wrestler-turned-actor. Several of his tough guy antecedents had clocked in for a big-guy-cute-kid film, such as Arnold Schwarzenegger with ‘Kindergarten Cop’, Vin Diesel in ‘The Pacifier’ and Dwayne Johnson’s ‘Tooth Fairy’ and ‘The Game Plan’.

    But unlike most of those, ‘My Spy’ is actually getting a sequel, with casting now announced for ‘My Spy: The Eternal City’. Anna Faris, Craig Robinson and Flula Borg are among the new faces joining the ensemble.

    eROznNidMXkGh7z1pE1Nl2

    What happened in ‘My Spy’

    The first ‘My Spy’ –– which had been intended for theatrical release by STX Entertainment but was moved to Amazon when the pandemic closed cinemas –– starred Bautista as JJ, a CIA agent who is assigned on an undercover mission to surveil and potentially protect Kate (Parisa Fitz-Henley) and daughter Sophie (Chloe Coleman) when the former arms dealer partner of Kate’s dead husband suspects he may have smuggled the plans for a weapon back to his unsuspecting wife.

    But while JJ and tech specialist Bobbi (Kristen Schaal) set up their operation in Kate and Sophie’s building, the precocious nine-year-old girl figures out exactly what JJ is up to and makes a deal –– if he’ll teach her spy craft, she won’t blow his cover.

    JJ reluctantly agrees, and finds himself bonding with Sophie, and eventually falling for her mother, as the threats mount.

    Chloe Coleman and Dave Bautista in 2020's 'My Spy.'
    (L to R) Chloe Coleman and Dave Bautista in 2020’s ‘My Spy.’

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Knock at the Cabin’

    What’s the story of ‘My Spy: The Eternal City’?

    The follow-up concerns a now teenage Sophie convincing JJ to chaperone her school choir trip to Italy where they both unwittingly end up pawns in an international terrorist plot targeting CIA chief David Kim (Ken Jeong) and his son, Collin –– who’s also Sophie’s best friend.

    Schaal and Jeong are back for the new movie, while Nicola Correia-Damude, Noah Dalton Danby and Devere Rogers are all reprising their roles.

    Faris, Billy Barratt, Taeho K, Borg and Robinson are new to the story, but Amazon has yet to reveal the roles they’ll play.

    Pete Segal, who directed the first movie, is back behind the camera, having worked on the script alongside writing duo Jon and Erich Hoeber. The cameras will be rolling this month.

    “We were so delighted with the success of ‘My Spy.’ It is an absolute privilege to reunite with Pete Segal, Dave Bautista, Chloe Coleman, and the rest of the talented cast and filmmakers–along with some very exciting additions,” Amazon and MGM Studios head Jennifer Salke said in a statement. “With the sequel, our Prime Video customers are in store for another dynamic story, complete with twists, hilarious performances, and even a little romance.”

    Chloe Coleman, Parisa Fitz-Henley and Dave Bautista in 2020's 'My Spy.'
    (L to R) Chloe Coleman, Parisa Fitz-Henley and Dave Bautista in 2020’s ‘My Spy.’

    Other Movies Similar to ‘My Spy: The Eternal City:’

    Buy ‘My Spy’ On Amazon