Tag: Brainstorm Media

  • ‘Sleepwalker’ Exclusive Interview: Hayden Panettiere

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    Opening in theaters and VOD on January 9th is the new psychological thriller ‘Sleepwalker‘, which was directed by Brandon Auman (‘Star Wars: Resistance’) and stars Hayden Panettiere (‘Heroes‘ and ‘Scream 4‘), Beverly D’Angelo (‘National Lampoon’s Vacation‘), Justin Chatwin (‘War of the Worlds‘), and Mischa Barton (‘The Sixth Sense‘).

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    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Hayden Panettiere about her work on ‘Sleepwalker’, her first reaction to the screenplay, her approach to her character, working with the rest of the cast, director Brandon Auman’s vision for the project, her role as a producer, and if it’s fun making a scary movie.

    Hayden Panettiere in 'Sleepwalker'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    Hayden Panettiere in ‘Sleepwalker’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

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

    Related Article: Hayden Panettiere Talks Acting and Producing New Thriller ‘Amber Alert’

    Hayden Panettiere stars in 'Sleepwalker'.
    Hayden Panettiere stars in ‘Sleepwalker’.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay, what spoke to you about the material and why you wanted to be part of this project?

    Hayden Panettiere: It was a combination of things. When I read scripts, I look for interesting plot lines, and stories that keep the audience invested and on the edge of their seats. That’s how films like this work, and I look for characters that have lots of layers to them. I’m really drawn to characters that have been through trauma. It’s something that I relate to, I think a lot of people relate to, and just characters that give me something to really sink my teeth into as an actor. It was also combined with the fact that it had an amazing cast attached to it. Beverly D’Angelo, Justin Chatwin, Mischa Barton, Lori Tan Chinn, and our two kids, Corinne Sweeney and Laird LaCoste. I love working with kids. So that was a big pull for me, and then getting to work with Appian Way and Verdi Productions and getting to executive produce, too. So, it was a combination of a lot of good stuff.

    MF: Can you talk about your approach to playing this character and the loss and guilt that she is dealing with?

    HP: Guilt and loss, they’re topics that I’m familiar with, so I had a lot to pull from my real life. I mean, we did this film in 15 days, which was a breakneck pace. We had a lot to get done, and it was very dark. But I was surrounded by such a great team of people that we were able to pull each other in and out of those dark scenes and those dark moments and have light moments. Beverly D’Angelo and I became very close, and I knew her growing up. She was my neighbor down the street when she lived with Al Pacino when I was a kid. So, we got to finally run into each other, and we look so much alike. It’s crazy that we have not played mother and daughter before.

    Beverly D'Angelo in 'Sleepwalker'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    Beverly D’Angelo in ‘Sleepwalker’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

    MF: To follow up, what was it like to work with Beverly D’Angelo after all these years later?

    HP: I mean, you never know. You never know until you’re on set and you have been around somebody, but we have such similar personalities. She’s so spunky and so funny. We kept each other laughing, and that chemistry just came like that. It was just that easy. It made my job incredibly easy and fun. I couldn’t have asked for anybody better to play my mom and to play across from. She’s a legend. She’s a legend, and she’s just a character, a firecracker, and somebody that you just want to hear all her stories. I hope to work with her again for sure.

    MF: The film also stars Mischa Barton and Justin Chatwin, who both began their careers around the same time you did in the early 2000s. Had you met either of them over the years and what was it like working with them on this project?

    HP: I don’t know that Mischa remembered this, but I used to be in the same audition rooms as her and her sister growing up in New York. So, I knew her in passing for a long time. Justin, we had met in passing, but I wasn’t as familiar with him as I was with Mischa. I didn’t have as much of a personal relationship with him.

    (L to R) Hayden Panettiere and Beverly D'Angelo in 'Sleepwalker'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    (L to R) Hayden Panettiere and Beverly D’Angelo in ‘Sleepwalker’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

    MF: You mentioned working with the kids in the cast, and since you began your career as a child actor, do you feel a close connection to kids working on a set now that you are an adult?

    HP: Absolutely. Having been one myself, I’m very, very protective of them. Especially with a dark subject matter like this, I was trying to be protective of them, their emotions, and them mentally, as well, and being able to pull them in and out of these dark, intense scenes. Knowing when to shake it off, lighten up, crack some jokes, and say, “Okay. Now, let’s get back into it.” So, we don’t have to spend all day feeling this heavy, dark weight following us around. I love them. They’re just so pure. They’re so energetic. They’re so honest. They’re so real and untainted, and they’re beautiful.

    MF: What was it like working with Brandon Auman, and what are you looking from a director when you’re on set?

    HP: Brandon was so passionate. He also wrote this. This was his first time directing a live-action piece, so I wanted to be as present for him as I could. I got to executive produce on this, which is something that I don’t always get to do. It was exciting for me. I feel like I got to use more than just my acting skills. I got to use all my experience that I’ve learned over the past 35 years in this industry, whether it be blocking, or how to speak to other actors, or how to make a scene move as quickly as possible without rushing and covering all the grounds. How to do blocking, and make it a dance, and make it interesting for the camera, all those little things. So, I just wanted him to be as excited about it as I was, and he was, even more so. This was his baby. So, I was excited to be able to be there and just watch him and help him through it.

    Hayden Panettiere in 'Sleepwalker'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    Hayden Panettiere in ‘Sleepwalker’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

    MF: Is it challenging for you splitting your time between acting and your producing duties while you were on set?

    HP: No. I found it constantly kept my mind moving. A lot of the times, I’m sitting there and in this dark emotional state, and it allowed me to jump out of those dark moments and focus on something else so that every time I reentered into the scenes, it was fresh. It wasn’t stale. It helped that.

    MF: Finally, with a film like this that covers such dark subject material, is it still fun making the movie or is it hard because you are jumping through so many emotional hoops as an actress?

    HP: It is fun but in different ways. It’s very rewarding when you feel very accomplished. When it’s dark subject matter like this, I feel very accomplished when I know that we got it, that we hit the nail on the head, and that I did my job to the best of my ability. I just feel it gives me deep pride in what I do.

    'Sleepwalker' opens in theaters and on VOD January 9th.
    ‘Sleepwalker’ opens in theaters and on VOD January 9th.

    What is the plot of ‘Sleepwalker’?

    An accomplished artist (Hayden Panettiere) is haunted by the tragic loss of her daughter in a car accident that left her abusive husband in a coma.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Sleepwalker’?

    • Hayden Panettiere as Sarah Pangborn
    • Beverly D’Angelo as Gloria Pangborn
    • Justin Chatwin as Michael Anders
    • Mischa Barton as Joelle Anders
    • Lori Tan Chinn as Bai Zhao
    • Kea Ho as Alexis
    • Eric Lutes as Doctor Henson
    Hayden Panettiere in 'Sleepwalker'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    Hayden Panettiere in ‘Sleepwalker’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

    List of Hayden Panettiere Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Sleepwalker’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Hayden Panettiere Movies On Amazon

  • ‘Tinsel Town’ Interview: Kiefer Sutherland

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    Opening in theaters and on VOD on November 21st is the new Christmas movie ‘Tinsel Town’, which was directed by Chris Foggin (‘This is Christmas’), and stars Kiefer Sutherland (‘24’), Rebel Wilson (‘Pitch Perfect’), Alice Eve (‘Star Trek Into Darkness’), and Derek Jacobi (‘The King’s Speech’).

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    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Kiefer Sutherland about his work on ‘Tinsel Town’, his first reaction to the screenplay, making his first Christmas movie, his character and his relationship to his daughter, the UK’s holiday tradition of pantomime, and working with the cast and director Chris Foggin, as well as an update on the future of ‘24’ and what it was like acting opposite Al Pacino in the upcoming ‘Father Joe’.

    Kiefer Sutherland stars in 'Tinsel Town'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    Kiefer Sutherland stars in ‘Tinsel Town’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

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

    Related Article: Kiefer Sutherland Teases Potential Return for ‘24’, Has Seen a Script

    (L to R) Kiefer Sutherland and Rebel Wilson star in 'Tinsel Town'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    (L to R) Kiefer Sutherland and Rebel Wilson star in ‘Tinsel Town’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and is this the first Christmas movie you’ve ever made?

    Kiefer Sutherland: It is the first Christmas movie that I’ve ever been in, and I was really moved by the script. Obviously, this is not something that I normally do, a comedy that is as broad as this. I thought it was incredibly funny. I think the British make these kinds of movies, kind of a warmhearted stories, they do them well. Chris Foggin is a fantastic director, but I loved the script. I found it very funny, and I just thought it was a nice story about someone who had lost their way as a human being, and the worst their life got, the better human being they became. I think that’s a kind of a wonderful fable. I found that the stuff between him and his daughter to be really moving as well. So, it had a lot of elements, whether it was the comedy and a touching drama at the same time, and it kind of came together. Piers Ashwood, who wrote the screenplay, I think just did a masterful job. So, I thought it was very funny right away and I was excited to be a part of it.

    MF: Your character, Bradley Mack, is a difficult Hollywood actor. Did you draw influence from any difficult actors that you have worked with along the way?

    KS: Well, I think first off, I had to take a very serious look at myself, right? I think over 43 years, I think there’s probably been moments where I have maybe been difficult. Certainly, in my younger years, I know that when you’re trying to find your way, you can make some mistakes and things like that. So, I drew upon those memories. Then, yes, I’ve seen some other actors be kind of demanding and maybe more demanding than their talent deserved, and Bradley Mack is kind of a perfect composite of that. What I really liked again about the screenplay is that he’s not a bad person. He’s just gone down a bad path, and that we all can find our way back. That’s really what the film is about. It’s just told in a very funny way.

    Kiefer Sutherland stars in 'Tinsel Town'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    Kiefer Sutherland stars in ‘Tinsel Town’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

    MF: Bradley Mack is specifically an action star; did you feel like that gave you a chance to spoof your iconic ‘24’ persona in a way?

    KS: I think a little bit, yeah, and it was fun. You know, I think it was fun. It’s very funny that people that kind of do an action movie here and there can sometimes start to think that they’re very skilled, either as a fighter or with weapons and things like that. The truth is you’re not. You’re taught just enough to fake it. So, I’ve always found that very funny. So, to be able to play that in a character for a film was a lot of fun.

    MF: Can you talk about Bradley’s estranged relationship with his daughter and this experience makes him a better father?

    KS: Well, again, he was confronted with a reality that he was, in fact, a bad father. Then, he is just forced to spend some time with his daughter because of these certain circumstances and he falls in love with her. My daughter was played by Matilda Firth, who is an extraordinary, gifted young actor. In the context of our movie, she was the adult in the relationship. That was a lot of fun and she guided her father back to being a better human being. I find that a very touching aspect of the film.

    Kiefer Sutherland stars in 'Tinsel Town'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    Kiefer Sutherland stars in ‘Tinsel Town’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

    MF: How familiar were you with the UK’s holiday tradition of pantomime, called Panto? Did you do any research into the tradition?

    KS: I did, absolutely. I certainly was not as familiar before the film I am now. I had never really seen a live pantomime, I’ve seen film versions here and there of a pantomime, but I’ve never been to one. So, when we got to Leeds, England, I was very excited because they had a pantomime on for that season, and unfortunately, it had closed two days before, so I wasn’t able to see it. But obviously, I got a great deal of help from everybody there, and it is a significant tradition in the UK and people take it very seriously. We talk about it in the context of the film, but it financially supports a lot of those theaters through the rest of the year. So, I think it’s very cool and it was fun to make a movie about it.

    MF: Can you talk about working with Rebel Wilson, Alice Eve and legendary actor Sir Derek Jacobi, as well as the rest of the cast?

    KS: Alice was fantastic. I only worked for her for a few days, but her timing is extraordinary, and she’s so incredibly funny as my divorced wife and James (Lance) did a great job as well, who played her new husband. Derek Jacobi is one of the great actors of all time, Sir Derek Jacobi, and to be able to have an opportunity to work with him was fantastic. Maria Friedman, Meera Syal, Danny Dyer, just all those fantastic actors, all just had such beautiful timing, and all kind of added personal moments to the movie. So, it was an absolute thrill to work with everybody.

    (L to R) Kiefer Sutherland and Rebel Wilson in 'Tinsel Town'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    (L to R) Kiefer Sutherland and Rebel Wilson in ‘Tinsel Town’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

    MF: What was it like collaborating with director Chris Foggin on this film and what are you looking for from a director on set?

    KS: For me, I’m looking for someone to be in charge. You know, the director is the one person who’s going to travel from the pre-production stage of a movie to the production stage and filming of the movie, the post-production stage where they’re editing and finalizing the music and all the special effects. So that’s the person that has the vision that’s going to carry its way through the entire film. I’m looking for someone to lead that, and that’s what the director is supposed to do. You know, having done this for quite some time, if you’re not working towards a shared vision, you’re going to end up on the cutting room floor. So, Chris is someone that I asked for guidance from, and at the end of the day, especially if you’re doing a comedy, you finish a scene and look over and if he’s laughing, we did something right, and if he’s not, we better figure this out. So, he was a fantastic director and I think just did a beautiful job with the film.

    MF: Earlier this year, you talked about speaking to the ‘24’ creators about some ideas to bring back the show in some way and that there were steps being taken to move forward. Are there any updates that you can give us on that?

    KS: You’d have to ask Howard Gordon how he was approached, but he did come up with what I thought was a really good idea. So, he wrote a piece, and I really enjoyed it. That’s kind of where we’re at and we’ll see if it gets made. But, you know, at this stage, I thought it was a really good idea, and that’s where we’re kind of at.

    Kiefer Sutherland as Jack Bauer in '24'.
    Kiefer Sutherland as Jack Bauer in ’24’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    MF: Is Jack Bauer still locked up in a Russian prison?

    KS: Yeah. So, he’s been there for a while, and he’s not happy about it.

    MF: Finally, I know that you are shooting the upcoming movie ‘Father Joe’ right now. What has it been like working with the legendary Al Pacino on that project?

    KS: Working with Al Pacino, you know, they always say, be careful about meeting your idols because they might let you down. That’s the opposite experience that I had with Al Pacino. Al Pacino was everything I’d hoped he’d be. He’s an extraordinarily powerful actor, but he’s a kind human being. So, I just really enjoyed it. I hope when I’m his age that I’m still working as well.

    'Tinsel Town' opens in theaters and on VOD on November 21st.
    ‘Tinsel Town’ opens in theaters and on VOD on November 21st.

    What is the plot of ‘Tinsel Town’?

    A washed-up Hollywood action hero (Kiefer Sutherland) is tricked into starring in a small English town’s chaotic Christmas pantomime, where a straight-talking dance instructor and his estranged daughter just might help him rediscover the magic of the season.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Tinsel Town’?

    • Kiefer Sutherland as Bradley Mack
    • Rebel Wilson as Jill
    • Matilda Firth as Emma
    • Alice Eve
    • Derek Jacobi
    (L to R) Matilda Firth and Kiefer Sutherland star in 'Tinsel Town'. Photo: Brainstorm Media.
    (L to R) Matilda Firth and Kiefer Sutherland star in ‘Tinsel Town’. Photo: Brainstorm Media.

    List of Kiefer Sutherland Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Kiefer Sutherland Movies On Amazon

  • Brainstorm Media to Release Naomi Watts Thriller ‘The Wolf Hour’ This Fall

    Brainstorm Media to Release Naomi Watts Thriller ‘The Wolf Hour’ This Fall

    The Wolf Hour
    Courtesy of Sundance Institute

    After premiering at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, “The Wolf Hour” has landed a U.S. distributor. Brainstorm Media has acquired the North American rights for the thriller starring Naomi Watts and is eyeing a fall release date, Variety reports.

    The film comes from writer-director Alistair Banks Griffin and stars Watts as June Leigh, a former counterculture figure living in New York in 1997. As violence in the city escalates over a blackout, she shuts herself inside her grandmother’s apartment in the South Bronx. She can’t escape the action, though; she keeps finding different visitors at her door and must deal with her fear and paranoia.

    The film is a “tense thriller,” according to Michelle Schwarzstein, Brainstorm’s president of marketing and acquisitions (via Variety). She described Watts’s performance as “riveting.” The two-time Academy Award-nominated actress is joined in the film by Emory Cohen, Jennifer Ehle, Kelvin Harrison Jr., Jeremy Bobb, and Brennan Brown.

    “The Wolf Hour” comes from producers Brian Kavanaugh-Jones, Bailey Conway Anglewicz, and Bradley Pilz. Ged Dickersin co-produced. The Big Picture Company’s Felipe Dieppa and Taryn Nagle executive produced alongside Belladonna Productions’ Linda Moran and Automatik’s Fred Berger.

    The film’s exact release date hasn’t been revealed yet, but keep an eye out for “The Wolf Hour” this fall.

    [via: Variety]