Tag: cara-delevingne

  • ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Interview: John Hoffman

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    Premiering August 8th on Hulu is the third season of the popular series ‘Only Murders in the Building,’ which was co-created by Steve Martin and John Hoffman, and nominated for 12 Emmys including Outstanding Comedy Series and Outstanding Writing For A Comedy Series at the upcoming ceremony that is scheduled to take place on January 15th, 2024.

    Selena Gomez, Shirley MacLaine, Director John Hoffman, Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Amy Schumer on the set of 'Only Murders in the Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Selena Gomez, Shirley MacLaine, Director John Hoffman, Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Amy Schumer on the set of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 2. Photo: Barbara Nitke/Hulu.

    SOME SPOILERS FOR ‘ONLY MURDERS IN THE BUILDING’ SEASON 1 AND 2 BELOW!

    ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 1 and 2 Recap

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    The series follows three amateur sleuths –– actor Charles-Haden Savage (Martin), who spent years on a low-rent police show and still dines out on his minor fame, down-on-his-luck, flamboyant theatre director Oliver Putnam (Martin Short) and Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez), a young artist whose life suddenly becomes intertwined with Charles and Oliver’s when a former friend and fellow resident of grand New York apartment building the Arconia is found murdered.

    The three also bond over their shared love of a true crime podcast called ‘All is not OK in Oklahoma’, and quickly decide to launch their own as they dig into the truth behind Tim’s death. As they work their way through the suspects (including the variety of quirky occupants of the building), they learn that the real killer is Jan (Amy Ryan), a musician who Charles has been dating.

    Season 1 ends with cranky building head chief Bunny Folger (Jayne Houdyshell) dead in Mabel’s apartment, with Mabel framed for her murder. The second season is dedicated to Charles, Oliver and Mabel figuring out what really happened with Bunny, and how a mysterious painting factors in.

    It also features more from Cinda Canning (Tina Fey), the driven, arrogant creator of ‘All Is Not OK in Oklahoma’ as she seeks to find a compelling follow-up to her hit series. Our heroes initially think that Cinda, and then artist Alice Banks (Cara Delevingne), whom Mabel briefly dated, might be the killer, but it is revealed to be Cinda’s overworked assistant Poppy White (Adina Version), who was actually the not-so-dead subject matter of ‘All is not OK’ and yearns to have a podcast of her own.

    What is the plot of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 3?

    Paul Rudd as Ben in season 3 of 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    (L to R) Paul Rudd as Ben in season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    At the end of Season 2, we jump a year forward, to the opening night of Oliver’s new play, ‘Death Rattle’. Its leading man, the annoying, smug Ben Glenroy (Paul Rudd), who clearly has no love for Charles, also starring in the production, collapses dead on stage.

    It’s revealed later in the initial episode that Ben is not actually dead but had a medical condition, and he promises to be a changed man, ready to make amends for his bad behavior during the play’s initial stages. He doesn’t get long to do that, though, as he’s pushed into an elevator shaft at the Arconia, landing on the car containing Charles, Oliver and Mabel. And so, another murder mystery is set in motion. Season 3 will also feature Oscar-winner Meryl Streep as Loretta Durkin, a struggling actress and Oliver’s love interest, who plays a small role in his Broadway show.

    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu's 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    Meryl Streep as Loretta in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo by: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    Who stars in ‘Only Murders in the Building’?

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director, executive producer and series co-creator John Hoffman about his Emmy nominated work on season 2 of ‘Only Murders in the Building,’ creating the series with Steve Martin, setting up the mysteries, lessons he’s learned between seasons, improvisation on set, the lead actors’ chemistry, the show’s attraction to big name guest stars, and a little tease of season 3.

    Tina Fey and Director John Hoffman on the set of 'Only Murders in the Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Tina Fey and Director John Hoffman on the set of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 2. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

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

    Moviefone: To begin with, congratulations on the show’s 12 Emmy nominations for season 2. How does it feel to get so much Emmy love?

    John Hoffman: I’m feeling very good, honored, relieved, all of the above. It’s been quite a ride with this show and the fact that for season two, dropping a year after our first season aired, to be recognized in this group of incredible shows, it’s rare air. So I am thrilled.

    MF: Season 3 begins on August 8th, are you excited for fans to see the next chapter?

    JH: I’m very excited for people to see what’s coming. We’ve got a good back half too. I promise you.

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 3

    Steve Martin as Charles in season 3 of 'Only Murders in the Building.'
    Steve Martin as Charles in season 3 of ‘Only Murders in the Building.’ Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    MF: Can you talk about creating the series with Steve Martin? Was it always designed to be a comedic murder mystery?

    JH: It began from the plucky mind of Steve Martin, and it was very much his notion. He’s a real fan and has a real interest in the world of crime and mystery, unfolding and getting underneath it and watching the reveals that happen around a case. So he’s a fan of that work. Then on top of it, he is a comedic genius. So that person held it all and very sweetly along with Dan Fogelman and Jess Rosenthal’s introduction, brought me into the fold of that. I was looking at it in a way of, once Steve said, “I would love Marty to be in this with me,” then I was hoping we could do something that felt like classic meets modern. You’ve got these two classic comedians with this very modern young woman in New York where that constantly feels like a theme and then it let the comedic and the mystery unfold in a fresh way. I think we got very fortunate and we worked really hard, but the goal is always to make it look as effortless as possible but behind the scenes it’s quite a challenge to pull this sucker off.

    MF: The end of the first season sets up the mystery for season 2. How much of the second season’s mystery was set in place when you introduced it at the end of the first season?

    JH: Great question. They’re very tied in. As you’ve seen from the beginning of season three, we take a bit of a leap away, but those first and second seasons are more tied in than maybe evident from the beginning of season two, for sure. Going to the very notion that by episodes 9 and 10, you’re realizing, “Oh my God, the central person responsible ultimately in season 2 was present and was the actual person involved in the podcast and in the case of the podcast that first drew our trio together in episode one of season 1. So, that developed along the way, but it was also kind of in the back of my mind, at least as far as those ties that could happen that felt very exciting. But it was very challenging to thread that and not give it away and not let it be revealed. So that all was very exciting to do, but very in its own classic mystery way, a dance of mini balls in the air with character arcs and the personal relationship of this trio and the discoveries that have to happen. The comedic premises, you then have to create all in the while keeping a thrust of this mystery story that everyone’s hooked into.

    Selena Gomez, Martin Short and Steve Martin in Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Selena Gomez, Martin Short and Steve Martin in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’ season 2. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    MF: As a director and executive producer, what were the biggest lessons you learned between seasons working on this show?

    JH: How valuable everyone else is. I have to say that in this moment too, as I speak to you as a producer of this marvelous experience and show, that I am in great solidarity and recognizing every minute of the value of the collaboration between actors and writers specifically that make everything about this show and make me stand in full solidarity with fairness for all of them right now in this very challenging moment in our business. But that is really it. To be the person who has to answer all the questions along the way for story, for actors, for everyone else, is very comforting oddly for me. I like being that person. But you have to be very careful with everything. But then to be able to feel the luxury of opening up to brilliant artists around you who have much better ideas than you do, and to be able to say, “Oh, wait a minute. Stop the train. We’re going here because of this fantastic idea.” There’s nothing like it. This show is just a magnet for talent. So, who’s coming in next door? Everyone feels this urgency behind the scenes to step it up for this incredible collection of actors that are on the show. But it’s also the great opportunity to work with people who make everything better.

    MF: Obviously, the first season was a huge success. What were the big challenges going into season two to repeat that success?

    JH: That sits in your head in a way that I wasn’t as much expecting or thinking about because I get very deep down in a story that I would like to tell. So I try and push aside everything else that way, but there’s no way for it not to emanate through. Certainly within our writer’s room, it was one of those moments of like, “Wait, they’re saying what over there? Who said what? Who wrote what?” That does inform, it can’t help it. It is part of the collaboration with the audience we have too. When you’re doing a mystery, you want to feel what they’re thinking a little bit and maybe undercut that, swerve away from it or lean right into it. So, that’s very nice to have that inclusivity for both audience and creators on this one.

    Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez in Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez in Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’ season 2. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    MF: Steve Martin and Martin Short are comedy legends, but what is surprising about the series is how organically Selena Gomez fits with their chemistry. Was that a pleasant surprise for you and is there room for improvisation on set? Do they come in with their own ideas, or stick to the scripts?

    JH: All three of them, I want to leave them completely unbridled to say and do whatever they want to say. Yet, I’ve recognized also that they have great comfort in these wonderful scripts that our writers work very hard on. There’s great trust and generosity from them. As I say, there’s great comfort too in knowing and recognizing the good fortune of having two geniuses and a very specific modern young woman, is that you hear their voices very distinctly and the way in which they can play is built into these characters that they are perfect for, comedically and dramatically. The fact that they’re so facile, it can go so many different ways, and gives us great leeway to really hone scenes, episodes and seasons that favor what they do best. So when they are with the material, they really stick to it in a larger way. I think they would say the same thing. More than that, it’s just about elevating all of it in the way that only they can do.

    MF: Finally, the show has become a magnet for very famous performers who want to guest star, Meryl Streep appears in season 3, for example. Season 2 featured Shirley MacLaine, Cara Delevingne, Tina Fey, Andrea Martin, and Paul Rudd, some of who carry over to season 3. Has there been an effort to get the biggest names possible to guest star, or has that just happened organically?

    JH: Yes. The simple answer is yes. To have Shirley MacLaine in the middle of a pandemic come out of her home in New Mexico to say, “I want to come play in the landscape of New York City with this great cast of characters,” was an honor to everyone. The minute she stepped on set, the whole temperature changed. She just was absolutely brilliant. You realize the air you’re in, but also it makes you step up to live up to these people. Cara was fantastic and a friend of Selena’s for a long time and was so sharp, witty, intuitive and also a lovely person. She fit perfectly into the world, and that went on and on. Andrea Martin is a comedic genius as well, and knows Marty and knows Steve and seamlessly fits in as well. So, it’s about being strong with what the show is and hoping that people recognize the tone and how they might work in it, and then watching them just create magic is incredible. Then that leaps off into the opportunities that come from a season 3 cast, which is, I don’t know, the greatest of any half hour comedy in history? I’m going to put it up there. I’m not going to lie, I can’t believe it.

    Director John Hoffman and Shirley MacLaine on the set of 'Only Murders in the Building' season 2.
    (L to R) Director John Hoffman and Shirley MacLaine on the set of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 2. Photo: Barbara Nitke/Hulu.

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  • Meryl Streep Joins ‘Only Murders in the Building’

    Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly in 2006's 'The Devil Wears Prada .'
    Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly in 2006’s ‘The Devil Wears Prada .’

    TV comedy thriller series ‘Only Murders in the Building’ already features one of the best casts on the small screen, and it’s about to get even better. Star Steve Martin revealed on twitter that Meryl Streep has joined the ensemble.

    https://twitter.com/SteveMartinToGo/status/1615457362629861389

    The show stars Martin, Selena Gomez and Martin Short as Charles-Haden Savage, Mabel Mora and Oliver Putnam, three very different residents of a swanky, high-rise apartment building in Manhattan. When one of the other people in the building is murdered––one who had a connection to Mabel––the three unlikely citizen detectives team up to investigate what really happened.

    Along the way, they launch the podcast that gives the show its name. Season 2 follows their attempts to unmask who killed Arconia Board president Bunny Folger (Jayne Houdyshell). Along the way, they’re publicly implicated in her murder and are the subjects of a competing podcast.

    ‘Only Murders’ has built a reputation for quirky characters, engaging mysteries and a wealth of acting talent in its cast beyond the central three.

    Those either guest starring or part of the supporting cast include Nathan Lane, Jackie Hoffman, Amy Ryan, Cara Delevingne, Tina Fey, Da’Vine Joy Randolph, Sting, Jane Lynch, Andrea Martin, Michael Rapaport and Shirley MacLaine.

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.

    At the end of Season 2, Oliver––a seasoned, though as the show starts, unemployed––theater director, got his chance to helm a new show on Broadway. His cast includes Savage (an actor who made his career and a healthy fortune starring in a cheesy 1980s police series) and Paul Rudd’s Ben Glenroy, a snobbish fellow performer who in a flash-forward, has disagreements with Savage. He dies on stage, and Season 3 will explore the backstory to that.

    As for Streep’s character, the ‘Only Murders’ team have yet to reveal how she’ll factor into the story for the new season and whether she’ll have any connection to the core trio.

    Streep, of course, needs little introduction, an Oscar winning actor more normally found in movies (but occasionally on TV). She seems like a perfect fit for the ‘Only Murders’ world and it’ll be interesting to see how she fits in.

    From the looks of Gomez’ Instagram post that also served to announce Streep’s casting, she’s already interacting well with the main cast, larking around pretending to be an assistant providing them with new cushions, while being asked by Short for the “tea I ordered a half hour ago”.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/Cnh-j5TIc0U/

    Created by Martin and showrunner John Hoffman, ‘Only Murders’ has now been shooting its third season for roughly a week, but there is no date on the books yet for when it might return to Hulu. Despite its quality, it hasn’t won as many awards as you might imagine, but Streep’s presence could well change that.

    Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu's 'Only Murders In The Building'.
    (L to R) Charles (Steve Martin), Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Oliver (Martin Short) on Hulu’s ‘Only Murders In The Building’. Photo: Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu.
  • ‘Carnival Row’ Teaser: See Orlando Bloom, Cara Delevingne in Neo-Noir Fantasy Series

    ‘Carnival Row’ Teaser: See Orlando Bloom, Cara Delevingne in Neo-Noir Fantasy Series

    Carnival Row teaser still
    Amazon Prime Video/YouTube

    Amazon’s Victorian fantasy series starring Orlando Bloom and Cara Delevingne arrives in August, and in the meantime, the official “Carnival Row” teaser is here.

    The video debuted Monday, and it introduces the world in which their characters live. There are humans and faeries living alongside each other, but the humans fear the faeries and have forbidden them to live, love, or fly with freedom. In the midst of all that, there is a string of mysterious murders in the city.

    Bloom portrays Rycroft Philostrate, a human detective, while Delevingne’s character is a faerie named Vignette Stonemoss. The two explain the tense situation in the teaser, describing “a rift in the city” and the threat of “something inhuman.” It seems the humans and faeries may have to band together. Watch below.

    “Carnival Row” comes from René Echevarria and Travis Beacham and is set for eight episodes. The series will premiere Aug. 30 on Amazon Prime Video.

  • Cara Delevingne Joins Orlando Bloom in Amazon’s ‘Carnival Row’

    Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets Mexico City film PremiereModeling? Check. Movies? Check. Now, “Suicide Squad” star Cara Delevingne is setting her sights on television.

    The supermodel/actress is joining Orlando Bloom in the upcoming Amazon series “Carnival Row.” The eight-episode fantasy drama revolves around mythical creatures who flee their war-torn homes to settle in a city, where tensions arise between citizens and the refugees. The fraught atmosphere only gets worse after a string of unsolved murders.

    Delevingne will play Vignette Stonemoss, a faerie harboring secrets. Bloom is a police detective who investigates the death of a faerie showgirl on Carnival Row, despite the prejudices against the faerish refugees.

    This is Delevingne’s (and Bloom’s) first major television role. She most recently appeared in “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets,” and before that, “Suicide Squad.” Her next film is “Tulip Fever,” out this weekend.

  • How Cara Delevingne Stays Stylish Even in a Spacesuit in Valerian

    Cara Delevingne from Valerian
    Cara Delevingne from Valerian

    A fashion model as well as an actress, Cara Delevingne not only fights to save the universe in Luc Besson’s sci-fi comic book adaptation “Valerian,” but she does it with a strong sense of style.

    “Luc has the most incredible eye for style,” she tells Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar. “Every single one of his movies are incredibly stylized. His taste, his fashion sense is amazing. He always has such an amazing vision of these characters so you can tell he’s such a visual person.”

    But in creating the costumes for this action-packed epic, the director carefully balanced design with utility.

    “They took a lot of time and effort to make them as comfortable as we could,” says costar Dane DeHaan. “We had a lot of fittings in those space suits where we could say, ‘Hey, this feels a little weird, could you change this?’ They really tailored them to us so we would be able to do all of the physical action and it would be comfortable.”

    Which was important, since both actors handled much of the action themselves as their characters Laureline and Valerian race against time to battle the dark forces threatening the peaceful metropolis of Alpha.

    “The biggest challenge was the physical challenge of it,” adds DeHaan. “The preparation of just getting into shape. Starting my days every day in the gym, not only to be physically ready but to also get into that Valerian mindset. Valerian never gets tired. That’s a big part of who he is as a person. That’s what I was going for.”

    And they did nearly all of it against a blue screen, with the special effects and other visuals added in later using CGI.

    “It was all about using our imaginations and relying on Luc’s vision,” says DeHaan. “Luc’s wanted to make this movie his entire life. And so it’s so fully realized in his mind and he knows every detail and every character and all the worlds so well. So we relied on him. And I was along for the ride.”

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  • Luc Besson Can’t Find All the ‘Fifth Element’ Easter Eggs in ‘Valerian’

    Even if you’ve seen all of French auteur Luc Besson’s films, which include such visionary masterworks as “Le Femme Nikita,” “The Professional,” “The Fifth Element,” and “Lucy,” you won’t be prepared for the visual splendor of “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.”

    Based on a groundbreaking French comic book series, the film follows a pair of intergalactic law enforcers (played by Dane DeHaan and Cara Delevingne) as they uncover a mysterious conspiracy at the heart of a bustling space station and flirt with each other a lot in the process. At one point, and we mention it because it’s brought up in the interview, the duo does a mission in Big Market, a kind of interplanetary flea market that exists in another dimension, so anyone entering it has to wear special goggles and gloves to be able to interact with the merchandise.

    It’s wild.

    You can tell that this is something that Besson has been wanting to do; indeed he’s been a fan of the property since he was a child and used some of the comic book artists in “The Fifth Element.” The movie has the feeling of an artistic statement decades in the making. And it’s so much fun to watch, especially if you watch it in IMAX 3D (seek out the IMAX screens that aren’t been monopolized by “Dunkirk,” it’s worth it).

    We got to sit down with Besson in Los Angeles a few weeks ago, and talked about choosing the right story to adapt, the technological changes that happened between “The Fifth Element” and “Valerian,” why he doesn’t think it’s foolish to already be prepping the sequels, and how he can’t find the hidden “Fifth Element” Easter eggs in the movie.

    Moviefone: You’ve been a fan of this comic since you were 10. How did you decide what story to adapt for the first movie?

    Luc Besson: When I was 10, I didn’t think about making the film. In fact, I never thought about making the film until “The Fifth Element.” Before, it was just a part of my childhood and I never thought I’d make a film of it. It was also impossible, because technically I didn’t know how you’d do it 20 years ago. I never had an issue because the Ambassador of Shadows, that’s the volume I chose, it struck me as the most evident. If you want to introduce the world of Valerian and Laureline, this is the one to do it. Because there’s Alpha, there’s the Pearls, there are the three stooges, there is the giant fish, the pirate. It was obvious. But you can read the comic in 25 minutes. I have to make a two-hour movie. So you have to get out of the drawings.

    Have you earmarked what the next one will be?

    Well, I already finished the script for the second one. I’m working on the third. And it’s funny because some of my friends have said, “This is insane. You don’t know if the first one will work. Maybe you’ll never get to do the second one.” And I said, “Yeah but I don’t care.” I just love to write.

    You write a lot.

    Yeah, I do write a lot. This last year, I was working three hours a day on the special effects. But that’s it. So I’m kind of like [raps fingers on the table].

    What story did you adapt?

    It’s not one in particular. The third one, yes, is an adaptation.Can you talk a little bit about the opening of the movie with the space station? It wonderfully relates it to our world.

    Exactly. I was struck by this footage of 1975 of the American and the Russian shaking hands and I watched the news an hour before and you see all this conflict between America and Russia and how we’re back to the Cold War. Suddenly, I watched this wonderful footage of these two guys with big smiles and they hug each other and I said, “Why’d we lose this energy?” I thought it was a good start. To start in 1975 and from 1975 to basically 2400, to see how this space station grows little by little. I used the shaking hands to have everybody shaking hands. It’s a metaphor to show we can still shake hands. It’s fine.

    Was part of the appeal of the movie making a hopeful science-fiction story?

    As a moviegoer, I’m a little fed up. Sci-fi is so dark. It’s always raining. It’s always night. The hero is always wondering what he should do and if it’s right to save the world. It’s like, “Wow. That’s the future? Are we sure it’s that?” The present is dark. If we cannot imagine that our future is bright, then it’s all suicide today. We will right our future. It’s up to us to shake hands and make it bright. And by the way, if you look at the state of humanity in the 10th century, we were fighting a lot. Today we share. We take the same planes. We are in the same company. We share the kitchen. We share sushi. We share a cheeseburger. It’s better. So why aren’t we sure it’ll be positive 10 centuries from now?

    Can you talk about the division of labor between your two big effects houses, Industrial Light & Magic and Weta?

    At the beginning, we bid. Weta wanted to do everything and ILM wanted to do everything. And I honestly love both of them. So we had this conversation and I said, “Let’s be honest. Do you really think you can handle 2,734 shots by yourself on time?” They were kind enough and honest to say, “Maybe it’s going to be hard.” So I said, “How about you share? You do a piece and you do a piece?” It’s the first time they shared. I was so happy. They almost choose by themselves. ILM was comfortable with Big Market, to take the entire thing, because it’s 600 shots. So they did all of Big Market. Boom. Then Weta took most of the rest. And there’s a third company called Rodeo and Rodeo that took all of the mechanical stuff — the space station, the space ships, nothing organic but mechanical. That was the third. The Pearls, all of the aliens are from Weta. And Big Market is ILM.

    Is Big Market from the comic?

    No, I came up with it.

    It’s insane.

    I know.Was it hard for everybody to keep track of?

    Come on. My first meeting I had 80 people from special effects and 100 people from the crew. I spent an hour explaining the scene and, at the end of the hour, they look at me like … I can tell no one understands. No one. I scratched my head and thought, How am I going to do this? It’s going to be a nightmare.

    I took all of the students from my school, I have a film school and there’s 120 students. I rented a sound studio for five weeks and we shot the scene. It was all handheld but they were playing the parts, they were doing the accessories, the sound, everything. So we put the 600 storyboards on a wall and did every shot one by one. I edited the entire scene, put some temp music in, and then I colored the entire scene. We had three colors — one for desert vision (yellow), blue vision I put on my helmet and see the other world, but I see the desert at the same time and the third vision, the red one, is the merchant who sees us. So now you have the entire thing edited with three different colors. Now we understand which version we’re seeing and where we are.

    I have this scene and it’s 18 minutes. So we have it on stage so the technicians can always refer to it and the actors are really happy because they can understand. Six weeks shooting for the entire Big Market sequence.

    At a recent special effects convention, it was teased that there are some connections to “The Fifth Element.”

    That’s not the story. The story is that some artist at ILM told me they put some tricks in it and I have to find them. He said there’s seven of them. I found five. There are two that I haven’t seen.

    There’s supposedly a flying taxi right?

    Yeah, that’s what they said. I haven’t seen it yet.In your mind, are these two films of a whole?

    I think there is a common energy and a common meaning in a way, but “The Fifth Element” was way weirder than “Valerian” for me. I think “Valerian” is easier to embrace. Because it’s the story of the guy and the girl and the guy tries to get the girl, this tiny little human story, which I love. They look like a couple from today fighting and having a job. This aspect makes it very real for an audience. Someone who doesn’t even like sci-fi can relate, because of that.

    “The Fifth Element” is out of this world. The girl doesn’t even speak English. And I think the audience, you have to remember, at the time, even though “The Fifth Element” is now a classic from what I heard, the movie wasn’t popular when it opened here. You had a blue alien singing classical music in space and having a stone in her stomach? It was nuts. But, 20 years later, because of Internet and people are traveling now with no cost, kids are flying everywhere, they are much more open. They’re closer to this type of universe than they were before.

    Do you miss the puppets you worked with on “Fifth Element”?

    No. It was a nightmare.

    Why did Alexandre Desplat do “Valerian” instead of your usual composer and collaborator, Eric Serra?

    You know, the reason is very simple: Eric is my friend of more than 30 years. We know each other so well. It’s very hard to reinvent ourselves when we’re together. It’s like an old couple. For the past couple of years, I’ve decided to do a movie with Eric once every two films. So he did “Lucy,” he did “The Lady.” So he will do the next movie I will do. I’ll do a movie in between the next “Valerian.” It’s a way of refreshing ourselves and meet again. Now he’s frustrated because he didn’t do the film and now he wants to impress me. I remember five, six years ago we were looking so much like an old couple it wasn’t creative. It wasn’t creative enough.

    Can you talk about your decision to go with a big orchestral score instead of something more electronic and futuristic?

    I think, after a while, when you see sci-fi what makes them old is the music. When you go to classical, it’s not dated. That’s why, for me, I wanted it to be more classical.

    There’s a story in the press notes about Natalie Portman visiting your set dressed as Jackie O.

    I’m shooting “Valerian,” and we’re in sound stages in Paris. And I have my little lounge. And Natalie is shooting “Jackie” in the same sound stages and her lounge is next to mine. So sometimes I come in the morning to my little apartment and see Jackie Kennedy aka Matilda aka Natalie, who I’ve known since she was 11 years old, dressed as Jackie. And she really did look like Jackie, with the pink thing and the wig. It was like switching in space every time I see her. I didn’t know who I was looking at — Jackie or Natalie or Matilda? And then you see Jackie Kennedy say, “Hi Luc!” It was so bizarre. When I met her as Natalie I’m used to it. It’s fine. It’s the fact that she was Jackie, it was too much for me.How was working with Rihanna?

    My goal is to think, Okay who do you think is the best to play the plot? Then you figure out everything else. First, it’s all about who you’d love to have. If you don’t try, then you never know. And I thought, Well Rihanna. Everybody collapsed. They said, “Are you kidding? She’s the biggest star in the world?” But I figured we should ask. The first thing I asked her manager was, “Is she interested in playing the part?” They said, “She’s definitely interested in playing the part and definitely interested in meeting you because she knows you and your reputation with women.” I said, “Well that’s a good sign.”

    I think between the role and the director I am, it was a safe place for her to go. It’s a real part but not too long, it won’t take six months out of a world tour. She trusts me, she has faith. So it was perfect for her too. The minute she came to Paris, she was dedicated totally. She let the entire entourage outside of the set, she came by herself and she really offered herself as an actress. She let me model her.

    Before I leave, I wanted to ask you about the ending, not to get into spoilers but it’s very human-versus-human. Was there ever a version where more of the crazy creatures we meet along the way show up again?

    No. It was already complicated enough. The only moment was, at a certain point, I wanted to put in the Doghan Daguis [three whimsical, gargoyle-y creatures that serve as comic relief earlier in the film]. I tried it a few times. I’d found a way, but it makes the climax more funny but too funny. I wanted the people to fear. There’s a ticking clock. If you have them cracking jokes in the middle of that you’re not going to take it seriously.

    Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets” is in theaters across the galaxy starting Friday.

  • Cara Delevingne ‘Pretty Sure’ She Won’t Be Back for ‘Suicide Squad 2’

    The doctor is probably out for “Suicide Squad 2.”

    Cara Delevingne played archaeologist Dr. June Moone in “Suicide Squad,” and it turned out she was also the villain of the DC Comics movie since she was possessed by the sorceress Enchantress.

    The Enchantress was crushed at the end of the first movie, freeing June — who was left alive and still dating Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman) as far as we could tell — but Delevingne told USA Today she’s “pretty sure” she will not be back for the sequel.

    “It was a life-changing experience and of course I’d do another one, but I don’t think it would make sense for the character.”

    However, she (joked?) added, “I’ll probably still be on the set hanging out with everyone.”

    The “Valerian” star may be out, but Joel Kinnaman is reportedly in, along with Will Smith (Deadshot), Margot Robbie (Harley Quinn), and whoever else.

    “Suicide Squad 2” doesn’t have an official director yet, but “The Shallows” director Jaume Collet-Serra was reportedly Warner Bros.’s frontrunner. A new script is now being written, with production aimed to start mid-2018.

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  • Everything We Know About the ‘Fifth Element’ Sequel That Never Was

    This year marks the 20th anniversary of “The Fifth Element,” French visionary Luc Besson‘s whirligig sci-fi epic about a cab driver (Bruce Willis) who befriends and falls in love with a space deity (Milla Jovovich) and ends up saving the galaxy and defeating a truly over-the-top baddie (Gary Oldman, naturally). It was a movie that seemingly came out of nowhere but was instantly embraced, if not widely than by a certain type of filmgoer that responded to its unusual and enchanting blend of comic book aesthetics, broad humor, thrilling action set pieces, and colorful characters. Two decades in, it’s hard not to think of it as a lovably goofy, ahead-of-its-time masterpiece.

    But the question remains: Why hasn’t there ever been a proper sequel to the film?

    The legend goes that Luc Besson started working on what would end up being “The Fifth Element” back when he was 15. By the time he had finished making “Atlantis,” his gorgeous and elliptical documentary about oceans, his script had ballooned to 400 pages. While Besson developed the visual look of the film, production halted in 1992. Besson went on to make “Leon: The Professional” in the interim and following the release of that film, he worked to streamline the ungainly sci-fi project to something more manageable (and attractive for big movie stars). Obviously, he pared down the script and even scored Willis, who Besson had courted during the first iteration of the movie, to star. But what became of all that additional material?When Besson made the press rounds for “The Fifth Element,” he casually mentioned a sequel or follow-up. The movie that the filmmaker had just completed was the first half of that massive script; the sequel would be the second half. Somewhere along the way it even got a name: “Mr. Shadow” (named after the malevolent force that threatened all mankind in “The Fifth Element”).

    In 1998, during the nascent days of the Internet rumor mill, it was reported that Bruce Willis had signed on for the follow-up and Mira Sorvino was also interested in a role. (Sorvino wound up in his 2001 martial arts thriller “Kiss of the Dragon,” which Besson co-wrote and produced.) For his part, Besson was hard at work on his follow up (with “Fifth Element” co-star and then-wife Milla Jovovich). In a 2011 interview with Moviefone, Besson said he had no interest in doing a sequel and in a Reddit AMA in 2013 he said that any talk of a sequel was just a “rumor.”

    I talked to him that same year about a potential “Fifth Element” follow-up and he told me: “‘The Fifth Element’ … I was a little bit frustrated because I made the film right before all the new effects arrived. So when I did the film it was all blue screen, six hours, dots on the wall, takes forever to do one shot. Now, basically, you put the camera on your shoulder and then you run and then you add a couple of dinosaurs and spaceships. And I was so frustrated because it was not so easy at the time. So I always think to myself that I would avenge one day and use all the new tools to do a sci-fi film for sure.”

    When I pressed him as to whether this sci-fi film would have any direct connection to “The Fifth Element,” he demurred: “I don’t know if it would be directly connected but it would be the same area and the same genre. So for me it would be connected even if the stories had nothing to do with each other.” (Also worth noting: Besson and the movie’s star, Milla Jovovich, divorced in 1999.)

    Which brings us to Besson’s approach to sequels, which can be a little tricky to understand. The only true sequels the filmmaker has directed himself involved a trilogy of animated features he made in France that were nominally distributed stateside. Otherwise, he has only written sequels (to mid-sized hits, like “Taken” and “The Transporter“). For years, he worked on a proper follow-up to “Leon: The Professional” and he said that none of the scripts were good enough. But when “Columbiana” (an assassin thriller he made with Zoe Saldana) was coming out, Besson spoke openly about it being a slightly modified version of the “Leon” sequel he had been working on, which at one point was titled “Mathilda.” So it might seem like we never got the sequel to “Leon: The Professional,” we did … kind of … you just have to look through the lens of Luc.M-4VDF-16373afrpsd Final (Left to right.)   Dane DeHaan, and Cara Delevingne star in EuropaCorp's  Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.Photo credit: Vikram Gounassegarin� 2016 VALERIAN SAS � TF1 FILMS PRODUCTIONWhich brings us to “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets,” Besson’s next grandiose sci-fi extravaganza, scheduled to open later this summer. If you watch the trailer for the film, you’ll notice key touchstones, like the exaggerated color palette, wacky alien species, and off-kilter comedic elements. The fact that there isn’t a flying taxi in the trailer is a miracle. (Also, there probably is one, you just have to look hard enough.)

    Unlike “The Fifth Element,” which was merely inspired by French comic books, “Valerian” is actually based off of one. This is that follow-up that Besson was hinting about in those Reddit AMAs and the film he was talking about with me. What I mean to say is that maybe the “Fifth Element” sequel is actually happening right now and being released as “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.” Even if it doesn’t have a direct connection, it’s sort of that spiritual successor Besson mentioned. There’s certain strands of the same DNA there.

    So, even if we never really-for-real got “Mr. Shadow” (or whatever it might have been called), at least we get this. And, judging by the trailers, it’s going to be awesome.

  • Rihanna Wows, Cara Delevingne Kicks Ass In New ‘Valerian’ Trailer

    The second trailer for “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets” is a visual trip, with crazy creatures, aliens and dazzling spacescapes galore. And hello, there’s Rihanna as a sexy nightclub entertainer.

    We also see more of Cara Delevingne kicking ass as Laureline, partner to special operative Valerian (Dane DeHaan). Together, the 28th century duo maintain order throughout the human space territories, which ain’t easy. And soon, as DeHaan says in the trailer, the whole universe is after them.

    Rihanna appears in the trailer in a bowler hat, looking remarkably like Liza Minnelli in “Cabaret.” According to USA Today, the footage screened at CinemaCon featured her doing a routine very similar to Minnelli’s famous nightclub chair routine from the 1972 musical. She appears at a cosmic nightclub run by Ethan Hawke, who, according to the site, is “eccentric” and “over-the-top.”

    She appears to be able to change appearance at will, morphing from brunette to blonde and changing outfits quicker than Mystique.

    DeHaan wouldn’t spill on exactly what her role is, but told USA Today, “Rihanna’s part is so crazy, it’s so awesome. I worked with her the first two weeks of the shoot and whenever I told anybody what I was going to be doing, their jaws were on the floor and they were so jealous. And that’s all I can say.”

    It’s directed by Luc Besson, who brought us the sci-fi classic “The Fifth Element.” It hits theaters July 21.

  • The ‘Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets’ Trailer Will Blow Your Mind

    It’s very easy to say that something is unlike anything you’ve ever seen before, especially since it’s very rare that something (especially a major motion picture) can be all that different. But after watching the trailer for Luc Besson‘s upcoming sci-fi extravaganza “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets,” it’s very clear that the movie, which opens next summer, will be unlike anything you’ve ever seen before.Dane DeHaan and Cara Delevingne in Valerian and the City of a Thousand PlanetsIf you’ve never heard of “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets,” you’ve still probably been exposed to it (at least tangentially) — the French comic books that the film is based on (Jean-Claude Mézières and Pierre Christin) are said to have influenced George Lucas when he was crafting the “Star Wars” series. So, you know, there’s that. Based on this teaser trailer, though, it’s a lot more outrageous, wacky, and fun than anything George cooked up.

    The trailer is brief and mostly dialogue-free. There’s a truly incredible song backing the action that will probably blow your mind when you hear it, but Besson asked that we keep it a secret (for now). But pretty much from the very beginning your jaw will be on the floor. This movie looks like it crams an almost incalculable amount of science fiction-y stuff in it: robots, aliens (dozens of different species), monsters, glittering futuristic cities, spaceships (the main characters’ signature ride was designed with the help of Lexus), characters running on beams of energy, different planets, and, of course, ray guns. There’s one shot that’s looking down towards the city and I swear to god there are flying carpets zooming past. (For those wondering, the majority of the visual effects were split between Weta and Industrial Light & Magic.)Alpha Space Station Docking Bay Extras K-Tron Warriors sets from "Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets"You get a sense of the playful, almost-romantic banter between intergalactic peace-keeping agents Valerian (Dane DeHaan) and Laureline (Cara Delevingne), without ever getting into the narrative nitty gritty. And almost as eye-popping as the various aliens, spaceships, and robots, is an appearance by a positively radiant Rihanna, who as we all know is so perfect she might as well be an android.

    At the end of the tease comes a very delicious tag line: “A universe without boundaries needs heroes without limits.” Aaaaaand is it Summer 2017 yet?

    After watching the trailer, we mingled with Besson, who was on hand to answer any questions and also to have some wine and cheese with a small assortment of journalist (he’s French, after all!) The filmmaker said of “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets,” “It’s my dream sci-fi movie.” And there’s a sense that he has been working towards this film his entire career — “The Fifth Element,” which will be 20 years old by the time “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets” hits the big screen, felt like an initial stab at this kind of material. It, too, was inspired by French comic books (Mézières was often cited) and had a similarly decadent, larger-than-life aesthetic (those Jean Paul Gaultier costumes!)

    But it’s not just “The Fifth Element” that “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets” calls to mind. There’s also echoes of the absurdist humor that ran through things like “Angel-A” and “The Family,” and the kind of harmonious one-love message of his brilliant “Lucy,” which was sort of like Terrence Malick’s contemplative “Tree of Life” but remade as a late-night direct-to-Cinemax action movie. And someone from Besson’s EuropaCorp told us that the original comic books that inspired “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets” have largely informed Besson’s entire career, from the way he writes rat-a-tat dialogue between actors to his fascination with a strong female central character.Star Dane DeHaan, director Luc Besson and star Cara Delevingne team up for EuropaCorp's Valerian and the City of a Thousand PlanetsWhen I asked Besson about Alexandre Desplat‘s score for the film (which, honestly, seems like an odd tonal fit considering the composer’s rather somber proclivities), since it was announced that he would be handling the music shortly after leaving similar duties on “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story,” Besson said he hadn’t heard anything yet. “He starts this week,” Besson explained. So while things that he had been tinkering with for “Star Wars” could end up in the mix for “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets” (and given how long Desplat was a part of “Rogue One,” that seems likely), Besson hasn’t heard a note.

    Besson has secured the rights to nine of the comic books in the series and will have a script for the second film by the time “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets” hits screens next summer (a trilogy has been fully mapped out, as of now), so if the movie turns out to be as awe-inspiring as the trailer suggests, there should be a lot more from the franchise coming your way very soon.

    But let’s not get ahead of ourselves, here; for now let’s all get really excited about “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.” (Between this and “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,” Summer 2017 is going to be full of really crazy space operas.)

    If two minutes of “Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets” leaves you borderline speechless, imagine what the whole movie will do.