Tag: chloe-zhao

  • Movie Review: ‘Hamnet’

    (L to R) Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Joe Alwyn as Bartholomew in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    (L to R) Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Joe Alwyn as Bartholomew in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    Now in limited release and expanding on December 5 is ‘Hamnet,’ directed by Chloe Zhao and starring Jessie Buckley, Paul Mescal, Emily Watson, Joe Alwyn, David Wilmot, Olivia Lynes, Bodhi Rae Breathnach, and Jacobi Jupe.

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    Related Article: Ridley Scott to Reunite with ‘Gladiator II’ Star Paul Mescal for Post-Apocalyptic Adventure ‘The Dog Stars’

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    (L to R) Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes and Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    Every frame of ‘Hamnet’ is beautifully designed and captured by director Chloe Zhao (‘Eternals’) and her team, rendering England during the life and times of William Shakespeare in both ethereal and grimy terms. Life is hard, but also mysterious, and those who still connect with the forces of nature are an increasingly rare breed – like Anne ‘Agnes’ Hathaway (Jessie Buckley), who becomes the Bard’s wife and is the true center of ‘Hamnet.’

    Agnes, the daughter of an alleged ‘forest witch,’ is both luminously beautiful and slightly feral, which makes her all-intoxicating for Shakespeare himself (Paul Mescal). ‘Hamnet’ chronicles that passion, their deep love, and the creation of their family in poignantly simple terms – until tragedy rips at their very core. But that tragedy also manifests itself in a way that reverberates through history, and it’s only when that happens that ‘Hamnet’ wobbles, with the film not providing enough time for that aspect of the story to breathe and take root in the same way that its first part does.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Actors Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal with director Chloé Zhao on the set of their film 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    (L to R) Actors Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal with director Chloé Zhao on the set of their film ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    A young William Shakespeare is drawn to the magnetic Agnes (pronounced ANN-yes) in 16th century Stratford, and after a quick courtship they’re going at it hot and heavy in a stable. That leaves Agnes pregnant with the first of their three children, initiating a marriage that is frowned upon by Shakespeare’s brutish father (David Wilmot) and stern mother (Emily Watson). But William, Agnes, and their children – Susanna, and the twins Judith and Hamnet – find happiness in their existence, even if William has to travel frequently to London to write and produce his plays.

    It’s only when the unimaginable (at least for us; it was much more common then) hits the clan, resulting in the death of perhaps the most precocious family member, that the clan’s entire dynamic is in danger of disintegrating – particularly as a shattered Agnes begins to bitterly resent her husband for not being there for that child’s last moments, and for throwing himself into his work instead of sharing in her grief. But William has his own method for dealing with the loss and his unspeakable anguish – and it expresses itself through the creation of one of his greatest plays (at least according to this movie, and the Maggie O’Farrell novel it was based on; the truth, as with many aspects of the real Shakespeare’s life, remains elusive).

    (L to R) Jacobi Jupe stars as Hamnet, Bodhi Rae Breathnach as Susanna and Olivia Lynes as Judith in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    (L to R) Jacobi Jupe stars as Hamnet, Bodhi Rae Breathnach as Susanna and Olivia Lynes as Judith in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    For its first two-thirds, ‘Hamnet’ builds a magnificent edifice of love, emotion, and empathy that borders on the mystical, primarily through the force of nature that is Jessie Buckley’s Agnes. Her love for William – and his reciprocation – is the core of the movie’s first act, with their endearing family life the center of its second. It all comes crashing down during an extended, agonizing sequence in which Agnes’ feral, soul-crushing response is a heartbreaking howl of loss that could reverberate through the soul of every parent.

    After reaching that height of sorrow, Zhao doesn’t completely find a way to balance the scales, or at least give the rest of the narrative the weight it deserves. Agnes’ fury toward William doesn’t seem earned – even if he becomes a distant figure during the middle of the film — and her journey during the closing sequences, both physical as she travels to London to see what the hell her husband is doing there and psychological as she sees his latest play and realizes where it’s coming from, seems rushed. Where ‘Hamnet’ should reach a powerful crescendo of forgiveness and acceptance, it never quite brings down the house, leaving one feeling like something’s missing.

    Cast and Performances

    Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    Jessie Buckley stars as Agnes in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    Whatever the flaws in narrative structure, there are none whatsoever in Jessie Buckley’s performance. She has been cited as the favorite to take home an Oscar this year and there’s no question about it. We meet Agnes curled at the base of a tree; she returns to that tree to give birth to her first child. The woman is connected to nature in ways both beautiful and enigmatic, and Buckley captures every aspect of her – her mystical nature, her undeniable charisma, her fierce love, and her excruciating grief – just right. It’s a powerhouse piece of work, and although it’s one of several delivered by women this year, it will be hard to top.

    We were somewhat soured on Paul Mescal after his miscasting in ‘Gladiator II,’ but he’s returned to our good graces here. Mescal’s Shakespeare, while not nearly as present onscreen as Agnes, is nevertheless a complex presence, a man torn between his love for his family and the work that takes him away from them, both physically and mentally. Mescal’s portrayal here is soulful and empathetic, giving us a glimpse into the beating heart of one of literature’s greatest geniuses (there’s only one scene, in which he spouts some of his most famous lines while considering the end of his own life, that doesn’t ring true).

    Attention must be paid as well to Emily Watson’s Mary Shakespeare, whose relationship with Agnes evolves from dour disapproval to love and understanding, and especially Jacobi Jupe as Hamnet Shakespeare, about whom we’ll say little but who also rips one’s heart out during several key scenes.

    Final Thoughts

    Paul Mescal stars as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    Paul Mescal stars as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Focus Features / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    Chloe Zhao seems most comfortable as a director in exploring the human psyche, the depths of our emotion and empathy, and the intimacy of our connection to both other people and the world around us. Perhaps that’s why her sole attempt to date at spectacle, ‘Eternals,’ didn’t quite work, while films like ‘Nomadland’ are so powerful.

    She re-centers herself here with ‘Hamnet,’ finding all the elements of her best work while adding a powerful message about the ways in which we process grief and how the creation of art can channel the deepest and most intense of human emotions. Shakespeare’s ‘Hamlet’ is not a recreation of events in the Bard’s life (which may or may not have happened as they do in this film), and neither is Chloe Zhao’s ‘Hamnet.’ But both take on a single, universal query: can art can provide empathy, understanding, and even healing? That is the question indeed.

    ‘Hamnet’ receives a score of 85 out of 100.

    Paul Mescal stars as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s 'Hamnet', a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC
    Paul Mescal stars as William Shakespeare in director Chloé Zhao’s ‘Hamnet’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Agata Grzybowska / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

    What is the plot of ‘Hamnet’?

    William Shakespeare (Paul Mescal) and Anne ‘Agnes’ Hathaway (Jessie Buckley) marry and have three children, until the family is shattered by an unthinkable tragedy that leads to the writing of one of the Bard’s greatest plays.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Hamnet’?

    • Jessie Buckley as Agnes Shakespeare
    • Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare
    • Emily Watson as Mary Shakespeare
    • Joe Alwyn as Bartholomew Hathaway
    • Jacobi Jupe as Hamnet Shakespeare
    • David Wilmot as John Shakespeare
    • Olivia Lynes as Judith Shakespeare
    • Bodhi Rae Breathnach as Susanna Shakespeare
    'Hamnet' opens in theaters on November 26th.
    ‘Hamnet’ opens in theaters on November 26th.

    List of Jessie Buckley Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Hamnet’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Jessie Buckley Movies on Amazon

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  • Ryan Kiera Armstrong Joins New ‘Buffy’ Series

    Ryan Kiera Armstrong stars in ' Star Wars: Skeleton Crew'.
    Ryan Kiera Armstrong stars in ‘ Star Wars: Skeleton Crew’.

    Preview:

    • ‘Star Wars: Skeleton Crew’s Ryan Kiera Armstrong is aboard the new ‘Buffy’ series.
    • Sarah Michelle Gellar is back as the vampire slayer.
    • Chloé Zhao will direct the pilot and produce.

    It might not feature white smoke coming out of a chimney as with the recent Pope’s election, but we have a chosen one within the expanding world of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer.’

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    Deadline reports that Ryan Kiera Armstrong, most recently seen as one of the young leads in ‘Star Wars: Skeleton Crew’ is set to add another pop cultural behemoth to her credits, as she’s scored a lead role alongside returning star Sarah Michelle Gellar in the yet to be titled reboot of ‘Buffy.’

    To be clear, this will be more a next step than a total reinvention of the vampire slayer concept, which has so far proved reliable on screens big and small and in comic book form.

    The new series comes via Hulu, which has a pilot order in place with Gellar as co-star and executive producer.

    ‘Poker Face’ showrunners Nora and Lilla Zuckerman are developing what is being described as “the next chapter in the Buffyverse.” Oscar winner Chloé Zhao, whose movies include ‘Nomadland’ and Marvel’s ‘Eternals’ is set to direct the pilot and serve as a producer.

    Gellar’s Buffy Summers will be a mentor to the new Chosen One played by Armstrong, who like her predecessor will be charged with battling all manner of vampires and other demonic creatures (and endowed with strength and resilience to do so) while also navigating more mundane teenage life issues.

    In keeping with the current trend for announcing casting decisions, Gellar took to Instagram to document her telling Armstrong the news that she’s gotten the role:

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    A post shared by Sarah Michelle (@sarahmgellar)

     

    Gellar had this to say about the choice:

    “From the moment I saw Ryan’s audition, I knew there was only one girl that I wanted by my side. To have that kind of emotional intelligence, and talent, at such a young age is truly a gift. The bonus is that her smile lights up even the darkest room.”

    Lilla and Nora Zuckerman used some Buffy terminology to praise their new lead:

    “We are so overjoyed to have found this generation’s slayer in Ryan Kiera Armstrong, she absolutely blew us away –– there is no question in our mind that she is the chosen one.”

    Related Article: Sarah Michelle Gellar Aboard ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Sequel Pilot

    What was the story of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’?

    (L to R) David Boreanaz and Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    (L to R) David Boreanaz and Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    ‘Buffy’ is a concept that has already shown an ability to evolve.
    It originated as a film starring Kristy Swanson in the title role. Joss Whedon wrote the film with Fran Kuzui directing and was released in 1992.

    Five years later, the series version, created by Whedon and now starring Gellar, debuted on The WB.

    It aired on The WB for its first five seasons before airing its final two seasons on UPN.

    The cast also included Nicholas Brendon, Alyson Hannigan, Charisma Carpenter, Anthony Stewart Head, David Boreanaz, Seth Green, and James Marsters among others. Boreanaz would then head up the spinoff series ‘Angel’ at The WB for five seasons.

    The original series’ executive producers included Gail Berman of the Jackal Group and Fran Kuzui & Kaz Kuzui via Suite B, who will all get a credit on the new pilot.

    The cast of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    The cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    And fun fact: also executive producing the pilot is Dolly Parton, whose company Sandollar was producer on the original.

    Whedon, who oversaw the show’s seven-season run, will not return to work on any new version. In 2021, the writer/producer, who also crafted the first two ‘Avengers’ movies and TV series ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’ for Marvel, was accused of creating a toxic work environment on both ‘Buffy’ and ‘Angel’ by nearly a dozen people associated with the show, particularly Carpenter.

    Fellow cast members such as Amber Benson and Michelle Trachtenberg backed up her allegations.

    Berman, and the Kuzuis previously teamed up with 20th TV in 2018 for a potential ‘Buffy’ reboot written by ‘Midnight, Texas’ creator Monica Owusu-Breen, on which Whedon was an executive producer. That project, whose lead was envisioned as a Black woman, didn’t move forward.

    The biggest dangling question any sequel series would need to answer is the clever notion introduced by the series’ final season, in that Buffy’s death (she got better) in a previous season triggered a raft of new potential Slayers.

    And now we have an answer to whether we’ll see one in the new show: a big yes, since Armstrong will take on that role.

    What has Sarah Michelle Gellar previously said about returning for a new ‘Buffy’ series?

    Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    Gellar has been in two minds about the idea of reprising Buffy Summers.

    In 2023, she poured cold water on taking on a new ‘Buffy’ series, telling UK magazine SFX:

    “I am very proud of the show that we created and it doesn’t need to be done. We wrapped that up. I am all for them continuing the story because there’s the story of female empowerment. I love the way the show was left: ‘Every girl who has the power can have the power.’ It’s set up perfectly for someone else to have the power. But like I said, the metaphors of ‘Buffy’ were the horrors of adolescence. I think I look young, but I am not an adolescent.”

    Yet last year, she appeared on ‘The Drew Barrymore Show’ where she was open to it:

    “I always used to say no because it’s in its bubble and it’s so perfect. But watching ‘And Just Like That…’ (the ‘Sex and the City’ sequel series) and seeing ‘Dexter: Original Sin,’ and realizing there are ways to do it, definitely does get your mind thinking, ‘Well, maybe.’”

    Less maybe, these days, more fully aboard.

    When will the new ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ series hit screens?

    Hulu has yet to say when this might premiere and, indeed, with that pilot order, it’s still more of a case of if the show passes muster.

    Still, given that attractive, grabby recognizable title and the original star attached, we’d guess this one has a good chance.

    The cast of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    The cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Movies and TV On Amazon

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  • ‘Buffy’ Sequel Series Pilot Ordered at Hulu

    Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    Preview:

    • Sarah Michelle Gellar is attached to a ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ sequel pilot.
    • Nora Zuckerman and Lila Zuckerman are aboard to write, showrun, and executive produce.
    • Chloé Zhao will direct the pilot and produce.

    As the opening narration of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ used to intone, “In every generation there is a chosen one. She alone will stand against the vampires, the demons, and the forces of darkness. She is the Slayer.”

    If Hulu’s plans work out, we might just get to meet this generation’s Slayer –– with a little help from the previous one.

    Yes, in a world where every old show and movie is now potential fodder for a sequel, reboot or remake, ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ is one that has been talked about a few times before.

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    Now, according to The Hollywood Reporter, it might actually come to fruition, as word arrives that streaming service Hulu is exploring the concept of a ‘Buffy’ streaming series.

    With Disney’s 20th Television backing the idea, ‘Poker Face’ showrunners Nora and Lilla Zuckerman are developing what is being described as “the next chapter in the Buffyverse.”

    Chloé Zhao poses backstage with the Oscars® for Directing and Best Picture the during the live ABC Telecast of The 93rd Oscars® at Union Station in Los Angeles, CA on Sunday, April 25, 2021. Credit/Provider: Matt Petit / A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Chloé Zhao poses backstage with the Oscars® for Directing and Best Picture the during the live ABC Telecast of The 93rd Oscars® at Union Station in Los Angeles, CA on Sunday, April 25, 2021. Credit/Provider: Matt Petit / A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Oscar winner Chloé Zhao, whose movies include ‘Nomadland’ and Marvel’s ‘Eternals’ is set to direct the pilot and serve as a producer.

    But perhaps more exciting for ‘Buffy’ fans is news that the original Buffy Summers herself, Sarah Michelle Gellar, is attached to recur on the show, albeit more as a mentor figure to the new focus, a fresh-faced Slayer who will be tasked with tackling vampires and other supernatural creatures.

    Related Article: What Gets Hinted At In ‘Eternals,’ And How Will The MCU Be Affected?

    What was the story of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’?

    The cast of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    The cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    ‘Buffy’ is a concept that has already shown an ability to evolve.
    It originated as a film starring Kristy Swanson in the title role. Joss Whedon wrote the film with Fran Kuzui directing and was released in 1992.

    Five years later, the series version, created by Whedon and now starring Gellar, debuted on The WB.

    It aired on The WB for its first five seasons before airing its final two seasons on UPN.

    The cast also included Nicholas Brendon, Alyson Hannigan, Charisma Carpenter, Anthony Stewart Head, David Boreanaz, Seth Green, and James Marsters among others. Boreanaz would then head up the spinoff series ‘Angel’ at The WB for five seasons.

    The original series’ executive producers included Gail Berman of the Jackal Group and Fran Kuzui & Kaz Kuzui via Suite B, who will all get a credit on the new pilot.

    The cast of 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    The cast of ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    And fun fact: also executive producing the pilot is Dolly Parton, whose company Sandollar was producer on the original.

    Whedon, who oversaw the show’s seven-season run, will not return to work on any new version. In 2021, the writer/producer, who also crafted the first two ‘Avengers’ movies and TV series ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’ for Marvel, was accused of creating a toxic work environment on both ‘Buffy’ and ‘Angel’ by nearly a dozen people associated with the show, particularly Carpenter.

    Fellow cast members such as Amber Benson and Michelle Trachtenberg backed up her allegations.

    Berman, and the Kuzuis previously teamed up with 20th TV in 2018 for a potential ‘Buffy’ reboot written by ‘Midnight, Texas’ creator Monica Owusu-Breen, on which Whedon was an executive producer. That project, whose lead was envisioned as a Black woman, didn’t move forward.

    The biggest dangling question any sequel series would need to answer is the clever notion introduced by the series’ final season, in that Buffy’s death (she got better) in a previous season triggered a raft of new potential Slayers. Is there just going to be one in the new series? We’ll have to wait and see.

    What has Sarah Michelle Gellar previously said about returning for a new ‘Buffy’ series?

    Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    Gellar has been in two minds about the idea of reprising Buffy Summers.

    In 2023, she poured cold water on taking on a new ‘Buffy’ series, telling UK magazine SFX:

    “I am very proud of the show that we created and it doesn’t need to be done. We wrapped that up. I am all for them continuing the story because there’s the story of female empowerment. I love the way the show was left: ‘Every girl who has the power can have the power.’ It’s set up perfectly for someone else to have the power. But like I said, the metaphors of ‘Buffy’ were the horrors of adolescence. I think I look young, but I am not an adolescent.”

    Yet last year, she appeared on ‘The Drew Barrymore Show’ where she was open to it:

    “I always used to say no because it’s in its bubble and it’s so perfect. But watching ‘And Just Like That…’ (the ‘Sex and the City’ sequel series) and seeing ‘Dexter: Original Sin,’ and realizing there are ways to do it, definitely does get your mind thinking, ‘Well, maybe.’”

    It seems the new concept has shifted her from “maybe” to all in…

    When will the new ‘Buffy’ series be on screens?

    Hulu has yet to make any official announcement –– and indeed, hasn’t confirmed any of the details, so we’ll have to wait and see whether this even makes it into production, let alone learn a launch date for the eventual show on the streaming service.

    (L to R) David Boreanaz and Sarah Michelle Gellar in 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    (L to R) David Boreanaz and Sarah Michelle Gellar in ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ Movies On Amazon

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  • Rosario Dawson Mistakenly Says a New ‘Punisher’ Show is Coming

    Jon Bernthal as Frank Castle in Marvel's 'The Punisher.'
    Jon Bernthal as Frank Castle in Marvel’s ‘The Punisher.’

    Given two recent examples, Marvel must be exploring some technology to stop actors saying much of anything about their movies and TV shows at all. Perhaps they could call it the Tom Holland Technique.

    Still, spoilers about projects that actually exist is one thing, but the company has now had to face performers who have roles in past projects announcing future work that isn’t yet official.

    Take Rosario Dawson, who played Claire Temple – a version of the Marvel character Night Nurse – on ‘Daredevil’ and various other ‘Defenders’ Marvel/Netflix series including ‘Jessica Jones’ and ‘Luke Cage’, took to the stage at Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo this weekend.

    In answer to a question about her potential future in the Marvel Universe (and the possibility of Jon Bernthal coming back) now that the likes of Charlie Cox’s Daredevil are confirmed to return, she let slip that she’d heard that ‘The Punisher’ was coming back.

    And that excited Dawson, since ‘The Punisher’ was one of the few shows she never got the chance to appear on, and she loves Bernthal.

    Sadly for her, and for fans of the characters, it appears she had some bad intel and was indulging in some wishful thinking. Dawson walked back her comments on Twitter this morning:

    While we’re sure Team Marvel has at least discussed the return of Bernthal’s character, we doubt Kevin Feige and co. are all that happy with actors making announcements, especially given how secretive the studio tends to be about its new movies and shows.

    Which brings us to Patton Oswalt, nerd favorite and regular genre actor, who made his MCU debut (after, of course co-writing, producing and voicing a MODOK animated series) as Pip the troll in a post-credit scene for ‘Eternals’ opposite Harry Styles as Eros/Starfox.

    Appearing on ‘The Today Show’ last week, Oswalt told the hosts and audience the following: “They have announced there’s going to be an Eternals sequel. Chloé Zhao is going to direct it. So, hopefully there will be more adventures of Starfox and Pip” (See the full video via Today Show’s TikTok account.)

    Of course, Marvel has made no such announcement as of yet – even in its big Comic-Con presentation, ‘Eternals’ did not feature. It’s not to say Feige and his team aren’t considering more ‘Eternals’ action but given the muted reaction to the movie and its box office results, it hasn’t seemed to be a big priority for the company.

    We doubt Oswalt is in big trouble, though we’re sure someone from Marvel has at least said something to him.

    Right now, on the TV front, the return of Cox’s Matt Murdock and Vincent D’Onofrio’s Kingpin is official, on a show called ‘Daredevil: Born Again’. And the previous shows are available properly on Disney+. As for the future of ‘The Punisher’? We’d be thrilled to see the return of Jon Bernthal as Castle, and only too happy if Rosario Dawson shows up to interact with him.

    As for ‘Eternals’? Let’s wait and see, shall we?

    Don Lee, Angelina Jolie, Richard Madden, Salma Hayek, Gemma Chan, and Lia McHugh
    (L to R) Don Lee, Angelina Jolie, Richard Madden, Salma Hayek, Gemma Chan, and Lia McHugh in Marvel Studios’ ‘Eternals.’
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  • ‘Eternals’ Review: A Disappointing Entry In The MCU

    ‘Eternals’ Review: A Disappointing Entry In The MCU

    (L-R): Kingo (Kumail Nanjiani), Sprite (Lia McHugh), Sersi (Gemma Chan), Ikaris (Richard Madden), Thena (Angelina Jolie), and Gilgamesh (Don Lee) in Marvel Studios' 'Eternals'
    (L-R): Kingo (Kumail Nanjiani), Sprite (Lia McHugh), Sersi (Gemma Chan), Ikaris (Richard Madden), Thena (Angelina Jolie), and Gilgamesh (Don Lee) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Eternals’

    Drowning in too many characters, convoluted plotting and disappointingly bad visuals, Chloé Zhao’s ‘Eternals,’ based on comic book characters created by Jack Kirby in 1976, follows a group of immortal aliens who have spent the last seven thousand years protecting the humans of Earth from evil, primitive, animalistic creatures called Deviants. They seemingly accomplish their mission, forcing the Deviants into extinction. As the film progresses the group learns more about the true nature of their mission, the Deviants return, bigger and badder than ever, and the heroes must learn to face the most human of all traits: free will.

    Zhao’s cast is filled with mostly character actors who finally get an A-list treatment. At the center is Gemma Chan as an empathetic Sersi who can manipulate matter through physical contact. Chan is an intriguing actress who often brings complex emotions to her characters, so the casting is apt, though unfortunately the film rarely allows her the time to feel like a true protagonist. Same goes for Richard Madden, as her sometime love interest Ikaris, who much like in Greek mythology can fly, but also harbors some dark secrets. Madden is all brooding looks, an immortal Superman-esque sadboy.

    Much hype was made of Kumail Nanjiani‘s physical transformation as Kingo, who can shoot cosmic energy from his hands, and for the last hundred or so years, has built himself up as an acting dynasty in Bollywood. Nanjiani is the actor best suited for the witty banter that has become a trademark of the MCU, but much of his one-liners land flat amongst a cast ill-prepared to match him snap for snap. Bollywood mainstay Harish Patel often steals the show as Kingo’s manager Karun, who is effortlessly funny, yet also adds some much-needed poignancy to the film’s more emotionally urgent moments.

    Brian Tyree Henry does the best he can as Phastos, a scientist and the MCU’s first openly queer character. It’s a pity that he has absolutely no chemistry with his on-screen husband, and is mostly strapped with fairly hetreonormative ideas of queer life. In perhaps the film’s most absolutely ill-conceived scene, not only does he blame his technology for the bombing of Hiroshima, Zhao shoots the sequence with him being comforted amongst the bleak, blasted remains of thousands of nameless Japanese.

    Also, for a film touted as queer representation, Zhao’s insistence on pairing off all the Eternals into heteronormative couplings, as if the only outcome of spending thousands of years together is that the male-presenting and female-presenting immortal beings will eventually end up together, feels like a slap in the face. I’d almost rather go back to a sexless MCU than this aggressive heteronormativity.

    The biggest disappointment in terms of untapped potential is Barry Keoghan as Druig, who can manipulate the minds of others. Keoghan is a once-in-a-generation presence on screen. There is currently no one doing unsettling like him, and you can see glimmers of what makes him such a beguiling presence on screen every so often. Yet it seems Zhao is determined to damper the unique energies of her performers, to turn down their shine until they all feel like a similar shade of bland.

    Lia McHugh plays Sprite, a pixie who can project life-like illusions but is forever trapped in the body of a pre-teen girl. There’s an episode of ‘Highlander: The Series’ that is more nuanced in the way it explores what it’s like to be an immortal child, if you’re interested in seeing this story done well. We’ve also got the MCU’s first deaf character in Makkari (Lauren Ridloff), who can run really, really fast. That’s pretty much all we get to know about her. Also, she’s after some green tablet, but we never find out what its significance is.

    Then there is Salma Hayek, at the helm of the group, as Ajak. She communicates with their leaders, the Celestials, and has hidden the true nature of their mission from the heroes. She’s also barely given anything to do beyond a few stern speeches to her team. How you waste a star like Hayek would be the biggest mystery in the film if it didn’t also star Angelina Jolie. How can you cast a star with her megawattage as Athena – here called simply Thena – the goddess of war, and make her so dull is truly one for the ages. Aiming for shell-shocked and wise, Jolie’s performance is undercut every time she begins to do something remotely interesting, as Zhao’s camera cuts away to something else. Even her connection with fellow Eternal Gilgamesh (Don Lee) is so undercooked it’s hard to see why he’d sacrifice anything for her, and later why she’d be moved to seek revenge for him.

    Hampered by too many characters, the plot is equally underdeveloped beyond the major beats. After learning the true purpose of their existence, suddenly our heroes have a ticking clock set before the actual end of the world. This is where American exceptionalism becomes human exceptionalism, and the safety of our planet is weighed as more important than thousands of other civilizations waiting to be born. Okay. Sure. I guess that makes sense when all the terrible things humans have actually done to the planet, like the melting of the ice caps, are easily explained away by the Celestials’ actions. It’s easier to see us as better than we are when there’s a big bad out there in space actually to blame.

    More disappointing than any of the ham-fisted plotting or underdeveloped characterization, is the filmmaking itself. The stunning compositions and natural light that permeate Zhao’s earlier films made with long-time cinematographer Joshua James Richards are rendered flat under the weight of the Marvel house style, mostly lensed by Ben Davis. Even the shots in South Dakota have none of the majesty we know Zhao and Richards have brought to the location in the past. How everything that felt fresh and unique and uncompromising in her earlier films is completely lacking in this film serves as a testament to how important the collaboration between director and cinematographer can truly be.

    Ultimately, ‘Eternals’ is a story about how empathy is the greatest strength of all, unfortunately that lesson is hampered by the physical strength-based action set pieces on which the MCU has built its style. One can only hope this is a failure solely based on Zhao being the wrong filmmaker to work within the confines of the Marvel machine, and not a sign of things to come from her in the future.

    1.5 stars out of 5.

    Eternals‘ is now in theaters.

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  • How Joan Micklin Silver Paved the Way for Chloé Zhao & Other Women Directors Today

    How Joan Micklin Silver Paved the Way for Chloé Zhao & Other Women Directors Today

    The films of the late Joan Micklin Silver
    The films of the late Joan Micklin Silver

    One of the first celebrity deaths to hit in 2021 was that of filmmaker Joan Micklin Silver. Not as well-remembered by the public today as she was at the height of her career – Silver was not included in the In Memoriam video that played at this year’s Oscars – she left a legacy that can be found in the careers of the women directors who came after her.

    This week Chloé Zhao’s third feature film ‘Nomadland’ was awarded three Oscars- including two for Zhao herself. She became the first woman of color, the first Asian woman, and only the second woman ever to win the award for Best Director. This success follows her previous critically-acclaimed features ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ (2015) and ‘The Rider’ (2017). Later this year Zhao’s highest-profile film – Marvel’s ‘Eternals’ – will finally make its debut after being pushed back from 2020 due to the ongoing pandemic.

    Zhao’s rise from the world of independent cinema to an Oscar-winning film to a big budget Marvel film like ‘Eternals’ recalls the similar rise to prominence from Ava DuVernay, whose feature film debut ‘I Will Follow’ she self-distributed, and whose third film ‘Selma’ made her only fifth woman nominated for Best Director at the Golden Globes (and first Black woman to be nominated), as well as the first Black female director to have her film nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture (though she was pointedly not nominated for Best Director at the Oscars that year). She followed that up with ‘A Wrinkle in Time’, which made her the first Black woman to direct a live-action film earning $100 million.

    But before both of these women smashed through the celluloid ceiling there was Joan Micklin Silver. In the 1970s, when there were so few women directors, women only made up 0.05% of all working directors (in 2020 they made up 12% of directors of the highest grossing films), and Silver fought like hell to forge a career in Hollywood.

    Like DuVernay, she self-financed her debut film, 1975’s ‘Hester Street’, which told the story of Jewish immigrants living on the titular Hester Street in the Lower East Side of New York City at the end of the 19th century. The film would go on to play at the Cannes Film Festival and its star Carol Kane received an Oscar nomination for Best Actress.

    Prior to making her directorial debut, Silver had worked as a writer in Hollywood, even selling a script called ‘Limbo’, a collaboration with Linda Gottlieb, to Universal Pictures in 1972. The film, directed by Mark Robson, follows the lives of women whose husbands are missing in action in Vietnam. Gottlieb would later write the screenplay that would become the basis for ‘Dirty Dancing.’ (The history of how her screenplay became the finished film is an entirely different story.)

    Silver reflected that she “had absolutely no chance of getting work as a director,” within the studio system and even after her success with ‘Hester Street’ she was told by a studio executive that, “feature films are very expensive to mount and distribute, and women directors are one more problem we don’t need.”

    She followed up ‘Hester Street’ with another self-financed film, 1977’s ‘Between The Lines,’ a prophetic look at the lives and loves of the staff at an alt-weekly that launched the careers of many actors including John Heard, Lindsay Crouse, Gwen Welles, Bruno Kirby, Joe Morton, Marilu Henner, Lane Smith, and Jeff Goldblum. Although the film played the Berlin International Film Festival and spawned a short-lived sitcom, it was largely hard to find until a recent restoration and revival from Cohen Media Group.

    Her next film ‘Chilly Scenes of Winter’, a biting romantic dramedy about an unfulfilled man named Charles (John Heard) whose infatuation with a woman named Laura (Mary Beth Hurt) becomes an unhealthy obsession, was produced in association with United Artists. Before the film’s release UA insisted Silver alter the film’s bleak ending to something happier and changed the name to ‘Head over Heels’. It bombed. In 1982 Silver convinced them to re-release the film with its original title and ending, to much better acclaim and box office success.

    Silver also found success working in television, like DuVernay’s ‘Queen Sugar’ and ‘When They See Us’. In 1976, she directed an adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s ‘Bernice Bobs Her Hair’ starring Shelley Duvall and in the 1980s she directed ‘How to Be a Perfect Person in Just Three Days’ for PBS and ‘Finnegan Begin Again’ for HBO.

    1987 saw Silver’s biggest hit to date: the romantic comedy ‘Crossing Delancey’ starring Amy Irving and Peter Reigert, an adaptation of the stage play by Susan Sandler. Irving plays Izzy Grossman, an independent 30-something who works at an upscale bookstore whose bubbe (Reizl Bozyk) hires a marriage broker (Sylvia Miles) to find a nice young Jewish man for her granddaughter. Izzy rebels against the match at first, but slowly finds herself falling for the most charming pickle salesman (Reigert) you’ll ever see on screen. The film had a rocky start as studios told Silver the film was “too ethnic,” which in an interview with the New York Times she said was a euphemism “for Jewish material that Hollywood executives distrust.” Eventually the film found its way to distribution by Warner Bros. thanks to a push from Irving’s husband at the time – Steven Spielberg.

    ‘Crossing Delancey’ received rave reviews and made more than four times its budget, but Silver’s next few films – 1989’s ‘Loverboy’ starring Patrick Dempsey, Kirstie Alley, Carrie Fisher, 1991’s ‘Big Girls Don’t Cry’ starring Hillary Wolf, Griffin Dunne, and Jenny Lewis, and ‘A Fish In The Bathtub’ starring Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara – received mostly mixed reviews and were box office disaster. She continued to direct films for television throughout the next decade; her last credit was 2003’s ‘Hunger Point’ starring Barbara Hershey and Christina Hendricks.

    Silver passed away at the age of 85 from vascular dementia on December 31, 2020.

    What was so remarkable about Silver’s career was her commitment to her vision and her voice, despite struggling against both sexism and anti-semitism within the industry. She paved the way for filmmakers like Zhao and DuVernay, who themselves have fierce voices and unique visions for what film can do. As more women break through in Hollywood and women helming multiple films becomes the rule rather than the exception, it’s important to remember the trailblazers like Joan Micklin Silver who paved the way.

  • Female Filmmakers in Focus: Jeanne Jordan, Steven Ascher talk ‘Our Towns,’ plus ‘Harlan County, U.S.A.’

    Female Filmmakers in Focus: Jeanne Jordan, Steven Ascher talk ‘Our Towns,’ plus ‘Harlan County, U.S.A.’

    Welcome to Female Filmmakers in Focus, where you will find a recommendation for films directed by women to seek out each week. This week features the new documentary ‘Our Towns,’ an interview with co-directors Steven Ascher and Jeanne Jordan, and a suggestion to pair it with Barbara Kopple’s Oscar-winning doc ‘Harlan County, USA’.

    ‘Our Towns’ (2021) – Co-Directed by Jeanne Jordan and Steven Ascher

    Journalists Deborah and James Fallows in 'Our Towns'
    Journalists Deborah and James Fallows in ‘Our Towns’

    After getting her start in public television, Jeanne Jordan founded West City Films with her husband Steven Ascher. Together they produce moving and deeply humanist documentaries about the American experience. The filmmaking duo received an Academy Award nomination for their 1995 film ‘Troublesome Creek: A Midwestern,’ which follows Jordan’s family’s struggle to save their Iowa farm.

    Based on the nonfiction book of the same name by journalists James and Deborah Fallows, ‘Our Towns’ sets out to paint a portrait of modern small town America. The documentary follows the Fallows as they set on a journey that takes them from the sun soaked hellscape that is the Inland Empire in California to the wettest and most remote part of Maine. The cities vary in size from a population of 216,000 all the way to one that is only 1,300, and what’s most fascinating about the documentary is the way they are able to show how despite the size differences, the struggles of these towns share commonalities. They explore how the economic recession, immigration restrictions, and even automation have affected the populations and job markets in these areas. One tidbit I found particularly interesting was the assertion that the number of breweries in a town was a good gauge on how well it is doing economically. Those who grew up in a small town (hello) will find themselves nodding their heads a lot, and the rest of you might get some insight and information that changes how you look at small town America.

    ‘Our Towns’ is available on HBO and HBOMax
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    Read on for an interview with ‘Our Towns’ co-directors Jeanne Jordan and Steven Ascher

    Movifone: How did you get involved in this project?
    Steven Ascher: James and Deborah Fallows wrote a book called ‘Our Towns’ and HBO optioned it. They called us and asked if we’d like to try to make a film from it. We had been longtime admires of their writing and when we met them we thought they were terrific. So we set off to try to express it as a movie.

    MF: Did you have any specific kind of cameras or lens that you used to capture the vibrancy of some of these locations?
    SA: We had a whole range of cameras. Bryan Harvey and I shot it together, and we used Sony FS7s for some of it. Bryan has a Mōvi rig, which is a stabilizer, which allows him to move around very fluidly on the ground. We also used a drone to get higher altitudes. We used Go-Pro cameras that we could attach inside the plane and outside the plane. We really had quite a lot of tools at our disposal.

    MF: Can you talk about how the editing process helps you take all the footage you have and make it into something cohesive?
    SA: One of the trickiest things in this film was to take all these disparate stories in different towns and try to make it feel like it had a flow, that these ideas moved from one to the other and that there was a kind of logic to the film. Always one of the hardest things in documentaries is to take the footage, and you have a reason for shooting it, but once you see it in the edit each thing has to build on the thing before. That takes a while. This film took about a year to edit.
    Jeanne Jordan: There were much longer cuts than we ended up being able to put on the air. We knew that people only have a certain tolerance for how long a documentary should be. We were really trying to keep it to the point where you would constantly be interested but you didn’t feel like you’d been watching for too long. We had to lose some unbelievable stories in doing that. Which is the hardest part of editing, especially when people have given you so much of their time. Ending on the “cutting room floor” is not where we want anyone to end up. It was a very difficult decision making process.

    MF: Did you always know you would end in Bend, Oregon?
    SA: Bend is an interesting town because it was a very successful timber town and then in the 80s timber crashed and they had the highest unemployment rate in the country. They then reinvented themselves as a tourist town. So we wanted to really look at them at the end of the journey as a kind of success story. They are what a lot of other towns wish they were. But also to look at how success has benefits and costs. Bend is grappling with growth and high real estate prices and how that affects the community. So we knew that Bend was going to be the last stop.

    MF: You show the resilience of these towns, but also how many of them are losing their character to strip malls. How did you come to that as an ending?
    SA: Traveling around the country to do this film was a constant reminder of both how incredibly beautiful this country is and also how ruined a lot of the landscape has become. Also, how individual the towns are and then how uniform they can be with the strip malls. The contradictions there really hit you when you travel around. We really wanted to honor the beauty of the landscape, but also note that if we aren’t careful we’re going to destroy that.
    JJ: It was really important to us to not just tell one side of the story, but to really give a full picture of what is actually in our country.

    MF: Can you recommend another film directed or co-directed by a woman for readers to seek out?
    SA: Since it’s in discussion right now, ‘Nomadland’ is such a wonder film. What is particularly interesting is that it kind of blends fiction and documentary. There is so much of real life and real people’s lives infused in the storytelling there. Chloé Zhao, who directed it, didn’t create a new format but really blended documentary and fiction in a beautiful way.


    Harlan County, USA (1976) – Directed by Barbara Kopple

    A scene from 'Harlan County, U.S.A.'
    A scene from ‘Harlan County, U.S.A.’

    Since I’ve covered Zhao’s films a few times now, I thought I’d throw in a recommendation for Barbara Kopple’s timeless Oscar-winning masterpiece ‘Harlan County, USA.’ Shot on a shoestring budget, the documentary follows the 1973 Brookside Strike against the Duke Power Company’s Brookside Mine and Prep Plant in Harlan County, Kentucky. Kopple and her crew embedded in the community, which included 180 workers and their wives, for over a year as the strike continued. The stirring footage includes everything from miners suffering from black lung to strikers being shot on the picket line. Special emphasis is put on the strength of the women in the community to keep families together, but also to push the strike in the direction it needs to go. Kopple also features folk music from the area, crafting a film that is not only a potent piece of political filmmaking, but also an ethnography for a region and its people. As labor issues and union-busting continue to be a huge problem in this country, ‘Harlan County, USA’ remains as vital now as it ever was.

    ‘Harlan County, USA’ is available on HBOMax and The Criterion Channel
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  • Female Filmmakers in Focus: Charlène Favier’s ‘Slalom’ & Chloé Zhao’s ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’

    Female Filmmakers in Focus: Charlène Favier’s ‘Slalom’ & Chloé Zhao’s ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’

    Welcome to Female Filmmakers in Focus, where you will find a recommendation for films directed by women to seek out each week. This week features a look at the new film ‘Slalom’, plus an interview with director and co-writer Charlène Favier.

    ‘Slalom’ (2020) – Directed and co-written by Charlène Favier

    Noée Abita as Lyz in ‘Slalom’

    At age 24 Charlène Favier started a production company called Char­lie Bus Pro­duc­tion. She studied act­ing at the Jacques Le Coq School in Lon­don and directing at the Asto­ria Stu­dio in New York. She has directed four narrative shorts and a documentary. ‘Slalom’ is her first feature film.

    Selected for the cancelled 2020 Cannes Film Festival, ‘Slalom’ follows Lyz, a 15-year-old girl who is training to become an Olympic athlete specifically a slalom skier. With her father out of the picture and her mother starting a new job in Marseilles, Lyz lives alone. She struggles to balance her schoolwork with her intense training. Finding a mentor in her trainer Fred (Jérémie Renier), their relationship escalates in a way that Lyz is not prepared for and does not fully understand. Anchored by Noée Abita’s first performance, ‘Slalom’ is an empathetic look at the struggles of teenage girls, as well as a searing condemnation of the way in which adults often take advantage of uneven power dynamics.

    ‘Slalom’ is out now in virtual cinemas through KinoMarquee.com. It is also playing at the Quad Cinema in New York City and Laemmle Monica Film Center in Santa Monica and Laemmle Playhouse 7 in Pasadena.
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    Read on for an interview with ‘Slalom’ director/co-writer Charlène Favier

    Moviefone: What was the initial inspiration for this film?

    Charlène Favier: The story came from my memories and experiences. It was really a necessity to make this film. It was also a therapy for me, this five year process of writing and shooting and editing. Telling this story was really important to me. I was in a writing workshop in La Fémis cinema school, which is a cinema school in Paris. I knew a little bit of what I was writing because I always tell the same story in my short films. Not about sexual abuse, but about resilience, about a young heroine who tries to find her identity. The sexual abuse story came afterwards. I was very shy to talk about that, but the students around me and my teacher, and later my producer told me, “you are telling a story about sexual abuse in sports.” I was really, really afraid of this idea. I didn’t realize what I was writing. It was really just coming out of me on my computer. I couldn’t keep it in me. When I started to write about that, I had to tell everything.

    MF: How did you cast Noée Abita?

    CF: I discovered Noée Abita who plays Lyz in ‘Ava‘ [directed by Léa Mysius]. She had the wild side I was looking for. She was shy, she was fragile and at the same time she was really powerful. That’s what instinctively saw in her. Before shooting my feature, because we didn’t have the money to shoot it right away, I decided to shoot a short film [‘Odol Gorri’]. I asked Noée to pay Eva in it, a character that was very similar to Lyz. It was a way for me to test out how directing would be, the mise-en-scène, and a way for me to test out filming the abuse scene. We became straight away like sisters. It was a really powerful relationship we built making that short. It was very natural for us to meet. It was something cosmic. Something from the universe to bring us together and tell this story.

    MF: Can you talk a little about casting Jérémie Renier as Fred?

    CF: Jérémie I knew for a long time. I love his work. I think he really acts with his body. He is able to really enter into his characters. He transforms himself the way American actors do, which I don’t see enough with French actors. So he is able to play contradictory characters. With this character there are some sides to him which are teenage like, and yet are also so grave and so harsh. For Noée it was the same thing, so the three of us we became really a trio. We were like brothers and sisters, like siblings.

    MF: How did you shoot the skiing sequences?

    CF: It was all from the point of view of Lyz. On the skis I really wanted to be with her. I want to film the sensation; the vertigo and fear, but also the joy of sliding on the snow. We had cameramen who followed Lyz and ski next to her, filming the movements. There was also a lot of work in post-production to get this feeling because it has a lot to do with the sound. The sound of the ski, the sound of the breeze, the breathing. I really wanted the viewers to be with her.

    MF: Were there any visual inspirations for the film?

    CF: Mostly I looked at art and photography for the light, like Edward Hopper and Todd Hido or Bill Viola, but his is more experimental visual art. I am more inspired by photography and art than cinema, but I have to say I am very inspired by Jane Campion. Her cinema that puts emotion next to nature is very organic and instinctual. That is something that inspires me a lot.

    MF: What do you hope audiences take away from the film?

    CF: I think it’s very important that the viewer experience this story through Lyz’s eyes. I want them to feel what a 15-year-old girl goes through so that they will understand the importance of being able to say no, to be able to respect oneself, to be able to then tell the world who you are. I didn’t want to pass any judgement. I want for people to be able to get into Lyz’s body and to be with her as goes through these experiences.

    MF: Can you recommend a film directed by a woman that readers should seek out?

    CF: I’m always going to recommend Jane Campion. ‘The Piano‘ is a fantastic movie that I could watch over and over. I also love her television show ‘Top of the Lake.’ I adore it. It’s magnificent. A few other unique films that I adore I saw at the Deauville Film Festival a few years ago, the first two films of Chloé Zhao: ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ and ‘The Rider’.


    ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ (2015) – Written and Directed by Chloé Zhao

    Irene Bedard, John Reddy, and Jashaun St. John in ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’

    Zhao’s debut film premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival, before screening at the Directors’ Fortnight section at the Cannes Film Festival that same year. Set in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, the film follows teen siblings Jashaun Winters (Jashaun St. John) and Johnny Winters (John Reddy), whose father has just died in a house fire. At his funeral they discover he had 25 children with nine different women. Johnny is counting down the days until he graduates from high school with plans to move to Los Angeles with his girlfriend, while Jashaun comes of age observing the struggles of those around her. Zhao uses non-professional actors to tell her story, partnering with cinematographer Joshua James Richards to capture the wild beauty of western skies. ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ is a lyrical, emotionally rich debut from a visionary talent.

    You can learn more about Chloé Zhao in this previous column about her most recent film, the Oscar-nominated ‘Nomadland’.

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  • 2021 Oscar Nominations

    2021 Oscar Nominations

    Best Picture nominees 'Judas and the Black Messiah,' 'Nomadland,' 'Promising Young Woman,' 'Sound of Metal,' 'Mank,' 'Minari,' 'Trial of the Chicago 7,' & 'The Father'
    Best Picture nominees ‘Judas and the Black Messiah,’ ‘Nomadland,’ ‘Promising Young Woman,’ ‘Sound of Metal,’ ‘Mank,’ ‘Minari,’ ‘Trial of the Chicago 7,’ & ‘The Father’

    Early in the morning on March 15th, Nick Jonas and Prianka Chopra-Jonas announced the nominations for the 93rd Academy Awards. Here are the nominees for this years’ awards:

    BEST PICTURE

    ‘The Father’
    ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
    ‘Mank’
    ‘Minari’
    ‘Nomadland’
    ‘Promising Young Woman’
    ‘Sound of Metal’
    ‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’


    DIRECTOR

    Thomas Vinterberg, ‘Another Round’
    David Fincher, ‘Mank’
    Lee Isaac Chung, ‘Minari’
    Chloe Zhao, ‘Nomadland’
    Emerald Fennell, ‘Promising Young Woman’


ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE

Riz Ahmed, ‘Sound of Metal’
Chadwick Boseman, ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’
Anthony Hopkins, ‘The Father’
Gary Oldman, ‘Mank’
Steven Yeun, ‘Minari’


ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE

Viola Davis, ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’
Andra Day, ‘The United States vs. Billie Holiday’
Vanessa Kirby, ‘Pieces of a Woman’
Frances McDormand, ‘Nomadland’
Carey Mulligan, ‘Promising Young Woman’


ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

Maria Bakalova, ‘Borat Subsequent Moviefilm’
Glenn Close, ‘Hillbilly Elegy’
Olivia Colman, ‘The Father’
Amanda Seyfried, ‘Mank’
Youn Yuh-jung, ‘Minari’


ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

Sacha Baron Cohen, ‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’
Daniel Kaluuya, ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
Leslie Odom Jr., ‘One Night in Miami’
Paul Raci, ‘Sound of Metal’
Lakeith Stanfield, ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’


ANIMATED FEATURE FILM

‘Onward’
‘Over the Moon’
‘A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon’
‘Soul’
‘Wolfwalkers’


ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

‘Borat Subsequent MovieFilm’
‘The Father’
‘Nomadland’
‘One Night in Miami’
‘The White Tiger’


ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
‘Minari’
‘Promising Young Woman’
‘Sound of Metal’
‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’


FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

‘Another Round’ – Denmark
‘Better Days’ – Hong Kong
‘Collective’ – Romania
‘The Man Who Sold His Skin’ – Tunisia
‘Quo Vadis, Aida?’ – Bosnia and Herzegovina


DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

‘Collective’
‘Crip Camp’
‘The Mole Agent’
‘My Octopus Teacher’
‘Time’


PRODUCTION DESIGN

‘The Father’
‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’
‘Mank’
‘News of the World’
‘Tenet’


CINEMATOGRAPHY

Sean Bobbitt, ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
Erik Messerschmidt, ‘Mank’
Dariusz Wolski, ‘News of the World’
Joshua James Richards, ‘Nomadland’
Phedon Papamichael , ‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’


COSTUME DESIGN

‘Emma’
‘Ma Rainey’s Blackbottom’
‘Mank’
‘Mulan’
‘Pinocchio’


MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING

‘Emma’
‘Hillbilly Elegy’
‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’
‘Mank’
‘Pinocchio’


FILM EDITING

‘The Father’
‘Nomadland’
‘Promising Young Woman’
‘Sound of Metal’
‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’


ACHIEVEMENT IN SOUND

‘Greyhound’
‘Mank’
‘News of the World’
‘Soul’
‘Sound of Metal’


VISUAL EFFECTS

‘Love and Monsters’
‘The Midnight Sky’
‘Mulan’
‘The One and Only Ivan’
‘Tenet’


LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM

‘Feeling Through’
‘The Letter Room’
‘The Present’
‘Two Distant Strangers’
‘White Eye’


ANIMATED SHORT FILM

‘Burrow’
‘Genius Loci’
‘If Anything Happens I Love You’
‘Opera’
‘Yes-People’


DOCUMENTARY (SHORT)

‘Colette’
‘A Concerto Is a Conversation’
‘Do Not Split’
‘Hunger Ward’
‘A Love Song For Latasha’


ORIGINAL SONG

‘Fight For You’ from ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
‘Hear My Voice’ from ‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’
‘Husavik’ from ‘Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga’
‘lo Sì (Seen)’ from ‘The Life Ahead (La Vita Davanti a Se)’
‘Speak Now’ from ‘One Night in Miami…’


ORIGINAL SCORE

‘Da 5 Bloods’
‘Mank’
‘Minari’
‘News of the World’
‘Soul’


Delayed by the pandemic, the Oscars ceremony will be on Sunday, April 25 on ABC.

  • 10 Women Who Deserve Best Director Nominations at the Oscars

    10 Women Who Deserve Best Director Nominations at the Oscars

    On March 15th the nominations for the 93rd annual Academy Awards will be announced. In the near-century long history of the Oscars, only five women have been nominated for Best Director: Lina Wertmüller for ‘Seven Beauties,’ Jane Campion for ‘The Piano,’ Sofia Coppola for ‘Lost in Translation,’ Kathryn Bigelow for ‘The Hurt Locker,’ and Greta Gerwig for ‘Lady Bird.’ Of those five women, the only winner was Kathryn Bigelow – and that was a decade ago! This year, the Golden Globes made history by nominating three women for Best Director, bringing the total nominated at that ceremony to a whopping eight. With Chloé Zhao being the first woman to win since Barbra Streisand took home the award for 1983’s ‘Yentl.’ These stats are not low because there haven’t been deserving women that directed movies. These stats are a symptom of a systematic bias that has been under investigation by the ACLU and U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and studied by scholars like The Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film. But you don’t need data and lawsuits to know women are equally as deserving of these accolades as their male peers. You just need to watch their films.

    This year three women have seen their films nominated by numerous awards bodies: Chloé Zhao, Emerald Fennell, and Regina King. But their films are not the only films worthy of being feted this year. In fact, the Academy could fill both their five Best Director slots and ten Best Picture slots completely with films directed by women this year. Let’s take a look at the contenders, shall we?


    Chloé Zhao – Nomadland

    Director/writer/editor Chloé Zhao on the set of 'Nomadland'
    Director/writer/editor Chloé Zhao on the set of ‘Nomadland’

    The most awarded film of the year, Chloé Zhao’s ‘Nomadland’ is this year’s frontrunner for both best director and best picture, especially after Zhao’s historic win at the Golden Globes. The film is led by a powerful, yet understated performance from Frances McDormand, but also features spirited turns from non professional actors as well. Over the past decade Zhao films have captured the spirit of the contemporary American West like few filmmakers before her. With ‘Nomadland’ she also taps into our country’s current economic disparities with a deft and compassionate hand.
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    Emerald Fennell – Promising Young Woman

    Carey Mulligan, writer/director Emerald Fennell, & Laverne Cox on the set of 'Promising Young Woman'
    Carey Mulligan, writer/director Emerald Fennell, & Laverne Cox on the set of ‘Promising Young Woman’

    One of the most divisive films of the year, Emerald Fennell’s ‘Promising Young Woman’ deconstructs the idea of ‘nice guys’ and the subtleties of rape culture. Fennell uses a bold candy-colored palette and pop-song infused soundtrack to create a stark contrast between the visuals of the film and its themes. Pointed casting of TV boyfriends of yore to as would-be rapists, and Carey Mulligan’s fierce performance as Cassie, a woman whose trauma manifests in extreme behavior, demonstrates Fennell’s skill as a director of actors.
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    Regina King – One Night In Miami…

    Aldis Hodge and director Regina King on the set of 'One Night in Miami...'
    Aldis Hodge and director Regina King on the set of ‘One Night in Miami…’

    An Oscar-winning actress herself, Regina King has directed episodes of television for almost a decade and with her feature film debut ‘One Night In Miami…’, proven herself to be one of the great multi-hyphenates in the business. Although based on a stage play by Kemp Powers, King crafts scenes that are anything but stagey. With her cast playing icons Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, and Sam Cooke, King brings out emotional depth from her actors Kingsley Ben-Adir, Eli Goree, Aldis Hodge, and Leslie Odom Jr., that bring their performances beyond mere impersonations. You feel as though everyone bared their soul making this film.
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    Eliza Hittman – Never Rarely Sometimes Always

    Director/writer Eliza Hittman on the set of 'Never Rarely Sometimes Always'
    Director/writer Eliza Hittman on the set of ‘Never Rarely Sometimes Always’

    Premiering at Sundance and playing at the Berlin Film Festival, Eliza Hittman’s third feature film ‘Never Rarely Sometimes Always’ was one of the last films to hit theaters before the pandemic shuttered many. The drama, which has become one of the years most awards films, follows teen cousins as Autumn (Sidney Flanigan) and Skylar (Talia Ryder) as they make the trek from rural Pennsylvania to New York City in order to receive an abortion. Shot in a neo-realistic style, Hittman throws one obstacle after another at her protagonists without the film ever feeling heavy headed or preachy. It’s tough the way life is tough, yet through it all she lets Autumn and Skylar feel little moments of joy in each other’s company.
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    Kitty Green – The Assistant

    Director/writer Kitty Green on the set of 'The Assistant'
    Director/writer Kitty Green on the set of ‘The Assistant’

    Debuting at the Telluride Film Festival in 2019 and landing in theaters last January, Kitty Green’s The Assistant tackles the #MeToo movement within the entertainment industry. Green presents an incisive take on the banality of the evil that lurks within its walls by following the titular assistant, played with impressive restraint by Julia Garner, through one terrible day at work. The abuse depicted within the film is found in microaggressions, in complacency, in bureaucracy. As the day ends, the viewer is left wondering how anyone can wade through all that muck just to make a film, yet it also leaves us as breathless as only a great film can. Green forces us to see the cost behind it all and question our own roles within this broken system.
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    Kelly Reichardt – First Cow

    Director/writer Kelly Reichardt on the set of 'First Cow'
    Director/writer Kelly Reichardt on the set of ‘First Cow’

    Like Zhao, Kelly Reichardt has spent much of her filmmaking career telling stories of the American West. One character in the film states they can taste London in the oily cake he eats, just as the viewer can feel the Pacific Northwest in this film. Set in 1820, when the PNW was mostly populated by fur trappers and military men, ‘First Cow’ follows the close bond formed by a cook named Cookie (John Magaro) and a Chinese immigrant named King-Lu (Orion Lee). Like she’s done in many of her films, Reichardt uses this setting to explore the more tender sides of masculinity. As the two build their baking business – with milk stolen from the titular cow – their ambitions threaten to disrupt their domestic bliss. Reichardt’s deft critiques on capitalism and class, slowly dismantle the myth of the American Dream, even at its nascency.
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    Isabel Sandoval – Lingua Franca

    Director/writer/producer/editor/star Isabel Sandoval in 'Lingua Franca.'
    Director/writer/producer/editor/star Isabel Sandoval in ‘Lingua Franca.’

    Not only did Isabel Sandvoval write and direct ‘Lingua Franca,’ she also produced, edited, and played the lead role. The film takes a deeply empathetic look at immigration from the point of view of a trans woman who works as a care-giver for an eldery woman in Brooklyn. Sandvoval has a delicate touch to her storytelling, bringing out warm, subtle performances from her cast. Both intimate and understated, the viewer feels as though they’ve only glimpsed a small piece of a much larger picture, and as the film ends you wish you could linger in this world for just a little bit longer.
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    Autumn de Wilde – Emma.

    (L to R) Amber Anderson, Tanya Reynolds, Josh O'Connor, writer/director Autumn de Wilde, and Johnny Flynn on the set of 'Emma.'
    (L to R) Amber Anderson, Tanya Reynolds, Josh O’Connor, writer/director Autumn de Wilde, and Johnny Flynn on the set of ‘Emma.’

    There are many things to praise about Autumn de Wilde’s adaptation of ‘Emma.’ The director’s detailed historical research shines in the art direction and costume design. She gets delightful performances from up-and-comers Anya Taylor-Joy and Johnny Flynn (who have delectable chemistry), and a hilarious supporting turn from Bill Nighy. But what really sets de Wilde’s Jane Austen adaptation above the rest is the way in which she manages to capture the vicious humor of Austen’s prose. There is an acidity to this Emma, which makes her character’s arc all the more triumphant and the film itself so thrilling to watch.
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    Channing Godfrey Peoples – Miss Juneteenth

    Writer/director Channing Godfrey Peoples on the set of 'Miss Juneteenth'
    Writer/director Channing Godfrey Peoples on the set of ‘Miss Juneteenth’

    Inspired in part by writer-director Channing Godfrey Peoples’ own youth celebrating Juneteenth and attending Miss Juneteenth pageants, her feature film debut premiered to near universal acclaim last summer. Led by lived-in performances from Nicole Beharie, for which she received the Gotham Award for Best Actress, ‘Miss Juneteenth’ navigates well-worn mother-daughter story beats with freshness and vigour. Shooting the film on location in Fort Worth, Texas, Peoples creates a real sense of place and economic position for her characters, and her personal connection to the subject and setting adds a palpable warmth.
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    Radha Blank – The Forty-Year-Old Version

    Director/writer/star Radha Blank on the set of 'The Forty-Year-Old Version'
    Director/writer/star Radha Blank on the set of ‘The Forty-Year-Old Version’

    After debuting at Sundance and winning the U.S. Dramatic Competition Directing Award, The Forty-Year-Old Version was a labor of love for Radha Blank, who not only wrote and directed the film, but also stars in the lead role. Loosely based on her own life, the film follows Radha as she hits forty and comes to terms with not living up to the promise of once being featured on 30 under 30 list. Radha takes her frustrations out through her alter ego: a rapper called RadhaMUSprime. Blank mines her own life and artistic struggles with humour and wisdom. She also addresses racial bias in the industry both through scenes in the film, but also in her choice to make the film in luminous B&W – not for financial reasons, but to evoke the art films she as a filmmaker loves.
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    That’s just a small sampling of the great films directed by women from last year. Here’s a few more that could easily be swapped in: Alice Wu’s ‘The Half of It’, Agnieszka Holland’s ‘Charlatan’, Julia Hart’s ‘I’m Your Woman’, Miranda July’s ‘Kajillionaire’, Josephine Decker’s ‘Shirley’, Maite Alberdi’s ‘The Mole Agent,’ Gina Prince-Bythewood’s ‘The Old Guard,’ Shannon Murphy’s ‘Babyteeth’, Kirsten Johnson’s ‘Dick Johnson Is Dead’, Déa Kulumbegashvili’s ‘Beginning’, Garrett Bradley’s ‘Time’, Naomi Kawase’s ‘True Mothers’, Cathy Yan’s ‘Birds of Prey,’ and Lili Horvát’s ‘Preparations to Be Together for an Unknown Period of Time’.

    There really is no shortage of exceptional films directed by women and after 93 years of the Oscars mostly shutting them out, enough is enough.