Tag: christopher abbott

  • Movie Review: ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’

    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters on December 25 is ‘The Testament of Ann Lee,’ directed and co-written by Mona Fastvold and starring Amanda Seyfried, Lewis Pullman, Thomasin McKenzie, Christopher Abbott, Stacy Martin, Scott Handy, Matthew Beard, Viola Prettejohn and Tim Blake Nelson.

    YhDPthnzD4n5NVnUMkoNr5

    Related Article: Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried Starring in Novel Adaptation ‘The Housemaid’

    Initial Thoughts

    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    You probably won’t see another movie like ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ this awards season or even this year. It’s a strange, often surreal, and numinous historical drama that’s frequently harrowing yet at times extremely moving. It’s also a musical of sorts, although many of the numbers are based on religious hymns and wouldn’t sound out of place in a folk horror film.

    Directed by Mona Fastvold and co-written by Fastvold with her longtime partner Brady Corbet – who directed 2024’s ‘The Brutalist,’ which the couple also co-wrote – ‘Ann Lee’ is, like that film, eerily immersive in its historical period and driven by a singular performance from its star. You simply cannot take your eyes off Amanda Seyfried in this film, even if other actors are somewhat sidelined and the film itself raises questions about its subject that are never really answered.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Mona Fastvold and Amanda Seyfried on the set of 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Mona Fastvold and Amanda Seyfried on the set of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Born in Manchester, England in 1736, Ann Lee (Amanda Seyfried) is brought up in a strict religious household, one of eight children, and sent to work at an early age in a cotton factory. In her 20s, she joins a religious sect known as the Shakers – literally the ‘Shaking Quakers,’ an offshoot of the Quaker faith that expiates sin and expresses devotion to God through ecstatic shaking, dancing, and singing.

    After marrying an iron worker named Abraham (Christopher Abbott), being initiated into sex, and giving birth to four children who all die in infancy, Ann is committed to an asylum. These experiences, combined with a stint in prison for public evangelizing, trigger visions which result in her being deemed the second coming of Christ in female form.

    Now known as Mother Ann Lee, Ann establishes a doctrine for the Shakers that renounces all sexual activity, which does not sit well with Abraham. Yet the Shakers also believe in gender equality, pacifism, human rights (they are appalled by slavery), and community sharing. Increasingly persecuted in England, Ann, her devoted brother William (Lewis Pullman), and a small band of followers journey to the American colonies and settle in upstate New York – but their persecution doesn’t end there.

    Mona Fastvold with cast and crew on the set of 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Mona Fastvold with cast and crew on the set of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Mona Fastvold presents all this in linear, straightforward fashion, adding surreal imagery and some showy camera moves to accentuate the more spiritual moments of Ann Lee’s life. The songs – a mix of chants, Shaker hymns, and folk melodies – are haunting enough to not clash with the film’s tone and esthetic, which veers from the pastoral to the brutal – the latter especially in the scenes where Ann gives birth, as well as a later, harrowing sequence of persecution and torture.

    Where Fastvold loses focus is the story’s meaning. The Shakers espoused some truly progressive ideals, and their dancing and shaking were indeed rapturous, even bordering (at least onscreen) on the erotic. That brings Ann’s whole rigid adherence to celibacy for her flock into question, along with her own mental state and the frankly cult-like piety of her followers.

    Was she channeling the divine, or was she suffering from trauma brought on by sexual dysfunction and the horrific loss of her children? How did her anti-sex mandate coexist with ‘be fruitful and multiply’? The film doesn’t make a strong case either way, and while it’s visually powerful and often dramatically moving, there’s a bit of an empty feeling at the end (especially when the closing credits reveal that there are only three Shakers left in the world today).

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Amanda Seyfried and Lewis Pullman in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Amanda Seyfried and Lewis Pullman in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Amanda Seyfried has always been an exceptional actor, but she pushes herself to new heights in ‘Ann Lee.’ In a year full of raw performances by women like Rose Byrne, Jessie Buckley, and Jennifer Lawrence, Seyfried not only fearlessly embraces the extremes that are brought upon Ann – including graphically disastrous childbirths, beatings, and torture – but fully inhabits the spirituality and determination of the women.

    While whatever drove Ann Lee – whether it was a connection to the divine or the throes of mental illness – is open to debate, Seyfried never leaves any doubt of what Ann herself believes. Her subtle physical transformation and beautiful singing voice only add to what is nothing less than an epic performance.

    It’s a shame that many of the other characters and performers struggle to stand out in the shadow of Seyfried’s work, but Thomasin McKenzie makes an impression as her devoted assistant Mary and Lewis Pullman broadens his range as well with his portrayal of Ann’s fiercely loyal and devout brother William. Also notable is Christopher Abbott, whose face tells the story of a man who is slowly checking out of what he found so compelling about Ann and the Shaker beliefs – it’s too bad that he more or less disappears from the story halfway through.

    Final Thoughts

    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Despite its thematic murkiness – and lapses in character development for everyone but its central figure – ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ is still a unique cinematic experience. We can’t say enough about Seyfried’s performance, and the film as a whole is a gripping, evocative experience.

    And setting aside the question of Ann’s convictions and the Shakers’ dedication to them, ‘Ann Lee’ is also a portrait of a woman trying to espouse and extend bold ideals and, of course, meeting resistance every step of the way. That she manages to create at least the beginnings of a truly egalitarian society, despite the odds and its own strange attributes, is akin in a way to the creation of such a challenging film itself.

    ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ receives a score of 85 out of 100.

    A scene from 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    A scene from ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’?

    Visionary spiritual leader Ann Lee rises from obscurity in 18th century England to forge the radical religious movement that will become the Shakers. Driven by her beliefs and persecuted in two countries, Ann gathers devoted followers who come to see her as the female embodiment of Christ.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’?

    • Amanda Seyfried as Ann Lee
    • Lewis Pullman as William Lee
    • Thomasin McKenzie as Mary Partington
    • Christopher Abbott as Abraham Standerin
    • Stacy Martin as Jane Wardley
    • Scott Handy as James Wardley
    • Matthew Beard as James Whittaker
    • Viola Prettejohn as Nancy Lee
    • Tim Blake Nelson as Pastor Reuben Wright
    'The Testament of Ann Lee' opens in theaters on December 25th.
    ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ opens in theaters on December 25th.

    List of Amanda Seyfried Movies and TV Shows

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Amanda Seyfried Movies on Amazon

    oRVZpUmu
  • ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ Interview: Amanda Seyfried

    h8QFrfiu

    Opening in theaters in limited release on December 25th is the new historical musical ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’, which was directed by Mona Fastvold (‘The World to Come’), based on a script she co-wrote with Brady Corbet (‘The Brutalist’).

    YhDPthnzD4n5NVnUMkoNr5

    The film stars Amanda Seyfried (‘Mamma Mia!’) in the title role, along with Lewis Pullman (‘Thunderbolts*‘), Thomasin McKenzie (‘Last Night in Soho’), Christopher Abbott (‘Kraven the Hunter’), and Tim Blake Nelson (‘Captain America: Brave New World’).

    Amanda Seyfried stars in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'.
    Amanda Seyfried stars in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Amanda Seyfried about her work on ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’, her first reaction to the screenplay, why she wanted to take on the role, and how she prepared for the musical sequences.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Seyfried, Lewis Pullman, Thomasin McKenzie, and Mona Fastvold.

    Related Article: Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried Starring in Novel Adaptation ‘The Housemaid’

    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to reading the screenplay and why you wanted to take on this role?

    Amanda Seyfried: I was very confused by the script because a lot of the hymns were just written out as bookmark. Because we weren’t sure which of the hymns we were going to use. There was a lot of moments of movement and worship that I couldn’t envision. So, I was very confused, and I told her. I was very honest about it, but I was also so curious because I couldn’t envision it, and I knew Mona could. I was like, I need to know what this is. I think I took on the role because I needed a challenge. I found it very hard to envision myself as this prominent feminist leader in the 18th century. I really admire Mona’s clarity as a director, and I just had to trust that she knew what she was doing when she cast me.

    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about preparing for the musical sequences? Did you have rehearsal time and were you singing live on set?

    AS: It was a lot of live singing, for sure. A lot of the movie is just me in that moment, which is very effective, especially when you’re singing softly or you’re in grief and you can you make certain noises on set that you might not make in the studio. We pre-recorded all the songs, many times in different ways. But then when you’re on set, things could really shift and evolve into something a little different and a little bit truer. So, that was a wonderful luxury, but also, I was a part of this for a year prior, so I dove in immediately with Daniel Blumberg, the composer. He was taking all these Shaker hymns and turning them on their heads and creating this incredible composition of minor chords and different rhythms. Things that I’ve never experienced before, he’s a magician and working with Celia Rowlson-Hall, who’s the choreographer, I worked with her for months and months, like hours and hours at the studio. Between jobs, we would do workshops with William Rexer, the DP, and Sam Ellison, our camera operator back in January of 2024. Just practicing and working with all these dancers and trying different ways of shooting and different lighting techniques and it was so much pre-production, constantly coming back together, even when we were working. I mean, Sam Ellison, the camera operator and I had shot with Will Rexer an entire television show last year. We were constantly coming back with Mona, and Mona directed one of the episodes. So, we were all together on another show being able to discuss things. On the weekends, we would get together and they would keep writing. It was just so much space and time and energy and passion underneath it all. So, by the time we got to Budapest, we were ready because we didn’t have that much time or money.

    'The Testament of Ann Lee' opens in theaters on December 25th.
    ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’ opens in theaters on December 25th.

    What is the plot of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’?

    Spanning 18th-century England and America, visionary spiritual leader Ann Lee (Amanda Seyfried) rises from obscurity to forge the radical religious movement that will become the Shakers. Haunted by personal tragedy yet driven by an unshakable belief in gender equality, communal living and ecstatic devotion, she gathers devoted followers who come to see her as the female embodiment of Christ. As persecution intensifies, Ann fights to protect both her followers and the incipient utopia they have begun to create.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’?

    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Testament of Ann Lee'. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Testament of Ann Lee’. Photo courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2025 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Movies and TV Shows Featuring Amanda Seyfried:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Testament of Ann LeeMovie Showtimes

    Buy Amanda Seyfried Movies & TV on Amazon

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Wolf Man’

    Christopher Abbott as Blake in 'Wolf Man', directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Christopher Abbott as Blake in ‘Wolf Man’, directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters January 17th is ‘Wolf Man,’ directed by Leigh Whannell and starring Christopher Abbott, Julia Garner, Sam Jaeger, Benedict Hardie, and Matilda Firth.

    Related Article: ‘Ozark’s Julia Garner to play the Silver Surfer in ‘The Fantastic Four’

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Charlotte (Julia Garner) and Blake (Christopher Abbott) in 'Wolf Man', directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2024 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Charlotte (Julia Garner) and Blake (Christopher Abbott) in ‘Wolf Man’, directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2024 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    The werewolf, or in this case the Wolf Man, is one of the top-tier stars of Universal Studios’ lineup of classic monsters, third in line behind Dracula and Frankenstein’s monster. So it stands to reason that the studio would hand the reins of this particular terror icon to Leigh Whannell, the writer (‘Saw’) and director who shepherded another Universal baddie, the Invisible Man, to the screen in an outstanding 2020 reinvention that turned the old sci-fi chestnut into a meditation on domestic abuse.

    For ‘Wolf Man,’ Whannell once again generates some terrific suspense and outright terror, particularly in the film’s first half, and creates an atmospheric and unsettling environment for his tale. But instead of repositioning the Wolf Man in more modern terms as he did with the Invisible Man, Whannell crafts a rather thin, straightforward shocker that holds little in the way of surprises, especially in its lackluster third act. Add an uninspiring monster and some odd casting, and ‘Wolf Man’ never quite sinks its teeth into you from start to finish.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Director of Photography Stefan Duscio and Director Leigh Whannell on the set of 'Wolf Man'. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Director of Photography Stefan Duscio and Director Leigh Whannell on the set of ‘Wolf Man’. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    A prologue informs us that a hiker disappeared into the lush woods of rural Oregon in 1995, allegedly victim of a strange virus known as “hill fever,” or in the tongue of the local Native American population, the “face of the wolf.” Also living in those woods in an isolated farmhouse is ex-military man Grady Lovell (Sam Jaeger) and his young son Blake (Zac Chandler), with Grady trying to teach the fearful Blake survival skills. Those will come in handy when father and son have a close encounter with some kind of ferocious creature in the woods while out hunting, a beast which Grady later vows to kill.

    Flash forward 30 years, and Blake (Christopher Abbott) is now an unemployed writer and stay-at-home dad who cares for his adoring daughter Ginger (Matilda Firth), while his wife Charlotte (Julia Garner) brings home the bacon as a hotshot journalist. All is not well with Blake and Charlotte’s marriage, so when he gets a notice that his father has been declared legally dead (we didn’t actually know he was missing before this, or for how long) and Blake has inherited the Oregon farmhouse, he suggests the family head up to the place for some reconnection time while they wind up Grady’s affairs.

    Except that things don’t turn out so well. Crashing their rented storage van after swerving to avoid some kind of large beast on the road to the house, Blake, Charlotte, and Ginger barely escape from the truck while watching a local get viciously dragged away by the fast-moving creature. They make it to the farmhouse on foot and barricade themselves inside, while the beast prowls the property. And it seems that the animal may have gouged Blake’s arm – a tragic turn of events that’s confirmed when Blake abruptly takes ill…and worse, seems to be transforming into something himself.

    The first half of ‘Wolf Man’ sets up the situation and the characters as well as possible, despite the fact that the script by Whannell and Corbett Tuck doesn’t give us much in the way of characterization. While we understand that Blake gets his protective nature (and his occasional flash of temper) from his dad, we’re told rather than shown that he and Charlotte are having problems. It’s all vaguely sketched in – we don’t even really know what kind of journalist Charlotte is – and more or less rushed through before the family heads to Oregon (which, rather confusingly, is played by New Zealand according to the production notes and Ireland according to the end credits).

    Christopher Abbott as Blake in 'Wolf Man', directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Christopher Abbott as Blake in ‘Wolf Man’, directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Their arrival there and the initial siege (as well as the prologue) is where Whannell shines as a master of creating atmosphere and suspense. The Lovells’ predicament in the truck – which ends up suspended, ‘Jurassic Park’-style, in the branches of a tree – followed by their harrowing run for the house, is scary stuff, as are the almost subliminal glimpses we get of the monster pursuing them (these sequences are aided enormously by Stefan Duscio’s vivid, immersive cinematography and Benjamin Wallfisch’s slithery yet sweeping score).

    The early stages of Blake’s “sickness” are also cleverly handled: he loses the power of speech even as his other senses become more highly attuned (a spider crawling on a wall sounds to him like an elephant). In one of the film’s better ideas, we see Charlotte and Ginger talking to him through what you might call “wolf vision”: he can’t understand the words coming out of their mouth, their eyes glow reflectively, and their own faces and the space around them appear as if Blake is seeing them through night vision goggles. As Blake continues to change – a gradual de-evolution more reminiscent of David Cronenberg’s ‘The Fly’ than the quicker changeovers of lycanthropic classics like ‘The Howling’ or ‘An American Werewolf in London’ – the corruption of his features and body is, thankfully, handled through prosthetics and makeup rather than CGI.

    In the end, however, we can’t say that the werewolf design in the film – neither the creature that infects Blake nor Blake’s final form itself – is very remarkable. While they pay homage to werewolves past (a little Henry Hull here, a bit of David Naughton there), they both look like actors in prosthetics (albeit well-made ones) and even when they run on all fours they just don’t seem…wolfish enough.

    It’s partially because of that, and partially because the story doesn’t really go anywhere surprising once the basic conflict is established – with Charlotte and Ginger now menaced by the murderous monster outside and the potential one inside – that the second half of ‘Wolf Man’ starts to feel labored. The relationship between Blake and Ginger is sweet and provides some moments of pathos later as Blake succumbs, but we just don’t know enough about this family to get us fully invested in their plight. Even the reasons why this area has been terrorized for more than three decades are not really explored.

    When did this all begin? What is the “hill virus”? How long as Blake’s dad been missing? The werewolf archetype is essentially a Jekyll-and-Hyde story, with the monster usually symbolizing the battle between a man’s civilized self and his more primeval, animalistic nature. That’s ripe for all kinds of potential exploration – of toxic masculinity, of generational trauma in the form of a curse – but Whannell settles for just an extended, only intermittently gripping, and increasingly gory battle.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Charlotte (Julia Garner), Ginger (Matilda Firth) and Blake (Christopher Abbott) in Wolf Man, directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Charlotte (Julia Garner), Ginger (Matilda Firth) and Blake (Christopher Abbott) in Wolf Man, directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Christopher Abbott has been flying under the radar for a while as an actor who can plug into a variety of roles and bring a sort of wounded, understated humanity to all of them. He does this quite well with the role of Blake, managing to let us know what he’s thinking even when his features change and he has no dialogue for the second half of the film. We certainly get a sense of the dynamics roiling within him – he’s been raised to know how to survive yet he’s apparently unable to provide for his family – but it also seems like a lot of his inner conflict might have hit the cutting room floor.

    On the other hand, while we’ve loved Julia Garner’s work in shows like ‘Ozark’ and films such as ‘The Assistant,’ she’s simply miscast here. Much of Charlotte’s characterization appears to be the victim of editing as well, but the simple fact is that she’s not believable as the mother of what looks like a 10-year-old girl. And her own issues – her emotional detachment from both her husband and daughter – are not given the kind of depth that may have at lease benefited from Garner’s often raw performance style, if not her youthful demeanor. While Christopher Abbott and the adequate Matilda Firth have some chemistry as father and daughter, there’s no sense that Abbott and Garner even know each other very well.

    Final Thoughts

    Ginger (Matilda Firth) in 'Wolf Man', directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Ginger (Matilda Firth) in ‘Wolf Man’, directed by Leigh Whannell. © 2025 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    As we mentioned earlier, the werewolf archetype can be adapted to any number of different metaphors, and the best movies starring this particular monster – ‘Ginger Snaps,’ ‘The Howling,’ the original ‘The Wolf Man’ – pull their interpretations off quite successfully. There are traces of that in Leigh Whannell’s ‘Wolf Man’: the themes of nature vs. nurture, as well as the idea of the failings of the parent being passed to the child, are addressed rather perfunctorily and dispatched in favor of thrills and blood.

    Weirdly as well (and I feel like this is also due to heavy editing), there is seemingly no attempt on the part of Charlotte or Blake to truly understand what is happening to him. “Daddy’s sick” is about all that Charlotte can muster up. The family also seems to live in a world where no one has ever heard of werewolves, not even on a fictional level, which also creates a kind of strange contextual vacuum for the story.

    As a stripped-to-the-basics shock show, ‘Wolf Man’ may offer up a scary good time for most of its relatively brief 100 minutes. But as the tragedy of a modern family encountering something primeval, and as a new way to approach the werewolf mythos, ‘Wolf Man’ lacks the teeth to add to this iconic horror tradition.

    ‘Wolf Man’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

    ku1fl9JCTUqIldcLHxv7n6

    What is the plot of ‘Wolf Man’?

    A San Francisco family man named Blake (Christopher Abbott) inherits his father’s rural Oregon farmhouse after the latter mysteriously disappears. But Blake’s trip to see the property with his wife (Julia Garner) and young daughter (Matilda Firth) turns nightmarish after Blake is bitten by a terrifying animal and begins to change into something horrific himself.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Wolf Man’?

    • Christopher Abbott as Blake
    • Julia Garner as Charlotte
    • Matilda Firth as Ginger
    • Sam Jaeger as Grady
    • Benedict Hardie as Derek
    Julia Garner in 'Wolf Man'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Julia Garner in ‘Wolf Man’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Other Movies Directed by Leigh Whannell:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Wolf Man’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Leigh Whannell Movies on Amazon

    JRwJJEwB

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Kraven The Hunter’

    Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven the Hunter in 'Kraven the Hunter.'
    Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven the Hunter in ‘Kraven the Hunter.’

    Opening in theaters December 13th is ‘Kraven The Hunter,’ directed by J.C. Chandor and starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ariana DeBose, Fred Hechinger, Alessandro Nivola, Christopher Abbott, and Russell Crowe.

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Madame Web’

    Initial Thoughts

    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Are we finally done with of the Sony Universe of Spider-Man Movies Not Featuring Spider-Man for good? We can only hope, because 2024 has surely brought us the nadir of this cash-grabbing MCU-adjacent nonsense with ‘Madame Web’ and now ‘Kraven The Hunter.’ Yet another pointless origin story for a Spider-Man villain that really serves no purpose without Spider-Man to fight against, ‘Kraven The Hunter’ wastes a serviceable performance from Aaron Taylor-Johnson (playing his second Marvel character in less than 10 years following his appearance as Quicksilver in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’) and smashes any hope of a real Kraven-Spidey face-off in the foreseeable future.

    Like ‘Madame Web,’ ‘Morbius,’ and the ‘Venom’ movies, ‘Kraven The Hunter’ is dragged down by a laziness that infects every aspect of the production. A badly written script, lousy editing, miserable-looking CG, underwhelming acting, and even sloppy dialogue looping (yes, just like in ‘Madame Web’) hinder the film’s modest attributes, like Taylor-Johnson’s work and the occasional flash of electrifying violence. And it’s all directed by J.C. Chandor – who’s made some good movies, like ‘A Most Violent Year’ – with the energy of a weak wind blowing across a desolate Siberian plain (where much of the film takes place).

    Story and Direction

    'Kraven the Hunter' director J. C. Chandor.
    ‘Kraven the Hunter’ director J. C. Chandor.

    ‘Kraven The Hunter’ makes its points with such thudding heavy-handedness that the movie produces unintentional laughter almost from the start. Russian martial music blares over the opening scene to make sure we know we’re deep in the Russian countryside, as a transport brings the title character (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) to a prison that would make Rikers Island look like the Four Seasons.

    Kraven is there on purpose, however, to execute a Russian gangster operating within its walls, a plot point that will make more sense later as we first must endure an extended flashback from 16 years earlier. Here we meet the younger Kraven, real name Sergei Kravinoff (Levi Miller), who is pulled out of school along with his half-brother Dmitri by their brutish father Nikolai (Russell Crowe), who informs his sons that their mother has taken her own life because she was “weak.”

    Dad decides that accompanying him on a hunt is just what the grieving boys need, although the rather timid Dmitri prefers singing and doing uncanny vocal impressions of Nikolai and others (he’s a “real chameleon,” as he and others tell us two or three times, just in case we don’t get the hint). Sergei is gravely injured by a legendary lion his dad has been tracking, and although he nearly succumbs to his wounds, a combination of the lion’s blood with a mystical potion given to him by a young African girl named Calypso — who just happens to be there with her parents — brings the young man back from the brink and imbues him with a range of special powers (enhanced strength and speed, better hearing, and eyes that change color).

    Also bestowed somehow with a new moral code by that heady brew, Sergei decides he’s not going to join his father’s business and takes off for the Siberian wilderness, where he sets up house in a dome-like cabin left behind by his mother and protects the local animals from poachers. Now grown into the impressive shape of Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Kraven hunts bad guys as a sort of mercenary but is soon called back to help defend his estranged father, who’s being threatened by a man he once dismissed named Aleksei Sytsevich (Alessandro Nivola), whose bizarre skin condition and own monstrous powers have led him to be called the Rhino.

    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    “A man who kills a legend becomes a legend himself,” gravely intones Nikolai at one point, as ‘Kraven’ deploys all the usual cliches about fathers and sons and the definition of “real” masculinity. Perhaps J.C. Chandor envisions this all as some sort of operatic Russian crime epic, but he’s undercut every step of the way by a ludicrous, coincidence-filled script from Richard Wenk, Art Marcum, and Matt Holloway (the latter two are credited on the first ‘Iron Man’ for Marvel Studios). Kraven/Sergei steps out of his brother’s apartment for a nap just as a bunch of the Rhino’s thugs come to kidnap him; Kraven calls a now-grown Calypso (Ariana DeBose) to warn her that the Rhino is coming for her just as she happens to look outside her office and see those same thugs bursting in. Plot points are simply stacked atop each other without any real development just to clumsily get people from point A to point B.

    Speaking of Calypso, who works as a lawyer, why does Kraven need her help in tracing bad guys if he’s supposedly the world’s greatest hunter? Why does her one notable fighting skill happen to come in handy just when Kraven needs it most? Does she even need to be in the story? And why the hell is the Foreigner (Christopher Abbott), an assassin who can hypnotize people by staring at them and counting to three, necessary here when the plot is already weighed down with multiple villains?

    In the end, these questions don’t matter because the rest of the film is so haphazardly done. For starters, there’s a CG lion that looks like it was discarded on a zip drive by someone at Disney and found by somebody else working on ‘Kraven.’ In fact, all the animals look terribly fake, a common problem in CG that’s exacerbated here by the sheer amount of them. And let’s not get started on the final version of the Rhino, who looks like the VFX folks just digitally stuck a horn and some rough gray skin over the superstructure of Rhys Ifans’ Lizard and called it a day.

    We can harp on the film’s other problems – shockingly sloppy dialogue looping (especially when Chameleon, I mean Dmitri, sings in different voices), shockingly dumb dialogue, and unshockingly predictable plot turns like Sergei getting his powers from magic blood, an idea that goes back to the Andrew Garfield era of Spider-Man. But all these other issues pale next to the movie’s main drawback: it’s just dull. Chandor can’t wring anything resembling real energy out of these tired old tropes, and the movie just grinds along for better than two hours like a broken-down train groaning into its final station.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Aaron Taylor Johnson and Russell Crowe in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Aaron Taylor Johnson and Russell Crowe in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    If there is a saving grace to ‘Kraven The Hunter,’ it’s the title character himself. Aaron Taylor-Johnson does a very commendable job against the odds; even though this is a far cry from the Kraven of the comics in many ways, he does have a moral code, a sense of honor, and a thread of compassion that’s in conflict with his naturally violent tendencies. Taylor-Johnson is also quite physically suited for the role, even if the editing of the fight scenes leaves something to be desired (maybe he just said the hell with it and figured he’d use this for his James Bond audition tape). Kraven’s ultimate objectives are vague and kind of muddled, but that’s the script’s fault.

    Fred Hechinger (seen this fall as the mad emperor Caracalla in ‘Gladiator II’ and the sadistic Harper in ‘Nickel Boys’) also does a decent job as Dmitri, although his eventual transformation into the Chameleon at the end is rushed and jarringly handled. One great shame about this movie is that it wastes three classic members of Spidey’s rogues gallery – Rhino, Chameleon (the very first villain Spider-Man ever faced!), and Kraven himself – on a movie that does these illustrious villains little justice.

    The rest of the cast doesn’t fare very well. Alessandro Nivola ingests the scenery as the Rhino, camping it up and all but twirling his moustache, while Russell Crowe alternates between phoning it in and chewing the sets around him as well, his heavy Russian accent like something out of a Cold War movie. As for Ariana DeBose, there’s no nice way to say it: she’s just bad here, spouting every line in flatly declarative fashion as if she’s reading them for the first time. She seems lost at sea, but again, that may be a function of the script, which offers no real function for Calypso.

    Final Thoughts

    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel 'Kraven the Hunter'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Aaron Taylor Johnson in Columbia Pictures and Marvel ‘Kraven the Hunter’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    The sad part about ‘Kraven The Hunter’ is that Aaron Taylor-Johnson’s fur-clad killer might have made a formidable nemesis for the current Tom Holland iteration of Spider-Man (in fact, Kraven was allegedly the back-up plan for ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ if the multiversal thing didn’t work out). But this laughable movie all but ensures that this version of Kraven won’t cross over into Spidey’s corner of the MCU, despite the handful of painfully obvious Easter eggs scattered throughout the film.

    As we noted above, we can only hope that the seven-year excursion into mediocrity that was the Sony Spider-Man Universe Not Featuring Spider-Man, which began in 2018 with ‘Venom,’ ends here with Kraven’s first and last hunt. The whole idea – to create a universe of movies starring Spider-Man villains without having Spider-Man show up in them – was a misfire from the beginning, the brainchild of two producers (Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach) desperate to hang onto whatever piece of the Marvel pie they could. Nearly half a billion dollars in production costs and six films later, their slice of that pie is moldy and spoiled and needs to go into the trash.

    ‘Kraven The Hunter’ receives 2.5 out of 10 stars.

    IhJWggEGUlOpETHULj3r6

    What is the plot of ‘Kraven The Hunter’?

    The son (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) of a Russian crime lord (Russell Crowe) rejects his father’s empire and sets out to track down criminals on his own and enact justice upon them, using his enhanced powers to make himself a feared and powerful hunter of men.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Kraven The Hunter’?

    • Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff / Kraven
    • Ariana DeBose as Calypso Ezili
    • Fred Hechinger as Dmitri Smerdyakov / The Chameleon
    • Alessandro Nivola as Aleksei Sytsevich / Rhino
    • Christopher Abbott as the Foreigner
    • Russell Crowe as Nikolai Kravinoff
    'Kraven the Hunter' opens in theaters in October.
    ‘Kraven the Hunter’ opens in theaters in October.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in Sony’s Spider-Man Universe:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Kraven the Hunter’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Aaron Taylor-Johnson Movies on Amazon

    Zb48SmxI
  • Julia Garner Joins Blumhouse Thriller ‘Wolf Man’

    Julia Garner in 'The Royal Hotel.'
    Julia Garner in ‘The Royal Hotel.’ Photo: Neon.

    Preview:

    • Julia Garner is the latest addition to ‘Wolf Man’.
    • Christopher Abbott is aboard to star in the horror.
    • Leigh Whannell is directing the movie for Blumhouse and Universal.

    Universal has once again turned to the Blumhouse team –– and to director Leigh Whannell, who did such a successful job updating ‘The Invisible Man’ –– to finally crack a new version of werewolf story ‘Wolf Man’, another take on one of the studio’s classic monsters.

    With Christopher Abbott already aboard to star, the cast is growing to include ‘Ozark’ break-out Julia Garner.

    What’s the story of ‘Wolf Man’?

    1941's 'The Wolf Man.'
    1941’s ‘The Wolf Man.’ Photo: Universal Pictures.

    This new take on the hairy tale will follow a family threatened by a lethal predator; Abbott is playing the father of the clan while Garner will be the mother.

    That’s about all the studios will say about the movie –– though you have to figure that Abbott might end up howling at the moon.

    The casting marks a reunion between Garner and Abbott, as the two worked together alongside in Sean Durkin’s 2011 drama ‘Martha, Marcy, May, Marlene’, which was Garner’s first professional acting job.

    Who is making the new ‘Wolf Man’ movie?

    Leigh Whannell as Adam Stanheight in 'Saw.'
    Leigh Whannell as Adam Stanheight in ‘Saw.’ Photo: Lionsgate Films.

    As mentioned, Whannell is aboard to direct, and he’s worked on the latest draft of the script with actor Corbett Tuck (a frequent collaborator on the ‘Insidious’ movies and ‘The Invisible Man’).

    They’re re-writing work already completed by ‘Dumb Money’ script duo Lauren Schuker Blum and Rebecca Angelo.

    But the movie’s history stretches back farther than that…

    Related Article: Director Kitty Green Talks ‘The Royal Hotel’ Starring Julia Garner

    What’s the history of ‘Wolf Man’

    Benicio del Toro as The Wolfman in 2010's 'The Wolfman.'
    Benicio del Toro as The Wolfman in 2010’s ‘The Wolfman.’ Photo: Universal Pictures.

    At one point, the movie was going to be a fresh opportunity for director Derek Cianfrance and star Ryan Gosling, who have previously collaborated on the likes of ‘Blue Valentine’ and ‘The Place Beyond The Pines’. But that has since lingered in development, with rumors swirling of creative differences between Gosling and executives.

    And Whannell was actually attached to the project before Cianfrance and Gosling boarded it, so this its current state is something of a full circle. Gosling will still score an executive producer credit, which we suppose will have to be “Kenough” for him.

    If you dig even further back, there was also talk (around the time Universal’s much-touted “Dark Universe” monster franchise was still a going concern) of Dwayne Johnson taking the lead in a Wolfman movie. While that would have been something to see, our fear would be for something more along the lines of ‘Van Helsing’.

    When will ‘Wolf Man’ howl into theaters?

    The new horror thriller is currently scheduled to arrive on October 25, 2025.

    1941's 'The Wolf Man.'
    1941’s ‘The Wolf Man.’ Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Wolf Man’:

    Buy ‘Wolf Man’ Movies On Amazon

    mTHJ4mLk
  • Movie Review: ‘Poor Things’

    Emma Stone in 'Poor Things.'
    Emma Stone in ‘Poor Things.’ Photo by Yorgos Lanthimos. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    In theaters December 8th, ‘Poor Things’ is the latest slab of eccentricity from Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos, who seems to attract applause and head-scratching in near equal measure.

    The filmmaker has brought us the likes of odd family drama ‘Dogtooth’, offbeat romantic drama ‘The Lobster’, horror mystery ‘The Killing of a Sacred Deer’ and, most recently, his Oscar-winning historical comedy drama ‘The Favourite’, which started his collaboration with actor Emma Stone.

    She’s back for his latest, a skewed version of a ‘Frankenstein’-alike mad scientist story that goes to some very strange places but also has interesting things to say about female power and misogyny.

    Does ‘Poor Things’ Offer Any Riches?

    Ramy Youssef and Emma Stone in 'Poor Things.'
    (L to R) Ramy Youssef and Emma Stone in ‘Poor Things.’ Photo by Yorgos Lanthimos. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    While the story of a woman reborn –– we won’t reveal exactly what is going on, as that is something audiences should discover if they haven’t been spoiled on the truth of the matter –– and its attendant learning-about-the-world tale is sure to turn some away, put off out by the uncanny visions on display.

    But even if you’re initially disquieted by the movie, our advice is to stick with it, as –– much like its main character –– ‘Poor Things’ has a lot more to say as it develops.

    ‘Poor Things’: Script and Direction

    Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone on the set of 'Poor Things.'
    (L to R) Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone on the set of ‘Poor Things.’ Photo by Atsushi Nishijima. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Poor Things’ sees Lanthimos working once again with ‘The Favourite’ scriptwriter Tony McNamara, who here adapts Alasdair Gray’s novel for the screen.

    And as with ‘The Favourite’, it’s a combination that works –– while the new movie features some very different characters and ideas than their previous collaboration, the subversive use of grotesque personalities and power plays is still effective in a more fantastical setting.

    McNamara weaves a compelling tale around Stone’s Bella but doesn’t let (most of) the other roles slide –– you can certainly see why actors, particularly those who like a challenge –– would flock to work with this writer/director team.

    Lanthimos is always someone who weaves worlds around his characters, either with stark production design or, in the case of ‘Poor Things’ a riot of Victoriana that gives way to something more akin to Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s more fantastical films as Bella’s journey continues. It’s definitely a fictional world –– no one will accuse ‘Poor Things’ of existing in reality –– but that all helps make it work.

    Related Article: Willem Dafoe Talks Psychological Thriller ‘Inside’ and Acting by Himself

    ‘Poor Things’: Performances

    Emma Stone and Mark Ruffalo in 'Poor Things.'
    (L to R) Emma Stone and Mark Ruffalo in ‘Poor Things.’ Photo by Atsushi Nishijima. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    There is no questioning Emma Stone’s commitment to the role of Bella Baxter, the young woman at the heart of the story. Stone has shown real willingness to stretch herself (partly in working with Lanthimos, where the result was a deserved Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for ‘The Favourite) and she throws herself into the part with gusto and vulnerability that gives way to steely determination.

    There isn’t too much room for nuance in playing Bella, but Stone digs some out, making you root for the character even though she can, at times early on, be tough to get a handle on her with her behavior. But she soon becomes someone you’re compelled to follow.

    Willem Dafoe also does a lot with a role that offers a little less to grasp onto than Bella. As scientist Dr. Godwin Baxter, he’s Bella’s father figure, but an imposing, distant type for much of the running time –– it’s clear he loves her and wants to care for her but isn’t entirely sure how.

    Willem Dafoe in 'Poor Things.'
    Willem Dafoe in ‘Poor Things.’ Photo by Atsushi Nishijima Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Mark Ruffalo, meanwhile, is having all manner of fun as the lascivious lawyer Duncan Wedderburn, and it’s infectious even as you loathe him for how he treats Bella when she grows past his influence.

    Around the central figures is a fine ensemble of actors given smaller, but still vital roles –– Kathryn Hunter shows up late on as a madam at a brothel who becomes something of a strangely wise mentor to Bella, letting her know how things really work in the world. This might be an offbeat reality, but some truths shine through, such as dynamics between men and women in ‘Poor Things’ faux-historical setting.

    There are one or two characters that don’t quite serve the actors as well –– Margaret Qualley, for example, is somewhat wasted in the thankless role of Felicity, who essentially serves as a cheap joke and could have been excised entirely without hurting the film.

    ‘Poor Things’: Final Thoughts

    Emma Stone and Mark Ruffalo in 'Poor Things.'
    (L to R) Emma Stone and Mark Ruffalo in ‘Poor Things.’ Photo by Yorgos Lanthimos. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Poor Things’ is well worth your time if you’re willing to relax into its particularly unusual vibe and engage with Bella Baxter’s story. It’s not just weird for weirdness’ sake, every element carefully curated to serve the plot.

    This is Yorgos Lanthimos at his most fantastical yet, but still maintaining the moral and ethical undercurrents that make his movies work beyond the strange surface trappings. It’ll certainly not be one to gather the family around at Christmas, but it’ll appeal to those who are after something distinctly different in their cinematic entertainment.

    Boasting a standout performance from Emma Stone, and Mark Ruffalo as you’ve probably never seen him before –– even the Hulk would wonder about Wedderburn.

    ‘Poor Things’ receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

    ySHZedKUmhttaGK5f2LqL

    What’s the story of ‘Poor Things’?

    This is the story of Bella Baxter (Emma Stone), a young woman brought back to life by the brilliant and unorthodox scientist Dr. Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). Under Baxter’s protection, Bella is eager to learn.

    Hungry for the worldliness she is lacking, Bella runs off with Duncan Wedderburn (Mark Ruffalo), a slick and debauched lawyer, on a whirlwind adventure across the continents. Free from the prejudices of her times, Bella grows steadfast in her purpose to stand for equality and liberation.

    Who else is in ‘Poor Things’?

    The ‘Poor Things’ ensemble also includes Ramy Youssef, Christopher Abbott, Suzy Bemba, Jerrod Carmichael, Kathryn Hunter, Vicki Pepperdine, Margaret Qualley and Hanna Schygulla.

    'Poor Things.'
    ‘Poor Things.’ Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 Searchlight Pictures All Rights Reserved.

    Other Yorgos Lanthimos Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Poor Things’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Yorgos Lanthimos Movies on Amazon

     

  • Trailer for Tom Holland Series ‘The Crowded Room’

    Pxe4ZqsS

    While Tom Holland‘s certainly faced high stakes and big drama in his movie career (heck, no one remembers him at the end of ‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’) and in ‘Uncharted’ he risked life and limb to recover artifacts.

    But his small screen work definitely goes down some darker paths –– witness Netflix’s ‘The Devil All the Time’ and Apple’s ‘Cherry’ –– and his next gig with the latter also has some seriously dark overtones. How dark? Try a psychological thriller digging into the faulty recollections of a man accused of a terrible crime.

    Tom Holland in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Tom Holland in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    What’s the story of ‘The Crowded Room’

    ‘The Crowded Room’ follows Danny Sullivan (Holland), a man who is arrested following his involvement in a shooting in New York City in 1979. The thriller series is then through a series of interviews with curious interrogator Rya Goodwin (Amanda Seyfried), and Danny’s life story unfolds, revealing elements of the mysterious past that shaped him, and the twists and turns that will lead him to a life-altering revelation.

    Who is the mysterious man who saved Danny from bullies when he was younger? And how does his daughter Ariana (Sasha Lane) fit into it all? Why can’t Danny remember chunks of his life? Could he be innocent as Rya feels, or is he much more nefarious?

    Akiva Goldsman created the 10-episode limited series, adapting Daniel Keyes’ 1981 non-fiction novel, the title of which we won’t reveal here as it nods to the truth of the tale and constitutes a giant spoiler. So don’t go googling if you’re curious because you’ll end up ruining the story for yourself.

    White God’ and ‘Pieces of a Woman’s Kornél Mundruczó directed several episodes, including the pilot.

    Emmy Rossum in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Emmy Rossum in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Related Article: Tom Holland and Jamie Bell both Starring in Fred Astaire Movies

    Who else is in ‘The Crowded Room?

    The series also stars Emmy Rossum, Will Chase and Lior Raz along with guest stars Jason Isaacs, Christopher Abbott, Thomas Sadoski and Zachary Golinger.

    As for Holland, next up, he’s down to star in a Fred Astaire biopic and there’s the prospect of another ‘Spider-Man’ entry, though little is known about that, and it could well end up being impacted by the writers’ strike in any regard. In a much earlier state is World War II drama ‘Beneath a Scarlet Sky’, which will see him playing a man who helps Jews escape to Switzerland.

    The first three episodes of ‘The Crowded Room’ will launch on Apple TV+ on June 9th, followed by one new episode weekly through July 28th.

    Amanda Seyfried and Tom Holland in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Amanda Seyfried and Tom Holland in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Amanda Seyfried in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Thomas Sadoski and Amanda Seyfried in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Thomas Sadoski and Amanda Seyfried in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Sasha Lane in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Sasha Lane in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Sasha Lane and Tom Holland in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Sasha Lane and Tom Holland in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Jason Isaacs and Tom Holland in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Jason Isaacs and Tom Holland in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Lior Raz in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Lior Raz in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Zachary Golinger and Emmy Rossum in 'The Crowded Room,' premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Zachary Golinger and Emmy Rossum in ‘The Crowded Room,’ premiering June 9, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Movies Similar to ‘The Crowded Room:’

    Buy Tom Holland Movies on Amazon

  • Hulu’s ‘Catch-22’ Trailer Is as Darkly Funny (and Soul-Crushing) as Joseph Heller’s Novel

    Hulu’s ‘Catch-22’ Trailer Is as Darkly Funny (and Soul-Crushing) as Joseph Heller’s Novel

    Hulu

    “It’s all a numbers game. And when your number’s up … your number’s up.”

    A character blithely utters that line in the full trailer for Hulu’s upcoming adaptation of “Catch-22,” Joseph Heller’s seminal novel. It is a pointed reminder of the pointlessness of war that is experienced by the protagonist of the story, Yossarian (Christopher Abbott), a U.S. Air Force bombardier in World War II.

    The trailer lays out the titular “catch,” a hilariously sinister bureaucratic rule that states a pilot can only avoid a mission if he claims insanity. But by claiming insanity. Unfortunately, by asking to be grounded, the pilot actually proves his sanity.

    The star-studded adaptation also features George Clooney (an executive producer and co-director of two episodes). He was originally supposed to play Colonel Cathcart, Yossarian’s commanding officer, but stepped back to focus on his other duties. Kyle Chandler took on the role. Clooney now plays Scheisskopf.

    “Catch-22” premieres May 17 on Hulu.

  • Exclusive: ‘Piercing’ Director Nicolas Pesce on the Integral Role of Music in the Film

    Exclusive: ‘Piercing’ Director Nicolas Pesce on the Integral Role of Music in the Film

    Universal

    Piercing” is probably one of the coolest movies you’ll ever see. I know it is one of the coolest movies I’ve ever seen, and I’ve seen a bunch of cool movies.

    I saw it first at Fantastic Fest, Austin’s premiere genre-based film festival, last fall, and fell in love. It’s the tale of a young psychopath (Christopher Abbott), who gets more than he bargains for when he decides to murder a prostitute (Mia Wasikowska). It’s funny, dark and sometimes strangely uplifting. Oh and did I mention that it is also super cool?

    One of the more fascinating aspects of the movie is its use of music, mostly stuff from old Italian thrillers. It works perfectly. And so I asked the director of “Piercing,” the brilliant Nicolas Pesce (you should also watch his first film, “The Eyes of My Mother,” just don’t plan on sleeping right afterwards), if he could talk us through the music and how he made the selections that he did. It’s a wonderfully inside look at how he put these great tracks together into an utterly intoxicating whole. And remember, “Piercing” is in theaters and on VOD now. However you watch it, just pray the sound is cranked all the way UP.

    SHUT UP AND PLAY THE GIALLO

    From Italo-Disco, to Prog-Rock, and Jazz, The Giallo Music of ‘Piercing’

    By Nicolas Pesce 

    “Piercing” is very much my love letter to Giallo movies. I imagine some readers are asking themselves right now, “What’s a Giallo movie?” In the 1970s, Italian filmmakers, many who’d come from the world of Spaghetti Westerns, turned their sights on to a new genre, a sort of Hitchcock inspired psycho-sexual thriller. One of the more notable aspects of these movies, was the music. There’s nothing that makes a movie feel more Giallo than the music. Within the genre, there were variation in visual aesthetic, and some variation in stories, but the one major constant, the thing that tied all the movies of the genre together, was this very specific sort of blend of Italo-disco, Jazz, Prog-rock, and big orchestral score.

    There’s a quality to these scores that is magical. And it’s impossible to reproduce. That might sound lazy but listen to the tracks and you’ll know what I mean. Technically, from a recording engineering standpoint, but also creatively. They are so specifically part of a very specific and short-lived moment. These tracks are so big, and tense and mysterious. But they’re also playful and romantic. They manage to bridge all the seemingly disparate tones we play with in “Piercing.”

    There’s something about these scores that makes the audience under the tone and mood of the movie immediately. The music helps you understand how to watch the movie.

    And not to mention, the music is just so damn good.


    “Tenebre” by Goblin  (from Tenebre dir. Dario Argento)

    This is one of my favorite Goblin tracks ever. It’s so epic and dramatic. But it’s also a song that really makes you want to dance. Sure, it may be a cue from a movie score, but you could have easily played that in any club, and no one would know. The first time I watched Tenebre, I discovered I’d lost the remote for my Blu-ray player. As I searched for what felt like hours, the Blu-ray menu played the first 40 seconds of this song on repeat. I don’t know how many times I heard that 40 second loop play, but it was a lot, and I still love this track. So that’s saying a lot. I eventually found the remote and watched the movie. And then many times after that. I think it’s my favorite Argento movie. At least right now it is. And it’s one of Goblin’s best soundtracks.


    “Profondo Rosso” by Goblin  (from Deep Red dir. Dario Argento)

    Another Goblin track. As a band they straddle this awesome weird line between Prog-Rock and disco, and I couldn’t love it more. The Goblin tracks, to me, are the bangers on this soundtrack, so we needed to save them for important moments. They’re also the most recognizable tracks in the score, so in order to not be distracting, we had to use them sparingly. We used one for the end, so that you’re walking out of the theatre feeling like John Travolta in “Saturday Night Fever,” but with some latex underneath your leisure suit. And the other for the first time our two main characters meet. The whole movie is about these two characters sort of accidentally derailing each other’s’ lives. So, the moment they first meet is a big one. It’s also the movies first use of split screen, so we needed the sequence to be bursting with style and energy in the way that only Goblin can.


    “Too Risky a Day for a Regatta” by Stelvio Cipriani  (from Tentacles dir. Ovidio Assonitis)

    How great is the title of this track? While this movie may not be a Giallo movie in the strictest sense of the word, composer Cipriani brought that Giallo heat nevertheless. Cipriani started off as a staple of the Spaghetti Western. And you can draw a straight line from Spaghetti Westerns to Giallo movies. When the western went out of style, the Italian directors who’d built their careers on the American-set action movies switched gears to pseudo-Hitchcockian styled pulp thrillers and took all their crews with them. And most importantly, their composers came along too. So now you have the composers from the Spaghetti Westerns writing disco tracks for thrillers, and I mean, how awesome does that sound? Cipriani is one of the greats, even if you don’t know his name. In this campy “Jaws” rip-off weirdly starring John Huston, however awesome the movie may be in a fun sort of way, the star of the show is Cipriani score. This track, with one hell of a title, is one of those tracks that you just makes you dance.


    “Camille 2000” by Piero Piccioni  (from Camille 2000 dir. Radley Metzger)

    Piccioni’s score for this movie is absolutely stunning. It’s huge and romantic, with sweeping strings of full orchestras, arranged as if for the pit of a Broadway Musical, or the love theme from some epically romantic old Hollywood fair. But here’s the catch, Camille 2000 is essentially a soft-core porno. It’s very soft, and it’s highbrow, but it could safely fall into the category. I don’t mean this to disparage porn or the film. I mean that only to point out that when most people think of more adult sorts of films of the 60s and 70s, a very particular style of music comes to mind. But here, Piccioni has disposed of the “Bow-chicka-wow-wow” guitar driven funk, and replaced it with something far more elegant, loving and romantic. His music puts a spin on the tone of “Piercing”’s violently seductive tete-a-tete, one that in spite of the kink, is filled with love and romance. Piccioni’s music is moving, and its quality, the actual tone of the recordings, is filled with a warmth reminiscent the music that accompanied old Hollywood love stories… but twinged with the necessary dose of sleaze.


    The Red Queen Kills Seven Timesscore by Bruno Nicolai  (film dir. Emilio Miraglia)

    I heard this score before I saw the movie. Which is sort of a funny way to discover a film these days, but a path I find myself down often. I hope that will happen for some people who watch “Piercing.” There are such awesome companies right now that are working so hard to keep not only vinyl alive but bring attention to a lot of super obscure movies. Companies like Mondo/Death Waltz, Waxwork, Dagored (who released this record) are keeping audiences interested in awesome old movies. Bruno Nicolai’s score for “Red Queen…” makes up the majority of “Piercing”’s soundtrack. We needed to find a movie that was obscure enough that most people wouldn’t immediately recognize the music, or at least, not have strong memories or emotional associations with the music already. But it also had to be a good enough movie to have a great score. It also needed to be scary and tense in a very very specific way but match the tone exactly. We knew that throughout the movie we would always need to retreat back to one central score in order to keep the otherwise pieced together soundtrack feeling cohesive. Searching for the right score felt like trying on clothes. We tried on a lot of movies’ scores. And when we tried on this one, it just fit.

    Universal

    I will also point out that there are a number of music cues in this movie that are not from old Italian movies. The music that plays in the world of the movie, the “diegetic” music, or the music that the characters can hear, that’s where we chose to use music that wasn’t from other movies. Pop and Soul songs from various decades, older and contemporary, a sort of hodge-podge of time periods (like the visual design of the movie). We tried to find tracks that feel familiar, classic, and timeless, but are songs you’ve never heard. Much of the world of “Piercing,” from the visual design, to the performances, to the story itself, it all feels almost like real life, but something is off, and makes it feel wrong. We wanted even the music in the world to feel slightly off so that it all feels almost like the world we know, but yet unfamiliar. Our music supervisor on the film was Randall Poster, who is incredibly talented with some incredible taste. Getting to build this part of the world with him was a lot of fun.

    A large part of choosing music like this, music from other movies, is getting to have this conversation. Getting to talk about the movies and somewhat obscure genres that inspired me. I have such a passion for introducing people to movies and genres they may have never heard of and talking to people who have seen every movie I’m stealing from and got a kick out of the inside jokes I put in there for them.

    At the Q&As after screenings, the music is always brought up. It comes up in one of two ways. Either the audience member has seen the original movies that I pulled music from, and they thought it was fun, because before seeing this movie, they didn’t think anyone in the world other than them had seen a movie like “Camille 2000.” The other version is, “What was that awesome disco track during the end credits?” And then I get to tell them about Goblin and “Tenebre.” And I’m a huge film nerd, so that’s pretty awesome.