Tag: clive owen

  • Movie Review: ‘Cleaner’

    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    ‘Cleaner’ receives 5.5 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters February 21st is ‘Cleaner,’ directed by Martin Campbell and starring Daisy Ridley, Matthew Tuck, Taz Skylar, Ruth Gemmell, Flavia Watson, and Clive Owen.

    Related Article: Daisy Ridley Talks Martin Campbell’s New Action Thriller ‘Cleaner’

    Initial Thoughts

    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    Everything old is new again. Well, sort of. We love a good action thriller, and we’re aware that the genre has certain tropes and conventions that usually crop up in most movies of this kind, but ‘Cleaner’ takes it one step further. While many of the plot details are changed, this is a pretty brazen remake of ‘Die Hard,’ with a lone person – in this case a woman, played by Daisy Ridley of ‘Star Wars’ fame – battling terrorists who capture a corporate skyscraper and take the people inside as hostages.

    Our heroine has a loved one in the building that she’s desperate to keep safe as well, and her only communication with the outside world is with a cop who’s doing her best to keep our protagonist in the loop and out of the soup. It’s difficult to watch ‘Cleaner’ without constantly comparing it to Bruce Willis’ 1988 all-timer, but even on its own merits, ‘Cleaner’ doesn’t quite click thanks to some strange screenwriting choices.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Daisy Ridley and Director Martin Campbell behind the scenes of the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    (L to R) Daisy Ridley and Director Martin Campbell behind the scenes of the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    We first meet Joey Locke as a child, as she crawls out a window in her apartment and sits on a ledge while her abusive father goes after her mother and neurodivergent older brother inside. This heavy-handed bit of character development, of course, comes in handy later (she likes to climb!), when we meet the adult Joey (Ridley).

    Thrown out of the army for assaulting a fellow soldier (not quite what it seems), Joey works in London as a window cleaner at the vast Agnian Energy skyscraper. Her brother Michael (Matthew Tuck) has just been evicted from a care home for allegedly leaking some of their internal files (more exposition that also resurfaces later), with Joey struggling to figure out who’s going to take care of him next.

    Joey is perpetually late to her job and perpetually mouthy to her employers, which doesn’t sit right when she snarks off to one of the heads of Agnian, Gerald Milton (Lee Boardman), in an elevator. Meanwhile, she’s deposited Michael in the lobby under the care of a security guard and commiserates with her co-worker Noah (Taz Skylar) as they clean the windows midway up the building. Noah leaves her to finish the job while the rest of the building staff prepares for a glitzy shareholders’ party that Gerald and his brother Geoffrey (Rufus Jones) are throwing that evening.

    No sooner does the party begin than the building is invaded by a group of ecoterrorists known as Earth Revolution and led by Marcus Blake (Clive Owen), who holds the Miltons, their board, and their guests hostage, locks down the building, and plans to record confessions by the Miltons and the board of all their dirty dealings and clandestine anti-environmental activities.

    Joey, trapped on her window cleaning cradle outside when the building’s systems are shut down, can only listen in horror through her earpiece while Michael hides out on one of the upper floors. She’s even more horrified when she learns that one of Marcus’ foot soldiers is none other than Noah – who, it turns out, has his own plans to wrest the operation from Marcus and upgrade it to a more destructive event.

    Clive Owen as “Marcus“ in the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    Clive Owen as “Marcus“ in the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    Swap out the great Alan Rickman’s Hans Gruber and his high-tech burglars for Clive Owen and the ecoterrorist bunch, replace Bruce Willis’ John McClane with Ridley’s Joey and McClane’s wife for Joey’s brother, and change up LAPD sergeant Al Powell for London police superintendent Claire Hume (Ruth Gemmell), and all the basic components from ‘Die Hard’ are basically in place.

    There are differences, of course: Gruber never faces an internal uprising from his second-in-command, who turns out to be a true psychopath, and the aims of the group are radically different. It also takes a long time in ‘Die Hard’ for the LAPD to believe in McClane and his story; ‘Cleaner’ plays for a few minutes with the London police thinking that Joey herself is the terrorist before that would-be complication is dispatched.

    That’s the second biggest problem with ‘Cleaner’: it plays like a Cliff Notes version of ‘Die Hard’ with the names changed. Director Martin Campbell, best known for two of James Bond’s finest films — ‘GoldenEye’ and ‘Casino Royale’ — can handle the action capably enough (unfortunate CG flames and explosions aside), but there’s a lot more talking on phones than forward momentum, and it weirdly seems easy for people to get around the building. While Campbell does manage to elicit some tension, thanks mainly to the unhinged Noah, there’s little sense of the cat-and-mouse suspense that the movie needs.

    And that is due to the biggest problem of all: the screenplay (by Simon Uttley, Paul Andrew Williams, and Matthew Orton) strands Joey on that damn cradle for almost the entire second act, making her a bystander instead of the pro-active force that she should be. When she finally gets in the game for real in the third act, she fights her way through the terrorists almost too easily as the movie barrels toward its resolution. Instead of being a wild card throwing sand in the gears of the terrorists’ seemingly well-oiled plans while barely staying one step ahead of them, Joey mostly cools her heels while the window cleaning cradle tilts this way and that.

    It’s a strange imbalance that, coupled with the perfunctory development of both the characters and their relationships (the script tries to forge the same McClane/Powell connection between Joey and Claire, but it’s purely surface level), makes ‘Cleaner’ feel like an intermittently interesting, half-hearted remake of a film that is the gold standard for the genre.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Daisy Ridley as “Joey” and Matthew Tuck as “Michael” in the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    (L to R) Daisy Ridley as “Joey” and Matthew Tuck as “Michael” in the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    Perhaps the best part of ‘Cleaner’ is the relationship between Daisy Ridley’s Joey and Michael Tuck’s Matthew. It’s too bad we don’t get to see enough of it, but the two actors generate a genuine warmth and sibling chemistry. Tuck, a relative newcomer who’s neurodivergent himself, brings sensitivity to his portrayal of a young man who’s fiercely devoted to his sister and battles against his challenges to help her – even if the script leaves him skulking around corners most of the time.

    As for Ridley, the toxic minority of so-called ‘Star Wars’ fans who have hounded her mercilessly cannot overshadow the fact that she is a fine actor. She’s warm and funny here, and brings a terrific physicality to the action scenes when she finally gets a chance. It’s just a shame that her character is semi-sketched in and that she doesn’t get the chance to get onto the playing field until late in the movie – where everything happens so quickly that we don’t feel for her the way we do for the increasingly bedraggled McClane. There’s also a somewhat preposterous showdown at the end that harkens back to, of all things, a scene in ‘Avengers: Endgame’ — only a little less believable.

    As for the rest of the cast, Taz Skylar does bring a frightening intensity to Noah that generates much of the film’s suspense, and at least the writers don’t try to make him or Clive Owen (in his brief screen time) emulate Alan Rickman’s incomparable Gruber. Ruth Gemmell brings a strong presence and intelligence to the role of Claire, but she too gets little to work with.

    Final Thoughts

    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    Martin Campbell and his cast work hard to give ‘Cleaner’ a big feel and high stakes, but the film can’t help but seem small. It’s so nakedly reminiscent of ‘Die Hard’ in its general structure and premise that it simply can’t escape the comparison. ‘Cleaner’ only echoes past glories of the genre without finding any depth or voice of its own.

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    What is the plot of ‘Cleaner’?

    An ex-soldier named Joey (Daisy Ridley) is working as a window cleaner at an energy corporation’s London skyscraper when a radical activist group takes over the building, leaving her trapped outside 50 stories in the air as she attempts to get back in, rescue the hostages, and save her brother who’s also inside.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Cleaner’?

    • Daisy Ridley as Joey Locke
    • Matthew Tuck as Michael Locke
    • Taz Skylar as Noah
    • Clive Owen as Marcus Blake
    • Ruth Gemmell as Superintendent Claire Hume
    • Flavia Watson as Zee
    • Lee Boardman as Gerald Milton
    • Rufus Jones as Geoffrey Milton
    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    Other Daisy Ridley Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Cleaner’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Daisy Ridley Movies On Amazon

  • ‘Cleaner’ Exclusive Interview: Daisy Ridley

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    Opening in theaters on February 21st is the new action thriller ‘Clearner’, which was directed by Martin Campbell (‘Casino Royale’ and ‘Edge of Darkness’) and stars Daisy Ridley (‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’), Taz Skylar (‘One Piece’), and Clive Owen (‘Children of Men’).

    Related Article: Daisy Ridley and Tom Bateman Talk ‘Magpie’ and Developing the Story

    Daisy Ridley stars in 'Cleaner'.
    Daisy Ridley stars in ‘Cleaner’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Daisy Ridley about her work on ‘Cleaner’, her first reaction to the screenplay, comparisons to ‘Die Hard’, her character’s relationship with her brother, shooting the action sequences, and working with director Martin Campbell.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Ridley, Taz Skylar, and director Martin Campbell.

    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    Moviefone: To begin with, what was your first reaction to the screenplay, and did it read like an old school action movie such as ‘Die Hard’, where one hero is pitted against a group of terrorists in a confined space?

    Daisy Ridley: When I finished it the first time, I thought, “Brilliant.” It was so propulsive and page-turning. Of course, you know ultimately, well you hope, that the good guy is going to win. But I could not, I was like, how is this going to be resolved? But that also coupled with the idea of working with Martin Campbell. But making it, I was excited to make a British action movie. Then of course it is essentially a love letter to ‘Die Hard’. I hadn’t thought about it in terms of one hero against everyone because I was so alone for so much of it, but because I’m constantly on the phone to the police, and me and the police officer build such a rapport and trying to figure out how to defeat what is ahead of us, and then me and my brother have built this beautiful relationship in the film, and that’s part of it. I felt weirdly alone but had a team. So, in that way it was lovely.

    (L to R) Daisy Ridley as “Joey” and Matthew Tuck as “Michael” in the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    (L to R) Daisy Ridley as “Joey” and Matthew Tuck as “Michael” in the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    MF: Can you talk about the trauma Joey suffered as a child, as well as her relationship with her brother, and what she’s willing to do to protect him?

    DR: It’s interesting because I feel like their relationship, I really wanted to honor relationships between siblings where one is in more of a caregiving position, and what that can do to the relationship and the dynamics that her and her brother have. Clearly, they love each other so much, but also, they are siblings. So, they fight, and they lash out and then they’re regretful, and certainly playing her, she loves him, but she has over the years put things off. In the small amount of time they have, she tries to say to him, “I’m so sorry for the time that was wasted up until now, and now we have no time.” But it’s so her driving force for the end of the film, and he ends up being such a hero in a way that I think is so beautiful. But working with Matt (Tuck), this is his first film, which is insane. Working with him was so wonderful, and it felt real in that she ends up taking accountability for the way she hasn’t been a great sister, but of course you learn that their childhood was difficult. Essentially everyone’s just trying to do the best they can really.

    (L to R) Daisy Ridley and Director Martin Campbell behind the scenes of the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    (L to R) Daisy Ridley and Director Martin Campbell behind the scenes of the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    MF: What was it like working with director Martin Campbell on this movie?

    DR: I mean, the whole shoot honestly was taxing because the of physical stuff, of course, but emotionally maintaining that level of angst, and understanding that the audience can’t be that angsty the whole time, so there has to be levels to the angst. I really had to rely on Martin to guide me through those levels. He’s just so wonderful to work with, really drawing out the emotion of the actors he’s working with and these relationships, so it feels like people you want to get behind. But I can’t speak highly enough of Martin, I just think he’s wonderful.

    Daisy Ridley behind the scenes of the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    Daisy Ridley behind the scenes of the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    MF: Finally, what was the most challenging action scene that you were asked to perform and how did you execute it?

    DR: Well, weirdly, the fight, I was really bruised. Like I was hurt. I’m pretty sure I wrenched something in my shoulder. But weirdly, the hardest thing was when I’m Spider-Woman for a moment, and it’s funny because a lot of the fighting is very realistic, but it’s the moment I was like, “Where does Joey come from?” But I dropped from the ceiling, must put a bag over someone’s head, and then I’m shoved into something here, and then I had to shove the stunt guy out of the shot. Someone was holding my toes, because I was just on wires that two guys were holding in the corner. I was floating, so someone had to hold my toes, so I was a bit stable. Then run away, and then my adrenaline was going because there was such choreography with the camera, I had to drop. A few times I missed his head. Then everything had to be so perfect. We ended up doing it maybe 50 times and my adrenaline was spiking. So weirdly, that ended up being one of the hardest moments, because there was so much to that one piece.

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    What is the plot of ‘Cleaner’?

    When activists take over an energy company’s annual gala held at One Canada Square, Canary Wharf in London, some more radical members of their group take hostages and threaten to blow up the building if police intervene. A dishonorably discharged but highly trained ex-soldier (Daisy Ridley), who works as the building’s window cleaner, attempts to save the hostages when she learns one of them is her older brother.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Cleaner’?

    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film 'Cleaner', a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.
    Daisy Ridley as “Joey” in the action film ‘Cleaner’, a Quiver Distribution release. Photo courtesy of Quiver Distribution.

    Other Daisy Ridley Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Cleaner’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Daisy Ridley Movies On Amazon

  • ‘A Murder at the End of the World’ Interview: Clive Owen

    Clive Owen as Andy Ronson in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    Clive Owen as Andy Ronson in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    The new miniseries ‘A Murder at the End of the World,’ which was created by actress Brit Marling and director Zal Batmanglij (‘Sound of My Voice,’ ‘The East’), and stars Emma Corrin (‘Deadpool 3’) and Clive Owen (‘Children of Men’), will premiere on FX beginning November 14th.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Clive Owen about his work on ‘A Murder at the End of the World,’ his character, Marling and Batmanglij’s pitch for the series, working with the filmmaking duo, and his love for mysteries.

    Clive Owen as Andy Ronson in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    Clive Owen as Andy Ronson in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how would you describe your character Andy Ronson, in your own words?

    Clive Owen: I play a character who’s a tech billionaire who used to have these regular retreats where he invites particular people who are at the forefront of the world, particularly in tech, and then brings them together for a gathering, and he has flown everyone to this very remote location in Iceland. Then it starts to turn into a very fresh take on a murder mystery where you’ve got a whole group of people who are captive, and things start to go wrong. Then we realize the situation, and that’s how it develops.

    A scene from FX's 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    A scene from FX’s ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    MF: How did Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij pitch the character to you when you were first in discussions for the role?

    CO: I mean, it was pitched as a very modern take on a on a murder mystery. I read a couple of descriptions and then jumped on another long zoom with them, and they started to talk about the potential of where it was going to go. What I loved about it is that I feel that they’re very exciting filmmakers, the two of them. They’re very ambitious. They’re trying to discuss things that are hugely relevant in an original way. Although it is a murder mystery, I’ve certainly never seen a character like Darby take us through a story like this. I was very excited by that, and it helps that Emma Corrin is fantastic in it. But you know a young, very smart, feisty person is not often at the center of stories like this. You realize that that’s something that you know needs to change and hopefully, this is the beginning of that.

    Related Article: Emma Corrin Talks ‘A Murder at the End of the World’ and Filming in Iceland

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    MF: Did you take inspiration for Andy from any real-life tech billionaires, or did you just draw your inspiration for the character from how he was written on the page?

    CO: Only from what I discussed with them. We had some long Zooms where we talked about it, and I didn’t want to go off and, you know, home in on one person. This is going to be my take on it. It was very much script led, and it was very much led by Brit and Zal. They gave me a whole back story very early on, and thoughts about where he came from and his background. We wrestled with that and brought things into play. Sometimes you still go outside, and you find somebody to home in on and think about. But this was very much script led.

    Clive Owen as Andy Ronson in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (Right) Clive Owen as Andy Ronson in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    MF: What was your experience like working with both Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij on this series?

    CO: It was refreshingly and seamless. You know they are a real partnership in terms of they do everything, and they really see the story through together. Then, on this one, Brit was also a director, and she was super impressive in terms of you could act with her in a scene, and then she would go and check the monitor. The rhythm never got held up. She was very on top of what she was trying to achieve, both as a director and as an actress, and it felt like a natural flow. She was crossing between acting and directing very easy and smooth.

    Clive Owen, Brit Marling and Emma Corrin in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Clive Owen, Brit Marling and Emma Corrin in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    MF: Can you talk about the dynamics between Andy and the character Brit Marling plays, Lee Anderson? Did you have rehearsal time or discuss their relationship before you began filming?

    CO: We talked about everything. I think it’s always super important to fully from an act to understand the intentions of what you know they were trying to do. We had plenty of Zooms and plenty of conversations about it. You know, what they were trying to achieve with it, and I think that’s kind of enough. If you over rehearse, you can sort of lose something. But it’s important to really nail everybody’s intentions. Their intentions as writers and directors, and what they want to get out of the actors, and we did. We did an awful lot of you prep before we shot.

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Christopher Saunders/FX.

    MF: Finally, the show is really a mystery series. Are you a fan of that genre?

    CO: I mean, back in the day I did a movie with Robert Atman called ‘Gosford Park.’ That’s the classic, you know, everybody brought together in one location, something goes wrong, and we must find out who’s responsible. This was a very fresh take on that kind of story.

    Clive Owen as Andy Ronson in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (Center) Clive Owen as Andy Ronson in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    What’s the plot of ‘A Murder at the End of the World?

    ‘A Murder at the end of the World’ sees Gen Z amateur sleuth and tech-savvy hacker Darby Hart (Emma Corrin) and eight other guests invited by a reclusive billionaire (Clive Owen) to participate in a retreat at a remote and dazzling location.

    When one of the other guests is found dead, Darby must use all of her skills to prove it was murder against a tide of competing interests and before the killer takes another life. She’ll gave to deal with both the human element and the complicated technology that runs the facility.

    Who is in the cast of ‘A Murder at the End of the World’?

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Lilja Jons/FX.

    Zal Batmanglij and Brit Marling Movies:

    Buy Clive Owen Movies On Amazon

     

     

  • ‘A Murder at the End of the World’ Interview: Emma Corrin

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    Premiering on FX on Hulu beginning November 14th is the new series ‘A Murder at the End of the World,’ which was created by actress Brit Marling and director Zal Batmanglij (‘Sound of My Voice,’ ‘The East’) and stars Emma Corrin (‘Deadpool 3’) and Clive Owen (‘Children of Men’).

    Emma Corrin stars in FX's 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    Emma Corrin stars in FX’s ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Emma Corrin about their work on ‘A Murder at the End of the World,’ discovering their character, collaborating with series creators Brit Marling and director Zal Batmanglij, and shooting in Iceland.

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Corrin, Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how did Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij pitch the character of Darby to you when you were first in discussions for the role?

    Emma Corrin: It came about in a quite strange but beautiful way where I was sent the script ahead of meeting them. I love reading scripts and you must do it a lot for this job. But sometimes I do find it hard to fully get lost in them. I don’t think I’ve ever read a script and not been able to put it down, just because of the format of it and the way that all works. I honestly couldn’t put these down. I was tearing through them, and I finished three and I was like, “Please, will they send me more?” They were like, “We don’t know if we should.” I was like, “Please, I need to know.” That was an amazing feeling. So immediately I felt so connected to the character. I felt compelled by her. I found her really refreshing. I just thought it was incredibly clever storytelling. So then when I met Brit and Zal on a Zoom, we just talked about storytelling. We talked about childhood, play, writing stories, what stories mean for us, why we tell them, why Darby tells them, and who she is and how that informs her. After that, they offered me the role. We hadn’t done the normal thing of going through scenes or reading through them. We’d really talked about her and her spirit, and that felt beautiful in some way to be offered it off the basis of that.

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Christopher Saunders/FX.

    MF: How did you personally connect to the character of Darby?

    EC: I think her look, and I think what really helped inform me was exploring the younger Darby and the older Darby, and doing work on how those people are different. I think with any character, even if a younger version of them isn’t in the piece you’re doing, I think that it’s what you explore. How has what this person has been through, even if it’s not in the script or in the story, how has it informed who they are today? I think it was a real gift to be able to have that person scripted, have that youthful part of her scripted, and be able to talk to Brit and Zal about that. Obviously, it’s a unique upbringing. Her dad’s a coroner. She’s grown up on crime scenes. There was a lot to explore there.

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘A Murder at the End of the World’

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Lilja Jons/FX.

    MF: Finally, what was the most difficult aspect of shooting on location in Iceland?

    EC: Shooting in that environment is so challenging because it is freezing and I’m not good in cold temperatures. I have terrible circulation and it was really demanding. But also, I found that incredibly rewarding because you feel like you’re working hard, and you feel like you deserve your bed at the end of the day. You know that feeling? It was a beautiful place to shoot. Even if you were absolutely freezing and thought you were going to die of hypothermia, you looked around and it was just breathtaking. So, it was sort of a double-sided thing. I honestly found the shoot in New Jersey hard on the stages. It’s a really demanding series. I’m in every single frame. I think that’s one of the things that excited me when I read the script. But then in actuality it was insane, and amazing. I was so supported by an incredible cast and an incredible crew who were always there for me when it got hard. But they built this hotel in the stages, and I was rattling around there every day for about four or five months. I really felt like I was starting to get mad by the end of it.

    Harris Dickinson as Bill, Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Harris Dickinson as Bill, Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Eric Liebowitz/FX.

    What’s the Plot of ‘A Murder at the End of the World?

    ‘A Murder at the end of the World’ sees Gen Z amateur sleuth and tech-savvy hacker Darby Hart (Emma Corrin) and eight other guests invited by a reclusive billionaire (Clive Owen) to participate in a retreat at a remote and dazzling location.

    When one of the other guests is found dead, Darby must use all of her skills to prove it was murder against a tide of competing interests and before the killer takes another life. She’ll gave to deal with both the human element and the complicated technology that runs the facility.

    Who is in the Cast of ‘A Murder at the End of the World’?

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Alice Braga as Sian in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Alice Braga as Sian in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Eric Liebowitz/FX.

    Zal Batmanglij and Brit Marling Movies:

    Buy Emma Corrin Movies On Amazon

     

  • TV Review: ‘A Murder at the End of the World’

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Harris Dickinson as Bill in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Christopher Saunders/FX.

    Launching on FX on Hulu on November 14th with two episodes, ‘A Murder at the End of the World’ sees the much-anticipated return to TV of writer/directors Brit Marling and Zal Batmanglij, who last brought us the twisty, complicated series ‘The OA’ on Netflix.

    Their new series doesn’t dig into quite as strange themes, but there is plenty on the creators’ minds, exploring concepts of trust, technology, love and, as the title suggests, murder.

    ‘A Murder at the End of the World’: Overview

    Harris Dickinson as Bill and Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Harris Dickinson as Bill and Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    In their movie work, Batmanglij have always explored fascinating ideas, though sometimes concept has trumped character. There is some of that for sure in their new limited series, though at least it has the chance to come to a proper conclusion (unlike ‘The OA’, which Netflix cancelled before the story was fully told, leaving fans frustrated).

    Here, they’ve cooked up a chilly take on the likes of Poirot and even ‘True Detective’ (the flashback subplot featuring Emma Corrin‘s Darby and Harris Dickinson’s Bill on a mission to unmask a suburban serial killer feels very much in the latter’s gritty wheelhouse).

    It’s a solid piece of entertainment if you’re a fan of the mystery genre, though the intertwining stories don’t always mesh as well as they might (and the flashbacks are less watchable than the main plot, sometimes serving as distraction more than background).

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘The Fall of the House of Usher’

    ‘A Murder at the End of the World’: Script and Direction

    Harris Dickinson as Bill, Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Harris Dickinson as Bill, Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Eric Liebowitz/FX.

    The creative pair has long proved they know how to create compelling worlds, and ‘Murder’ is no exception.

    Utilizing voiceover and some of the other tropes of the mystery genre, the series cooks up a variety of potential suspects for Darby to investigate, all with their own motivations and interests, though they’re naturally not all as well drawn as she is.

    As a setting for the show, the high-tech, stylish hotel facility is both interesting visually and able to push the story forward, not least because the idea of surveillance and how the point of view can be shifted subconsciously is one that the series explores well.

    It must be said, though, despite the clearly decent budget, a few moments are very obviously greenscreen, such as when the cast are out and about in the freezing Icelandic wastes. A few shots are embarrassingly amateur for such a stylish series.

    How Are the Performances in ‘A Murder at the End of the World’?

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Alice Braga as Sian in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Emma Corrin as Darby Hart and Alice Braga as Sian in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Eric Liebowitz/FX.

    Corrin, of course, anchors every scene, but unlike ‘The Crown’ where she found the perfect tones and attitude as Princess Diana, her turn as Darby is held back somewhat by having to adopt the accent and mood of the hacker.

    Darby’s an awkward character, whose low key style and troubled past edge her into cliché, though she is at least an effective detective.

    It’s Clive Owen who shines more here, playing the mysterious tech maven Andy Ronson with shades of Elon Musk (though less annoying) who has plans to save the world from a climate crisis and has gathered a group of friends and experts to bear witness to some of his amazing new ideas.

    Owen brings plenty to the table as Ronson, peeling away his layers as the story moves on, and showing his troubled relationship with wife Lee (Marling). The actor/writer/director has given herself enough to chew on as Lee, who keeps her own secrets close but finds a kinship in Darby.

    And the third tentpole of the show is Harris Dickinson as Darby’s former partner/love Bill Farrah, who accompanies her on a murder mystery in the flashbacks and then shows up at the retreat after years of estrangement. Dickinson brings Bill to life with subtlety and weird charm even as the character erects big boundaries as an agitprop hacker-turned-Banksy type.

    Elsewhere, most of the other characters are treated like plot devices more than people, with only a few making a real impression, such as Joan Chen playing Lu Mei, a wealthy contemporary of Andy who designs smart cities and Edoardo Ballerini as Ray, the ever-present AI who controls the facility and acts as a very advanced version of Alexa.

    ‘A Murder at the End of the World’: Final Thoughts

    Harris Dickinson as Bill in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    Harris Dickinson as Bill in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    The new show won’t completely fill the void for those missing ‘The OA’, but ‘A Murder at the End of the World’ does at least represent Batmanglij and Marling given relatively free reign to indulge themselves. Though the storyline is a little more conventional, there are enough touches to make this work on different levels.

    If the ambition sometimes expands beyond their reach, the show still offers a tricky mystery to keep you guessing.

    ‘A Murder at the End of the World’ receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Chris Saunders/FX.

    What’s the story of ‘A Murder at the End of the World?

    ‘A Murder at the end of the World’ sees Gen Z amateur sleuth and tech-savvy hacker Darby Hart (Emma Corrin) and eight other guests invited by a reclusive billionaire (Clive Owen) to participate in a retreat at a remote and dazzling location.

    When one of the other guests is found dead, Darby must use all of her skills to prove it was murder against a tide of competing interests and before the killer takes another life. She’ll gave to deal with both the human element and the complicated technology that runs the facility.

    Who else is in ‘A Murder at the End of the World’?

    The show’s ensemble also includes Harris Dickinson, Brit Marling, Alice Braga, Joan Chen, Raúl Esparza, Jermaine Fowler, Ryan J. Haddad, Pegah Ferydoni, Javed Khan, Louis Cancelmi, Edoardo Ballerini, Britian Seibert, Christopher Gurr, Kellan Tetlow, Daniel Olson and Neal Huff.

    Harris Dickinson as Bill, Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in 'A Murder at the End of the World.'
    (L to R) Harris Dickinson as Bill, Emma Corrin as Darby Hart in ‘A Murder at the End of the World.’ Photo: Eric Liebowitz/FX.

    Zal Batmanglij and Brit Marling Movies:

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  • New ‘Gemini Man’ Trailer: Will Smith Faces Off Against His Younger Self in Assassin Duel

    New ‘Gemini Man’ Trailer: Will Smith Faces Off Against His Younger Self in Assassin Duel

    Paramount Pictures

    The only person who can beat Will Smith is … himself?

    A new trailer for “Gemini Man” reveals more of Ang Lee’s sci-fi thriller, which has Smith playing dual roles: an aging assassin hunting down his younger clone. The movie uses CGI to make the 50-year-old Smith look just like he did when he was 23.

    In the action-packed trailer, Smith confronts his younger self, who has been bred to be a killer by Clive Owen. And now this young assassin, dubbed Junior, is coming after the older, more experienced version. They’re soon battling it out, throwing punches, grenades, and even motorcycles at each other. Their cat-and-mouse game is complicated by the fact that they can predict each other’s moves.

    Unlike how they de-aged Samuel L. Jackson in “Captain Marvel,” a recent behind-the-scenes featurette revealed that the effects used in “Gemini Man” are different.

    “This is not de-aging. This is not face-replacement,” VFX supervisor Bill Westenhofer explained. “What you see for Junior is a completely digital creation, 100 percent driven by Will Smith’s performance capture.”

    “This technology is going to change how movies are made,” Smith said.

    “Gemini Man” also stars Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Benedict Wong, and opens in theaters October 11.

  • Daisy Ridley Is Warned to ‘Be Afraid’ in First ‘Ophelia’ Trailer

    Daisy Ridley Is Warned to ‘Be Afraid’ in First ‘Ophelia’ Trailer

    IFC Films

    What if “Hamlet” were told from the viewpoint of Ophelia? That’s the premise of “Ophelia,” starring Daisy Ridley (nearly unrecognizable in a long red wig) as the classic Shakespearean character.

    In the first trailer, we see her trying to get Hamlet (George MacKay) to flee the castle after his father’s murder, worrying that she’ll be forced to marry another, and then being dramatically dragged out of the court.

    Naomi Watts, who plays Hamlet’s mother, Queen Gertrude, has previously said that, although Ophelia goes stark-raving mad in the play, she’s far from a damsel in distress in this film. “If [a woman’s mind] is powerful, it must be madness. And now there’s this shift that’s taking place, and that’s reflected in this storytelling.”

    Claire McCarthy (“Skin”) directs this new adaptation, which costars Clive Owen as murderous Claudius and Tom Felton as Ophelia’s brother, Laertes.

    The trailer includes key scenes from any “Hamlet “production, including Ophelia in the water, the bloody aftermath of the final showdown, but with the focus on Ophelia, this film promises to be quite different.

    The opens in limited release on June 28, followed by a digital and On Demand release on July 3.

    [Via EW]

  • Joel Kinnaman Is Caught Between The Mob, The NYPD And The FBI In ‘The Informer’ Trailer

    Joel Kinnaman Is Caught Between The Mob, The NYPD And The FBI In ‘The Informer’ Trailer

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    After playing Robocop and “Suicide Squad”’s Rick Flagg, Joel Kinnaman finds himself on the other side of the law in “The Informer,” the new film from Andrea Di Stefano (“Escobar: Paradise Lost”).

    Aviron Pictures released the first trailer Friday from the upcoming thriller, which also stars Rosamund Pike (“A Private War”), Clive Owen (“Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets”), Ana de Armas (“Blade Runner 2049”) and Common (“The Hate U Give”). In the film, Kinnaman’s character Pete Koslow, a former Special Ops soldier, agrees to become an informant for the FBI in exchange for reduced prison time after getting into a violent altercation to protect his wife. But when the FBI sting he’s participating in results in the death of an undercover police officer, Koslow finds himself caught between the federal agents he’s working for, the mobsters he’s convinced he’s working with, and the cops who want to pin their colleague’s death on him.

    Check out the trailer below:

    Following his Hollywood breakthrough in “Robocop,” Kinnaman has quickly become one of the industry’s most versatile performers, shuffling between film and TV projects such as “House of Cards,” “Knight of Cups,” “Altered Carbon,” and the upcoming series “Hanna,” based on the 2011 film starring Saoirse Ronan.

    The film was adapted from Borge Hallstrom and Anders Roslund’s novel of the same name by Matt Cook, who previously wrote “Triple 9” and “Patriots Day.” “The Informer” opens in theaters nationwide March 22, 2019.

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

    Cara Delevingne from Valerian
    Cara Delevingne from Valerian

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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