Tag: cooper-koch

  • Cooper Hoffman and Ike Barinholtz Join ‘Artificial’

    Preview:

    • Cooper Hoffman and Ike Barinholtz are aboard ‘Artificial’.
    • It’s ‘Challengers’ and ‘After the Hunt’ director Luca Guadagnino’s next movie.
    • Andrew Garfield, Cooper Koch and Yura Borisov are also in the cast.

    Luca Guadagnino is one of those directors who can always attract solid talent, and often seems to work with rising stars.

    For his latest, ‘Artificial’, the filmmaker already has quite the crop either locked down or circling –– Andrew Garfield, Monica Barbaro, Jason Schwartzman Cooper Koch and ‘Anora’ breakout Yura Borisov among them.

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    The latest to enter talks? ‘Licorice Pizza’s Cooper Hoffman, and ‘The Studio’s Ike Barinholtz.

    Related Article: Andrew Garfield & Monica Barbaro Circling Luca Guadagnino’s ‘Artificial’

    What’s the story of ‘Artificial’?

    Andrew Garfield in 'We Live in Time'. Photo: StudioCanal.
    Andrew Garfield in ‘We Live in Time’. Photo: StudioCanal.

    Nothing has been official released yet, but Guadagnino reportedly considered several scripts before landing on Simon Rich’s (‘An American Pickle’) about the wild true story surrounding OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.

    He co-founded OpenAI, but in the fall of 2023, after mounting safety concerns regarding AI, and reports of abusive behavior, was ousted as the head of the company by his board.

    Five days later, after a revolt, he was reinstated in a story reminiscent of the return of Steve Jobs to Apple.

    If all goes as planned, Garfield will play Altman, Barbaro will be chief technology officer Mira Murati, and Borisov has the role of Ilya Sutskever, a co-founder who led the movement to get rid of Altman.

    We don’t yet know who Hoffman or Koch will be, but Barinholtz is in talks to be Elon Musk, who… well, does he really need an introduction these days after the last few months. At least it’s a good casting choice: Barinholtz is good at playing smug weirdos.

    Along with Garfield, the new project marks a reunion for Guadagnino and Amazon, having made ‘After the Hunt’ and last year’s sizzling tennis drama ‘Challengers’ for the company.

    What else is Luca Guadagnino working on?

    Director Luca Guadagnino attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Amazon MGM Studios’ 'Challengers' at Regency Village Theatre on April 16, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Amazon MGM Studios.
    Director Luca Guadagnino attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Amazon MGM Studios’ ‘Challengers’ at Regency Village Theatre on April 16, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Amazon MGM Studios.

    As talked about above, the director had been busy developing ‘Sgt. Rock,’ which adapts the DC Comics character for the big screen. Daniel Craig reportedly considered the lead, but Guadagnino was locking in on Colin Farrell to star.

    Yet weather conditions have reportedly stymied the production, and the aim is to have it rolling cameras next year –– though not with Guadagnino aboard.

    Beyond that, he has a variety of other potential movies waiting in the wings, including a new adaptation of ‘American Psycho’ and romantic drama ‘Separate Rooms.’

    When will ‘Artificial’ be in theaters?

    Though ‘Artificial’ is clearly coming together fairly quickly, Amazon MGM Studios has yet to hand out a release date for the movie.

    Guadagnino’s latest, the aforementioned ‘After The Hunt,’ which stars Garfield alongside Julia Roberts and Chloë Sevigny, is scheduled to arrive in theaters on October 17th, signaling a potential awards contender.

    Director Luca Guadagnino on the set of 'Challengers', a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Niko Tavernise / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures. © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Director Luca Guadagnino on the set of ‘Challengers’, a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Niko Tavernise / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures. © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Luca Guadagnino Movies:

    Buy Luca Guadagnino Movies on Amazon

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  • Kevin Bacon and Carrie Preston Talk Peacock’s ‘They/Them’

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    Premiering on Peacock beginning August 5th is the new slasher film ‘They/Them’ from Blumhouse Productions and writer/director John Logan (‘Gladiator’).

    The movie stars Kevin Bacon (‘Friday the 13th,’ ‘Footloose’) as Owen Whistler, the owner of a gay conversion camp. When a new group of LGBTQ kids unwillingly arrive at the camp, they soon discover that there is a mysterious masked killer murdering members of the camp.

    In addition to Bacon, the cast also includes Carrie Preston, Anna Chlumsky, Theo Germaine, Quei Tann, Anna Lore, Monique Kim, Darwin del Fabro, Cooper Koch, and Austin Crute.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Kevin Bacon and Carrie Preston about their work on ‘They/Them,’ the film’s characters, working with the young actors, the important message of the movie, and comparisons to ‘Friday the 13th.’

    Kevin Bacon in 'They/Them.'
    Kevin Bacon in ‘They/Them.’ Photo by: Josh Stringer/Blumhouse. Copyright © 2022 Blumhouse Productions, LLC All.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Kevin Bacon, Carrie Preston, Theo Germaine, Austin Crute, Cooper Koch, Darwin Del Fabro, Monique Kim, Anna Lore, producer Scott Turner Schofield, and writer/director John Logan.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Kevin is it nice to be in a movie that is both entertaining and also says something important about the world we live in?

    Kevin Bacon: Yeah. I mean, that’s exactly what my first reaction was. I love horror. I’ve done horror. But now you have a movie that is in an accessible, presented and structured, by a very mainstream director who has had tremendous public appeal as a writer and director, and yet has a very interesting way in on a message about something that is actually truly horrible in society. It’s way more horrible than someone in a mask running around stabbing people.

    MF: Carrie, can talk about your approach to playing this character and her devotion to her husband and his ideals?

    Carrie Preston: It is an interesting woman that would want to be with someone whose family has had this camp for forever, where horrible things have been happening to young people. So, there’s got to be something going on in her that is askew to put it mildly. I always try to figure out the positive thing to play because you don’t want to play evil, right?

    So, why is she doing what she’s doing? She really feels like she’s saving these young kids from a life of adversity, and she thinks that she’s going to save them. It is a very manipulative way to do it, but I think that’s what she is getting out of it. She thinks of them as her own children. They don’t have kids, so these kids are theirs.

    Darwin del Fabro as Gabriel, Austin Crute as Toby, and Cooper Koch as Stu in Peacock's 'They/Them.'
    (L to R) Darwin del Fabro as Gabriel, Austin Crute as Toby, and Cooper Koch as Stu in Peacock’s ‘They/Them.’

    MF: Kevin, because of the genre and location, ‘They/Them’ has been compared to ‘Friday the 13th,’ which you were also in. Did making this movie bring back any memories for you of when you made the first ‘Friday the 13th?’

    KB: You mean nightmares? Listen, ‘Friday the 13th,’ I was a kid and it was a tiny little budgeted movie. I was trying to do theater. Basically, I made a couple of bucks in order to pay my rent and in my apartment on the upper west side. So, the fact that it ended up becoming what it was, it’s not like I went into that movie going, “I want to be part of a classic horror film.”

    That had nothing. It was a gig, and this is a totally different kind of experience. This is a great filmmaker that we are all working with and an amazing cast of young people, and people like Carrie with a tremendous amount of experience, and it’s very different. I didn’t flash on ‘Friday the 13th.’ But I guess it’s inevitable, right?

    MF: Finally, Carrie what was your experience like working with the young actors on the film?

    CP: They have so much life, and by the time I came to meet them, they had already been hanging out together. They were all staying in the same hotel. They had their own little pod, they were bonded, and it was infectious to be around that kind of energy. It made me want to be a part of it. I would stand around outside of their trailers like, “Hey guys, what’s going on?” Because I just wanted to be around them.

    I find them all incredibly talented, fascinating, and cool people. They can live from a place of truth. When I was being trained as an actor we were sort of being told don’t. Don’t share the truth about yourself and it’s the complete opposite now. So, we have really grown, and we have a lot more growing to do, but it’s really exciting for me to see that.

    Kevin Bacon and Carrie Preston in Peacock's 'They/Them.
    (L to R) Kevin Bacon and Carrie Preston in Peacock’s ‘They/Them.
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