Tag: daniel-kaluuya

  • ‘Queen & Slim’ Trailer Turn Daniel Kaluuya, Jodie Turner-Smith Into Black Bonnie & Clyde

    ‘Queen & Slim’ Trailer Turn Daniel Kaluuya, Jodie Turner-Smith Into Black Bonnie & Clyde

    Universal

    It’s ride or die for Daniel Kaluuya and newcomer Jodie Turner-Smith in the trailer for “Queen & Slim.”

    Kaluuya and Turner-Smith play a budding couple, whose first dates goes tragically awry after a run-in with a police officer. When he kills the cop in self-defense, the couple goes on the run. They become a viral sensation, with one person dubbing them the “black Bonnie and Clyde.”

    As they flee, these two unlikely fugitives will discover themselves and each other in the most dire and desperate of circumstances, and will forge a deep and powerful love.

    The movie comes from the pen of Emmy-winning screenwriter Lena Waithe (“Master of None,” “The Chi”) and first-time feature film director Melina Matsoukas (who directed Beyonce’s “Formation” music video).

    “Queen and Slim” opens in theaters November 27.

  • Daniel Kaluuya and Lakeith Stanfield to Star in Black Panther Movie ‘Jesus Was My Homeboy’

    Daniel Kaluuya and Lakeith Stanfield to Star in Black Panther Movie ‘Jesus Was My Homeboy’

    Universal/Annapurna

    Daniel Kaluuya and Lakeith Stanfield (who shared the screen in “Get Out‘) are in negotiations to star in the historical drama “Jesus Was My Homeboy” about Black Panther Party leader Fred Hampton.

    Ryan Coogler is producing, but not directing. (Kaluuya was also in Coogler’s “Black Panther,” of course, about the Marvel superhero, not the political party.)

    Shaka King will direct and produce from a script he wrote with Will Berson. It will focus on the infamous 1969 death of Hampton, who was shot and killed in his own apartment during a police and FBI raid. His death was ruled a justifiable homicide, but a civil lawsuit resulted in a $1.85 million settlement in 1982.

    Kaluuya is in talks to play Hampton and Stanfield would play William O’Neal, an FBI informant who later committed suicide.

    The two actors shared a pivotal scene in Jordan Peele’s hit horror movie in which Stanfield’s semi-catatonic character warns Kaluuya’s to “Get out!”

    Last year, Kaluuya played a brutal crime boss in “Widows,” and Stanfield was a telemarketer in Boots Riley’s “Sorry to Bother You.”

    [Via Variety]

  • ‘Widows’ Review: Director Steve McQueen and Viola Davis Deliver One Hell of a Heist Movie

    ‘Widows’ Review: Director Steve McQueen and Viola Davis Deliver One Hell of a Heist Movie

    Fox Searchlight

    Heist movies are often compelling because of their mechanics — the thrill (and spectacle) of watching crooks dismantle a system, outsmart the law and escape with their lives, and bounty, intact. Steve McQueen’sWidows” offers a lot of superficial window dressing to make his heist unique — the fact that the would-be perpetrators are the wives of “real” thieves — but what’s compelling, even riveting, about his film is not how they are pulling it off, but why.

    Bolstered by an impressive ensemble including Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Elizabeth Debicki, Cynthia Erivo, Colin Farrell, Daniel Kaluuya, and Liam Neeson, “Widows” brings to irresistible life the determination, and desperation, of four women struggling to control their own fate within a system built upon, and preoccupied by, its own greed, corruption, and indifference.

    Davis (“Fences”) plays Veronica Rawlins, a Chicago teacher’s union delegate whose life is thrown into disarray after her husband, Harry (Neeson), dies during a botched robbery — one he staged with his colleagues Carlos (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo), Florek (Jon Bernthal), and Coburn (Jimmy Goss). Before she can begin to grieve, local crime boss Jamal Manning (Brian Tyree Henry) contacts her, demanding the money that Harry took, which he hopes will cushion his campaign for South Side alderman against incumbent Jack Mulligan (Farrell). But after retrieving Harry’s notebook, which contains the plans for his failed robbery, Veronica reaches out to the wives of his former partners — Linda (Rodriguez), Alice (Debicki), and Amanda (Carrie Coon) — enlisting them to complete the job and pay off Jamal.

    Twentieth Century Fox.

    Though initially reluctant to participate, Linda and Alice quickly discover an aptitude for the kind of reconnaissance and deception needed to mount a robbery, while Veronica canvasses Mulligan, a friend of Harry’s, for help. But even as everything finally seems to come together— hiring Belle, a resourceful babysitter, as driver after Veronica’s trusted chauffeur, Bash (Garret Dillahunt), suffers an attack at the hands of Jamal’s cold-blooded brother Jatemme (Kaluuya) — the details of the heist, and the motives of the players involved, force them to confront new and uncomfortable elements of their individual pasts. They do so even as time rapidly approaches to launch a desperate plan intended to protect their collective futures.

    Adapted with Gillian Flynn (“Gone Girl”) from a British miniseries of the same name, McQueen condenses what was originally six hours of BBC television into a very dense 129 minutes, though you’re unlikely to feel that there’s anything missing. They not only conjure extraordinarily vivid portraits of all of the characters involved — women and men, bad and good — but provide a rich and detailed world that gave birth to or shaped their identities. Set in Chicago against the backdrop of one of its poverty-stricken boroughs, there’s automatically a divide between the haves and have-nots, but McQueen turns that dialectic into a pathology, and a commentary on the dynamic that continues to metastasize in contemporary American society.

    Veronica lives comfortably in an apartment provided by Harry’s extracurricular exploits. But, after his death, she is left with nothing; none of it is in her name, and she is immediately reminded of her powerlessness by Jamal, who dreams of finding a legitimate role in his community but backslides into the criminality that made it financially possible for him to aspire to something greater. The always beautiful and obedient Linda was raised in an atmosphere of domestic violence, but soon discovers that there’s power in people underestimating her. And Belle, literally running from one job to the next, stumbles across the moneymaking opportunity of a lifetime — the one for which she’s inadvertently been preparing her whole adult life.

    Davis brings polished, flinty resolve to Veronica’s plight, concealing her grief behind immaculate presentation of her clothes and lifestyle to the world, not to mention a fluffy little dog that accompanies her everywhere. McQueen lets her be sexy, vulnerable, tough and unlikeable, often simultaneously, and you can feel Davis’ already-sophisticated faculties as an actress flexing with a freedom she hasn’t experienced before.

    20th Century Fox

    Debicki seems to deliver one “star-making” performance after another, but here she transforms in a really profound way that isn’t merely a byproduct of playing a women who chooses not to be a victim. She literally towers over her co-stars (she’s 6’3”), but she carries a feverish, improvisational energy and commands the screen with utter believability. Erivo is another standout as Belle, tougher and more fearless than any of the women to whom she’s meant to prove herself.

    But Kaluuya creates a singular sort of menace felt even when he’s not on screen as Jatemme, a person indoctrinated to not feel and not care about anything except his own needs and goals — and his brother’s. He is willing to stop at nothing, and do anything, to accomplish them.

    McQueen’s movies have long since explored the deeper roots of what makes us work — and not work — as a society, which may be why the film’s central robbery feels like sleight of hand. By the time it goes down, we care more about the characters at the center of this story and how they will survive than whether the machinery of their plans comes easily together. Working with longtime cinematographer Sean Bobbitt, McQueen delivers the visceral thrills of criminality, but always injects them with the greater cultural and emotional dimensions of people in a world where it feels necessary, or justified.

    Ultimately, McQueen’s latest certainly joins the ranks of films like “Heat” and “The Usual Suspects” in terms of its intelligence, intensity and complexity, but its goals are different than most heist movies, as is its success. As the best entries in the subgenre tend to build to some sort of climactic showdown and a quick getaway, “Widows” lingers in the messy, relatable humanity of the perpetrators, it cares why they are committing their crimes, and it examines what it means — not just financially, but emotionally — if they succeed.

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  • Six Things You Need to Know Before You See Marvel’s ‘Black Panther’

    Marvel Studios kicks off the new year in a big way with the release of “Black Panther.”

    Directed by Ryan Coogler and featuring Chadwick Boseman as the titular superhero king, “Black Panther” is easily one of the most anticipated superhero movies yet. But before you order your tickets, here are six things you need to know about the latest entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

    1. It Picks Up Where ‘Captain America: Civil War’ Left Off
    Marvel Studios' BLACK PANTHER T'Challa/Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman)  Credit: Matt Kennedy/©Marvel Studios 2018We highly recommend that you watch the most recent “Captain America” movie before sitting down to screen “Black Panther.” This new film is a direct offshoot of that one in many ways. “Civil War” introduced viewers to Chadwick Boseman’s T’Challa and established his struggle as a man suddenly thrust into monarchy while seeking revenge for the murder of his father.

    “Civil War” also introduced moviegoers to Martin Freeman‘s Everett K. Ross, a character who will play a crucial role in “Black Panther.” Where before Ross was a CIA agent helping to enforce the fledgling Superhuman Registration Act, now he’s acting as a liaison of sorts between the US and the secretive nation of Wakanda.

    2. Wakanda Is Kind of a Big DealMCU fans first heard mention of Wakanda in 2015’s “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” as plunderer extraordinaire Ulysses Klaue (Andy Serkis) recounted the story of how he lost an arm there after being caught smuggling vibranium out of the country (naturally).

    “Black Panther” is the first time in the MCU where we’ll actually spend some legit time there (more than the few seconds in the “Civil War” end credits sting.) Wakanda’s emergence is going to be a very big deal in the MCU, as the outside world comes to grips with the fact that a highly advanced society has been hiding in plain sight — in the heart of Africa — for centuries. T’Challa’s greatest challenge as king will be in deciding how to guide his homeland into an uncertain future where isolationism is no longer an option.

    3. T’Challa’s Fighting on More Than One Front
    Don’t expect “Black Panther” to completely follow the traditional superhero movie formula. Panther is a king first and a superhero second, and his struggles tend to reflect that fact.

    As our hero deals with bringing his country to the world stage, he’ll face a great deal of political unrest within his homeland. Not everyone is happy about the prospect of being led by this young, unproven monarch. But any good king has friends and advisors to rely upon, and T’Challa is no exception. The film will introduce several new allies for Black Panther, including his sister, Shuri (Letitia Wright), his stepmother, Ramonda (Angela Bassett), close friend W’Kabi (Daniel Kaluuya), and advisor Zuri (Forest Whitaker).

    T’Challa will also call upon the skills of his elite bodyguards, the Dora Milaje (think Wakanda’s version of an all-female Seal Team Six), a group that includes Nakia (Lupita Nyong’o) and Okoye (Danai Gurira).

    4. Get Ready for Lots of Punching
    It’s just as well T’Challa has so many allies in this film, because he’s got a list of enemies long enough to fill out an entire Avengers movie.

    His chief nemesis is Erik Killmonger (Michael B. Jordan), a Wakandan exile and mercenary with designs on the throne. The trailers make it clear that Killmonger will eventually gain possession of his own Black Panther suit and test his might against T’Challa.

    Killmonger will be aided by Klaue, who hasn’t lost his thirst for Wakanda’s valuable vibranium stockpile. The trailers also make it clear that Klaue has received a few upgrades of his own, replacing his severed hand with a sonic weapon that will make fans of the character in the comics giddy.Finally, T’Challa will face a another challenger to the throne in the form of M’Baku (Winston Duke), the leader of a rival mountain tribe called the Jabari.

    5. There’s Some Mysticism Going on Here, Too
    Not only is Black Panther a more politically-driven character than most of Marvel’s heroes, he also has a strong spiritual side.

    Wakandan culture worships the panther god Bast, and one of the gifts of the Black Panther is their ability to enter the spiritual realm and directly commune with both their ancestors and Bast herself. Expect that side of the character to be explored in the new movie, as we learn that Black Panther’s power — as well as Wakanda itself — is as much spiritual as it is technological. (While visiting the film’s set, we saw some interesting concept art depicting the above plain — or rather, a more astrological version of it — with the land replaced by what looked like an eye’s iris and pupil, one laid out flat and stretching across the horizon line. Take that, “Doctor Strange.”)

    6. Black Panther Will Return
    Which is a good thing, and a no-brainer, considering that the film has sold more advanced tickets than any other Marvel movie.

    Boseman has signed a five-picture contract with Marvel Studios, and you’d better believe they’re going to make the most of it. Boseman will reprise his role three months later in “Avengers: Infinity War,” as Wakanda becomes a ground zero of sorts for Thanos’ invasion of Earth. Fans have speculated that Wakanda may be home to the Soul Stone, the sixth and final Infinity Stone (and the only one that has yet to be featured in the MCU).

    So don’t be surprised to see at least one post-credits sequence setting the stage for “Infinity War.”We also expect Marvel to leave the door wide open for more “Black Panther” sequels. Based on ticket pre-sales, the film is expected to become one of the highest-grossing Marvel movies yet.

  • Oscars 2018 Nominations: Jordan Peele ‘Ugly Cried’ Over ‘Get Out’ Nods

    Actor-writer-director-producer Jordan Peele had a very good morning: His feature debut flick, “Get Out,” scored an impressive four Oscar nominations on Tuesday, earning accolades for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, and Best Original Screenplay. And all of that recognition made Peele understandably emotional.

    Peele took to Twitter to share his reaction to the nominations announcement, at first simply letting an indelible image from his movie do the talking. The director later added that he was in “the opposite of the Sunken Place,” another nod to “Get Out.”

    Noting that he had spoken to star Daniel Kaluuya, who was nominated for Best Actor (and also on the receiving end of some creative name mangling, courtesy of Tiffany Haddish), Peele revealed that all of the Oscars love had made him “ugly cry.” And of course, the fans’ support of the flick wasn’t lost on the director, who in another tweet thanked “everyone who bought a ticket and told someone else to,” crediting them with the film’s success.

    It’s wonderful to see someone like Peele, known primarily for his work in television and comedy (shout-out to the late, great Comedy Central sketch series “Key & Peele”), succeed on Hollywood’s biggest stage, and he should enjoy every last bit of his well-deserved success. And as his wife and fellow comedian Chelsea Peretti pointed out on Twitter, the family had yet another reason to celebrate on Tuesday.

    Now that’s an impressive feat.

    [via: Jordan Peele/Twitter]

  • How ‘Get Out’ Helped Allison Williams Get Marnie Out of Her Mind

    2017 MTV Movie And TV Awards - Press RoomWhen HBO’s zeitgeist-shifting series “Girls” concluded last month after six seasons, star Allison Williams might have fretted about being pigeonholed in roles in the vein of the show’s Marnie Michaels.

    But Williams didn’t need to worry, having already preemptively “flipped the script” on any typecasting with her performance in “Get Out,” the low-budget thriller from writer-director Jordan Peele that deftly blended the horror genre with some trenchant cultural commentary on race and sex and went on to become one of the highest-grossing and best reviewed films of the year.

    With “Get Out” arriving on home video (out now), Williams connected with Moviefone for a deep dive into both the creative and career-minded choices she navigated while making the film, and her hopes that her future projects spark as much conversational back-and-forth as her previous gigs.

    Moviefone: How cool is it to have made a really scary horror movie that also says something really interesting? How rare is that opportunity?

    Allison Williams: Really, really rare. I feel really lucky to be part of it. I’m just glad it exists. I feel really psyched that I get to be part of it, to put it lightly.

    When the material came your way, what did you see in it instantly, and what gave you the confidence that it was going to work? This is a tricky thing to pull off.

    To address the second point first, Jordan Peele gave me all the confidence in the world. First of all, his reputation as a comedic genius, and as a mirror of cultural phenomenon preceded him, so when I talked to him about the script I knew I was in for something interesting. Especially after I’d been warned by my agent that it wasn’t a comedy, I was doubly intrigued.

    Aside from trusting Jordan completely, it was, on its face, a risk, because he, while brilliant and while having had a lot of experience with “Key & Peele,” was technically a first-time writer/director with this feature. It’s very, very independent, as most Blumhouse movies are.

    And it was nearly impossible to describe — and I know that because I tried describing it to everyone in my life who had been waiting for me to do my first movie, and then when I said “I got it, this is the one, it’s amazing,” they were like, great, what’s it about and who are you playing?” I didn’t want to spoil it, so I just basically said, “It’s ‘Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner‘ meets ‘Rosemary’s Baby,’” and they would kind of look at me quizzically.

    And then when they asked about my character, I described the Rose that we see in the first half of the movie. I know that they were thinking, “Wow, it’s weird. You talk so much about wanting to play someone different from Marnie, and by the description of it, she doesn’t sound all that different.” But I just didn’t want to spoil anything for them.

    So it was one of those things where it was great on the page, and it was a great experience shooting it, and then the first time I saw it all cut together nearly finished, I just breathed a sigh of relief where I thought, “Oh my gosh, this is so good!” I just thought it was good. The performances that Jordan got out of the actors — Daniel Kaluuya is breathtaking in it, I think, and all of the actors are really, really good. I just feel lucky to have been working with them.

    In terms of knowing that it was the the one and choosing it, but I get asked this question a lot and the answer’s always the same, which is that, when I look at a script or a project, I ask myself a series of three questions. “Why this? Why now? Why me?” Basically the “why this” is explainable by the quality of the script, and the subject matter, and the tone, and Jordan, etc. The “why now” felt very obvious because it was exactly the right moment for this movie. I really wished it could come out more quickly. And the “why me” was basically that Rose fascinated me, and she needed to be the whitest of white, and very willing and able to step up to the plate in that regard.

    Funny enough, Jordan needed someone he thought the audience would trust immediately, and I needed a part that would flip the Marnie that people seem to find difficult to extricate from me, on its head. So we both got exactly what we needed out of me playing this role. So it was really a confluence of wonderful things, and I felt really, really lucky. Even though, playing her at times was incredibly unpleasant, the overall experience was one of the best I’ve ever had.

    There’s a scene I love in which, on camera, you’re absolutely emotionless, and yet your voice on the phone is filled with a gamut of emotions in that scene. That’s such a tricky technical acting thing to pull off. Tell me a little bit about that particular sequence.

    Yeah, it’s funny. So that conversation, initially, we had thought about it — or at least I had thought about it — that Rose would be in character immediately before and immediately after the phone call. You see her kind of out of character, so to speak. Then Jordan said, “I’m picturing it in a new way, where your voice is Rose’s, but your demeanor is just completely flat and dead, and that would be really creepy if you would pull it off.” And he told me that a couple hours, maybe an hour, before we shot it.

    So I was kind of like, “I don’t know if I can do that, but let me see. Worst case scenario, we can shoot it that way, and if it doesn’t ring true, I can just do it in ADR.” Then I went into my trailer, and I practiced a few times in the mirror. And then, I brought Jordan in and I did it with him, and he got really giggly and excited so I took that as a good sign. He has a real giggle, and it makes me very happy, but it was basically the way he told us when something was crazy in a way that delighted him.

    So I felt like I’d achieved it, but it felt a lot like sort of patting your head and rubbing your stomach. This is a weird comparison, but I felt a little bit like a parrot, because I’ve always been so creeped out by parrots that can talk. They don’t emote, obviously, but their voices mimic the inflection of the people around them. So their voices actually have a lot of emotion, but it’s just a parrot. So it was a little weird, but I was happy with how it came out.

    You’ve done Q&As for the film, you’ve had conversations with friends who have seen the movie — tell me about those conversations that the movie sparked, and what’s been intriguing and fascinating for you to hear what people said about the film’s themes.

    Oh my gosh, there have been so many! I’ll tell you something that I heard last night. A friend of mind texted me and said, “I just watched the movie for the third time, and I’m with my family, which is half Puerto Rican and half Italian, and I just want you to know that now we’re all having a big conversation about race in the U.S. and about our cultural background thanks to the movie.” That was the text I got last night.

    I have heard from people that learned a lot about how little time they’ve spent looking at the world from any other point of view, what it would be like to be the minority at a party. It’s not something that a lot of people experience — a lot of white people, I mean. So the experience of seeing the movie through Chris’s eyes, and actually maybe thinking for the first time what that would be like, and gravitating towards the only other black guy at the party, only to find that he is, as you later find out, also a white guy. It’s so isolating.

    That’s where Jordan’s writing and Daniel’s performance really shone through, because it broke through and created this empathic experience for audiences that, in lesser hands, might not have happened as well as it did. So the reactions have been pretty amazing. People I never would have expected to see it. Long emails from my mother-in-law about things she discovered the second time she saw it in a theater, things that she picked up on. All kinds of stuff.

    Every once in a while, I’ll get a text from someone that just has thought of something for the first time since they saw it. Like a friend of mine I was talking to recently, he was like, “I realized around a month later that that was an auction.” I was like, “You must have been just really overwhelmed by everything if that didn’t occur to you!” But it’s funny to me how it hits different people in different ways, and in waves, and that’s kind of the greatest testament to the movie.

    There are so many movies we see, and then they end, and that’s kind of the end of our relationship with them. But it’s the rare movie that sticks with you, and begs a second viewing, that you end up actually thinking about longer.

    I listen to a ton of podcasts — just this last week I was listening to one called “The Read,” which I love, and they were describing something as like an Armitage party. I knew exactly what they meant, from the shorthand, and they’ve also used the phrase The Sunken Place a lot. So that, when the phraseology from the movie seeps into the lexicon, that’s a real win. That’s really exciting. That kind of means that “Get Out” has been added to a library of things that, I’m hoping, will stick around for a while.

    You mentioned flipping the script on your Marnie image in the kind of performance you gave here. One thing that this movie and “Girls” have in common is some real cultural meat to chew on. Is that what you are going to keep looking for in the projects, whether it’s film or television?

    Definitely. The cultural reception of it is really hard to predict or have any element of control over. The way I look at it from my vantage point is, by asking the “why now?” and the “why this?” question, will kind of, ideally, always keep me looking at things that in some way, even indirectly, address whatever is happening in a given moment.

    That can be done by looking backwards or looking forward. “The Handmaid’s Tale” is a really good example of something that was written a long time ago and is set in the future, but seems to be addressing a lot of anxiety that’s happening right now.

    So there’s an electricity to it that feels vital, and I look at what I want to do next, and I think if those intentions are executed well, it does have the potential of something like “Girls” and “Get Out” where it becomes a topic of think pieces and articles and people dissecting it and being taken seriously as art, because I think the act of continuing thought, and thinking about it on a daily basis, and talking about it, doesn’t feel fruitless and random, it feels like it’s connected to the things that you’re dealing with and interacting with on a regular basis.

    Of course there’s still plenty of entertainment for all of many, many people who wants to use those two hours at the movies to check out, and to not think about the anxieties of the world, or, say, on a Monday night, check out and watch Rachel Lindsay’s quest for love on “The Bachelorette.” That is an impulse that is still well catered to.

    But for the time being, I want to get back into and deal with something that’s confronting what’s happening inside your heart and in your core, I’m very proud to have been part of something that addressed that for women in a lot of ways, which was “Girls,” and sexuality and race with “Get Out.”

  • ‘Black Panther’ Cast Does the ‘Get Out’ Challenge

    When the cast of “Black Panther” includes “Get Out” star Daniel Kaluuya, you know his co-stars are going to have some fun with his role in the hit horror film.

    Lupita Nyong’o shared an Instagram video from the “Black Panther” set, where the cast runs towards the camera a la Marcus Henderson‘s now-famous run in “Get Out.”

    “The Ultimate #getoutchallenge is when #danielkaluuya is down to play” Nyong’o wrote.

    In the short clip, Kaluuya looks up from his phone to see the entire cast running towards him before the camera falls to the ground. “F– this,” he says before walking away.

    The cast of “Black Panther” includes Chadwick Boseman, Michael B. Jordan, “The Walking Dead’s” Danai Gurira, and “This Is Us” star Sterling K. Brown. The movie opens February 16, 2018.

    [Via EW]