Tag: deadwood

  • ‘Deadwood’ Forever: Other Great Performances By The HBO Series’ Cast Members

    ‘Deadwood’ Forever: Other Great Performances By The HBO Series’ Cast Members

    HBO

    Today HBO’s acclaimed series “Deadwood” comes at long last to an end with a two-hour film reuniting its colorful characters one last time. At the time of its premiere 14 years ago, many of its leads were hard-working character actors hoping for a breakout role, while others were longtime performers looking for a comeback. Creator and showrunner David Milch gave each of them unforgettable calling cards that exploded and expanded their careers, opening doors on television shows and movies alike. To commemorate the series’ overdue conclusion, Moviefone scoured the filmographies of the show’s incredible cast for some of the incredible work they did before, during and especially after appearing on one of the most groundbreaking, mesmerizing television shows ever.

    Lionsgate

    Ian McShane – “Sexy Beast” (2000), “John Wick” (2014)

    It’s hard to believe that the would-be star of “Deadwood” went 13 years (from 1987 to 2000) without a film credit given his mesmerizing screen presence, but McShane’s comeback feels especially appropriate: in Jonathan Glazer’s “Sexy Beast,” he plays a stoic mob boss who does and says almost nothing, and still manages to be absolutely terrifying. He’d later provide echoes of both that role and his “Deadwood” turn as Continental manager Winston in the action-packed “John Wick” franchise.

    20th Century Fox

    Timothy Olyphant – “The Girl Next Door” (2004), “Justified” (2010)

    When “Deadwood” was cancelled after its third season, Olyphant moved on to a familiar, equally memorable challenge with the acclaimed television series “Justified,” where he again played a rigid lawman. But immediately before starting on Milch’s show, he stole Luke Greenfield’s “Risky Business” riff “The Girl Next Door” as a calculating, charismatic pimp who throws a wrench into the plans of an overachieving high school senior.

    Netflix

    Molly Parker – “The Center of the World” (2001)

    Molly Parker has, for most of her career, been a bit of an indie darling, so it comes as no surprise that years before joining Milch’s show, she already transfixed audiences in Wayne Wang’s idiosyncratic drama about a Vegas stripper who confounds a dot-com millionaire who hires her to spend the weekend with him.

    Showtime

    Paula Malcolmson – “The Hunger Games” (2012), “Ray Donovan” (2013)

    Like many of the show’s stars, Malcolmson went on to appear in a number of high profile television series, including “Ray Donovan,” where she has a starring role opposite Liev Schreiber. But prior to that, she signed on for a choice gig as Katniss Everdeen’s troubled mother in the “Hunger Games” franchise.

    Roadside Attractions

    John Hawkes – “Winter’s Bone” (2010), “Martha Marcy May Marlene” (2011)

    Few actors even on this show have the versatility of the great John Hawkes, who went on to play a terrifying meth addict opposite Jennifer Lawrence in Debra Granik’s “Winter’s Bone,” and followed up that performance with another one as a charismatic, mysterious cult leader in Sean Durkin’s “Martha Marcy May Marlene.”

    Momentum Pictures

    Dayton Callie – “Abattoir” (2016)

    Callie has long been one of Milch’s repertory players, popping up over and over again in his various television projects. But in Darren Lynn Bousman and Chris Monfette’s “Abattoir,” he plays the mysterious caretaker of a house built out of rooms where terrible things happened, and he effortlessly conveys the menace and gravitas of that responsibility.

    Warner Bros.

    Brad Dourif – “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” (1975), “Child’s Play” (1988)

    Dourif’s Doc Cochran was often the heart of Milch’s series, which may come as a surprise to fans of his earlier work, which includes his breakthrough turn as a delicate mental patient opposite Jack Nicholson in Milos Forman’s 1975 Oscar winner, as well as the voice of iconic movie monster Chucky in the “Child’s Play” films.

    Radius-TWC

    Robin Weigert – “The Good German” (2006), “Synecdoche, New York” (2008), “Concussion” (2010)

    Weigert’s Calamity Jane stole many scenes — and hearts — over the series’ three seasons, and she has quietly done the same in a number of acclaimed movies, disappearing into roles in Steven Soderbergh’s exercise in period filmmaking “The Good German,” Charlie Kaufman’s melancholy mind-bender “Synecdoche” before breaking out again in the lesbian drama “Concussion.”

    20th Century Fox

    W. Earl Brown – “There’s Something About Mary” (1998) 

    As Al Swearengen’s Number Two, Dan, Brown was forced to tackle some tough challenges, but he’d already proven himself more than capable in a variety of movie and TV roles, perhaps most notably playing Warren, the disabled brother of Cameron Diaz’ Mary in the Farrelly brothers’ raunchy but as always surprisingly sweet 1998 comedy.

    Warner Bros.

    William Sanderson – “Blade Runner” (1982), “Newhart” (1982)

    More than two decades before playing the Grand Hotel’s oily, scheming proprietor E.B. Farnum, Sanderson became known to moviegoers as the tender, troubled inventor J.F. Sebastian in Ridley Scott’s groundbreaking sci-fi classic, and then pulled a 180 in more than 90 episodes of the sitcom “Newhart” playing Larry, the dimwitted brother to two Darryls.

    20th Century Fox

    Kim Dickens – “Gone Girl” (2014)

    Kim Dickens is one of Hollywood’s most reliable character actors, appearing in films and television roles with equal ease and skill. For David Fincher, she played a doubtful detective searching for clues in the disappearance of Nick Dunne’s wife Amy before winning acclaim in not one but two popular television series, “House of Cards” and “Fear the Walking Dead.”

    Orion Pictures

    Ricky Jay – “House of Games” (1987), “Boogie Nights” (1997)

    Ricky Jay’s pedigree as one of David Mamet’s regular played made him ideal for the role of a smart-talking card sharp and hustler in “Deadwood,” but he had already convincingly played a con artist in Mamet’s breakthrough film “House of Games,” and delivered a decidedly more avuncular performance as Jack Horner’s unflappable cinematographer in Paul Thomas Anderson’s ode to the 1970s porn industry “Boogie Nights.”

    Paramount Vantage

    Garret Dillahunt – “No Country For Old Men” (2007), “The Assassination of Jesse James” (2007), “Raising Hope” (2014), “Widows” (2018)

    Few actors got a bigger bounce from “Deadwood” than Dillahunt, who was so good that Milch killed him off and then brought him back in another role. Just a year after the show ended he delivered memorable turns for both the Coen brothers and Andrew Dominik in two more Western-themed projects, then transitioned into a sitcom star with “Raising Hope” before delivering a powerful supporting performance as a dedicated but feckless driver in Steve McQueen’s feminist crime film “Widows.”

  • ‘Deadwood’ Creator David Milch Reveals He Has Alzheimer’s Disease

    ‘Deadwood’ Creator David Milch Reveals He Has Alzheimer’s Disease

    HBO

    Fans of “Deadwood” are thrilled we’re finally getting a movie follow-up to the acclaimed series. But it’s bittersweet for the series creator, David Milch, who revealed to Vulture’s Matt Zoller Seitz that he’s in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.

    Milch started noticing something was wrong about five years ago, when he noticed he had “imperfect recall and tardy recall and short temper. I became more and more of an acquired taste.” He says writing also became more difficult.

    Then, about a year ago, Milch finally got a brain scan and received the devastating news. “As best I understand it, which is minimally, I have a deterioration in the organization of my brain,” he said “And it’s progressive. And in some ways discouraging. In more than some ways — in every way I can think of.”

    He realizes, looking back, that his father probably had the disease as well: “That was a while ago, and the diagnosis was not as sophisticated or specific, but in retrospect, he exhibited all the symptoms of the illness.”

    Reassembling the “Deadwood” cast was tricky, and it sounds like the knowledge that this might be the last time that this particular cast and crew work together comes through on the screen.

    Writes Seitz, “Milch’s Alzheimer’s is insinuated in fleeting exchanges — as when Brad Dourif’s Doc Cochran asks Al [Ian McShane] what day it is and he mistakenly says Tuesday when it’s Friday. The tale is suffused with a melancholy acceptance of the passage of time and the certainty of aging and death.”

    “You walked on the set, everybody was the same again, except they were older,” McShane said of getting everyone back together for what is likely the last time. “But this time, when you finished a scene with them, you were actually saying good-bye.”

    Milch hasn’t said he’s retiring. His only announced project right now, however is his autobiography.

    His wife Rita explained that Milch’s having written all these years give him an advantage other people might not have. “I compare it to a musician who can still play and has access to the memory of how to do that and is still able to exercise his talent,” she sad. “The brain is David’s most exercised muscle.”
    Deadwood: The Movie” airs on HBO on May 31.

    [Via Vulture]

     

  • New HBO Teaser Shows Glimpses of ‘Game of Thrones,’ ‘Watchmen,’ ‘Deadwood’

    New HBO Teaser Shows Glimpses of ‘Game of Thrones,’ ‘Watchmen,’ ‘Deadwood’

    Game of Thrones, Arya Stark, Maisie Williams
    HBO

    A girl has a name, Arya Stark, and she sees dragons.

    During the finale of “True Detective” Sunday night, HBO released a new teaser for its upcoming 2019 slate, which included a brief (very brief) snippet of footage from the final season of “Game of Thrones.”

    A previous teaser showed Sansa Stark and Daenerys Targaryen meeting at Winterfell. This one focuses on Arya Stark (Maisie Williams) looked awed, with a slight smile on her face — seems like a reaction to seeing a dragon for the first time.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FHYri6Y4oA&feature=youtu.be

    The HBO teaser also included a sneak peek at Damon Lindelof’s upcoming “Watchmen” series. We see shots of Jeremy Irons and Oscar winner Regina King but not much else.

    There was slightly more substantial footage from the “Deadwood” reunion movie, with lawman Seth Bullock (Timothy Olyphant) serving warning to his oft-antagonist, brothel owner Al Swearengen (Ian McShane).

    Watch the teaser for glimpses of “Big Little Lies” Season 2, Danny McBride’s televangelist comedy “The Righteous Gemstones,” and the final season of “Veep.”

  • Ian McShane Teases ‘Deadwood’ Movie Details, Ending

    Ian McShane Teases ‘Deadwood’ Movie Details, Ending

    HBO

    “Deadwood” is holding a party.

    When the acclaimed HBO western returns with a long-anticipated movie this spring, many things will have changed — and many things remain the same.

    As star Ian McShane, who plays brothel owner Al Swearengen, has revealed, the town is entering a new phase of its life, though the players are still familiar faces.

    They include Al, sheriff Seth Bullock (Timothy Olyphant); wealthy goldmine owner Alma Garrett (Molly Parker); businessman Sol Star (John Hawkes); former prostitute Trixie (Paula Malcomson); and the notorious, greedy, money-grubbing tycoon George Hearst (Gerald McRaney).

    “Deadwood is celebrating South Dakota as a state, and Hearst has come back and Alma has come back in town, so you have all the main characters converging and how they changed in 10 years,” McShane told reporters at the Television Critics Association press tour, while promoting Starz’s second season of “American Gods.”

    He continued: “Now Hearst wants to put telegraphs in town, which isn’t going too well. Al has had a little bit too much of that over the years. There’s a surprise for Trixie and Star.”

    The original series, which ran from 2006 to 2008, was set in the 1870s, when Deadwood wasn’t much more than a prospecting camp. The follow-up film jumps ahead a decade, to 1889 when South Dakota earned statehood.

    But despite the passage of time, it looks like Al and Hearst are still at odds. And with Alma in the mix, no doubt her ex-lover Bullock will also get involved in any disputes that arise.

    McShane also teased the possibility of a second sequel movie — even though this one took 12 years to make.

    “It ends leaving you wondering,” he said of the ending.

    “If it makes $115M, HBO will somehow find a way to do another one.”

  • ‘Deadwood’ Really Is Coming Back! First Photos Tease Al Swearengen, Seth Bullock in HBO Movie

    ‘Deadwood’ Really Is Coming Back! First Photos Tease Al Swearengen, Seth Bullock in HBO Movie

    HBO

    A dirty dozen years have passed since the demise of “Deadwood” on HBO. But now, the acclaimed Western drama is well and truly returning to the land of the living.

    The first photos from HBO’s (very) long-awaited movie follow-up to the series are here, courtesy of Entertainment Weekly. The film will wrap up the story begun in the three seasons that aired from 2004 to 2006.

    Stars Ian McShane and Timothy Olymphant return as saloon owner Al Swearengen and lawman Seth Bullock, respectively. Here’s a look at how each of them have fared since we last saw them.

    HBO
    HBO

    They’re both a little older and grayer. Al seems to be contemplating something (likely criminal) at the Gem, while Seth appears to be a U.S. marshal.

    Series creator David Milch wrote the movie script. Most of the original cast members are returning as well, including Molly Parker (Alma Ellsworth), Paula Malcomson (Trixie), John Hawkes (Sol Star), Anna Gunn (Martha Bullock), Dayton Callie (Charlie Utter), Brad Dourif (Doc Cochran), Robin Weigert (“Calamity” Jane Canary), William Sanderson (E.B. Farnum), Kim Dickens (Joanie Stubbs) and Gerald McRaney (George Hearst).

    The “Deadwood” movie does not yet have a premiere date.

  • ‘Deadwood’ Movie Begins Filming, 12 Years After HBO Finale

    Deadwood
    HBO

    A dozen years after its series finale on HBO, “Deadwood” has risen from the dead.

    Production on the long-awaited follow-up movie has begun. Many of the principal cast members from the series, which ran from 2004-2006, will be back, including stars Ian McShane (Al Swearengen) and Timothy Olyphant (Seth Bullock).

    HBO also released the first synopsis of the movie:

    The indelible characters of the series are reunited after ten years to celebrate South Dakota’s statehood. Former rivalries are reignited, alliances are tested and old wounds are reopened, as all are left to navigate the inevitable changes that modernity and time have wrought.

    It’s been a long road to this moment. When “Deadwood” went off the air in 2006, both HBO and creator David Milch talked about wrapping up the series with two movies. But the parties couldn’t come to terms and cast members went off to other projects.

    Finally, in the last year, fans got an answer to their prayers: one movie would get made. 

    Daniel Minahan will direct the two-hour movie. Also returning to reprise their roles are

    Molly Parker (Alma Ellsworth), Paula Malcomson (Trixie), John Hawkes (Sol Star), Anna Gunn (Martha Bullock), Dayton Callie (Charlie Utter), Brad Dourif (Doc Cochran), Robin Weigert (“Calamity” Jane Canary), William Sanderson (E.B. Farnum), Kim Dickens (Joanie Stubbs) and Gerald McRaney (George Hearst). Unfortunately, Powers Boothe (Cy Tolliver) passed away in May 2017.

    The movie does have a new cast member, Jade Pettyjohn, who will play the character of Caroline. Filming will take place a Melody Ranch (also used as the set of “Westworld”). The finished movie will air on HBO sometime in 2019.

  • It’s Official: ‘Deadwood’ Movie Filming This Fall for 2019 Premiere

    It’s Official: ‘Deadwood’ Movie Filming This Fall for 2019 Premiere

    Deadwood
    HBO

    Drinks are on Al Swearengen!

    It feels like the “Deadwood” cast and HBO brass have been talking about this movie since the late 1800s. Now it’s finally happening.

    HBO Programming president Casey Bloys confirmed the news Wednesday during the TCA summer press tour. HBO is officially moving forward on a movie, with filming set to start in October for a potential spring 2019 air date. Bloys said that spring premiere was not set in stone, so we’re still waiting for a specific date.

    Casey Bloys: “All of these people worked hard to get this together. It’s been a logistics nightmare getting all the cast members’ schedules together but we are there. It is greenlit.”

    Last fall, “sources” told TVLine HBO was aiming to film the movie this fall, so it sounds like that actually panned out.

    At last year’s TCA, Bloys praised “Deadwood” creator David Milch’s script for the movie:

    Casey Bloys: “The one thing that I was concerned about was I wanted a script that would stand on its own [for fans of ‘Deadwood’ fans and newcomers]. David totally delivered on that. I think it’s a terrific script. If we can do it on a budget that makes sense for us, and if we can get the cast together, we’re inclined to do it.”

    And now they’re doing it. Daniel Minahan will direct the two-hour movie. The original cast is said to be excited to return. Sadly, we know Powers Boothe (Cy Tolliver) won’t be back, since he passed away in May 2017.

    Expect a lot more HBO news to come out today, from 2018 TCAs.

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  • ‘Deadwood’ Movie Could Start Filming in Fall 2018

    DeadwoodDon’t hold your breath, but the long-awaited “Deadwood” movie might be filming as early as next year.

    “Sources confirm” to TVLine that HBO wants to start filming the follow-up to the acclaimed TV series in Fall 2018. HBO refused to comment on the project, which hasn’t yet been officially greenlit.

    At the Television Critics Association summer press tour, HBO top programming executive, Casey Bloys said he was pleased with the script series creator David Milch has written. “The one thing that I was concerned about was I wanted a script that would stand on its own [for fans of ‘Deadwood’ fans and newcomers],” he said. “David totally delivered on that. I think it’s a terrific script. If we can do it on a budget that makes sense for us, and if we can get the cast together, we’re inclined to do it.”

    Of course, “inclined to do it” is a long way from “definitely going to do it,” but the outlook seems good. And that’s a mighty sprawling cast to reassemble. Two key players sound very game, however.

    Paula Malcomson recently told TVLine that the movie is “a big Valentine” to her character Trixie and Al Swearengen (Ian McShane). And she’s confident about the movie actually getting made.” I really think it will happen [this time]. And I would never say that. I’m usually the most cynical about these things,” she said.

    Back in April, McShane told TVLine, “[Milch]’s two-hour movie script has been delivered to HBO. If they don’t deliver [a finished product], blame them.”

    McShane currently stars on “American Gods,” while Malcolmson just joined the Superman prequel series “Krypton” after four seasons on “Ray Donovan.”

    One cast member who sadly won’t be back: Powers Booth, who played saloon owner Cy Tolliver. Boothe passed away in May.

  • ‘Deadwood’ Actor Powers Boothe Dead at 68

    Powers Boothe, a veteran character actor, died Sunday at the age of 68 — a few weeks shy of his 69th birthday.

    Actor and friend Beau Bridges was first to release the news via Twitter:

    The late actor’s publicist confirmed the death to TVLine.

    Booth, who passed away in his sleep Sunday morning, is arguably best known for his role on HBO’s “Deadwood,” where he played saloon owner Cy Tolliver.

    His distinguished feature film and TV career included big-screen roles in “Tombstone,” “Frailty,” directed by the late Bill Paxton, and “The Avengers.”

    The latter role he would reprise on ABC’s “Agents of SHIELD.”

  • Ian McShane: ‘Deadwood’ Revival Movie Script ‘Has Been Delivered to HBO’

    “Deadwood” is aliiiiiive and finally on its way back to us. The HBO show was canceled in 2006 after three seasons, but we haven’t shut up about it since. In 2015, star Garret Dillahunt (Jack McCall/Francis Wolcott) tweeted out some hope when he wrote about “credible rumors about a #Deadwood movie.” At the time, an HBO spokesperson said there had only been “preliminary conversations.”

    But now Ian McShane (Al Swearengen) says a movie script is complete, and off to the network. Here’s what the always candid McShane recently told TVLine:

    Series creator David Milch’s “two-hour movie script has been delivered to HBO. If they don’t deliver [a finished product], blame them.”

    Will do!

    McShane further told TVLine he has talked to David Milch about some of the script, but he’ll be having lunch with the boss soon for more intel.

    Dillahunt promoted McShane’s story on Twitter, which suggests he’s in the loop as well:

    Now we just need to wait and see what HBO does with the script, and which characters have been chosen to return.

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