Tag: edward-scissorhands

  • ‘Trigger Warning’ Exclusive Interview: Anthony Michael Hall

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    Premiering on Netflix on June 21st is the new action thriller ‘Trigger Warning’, which was directed by Mouly Surya (’Marlina the Murderer in Four Acts’). The movie stars Jessica Alba (‘Fantastic Four’), Anthony Michael Hall (‘The Breakfast Club’ and ‘The Dark Knight’) and Mark Webber (‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’).

    Related Article: Titus Welliver and Mimi Rogers Talk ‘Bosch: Legacy’ Season 2 and Beyond

    Anthony Michael Hall.
    Anthony Michael Hall. Photo Credit: Mark Binks.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with iconic Hollywood actor Anthony Michael Hall about his work on ‘Trigger Warning’, his first reaction to the screenplay, playing the villain, his action sequences, and working with Jessica Alba and director Mouly Surya.

    Hall also talked about his long and impressive career including his work with director John Hughes on ‘Sixteen Candles’ and ‘The Breakfast Club’, working with director Tim Burton and Johnny Depp on ‘Edward Scissorhands,’ and working with director Christopher Nolan, Christian Bale and Heath Ledger on ‘The Dark Knight,’ as well as if he will return for season 3 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’ and his confirmed role in season 3 of ‘Reacher’.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to see what Anthony Michael Hall had to say about Netflix’s ‘Trigger Warning’.

    Anthony Michael Hall.
    Anthony Michael Hall. Photo Credit: Mark Binks.

    Moviefone: To begin with, what was your first reaction to the screenplay for ‘Trigger Warning’ and why did you want to be a part of this project?

    Anthony Michael Hall: Well, it came up about three and a half years ago. My managers are a great company, Untitled Management, and they set up a meeting for myself and Mouly Surya, the filmmaker. So, I watched her film that was nominated, it was called ’Marlina the Murderer in Four Acts’, also like ‘Trigger Warning’, a female driven revenge thriller, and she did a beautiful job with that. That’s like her ‘Kill Bill’, and she’s a very talented filmmaker. So, I met with Mouly. We had a nice Zoom session meeting because it was COVID times, and she was lovely. She was cool about it. She had grown up watching a lot of my films. That’s why I feel old. Anyway, she was really kind enough to invite me to join the party and to make ‘Trigger Warning’ with them. It was interesting. I liked the script a lot. John Brancato, the guy who wrote it, is a friend of a mutual friend of mine that I knew in Brooklyn growing up, and I knew of his writing. He was talented. So, the guys did a good job with it. I think there’s something very stark about the good versus evil reality. When I did ‘The Dark Knight’, or even in a film like this, there’s shadings of a Western here too. But she’s, as you know, a special ops military woman who comes into town and discovers her father’s been murdered. I’m playing this career politician, Ezekiel Swann, who is a senator, and a dirty character. It was funny for me too, because suddenly I’m on set, and I’m in my late fifties and I have two grown men playing my sons. I was like, “Okay. I guess I’m my age now.” They did a great job. Jake Weary plays Elvis and Mark Webber plays Jesse, very different actors. They’re my Cain and Abel, my two sons. It was just an interesting project from all these vantage points. The fact that we were produced by Thunder Road who did the ‘John Wick’ series, so that guaranteed this level of action. We had the 87eleven, which is this famous stunt group that does all those films, so they just could not have been more prepared. By the time we got to the set in Santa Fe, the stunt crew had been there for about five or six weeks. So, they pre-visualized everything. They’d already shot the sequences, and so we had fight training and we had choreographed sequences and training to do, and it was just a lot of fun. I’d never done an action picture where there was that much of a focus on the action. It was great to be a part of. Then working with Jessica, she was game. She really did a good job. I think her acting is excellent. She did a nice job carrying the film. But also, with that background in action, it was very important for her that we execute on those levels. There’s that line in the film, which she says to Jake Weary, who plays my son, Elvis. She said, “You should put a little more weight on your back foot. You wouldn’t punch like such a b**ch.” I mean, she was game on. I think she ad-libbed that in the moment, and they used it in the film. But I thought the script was solid. It was a good group of actors I got to work with. Experientially, just being in Santa Fe, and shooting a picture there was a lot of fun too. All those elements become ingredients in the making of something and it was great to be a part of. I had fun.

    Anthony Michael Hall as Ezekiel, Mark Webber as Jesse and Jessica Alba as Parker in 'Trigger Warning.'
    (L to R) Anthony Michael Hall as Ezekiel, Mark Webber as Jesse and Jessica Alba as Parker in ‘Trigger Warning.’ Photo: Ursula Coyote/Netflix ©2024.

    MF: Can you talk about Senator Swann and Parker’s history together and working on that backstory with Jessica Alba?

    AMH: That’s a great point. I think acting is often in the eyes more than it is the words. You’re right, there’s that backstory element that she doesn’t like me. You even wonder if Mark does, my son who’s the sheriff. A lot of that is how you can read their faces in the scene where I show up and I tell her, “Welcome back,” and she’s side eyeing me going, “This guy, he’s a real career politician.” Even though I didn’t base it on any one character, one of the things I tried to do, which was just give a little bit of a non-descript southern background to him, so I gave him a little bit of a southern snarl. Even though my sons weren’t doing that. But when you get to a set, it’s interesting. When I met with the costume department and our designer, she was great. She had a vision board and she had pulled all these pictures of Ted Turner from the ‘80s, guys that are very wealthy but just choose to live in the southwest and that country cowboy lifestyle, even if they’re not necessarily real cowboys. So, I think that that breathed life into it. Being in Santa Fe, seeing the level of production and professionalism from the stunt team. All these ingredients really make for a nice mixture. So, it was just fun to execute. Then working with Netflix, I’ve had the pleasure to work with them, and Amazon, I’ve done two shows for Amazon, ‘Reacher’ and ‘Bosch: Legacy’, but I did a film called ‘War Machine’, that I started in with Brad Pitt for Netflix. I have to say, they’re a great company to work for. I mean, they give you the resources, they’re supportive and they’re not meddlesome. They’re not looking over your shoulders as you’re making something. Even as an actor on the set, I saw that they had free reign to really deliver the movie that they were going to deliver. It was great working with Thunder Road and Mouly, and she couldn’t have been sweeter. She’s such a nice lady, but has great instincts as a director, gives great adjustments, and has a great eye visually. So, it was really a pleasure.

    Anthony Michael Hall as Ezekiel in 'Trigger Warning'.
    Anthony Michael Hall as Ezekiel in ‘Trigger Warning’. Photo: Netflix ©2024.

    MF: Is it fun playing a villain and what’s your approach?

    AMH: I’ve played bad guys a lot. I’ve done a bunch of villains over the years, but this is probably one of the more prominent films that I’ve done. I mean, I enjoy it. I think there’s a no holds barred approach, and I think when you’re playing a bad guy, you can pull out all the stops. I also think it’s important to inject a little bit of humor in there. One funny thing happened. There’s that scene where Jessica and I are talking, and I’m talking about Latinx and questioning her. The scene opens with me saying something asinine like, “Everybody in my town knows I’m not racist.” When we shot the scene, I didn’t find any humor in it, but when we were watching it with an audience a few weeks ago, my wife laughed her butt off. I started laughing, and the audience was laughing. It’s funny. It’s great when there’s a surprise element of humor and you didn’t really intend it, and that’s what happened in that scene. It was fun to work on and I really enjoyed it. I also really appreciated working with this core group of women that were really leading the charge. I thought that was impressive. In recent years, I’ve worked on ‘The Goldbergs’ and several shows, even on ‘Bosch: Legacy’ for Amazon, and I’ve had the good fortune of working with a lot of female directors, and I think it’s great. I think we need more of it. Because obviously the world should be about inclusivity and people getting opportunities, and I’ve been very proudly directed by a bunch of great women directors in recent years, and I enjoyed it. Mouly being probably the best among them.

    Jessica Alba as Parker in 'Trigger Warning'.
    (Right) Jessica Alba as Parker in ‘Trigger Warning’. Photo: Ursula Coyote/Netflix ©2024.

    MF: Jessica Alba is also an executive producer on the movie. What was it like working with her as both a producer and actress?

    AMH: Jessica comes ready. She’s very serious. She’s very serious about her work and is very caring, but she’s also a great mom. Her daughters were on set with her. She’s very much a take charge woman. I’ve had the pleasure of meeting her and her husband before we made the film, and they’re cool people, they really are. So, I’m happy for it.

    Molly Ringwald in 'Sixteen Candles'.
    Molly Ringwald in ‘Sixteen Candles’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    MF: It’s the 40th anniversary of ‘Sixteen Candles’, what are your memories of making that film with director John Hughes. You ended up working with him a lot, but was that the first time?

    AMH: What’s interesting is he had written ‘National Lampoon’s Vacation’ in 1982, and then it gets made I think in ’82 or ’83. It was released in ’83. So, I didn’t meet John on that. I met him at the auditions here in New York City for ‘Sixteen Candles’ at the Universal building on Park Avenue. It led to me doing the two other films with him right away. So, if you include ‘Vacation’, the first four films of my career, they were written and directed by John, or written by John in the case of ‘Vacation’, so I think that there was something in the stars with us. He was just such a great guy. I can’t speak highly enough about him. He was so wonderful, so down to earth, and so helpful. When you worked on a John Hughes film, it was always a collaboration in process. You could discuss anything with him. We would typically shoot two or three or four takes as written, and then if you had ideas, he would be like, “Try that.” He had such a God-given ability as a writer and a director. He loved music, the way he incorporated music into his films to uplift certain moments, and the things that he did. But also, his sense of collaboration, I think that was another one of his real gifts because he wasn’t precious about it. He allowed things to happen, and he allowed you to play around and to ad-lib. If we were going to embellish something or change something, as long as it worked for the scene, he was all for it. He was really a great guy in so many ways.

    Judd Nelson, Emilio Estevez, Ally Sheedy, Molly Ringwald and Anthony Michael Hall in 'The Breakfast Club'.
    (L to R) Judd Nelson, Emilio Estevez, Ally Sheedy, Molly Ringwald and Anthony Michael Hall in ‘The Breakfast Club’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    MF: Are you surprised by the legacy of ‘Sixteen Candles’, ‘The Breakfast Club’ and ‘Weird Science’ and that new audiences are discovering those movies and loving them?

    AMH: Yeah, I am. I’m truly grateful for that. It’s amazing how they continue to find younger and younger audiences and new generations. I’m so appreciative of that fact. It’s interesting, I had many years to think about this. I think there is a paradigm to his work. In other words, all the characters start out at a certain place, but there’s an arc and they all wind up in a better place than they started, through finding love and humor. But also, mainly by showing their vulnerabilities, by showing the rough parts of childhood, by being honest about it, warts and all, pimples and all. I think that there is a method to his madness in a way. He allowed characters to be vulnerable, to be real, to let their guard down, all these very interesting things that we can all now see and reflect on. But when I look back all those years ago, to think that he was a relatively young guy. He was in his mid-thirties, so the fact that he had that kind of awareness and intelligence as a writer, and overview to be able to see his projects, was very impressive. I’m just grateful that they continue to find younger audiences. I think ‘The Breakfast Club’ particularly, because I think there’s a strong message of anti-bullying and just the overall idea that we’re all more alike than we’re different. To celebrate that and to celebrate the differences is I think something that the world has grown more accustomed to. For example, this new generation of kids, people that are millennials, they’re a lot more open-minded and a lot more inclusive let’s say, than the prior generation. I think that shows a healthy sort of evolution in our general character I think, as people, and I think that that’s very healthy and helpful.

    Johnny Depp in 'Edward Scissorhands'.
    Johnny Depp in ‘Edward Scissorhands’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    MF: What was your experience like working with director Tim Burton on ‘Edward Scissorhands’? Did you recognize his genius right away and what did you think of his vision for that project?

    AMH: I did. Again, he’s another one where I’ve had a lot of time to think about it. You look at his work, I mean, his movies are artful, they’re masterpieces, they’re beautiful, and there’s an evolution there too. It’s interesting, when I look back on ‘Scissorhands’, I have a couple thoughts about it. I mean, it is like ‘Pinocchio’, and it’s a little bit of ‘Romeo and Juliet’. But when you look at his life, Tim Burton grew up in Burbank. He was a student of animation. His favorite actor was Vincent Price. The fact that he is in many ways, I think very Walt Disney like himself, and that he created this world unto himself as a filmmaker. I just think he’s brilliant. I loved Tim, and I still love Tim and I love all his movies, and that was the first of a great collaboration between he and Johnny. They went on to make another, seven or eight movies together. So, I felt very privileged to be a part of that, and it was exciting to work on. I think at that point, I had just come off the John Hughes films, and ‘Saturday Night Live’, and everything else I was doing as a kid. I had sprouted up; I had just grown into a bigger guy. I think he found that interesting and compelling. Like it could be interesting to pit me against Johnny, who was a different thing. But Johnny, God bless him, he had a lot of work to do. Just even before the cameras rolled, he would get to work at 3:30/4:00 AM, I remember reading the call sheets. Because it would take like three hours to do his face, and they had a team of people just getting him into that suit, and then putting the hands on, the scissors. It was quite a production. But again, a great project. Just happy to be a part of a Tim Burton film.

    Heath Ledger and Christian Bale in 'The Dark Knight'.
    (L to R) Heath Ledger and Christian Bale in ‘The Dark Knight’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    MF: Can you also talk about working with Christopher Nolan on ‘The Dark Knight’? What did you learn from watching the specific way that he makes movies?

    AMH: Well, you just said it. That was the key word. I was very watchful. I remember feeling, it’s almost like you remember that old movie, ‘Amadeus’ about Mozart? I felt like Salieri watching Mozart. I’m looking at this guy, and I had just finished ‘The Dead Zone’, and I kept looking at Chris Nolan and he just feels like such an old soul. There’s something very aristocratic about him. Obviously, he’s a highly intellectual person, a very smart man, but very eccentric in some ways too. He would come to work in the same thing every day. He wore a vest, a dress shirt, a three-quarter length jacket, like a conductor almost. He certainly was a conductor to work with. But I just remember having this feeling when I worked with him like, wow. This guy, he’s fascinating. I’ve got to tell you, scene by scene, the way he attacked it was amazing. I mean, some scenes we would shoot, it would be a three or four camera set up, and some there would be seven, eight, even ten cameras going. His technical prowess and his technical abilities are impressive, but also just his filmmaking. I remember seeing ‘Memento’, that was a great film. It really was an incredible movie. I’ve always been impressed with Chris, and it was an honor to work with him. I had a great time. I had auditioned for another role when I did ‘The Dark Knight’, and then he brought me back in for the role that I wound up doing. But it was interesting. At that time, all those years ago, 2007, after I did the audition, it was a period of months before I even found out about it. They circulate the tapes among the studio executives and all that. But just a great project to be a part of. We shot in London, and then I shot in Chicago for three weeks. I mean, I worked on the film for about a month, even though it was a small role. It was a great lesson too, in terms of that adage of “There are no small parts, only small actors.” I had a small role in the film, but I had the pleasure to work with Chris and to work alongside Gary Oldman. I can say I was in a movie with Michael Caine, even though I didn’t get to meet Michael Caine. I’m on the background on the TV in some of those shots, with he and Christian. But in terms of Christian and Heath, if I can just speak to those guys for a second, I mean, they’re both brilliant. I remember asking Chris Nolan about it. He said Christian was the first guy he met with at Warner Bros., and he just had an instinct. He just felt like he was the right guy. Then after we had made the film years later, I remember reading about his interactions with Heath. Heath was incredible. I know two of the things that were inspirational for them was ‘A Clockwork Orange’, because that’s a great film. Then also something about the Sex Pistols. He wanted to bring some sense of anarchy to the film, which obviously was reminiscent of the Sex Pistols in the ‘70s. I think there’s some Johnny Rotten in the Joker as well, a little Sid Vicious. So, that sense of anarchy coming in and attacking Gotham was very powerful. As we know, I think he just brought a lot of gravity to a comic book film. What he did reinvent the genre. It’s amazing.

    Anthony Michael Hall joins 'Bosch: Legacy' as Special Agent Barron.
    (Right) Anthony Michael Hall joins ‘Bosch: Legacy’ as Special Agent Barron. Photo Credit: Tyler Golden.

    MF: You appeared in a recurring role in season 2 of ‘Bosch: Legacy’. Will you be retuning for season 3?

    AMH: Well, apparently, I don’t think I’m going to be returning on ‘Bosch: Legacy’. It was interesting. It ended the season in a cliffhanger, so I thought there might be an opportunity, but it didn’t play out like that. But again, it was a pleasure to work with those guys. I love Michael Connelly. I mean, they gave me a great opportunity there. I was playing a lead FBI investigator going after him, as you recall.

    Alan Ritchson as Jack Reacher in Prime Video's 'Reacher' season 2.
    Alan Ritchson as Jack Reacher in Prime Video’s ‘Reacher’ season 2.

    MF: Finally, I understand that you will be appearing on season 3 of Prime Video’s ‘Reacher’. What can you tell us about your character and working with Alan Ritchson?

    AMH: Season 3 of ‘Reacher’ was incredible. We started last summer, and we had a four-month break due to the strike, and it was supposed to wrap in November. We wound up starting in November and shooting until June. I just wrapped a couple of weeks ago. They’re going to be finishing next month. But I can tell you this, they’ve really upped the ante on the action. They continue to push the boundaries with that. I think that’s very important to the audience, that the action is there. I like Alan Ritchson a lot. I think he’s a good guy. I like working with him. I think he’s doing a nice job with his performance. He’s very vested too in the process, which was nice to see. It reminded me when I had ‘The Dead Zone’, because as the lead actor you must be the quarterback of the team. You must not just know your own stuff, but you must be able to be supportive, be a team player, and really help galvanize your team and get everything done. I saw myself in him because I see where he’s at right now in his career and he’s doing great. But he’s a nice guy. He’s a standup guy. He’s got a good heart, and it was a great show to be a part of. I’m excited that people will see it. It’ll air in 2025, due to the strike.

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    What is the plot of ‘Trigger Warning’?

    A skilled Special Forces commando (Jessica Alba) takes ownership of her father’s bar after he suddenly dies, and soon finds herself at odds with a violent gang running rampant in her hometown.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Trigger Warning’?

    Anthony Michael Hall.
    Anthony Michael Hall. Photo Credit: Mark Binks.

    Anthony Michael Hall Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Anthony Michael Hall Movies on Amazon

     

  • Actor Alan Arkin Dies at Age 89

    Alan Arkin in Netflix's 'The Kominsky Method.'
    Alan Arkin in Netflix’s ‘The Kominsky Method.’ Photo: Mike Yarish/Netflix.

    It’s not every actor whose passing can lay claim to being announced by ‘Seinfeld’s George Costanza, but Alan Arkin, a consummate actor and well-respected man, can. Close friend Jason Alexander tweeted the first sad news of Arkin’s death at the age of 89, which has since been confirmed.

    https://twitter.com/IJasonAlexander/status/1674665367317233665

    Arkin leaves behind a stellar, seven-decade career full of performances both comedic and dramatic that any actor (and musician, in his case) would be proud to list.

    Early life

    Alan Arkin and Peter Falk in 'The In-Laws.'
    (L to R) Alan Arkin and Peter Falk in ‘The In-Laws.’ Photo courtesy of Warner Bros.

    Alan Wolf Arkin was born in Brooklyn on March 26, 1934, with his family relocating to Los Angeles when he was 12. He started taking acting classes at a young age but became a college dropout to pursue his first creative love: music, forming the Tarriers, a folk-music group in which he was the lead singer. Arkin, along with the others, wrote a version of the Jamaican calypso folk tune ‘The Banana Boat Song’ that was a hit in 1956.

    Alongside writing and performing with the group, he began to pursue acting opportunities, and his two endeavors meshed for his (albeit uncredited) screen debut when he appeared with the Tarriers in 1957’s ‘Calypso Heat Wave’. Arkin’s musical talents also found their way into his stage work, combined with his having been part of the original Chicago Second City Comedy troupe, as he wrote lyrics, music and sketches for his Broadway debut ‘From the Second City’. His theatre work would see him go on to win a Tony for Joseph Stein’s comedy ‘Enter Laughing’ and he also enjoyed a successful run as a director.

    Here’s what Arkin says about joining Second City on the troupe’s site:

    “Second City saved my life. It literally saved my life. I have a feeling it’s true for a lot of other people, too.”

    A life in movies

    Mark Wahlberg and Alan Arkin in Netflix's 'Spenser Confidential.'
    (L to R) Mark Wahlberg and Alan Arkin in Netflix’s ‘Spenser Confidential.’ Photo: Daniel McFadden.

    Yet it will be for his movie career Arkin will likely be best remembered, a man who could turn in scene-stealing performances even in smaller supporting roles. his movie highlights including the likes of ‘Argo’, ‘Wait Until Dark’, ‘Inspector Clouseau’, ‘Catch-22’, ‘Little Murders’ (which he also directed), ‘The In-Laws’, ‘Big Trouble’, ‘Glengarry Glen Ross’, ‘So I Married an Axe Murderer’, ‘Edward Scissorhands’, ‘The Rocketeer’, ‘Gattaca’, ‘Slums of Beverly Hills’, ‘Sunshine Cleaning’, ‘Get Smart’, ‘The Muppets’ ‘Going in Style’ and Tim Burton‘s ‘Dumbo’. His last credited work was in ‘Minions: The Rise of Gru’.

    He earned an Oscar nomination for his first credited screen role in ‘The Russians are Coming, the Russians are Coming’, and another for ‘The Heart is a Lonely Hunter’ but would score the trophy itself for ‘Little Miss Sunshine’.

    Related Article: Veteran Character Actor Frederic Forrest Has Died at the Age of 86

    Small screen work

    Michael Douglas and Alan Arkin in Netflix's 'The Kominsky Method.'
    (L to R) Michael Douglas and Alan Arkin in Netflix’s ‘The Kominsky Method.’ Photo: Mike Yarish/Netflix.

    On TV, he earned multiple Emmy nominations and appeared on shows such as ‘Chicago Hope’, ‘Captain Kangaroo’, ‘St. Elsewhere’, The Muppet Show’, ‘BoJack Horseman’, ‘The Kominsky Method’, ‘Will & Grace’, ‘The Pentagon Papers’ and ‘The Other Side of Hell.’

    Paying tribute

    Arkin’s sons, who all entered showbusiness (Adam most famously), paid tribute in a joint statement:

    “Our father was a uniquely talented force of nature, both as an artist and a man. A loving husband, father, grand and great-grandfather, he was adored and will be deeply missed.”

    Alan Arkin at the world premiere of Netflix's 'Spenser Confidential.'
    Alan Arkin at the world premiere of Netflix’s ‘Spenser Confidential.’ Photo: Charley Gallay.

    Alan Arkin Movies:

    Buy Alan Arkin Movies On Amazon

  • Happy Birthday, Danny Elfman! 11 Scores That Defined His Career

    Happy Birthday, Danny Elfman! 11 Scores That Defined His Career

    Disney

    If luminaries like Bernard Herrmann, Ennio Morricone, John Barry and John Williams embody an older, perhaps “classic” generation of film music, Danny Elfman, along with Stewart Copeland, Mark Mothersbaugh and others heralded the arrival of composers who began their career as pop and rock artists before transitioning into the work for which they have become best known – film scores. Elfman, born on May 29, was a member of the band Oingo Boingo for over 20 years, but began composing film music in the late 1970s before making his breakthrough with the score to his brother’s film “Forbidden Zone,” and three years later, the first of dozens of partnerships with Tim Burton on “Pee-wee’s Big Adventures.” In honor of Elfman’s birthday, we’re taking a look back at just a handful of the film and television projects that not only earned him acclaim, but cemented his status as one of the most beloved and recognizable composers in modern music.

    Warner Bros.

    “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure” (1985) – Searching for the sound of Paul Reubens’ whimsical road trip to recover a stolen bicycle, Elfman borrows from Nino Rota’s scores for “8 ½” and “The Clowns,” creating an indelible calling card that would establish him as one of Hollywood’s most idiosyncratic and instantly-recognizable composers.

    Warner Bros.

    “Beetlejuice” (1988) – Elfman’s next outing with Burton would not only become equally famous but helped establish the sound that defined much of his work for the next few years — gothic, mischievous music driven by propulsive, low-end brass and embellished by soaring choral arrangements.

    Warner Bros.

    “Batman” (1989) – Effectively setting a musical template for superhero movies that would help reintroduce them to audiences, Elfman won his first and only Grammy cribbing the main theme from Burton’s film from a few notes of Gottfried Huppertz’ “Die Nibelungen” for what remains one of the most identifiable superhero themes outside John Williams’ for “Superman.”

     

    20th Century Fox

    “The Simpsons” (1989) – Elfman made a detour into television with this, possibly one of the most famous themes in the medium’s history. Though Alf Clausen skillfully expanded it for the series, Elfman’s music dug in like an earworm, establishing the tone of the show for decades to come.

    20th Century Fox

    “Edward Scissorhands” (1990) – Burton and Elfman had become a bygone conclusion by 1990, when they teamed up for this Christmas-themed gothic romance that indulged the filmmaker’s outsider impulses for what became yet another signature work for both artists.

    Walt Disney Studios

    “The Nightmare Before Christmas” (1993) – Elfman worked triple duty as composer, songwriter and singer in this future Hot Topic favorite, providing the singing voice of its misguided hero Jack Skellington and proving his instincts as a performer in his own right were still as sharp as ever.

    Miramax

    “Good Will Hunting” (1997) – Elfman won his second Oscar nomination with this delicate, guitar-driven score for Gus Van Sant’s film about a troubled prodigy and his relationship with a scruffy therapist. Merging his sound with singer-songwriter Eliot Smith’s, Elfman broke new ground in his filmography and showcased his evolving versatility.

    Sony Pictures

    “Spider-Man” (2002) – Elfman again helped define a new era of superhero movie music with this distinctive and memorable score for Sam Raimi’s film. Raimi shares in common with Burton a unique, idiosyncratic personality as a filmmaker, which undoubtedly made him and Elfman great collaborators.

    Sony Pictures

    “Big Fish” (2003) – Burton’s then-most-mature film to date challenged Elfman to create something that combined the magic of the filmmaker’s earlier work with more somber and grounded tones, and he pulled it off, earning Oscar, Golden Globe and Grammy nominations for his work.

    Focus Features

    “Milk” (2008) – Another Van Sant collaboration, another nomination: Elfman once again complemented the filmmaker’s thoughtful, sensitive work with a score that communicated the drive and humanity of their real-life protagonist, nabbing Oscar and Grammy nods in the process.

    Warner Bros.

    “Justice League” (2017) – After more than 25 years as a composer, Elfman is so prolific that it’s hard to top himself, or to do something he hadn’t before. For Zack Snyder’s team-up film, Elfman beautifully combines music from his own repertoire (the ‘89s “Batman”) with work from other contemporary superhero films and an homage to Williams’ iconic ’78 “Superman” music for an irresistible mix tape of heroic themes.

  • In Honor of ‘Long Shot,’ Our Favorite Cinematic Odd Couples

    In Honor of ‘Long Shot,’ Our Favorite Cinematic Odd Couples

    Lionsgate

    In the new film “Long Shot,” Seth Rogen plays an unemployed journalist who decides to woo his former babysitter, who is now United States Secretary of State. Skillfully directed by Jonathan Levine (whose work we’ll revisit below), the film relies on the pairing of scruffy charmer Rogen and knockout megastar Charlize Theron. But the film honors an enduring legacy of movies where two characters film themselves drawn to one another despite disparate goals, points of view, personalities or lifestyles. To commemorate the film , we’ve assembled a shortlist of notable odd-couple pairings that have changed and inspired the way we look at relationships on the silver screen and in our daily lives.

    United Artists

    Some Like It Hot” (1959)Billy Wilder directed this raucous comedy about two musicians who hide out in an all-girl band to avoid a vindictive mobster. But while Tony Curtis’ saxophonist woos a ditzy bombshell played by Marilyn Monroe, Jack Lemmon fends off (and eventually kinda-sorta succumbs to) the advances of a millionaire too blinded by love to care that he isn’t a she.

    Embassy Pictures

    The Graduate” (1967) – This generational touchstone elevates a story of two young people in love by complicating their romance when aimless graduate Benjamin (Dustin Hoffman) embarks of an affair with his would-be girlfriend’s mother (Anne Bancroft). The movie eventually arrives at the realization that neither relationship is probably destined to last, but at least acknowledges that Benjamin’s tryst with Mrs. Robinson is much more interesting than his courtship of her daughter (Katharine Ross).

    Paramount

    Harold and Maude” (1971) – In Hal Ashby’s wild, bleak comedy, Bud Cort plays an eccentric young man who falls in love with a free-spirited septuagenarian (Ruth Gordon) who teaches him to forget about his obsession with death and just enjoy life.

    Buena Vista

    Splash” (1984)Ron Howard directed this comedy about a man (Tom Hanks) and a mermaid (Daryl Hannah) who reunite as adults after falling in love as children. The culture-shock jokes for the former bottom-dweller prove less affecting than the tender romance that blossoms between the two despite a scientist’s (Eugene Levy) determination to uncover her true identity.

    Universal

    Howard the Duck” (1986) – As awful as this movie is, it did manage to break new ground as the first known depiction on screen of canoodling between a foul-mouthed, anthropomorphic duck and a human woman (Lea Thompson).

    Columbia Pictures

    Roxanne” (1987)Steve Martin is hilarious and a little heartbreaking as Charlie, a small town fire chief who falls head over heels for a comely astronomy grad student (“Splash”’s Daryl Hannah) only to find himself writing overtures on behalf of hunky dimwit Chris (Rick Rossovitch).

    Buena Vista

    Who Framed Roger Rabbit” (1988) – You won’t see a more devoted pair than goofball rabbit Roger (Charles Fleischer) and his hourglass-shaped spouse Jessica (Kathleen Turner), whose marriage is tested when Roger becomes a murder suspect.

    20th Century Fox

    Edward Scissorhands” (1990) – Tim Burton established a careerlong pedigree as purveyor of unconventional love stories starting with this film about an artificial young man (Johnny Depp), a high school cheerleader (Winona Ryder) and the weaponized hands that come between them.

    Columbia Pictures

    “The Professional” (1994) – Luc Besson wrote and directed this film about a hit man (Jean Reno) and the teenage girl (Natalie Portman) he reluctantly agrees to care for – and who in return shows him a few things about life – after he rescues her from a ruthless policeman (Gary Oldman) trying to cover up the trail of his corruption.

    TriStar Pictures

    As Good As It Gets” (1997)James L. Brooks turns oil and water into cinematic gold with this comedy about an obnoxious, obsessive-compulsive author (Jack Nicholson) who falls for a pragmatic waitress (Helen Hunt), resulting in love and some important life lessons for both of them.

    Columbia Pictures

    Punch-Drunk Love” (2002)Paul Thomas Anderson rebounded from the operatic “Magnolia” with this short and very sweet story about a novelty goods salesman (Adam Sandler) with seven sisters who falls into a delicate courtship with a woman (Emily Watson) without any siblings, finding the perfect balance together.

    Lionsgate

    Secretary” (2002) – Maggie Gyllenhaal stars in this oddball romance between an aimless young woman and the businessman (James Spader) who quite literally whips her into shape.

    Universal

    King Kong” (2005) – Peter Jackson’s remake of the 1933 classic builds a tender love story into its death defying adventures as Ann Darrow (Naomi Watts) comes to care deeply for Kong (Andy Serkis) as he slowly changes from her captor to her protector.

    MGM

    Lars and the Real Girl” (2007)Ryan Gosling stars in this unusual story about a socially-awkward young man who finds an unlikely but perfect companion in a life-size female doll he orders from an adult website.

    Warner Bros.

    Her” (2013)Spike Jonze explores the bonds and barriers of technology with this story about a writer (Joaquin Phoenix) who becomes involved with a computer program (Scarlett Johansson) in order to process his residual feelings about the end of his previous relationship with an actual woman (Rooney Mara).

    Summit

    Warm Bodies” (2013) Summit Entertainment “Long Shot” director Jonathan Levin also helmed this adaptation of Isaac Marion’s book about a zombie named R (Nicholas Hoult) whose appetite for human flesh is unexpectedly abated after he encounters a young woman (Teresa Palmer) who quite literally teaches him how to live again.

  • Every Tim Burton Movie, Ranked From ‘Beetlejuice’ to ‘Batman’

    Every Tim Burton Movie, Ranked From ‘Beetlejuice’ to ‘Batman’

  • ‘Edward Scissorhands’: 11 Things You (Probably) Didn’t Know About the Tim Burton Classic

    Before 20th Century Fox released “Edward Scissorhands” 25 years ago (on December 7, 1990), the studio marketers didn’t want ticketbuyers to see what Johnny Depp looked like. Why? They found his appearance freakish and off-putting.

    But audiences warmed up to Depp; this was the role that made him an in-demand big-screen leading man. It’s also the film that launched Depp’s long creative partnership with director Tim Burton, and it’s a fan favorite that’s stood the test of time. In honor of the film’s 25th (!?) anniversary, here are ten facts you need to know about our favorite hair stylist/dog groomer/walking hedge trimmer.
    1. A wild-haired, black-clad, misunderstood artist adrift in suburbia, Edward is clearly based on Burton himself as a teenager growing up in Burbank, California. He and screenwriter Caroline Thompson had been developing the character and the story for years, but Burton waited until the enormous success of 1989’s “Batman” gave him the clout to make the highly-personal movie without creative interference.

    2. Depp, then best known as the teen-heartthrob star of TV’s “21 Jump Street,” was no one’s first choice to play Edward. Burton wanted someone more obscure, but the studio wanted a bigger, more bankable name. Tom Cruise met with Burton to discuss the role, but he walked away when Burton refused to give the film a happier ending. Michael Jackson reportedly expressed interest, but the filmmakers didn’t follow up with him.

    3. Others up for the role were Tom Hanks, William Hurt, Robert Downey Jr. and the then-little-known Jim Carrey, before Depp finally won over the filmmakers.
    4. Although Drew Barrymore had auditioned for the role of Kim Boggs, casting Winona Ryder as Edward’s love interest proved to be a no-brainer. Not only had Burton enjoyed working with her on “Beetlejuice,” but she had also been Depp’s girlfriend for several months. By the time the shoot was underway, they were engaged, and Depp had tattooed “Winona Forever” on his bicep. Alas, they ended their engagement three years later, and Depp erased some of the tattoo, so that it read “Wino Forever.”

    5. Lutz, Florida served as the location for the film’s surreal suburban setting. Production designer Bo Welch created the neighborhood’s look of pastel uniformity by having the houses painted in one of four shades, which he described as “sea-foam green, dirty flesh, butter, and dirty blue.” The castle, however, was built from scratch on a soundstage.

    6. Blink and you’ll miss future Backstreet Boy Nick Carter (at the time, a 10-year-old living in nearby Ruskin, Florida) as a kid having fun on a slip-and-slide.
    7. A lifelong fan of Vincent Price (above), Burton created the role of the inventor with the horror icon in mind. It would turn out to be Price’s final screen appearance before his death in 1993.

    8. In 2013, when British scientist David Legg discovered a 505-million-year-old fossil of a lobster-like creature with claws that resembled scissors, he named it “Kooteninchela deppi” after the “Edward Scissorhands” star.

    9. Those elaborate topiary sculptures that Edward clips weren’t bushes at all; in fact, they weren’t even alive. They were made of elaborate webs of chicken wire, covered with green plastic plant sprigs and stretched over steel skeletons.
    10. Fox initially budgeted the movie at around $8 to $9 million, though the final cost was closer to $20 million. It earned back $56 million in North America and another $30 million overseas.

    11. “Edward Scissorhands” was nominated for a single Oscar — Best Makeup. It lost the award to the team from “Dick Tracy.”
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  • Quiz: Which Johnny Depp Character Are You?

    Is there anything Johnny Depp can’t do? (Other than get people to see “Mortdecai?”)

    For the better part of three decades, Depp has made a career out of playing a crazy-wide range of engaging characters. He’s done everything from a ’50s greaser prone to breaking out into song, to a pale-faced man with scissorhands and a knack for grooming.

    When he’s not making every other Tim Burton movie, he tries his hand at more “Serious” fare — think “Donnie Brasco,” “Finding Neverland” or his latest film, the crime bio-pic “Black Mass.” Oh, and don’t forget Captain Jack.

    Depp’s bench of memorable characters is crazy deep — so which one best suits you? That’s your cue to take our quiz and find out.

  • Quiz: Which Tim Burton Movie Are You?

    Director and writer Tim Burton has one the greatest imaginations in cinematic history. From “Beetlejuice” to “Alice in Wonderland,” he’s given us so many iconic films throughout the years. But which one of his quirky flicks are you most like? Find out your Tim Burton movie match right now. (Spoiler alert: Statistically, Johnny Depp is most likely in it.)