Tag: elle fanning

  • ‘Maleficent 2’ Begins Production, Announces New Cast Members

    Production has officially begun on the sequel to Disney’s 2014 hit “Maleficent,” with cast members both old and new converging on the film’s London set this week.

    Disney announced the start of filming on “Maleficent II” in a tweet on Tuesday, sharing a snap of three chairs emblazoned with the names of the movie’s main protagonists: the returning Maleficent (Angelina Jolie) and Princess Aurora (Elle Fanning), as well as new character Queen Ingrith (Michelle Pfeiffer).

    The studio also released some additional details about the flick, including a list of new actors joining the fold: Harris Dickinson (playing Prince Phillip, Aurora’s love interest in “Sleeping Beauty”), Chiwetel Ejiofor, Ed Skrein (reportedly playing a villain), and Robert Lindsay. Returning cast members from the first film are Sam Riley, Imelda Staunton, Juno Temple, and Lesley Manville.

    Fanning celebrated the production kickoff with a series of silly snaps on Instagram, featuring her famous horned costar.

    It’s bring your mom to work day on the #Maleficent2 set!!!!! ✌????

    A post shared by Elle Fanning (@ellefanning) on

    Ultimate Photobomb #Maleficent2

    A post shared by Elle Fanning (@ellefanning) on

    We’re keeping our fingers crossed that some footage of these photos being taken winds up on the film’s eventual blooper reel.

    Here’s the flick’s official synopsis:

    A fantasy adventure that picks up several years after Maleficent, in which audiences learned of the events that hardened the heart of Disney’s most notorious villain and drove her to curse a baby Princess Aurora, Maleficent II continues to explore the complex relationship between the horned fairy and the soon to be Queen, as they form new alliances and face new adversaries in their struggle to protect the moors and the magical creatures that reside within.

    No word yet on when “Maleficent II” is due in theaters. Stay tuned.

    [via: Disney/Twitter, Coming Soon]

  • ‘Mary Shelley’ Trailer Delves Into Origins of ‘Frankenstein’

    It’s time for a look at the mind behind the classic novel “Frankenstein.”

    The biopic “Mary Shelley” is due to hit U.S. theaters soon, and ahead of its launch, the studio has released a new trailer. The preview looks the life of the “Frankenstein” author, how she came up with the horror story, and her battle to be taken seriously. Elle Fanning plays the title character, joined by Douglas Booth as the author’s husband, Bel Powley as her stepsister, and Tom Sturridge as Lord Byron, among others.

    The preview teases a complicated story, saying that “her greatest love inspired her darkest creation.” There are moments of happiness, like when Mary first falls in love with poet Percy Shelley (Booth), but it also hints at loss, betrayal, and death. Watch below.

    Directed by Haifaa al-Mansour and written by Emma Jensen, “Mary Shelley” first premiered at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival. It will open stateside on May 25.

  • ‘The Beguiled’ Trailer Brings Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman Together in Sofia Coppola’s Thriller

    Daniel Wu as Sunny - Into the Badlands _ Season 2, Episode 3 - Photo Credit: Antony Platt/AMCColin Farrell is a rooster in a hen house in the first trailer for Sofia Coppola’s Civil War-era seduction thriller “The Beguiled.”

    Farrell plays a wounded Union Army soldier taken in by Nicole Kidman’s schoolmistress of an all-girls seminary in Virginia. Kirsten Dunst plays a teacher, while Elle Fanning is a young student, both of whom seem attracted to him. While Kidman is determined to show the soldier some “real Southern hospitality,” his presence soon sparks a tense environment of seduction, betrayal, and revenge.

    The movie, based on Thomas Cullinan’s 1966 novel, is Coppola’s first since 2013’s “Bling Ring.” The trailer looks like a promising mix of Southern gothic moodiness, sexy danger, and gender power play.

    As Coppola told Entertainment Weekly, “The main crux of the story is about the dynamics between a group of women all stuck together, and then also the power shifts between men and women. So for me, it’s very universal, but it’s in this exotic setting of the Southern gentility.”

    “The Beguiled” opens in theaters June 30.

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  • What Movies Are Out: Live by Night, Sleepless, The Bye Bye Man

    Ben Affleck in Live by Night
    Ben Affleck in Live by Night

    What Movies Are Out This Weekend – Live by Night, Sleepless, The Bye Bye Man

    Things get very real, very fast at the box office with three new movies that put everything up on the screen, and Made in Hollywood has all the details in this week’s episode.

    “Live by Night” director-star Ben Affleck strives for Roaring 20s authenticity by using buildings from the era and even dressing costar Elle Fanning in vintage underwear. It’s all part of Affleck’s long love affair with the gangster genre.

    “I’ve always thought of myself as a gangster — but with no weapons and no gang and no crew,” he jokes to Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar. “So I’m kind of a gangster of one.”

    Authenticity came in a more painful form for “Sleepless” star Jamie Foxx when a fight scene with Michelle Monaghan in the police action film got so out of control she smacked him in the face.

    “Right down straight to the kisser,” Foxx, pointing to his front tooth, tells reporter Patrick Stinson. “We’re doing the fight scene and I guess ‘action’ got called wrong and BAM! She chipped this. All this is porcelain.”

    For “The Bye Bye Man” star Doug Jones, a tense encounter with Carrie-Anne Moss went to another level because of one real-life location used for the horror flick about a monster who manipulates his victims with hallucinations.

    “Our interrogation scene was in just a police station,” Jones tells reporter Julie Harkness Arnold, “but that’s still a little weird when you’re walking down looking at the cell rooms.”

    “I could definitely feel the energy,” adds Moss. “I’m a very intuitive, sensitive person, so when I go onto sets I tend to feel the energy of things. So when you’re in a movie like this, you have to be kind of mentally disciplined.”

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  • Why Elle Fanning Worried She Was Too Young for Live by Night

    Elle Fanning from Live by Night
    Elle Fanning from Live by Night

    Elle Fanning Worried She Was Too Young for Ben Affleck’s Live by Night

    Playing the evangelist daughter of a cop in Roaring 1920s Boston in Ben Affleck‘s “Live by Night,” longtime child actress Elle Fanning believed she’d found her most mature role to date, though she initially worried the complicated character Loretta might prove too mature.

    “I knew it would be a challenge, and I always want to challenge myself,” Fanning, 18, tells Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar. “When I read the script first I was 15. I remember reading it and I didn’t know if I would get the part. Then I met with Ben. And there’s like no way. He’s going to think I’m too young.”

    Elle Fanning Reveals How Delay in Filming Helped Her in Live by Night

    In the end, it all worked out, in no small part because it took nearly three years for Affleck to get the gangster flick made.

    “I filmed the movie when I was almost 18,” says Fanning. “I felt like it was perfect for Loretta’s character, because I was right on the cusp of feeling like a little girl but then also being a woman. And that odd limbo that you feel is what Loretta was going through, too. It was perfect. She’s such a complex kind of woman. To be one of three women who influence Ben in the film …was better than just playing the kid in the movie.”

    Helping Fanning channel Loretta was the authentic period wardrobe created by costume designer Jacqueline West.

    “She’s like the best ever and thinks of every single detail,” says Fanning. “Everything is very thought out and very specific down to the socks and underwear which are all from the 1920s. … You do walk a certain way, you feel a certain way. You’re really transported back to that time.”

    Elle Fanning on Getting Over Ben Affleck’s Batman Past

    As for working with Affleck, it took a few moments for Fanning get past his megastar image – and the fact that her costar was also her director.

    “It’s like Batman?” she jokes. “Ben makes you feel .. so safe and comfortable. He’s directing it, and he’s also the actor with you in the scene. Once he’s playing Joe, you just look at him as the actor. He’s Joe in the scene with you. And then they say cut and he’s off to look at lighting and camera angles. He really does that flawlessly, that transition. So it was amazing to work with him. It was the best experience, really. He just knows how to help you do your best work.”

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  • Why Ben Affleck Jokes He’s a Gangster Without a Gang

    Ben Affleck from Live by Night
    Ben Affleck from Live by Night

    Ben Affleck of Live by Night Talks the Cool Allure of Gangster Movies

    There must be something about those hats and spats that no actor can resist.

    “I wanted to make a great gangster movie,” says Ben Affleck, the star, director and co-writer of the 1920s-set “Live by Night.” “I wanted to make a fun, pulpy, sexy gangster movie with cars and guns and suits and hats and love and betrayal and all that great stuff that goes into the genre.”

    Maybe that’s because Affleck relates to those guys. “I’ve always thought of myself as a gangster — but with no weapons and no gang,” he laughs. “So I’m kind of a gangster of one.”

    How Ben Affleck Got ’20s Look in Live by Night

    The star tells Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar that capturing the authentic feel of the Roaring ’20s was key for “Live by Night,” about the son of a strict Boston police superintendent who turns outlaw, only to cross a powerful mob boss by stealing his money and his moll.

    That starts with the real-life locations. “We found places that still look like the ’20s, believe it or not,” he says. “There are a few of them out there still.”

    And it includes capturing the chaos of the climactic final scene, seven minutes of mayhem that took a week to shoot. “It was complicated,” Affleck says. “It had to be done piece by piece. We had to storyboard each shot and make sure they all made sense geographically and knew who was who. It was a lot of work but it’s one of those things where you put them together piece by piece by piece and you have this big jigsaw puzzle that’s all finished and looks pretty cool.”

    Chris Messina on Gaining 40 Pounds for Live by Night

    For costar Chris Messina, striving for authenticity meant packing on so much weight for his role that he’s virtually unrecognizable.

    “I gained 40 pounds, so it was a fun experience of eating a lot of food, drinking a lot of beer, ice cream, pasta,” he says, then points to Affleck. “This guy, he gave me a trainer as a wrap gift to help me lose the weight. He’s a good friend.”

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