Tag: emma-watson

  • Emma Watson Has an Idea for ‘Beauty and the Beast’ Sequel

    If Disney decides to make a sequel to “Beauty and the Beast,” they can bring back Emma Watson not just as the star but as a writer, too!

    “I would love to do a sequel,” the actress told Access Hollywood. “I always thought that Belle would become a teacher and she would run a library in the castle and open it up to the village.”

    “Beauty and the Beast” was a mega blockbuster, earning more than $1.1 billion worldwide. So, talk of a potential sequel, or spinoff, started up as the movie continued to rake in cash.

    Watson’s idea definitely sounds like a plausible for Belle, whose love of books and learning is a defining characteristic. Perhaps she could take a new character, an orphaned boy with special talents, under her wing. And the antagonists could be a cruel teacher and a bullying student. Oh wait, Watson’s already done that kind of story.

  • ‘The Circle’ Director James Ponsoldt on Casting John Boyega and Then Leaving Him in a Corner

    There are few films as keenly of-the-moment as “The Circle.”

    This nifty little cautionary thriller, based on a book by vaulted author Dave Eggers, follows Mae (Emma Watson), a young woman who gets the chance of the lifetime when she’s given a job at a staggering tech behemoth (run, in part, by Tom Hanks, playing a character as charming as he is potentially dangerous). In “The Circle,” ideas that are in the current conversational bloodstream, provocatively channeling our own fears about transparency, privacy, and surveillance are packaged within compelling character work and a familiar suspense framework. Some of the movie plays like the most edge-of-your-seat TED talk you’ve ever watched, other portions are like “Black Mirror,” but with the more absurd elements toned down considerably.

    And you could feel those modern anxieties at the film’s premiere, as part of the Tribeca Film Festival, in New York. Watson and Hanks were there, as was the film’s director, James Ponsoldt, who I got to sit down with the next day in midtown Manhattan. The filmmaker, who some will know from his previous films “The Spectacular Now” and “The End of the Tour,” makes bold leaps forward with this film, which is playful, colorful, and slick. (Cinematographer Matthew Libatique, a frequent confederate of Darren Aronofsky’s, absolutely kills it.)

    It was a refreshingly wide-ranging conversation that covered everything from working with Eggers on the film’s screenplay to being one of the last filmmakers to direct the late, great Bill Paxton, to what his interest levels are in taking over a big Hollywood franchise. As always, Ponsoldt is engaging and forthcoming. He is, like Mae in the film, totally transparent.

    What was it like adapting Dave Eggers with Dave Eggers?

    It was great. “A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius” came out when I was in college. It made a huge impact on me and pretty much everyone I knew; we were all obsessed with the book. I think I’ve read everything of his since. He feels like a cultural commentator who is speaking not only to my generation, but definitely to my generation. When “The Circle” came out, I was excited to read it was a Dave Eggers novel but it felt really different. It was plagued with genre and was a dark satire and Mae was a character who I felt was compelling and frustrating, and I realize my complicated relationship with the character was because I saw some of myself in the character, for better or worse, probably for worse. And the book really haunted me. That’s what I was bringing to it.

    When I first talked to Dave about it he was just great, in as much as his take was, the book is the book, the movie should be the movie, it shouldn’t be blindly adherent. He thinks the best film adaptations of books take the theme but invent and necessarily have to strip away and invent things for the screen. I think a literal adaptation of that book would have had to be a 10-hour miniseries, and perhaps a great one.

    So Dave said that at the outset, but there was a part of me that was wondering. I would be, if I spent years on a novel, [apprehensive] if someone was diving into it and ripping it apart in some cases. But he was just the best. The first draft of it he read and he sent me back a printed out copy with some penciled in notes but was very supportive. And then it became a constant back-and-forth. He had no ego in it at all. He was the first one to say, “What about this?” and “What about that?” The entire time I found it constantly inspiring. He was a great collaborator.

    Now that Tom Hanks has been in two of his adaptations, is he the Tony Stark of the Dave Eggers Cinematic Universe?

    I don’t know! It’s so funny! It’s pretty cool, that relationship. I was at an amazing fundraiser in San Francisco on Monday night, and Tom was the guest of honor. It was raising money for an organization that Dave is part of. Just watching their rapport was like, Yes, I would listen to one of our most celebrated novelists and one of our most celebrated actors talk all night long. That’s pretty cool.

    Was there any fear that you were going to get to it too late? Because the story is very of-the-moment.

    Yeah, for sure! I think any film in the history of films where technology is any part of it, you have that question, because technology changes. So does the movie become moot? I think that’s always a question. I don’t think so. If you just fetishize the gadgets then, yes, that’s potentially a place where you can get into murky water. But if your real concern is issues of privacy and surveillance and overreach and us and the way we relate to technology and our own ego and our desire for privacy and yet our desire to be known and our love of free and new stuff that might come with fine print that we may or may not read, I don’t see those issues going away.

    A few pages into Dave’s book, he says something to the extent of, “The Circle is a company that has subsumed all of its competitors.” It’s five minutes into the future, it’s an alternate now. We went out of our way to make sure all of the tech in the film is either built from the ground up or seriously adapted from other things so you’ll really only see it in the film. Yes, the technology will definitely change but we still watch movies with older cars.

    And there is a little bit of magic to the technology.

    Oh, totally. There’s certainly a sense of humor to the book and hopefully the movie. It is satire and it is ridiculous and I’m not sure, when the book came out, that everybody read it that way. But it does have a sense of humor about it. I don’t think it an overly techno-phobic or Luddite book. I think there’s some belief that if you write something that engages with issues of technology, that you hate technology. That’s like making a movie about fascism and saying that you hate politics. But it’s like, no, you’d argue for good politics and ethnical politicians. But we were trying to tell the story through one person.

    Was it fun going from the wintery desolation of “The End of the Tour” to “The Circle,” which is so sunny and bright and has graphics all over the place?

    Yeah. But they present their own challenges. On one hand, it’s easy to do a naturalism, although “End of the Tour” had a period naturalism that was pretty hard actually because it was 20 years ago. We think we know what 1946 or 1968 looks like, but 1996 is like now but not quite. So a lot of it was just removing, removing, removing. In this case, I think people are used to anything involving technology being dystopian looking — cold and symmetrical and everyone wears white. But that’s not how these companies look and feel, and it doesn’t benefit the story, it makes things a little too binary. These companies are young and fun and idealistic. They can also feel naïve but there is a youthful energy and spirit there, for better or worse. My time at tech campuses, I spent time in giant open floor plans with walls that say, “DISRUPT.” Where you’re like, is this a parody of itself? But it’s easy to be a cynic in that world.

    You bring up cynicism and what’s interesting about Mae is that she never succumbs to cynicism. She’s the same optimist at the end of the movie that she was at the beginning. Was that important for you?

    Yeah, totally. I think Dave’s book is tricky and fun. It’s like a dark fairy tale or adult fable or something. Through Mae’s choices, there are tragic, cataclysmic repercussions, and it doesn’t mean that she doesn’t fundamentally changes her feelings about privacy or what she’s open to or what she sees in the future. Personally, she’s not going to get into government regulation antitrust issues. She’s a believer. She’s a disrupter who, like all of us, believes our position is better than those that came before us. But the truth is her vision for the future could be far worse. She just can’t possibly know. This year alone we’ve seen what disruption means and that can be aided by the Internet and Twitter, with people using it as a platform to affect elections in multiple countries. I’m sure there were people on both sides who believed they were right and the other side was wrong.

    I wanted to ask you about someone who is becoming a regular collaborator: composer Danny Elfman. His score for this movie is amazing, and I don’t know that he’s ever done a score that’s this electronic.

    I don’t know that he has. You go back to Oingo Boingo, there’s a lot of synth stuff there. Danny is amazing. I was a huge fan. I knew who Danny Elfman was before I understood what composers did. “The Simpsons.” There’s definitely a sound. Danny can do anything. But there’s the stuff with Tim Burton and the stuff with Sam Raimi. There’s also the stuff he’s done with David O. Russell and Gus Van Sant. I was excited for “End of the Tour” because, like most of my films, there’s probably about 20 minutes of music. But I was excited to collaborate with him in a way that I hadn’t heard him do before.

    With “The Circle,” it was a movie with a lot of sound, especially when she gets into the world of The Circle. Surprisingly, there’s a lot of human voice that’s been futzed with, or auto-tuned to the point that you can’t recognize it’s a human voice, which was intentional. We talked a lot about electronic music and I’m a huge fan of it. To some people, who are not fans of it, it can sound cold, but for me I’ve never found that. But starting with Kraftwerk and onward there’s so much humanity and wit and warmth to it. We wanted to create a soundscape for Mae that was overwhelming. There’s a lot. In the same way that the camera doesn’t stop moving when she starts working at the Circle, neither does the score.

    Can you talk about working with Beck?

    Yeah. Working with … “My pal Beck,” say that with quotes. The truth is, when you go to some of these places and I went to one of them for research and there was a free Hot Chip concert on a Thursday night. Of course there’s a free Hot Chip concert and yoga and free food. We wanted someone to come in and perform that feels very matter-of-fact, another Tuesday night at The Circle. When his name came up, I had been a huge fan forever but I didn’t think there was any way he’d do it. And then we heard that he thought it’d be really fun. But I still didn’t think it would happen because I just assume things would fall apart. And we got to the day and it was like, He’s really going to be there, huh? And he was there and he was amazing! It’s hard to tell, but the camera swoops down and swirls around him; it’s pretty elaborate. He was great and had incredible dance moves and was spot on. He did it again and again. Then he said, “We probably have another hour, hour and a half in us.” So I was like, “Cool!”

    Did he know your movies or was he a fan of the book or what? Did you ever find out?

    That’s a really good question. Some of the folks involved, like our music supervisor, grew up in L.A., and she had grown up in some of the same circles as Beck. I don’t know what she told him. I assume he read the book because he’s very cultured and he and Dave Eggers know each other. But beyond that I didn’t fish too much. I didn’t want to tempt fate. I was just excited that he was there.

    You dedicate the movie to Bill Paxton and his performance is so great and affecting. Everyone loved him, and he was known as being the nicest guy. What was your experience with him?

    He was the nicest guy. I hadn’t worked with him before, so my only frame of reference was with this film. He had this kind of aw-shucks Texas demeanor, but he was genuinely kind, properly disciplined; he knew how to do his job and was obsessed with getting the details right for his character and framing the character honestly and humanely and not judging the character.

    Like most great actors, he was most concerned with making his fellow actors feel good. And he was also a really good filmmaker. It’s obvious that he understood how a set worked and what everyone’s job was and had a lot of respect for everyone. He was the glue on set with this animating energy. He is someone who would text me and say, “Turn on TCM, there’s a really obscure noir you need to watch.” I knew him through the lens of that experience.

    Everyone loved him and he seemed to genuinely love everybody. I feel bad, first and foremost, for his family, but it feels like a bummer for everybody — his family, his fans. He should have been here for decades to come.

    Your take on casting is really interesting. Because when I found out Bill Paxton was in the movie I assumed he was one of the Three Wise Men. Can you talk about your approach to casting?

    With the Three Wise Men, my first frame of reference was Dave’s book. So I checked there; I was thinking about people in the real world although they’re fictional characters. It’s like, “Who would have been a hacker programmer in real life?” What do those images look like? And have they been influenced by other movies I’ve seen? What do people who actually run multimillion-dollar companies look like? How do they talk? What’s their background? Are they villainous like I think they’d be? Probably not. It was a lot of those things. In the case of Tom Hanks’s character, what are the aspects of a charismatic person who really believes what he believes? Really wants to democratize the world but that being said is making billions of dollars for the company, which muddies up the intentions.

    Bill’s character was hard because it’s tricky to portray someone with a chronic illness. That’s part of the dynamic of Mae’s family, it’s part of the drama, part of the anxiety, and one of the aspects of The Circle, which is that they have an amazing health care and can treat a member of her family with a preexisting condition. You need an actor like Bill Paxton to get that character spot-on.

    Was it hard casting an actor as charismatic as John Boyega and leaving him in the back of the room for most of his scenes?

    Well, it’s Emma’s movie, right? She’s in every scene. But one is really fortunate to get amazing actors to play those other roles. I’m someone who would make a movie with that actor or actress and have them in every scene. I can’t wait to make a movie that’s John Boyega in every scene or Karen Gillan in every scene. That would be really thrilling. John’s amazing, and you see Tom doing it as well. Tom has had no problem starring in movies but they also have no problem serving the story and being a supporting role. I had loved John in “Attack the Block” and met with him and found him to be so intense in the best way. He was charismatic, intense, and focused. So I was thrilled that he was going to do it, because his life was going to change very soon.

    As a filmgoer, I’m always excited when actors who are typically stars play a very different version that what they’re known for or play a supporting role. Part of having a vibrant career is making those decisions.

    You’re of the age/resume of filmmakers who are having big projects thrown their way. Has that happened to you? Does any of that stuff interest you?

    You know. Yes, they have offered things to me. But it depends. For me, I like ideas that aren’t beholden to massive corporate interests. I could imagine making a movie that’s an absolute no-budget movie or a movie with a pretty big budget. But something that is just part two or three or four or five doesn’t necessarily sound as exciting to me.

    I am writing something for Disney, but it’s an original idea that, if I’m lucky enough to make it, will be a much bigger budget than what I’m used to. So there will be those pressures. But I’m excited to build that world. I have tremendous respect for those filmmakers, some of whom are friends of mine, who step into a franchise where there’s a lot of love for the graphic novel or whatever it is it’s based on. It’s a different type of pressure. It’s nice to build your own little universe and go on and build another one.

    “The Circle” is out today everywhere.

  • Here’s How ‘Power Rangers’ and ‘Beauty and the Beast Crushed It at the Box Office

    Hollywood seems to think remakes are easy ways to make money; just pick a familiar title and let nostalgia do the work for you. Actually, as remake-weary viewers know, such movies are hard to do right.

    This week’s box office, however, proves it can be done, given the continuing success of “Beauty and the Beast” and the estimated $40.5 million debut of “Power Rangers.” Disney’s live-action remake of the animated classic held on to the top spot in its second weekend, with an impressive $88.3 million. (Some pundits predict that tally could go up to $90 or $91 million by Monday, a crazy-good total for a second weekend.)

    The weekend results also offer a cautionary tale of how not to do it, with “CHiPs” opening well below expectations in seventh place, with an estimated $7.6 million.

    Why did digging up the past work so well for “Beauty” and “Power Rangers,” and so poorly for “CHiPs”? Here are the reasons.

    1. Audiences Love Some Nostalgia — Unless You’re ‘CHiPs’
    “Beauty” and “Power Rangers” both date back to the ’90s, yet neither ever really went away.

    From the show and about $6 billion worth of toys out there.

    “CHiPs” (that’s how they spelled it then) may have had a big pop culture footprint 40 years ago, but aside from whatever lingering fondness our culture still has for the NBC motorcycle cop action series, which ran from 1977 to 1983, but the show hasn’t been seen much in reruns since then. So it’s hard to imagine too many fans, new or old, yearning to see Ponch and Jon ride side by side down the Pacific Coast Highway once more.

    2. Update What Fans Love
    “Beauty” maintained fan loyalty by not changing much at all. It did add just enough novelty (It’s live-action now! With IMAX-worthy spectacle! And some intriguing sorta-gay subtext!) to justify the new version’s existence.

    “Power Rangers” was a trickier adaptation. The original was fun and campy and colorful but also thoroughly juvenile. What could give the Lionsgate remake appeal to fans who are now grown-ups as well as teens who’ve never seen the old show? Make it into a young-adult sci-fi/fantasy movie (with a strong dose of Marvel). This YA-y approach worked very well for Lionsgate in the past, with the “Twilight” and “Hunger Games” franchises. The result seemed to hit the demographic sweet spot, with the movie drawing an audience that was 50 percent over age 25 and 30 percent under 18.

    “CHiPs” underwent a more radical overhaul, with writer/director/star Dax Shepard playing up the comedy and giving the characters elaborate backstories. In other words, it’s “CHiPs” in name and premise only; most of what original “CHiPs” fans may have loved about the old show is gone. Granted, this approach worked for the “21 Jump Street” movies, but at least those were well-written and acutely self-aware. And they also had one asset that “CHIPS” lacks —

    3. Star Power
    The “Jump Street” movies at least had proven box office draws in Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum. “CHIPS” stars Shepard and Michael Peña are not proven ticket-sellers, and they’re both lacking in the charisma department; they’re not even as charming as Estrada and Larry Wilcox were on the small screen. With all this stacked against the film, on top of audiences not caring about the TV show at all anymore, it’s amazing (and crazy) that Warners pulled the trigger on it at all. Let alone thought it was a good idea to begin with.

    “Beauty” and “Power Rangers” both get by without star power being much of an issue. Because the titles and brand are the draw. “Power Rangers” features “Hunger Games” alumna Elizabeth Banks in a well-tailored role as its diva villain, but no one’s coming to see her; it’s all about the quintet of heroes in the candy-colored costumes.

    4. Buzz Means Everything
    “Beauty” did just okay with critics (earning a 71 percent “Fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes) but wowed audiences, who gave it an “A” CinemaScore. “Power Rangers” did not wow critics (46 percent on RT), but audiences ate it up anyway and gave it an A CinemaScore, too. Both benefitted from strong word-of-mouth, which was not the case for “CHIPS.” Neither critics nor audiences cared much for it, judging by the movie’s 20 percent RT rating and B- CinemaScore.

    5. Family-Friendly Ratings
    It probably didn’t help that “CHiPs” was rated R, indicating a raunchiness that would both repel fans of the squeaky-clean TV show and keep out younger viewers.

    “Power Rangers” may be a lot more mature than its TV source, but it’s still rated PG-13, the ideal rating to draw fans who want to see a movie with some grit but without keeping young ticketbuyers away. Even “Beauty” is rated PG, which is about as far as it can go to indicate grown-up content while still being a family movie.

    6. Timing
    March has been a huge month for summer-style blockbusters, but this weekend was especially crowded, with three new wide releases competing. “Beauty” certainly benefitted from having last weekend all to itself. Still, even with the movie doing just half the business of last weekend’s record-smashing debut, “Beauty” was still impossible to compete with, doing about $28 million more than the three new wide releases combined.

    The week’s lone new movie that wasn’t a remake, sci-fi/horror thriller “Life,” should have been a bigger draw for women, both because of its horror premise and the casting of both Jake Gyllenhaal and Ryan Reynolds. Nonetheless, the film opened in fourth place, underperforming with an estimated $12.6 million. “Life” failed to draw women (its audience was just 45 percent female), maybe because they were all still lining up for “Beauty.”

    You’d think “Life” would have done well, thanks to its star power and decent reviews. But audiences didn’t like it (it earned a dismal C+ at CinemaScore), suggesting that the movie would have done poorly even on a less competitive weekend.

    It’s this kind of disappointing result, for an original screenplay filmed with a star-studded cast on a modest budget ($58 million), that leads Hollywood to believe it’s safer just to keep filming remakes.

  • Thanks to ‘Beauty and the Beast,’ Emma Watson Will Be Highest Paid Actress of 2017

    Emma WatsonThe live-action “Beauty and the Beast” has so far grossed more than $490 worldwide* and part of that enormous chunk of cash will go to Emma Watson.

    Watson was paid only $2 million to star as Belle, but thanks to a sweet back-end deal, the 26-year-old could rake in more than $15 million, according to THR.

    That ranks her above Jennifer Lawrence, who’s held the top position since 2015 when she was paid $15 million for the final “Hunger Games” movie, according to The Daily Beast.

    Watson previously held the “highest paid actress” title in 2010, thanks to “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1,” and was ranked 14th overall that year.

    “She is the biggest star in the world right now,” Liza Anderson, celebrity publicist and founder of Anderson Group Public Relations told the London Evening Standard. “She can star in anything. She could produce. She’s America’s sweetheart and a global sweetheart. There’s no better position to be in right now. I’m sure she has Hollywood banging at her door. I think she has the world in the palm of her hand.”

    Watson famously turned down another singing role in “La La Land,” which won a Best Actress Oscar for Emma Stone, to star in the Disney remake.

    According to The Daily Mail, Watson’s net worth is reportedly $70 million, mostly earned from the “Harry Potter” films. That’s a lot of bling for the “Bling Ring” star.

    *The Daily Beast reported that the film had grossed $790 million, but BoxOfficeMojo reports that the worldwide gross is $90 million as of March 23.

  • 5 Reasons ‘Beauty and the Beast’ Made All the Money This Weekend

    There was no question that “Beauty and the Beast” would top the box office chart this weekend. The only question was: How big would its opening weekend get?

    The answer was an estimated $170 million in North America, making “Beauty” the seventh biggest debut in history, the biggest March opening ever, and the biggest premiere ever for a PG-rated film. It’s also the biggest opening weekend for any of Disney’s recent wave of live-action remakes of its catalogue of animated classics.

    The film’s opening weekend was slightly higher than most predicted, and, despite good-but-not-great reviews (71 percent “Fresh” at Rotten Tomatoes), high expectations from fans of the original 1991 film, a star (Emma Watson) who remained unproven outside of the “Harry Potter” franchise, “Beast” managed to net $350 million worldwide over its first weekend. Here’s how the tale as old as time pulled it off:

    1. Nostalgia
    “Beauty” is the first of Disney’s live-action remakes whose source is a fairly recent film, one from the studio’s animation renaissance of the 1990s instead of from when Walt was alive, which was more than a half-century ago. And the 1991 “Beauty” wasn’t just any Disney animated feature; it was the first ever to earn a Best Picture Oscar nomination. So it was beloved by critics as well as young and middle-aged adults who grew up watching it and kids who fell in love with it on home video,

    Plus, for years, Disney used the musical’s “Be Our Guest” as a tourist jingle. So “Beauty” wasn’t just a fondly-but-dimly-remembered film from the distant past; rather, it’s been both ubiquitous and popular for more than 25 years straight.

    Talking to Moviefone, Disney’s Executive Vice President for Theatrical Distribution, Dave Hollis, cited nostalgia first among “Beauty’s” strengths. He said the company found the 25-year interval since the first film to be the “perfect distance” to capitalize on the affection for the film held by viewers who were kids in 1991. Now, he said, those viewers are “parents bringing their children into theaters for the same kind of experience.”

    2. March Is the New Launchpad for Blockbusters
    March madness isn’t just a basketball thing anymore. It also describes how crowded the late-winter month has become with summer-worthy blockbusters.

    It’s a trend that started with Disney’s live-action update of “Alice in Wonderland” seven years ago, a film whose $116 million opening proved once and for all that you could open a blockbuster in March as easily as in May or June. Indeed, instead of releasing “Beauty” on staggered dates throughout the world, Disney put out the film on the same day in all but three major world markets (Australia, France, and Japan), allowing the movie to take advantage of spring break in the U.S. and similar springtime holidays around the globe. As a result, “Beauty” enjoyed similar record-breaking openings in many countries and grossed an estimated $180 million overseas.

    The current March may be the most crowded one yet, with at least one new potential blockbuster every weekend, including “Kong” and “Logan.” And yet, there seems to be room for everyone so far, with these hit films driving interest in theatrical moviegoing that has benefitted just about every wide release this month. “The market always expands for quality film,” Hollis said. He acknowledged how thick with major releases March has become, but he said the month is “still unbelievably less crowded than the summer.”

    3. Old Story, New Visuals
    Disney’s cartoon-to-live-action adaptations have tried, mostly with success, to be as imaginative and stunning to look at as the original animation. “Beauty” seems to work on this level as well, particularly with all the inanimate objects in Beast’s castle coming to vivid, dancing life. As a result, the movie has done especially well in enhanced formats that bring in ticket surcharges.

    Some 37 percent of sales went to premium formats, including 26 percent to 3D, eight percent to IMAX (2D and 3D), and 11 percent to other premium large format screens (2D and 3D). Those are large numbers for the high-end tickets, which usually account for 25 percent or less of a 3D movie’s opening weekend. In fact, it’s the biggest IMAX debut ever for a PG-rated movie, both domestically and worldwide. Hollis says the marketing played up the visuals, partly in order to broaden the film’s appeal beyond families. “It’s part of how we’re positioning the film to general audiences,” he said.

    4. Good Word-of-Mouth
    As soft as the reviews were, they didn’t do much to depress turnout among older viewers who still read criticism. Maybe that’s because word-of-mouth was so strong. Paying customers gave “Beauty” an A CinemaScore, suggesting that they recommended it enthusiastically to others.

    5. Families Really Wanted to See the Movie
    All the grumbling over the last few weeks about the movie’s supposedly taboo-shattering depiction of LeFou (Josh Gad) as gay didn’t seem to stop families from buying tickets to “Beauty.”

    Director Bill Condon‘s remarks about giving LeFou an “exclusively gay moment” at the end of the film had some prominent Evangelical activists up in arms and threatening boycotts of “Beauty” and Disney in general, and one Alabama theater made headlines for refusing to book the film. Nonetheless, advance-sales site Fandango called “Beauty” the fastest-selling family film in its history. Disney reported that families bought 50 percent of the tickets and that 35 percent of tickets went to kids 16 and under.

    Asked whether the studio had any concerns about the possible impact of the religion-motivated backlash at the box office, Hollis declined to comment. Still, the movie’s $170 million take speaks for itself.

  • Emma Watson & Amanda Seyfried Take Legal Action After Private Photos Leak

    Actresses Emma Watson and Amanda Seyfried are both taking legal action, separately, over the release of “stolen” private images.

    A publicist for Watson told the BBC, “Photos from a clothes fitting Emma had with a stylist a couple of years ago have been stolen. They are not nude photographs. Lawyers have been instructed and we are not commenting further.”

    Seyfried’s lawyers sent a letter to a website that had posted, without her consent, “several very private photographs of Ms. Seyfried either in various states of nudity or in intimate moments with her former boyfriend.” TMZ has a copy of the letter, which demands that the site “immediately and permanently: (i) cease and desist any use of the Seyfried Photographs, and (ii) remove the Seyfried Photographs
    from your website.”

    'Loving' - Red Carpet Arrivals - The 69th Annual Cannes Film FestivalThese leaks follow Mischa Barton‘s statement about an unauthorized sex tape being shopped around. “Someone I thought I loved and trusted was filming my most intimate and private moments, without my consent, with hidden cameras,” she said (via People). “Then I learned something even worse: that someone is trying to sell these videos and make them public. I came forward to fight this not only for myself but for all the women out there.”

    Emma Watson said she was threatened with a leak of nude images in 2014 after a speech she gave on gender equality as a UN Ambassador. She said she knew it was a hoax, since the pictures didn’t exist, but it didn’t escape her attention that “The minute I stepped up and talked about women’s rights I was immediately threatened – within less than 12 hours I was receiving threats.” Watson is currently promoting “Beauty and the Beast,” which opens Friday, March 17.

    In January, the hacker who broke into the private accounts of Jennifer Lawrence and other celebrities was sentenced to nine months in prison.

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  • Watch the ‘Beauty and the Beast’ Cast Reveal Their Favorite Disney Princesses


    Emma Watson joins the list of Disney princesses as book-loving Belle in the live-action “Beauty and the Beast,” which opens Friday. So who was her favorite Disney princess when she was growing up?

    “Obviously, a massive Belle fan,” says the “Harry Potter” alum. “I was also very partial to Pocahontas.” (As she told us in another video, it was partly due to the pet raccoon, partly because of Pocahontas’s awesome hair.)

    Gugu Mbatha-Raw reveals she was similarly “obsessed with Belle … I also loved Ariel in ‘The Little Mermaid.’ That was kind of my generation.”

    No surprise, composer Alan Menken — who wrote the songs used both in the 1991 “Beauty and the Beast” and the remake, as well as penning tunes for Ariel and Pocahontas — also favors the bookish, Beast-loving Belle: “It could actually be Belle! Belle’s pretty special.”

    On an entirely different note, Audra McDonald says, “I identified more with some of the villains. I loved Cruella De Vil [“101 Dalmatians“].” She also points out that another favorite, Ursula from “The Little Mermaid” is “actually a princess, too! She’s a princess gone very bad.”

    Dan Stevens went a bit more modern, citing the daring heroines of “Brave” (his daughter’s a big fan!) and “Moana.” “I’ve reacquainted myself with the new generation of Disney princesses, being a father now.” Awww!

  • Watch the ‘Beauty and the Beast’ Cast Reveal Their First Disney Obsessions


    We had the best day ever chatting with the talented cast of “Beauty and the Beast” about their first Disney obsessions.

    For Emma Watson, it was all about “Pocahontas.” “I think I wanted a pet raccoon,” she told Moviefone. “And she had really good hair. Pocahontas was just cool. She was so cool.

    Legion,” revealed why “Dumbo” first captured his heart. “I suppose the story of an elephant and a mouse and the friendship between them … and when they start drinking a bucket of who-knows-what they just start trippin’ balls.” Now we know why he said yes to “Legion”!

    Although Emma says she can barely remember the film, Dan sings the praises of the scene where giant pink elephants parade past our drunken heroes: “The pink elephant sequence in ‘Dumbo’ is one of the great sequences in cinema history,” he insists.

    Gugu Mbatha-Raw (who plays Plumette, the maid who becomes an enchanted feather duster) reveals, “I was obsessed with Minnie Mouse. When I was 3 or 4, I had a Minnie Mouse party. I had the outfit and the ears. Yeah, I’m kind of still a bit obsessed with Minnie Mouse.” (Could her hairdo on the day of the L.A. junket even be an homage to Minnie?)

    Six-time Tony winner Audra McDonald (Garderobe, the singing wardrobe) shares, “I had a Mickey Mouse record player. His ears were the top of the little box that opens and his gloved hand was the needle.” Gugu’s reaction? “That is so cool!”

    Josh Gad, who plays LeFou, says he’s very fond of the ’70s animated “Robin Hood,” and started serenading us with a little “Ooh-de-lally-ay.” Another Gad favorite? The swinging ’60s “Jungle Book.” Costar Luke Evans (the evil but so handsome Gaston) chimed in that he loves another ’60s favorite: “The Sword in the Stone,” which also involves a big, dumb lug who’s not the hero. Hmmmm.

    Composer Alan Menken said his favorite growing up was “Davy Crockett” the Disney TV series that aired in 1955. And then he begins to sing some of the “King of the Wild Frontier” theme song. The man who gave us “Be Our Guest” said he was also very fond of a certain musical insect called Jiminy Cricket.

  • How Dan Stevens Brought the Beast to Life in Beauty and the Beast

    Dan Stevens from Beauty and the Beast
    Dan Stevens from Beauty and the Beast

    How do you make Emma Watson love a beast?

    That was the critical question throughout filming the live-action reboot “Beauty and the Beast,” and star Dan Stevens searched the animated version of the movie for inspiration.

    “One of the things I really wanted preserve from the animated film was just how funny and sweet and silly the Beast is, as well as being this great hulking scary thing sometimes,” Stevens tells Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar.

    In the end, he says, “We decided he had to be funny. He had to have a sense of humor. He had to be intelligent and witty. So we translated some of that humor more into a dry wit that he has, which I really enjoy.”

    Tapping into the nuances of the Beast character proved particularly challenging for Stevens, best known as the star of “Downton Abbey,” because of the technical demands of motion-capture technology. What Stevens did — and wore — on set looked nothing like it would in the finished movie.

    “There was a prosthetic muscle suit but no fur, or anything, and nothing on my face,” he explains. “So I was puppeteering a muscle suit on stilts for the physical capture, and then the facial capture was done separately. That’s been for me one of the most delightful aspects of seeing the finished movie, of seeing how this sensitivity of the human face can be born through using this technology.”

    That meant that the iconic ballroom scene, when the Beast waltzes with Watson’s Belle, had to be shot a couple of times — once showing his full body, then a second time focusing only on his facial expressions.

    “I waltz with my face. It was quite weird,” he says. “That was one of the interesting things about that facial capture process was sitting in this booth and doing everything we’ve done in all of these scenes, whether it was eating or sleeping or shouting or talking or waltzing. They would spray my face with UV paint and these 27 little cameras would capture it.”

    So what’s his waltz face?

    “It depends which bit of the waltz you’re looking at, but he had to look lovingly at Belle a lot of the time,” says Stevens. “There’s a particular feeling that you get when you nail a waltz with somebody. And it’s almost an ecstatic feeling of joy. I just had to feel joyful and in love. It’s a lovely moment of storytelling through dance, that Belle reminds the Beast that he used to love dancing, and she teaches him the first few steps, and then he gets the hang and pretty soon he’s waltzing — on stilts.”

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  • 5 Things You Need to Know Before You See ‘Beauty and the Beast’

    In 2016, Disney had a record-shattering year at the box office. They seem pretty determined to rake in all the money in 2017, too. Their first blockbuster hitting theaters this year is “Beauty and the Beast,” the latest in a long line of live-action remakes of their classic animated movies.

    But don’t worry if it’s been a while since you watched your VHS copy of this Disney hit. We’re here to break down everything you need to know about this tale as old as time, including what’s different this time around.

    1. The Plot’s Pretty Much the SameMost of Disney’s live-action remakes have diverged from the source material quite a bit in terms of plot, with “Maleficent” being the most significant example. But the studio looks to be taking the conservative approach this time around.

    The new “Beast” will follow the same structure as the old one, with Belle becoming a prisoner in a haunted castle full of talking furniture. There, she (duh) falls in love with a prince cursed to live a tortured existence as a hideous beast. In this case, why fix what ain’t broken? The new movie will also fill-in some narrative gaps in the original, like what happened to Belle’s mom.

    2. Get Ready for LOTS of CGWhile “Beauty and the Beast” is a live-action movie, expect a pretty hefty amount of CG effects. The Beast himself will have some CG enhancements, too, even though Dan Stevens used a degree of make-up effects on set.

    Naturally, Beast’s transformed household servants will also be CG creations. That’s an area where the new movie has taken a bit of flack, as some of the character designs are a little, um, nightmarish, when compared to the original film. See above.

    3. Yes, It’s Still a MusicalLuckily, Disney didn’t try and replace those beloved, Alan Menken and Howard Ashman-composed songs with something new. Expect all the classics to appear in the remake, from “Gaston” to “Be Our Guest” to “Beauty and the Beast” itself.

    However, there will be a few new additions to the repertoire. Celine Dion has been tapped to sing a new song, “How Does a Moment Last Forever?” This tune will play during the end credits. Another new composition, “Evermore,” will also appear during the course of the film. Hey, Disney’s gotta score a shot at potential Best Song Oscar noms, you know.

    4. The Cast Is Really ImpressiveAs beloved as the original film is, Disney really needed to “go big or go home” when it came to the cast. Luckily, they managed to assemble a pretty impressive lineup. Emma Watson plays Belle, while Dan Stevens will play the Beast in both beastly and human forms.

    Kevin Kline stars as Belle’s lovable father, Maurice, and Luke Evans plays the burly, self-absorbed hunter Gaston. And that’s Josh Gad as Gaston’s bumbling sidekick, Le Fou. Also keep your ears open for the voices of Ewan McGregor, Ian McKellan, and Emma Thompson as the Beast’s transformed servants.

    5. There Are Some Minor Changes… “Beauty and the Beast” may be playing it safe in terms of plot, but that’s not to say the new movie will be a carbon copy of the original. The biggest change looks to be a greater focus on Le Fou. It was recently revealed that Le Fou will be the first openly gay character in a Disney movie, and his unrequited love for Gaston will be a running thread throughout the story.

    The movie is also introducing a completely new character in the form of Stanley Tucci‘s Cadenza. Formerly Prince Adam’s castle composer, Cadenza was transformed into a harpsichord (naturally) when the kingdom was cursed by the witch.

    Fans can’t wait to see how this all plays out, when the movie hits theaters Friday.