Tag: first-reformed

  • ‘Master Gardener’ Interview: Joel Edgerton and Sigourney Weaver

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    Opening in theaters on May 19th is the new film ‘Master Gardener,’ which was written and directed by ‘Taxi Driver’ and ‘Raging Bull’ writer and ‘Affliction’ and ‘The Card Counter’ director Paul Schrader.

    What is the plot of ‘Master Gardener?’

    ‘Master Gardener’ follows Narvel Roth (Joel Edgerton), the meticulous horticulturist of Gracewood Gardens. He is as much devoted to tending the grounds of this beautiful and historic estate, to pandering to his employer, the wealthy dowager Mrs. Haverhill (Sigourney Weaver). When Mrs. Haverhill demands that he take on her wayward and troubled great-niece Maya (Quintessa Swindell) as a new apprentice, chaos enters Narvel’s spartan existence, unlocking dark secrets from a buried violent past that threaten them all.

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    Who is in the cast of ‘Master Gardener?’

    ‘Master Gardener’ stars Joel Edgerton (‘Warrior‘) as Narvel Roth, Sigourney Weaver (‘Avatar: The Way of Water‘) as Norma Haverhill, Quintessa Swindell (‘Black Adam‘) as Maya, Rick Cosnett (‘The Flash‘) as Stephen Collins, and Esai Morales (‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One‘) as Oscar Neruda.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Joel Edgerton and Sigourney Weaver about their work on ‘Master Gardener,’ creating their complex characters and their unusual relationship, hiding from your past, Quintessa Swindell’s performance, and working with legendary filmmaker Paul Schrader.

    Sigourney Weaver and Joel Edgerton at the premiere of 'Master Gardener,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    (L to R) Sigourney Weaver and Joel Edgerton at the premiere of ‘Master Gardener,’ a Magnolia Pictures release.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch the interview.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Joel, can you talk about the past that Narvel is hiding from and the way his dedication to gardening has helped him create a new life?

    Joel Edgerton: As we know if we’re Paul Schrader fans and particularly of his last two films (‘First Reformed’ and ‘The Card Counter’), this has been roughly a third part of a trilogy. These characters that are hiding or moving away from a more violent past into a more monastic or sedentary or simple life. In this case, horticulture being the new life and the old life being white nationalism, and not just white nationalism, but being very much involved in violence under the banner of white nationalism. Now he’s trying to move away from that. There’s a really key moment, I think, where we do get a real insight, which is something I truly believe is that we all inherit these ideas from somewhere. That we as children, I think we’re blank canvases, we’re more of the horticulturalist, we’re more the nature loving humanist. That somewhere along the way we get corrupted by other people’s ideas. I don’t think we grow up with hate in our system. We’re primal maybe, but not like labeling hate. Narvel does point that out at some point, which gives us something of a glimmer of an idea that we could open our mind to forgive him as the way that we’re expected to be challenged that other characters are questioning whether to forgive his past. I think that answers you.

    MF: Sigourney, how would you describe Narvel and Norma’s relationship?

    Sigourney Weaver: It always seemed affectionate to me. I think she’s come to depend on him quite a bit. I think she’s probably thrilled to see this man start from scratch and see the power of the garden working on him, the power of this knowledge, this new way of looking at nature and the world and what a great gardener he is. How well he takes care of his people, how passionate he cares about the plants. I think that for Norma, she feels it’s a success and I think that’s one reason why she probably thinks this is going to work with Maya too and it’s all going to be fine.

    Joel Edgerton and Sigourney Weaver in 'Master Gardener,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    (L to R) Joel Edgerton and Sigourney Weaver in ‘Master Gardener,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. Copyright 2002 Master Gardener US LLC. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: Sigourney, can you talk about how that relationship changes once Maya arrives?

    SW: I think Nora brings Maya in with the best of intentions having turned her back on Maya’s mother. I think she has full confidence in Narvel as a teacher and a boss. To me, it was a very interesting situation to come for Norma to come up with this plan with the best intentions and see what happens to it. I found it very poignant to see how much of a struggle it became for her.

    MF: Joel, can you talk about Narvel’s relationship with Maya and what he sees in her?

    JE: Personally, when I read the screenplay, I was really interested in the idea that damaged or even reformed, damaged people gravitate towards each other. That there’s a kinship and perhaps a sort of crusader aspect to Narvel having come out the other side of his own regrowth and rebirth that he can perhaps lend a hand, but there’s also the enmeshed, codependent demons that live inside ex-addicts. I think that’s part of it, that Maya brings with her a subtle but complicated sense of trouble or danger with her, which comes in the form of people she associates with, but also the kind of lifestyle she may have led, that in beautiful Schrader form is never really over explained. I think this attraction forms partly by that and the need to help the crusade, but also just a pure physical attraction at the same time.

    Quintessa Swindell and Joel Edgerton in 'Master Gardener,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    (L to R) Quintessa Swindell and Joel Edgerton in ‘Master Gardener,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. @2002 Master Gardener US LLC. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: Joel, what was it like working with Quintessa Swindell and creating that relationship with her?

    JE: I always used to consider myself a young actor, and I know that I’m somewhere in the middle now, smack dab In the middle. Quintessa represents the next wave, I think, in the next generation, and they are a real force. I was really impressed actually with the way that Quintessa challenged Paul because when you’re in the middle like us, we have a real history I think, with Paul and Paul’s films. Not to say that young actors don’t do their homework and look back on films that were made before they were born, for example, but there’s a certain reverence I’ve always deferred to with directors to say, I’ll ask questions, but I won’t overly challenge someone. It was really interesting to watch Quintessa, with her awareness of her generation, pardon me, really sort of challenge Paul on certain questions that he had written in the script to represent a generation that Quintessa rightfully could say that Paul maybe wasn’t fully aware of. She could say, “Well, if we’re going to collaborate, let me tell you what I think about my generation.” I thought that was pretty awesome. That’s all stuff aside from them as an actor, but I thought Quintessa is just a real spark of performer.

    Sigourney Weaver in 'Master Gardener,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Sigourney Weaver in ‘Master Gardener,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. Copyright 2002 Master Gardener US LLC. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Related Article: Oscar-Nominee Sigourney Weaver Talks ‘The Good House’

    MF: Sigourney, Maya is Norma’s only living relative and she is so distant with her. Can you talk about that relationship and why she doesn’t try to connect with her niece?

    SW: I think Norma has things pretty much the way she wants them. In the original script, she had three children appear and she has no intention of leaving them the garden. But I think she remembers Maya as she says. She was enchanted and enchanting, and I think Norma’s never forgotten Maya’s connection with the garden. She is distant. I’m not sure that Norma’s very good at all this. She’s very hard. She’s not a hypocrite. It’s very hard for her to pretend to not feel something. You always kind of know where you stand with Norma. I love that scene in the lunchroom. I think it’s so remarkably written when I try to go into the past and it kind of blows up in my face. It’s exciting to do that kind of work. Again, he’s not doing exposition or explanation. He doesn’t do any of the things you read in scripts normally. He just puts it out there in such a raw form and it’s up to the characters and up to the audience to sort of make of it what they will.

    Paul Schrader, director of 'Master Gardener,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Paul Schrader, director of ‘Master Gardener,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. Copyright Franklin Ferville. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: Sigourney, what was your experience like working with Paul Schrader on set?

    SW: He had a commitment to shoot this in twenty days, and I think I was there for four. It was fascinating because he’s the closest thing we have to sort of the new wave. I’ve never worked this way, but you’d shoot maybe two masters of the first part of the scene and then move on and do a two shot of the middle part, and then maybe a close up. So you never really did the whole scene. I was impressed that Quintessa could do that because I’d never worked that way. I’m happy that I’ve done so much work that I could do it, but he was only shooting what he needed for the edit. He kept rewriting and he kept demanding so much of himself but there’s an urgency to his work, which I think is because of what he wants to get out and communicate. So it was very sort of scary, but also exciting to work in that way.

    MF: Finally, Joel, is there anything you’d like to add about working with Paul Schrader?

    JE: He’s like a surgeon. There’s no extraneous movements. Like Sigourney’s saying, he’s shooting sections of scenes because he’s, in an old school fashion really, thought about the edit and the efficiency of the scene and the construction of the scene. He is not going to overshoot things partly because of the budget and the schedule. But there’s a confidence even if he wasn’t confined by those things. There’s a confidence that he knows what he wants in performance, in a frame, in the writing. There’s no fence sitting with Paul. You never feel that if you ask his opinion on something. He will think about it and then he’ll give you a very clear answer. I don’t think I’ve ever worked with a director who’s so blunt. I thought my skin was pretty thick and I realized it is thick enough to just have someone say, “That was terrible, mate. Do it again and do this.” He wasn’t ever cruel to me or anything. But you got the feeling if you did a terrible take, he wouldn’t come up and give you three compliments and then tell you the criticism. He goes straight to the criticism.

    Joel Edgerton in 'Master Gardener,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Joel Edgerton in ‘Master Gardener,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. Copyright 2002 Master Gardener US LLC. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

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  • Every Movie You Need To See Before Oscar Night

    Every Movie You Need To See Before Oscar Night

  • 2019 Independent Spirit Award Nominations Led by ‘Eighth Grade,’ ‘First Reformed’

    2019 Independent Spirit Award Nominations Led by ‘Eighth Grade,’ ‘First Reformed’

    A24

    The Film Independent Spirit Awards announced its nominations today, kicking awards season into higher gear as the end of 2018 approaches.

    Critical favorites “Eighth Grade” and “First Reformed” were the most high-profile of the feature film nominees. Both movies earned four nominations in total.

    “We the Animals,” which follows three boys growing up in a mixed-race family in upstate New York, led all films with five nominations.

    The Spirit Awards have become a harbinger of Oscar accolades. Four of the last five Spirit winners for Best Feature went on to win the Academy Award. And every Spirit winner for the last nine years has at least been nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars.

    The 34th Spirit Awards will air live from Santa Monica on IFC at 5 p.m. ET on Saturday, February 23, 2019.

    Here’s the full list of Spirit Award nominations:

    BEST FEATURE
    “Eighth Grade”
    “First Reformed”
    “If Beale Street Could Talk”
    “Leave No Trace”
    “You Were Never Really Here”

    BEST DIRECTOR
    Debra Granik, “Leave No Trace”
    Barry Jenkins, “If Beale Street Could Talk”
    Tamara Jenkins, “Private Life”
    Lynne Ramsay, “You Were Never Really Here”
    Paul Schrader, “First Reformed”

    BEST FEMALE LEAD
    Glenn Close, “The Wife”
    Toni Collette, “Hereditary”
    Elsie Fisher, “Eighth Grade”
    Regina Hall, “Support the Girls”
    Helena Howard, “Madeline’s Madeline”
    Carey Mulligan, “Wildlife”

    BEST MALE LEAD
    John Cho, “Searching”
    Daveed Diggs, “Blindspotting”
    Ethan Hawke, “First Reformed”
    Christian Malheiros, “Socrates”
    Joaquin Phoenix, “You Were Never Really Here”

    BEST SUPPORTING FEMALE
    Kayli Carter, “Private Life”
    Tyne Daly, “A Bread Factory”
    Regina King, “If Beale Street Could Talk”
    Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie, “Leave No Trace”
    J. Smith-Cameron, “Nancy”

    BEST SUPPORTING MALE
    Raúl Castillo, “We the Animals”
    Adam Driver, “BlacKkKlansman”
    Richard E. Grant, “Can You Ever Forgive Me?”
    Josh Hamilton, “Eighth Grade”
    John David Washington, “Monsters and Men”

    BEST SCREENPLAY
    Richard Glatzer (Writer/Story By), Rebecca Lenkiewicz & Wash Westmoreland, “Colette”
    Nicole Holofcener & Jeff Whitty, “Can You Ever Forgive Me?”
    Tamara Jenkins, “Private Life”
    Boots Riley, “Sorry to Bother You”
    Paul Schrader, “First Reformed”

    BEST FIRST FEATURE
    “Hereditary”
    “Sorry to Bother You”
    “The Tale”
    “We the Animals”
    “Wildlife”

    BEST FIRST SCREENPLAY
    Bo Burnham, “Eighth Grade”
    Christina Choe, “Nancy”
    Cory Finley, “Thoroughbreds”
    Jennifer Fox, “The Tale”
    Quinn Shephard (Writer/Story By) and Laurie Shephard (Story By), “Blame”

    BEST DOCUMENTARY
    “Hale County This Morning, This Evening”
    “Minding the Gap”
    “Of Fathers and Sons”
    “On Her Shoulders”
    “Shirkers”
    “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?”

    BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM
    “Burning” (South Korea)
    “The Favourite” (United Kingdom)
    “Happy as Lazzaro” (Italy)
    “Roma” (Mexico)
    “Shoplifters” (Japan)

    JOHN CASSAVETES AWARD
    “A Bread Factory”
    “En El Septimo Dia”
    “Never Going Back”
    “Socrates”
    “Thunder Road”

    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
    Ashley Connor, “Madeline’s Madeline”
    Diego Garcia, “Wildlife”
    Benjamin Loeb, “Mandy”
    Sayombhu Mukdeeprom, “Suspiria”
    Zak Mulligan, “We the Animals”

    BEST EDITING
    Joe Bini, “You Were Never Really Here”
    Keiko Deguchi, Brian A. Kates & Jeremiah Zagar, “We the Animals”
    Luke Dunkley, Nick Fenton, Chris Gill & Julian Hart, “American Animals”
    Anne Fabini, Alex Hall and Gary Levy, “The Tale”
    Nick Houy, “Mid90s”

    ROBERT ALTMAN AWARD
    “Suspiria”

    TRUER THAN FICTION AWARD
    Alexandria Bombach, “On Her Shoulders”
    Bing Liu, “Minding the Gap”
    RaMell Ross, “Hale County This Morning, This Evening”

    SOMEONE TO WATCH
    Alex Moratto, “Socrates”
    Ioana Uricaru, “Lemonade”
    Jeremiah Zagar, “We the Animals”

    PRODUCERS AWARD
    Jonathan Duffy and Kelly Williams
    Gabrielle Nadig
    Shrihari Sathe

    BONNIE AWARD
    Debra Granik
    Tamara Jenkins
    Karyn Kusama

  • ‘First Reformed,’ ‘The Favourite’ Lead Gotham Awards

    ‘First Reformed,’ ‘The Favourite’ Lead Gotham Awards

    Killer Films

    Awards season officially kicks off with the nominations for the 2018 Gotham Awards, the honors handed out annually by the New York-based Independent Filmmaker Project. Movies and stars nominated there often go on to win major awards, including “Get Out” and “Manchester by the Sea.”

    First Reformed,” which stars Ethan Hawke as a priest questioning his faith, scored three nominations: Best Actor, Best Feature and Best Screenplay.

    Another likely Oscar nominee is “The Favourite,” about two women vying for power in the 18th century court of Queen Anne (Olivia Colman). It was nominated for Best Feature and a special jury prize will be awarded to its three stars: Colman, Emma Stone, and Rachel Weisz.

    And while horror fans have been debating if Toni Collette‘s fearless performance in “Hereditary” will get any awards notice, the answer is yes. She’s nominated for Best Actress and the film’s director, Ari Aster, is in the running for the Bingham Ray Breakthrough Director Award.

    Also scoring two nominations each: Indies “Support the Girls,” “Eighth Grade, and “Private Life.”

    Interestingly, Adam Driver, who has more of a supporting role in Spike Lee‘s “BlacKkKlansman” as a cop wrestling with his Jewish heritage while working undercover with a local chapter of the KKK, has been nominated as Best Actor instead of the film’s star, John David Washington. The Gotham Awards do not have a supporting actor or actress category.

    Here’s the full list of nominees:

    Best Feature
    “The Favourite” (Fox Searchlight Pictures)
    “First Reformed (A24)
    If Beale Street Could Talk” (Annapurna Pictures)
    Madeline’s Madeline” (Oscilloscope Laboratories)
    The Rider” (Sony Pictures Classics)

    Best Documentary
    “Bisbee ‘17” (4th Row Films)
    “Hale County This Morning, This Evening” (The Cinema Guild)
    “Minding the Gap” (Hulu & Magnolia Pictures)
    “Shirkers” (Netflix)
    “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” (Focus Features)

    Best Actor
    Adam Driver in “BlacKkKlansman” (Focus Features)
    Ben Foster in “Leave No Trace” (Bleecker Street)
    Richard E. Grant in “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” (Fox Searchlight Pictures)
    Ethan Hawke in “First Reformed” (A24)
    Lakeith Stanfield in “Sorry to Bother You” (Annapurna Pictures)

    Best Actress*
    Glenn Close in “The Wife” (Sony Pictures Classics)
    Toni Collette in “Hereditary” (A24)
    Kathryn Hahn in “Private Life” (Netflix)
    Regina Hall in “Support the Girls” (Magnolia Pictures)
    Michelle Pfeiffer in “Where is Kyra?” (Paladin and Great Point Media)
    *The 2018 Best Actress nominating committee also voted to award a special Gotham Jury Award to Olivia Colman, Emma Stone, and Rachel Weisz for their ensemble performance in The Favourite. (Fox Searchlight Pictures)

    Breakthrough Actor
    Yalitza Aparicio in “Roma” (Netflix)
    Elsie Fisher in “Eighth Grade” (A24)
    Helena Howard in “Madeline’s Madeline” (Oscilloscope Laboratories)
    KiKi Layne in “If Beale Street Could Talk” (Annapurna Pictures)
    Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie in “Leave No Trace” (Bleecker Street)

    Bingham Ray Breakthrough Director Award
    Ari Aster for “Hereditary” (A24)
    Bo Burnham for “Eighth Grade” (A24)
    Jennifer Fox for “The Tale” (HBO)
    Crystal Moselle for “Skate Kitchen” (Magnolia Pictures)
    Boots Riley for “Sorry to Bother You” (Annapurna Pictures)

    Best Screenplay
    “The Favourite,” Deborah Davis and Tony McNamara (Fox Searchlight Pictures)
    “First Reformed,” Paul Schrader (A24)
    “Private Life,” Tamara Jenkins (Netflix)
    “Support the Girls”, Andrew Bujalski (Magnolia Pictures)
    “Thoroughbreds,” Cory Finley (Focus Features)

    Breakthrough Series – Long Form
    “Alias Grace” (Netflix)
    “The End of the F***ing World” (Netflix)
    “Killing Eve” (BBC America)
    “Pose” (FX Networks)
    “Sharp Objects” (HBO)

    The 26th annual Gotham Awards will be held on November 26 at Cipriani Wall Street in NYC.

    [Via Variety]

  • Ethan Hawke Dissed ‘Logan’ and Superhero Movies, Launching a Heated (and Hilarious) Debate

    Ethan Hawke Dissed ‘Logan’ and Superhero Movies, Launching a Heated (and Hilarious) Debate

    Logan
    20th Century Fox

    Ethan Hawke just had a great interview with The Film Stage. He talked about his acting lengthy career — including his early jealousy of Christian Bale, his non-McConaughey moment, River Phoenix, the Oscars, another “Before” movie, his new movie “First Reformed,” and the necessity of film festivals.

    But it’s Hawke’s comment on James Mangold‘s “X-Men” movie “Logan,” and superhero movies in general, that got the most attention.

    That part of the Q&A came toward the very end. Here’s that section, and the preceding paragraph as a lead-in:

    “I’m always astonished, I’m sure you are too, you can go on Apple TV now and see that Joaquin Phoenix and Gwyneth Paltrow made a movie together that I never heard of. What? And like, Matt Damon’s in a Clint Eastwood movie I never heard of? So many things get lost in the cracks and if those big names are getting lost, where are the ‘Gattacas’ of right now? It might be like other art forms where it might take 50 years to curate what’s happening right now. That’s why film festivals have become so important because you guys at film festivals are like curators of, like, what does the world need to be paying attention to. What should be seen? If we didn’t have these festivals, big business would crush all these smaller movies.

    Now we have the problem that they tell us ‘Logan’ is a great movie. Well, it’s a great superhero movie. It still involves people in tights with metal coming out of their hands. It’s not Bresson. It’s not Bergman. But they talk about it like it is. I went to see ‘Logan’ cause everyone was like, “This is a great movie” and I was like, “Really? No, this is a fine superhero movie.” There’s a difference but big business doesn’t think there’s a difference. Big business wants you to think that this is a great film because they wanna make money off of it.”

    The fact that Hawke brought up “Logan” himself for a public shaming — and then brought up directors Robert Bresson and Ingmar Bergman as comparisons — ruffled a lot of feathers. He came off, to some, as being a pretentious film snob, dismissing superhero movies en masse.

    First Reformed
    Killer Films

    (“Logan” was nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 2018 Academy Awards, as the first live-action superhero film ever nominated for screenwriting.)

    Social media took the comments and ran with them, debating both sides of the superhero issue again:

    https://twitter.com/yahboyantman/status/1033421726351347714

    https://twitter.com/CinemaVsDave/status/1033733658379780096

    https://twitter.com/9_volt_/status/1033872312158830593

     

    https://twitter.com/andymannion77/status/1033594067182145537

    https://twitter.com/Soderberghian/status/1033505655250972672

    https://twitter.com/charles_kinbote/status/1033861637277720576

    https://twitter.com/JesabelRaay/status/1033528448101150720

    https://twitter.com/charles_kinbote/status/1033469707008004096

    https://twitter.com/TooDamnCreative/status/1033432678501150723

    https://twitter.com/aoscott/status/1033881573366607873

    https://twitter.com/JamesConoway/status/1033436341219016710

    https://twitter.com/faceyouhate/status/1033845412036313089

    Well, it sure sparked a lot of conversation for something that couldn’t matter less.

    Meanwhile, Ethan Hawke’s “First Reformed” arrived on DVD/Blu-ray/Digital on August 21.

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