Tag: frances-mcdormand

  • Movie Review: ‘Women Talking’

    Rooney Mara stars as Ona in director Sarah Polley’s film 'Women Talking,' an Orion Pictures Release.
    Rooney Mara stars as Ona in director Sarah Polley’s film ‘Women Talking,’ an Orion Pictures Release. Photo credit: Michael Gibson. © 2022 Orion Releasing LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    On limited release now before opening more widely in theaters on January 6th, ‘Women Talking’ represents fourth movie from actor and director Sarah Polley, and while it is certainly her stagiest effort, there are deep, dark and uncomfortable truths running through the script and an outstanding cast bringing those words to life.

    ‘Women Talking’ marks the second time that Polley has adapted someone else’s work, the first being 2006’s ‘Away from Her’. Here, she draws from Miriam Toews’ 2018 novel, itself written as a reaction to shocking true events that happened at the Manitoba Colony in Bolivia in 2011.

    At the ultraconservative Mennonite community, girls and women woke up regularly to discover they had been sexually violated. The attacks were written off as “wild female imagination”, or else attributed to ghosts or the work of Satan.

    In truth, a group of colony men had been spraying an animal anesthetic into neighboring houses at night, rendering everyone unconscious, and raping the women. The colony elders, deciding that the case was too difficult to handle themselves, called local police to take the perpetrators into custody.

    Rooney Mara stars as Ona, Claire Foy as Salome, Judith Ivey as Agata, Sheila McCarthy as Greta, Michelle McLeod as Mejal and Jessie Buckley as Mariche in director Sarah Polley’s film 'Women Talking,' an Orion Pictures Release.
    (L to R) Rooney Mara stars as Ona, Claire Foy as Salome, Judith Ivey as Agata, Sheila McCarthy as Greta, Michelle McLeod as Mejal and Jessie Buckley as Mariche in director Sarah Polley’s film ‘Women Talking,’ an Orion Pictures Release. Photo credit: Michael Gibson. © 2022 Orion Releasing LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    The movie’s story unfolds shortly after the men have been taken away, with several of the remaining men heading into town to post bail for their fellows. A group of the colony’s women gather secretly to discuss what to do in the wake of the revelations. Their reactions run the gamut from fearful to furious, and the debate covers all manner of subjects, but is focused mainly on a vote as to whether they stay, fight or leave the community altogether.

    None of the options are perfect––some argue that if they leave, their Mennonite religion (though the name is never mentioned) teaches that God won’t be able to find them and they’ll be denied their place in Heaven. Others are burning with the desire to exact revenge on the perpetrators. And some are concerned that leaving means the boys left behind will have no one to care for them and guide them into becoming more responsible men than some of those who have come before them.

    Even if you haven’t read the book, the film’s title will leave you in no illusion as to what to expect. Though that might turn some off, expecting an exercise in dialogue and tone, the intellectual and spiritual fireworks between the main characters more than makes up for an assumed lack of forward movement.

    This is, by its very nature, a painful and difficult film to watch––for women who will identify with the dilemmas, and for men who should gain further insight into the high wire than women everywhere must walk on a daily basis when confronted with terrible behavior towards them.

    Director Sarah Polley on the set of her film 'Women Talking,' an Orion Pictures Release.
    Director Sarah Polley on the set of her film ‘Women Talking,’ an Orion Pictures Release. Photo credit: Michael Gibson. © 2022 Orion Releasing LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    A film as dialogue driven as this one lives and dies on the quality and skill of its cast, and here, Polley’s latest has its greatest strength. An actor for years before she began to devote more of her time to directing, she has a real eye for talent and knows how to work with fellow performers.

    For ‘Women Talking’, Polley (along with casting directors John Buchan and Jason Knight) have assembled an exemplary ensemble of actors of various ages and stages of their careers, one of the finest gathering of women on screen in many years.

    The likes of Rooney Mara, Judith Ivey, Claire Foy, Sheila McCarthy, Frances McDormand and Jessie Buckley anchor this one, clearly relishing the chance to show what they can do when they’re given the chance to take center stage.

    While some, such as Mara, Foy and particularly McDormand, have been able to find roles that let them shine (with awards glory and nominations following), others are still breaking through, relegated to second string characters compared to their male counterparts. Even Foy, in movies such as ‘First Man’ had to make do with a less compelling wife role.

    Ben Whishaw stars as August, Rooney Mara as Ona and Claire Foy as Salome in director Sarah Polley’s film 'Women Talking,' an Orion Pictures Release.
    (L to R) Ben Whishaw stars as August, Rooney Mara as Ona and Claire Foy as Salome in director Sarah Polley’s film ‘Women Talking,’ an Orion Pictures Release. Photo credit: Michael Gibson. © 2022 Orion Releasing LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Here, there is no such restriction. The only real male character in the film is August (Ben Whishaw), whose family was excommunicated, but who has been allowed to return after securing an education in the outside world and teaching the boys (the young women are not considered worthy of lessons, even though the story is set in 2010).

    Sweet-natured and thoughtful, he’s permitted to sit in so as to take the minutes of their meeting (one might argue that treating a secret gathering to decide urgent action like a council meeting to figure out a new pedestrian zone might seem unlikely, but the women are raised to be formal and all are detail-orientated.

    Foy pulsates with anger as Salome, matched by Buckley’s Mariche, who is seen near the beginning attacking some of the men in custody with a scythe. She wants to see justice done––even if she must do it herself, but slowly starts to question her rage. Ivey as elder Agata, looks to remain calm, while McDormand’s Scarface Janz––who delivers monologues while rarely saying a word thanks to her expressions–– seethes and counsels.

    Jessie Buckley stars as Mariche and Judith Ivey as Agata in director Sarah Polley’s film 'Women Talking.'
    (L to R) Jessie Buckley stars as Mariche and Judith Ivey as Agata in director Sarah Polley’s film
    ‘Women Talking,’ an Orion Pictures Release. Photo credit: Michael Gibson. © 2022 Orion Releasing LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    The entire cast is, without exception, impressive, whether it is young victims wandering through fields, stunned at learning what really happened to them, to others giggling and scampering their way through the meeting, not really cognizant of the huge issues being debated. And, of course, the leads, feasting on Polley’s adaptation, render some of the best performances of the year.

    There is a somewhat stage bound feeling to the whole affair, though the crackling interchanges between the women certainly help overcome the idea that this might have been better served as a play. Though the most significant action is a census taker driving through the community looking to count heads, the tone, by turns meditative and electric, is a feature, not a bug.

    Polley is becoming a first-rate director, and here she truly has a cast to match. ‘Women Talking’ might be a tough watch, but it’s worth paying attention to.

    ‘Women Talking’ receives 7 out of 10 stars.

    Michelle McLeod stars as Mejal, Sheila McCarthy as Greta, Liv McNeil as Neitje, Jessie Buckley as Mariche, Claire Foy as Salome, Kate Hallett as Autje, Rooney Mara as Ona and Judith Ivey as Agata in director Sarah Polley’s film, 'Women Talking,' an Orion Pictures Release.
    (L to R) Michelle McLeod stars as Mejal, Sheila McCarthy as Greta, Liv McNeil as Neitje, Jessie Buckley as Mariche, Claire Foy as Salome, Kate Hallett as Autje, Rooney Mara as Ona and Judith Ivey as Agata in director Sarah Polley’s film, ‘Women Talking,’ an Orion Pictures Release. Photo credit: Michael Gibson. © 2022 Orion Releasing LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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  • ‘Women Talking’ Interview: Actress Claire Foy

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    Opening in theaters on January 6th is the new film from actress and director Sarah Polley (‘Take This Waltz’) entitled ‘Women Talking.’

    Set in 2010, the women of an isolated religious community grapple with reconciling a brutal reality with their faith after it is revealed that men from their community drugged and raped the women at night for years.

    The film stars Rooney Mara, Claire Foy, Jessie Buckley, Judith Ivey, Sheila McCarthy, Michelle McLeod, Liv McNeil, and Kate Hallett, Ben Whishaw and three-time Oscar-winner Frances McDormand.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with actress Claire Foy about her work on ‘Women Talking,’ the subject matter, her character’s choice, working with the cast, and director Sarah Polley.

    Claire Foy stars in director Sarah Polley's 'Women Talking.'
    Claire Foy stars in director Sarah Polley’s ‘Women Talking.’

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Foy, Judith Ivy, Sheila McCarthy, Michelle McLeod, Liv McNeil, and Kate Hallett.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about the urgency of the situation your character finds herself in at the beginning of the film?

    Claire Foy: The urgency is that these women have been subjected to quite a tragic circumstance. They’ve been sexually abused, and they’ve just discovered this. My character wants to seek revenge on the men who have committed the crimes. So, the men are sent away, and they’ve got 24 hours until the men come back to the colony, and they have to decide what they’re going to do.

    So, these women who are in the hayloft have been put into the position of deciding for the entire community of women whether they will stay and fight, whether they will stay and do nothing, or whether they will leave. They’re on a time pressure. They’ve only got 24 hours. Also, it’s about them getting to decide what world they want to live in. They’ve been given a tragic set of circumstances, and they get to see what they do with that, I suppose.

    MF: Did you agree with your character’s point of view and what were some of the challenges you faced as an actress playing this role?

    CF: Yeah, I really did. I really identified with Salome’s approach to the position that she’s in. I think everybody did. I think, all the actors in the film really stood by and championed their character’s point of view, but I really did. I felt that it was a very appropriate reaction for what she’d endured, and what her daughter had endured.

    There were lots of challenges in that. I think she is challenged in the film a lot. Her position is challenged as all the women’s are, and it’s about them all coming to a conclusion collectively as a unit about what they will do. That means that sometimes you have to change your mind.

    Michelle McLeod stars as Mejal, Sheila McCarthy as Greta, Liv McNeil as Neitje, Jessie Buckley as Mariche, Claire Foy as Salome, Kate Hallett as Autje, Rooney Mara as Ona and Judith Ivey as Agata in director Sarah Polley’s film, 'Women Talking,' an Orion Pictures Release.
    (L to R) Michelle McLeod stars as Mejal, Sheila McCarthy as Greta, Liv McNeil as Neitje, Jessie Buckley as Mariche, Claire Foy as Salome, Kate Hallett as Autje, Rooney Mara as Ona and Judith Ivey as Agata in director Sarah Polley’s film, ‘Women Talking,’ an Orion Pictures Release. Photo credit: Michael Gibson. © 2022 Orion Releasing LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: What was it like for you on set surrounded by this incredible cast of actresses?

    CF: It was really extraordinary. I was very grateful every day to be there. I was just watching the most extraordinary work being produced and being really proud of seeing the performances that people were able to put in, and also how dedicated we all were to what we were making, and to Sarah, and to the story. It was an incredibly supportive, collaborative, amazing environment to be in.

    MF: Finally, what was your experience like working with director Sarah Polley?

    CF: Just the best. She’s incredibly compassionate. She’s so intelligent. She’s so open to learning, and she’s so self-aware. She’s incredibly generous with every single person on set. She believes everybody has a right to be involved in the film they’re making and have an opinion. She’s what a director should be and what a leader should be. She’s so good at setting an example and leading people.

    Director Sarah Polley on the set of her film 'Women Talking,' an Orion Pictures Release.
    Director Sarah Polley on the set of her film ‘Women Talking,’ an Orion Pictures Release. Photo credit: Michael Gibson. © 2022 Orion Releasing LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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  • Movie Review: ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’

    Denzel Washington in 'The Tragedy of Macbeth'
    Denzel Washington in ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’

    Opening in theaters on December 25th is the latest adaption of William Shakespeare’s classic stage play ‘Macbeth,’ which is directed by Oscar-winner Joel Coen (‘No Country for Old Men’) entitled ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth.’ The film stars two-time Academy Award-winner Denzel Washington (‘Glory’ and ‘Training Day’) in the title role, and three-time Academy Award-winning actress Frances McDormand (‘Fargo,’ ‘Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri’ and ‘Nomadland’) as Lady Macbeth. In addition to Washington and McDormand, the cast also includes Corey Hawkins (‘Straight Outta Compton’), Brendan Gleeson (‘In Bruges’), and Stephen Root (‘Office Space’). The result is a smart and sophisticated retelling of the Bard’s classic play with stellar performances from Denzel Washington and Francis McDormand.

    The film begins by introducing us to Macbeth (Washington), a Scottish lord who after battle meets three witches (all played by Kathryn Hunter). The witches predict that Macbeth will soon be King, and while skeptical, he begins to see their prophecy come true. He writes a letter to his wife Lady Macbeth (McDormand), telling her of the witches and the prophecy, and she encourages him to kill the King (Brendan Gleeson) in order for it all come true. Macbeth agrees and while the King is visiting their home, he hatches a plan to assassinate him. Once Macbeth is King, he becomes paranoid of losing the throne and commits a series of murders to try and cover up his assignation of the former King. Macbeth begins to see the ghosts of his victims, while Lady Macbeth suffers from the guilt of their crimes and goes mad. Distraught over his wife’s death, and misunderstanding the witch’s prophecy, Macbeth goes to war with England.

    Joel and Ethan Coen are probably the greatest directing duo of all time. Their resume of films is truly incredible and includes such movies as ‘Raising Arizona,’ ‘Fargo,’ ‘The Big Lebowski,’ ‘No Country for Old Men,’ ‘Burn After Reading,’ ‘True Grit,’ ‘Inside Llweyn Davis,’ and ‘Hail, Cesar!’ But ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’ marks the first film Joel Coen has made without his brother, and it is everything you would expect from the director. The film masterfully balances the strange and odd aspects that everyone loves about the Coen Brothers, while mixing it with the classic Shakespeare play. The film is shot in black-and-white, which seems to be in vogue this season after ‘Belfast’ and ‘C’mon C’mon,’ and is a brilliant choice that is appropriate to the source material. Coen uses a lot of quick cuts and interesting editing techniques to help the audience follow the source material’s intricate twists and turns.

    The director also blocks the actors excellently, just like in a play, so every movement has gravitas and meaning behind it. He also uses close-ups really well, choosing to focus the camera on an actor’s face as they give a monologue directly to the audience. The production design is incredible, utilizing giant spaces with minimal setting, which doesn’t take away from the gravity of the performances. The lighting in the film is also well-done, and Coen really plays with the contrast between darkness and light, which makes for some visually stunning sequences. Cinematographer Bruno Delbonnel, who also shot ‘Inside Llweyn Davis’ and ‘The French Dispatch’ really did an amazing job and deserves an Academy Award nomination. While I don’t expect Coen to be nominated for Best Director, it’s already a packed field, I do think the film is in the running for a Best Picture nomination, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Coen is gifted with a Best Adapted Screenplay nom.

    The supporting cast is strong and handles the material well, especially Stephen Root, who is quite funny as The Porter. Brendan Gleeson gives a very good and pivotal performance as King Duncan, and has some excellent scenes with Washington and McDormand. Corey Hawkins is an actor I’ve had my eye on since ‘Straight Outta Compton,’ where he played Dr. Dre. It was a brilliant performance and since then the actor has appeared in ‘Kong: Skull Island,’ Spike Lee’s ‘BlacKkKlansman,’ and ‘In the Heights.’ In this film, not only does the young actor have to recite Shakespeare’s words, but he also has to act opposite Denzel Washington, and he pulls off both with ease, giving an excellent performance as Macduff. I also want to mention actress Kathryn Hunter, who gives a wonderfully creepy and extremely physical performance as all three of the witches.

    I also suspect that Oscar-winners Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand will probably both get nominated for Best Actor and Best Actress, respectively, again this year. They both give jaw-droppingly good performances and while watching the movie you really realize how truly gifted they both are. It’s easy with Shakespeare to fall into the rhythm of his words and not really make them your own, or truly embody them, which is exactly what Washington and McDormand do. They both recite the dialogue perfectly, and you completely believe they are their characters, but at the same time, you never forget they are Denzel and Frances. It’s really remarkable to watch. Washington infuses Macbeth with his trademark cool, something the character has never had before. It’s in the dialogue and the way he walks, making the material fresh and new. McDormand is an absolute joy to watch, and the way she interprets particular lines is genius and comes from her own unique personality. The two also have an electrifying chemistry on screen together, and I hope that they will work together again someday.

    However, the film is not without its faults. Shakespeare can be difficult for many to understand as the material is very dense, and while Coen did a great job interpreting the material cinematically, I could see it that it would be easy for some audience members to get lost. It may be a difficult watch for those not familiar with the original play, as it can be a confusing story, but for those who are familiar, it’s easy to follow. In the end, ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’ is a thrilling and vibrant retelling of Shakespeare’s classic play, masterfully directed by Joel Coen and featuring transcendent performances from two of the greatest screen actors of all-time.

    ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’ receives 4 out of 5 stars.

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  • 2021 Oscar Nominations

    2021 Oscar Nominations

    Best Picture nominees 'Judas and the Black Messiah,' 'Nomadland,' 'Promising Young Woman,' 'Sound of Metal,' 'Mank,' 'Minari,' 'Trial of the Chicago 7,' & 'The Father'
    Best Picture nominees ‘Judas and the Black Messiah,’ ‘Nomadland,’ ‘Promising Young Woman,’ ‘Sound of Metal,’ ‘Mank,’ ‘Minari,’ ‘Trial of the Chicago 7,’ & ‘The Father’

    Early in the morning on March 15th, Nick Jonas and Prianka Chopra-Jonas announced the nominations for the 93rd Academy Awards. Here are the nominees for this years’ awards:

    BEST PICTURE

    ‘The Father’
    ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
    ‘Mank’
    ‘Minari’
    ‘Nomadland’
    ‘Promising Young Woman’
    ‘Sound of Metal’
    ‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’


    DIRECTOR

    Thomas Vinterberg, ‘Another Round’
    David Fincher, ‘Mank’
    Lee Isaac Chung, ‘Minari’
    Chloe Zhao, ‘Nomadland’
    Emerald Fennell, ‘Promising Young Woman’


ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE

Riz Ahmed, ‘Sound of Metal’
Chadwick Boseman, ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’
Anthony Hopkins, ‘The Father’
Gary Oldman, ‘Mank’
Steven Yeun, ‘Minari’


ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE

Viola Davis, ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’
Andra Day, ‘The United States vs. Billie Holiday’
Vanessa Kirby, ‘Pieces of a Woman’
Frances McDormand, ‘Nomadland’
Carey Mulligan, ‘Promising Young Woman’


ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

Maria Bakalova, ‘Borat Subsequent Moviefilm’
Glenn Close, ‘Hillbilly Elegy’
Olivia Colman, ‘The Father’
Amanda Seyfried, ‘Mank’
Youn Yuh-jung, ‘Minari’


ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

Sacha Baron Cohen, ‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’
Daniel Kaluuya, ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
Leslie Odom Jr., ‘One Night in Miami’
Paul Raci, ‘Sound of Metal’
Lakeith Stanfield, ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’


ANIMATED FEATURE FILM

‘Onward’
‘Over the Moon’
‘A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon’
‘Soul’
‘Wolfwalkers’


ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

‘Borat Subsequent MovieFilm’
‘The Father’
‘Nomadland’
‘One Night in Miami’
‘The White Tiger’


ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
‘Minari’
‘Promising Young Woman’
‘Sound of Metal’
‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’


FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

‘Another Round’ – Denmark
‘Better Days’ – Hong Kong
‘Collective’ – Romania
‘The Man Who Sold His Skin’ – Tunisia
‘Quo Vadis, Aida?’ – Bosnia and Herzegovina


DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

‘Collective’
‘Crip Camp’
‘The Mole Agent’
‘My Octopus Teacher’
‘Time’


PRODUCTION DESIGN

‘The Father’
‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’
‘Mank’
‘News of the World’
‘Tenet’


CINEMATOGRAPHY

Sean Bobbitt, ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
Erik Messerschmidt, ‘Mank’
Dariusz Wolski, ‘News of the World’
Joshua James Richards, ‘Nomadland’
Phedon Papamichael , ‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’


COSTUME DESIGN

‘Emma’
‘Ma Rainey’s Blackbottom’
‘Mank’
‘Mulan’
‘Pinocchio’


MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING

‘Emma’
‘Hillbilly Elegy’
‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’
‘Mank’
‘Pinocchio’


FILM EDITING

‘The Father’
‘Nomadland’
‘Promising Young Woman’
‘Sound of Metal’
‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’


ACHIEVEMENT IN SOUND

‘Greyhound’
‘Mank’
‘News of the World’
‘Soul’
‘Sound of Metal’


VISUAL EFFECTS

‘Love and Monsters’
‘The Midnight Sky’
‘Mulan’
‘The One and Only Ivan’
‘Tenet’


LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM

‘Feeling Through’
‘The Letter Room’
‘The Present’
‘Two Distant Strangers’
‘White Eye’


ANIMATED SHORT FILM

‘Burrow’
‘Genius Loci’
‘If Anything Happens I Love You’
‘Opera’
‘Yes-People’


DOCUMENTARY (SHORT)

‘Colette’
‘A Concerto Is a Conversation’
‘Do Not Split’
‘Hunger Ward’
‘A Love Song For Latasha’


ORIGINAL SONG

‘Fight For You’ from ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’
‘Hear My Voice’ from ‘The Trial of the Chicago 7’
‘Husavik’ from ‘Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga’
‘lo Sì (Seen)’ from ‘The Life Ahead (La Vita Davanti a Se)’
‘Speak Now’ from ‘One Night in Miami…’


ORIGINAL SCORE

‘Da 5 Bloods’
‘Mank’
‘Minari’
‘News of the World’
‘Soul’


Delayed by the pandemic, the Oscars ceremony will be on Sunday, April 25 on ABC.

  • 10 Women Who Deserve Best Director Nominations at the Oscars

    10 Women Who Deserve Best Director Nominations at the Oscars

    On March 15th the nominations for the 93rd annual Academy Awards will be announced. In the near-century long history of the Oscars, only five women have been nominated for Best Director: Lina Wertmüller for ‘Seven Beauties,’ Jane Campion for ‘The Piano,’ Sofia Coppola for ‘Lost in Translation,’ Kathryn Bigelow for ‘The Hurt Locker,’ and Greta Gerwig for ‘Lady Bird.’ Of those five women, the only winner was Kathryn Bigelow – and that was a decade ago! This year, the Golden Globes made history by nominating three women for Best Director, bringing the total nominated at that ceremony to a whopping eight. With Chloé Zhao being the first woman to win since Barbra Streisand took home the award for 1983’s ‘Yentl.’ These stats are not low because there haven’t been deserving women that directed movies. These stats are a symptom of a systematic bias that has been under investigation by the ACLU and U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and studied by scholars like The Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film. But you don’t need data and lawsuits to know women are equally as deserving of these accolades as their male peers. You just need to watch their films.

    This year three women have seen their films nominated by numerous awards bodies: Chloé Zhao, Emerald Fennell, and Regina King. But their films are not the only films worthy of being feted this year. In fact, the Academy could fill both their five Best Director slots and ten Best Picture slots completely with films directed by women this year. Let’s take a look at the contenders, shall we?


    Chloé Zhao – Nomadland

    Director/writer/editor Chloé Zhao on the set of 'Nomadland'
    Director/writer/editor Chloé Zhao on the set of ‘Nomadland’

    The most awarded film of the year, Chloé Zhao’s ‘Nomadland’ is this year’s frontrunner for both best director and best picture, especially after Zhao’s historic win at the Golden Globes. The film is led by a powerful, yet understated performance from Frances McDormand, but also features spirited turns from non professional actors as well. Over the past decade Zhao films have captured the spirit of the contemporary American West like few filmmakers before her. With ‘Nomadland’ she also taps into our country’s current economic disparities with a deft and compassionate hand.
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    Emerald Fennell – Promising Young Woman

    Carey Mulligan, writer/director Emerald Fennell, & Laverne Cox on the set of 'Promising Young Woman'
    Carey Mulligan, writer/director Emerald Fennell, & Laverne Cox on the set of ‘Promising Young Woman’

    One of the most divisive films of the year, Emerald Fennell’s ‘Promising Young Woman’ deconstructs the idea of ‘nice guys’ and the subtleties of rape culture. Fennell uses a bold candy-colored palette and pop-song infused soundtrack to create a stark contrast between the visuals of the film and its themes. Pointed casting of TV boyfriends of yore to as would-be rapists, and Carey Mulligan’s fierce performance as Cassie, a woman whose trauma manifests in extreme behavior, demonstrates Fennell’s skill as a director of actors.
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    Regina King – One Night In Miami…

    Aldis Hodge and director Regina King on the set of 'One Night in Miami...'
    Aldis Hodge and director Regina King on the set of ‘One Night in Miami…’

    An Oscar-winning actress herself, Regina King has directed episodes of television for almost a decade and with her feature film debut ‘One Night In Miami…’, proven herself to be one of the great multi-hyphenates in the business. Although based on a stage play by Kemp Powers, King crafts scenes that are anything but stagey. With her cast playing icons Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, and Sam Cooke, King brings out emotional depth from her actors Kingsley Ben-Adir, Eli Goree, Aldis Hodge, and Leslie Odom Jr., that bring their performances beyond mere impersonations. You feel as though everyone bared their soul making this film.
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    Eliza Hittman – Never Rarely Sometimes Always

    Director/writer Eliza Hittman on the set of 'Never Rarely Sometimes Always'
    Director/writer Eliza Hittman on the set of ‘Never Rarely Sometimes Always’

    Premiering at Sundance and playing at the Berlin Film Festival, Eliza Hittman’s third feature film ‘Never Rarely Sometimes Always’ was one of the last films to hit theaters before the pandemic shuttered many. The drama, which has become one of the years most awards films, follows teen cousins as Autumn (Sidney Flanigan) and Skylar (Talia Ryder) as they make the trek from rural Pennsylvania to New York City in order to receive an abortion. Shot in a neo-realistic style, Hittman throws one obstacle after another at her protagonists without the film ever feeling heavy headed or preachy. It’s tough the way life is tough, yet through it all she lets Autumn and Skylar feel little moments of joy in each other’s company.
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    Kitty Green – The Assistant

    Director/writer Kitty Green on the set of 'The Assistant'
    Director/writer Kitty Green on the set of ‘The Assistant’

    Debuting at the Telluride Film Festival in 2019 and landing in theaters last January, Kitty Green’s The Assistant tackles the #MeToo movement within the entertainment industry. Green presents an incisive take on the banality of the evil that lurks within its walls by following the titular assistant, played with impressive restraint by Julia Garner, through one terrible day at work. The abuse depicted within the film is found in microaggressions, in complacency, in bureaucracy. As the day ends, the viewer is left wondering how anyone can wade through all that muck just to make a film, yet it also leaves us as breathless as only a great film can. Green forces us to see the cost behind it all and question our own roles within this broken system.
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    Kelly Reichardt – First Cow

    Director/writer Kelly Reichardt on the set of 'First Cow'
    Director/writer Kelly Reichardt on the set of ‘First Cow’

    Like Zhao, Kelly Reichardt has spent much of her filmmaking career telling stories of the American West. One character in the film states they can taste London in the oily cake he eats, just as the viewer can feel the Pacific Northwest in this film. Set in 1820, when the PNW was mostly populated by fur trappers and military men, ‘First Cow’ follows the close bond formed by a cook named Cookie (John Magaro) and a Chinese immigrant named King-Lu (Orion Lee). Like she’s done in many of her films, Reichardt uses this setting to explore the more tender sides of masculinity. As the two build their baking business – with milk stolen from the titular cow – their ambitions threaten to disrupt their domestic bliss. Reichardt’s deft critiques on capitalism and class, slowly dismantle the myth of the American Dream, even at its nascency.
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    Isabel Sandoval – Lingua Franca

    Director/writer/producer/editor/star Isabel Sandoval in 'Lingua Franca.'
    Director/writer/producer/editor/star Isabel Sandoval in ‘Lingua Franca.’

    Not only did Isabel Sandvoval write and direct ‘Lingua Franca,’ she also produced, edited, and played the lead role. The film takes a deeply empathetic look at immigration from the point of view of a trans woman who works as a care-giver for an eldery woman in Brooklyn. Sandvoval has a delicate touch to her storytelling, bringing out warm, subtle performances from her cast. Both intimate and understated, the viewer feels as though they’ve only glimpsed a small piece of a much larger picture, and as the film ends you wish you could linger in this world for just a little bit longer.
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    Autumn de Wilde – Emma.

    (L to R) Amber Anderson, Tanya Reynolds, Josh O'Connor, writer/director Autumn de Wilde, and Johnny Flynn on the set of 'Emma.'
    (L to R) Amber Anderson, Tanya Reynolds, Josh O’Connor, writer/director Autumn de Wilde, and Johnny Flynn on the set of ‘Emma.’

    There are many things to praise about Autumn de Wilde’s adaptation of ‘Emma.’ The director’s detailed historical research shines in the art direction and costume design. She gets delightful performances from up-and-comers Anya Taylor-Joy and Johnny Flynn (who have delectable chemistry), and a hilarious supporting turn from Bill Nighy. But what really sets de Wilde’s Jane Austen adaptation above the rest is the way in which she manages to capture the vicious humor of Austen’s prose. There is an acidity to this Emma, which makes her character’s arc all the more triumphant and the film itself so thrilling to watch.
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    Channing Godfrey Peoples – Miss Juneteenth

    Writer/director Channing Godfrey Peoples on the set of 'Miss Juneteenth'
    Writer/director Channing Godfrey Peoples on the set of ‘Miss Juneteenth’

    Inspired in part by writer-director Channing Godfrey Peoples’ own youth celebrating Juneteenth and attending Miss Juneteenth pageants, her feature film debut premiered to near universal acclaim last summer. Led by lived-in performances from Nicole Beharie, for which she received the Gotham Award for Best Actress, ‘Miss Juneteenth’ navigates well-worn mother-daughter story beats with freshness and vigour. Shooting the film on location in Fort Worth, Texas, Peoples creates a real sense of place and economic position for her characters, and her personal connection to the subject and setting adds a palpable warmth.
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    Radha Blank – The Forty-Year-Old Version

    Director/writer/star Radha Blank on the set of 'The Forty-Year-Old Version'
    Director/writer/star Radha Blank on the set of ‘The Forty-Year-Old Version’

    After debuting at Sundance and winning the U.S. Dramatic Competition Directing Award, The Forty-Year-Old Version was a labor of love for Radha Blank, who not only wrote and directed the film, but also stars in the lead role. Loosely based on her own life, the film follows Radha as she hits forty and comes to terms with not living up to the promise of once being featured on 30 under 30 list. Radha takes her frustrations out through her alter ego: a rapper called RadhaMUSprime. Blank mines her own life and artistic struggles with humour and wisdom. She also addresses racial bias in the industry both through scenes in the film, but also in her choice to make the film in luminous B&W – not for financial reasons, but to evoke the art films she as a filmmaker loves.
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    That’s just a small sampling of the great films directed by women from last year. Here’s a few more that could easily be swapped in: Alice Wu’s ‘The Half of It’, Agnieszka Holland’s ‘Charlatan’, Julia Hart’s ‘I’m Your Woman’, Miranda July’s ‘Kajillionaire’, Josephine Decker’s ‘Shirley’, Maite Alberdi’s ‘The Mole Agent,’ Gina Prince-Bythewood’s ‘The Old Guard,’ Shannon Murphy’s ‘Babyteeth’, Kirsten Johnson’s ‘Dick Johnson Is Dead’, Déa Kulumbegashvili’s ‘Beginning’, Garrett Bradley’s ‘Time’, Naomi Kawase’s ‘True Mothers’, Cathy Yan’s ‘Birds of Prey,’ and Lili Horvát’s ‘Preparations to Be Together for an Unknown Period of Time’.

    There really is no shortage of exceptional films directed by women and after 93 years of the Oscars mostly shutting them out, enough is enough.

  • Female Filmmakers in Focus: Chloé Zhao’s ‘Nomadland’ & Angelina Jolie’s ‘By the Sea’

    Female Filmmakers in Focus: Chloé Zhao’s ‘Nomadland’ & Angelina Jolie’s ‘By the Sea’

    Welcome to this week’s edition of Female Filmmakers in Focus, a column where you will find a recommendation for films directed by women to seek out each week.

    Nomadland (2020) – directed by Chloé Zhao

    Frances McDormand & Chloé Zhao on the set of 'Nomadland'
    Frances McDormand & Chloé Zhao on the set of ‘Nomadland’

    With the wide release of her third film ‘Nomadland’ into theaters on Hulu this weekend, writer-director Chloé Zhao is only just beginning. Born in Beijing, China, Zhao attended primary schools in England and Los Angeles. She received a degree in political science at Mount Holyoke before enrolling in film school at NYU – where Spike Lee was one of her teachers – and where she met her creative partner, cinematographer Joshua James Richards, who has shot her first three films. Deciding to set her thesis film in Devils Lake, North Dakota because she liked the name she discovered the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, which inspired her first two films ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ and ‘The Rider,’ both of which opened to critical acclaim. ‘Nomadland’ has positioned Zhao as a frontrunner at the Oscars this year, and she will be following it up with the Marvel film ‘Eternals,’ slated for release in November 2021.

    Based on the book by Jessica Bruder, star Frances McDormand originally optioned Nomadland and was so impressed by Zhao’s film ‘The Rider’ that she approached her to write and direct the film. The result is an emotionally rich, painfully relevant film about the waning days of the American Dream. Set in 2011, McDormand plays Fern, a woman reaching retirement age during the Great Recession who has lost her home after her husband passes and the company town they had lived in together shuts down. Fern begins to live in a van, travelling across the country working seasonal jobs. Like Zhao’s first two films, many of the cast are non-professional actors – subjects of the nonfiction book – with a standout performance from a woman named Swankie. Nomadland examines the importance of interpersonal relationships, the siren’s call of personal freedom, our dependence on capitalism, and the harsh realities of aging in a country that doesn’t seem to care about its older population.

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    By the Sea (2015) – directed by Angelina Jolie

    Angelina Jolie on the set of 'By the Sea'
    Angelina Jolie on the set of ‘By the Sea’

    We are now heading into our fourth decade of Angelina Jolie as a public figure, and as those decades changed, she grew as an artist. Getting her start acting in short films directed by her brother while he attended USC film school, she quickly began starring in iconic music videos like Lenny Kravitz’s “Stand by My Woman” (1991), The Lemonheads’s “It’s About Time” (1993), and Meat Loaf’s “Rock and Roll Dreams Come Through” (1993). Her career trajectory started with cult hits like as ‘Hackers’ and ‘Foxfire’, then award-winning television films like ‘George Wallace’ and ‘Gia.’ Then came her Oscar-winning turn in ‘Girl, Interrupted’, blockbusters like ‘Lara Croft: Tomb Raider’, ‘Mr. & Mrs. Smith,’ and ‘Salt,’ and critically acclaimed dramas like ‘A Mighty Heart’ and ‘Changeling’. In the last decade Angelina Jolie has also come into her own as an accomplished writer-director, with four very different films under her belt: the Bosnian War drama ‘In the Land of Blood and Honey’, a biopic of Olympian and WWII vet Louis “Louie” Zamperini ‘Unbroken’, the 1960s psychological romance drama ‘By The Sea’, and Cambodian Civil War drama ‘First They Killed My Father’.

    Of her directorial filmography, By The Sea was likely her most high-profile in that it was the only one of her films in which she and then-partner Brad Pitt both appeared. And yet this film is also her most misunderstood. Written off as a vanity project by many, the film has a small, but passionate fan base, with at least two masterful close-reads by film writers Kim Morgan and Angelica Jade-Bastien. With shades of 60s filmmakers like Antonioni, Bergman, Polanski, and Losey, ‘By The Sea’ follows writer Roland (Pitt) and his wife Vanessa (Jolie) as they set up camp in a coastal hotel, so he can finish his latest book. In the tradition of the great relationship dramas like ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?’ and ‘La Notte,’ there’s a storm at the heart of this relationship. They may be beautiful people, but anger, malice, resentment, and self-loathing are simmering beneath their façades. All the hallmarks of complicated romance! When Roland and Vanessa begin a voyeuristic fascination with a honeymooning younger couple (Melvil Poupaud and Mélanie Laurent), the tensions in their fraught relationship start to boil over. Sleek and glossy on the surface, with gorgeous cinematography by Christian Berger, a lush score from Gabriel Yared, and to die for costumes by Ellen Mirojnick, at its core the film is melancholic and even unsettling, examining ideas of gaze, fidelity and possession, grief and even vanity itself. Jolie is at the top of her game, both in terms of her performance and her artistry as a filmmaker. ‘By The Sea’ is currently streaming on Netflix.

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  • What to Watch this Week: ‘Nomadland’, ‘Body Brokers’, ‘Supernova’, and more…

    What to Watch this Week: ‘Nomadland’, ‘Body Brokers’, ‘Supernova’, and more…

    If you’re curious as to what new movie this week might be best for you, Moviefone is here to help you find it and watch it. This week’s selection of movies features a lot of well-earned adult angst, stunning landscapes, wildlife (emphasis on wild), and rockin’ out. Here are the movies we’re suggesting this week:


    Nomadland (In Theaters & Hulu)

    Frances McDormand in 'Nomadland'
    Frances McDormand in ‘Nomadland’

    Frances McDormand plays Fern, a woman disenfranchised by the closing of a sheetrock plant in Nevada, and a wife devastated by the death of her husband. She decides to take to the open road as she ponders life and does whatever she pleases after a life that didn’t allow her that path. Along the way, director Chloe Zhao spotlights the stories of real life nomads that Fern meets, driving home the point that the America that people were promised sometimes fails to materialize. Set against the backdrop of incredible Western skies, the story allows for McDormand to make the intangible materialize. She has the power to turn lighting a sparkler into a clip they’ll use for her inevitable Oscar nomination.

    Watch It If: You’ve ever thought about how freeing it would be to sell your belongings, get in your car, and just drive. For any McDormand stans, and viewers that crave the scenery of Easy Rider with the relatability and quietness of Boyhood, with a dash of Tree of Life poetry.
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    Flora & Ulysses (Disney+)

    Matilda Lawler in 'Flora & Ulysses'
    Matilda Lawler in ‘Flora & Ulysses’

    Flora (Matilda Lawler) is really going through it. Her parents have separated, and her life as a self-proclaimed cynic isn’t helping her see the bright side of things. She’s also obsessed with superheroes but lamenting how she doesn’t have any of her own in real life. Soon, she rescues a squirrel that she names Ulysses, and life starts to get interesting, including when her family realizes Ulysses can type and is quite the poet. Her life (and feelings) will surely never be the same after this.

    Watch It If: You need a follow-up for this week’s Disney+ episode of Wandavision that will leave everyone in your family feeling warm and fuzzy…and much kinder towards rodents.
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    Supernova (PVOD)

    Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth in 'Supernova'
    Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth in ‘Supernova’

    More adults in a camper here, but this time in England, with Stanley Tucci as a man suffering from early-onset dementia, and Colin Firth as his husband struggling to care for him. They are on a farewell tour of sorts, before Tucci no longer remembers the friends they’re going to see. Firth has stepped back from his career as a pianist and silently wrestles with worry. Longtime friends in real life, the two paint an unforgettable, emotional picture of a couple, for better or for worse.

    Watch It If: You would like to know what’s it’s really like to hang out with The Tooch and Firthy. The intimacy in this film is off the charts.
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    I Care a Lot (Netflix)

    Rosamund Pike in 'I Care a Lot'
    Rosamund Pike in ‘I Care a Lot’

    Marla Grayson, a woman whose smile doesn’t ever reach her eyes, has a good thing going. She is played by an unsettling Rosamund Pike, and in the film is making a living stealing from the elderly. Her scheme involves hoodwinking judges into giving her legal guardianship over those who need her the most–or need someone anyway, hopefully one more honest. Unfortunately for Marla, her latest victim happens to have ties to the powerful people, and they have strong opinions about Marla’s methods.

    Watch It If: You get especially hot under the collar seeing predators targeting the more vulnerable members of our society, and then live for them getting their comeuppance. Also if you need a dose of Chris Messina, he’s here dropping truth bombs.
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    Body Brokers (In Theaters & VOD)

    Michael K. Williams and Jack Kilmer in 'Body Brokers'
    Michael K. Williams and Jack Kilmer in ‘Body Brokers’

    Utah (Jack Kilmer) and Opal (Alice Englert) are two kids in Ohio who abuse drugs and commit crimes. It doesn’t look like much more is on the horizon for them, until Wood (Michael K. Williams) shows up promising them a better life in a California live-in rehab center. Utah is intrigued by the idea to heal his body and finally get to see the ocean. Soon, his challenges with sobriety are compounded by learning that drug rehabilitation is big business, and there are plenty of scavengers looking to exploit it at the cost of others.

    Watch It If: You want to see another story about something helpful being destroyed by capitalism in a big grift that only hurts the little guy, a’la The Big Short. No bubble bath explainer scenes in this film, though.
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    Rock Camp (PVOD)

    Dave Mustaine (far right) in 'Rock Camp'
    Dave Mustaine (far right) in ‘Rock Camp’

    It turns out that anybody can share a stage with rock royalty like Gene Simmons, Alice Cooper, Roger Daltrey, and Steven Tyler, as long as they enroll in Rock and Roll Fantasy Camp. This documentary shows how 20 years ago, tour producer David Fischof wanted to give people the chance to live and jam like a rock star. With the help of music legends, he’s brought the dream to life, with rehearsals and performances, and now this documentary that’s going to make it impossible to get a spot–darnit, how is the line ALREADY busy?!

    Watch It If: Seeing rock legends bonding over their shared love of music with guys wearing Dockers makes you a little misty. Which it really should.
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  • Denzel Washington, Frances McDormand in Talks for Joel Coen’s ‘Macbeth’ Adaptation

    Denzel Washington, Frances McDormand in Talks for Joel Coen’s ‘Macbeth’ Adaptation

    Denzel Washington; Frances McDormand
    Sony Pictures Releasing; Fox Searchlight Pictures

    Joel Coen is adapting Shakespeare’s “Macbeth,” and it seems he may land some top talent.

    Multi-Academy Award winners Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand are reportedly looking to join. They’re in early talks to team up, according to Deadline’s intel. Coen, who is married to McDormand, is writing the script and plans to direct as well.

    The project will be the next in a long line of screen versions of “Macbeth.” In fact, there was a Hollywood version as recently as 2015, Justin Kurzel‘s film starring Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard. The original play is a tragedy that follows the titular character, a Scottish general, as he attempts to usurp the Scottish throne after hearing a prophecy from three witches. He does indeed gain power, but he soon finds there are unexpected consequences to his actions.

    Washington and McDormand are both celebrated actors, with two Academy Awards each. He won for “Glory” and “Training Day,” while she won for “Fargo” and “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.” Washington most recently starred in “The Equalizer 2,” and McDormand lent her voice to 2018’s “Isle of the Dogs.”

    Coen, of course, has received his fair share of accolades as well. He is a four-time Oscar winner, having been honored as a writer, director, and producer.

    Scott Rudin is producing “Macbeth” and A24 is reportedly set to distribute.

    [via: Deadline]

  • 12 Actors Dangerously Close to Getting an EGOT

    12 Actors Dangerously Close to Getting an EGOT

     

  • Frances McDormand’s Oscar 2018 Statue Was Stolen; Police Arrest Suspect

    Come on, now. If there’s anyone you don’t want to tick off, it’s Frances McDormand. She’d probably do more than put up billboards to shame you. That should be obvious by now.

    The 2018 Oscars aired last night, with McDormand picking up her second Academy Award as Best Actress. The “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” star then went to the Governors Ball after the show. That’s when her statue was briefly stolen.

    The “Three Billboards” trophy was later recovered, so her “Fargo” Oscar will get to meet its new sibling.

    Deadline said police arrested Terry Bryant, 47, for the crime. He had a ticket to the event, police said, but he didn’t have authority to be the new Best Actress winner. He was arrested at 11:50 PT, and he’s facing a charge of felony grand theft. His bail is set at $20,000.

    Frances McDormand had an impressive, and interactive, Oscars speech, asking the female nominees in all categories to stand up during the speech. She issued a call to action for inclusion riders, asking actors to include stipulations in their contracts to ensure more diversity.

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