Tag: geraldine-viswanathan

  • ‘Thunderbolts*’ Digital Release Interview: Jake Schreier

    2Z0FcGNi

    Available on digital now and 4K and Blu-ray July 29th is Marvel Studios’ ‘Thunderbolts*’, which was directed by Jake Schreier (‘Beef’).

    The film stars several MCU regulars including Florence Pugh (‘Hawkeye’) as Yelena Belova, Sebastian Stan (‘Captain America: The Winter Soldier’) as Bucky Barnes, Wyatt Russell (‘The Falcon and the Winter Soldier’) as John Walker, David Harbour (‘Black Widow’) as Alexei Shostakov, Hannah John-Kamen (‘Ant-Man and the Wasp’) as Ava Starr, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus (‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’) as Valentina Aleegra de Fontaine, as well as Marvel newbies Geraldine Viswanathan (‘Drive-Away Dolls’) as Mel, and Lewis Pullman (‘Top Gun: Maverick’) as Bob.

    Related Article: How Will ‘The Fantastic Four: First Steps’ Tie Into ‘Thunderbolts*’?

    Florence Pugh and Jake Schreier on the set of Marvel Studios' 'Thunderbolts*'. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. © 2025 Marvel.
    Florence Pugh and Jake Schreier on the set of Marvel Studios’ ‘Thunderbolts*’. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. © 2025 Marvel.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Jake Schreier about the ‘Thunderbolts*’ digital release and his work on the film. The director discussed his initial pitch to Marvel, selecting the characters, the asterisk in the title, the ‘New Avengers’ reveal, the ‘The Fantastic Four: First Steps’ cameo in the second end credit scene, deleted scenes, and Florence Pugh’s opening scene stunt, as well as addressing the rumors that he will direct the MCU’s upcoming new ‘X-Men’ movie.

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

    'Thunderbolts*' director Jake Schreier.
    ‘Thunderbolts*’ director Jake Schreier.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first meeting with Marvel Studios and the pitch that got you the job directing ‘Thunderbolts*’?

    Jake Schreier: Well, know the pitching process at Marvel takes a long time. I think there were maybe seven meetings over the course of seven months. So, the first meeting was just me talking to Brian Chapek and just having a very loose conversation about the idea for the movie, which I thought was neat. Eric Pearson and he had come up with this great setup where it was about a set of contract killers being sent to kill each other and to be disposed as opposed to being put together in some sort of team, which was a neat slip on the expectation. I just talked about my favorite movies that related to that and that sense of tension and what you would want to bring to a movie like that. Then the conversation grew month after month. Each time I would bring something a little bit new. I like to pitch on things, show people, if we were already making the movie together, this is the sort of stuff that I would start doing. I think the second one is that I did make a kind of reference reel of movies. Not that the movie should be like this movie, but these are kind of moments of tension within other movies about groups of people that don’t trust each other, and how important that was to what we were building here. I think that included ‘Ronin’, and it included ‘Toy Story 3’, a very disparate group of movies and ‘Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol’, all kinds of different stuff. Then at subsequent meetings, there was concept art for what the void could look like, and then a storyboard in certain sequences from the film. We had talked about the elevator sequence, this funny idea of if it was all about trust or a trust fall, if they must climb up back-to-back, which is an idea that Brian had, that was fun. I took that and storyboarded it just to show what that might feel like. So yeah, it was more of a long beat by beat process. I think, one thing about working at Marvel was, Kevin (Feige) always says, “Always be fussing.” The movie is never really done until they kind of pry it out of your hands and you must release it. You’re always looking to improve it. So, to some degree, it’s not so much about the specific pitch or everything kept changing after I came on board, but it’s about will this work out as a working relationship? Are the ideas flowing and will you push each other to make it better? It felt like Brian, and I worked so well together in this movie, and that felt like a really strong core to build from.

    MF: Was the core cast of characters already selected when you came on board and were there characters you wanted to include but were unable to?

    JS: They were mostly chosen. I attempted to give input, which was quickly shot down, which I think on the first one I was like, “What if Man-Thing was involved,” which has now been picked up by the internet as though that was ever going to happen, which it wasn’t. They quickly and politely were like, “He was in ‘Werewolf by Night’, which I didn’t know. So that didn’t happen. But then I think before I came on board, they added Robert Reynolds to the mix. That was the biggest change. Then once that was part of it, I mean even in our pitch conversation, everything really ran towards thinking about what it meant to have a character like Sentry and the Void in this movie, and how that tied into Yelena and what she’s going through, and how important that was to build that kind of connection and have that drive the story.

    'Thunderbolts*' is available on digital now and 4K and Blu-ray on July 29th.
    ‘Thunderbolts*’ is available on digital now and 4K and Blu-ray on July 29th.

    MF: Was the asterisk in the title your idea, and at what point was it decided that the team would really become the ‘New Avengers’?

    JS: So, they were always introduced as the New Avengers. Even in the first draft that I read before I came on board. I did pitch the asterisk thing. I think in my last pitch meeting before I got the movie, but I did not expect it to be in the actual title. I thought, “Oh, maybe there could be a billboard somewhere with an asterisk, and they’ll say, “Until we come up with something better.” But yeah, I mean that was the fun thing about working with those guys, and everyone in marketing. They’re very open and collaborative, and they would take ideas like that and really run with them and put their own spin on it. There was just a lot of openness on this movie, I think, to kind of take risks and try to do something different.

    MF: So, this was always going to be a ‘New Avengers’ movie, is that right?

    JS: Yes, it was always ended. That moment was always baked in. I mean, at least from the time I met on it, that was always where the story landed.

    (L to R) Director Jake Schreier and Wyatt Russel on the set of Marvel Studios' 'Thunderbolts*'. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. © 2025 Marvel.
    (L to R) Director Jake Schreier and Wyatt Russel on the set of Marvel Studios’ ‘Thunderbolts*’. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. © 2025 Marvel.

    MF: Did you feel added pressure knowing that this was secretly an ‘Avengers’ movie?

    JS: I mean, look, there’s enough pressure on these movies no matter what you’re doing. I think obviously it meant that we felt we had to build a story that at one time was this kind of very different story within the MCU about different characters, but it did need in its own way to live up. It was never going to be at the scale of a normal ‘Avengers’ film. But to the legacy of these kinds of great movies that had been made in the MCU, that when you get to that moment, even if it’s through a route that you never expected, you can kind of splint. Even if at first, you’re like, “Wait, what?” You kind of think about it and you’re like, “Okay, no, maybe this could work.” Or at least I want to see them try and see what happens going forward.

    MF: Can you talk about the second end-credit scene that teases ‘The Fantastic Four: First Steps’? What was your involvement in that scene and when and where was it shot?

    JS: That was late. I mean, I was there, I went to London. So that’s on the set, I think of the new ‘Avengers’ movie (‘Avengers: Doomsday’) that the Russo’s are directing. I think that might’ve been, it was one of the first scenes they shot for it. So, the idea was going to be part of that movie, and then also our end credits scene. So, there were things that it kind of had to do for where our story went, but we also wanted it in a way to be this handoff. It was fun to watch them directed and directed in that context and have it been this sort of, leap of seeing. I think Florence said it was like “Being dropped off at school by your parent, and you look back and like, all right, we’ll have fun guys. Good luck out there. You’re in a new grade now.” So yeah, it was just fun to have everyone kind of collaborate on that and get to see them take that next step on their next journey.

    (L to R) Ghost (Hannah John-Kamen), Bob (Lewis Pullman), Yelena Belova (Florence Pugh) and John Walker (Wyatt Russell) in Marvel Studios' 'Thunderbolts*'. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. © 2025 Marvel.
    (L to R) Ghost (Hannah John-Kamen), Bob (Lewis Pullman), Yelena Belova (Florence Pugh) and John Walker (Wyatt Russell) in Marvel Studios’ ‘Thunderbolts*’. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. © 2025 Marvel.

    MF: Will there be deleted scenes available on the digital and home entertainment releases, and if so, can you talk about why those scenes were ultimately cut?

    JS: Yes. I mean, I must be honest, there’s not a lot that was left on the cutting room floor of this movie. There are little things that got cut out. In the edit, we trimmed things down, but it was more really kind of honing the scenes than it was dropping a lot of full scenes. At first, I was like, “I don’t want any deleted scenes.” Then they were like, “You have to have a few.” So, I put them in there. What I can say is that there’s a very extensive behind the scenes featurette, and a very funny gag reel, which mostly is just cute. But I think the behind-the-scenes stuff, again, we did so much practically on this movie and in camera, and practical effects and returning to this old school style of filmmaking. I think I had a lot of fun, and they really did a great job of capturing that stuff, getting to watch the way those things were put together. I think, again, it’s just a testament to how hard everyone works on these movies, and I think that is fun to see.

    MF: I understand that Florence Pugh insisted on doing the stunt in the opening scene where she jumps off a skyscraper herself. Can you talk about working with her and the stunt team to make that possible?

    JS: I mean, we had this idea for it, Lee Sung Jin, who wrote multiple drafts of the script, had written in this stunt. That was sort of our version of a Bond opening, but it’s more of an emotional stunt, in a way, where it’s like, it almost seems like it could be a suicide. Then it’s just her kind of malaise in her job, but it takes you into this real character beat that then becomes an action sequence. But again, it’s our spin on it, because it’s what the depressed spy would do. So, I think what was exciting about it was obviously the stunt itself and going somewhere and really doing something like that, because it’s Florence having this great acting beat at the start of that shot. In the same take, we watch her step off the second-tallest building in the world. So, she had to take that on because we can’t really ask her to do that. We could say it was an idea we had. We didn’t even know we were going to shoot it. She was like, “I love heights. Let’s do it.” So, through the whole production, it was kind of finding a place that would make sense. Then, Malaysia seemed promising, but Jason Tamez, our incredible line producer, had to do months of work to coordinate getting up there. Then I think it took three different engineering firms to sign off on the rig, and (Stunt Coordinator) Michael Huggins and our entire rigging team. I mean, the amount of trust that Florence had to have in our team, and you can see how much she trusts them. They are the best at what they do. I can’t believe she did that. Florence is amazing, but also the amount of coordination and work that it takes from everyone else involved to pull something like that off and to be able to stand by it and say, “We could do this.” Because again, at first, Disney Health and Safety quite reasonably just said, “No.” So, it took a lot of pushing and a lot of groundwork on everyone’s part to make it happen.

    Florence Pugh on the set of Marvel Studios' 'Thunderbolts*'. Photo by Steve Swisher. © 2025 Marvel.
    Florence Pugh on the set of Marvel Studios’ ‘Thunderbolts*’. Photo by Steve Swisher. © 2025 Marvel.

    MF: Finally, there have been several online rumors recently that you will be directing the upcoming ‘X-Men’ movie that Marvel Studios is planning for after ‘Avengers: Secret Wars’. Without confirming the rumors, do you have a particular take on those characters and is that a world you would be interested in exploring as a director if given the chance?

    JS: I think just knowing the way the internet works, for right now, if it’s okay, I’m going to plead the fifth on that question. But I can say that I would be very excited. I had a great time working at Marvel, and I’d be very excited to work with them again.

    NOTE: After this interview took place it was confirmed by Marvel Studio’s Kevin Feige that Jake Schreier will in fact be directing the upcoming ‘X-Men’ movie.

    ySD9fRBhzaiO2TcznWDp2

    What is the plot of ‘Thunderbolts*’’?

    A group of dangerous, unstable antiheroes and castoffs are set up on a doomed mission by a government operative (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), only to find themselves confronting a powerful new menace that threatens Earth.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Thunderbolts*’?

    • Florence Pugh as Yelena Belova
    • Sebastian Stan as Bucky Barnes
    • Wyatt Russell as John Walker/U.S. Agent
    • David Harbour as Alexei Shostakov/Red Guardian
    • Hannah John-Kamen as Ava Starr/Ghost
    • Olga Kurylenko as Antonia Dreykov/Taskmaster
    • Lewis Pullman as Robert “Bob” Reynolds
    • Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Valentina Allegra de Fontaine
    'Thunderbolts*' is available on digital now and 4K and Blu-ray on July 29th.
    ‘Thunderbolts*’ is available on digital now and 4K and Blu-ray on July 29th.

    List of Movies and TV Shows Featuring ‘Thunderbolts*’ Characters:

    Buy Marvel Movies On Amazon

     

  • Movie Review: ‘You’re Cordially Invited’

    (L to R) Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon in 'You're Cordially Invited'. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon in ‘You’re Cordially Invited’. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.

    ‘You’re Cordially Invited’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

    Arriving on Prime Video on January 30th, ‘You’re Cordially Invited’ takes your basic wedding confusion comedy and blends it with the particular style of writer/director Nicholas Stoller, who has previously brought us the likes of ‘The Five-Year Engagement,’ ‘Forgetting Sarah Marshall’ and ‘Bros.’

    The blend, like the two families awkwardly trying to share space when a venue is double-booked, doesn’t always completely work.

    Related Article: Jennifer Coolidge and Cheech Marin Talk Prime Video’s ‘Shotgun Wedding’

    Should you RSVP to ‘You’re Cordially Invited’?

    (L to R) Jimmy Tatro, Meredith Hagner and Reese Witherspoon in 'You're Cordially Invited'. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Jimmy Tatro, Meredith Hagner and Reese Witherspoon in ‘You’re Cordially Invited’. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Back in 2009, Kate Hudson and Anne Hathaway starred in ‘Bride Wars’ as two friends preparing to get married who discover that their nuptials have been double booked into the same venue.

    Stoller’s film takes that concept and uses it instead to explore the wider idea of families with issues they have to work out instead of just two people and their respective betrothed.

    But ‘Bride Wars’ is not the only existing film that this new one appears to borrow from like a cinematic magpie –– there are elements of ‘Wedding Crashers,’ ‘Sweet Home Alabama’ and more all in the mix.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Nicholas Stoller (Director) and Reese Witherspoon (Margot) in 'You're Cordially Invited'. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Nicholas Stoller (Director) and Reese Witherspoon (Margot) in ‘You’re Cordially Invited’. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Stoller has been working as both writer and director on his movies for a while now, so he’s fully responsible for all that works… And what doesn’t.

    The storyline for this one feels fairly basic but delves into some deeper issues. Will Ferrell’s Jim is a single dad who lost his wife years ago to illness, and he’s a little too doting on daughter Jenni (Geraldine Viswanathan), who returns from college and announces that she’s getting married.

    Then we have Reese Witherspoon as Margot, an LA-based reality show super-producer whose younger sister Neve (Meredith Hagner), she considers the only part of her Southern family truly worth engaging with.

    When Jim attempts to book the island locale where he got married by phone, he thinks all is well –– except the elderly inn manager’s pen doesn’t work and then she keels over dead after putting the handset down. Margot, meanwhile, gets the manager’s grandson Leslie (Jack McBrayer), who fills her details in and processes her credit card.

    ocuz7c4Y

    So the scene is set for both families to show up on the same weekend and chaos to follow –– while the parties initial agree to share, things quickly escalate to farcical levels.

    Trouble is, while Stoller tries to weave in more emotional layers –– Jim about his wife, Margot about her family drama –– little of that sits well with the wackiness of Jim wrestling an alligator or one of Margot’s family dressing as the zebra from the singing competition series she produces to destroy the wedding cake Jim so lovingly baked for Jenni’s ceremony.

    Tone whiplash is very real for this one –– it’s a lot to take in for one movie and that can make things awkward. But perhaps not as awkward as one particular development that comes late in the film, is never really justified and never really convinces despite the talents of the people involved.

    ‘You’re Cordially Invited’: Performances

    (L to R) Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell in 'You're Cordially Invited'. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Reese Witherspoon and Will Ferrell in ‘You’re Cordially Invited’. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Ferrell and Witherspoon anchor the movie, but a talented ensemble help keep things light and funny.

    Will Ferrell as Jim

    Ferrell can do overly emotional weirdo with the best of them, and he’s fully committed here, whether he’s obsessing about his daughter’s big day or plotting revenge on the other wedding party.

    Reese Witherspoon as Margot

    Witherspoon is channeling a few characters she’s played before, partly Melanie from the aforementioned ‘Sweet Home Alabama.’

    She’s typically great in the role, adept at both the humor and the heart portions, and has some excellent interactions with her family.

    (L to R) Jack McBrayer, Jimmy Tatro, Meredith Hagner and Reese Witherspoon in 'You're Cordially Invited'. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Jack McBrayer, Jimmy Tatro, Meredith Hagner and Reese Witherspoon in ‘You’re Cordially Invited’. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Meredith Hagner and Jimmy Tatro as Neve and Dixon

    Playing Margot’s sister, Hagner is reliably entertaining, even if her role is by design less funny than Witherspoon’s.

    Tatro, meanwhile, gets even less to do as her husband-to-be, but does pull off some memorable moments and, partly thanks to how he’s script, makes Dixon more than just the lunkheaded exotic dancer Neve’s family believes him to be.

    Geraldine Viswanathan as Jenni and Stony Blyden as Oliver

    Viswanathan, as she was in the likes of ‘Blockers‘, is a highlight and plays well against Ferrell’s particular energy. She’s also game for anything.

    Blyden’s character, Jenni’s own future husband, is less fleshed out and he makes less of an impact.

    (L to R) Will Ferrell and Geraldine Viswanathan in 'You're Cordially Invited'. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Will Ferrell and Geraldine Viswanathan in ‘You’re Cordially Invited’. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Rory Scovel as Colton

    Scovel is another reliable funny performer and playing Margot’s mildly misogynistic brother (who constantly refers to his wife as “the wife”), he nails the job.

    Celia Weston as Flora

    Weston plays the matriarch of Margot’s family, who has a complicated relationship with her daughter. She’s excellent in the role, one of the few in the cast who truly finds both the funny and the heartfelt sides beyond the leads.

    Keyla Monterroso Mejia as Heather

    Mejia, who, while her role is still relatively small, continues to impress –– she was superb in ‘One of Them Days’ –– and plays Jenni’s best friend/bridesmaid who agrees to plan her wedding, and does a terrible job.

    The actor commits completely, bringing a frantic, funny energy to her performance.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon in 'You're Cordially Invited'. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon in ‘You’re Cordially Invited’. Photo Credit: Glen Wilson/Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Somewhat unbalanced and sometimes a little too forced in its attempts to find humor in the situations, ‘You’re Cordially Invited’ seems unlikely to find its way down the altar to the favorites lists of this type of comedy.

    Still, it has a few decent laughs and we’re sorry it’s another comedy with big names skipping theaters and heading straight to streaming.

    1cU7syB1szjtquFnpGNGO7

    What’s the plot of ‘You’re Cordially Invited’?

    A bride (Geraldine Viswanathan) and her father (Will Ferrell) discover their dream wedding venue has been double booked for another bride (Meredith Hagner) and her wedding-planner sister (Reese Witherspoon), with hilarious consequences.

    Who is in the cast of ‘You’re Cordially Invited’?

    • Will Ferrell as Jim
    • Reese Witherspoon as Margot
    • Geraldine Viswanathan as Jenni
    • Meredith Hagner as Neve
    • Celia Weston as Flora
    • Keyla Monterroso Mejia as Heather
    • Leanne Morgan as Gwyneth
    • Jimmy Tatro as Dixon
    • Jack McBrayer as Leslie
    • Lauren Holt as Abigail
    • Stony Blyden as Oliver
    (L to R) Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon in 'You're Cordially Invited'. Photo Credit: Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.
    (L to R) Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon in ‘You’re Cordially Invited’. Photo Credit: Prime Video. Copyright: © 2023 Amazon Content Services LLC.

    List of Movies and TV Shows Directed by Nicholas Stoller:

    Buy Will Ferrell Movies on Amazon

    Buy Reese Witherspoon Movies on Amazon

  • Movie Review: ‘Drive-Away Dolls’

    Margaret Qualley as "Jamie" and Geraldine Viswanathan as "Marian" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Margaret Qualley as “Jamie” and Geraldine Viswanathan as “Marian” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    In theaters now is ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ starring Margaret Qualley, Geraldine Viswanathan, Beanie Feldstein, Colman Domingo, Bill Camp, Pedro Pascal, Joey Slotnick, C.J. Wilson, and Matt Damon.

    Related Article: Geraldine Viswanathan, Margaret Qualley and Beanie Feldstein Talk ‘Drive-Away Dolls’

    Initial Thoughts

    With the Coen brothers taking some time off from each other after more than three decades of making films together, Joel Coen directed the eerie, intense ‘The Tragedy of Macbeth’ with Denzel Washington, while Ethan Coen has gone in a decidedly different – if also somewhat more familiar — direction.

    Writing with his wife (and occasional Coens editor) Tricia Cooke, Ethan has come up with ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a combination of road movie, comedic caper, and lesbian romance that comes across in the style of earlier Coen brothers laughers like ‘Raising Arizona’ or ‘The Big Lebowski.’ But while the two leads have a sweet and even sexy chemistry, the laughs are only intermittent and the movie ends up as a trifle more than anything else.

    Story and Direction

    Actor Margaret Qualley, actor Geraldine Viswanathan and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Actor Margaret Qualley, actor Geraldine Viswanathan and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Jamie (Margaret Qualley) and Marian (Geraldine Viswanathan) are two young women who are part of Philadelphia’s lesbian community circa December 1999. Jamie is spur-of-the-moment, unfiltered, and endlessly horny, wrecking her latest relationship with cop Sukie (Beanie Feldstein) when she is caught cheating on her. Marian, on the other hand, is uptight and generally unhappy with her life, which Jamie sees as a cue that her friend needs to get out in the world and get some action.

    The two decide to reboot their lives with a road trip to Tallahassee, Florida, where Marian wants to do some reading and bird-watching while Jamie wants to stop at every lesbian bar they can find along the way and get them both laid. The pair hit the road in a one-way rental courtesy of drive-away agency operator Curlie (Bill Camp) – except that Curlie has given them the wrong car.

    Unbeknownst to the ladies, the trunk contains cargo both strange and decidedly illegal, and the two women find themselves soon pursued by two goons (C.J. Wilson and Joey Slotnick) sent in hot pursuit by their boss (Colman Domingo), who answers to an even higher, more sensitive authority. How Jamie and Marian deal with the situation could either shatter their friendship, end their lives, or both.

    Actor Geraldine Viswanathan, actor Margaret Qualley, and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Actor Geraldine Viswanathan, actor Margaret Qualley, and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    As one might ascertain, ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ (the original title, ‘Drive-Away Dykes,’ was deemed not marketable by the studio) sounds a lot like it’s in the vein of the deadpan, surreal comedies that Joel and Ethan Coen were perhaps best-known for during their 34 years of making films together. While the siblings have made more somber films together as well, like the brilliant ‘No Country for Old Men,’ as well as drama/comedy hybrids like ‘Fargo’ and ‘A Serious Man,’ it’s their zanier work like ‘Raising Arizona,’ ‘The Big Lebowski,’ and ‘O Brother Where Are Thou?’ that audiences arguably associate most with them.

    ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ is squarely in the latter tradition, with a slightly different spin. In addition to directing (this is Ethan’s first narrative feature on his own, following a 2022 Jerry Lee Lewis documentary), Ethan also wrote the script with his wife Tricia Cooke, who identifies as queer. Perhaps the freshest aspect of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ is that its leads, Jamie and Marian, are not solely characterized by their sexuality; yes, the movie features a heaping of sex, and Jamie is determined to get some nookie for both herself and Marian, but it’s not the driving factor of the story or part of its overall themes. It’s just part of who they are.

    The relationship between Jamie and Marian is at first caustic, of course – these two couldn’t be more opposite – but it soon unveils a sweeter undertone as they (somewhat predictably) begin to realize that their feelings for each other run deeper than suspected. Qualley and Viswanathan are great together in that regard, and the strongest element of the movie. But the plot – a mishmash of ‘60s and ‘70s road trip B-movies with a dash of psychedelia – is so slight, the ultimate mystery so silly, and the humor so intermittent that ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ ends up feeling like a lark more than anything else. It has its fun moments, but it dissolves from one’s mind the minute it’s over.

    Characters With No Names

    Colman Domingo as "The Chief", C.J. Wilson and Joey Slotnick as "The Goons" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Colman Domingo as “The Chief”, C.J. Wilson and Joey Slotnick as “The Goons” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features

    Part of the problem with ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ is that it feels almost like a rough draft version of a Coen brothers film (since Cooke, a film editor by trade, frequently edited the movies made by her husband and brother-in-law, she was an integral part of that process as well). The Coens’ comedies are often fizzy in nature, but the best of them have had either incredibly compelling characters or either a darker or more emotional underpinning that helped turn them into classics.

    There’s little of that in ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ outside of the chemistry between Qualley (who looks a lot like her mom, Andie MacDowell, in this film) and Viswanathan, both of whom have great timing, highly expressive faces and effortless presence. Qualley is particularly strong here. But once you get beyond them, the rest of the characters are barely sketched in.

    Pedro Pascal stars as "The Collector" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    Pedro Pascal stars as “The Collector” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Most of them don’t even have names, in fact. Domingo, always excellent, is just called the Chief; his goons are literally listed as The Goons in the credits. A cameoing Pedro Pascal is known simply as the Collector (there are a couple of other cameos as well, from Matt Damon and a star we won’t name). We’re always a little suspicious when we see cast lists like this: it’s often a clear sign that these characters are nothing more than stock figures, and little attempt is made to give them any more depth than that (the Goons’ scenes together – one of them constantly yammering and the other mostly silent – also feel like reheated leftovers from two similar characters in ‘Fargo,’ played in that film by Steve Buscemi and Peter Stormare).

    But that’s the nature of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’: it’s so sketchily pulled together that despite the warmth of its leads and a few fleeting jokes than land well, it feels like half the movie is missing in a way. And in one sense, it is.

    Final Thoughts

    Geraldine Viswanathan as "Marian", Margaret Qualley as "Jamie" and Beanie Feldstein as "Sukie" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Geraldine Viswanathan as “Marian”, Margaret Qualley as “Jamie” and Beanie Feldstein as “Sukie” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    The Coen brothers have made some of the most memorable movies of the last 40 years, from their still-stunning debut ‘Blood Simple’ to some of the later masterpieces we mentioned earlier. But from the two narrative movies we’ve seen them make separately – Joel’s ‘Macbeth’ and Ethan’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ — it seems like they have very different sensibilities. Based on watching the latter, it almost seems that Ethan needs his brother’s sense of gravitas to balance out his goofier impulses.

    We certainly admire the lead performances and the film’s successful attempt to make a queer-centric movie that doesn’t feel like exploitation (not the good kind) or heavy-handed social commentary. But we wish those were in service of something that was funnier in a more organic way and less of a one-dimensional pastiche.

    ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ receives 5.5 out of 10 stars.

    HOEVCE84KnZdeP6ojElze6

    What is the Plot of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’?

    This comedy caper follows Jamie (Margaret Qualley), an uninhibited free spirit bemoaning yet another breakup with a girlfriend, and her demure friend Marian (Geraldine Viswanathan) who desperately needs to loosen up. In search of a fresh start, the two embark on an impromptu road trip to Tallahassee, but things quickly go awry when they cross paths with a group of inept criminals along the way.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’?

    • Margaret Qualley as Jamie
    • Geraldine Viswanathan as Marian
    • Beanie Feldstein as Sukie
    • Colman Domingo as Chief
    • Pedro Pascal as Santos
    • Bill Camp as Curlie
    • Matt Damon as Senator Channel
    • Joey Slotnick as Arliss
    Margaret Qualley as "Jamie" and Geraldine Viswanathan as "Marian" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Margaret Qualley as “Jamie” and Geraldine Viswanathan as “Marian” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Other Ethan Coen Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Coen brothers Movies on Amazon

    tY0ZUBp7

     

  • ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ Cast Interview

    BrXk0WGg

    Opening in theaters on February 23rd is the new film from director Ethan Coen (‘The Big Lebowski’) called ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ which he co-wrote with Tricia Cooke and stars Geraldine Viswanathan (‘Blockers’), Margaret Qualley (‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’), Beanie Feldstein (‘Book Smart’), Colman Domingo (‘Rustin’), Matt Damon (‘The Martian’) and Pedro Pascal (‘The Last of Us’).

    Geraldine Viswanathan, Margaret Qualley and Beanie Feldstein talk director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls.'
    (L to R) Geraldine Viswanathan, Margaret Qualley and Beanie Feldstein talk director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Geraldine Viswanathan, Margaret Qualley and Beanie Feldstein about their work on ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ their quirky characters, and working with director Ethan Coen.

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

    Related Article: Marvel’s ‘Thunderbolts’: Geraldine Viswanathan Replacing Ayo Edebiri

    Geraldine Viswanathan stars as "Marian" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    Geraldine Viswanathan stars as “Marian” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Geraldine, can you talk about your first reaction to Ethan Coen and Trisha Cooke’s screenplay and the aspects of this character you were excited to explore on screen?

    Geraldine Viswanathan: I think getting the script was just so exciting. I feel like Ethan and Trish are some of the greatest writers of our time. It was just such an original and fresh script with so many cool elements and so many surprising turns, and I really fell in love with the character, Marian. I feel like at first, I thought I was really different from her, but I also kind of understood her and related to her and the way that I get introverted or sensitive and shy. I felt excited to play into those parts of myself a little bit more.

    Margaret Qualley stars as "Jamie" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    Margaret Qualley stars as “Jamie” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    MF: Margaret, Jamie is really a free spirit, can you talk about your approach to playing her?

    Margaret Qualley: Playing Jamie, she’s a total free spirit. It was very inspiring. I would like to have a little bit more of Jamie in my everyday life because I’m somebody that can be a little in my head, go home a little bit anxious, and I think that’s not really a big part of her experience. I imagine her kind of like a teenage boy. Not that teenage boys aren’t in their head, but there maybe is kind of like a puppy spirit.

    Beanie Feldstein stars as "Sukie" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    Beanie Feldstein stars as “Sukie” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    MF: Beanie, can you talk about Sukie’s breakup with Jamie and how that anger really fuels her journey through the movie?

    Beanie Feldstein: I mean, I think you hit it that she’s so heartbroken, but that kind of takes a turn into just tunnel vision, that she’s just, no matter whether they’re together or not together, she’s focused on Jamie. That was the note that Ethan and Tricia gave me in my Zoom audition. They were just like, “You cannot be more obsessed with her, and nothing takes your focus away from her.” So, I think that’s kind of Sukie’s motives the entire time, and to play someone who was just unapologetically angry, and abrasive is the opposite of my personality. So that was fun to jump full speed ahead. I think Ethan and Tricia saw something in me that I don’t see in myself. So, it was fun to play.

    Actor Geraldine Viswanathan, actor Margaret Qualley, and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Actor Geraldine Viswanathan, actor Margaret Qualley, and director/writer/producer Ethan Coen on the set of ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    MF: Finally, Geraldine, what was it like being on set with Ethan Coen and collaborating with him on this movie?

    GV: I mean, incredible. He is one of the best filmmakers of our time and really is a wonderful person. He has every right to be an asshole, but he’s just not. He’s so great and special, and he’s just a genius. I just relished being around him. Anytime he spoke I was like, “Yes.” I just wanted to learn from him as much as I could. He’s even better than you could imagine.

    HOEVCE84KnZdeP6ojElze6

    What is the Plot of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’?

    This comedy caper follows Jamie (Margaret Qualley), an uninhibited free spirit bemoaning yet another breakup with a girlfriend, and her demure friend Marian (Geraldine Viswanathan) who desperately needs to loosen up. In search of a fresh start, the two embark on an impromptu road trip to Tallahassee, but things quickly go awry when they cross paths with a group of inept criminals along the way.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Drive-Away Dolls’?

    • Margaret Qualley as Jamie
    • Geraldine Viswanathan as Marian
    • Beanie Feldstein as Sukie
    • Colman Domingo as Chief
    • Pedro Pascal as Santos
    • Bill Camp as Curlie
    • Matt Damon as Senator Channel
    • Joey Slotnick as Arliss
    Geraldine Viswanathan as "Marian", Margaret Qualley as "Jamie" and Beanie Feldstein as "Sukie" in director Ethan Coen's 'Drive-Away Dolls,' a Focus Features release.
    (L to R) Geraldine Viswanathan as “Marian”, Margaret Qualley as “Jamie” and Beanie Feldstein as “Sukie” in director Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls,’ a Focus Features release. Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Other Ethan Coen Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Coen brothers Movies on Amazon

     

  • Geraldine Viswanathan Replacing Ayo Edebiri in ‘Thunderbolts’

    Geraldine Viswanathan in 'Drive-Away Dolls.'
    Geraldine Viswanathan in ‘Drive-Away Dolls.’ Credit: Wilson Webb / Working Title / Focus Features.

    Preview:

    • Geraldine Viswanathan is replacing Ayo Edebiri for ‘Thunderbolts’.
    • This is the latest change for the Marvel movie.
    • Jake Schreier is on board to direct.

    There is another casting change afoot for Marvel’s ‘Thunderbolts’ movie. Having already lostBeef’/‘Minari’ actor to a busy schedule (with ‘Top Gun: Maverick’s Lewis Pullman reportedly making a deal to replace him as the character of Sentry), this time it’s ‘The Bear’s Ayo Edebiri discovering her busy schedule can no longer accommodate the movie’s shoot.

    Edebiri, who has become hugely in demand thanks to her award-winning performance on the culinary drama, will be replaced by Geraldine Viswanathan, known for ‘Blockers’ and recent Apple TV+ movie ‘The Beanie Bubble’.

    ySD9fRBhzaiO2TcznWDp2

    What is the ‘Thunderbolts’ movie?

    Marvel Studios' 'Thunderbolts.'
    Marvel Studios’ ‘Thunderbolts.’

    Though not a 1:1 match, the Thunderbolts are effectively Marvel’s version of The Suicide Squad: a group of villains –– or at least anti-heroes –– brought together by third-party schemers in a possibly ill-advised attempt to turn them into a force for good.

    In Marvel’s case, they were originally assembled by Baron Zemo and the Masters Of Evil and have sometimes been linked to Hulk regular General Thaddeus ‘Thunderbolt’ Ross (hence the name). They made their debut in the pages of ‘The Incredible Hulk’ in 1996, introduced by writer and artist team Peter David and Mike Deodato. They continued to their own series the same year, created by Kurt Busiek and Mark Bagley, and have been brought back with a bunch of alternative line-ups in comics ever since.

    Related Article: Lewis Pullman Reportedly in Talks to Play ‘Thunderbolts’ Sentry

    Who is in the Thunderbolts movie so far?

    David Harbour from 'Thunderbolts' at D23 Expo 2022.
    David Harbour from ‘Thunderbolts’ at D23 Expo 2022.

    The vast majority of the cast were announced back in 2022 at Disney’s D23 event: Bucky Barnes (formerly The Winter Soldier), played by Sebastian Stan, is a key figure alongside Florence Pugh’s Yelena Belova, Olga Kurylenko’s Antonia Dreykov/Taskmaster and David Harbour’s Alexei Shostakov/Red Guardian, those three having been introduced in ‘Black Widow’.

    Then there’s John Walker, AKA US Agent, played by Wyatt Russell and first seen in ‘The Falcon and the Winter Soldier’ and Hannah John-Kamen’s Ava Starr, the phasing character known as Ghost, who debuted in ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp’.

    Julia Louis-Dreyfus from 'Thunderbolts' at D23 Expo 2022.
    Julia Louis-Dreyfus from ‘Thunderbolts’ at D23 Expo 2022.

    As for those overseeing the team, we have Valentina Allegra de Fontaine, AKA Val, played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who was also introduced in the ‘Falcon’ series and has since cropped up in the likes of ‘Black Widow’ and ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’. We also have Thaddeus Ross –– last seen in ‘Black Widow’ and played since ‘The Incredible Hulk’ by William Hurt. But because of the actor’s death in 2022, Marvel has had to recast the role, tapping genre icon Harrison Ford to take over.

    Ross is reportedly the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s current President of the US (at least in ‘Captain America: New World Order’) so that’ll likely factor in.

    Edebiri had been filling an unknown role, which Viswanathan will take over. Deadline’ s report offers no details as to the part. The actor will next be seen in Ethan Coen’s ‘Drive-Away Dolls’ , due in theaters on February 23rd.

    Who is making ‘Thunderbolts’?

    Lee Sung Jin, Ali Wong and Steven Yeun attend Netflix's Los Angeles premiere of 'BEEF' at Netflix Tudum Theater on March 30, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    (L to R) Lee Sung Jin, Ali Wong and Steven Yeun attend Netflix’s Los Angeles premiere of ‘BEEF’ at Netflix Tudum Theater on March 30, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix.

    Jake Schreier (‘Beef’) is directing the film based on a script by Eric Pearson and Lee Sung Jin (the Emmy-winning creator of ‘Beef’).

    When will ‘Thunderbolts’ be in theaters?

    ‘Thunderbolts’ is currently scheduled for release on July 25th, 2025. But we’re still waiting to see if that changes.

    Sebastian Stan from 'Thunderbolts' at D23 Expo 2022.
    Sebastian Stan from ‘Thunderbolts’ at D23 Expo 2022.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Thunderbolts:’

    Buy Marvel Movies On Amazon

    cI48UWAN
  • Steve Buscemi, Daniel Radcliffe on Miracle Workers Season 3

    Steve Buscemi, Daniel Radcliffe on Miracle Workers Season 3

    9PRqLlQb

    The upcoming season of ‘Miracle Workers’ takes the cast to the 1840s, which means we get Western-style comedy. Cast members Steve Buscemi, Daniel Radcliffe, Geraldine Viswanathan and Karan Soni talked with us about this new season.

    First up, Steve Buscemi and Daniel Radcliffe talk about the advantages of working on an anthology series.

    Moviefone: Steve, can you explain to people who may not know what is an anthology series?

    Steve Buscemi: Very good question. So it’s a series where each season is different from each other, but what’s the same about it is that we have the same cast. So on our show, the first setting was in heaven. That was the first season. I played God. Dan played an angel. Second season was the dark ages. I played a shit shoveler. Dan played a crown prince and this season we’re on the Oregon Trail. So it’s a Western. And in this season, Dan and I have the most to do together than previous seasons, which I think we were both very happy about. I play an outlaw who’s on the run, trying to evade the law. Dan plays a pastor who was just trying to save his town from starvation and to get them to better pastures and Oregon. We somehow meet up and become a team to try and get there.

    MF: Yeah. I was just talking to Geraldine and Karan and talking about how Benny the Teen is really their GPS.

    Buscemi: It may not have been the wisest thing to use Benny as their guide. I mean, he is a bit of a con man, but he has been around and he knows how to ford a river and he knows how to get over a mountain. So, yeah. But really he’s a very selfish guy and he’s just really trying to evade the law and maybe get revenge on his gang who left him for dead.

    MF: Daniel, and the Reverend when he discovers that their GPS is really an outlaw. He’s not really happy about it, but everybody else in his town, they’re thrilled. They’re overjoyed. I found that hilarious.

    Daniel Radcliffe: Yeah. Well, I think they all know that, yes, he is a more murderous GPS and less to be trusted than a normal one, but they also recognize that he is their only way, and he is the only man who has the skills to get them to Oregon. At that point, my character is still so morally rigid that he’s like, “No, we can’t be led to Oregon if it’s by this person who is very unholy.” And that’s one of the first compromises Zeke learns he has to make on the trail is that actually, it’s better to go with this guy than not get there at all. I think that’s sort of one of the first turning points for him.

    MF: What is the reverend’s backstory?

    Radcliffe: He was an orphan growing up in the UK in England, who became obsessed with the idea of America at some point growing up over there because it represented a lot of the idea that America sort of represented a social mobility that particularly at that time was absolutely not available in England, would have drawn him over. And he’s made it his new home, and now he’s become the most ardent patriot and believer in America, the idea of America, than sort of anyone else in the town.

    MF: This next question, I guess, is both of you because both of you, for instance, Daniel, you did many Harry Potter movies where you played the same character throughout. Steve, you played the same character through the run of Boardwalk Empire. You’re on your third season here. We just talked about how it’s an anthology series, completely different characters. What are the pros and cons to you about this series compared to something that’s not an anthology series? I can start with you, Daniel.

    Radcliffe: I would just say, to me, it’s mostly advantages. As an actor, I love getting to do something different all the time and getting to keep it fresh in that way. I think the only thing that you can say is a disadvantage sometimes is that you get to the end of the season just being like, “Oh, I’ve just figured this character out just in time to never play him again.” But the same thing happens with plays in theater. You figure it out just at the end, so it’s the nature of it. And I definitely am a real fan of just keeping it changing. It’s great for me.

    MF: And Steve?

    Buscemi:
    I think we’re blessed that we get to work together each season and yet play different characters. I see it as mostly an advantage, but I do agree with Dan. At the end, I mean, it’s always hard to shed a character that you really enjoy. But I look forward to hopefully getting another season and it being a totally different situation and a different character.

    MF: So Daniel, the first season Miracle Workers was from Simon Rich’s novel. And the second season, I believe, was from a short story of his. Where did the idea for this season come from?

    Radcliffe: I’ve heard that the second season was from a short story as well. That was news to me when I heard that, which is probably just a failing on my part. But the third series is completely the brainchild of Dan Mirk and Robert Padnick. Dan has been working on the show since the very beginning and Robert worked on the last season, but Simon sort of stepped aside this season and they took over the actual show running, and so it came from their glorious brains. And I think probably, Robert and Dan I think are both interested in historical stuff and Robert also leans quite dark in his sense of humor as well. So this just was the perfect setting for them.

    MF: Steve, what is it about the historical Oregon Trail story that we’ve all learned about that lends itself to this humor?

    Buscemi: Well, I mean, I was surprised that some of the humans that they found in this particularly horrible thing that happens later in the season when we have to cross a mountain, and it’s cold and everybody’s starving. It leads to some pretty horrific choices. And it’s funny. I just think the different cast of characters just lends itself to great stories and relationships. And what I love about all three seasons is that these characters are up against great odds, and they figure out that the only way that they’re going to beat the odds is if they work together. Sometimes they don’t want to work with the person that they’re next to, but they somehow figure it out, and that’s what I love about it. So it’s still, to me has, even though it touches on some dark themes, overall, it still has a positive message.

    MF: And Daniel, this series is just hilarious. It’s really funny. I’m just wondering how many takes our ruined because you don’t keep a straight face?

    Radcliffe: Generally, I have gotten much better at that, but I would say that there’s at least one scene in episode three that they have to cut away from me very, very quickly because I couldn’t. I think they got one take where John Bass said the line that he said, and I managed to keep it together for two seconds, and that was enough time for them to then cut out of it. But every other time I laughed and ruined it. So I’m very glad they found a way around it. Laughing on set is both the best and worst thing because it is incredibly funny. But at the same time, when you were aware that, oh no, you’re really ruining this. They need this shot to work. It is also very, very stressful.

    MF: Steve, this was shot under pandemic protocol. I think I would just be giddy from being around people again.

    Buscemi: It was very surreal. This is the first job that both Dan and I did during, back and we weren’t back yet. We shot this during the pandemic. And so it was very surreal to see the crew in masks and we were wearing masks if we weren’t on camera, but it was great to be outdoors. I mean, if I had to be working this, because of the subject matter and because of the way they did it, and also production was very super aware of the challenges, and we were tested all the time. So the protocols were in place and we did it. And at the end of it, we felt really proud and good that we were able to achieve so much during these challenging times. And you’re right, it felt good to be with people. It felt great to be with people.


    Next, Geraldine Viswanathan and Karan Soni talk about their characters for this season.

    Moviefone: Hi, you guys. Geraldine, explain to me and for people who may not understand, what is an anthology series?

    Geraldine Viswanathan: An anthology series is, we switch it up each season, so there’s no … An anthology. Yeah, it’s like … How do you define anthology?

    Karan Soni: It’s the same cast but different characters, and you can watch each season like its own season. Not to mansplain here, but I just got in there.

    MF: Yeah. I think that’s very interesting because, for instance, if you’re acting in a regular series, and you’re in your third season, you’ve developed your same character now for your third season. But for you guys, you are playing completely different characters every season. Geraldine, do you see any connection between your characters from season to season, although they’re completely different?

    Viswanathan: I do. I do think that each season is set in a world where things are bad, where things are run poorly or things just aren’t working. It’s kind of twisted and backwards, and I think that my character always kind of comes in as the eyes of the audience, and is kind of that modern perspective of why are things this way, and how can they be better? How can we work together to make things better? I think, yeah, I’m always sort of frustrated by the state of the world around me, especially as we go in history, and I’m the female lead of the show. I think it’s always … that gets frustrating. So she’s sort of always the eyes, the audience’s way in.

    MF: Karan, for you, what has this experience been like, three seasons of completely different character?

    Soni: Oh my gosh, it’s been one of the best jobs I think I’ve ever had, because one, it’s creatively very fulfilling. It’s always different, but we get to work with … I love all the actors I get to work with, we all really genuinely get along, we hang out outside of work. So that is amazing, and then the fact that we get to show different skill sets and try different things every year is amazing. And yeah, so it just feels like the ultimate dream because it’s a TV show, so it’s some sense of something that you can look forward to every year, which is rare in Hollywood, to be like, “Oh, do Miracle Workers this year.” And yet it’s different, and we get to try and do different things all the time, and I feel like we only have grown closer as a cast every year. So, I feel like by season 11, we’ll just be living in the same house with each other.

    MF: I hope there’s a season 11, I find the series so interesting. What is the buildup like for you, waiting to find out what the next season’s going to be about? How soon do you know?

    Soni: We don’t really know. We don’t really know, although if we ask, they do sometimes tell us. But yeah, we don’t really know a lot, and then it’s always right before the table read, you get the script and they’re like, “We’re going to do the first table read,” that I’m always very nervous. Because it’s so unusual, because normally you would either audition for a role or even if you’re offered a role, you would get to read the role before anything, and this time you’re sort of doing a table read to something you didn’t read or seek out or talk to the director about, or writer about, and they’ve just created it for you. And so, it can be initially quite like, there’s a lot of butterflies in the beginning to be like, “Can I do this? How am I going to make it different? What am I going to do?” And all of that stuff. And then it gets very fun and exciting, once you get into the groove of it.

    MF: Geraldine, talking about the creator, Simon Rich, Miracle Workers was based on his novel, and then Miracle Workers, Dark Ages was based on a short story. So Miracle Workers, Oregon Trail, where did that come from?

    Viswanathan: Good question, I’m not sure. But we did this season, Simon Rich didn’t work on this season, his right-hand man, Daniel Mirk and Robert Padnick, who’ve been on the show alongside of him for each season, they took over this time, and they pitched the idea of Oregon Trail. So I don’t know if it came from one of his …

    Soni: Yeah, I don’t know if this one did because he wasn’t writing on this one. Yeah, I think this was a original idea, but I could be wrong.

    MF: Geraldine, talk to me about Prudence Aberdeen’s background.

    Viswanathan: She’s a woman of the 1840s. She’s married to Todd Aberdeen, who’s the wealthy man in town. And I think that’s kind of all we know about her backstory. Yeah, she’s just trying on everything, she’s like, “Who do I want to be?” She’s in that point of her life.

    MF: Talking about Todd, he’s very needy, super needy, but I love the way Prudence, and she’s not hiding it, when she is not around him, she’s a modern woman. But then, when she’s with him, she caters to him as if she’s an 1800s wife.

    Viswanathan: Yes. Yes, exactly. She’s trying to hold face at the beginning and trying to be a good wife and pretend to like him at all, because this situation is beneficial to her. But she very quickly is not able to hold up the charade anymore, and she kind of openly scorns him to his face, because he’s the worst. Yeah.

    MF: Karan, how about you, backstory for the Gunslinger?

    Soni: Yeah. The Gunslinger, he just grew up with gunslingers, I figured, and he always wanted to be that sort of hero. And then he just set his target on Steve’s character, and he has been chasing him for years and years and years and years and has not caught him. So he’s not very good at his job, but he really wants to try to be better. And then this season, we see where all that leads him, when he finally comes face to face with the person he’s tried to hunt down all these years. It sounds like a gritty drama, I love it.

    MF: And it’s not, it’s a comedy. And my next question is, how does the Oregon Trail, something you really wouldn’t think of, lend itself so well to comedy?

    Soni: Well, there’s something very funny about just horses and oxen peeing and pooping. And then these little fools who are just, with no GPS, like the poster says, making their way across this crazy terrain. And you’re like, “You’re all going to die.” But it’s fun to watch them, ignorant and blissful, before they walk into their death.

    MF: They have a GPS, they have Benny the Teen.

    Soni: Exactly, oh my gosh. Exactly, that’s their GPS.

    MF: Geraldine, while you’re shooting, is it as funny as what we see finally? And how do you keep a straight face, how do you not break?

    Viswanathan: Well, I often do break, and it’s a problem, because we’ve got short days, we’ve got to get the shot. But sometimes Jon Bass is on top of me and farting on top of me, and it’s really hard not to laugh. That’s really an absurd situation that we’ve all found ourselves in, especially after COVID with not speaking to people for so long, and then suddenly being on set in this absurd set, I think it just felt absurd. So, I break all the time, and I’m actually open to advice on how to not break.

    MF: Maybe for the next season, maybe they will give you some advice.

    Viswanathan: Hopefully. I’ll have to cut a wire in my brain or something.

    ‘Miracle Workers: Oregon Trail’ is on Wednesdays on TBS.

  • Geraldine Viswanathan, Dacre Montgomery, and writer/director Natalie Krinsky discuss ‘The Broken Hearts Gallery’

    Geraldine Viswanathan, Dacre Montgomery, and writer/director Natalie Krinsky discuss ‘The Broken Hearts Gallery’

    In this exclusive interview with Made in Hollywood, stars Geraldine Viswanathan, Dacre Montgomery, and writer/director Natalie Krinsky talk about the film’s story and what they’ve all saved from past relationships.

    ‘The Broken Hearts Gallery’ is now in theaters.

    PcWLxMgcdM0pJcgNNVauE4