Tag: griffin-dunne

  • Lee Pace and Maisie Williams Added to ‘Practical Magic 2’

    (Left) Lee Pace in 'Foundation,' premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+. (Right) Maisie Williams in 'Game of Thrones'. Photo: HBO.
    (Left) Lee Pace in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+. (Right) Maisie Williams in ‘Game of Thrones’. Photo: HBO.

    Preview:

    • Lee Pace and Maisie Williams are leading the new recruits for ‘Practical Magic 2’
    • Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock are back to star.
    • Susanne Bier is directing the movie.

    It’s clearly the time for long-awaited sequels to much-loved movies announcing clutches of new casting to support their returning stars.

    With ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ recently adding actors, it’s the turn of ‘Practical Magic 2’, which will see the return of Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock as witch sisters Gillian and Sally Owens.

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    According to Deadline, new for the sequel will be Lee Pace (‘Foundation’), Maisie Williams (‘Game of Thrones’) Xolo Maridueña (‘Blue Beetle’), and Solly McLeod (‘The Dead Don’t Hurt’). We also now have confirmation that Joey King is officially aboard after previously being in talks.

    That’s not all –– Stockard Channing and Dianne Wiest, who appeared alongside Bullock and Kidman in the original movie –– will reprise their roles.

    Related Article: Joey King in Talks to Join Witch Family Curse Sequel ‘Practical Magic 2’

    What’s the story of ‘Practical Magic’?

    Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    ‘Practical Magic’ adapts Alice Hoffman’s 1995 novel. The movie follows two sisters, Sally (Bullock) and Gillian Owens (Kidman), who come from a long line of witches.

    Orphaned at a young age, they are raised by their eccentric aunts, who embrace their magical heritage. However, the Owens family is cursed: any man who falls in love with an Owens woman is doomed to an untimely death.

    Subsequently, Sally and Gillian struggle with their powers and the consequences of the family curse. Sally attempts to lead a normal life, distancing herself from magic, but tragedy strikes when her husband dies.

    Gillian, on the other hand, lives a wild life, embracing her magical abilities. The sisters are reunited when Gillian finds herself in a dangerous relationship with Jimmy Angelov (Goran Visnjic), a violent man. In an effort to protect Gillian, the sisters accidentally kill Jimmy, leading to a series of supernatural events as they attempt to hide his death and ultimately break the family curse.

    What will be the story for ‘Practical Magic 2’?

    Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    While there are zero official details are available for the new movie’s storyline, King’s casting does open up a narrative alley we figured they’d take.

    She’ll play one of Bullock’s daughters, the one who discovers the dark family secrets and her own dark powers, plunging the family into a crisis.

    As for the newcomers (beyond King), we don’t yet know their roles.

    But Wiest and Channing, of course, will be Aunt Jet and Aunt Frances respectively, who always have wise words for their nieces (and now, grand-nieces).

    Akiva Goldsman, who worked on the script for the original, is back, with Georgia Pritchett, a veteran of ‘Veep’ and ‘Succession,’ also credited.

    What else has Susanne Bier made?

    Susanne Bier, Oscar®-nominee for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year, arrives for the 83rd Annual Academy Awards® at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, CA February 27, 2011. Credit/Provider: Ivan Vejar / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Susanne Bier, Oscar®-nominee for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year, arrives for the 83rd Annual Academy Awards® at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, CA February 27, 2011. Credit/Provider: Ivan Vejar / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Bier is a hugely respected Danish filmmaker who is more normally found in the indie sphere, though has been diversifying into premium TV in recent years.

    She got her start with 1991’s ‘Freud Leaving Home’ and has since made the likes of ‘Like It Never Was Before,’ ‘Credo,’ ‘The One and Only,’ ‘Open Hearts,’ ‘After the Wedding,’ ‘Things We Lost in the Fire,’ ‘Serena’ and ‘In a Better World,’ which won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year in 2011.

    Her work has scored many other accolades and trophies, and she’s also been behind projects such as John le Carré adaptation ‘The Night Manager’ and White House drama ‘The First Lady.’ She is the first female director to win a Golden GlobeEmmy and European Film Award, collectively.

    Perhaps most pertinent to ‘Practical Magic’ and its stars is her previous collaborations with both Bullock and Kidman.

    Bullock starred in Bier’s Netflix thriller ‘Bird Box,’ the story of a world plunged into chaos when aliens arrive who send anyone who glimpses them mad.

    As for Kidman, Bier handled HBO drama ‘The Undoing,’ which saw the actor starring alongside Hugh Grant in a murder mystery. And more recently, Bier tackled all the episodes of Netflix drama ‘The Perfect Couple,’ with Kidman playing the icy matriarch of a wealthy, dysfunctional family.

    Here’s the statement from the filmmaking team on the new casting choices:

    “Twenty-five years ago, Sally, Gillian, Aunt Jet and Aunt Franny flew off the pages of Alice Hoffman’s beloved novel and into theaters around the world, and we are thrilled to bring the Owens family back to the big screen with Joey, Lee, Maisie, Solly and Xolo joining the next chapter in our story. The enduring affection for these characters has been our inspiration to deliver the next installment in the Owens’ story to new fans, and those who’ve been with us since the beginning.”

    When will ‘Practical Magic 2’ be in theaters?

    We do now know when Warners is looking to release the sequel –– and in theaters, rather than sending it direct to streaming service HBO Max –– September 18th, 2026.

    Production is currently underway in England, so all looks good for the sequel to hit that date.

    Nicole Kidman in 'Practical Magic'.
    Nicole Kidman in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Practical Magic 2′:

    Buy ‘Practical Magic’ Movie On Amazon

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  • Joey King in Talks for ‘Practical Magic 2’

    Joey King attends the world premiere of Netflix's 'A Family Affair' at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood on June 13, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. Photo: Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix.
    Joey King attends the world premiere of Netflix’s ‘A Family Affair’ at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood on June 13, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. Photo: Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix.

    Preview:

    • Joey King is in talks for ‘Practical Magic 2.’
    • Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock are back to star.
    • Susanne Bier is preparing to direct the movie.

    We’ve known for a while that a sequel to 1998 witchy family curse comedy drama ‘Practical Magic’ was on the way –– stars Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock have been talking it up, and the project took a big step forward when Susanne Bier was announced as director.

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    With a shoot now planned for late summer in the UK (a common spot for Warner Bros. to produce its movies these days), The Hollywood Reporter brings the latest news: Joey King is now in talks to land a role in the sequel.

    Related Article: ‘Bird Box’ Director Susanne Bier to Conjure Up ‘Practical Magic’ Sequel

    What’s the story of ‘Practical Magic’?

    Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    ‘Practical Magic’ adapts Alice Hoffman’s 1995 novel. The movie follows two sisters, Sally (Bullock) and Gillian Owens (Kidman), who come from a long line of witches.

    Orphaned at a young age, they are raised by their eccentric aunts, who embrace their magical heritage. However, the Owens family is cursed: any man who falls in love with an Owens woman is doomed to an untimely death.

    Subsequently, Sally and Gillian struggle with their powers and the consequences of the family curse. Sally attempts to lead a normal life, distancing herself from magic, but tragedy strikes when her husband dies.

    Gillian, on the other hand, lives a wild life, embracing her magical abilities. The sisters are reunited when Gillian finds herself in a dangerous relationship with Jimmy Angelov (Goran Visnjic), a violent man. In an effort to protect Gillian, the sisters accidentally kill Jimmy, leading to a series of supernatural events as they attempt to hide his death and ultimately break the family curse.

    What will be the story for ‘Practical Magic 2’?

    Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    While there are zero official details are available for the new movie’s storyline, King’s casting does open up a narrative alley we figured they’d take.

    She’ll play one of Bullock’s daughters, the one who discovers the dark family secrets and her own dark powers, plunging the family into a crisis.

    Akiva Goldsman, who worked on the script for the original, is back, with Georgia Pritchett, a veteran of ‘Veep’ and ‘Succession,’ also credited.

    Who else is making the ‘Practical Magic’ sequel?

    Griffin Dunne in Greenwich Entertainment's 'Ex-Husbands'. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.
    Griffin Dunne in Greenwich Entertainment’s ‘Ex-Husbands’. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

    Griffin Dunne was in the director’s chair for the original, and spoke to Moviefone earlier this year about why he was not returning as director.

    “I think we should see what a woman would bring to that magic. I think that there’s no such thing as a man being a woman’s director anymore, there’s a woman director. I’m included as executive producer, but not involved in a day-to-day or any of that.”

    As mentioned, Goldsman is the only one of the first movie’s writers (which also included Robin Swicord and Adam Brooks) to come back.

    Bullock and Kidman will produce the movie alongside the original’s Denise Di Novi.

    Where else can we see Joey King?

    Joey King as Zara Ford in 'A Family Affair'.
    Joey King as Zara Ford in ‘A Family Affair’. Photo: Aaron Epstein/Netflix © 2024.

    King made her debut on Disney series ‘The Suite Life of Zack & Cody,’ but has built quite the career since then.

    Her other TV includes ‘Ghost Whisperer,’ ‘New Girl,’ ‘The Flash,’ ‘Fargo’  and perhaps biggest in terms of impact, Netflix TV movie series ‘The Kissing Booth’.

    On the big screen, she’s been seen in movies such as ‘The Conjuring,’ ‘The Princess,’ ‘Bullet Train,’ and most recently, ‘A Family Affair’ (which also happens to star one Nicole Kidman) and ‘Uglies.’

    What else has Susanne Bier made?

    Susanne Bier, Oscar®-nominee for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year, arrives for the 83rd Annual Academy Awards® at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, CA February 27, 2011. Credit/Provider: Ivan Vejar / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Susanne Bier, Oscar®-nominee for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year, arrives for the 83rd Annual Academy Awards® at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, CA February 27, 2011. Credit/Provider: Ivan Vejar / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Bier is a hugely respected Danish filmmaker who is more normally found in the indie sphere, though has been diversifying into premium TV in recent years.

    She got her start with 1991’s ‘Freud Leaving Home’ and has since made the likes of ‘Like It Never Was Before,’ ‘Credo,’ ‘The One and Only,’ ‘Open Hearts,’ ‘After the Wedding,’ ‘Things We Lost in the Fire,’ ‘Serena’ and ‘In a Better World,’ which won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year in 2011.

    Her work has scored many other accolades and trophies, and she’s also been behind projects such as John le Carré adaptation ‘The Night Manager’ and White House drama ‘The First Lady.’ She is the first female director to win a Golden Globe, Emmy and European Film Award, collectively.

    Perhaps most pertinent to ‘Practical Magic’ and its stars is her previous collaborations with both Bullock and Kidman.

    Bullock starred in Bier’s Netflix thriller ‘Bird Box,’ the story of a world plunged into chaos when aliens arrive who send anyone who glimpses them mad.

    As for Kidman, Bier handled HBO drama ‘The Undoing,’ which saw the actor starring alongside Hugh Grant in a murder mystery. And more recently, Bier tackled all the episodes of Netflix drama ‘The Perfect Couple,’ with Kidman playing the icy matriarch of a wealthy, dysfunctional family.

    When will ‘Practical Magic 2’ be in theaters?

    We do now know when Warners is looking to release the sequel –– and in theaters, rather than sending it direct to streaming service Max (sorry, HBO Max, or whatever it’s called by the time the movie arrives) –– September 18th, 2026.

    So if you need more witchy magic in your life, you’re going to have to be patient for a little over a year. But what’s that compared to the 28-year-long wait already?

    Nicole Kidman in 'Practical Magic'.
    Nicole Kidman in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Practical Magic 2′:

    Buy ‘Practical Magic’ Movie On Amazon

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  • ‘Ex-Husbands’ Exclusive Interview: Griffin Dunne

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    Opening in New York theaters on February 20th before expanding to additional markets is the new dramatic comedy ‘Ex-Husbands’, which was written and directed by Noah Pritzker.

    The film stars Griffin Dunne (‘After Hours’ and ‘Dallas Buyers Club‘), Rosanna Arquette (‘Pulp Fiction’), Richard Benjamin (‘Westworld’), Miles Heizer (‘Love, Simon’), and James Norton (‘Bob Marley: One Love’).

    Related Article: Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman Ready to Return for ‘Practical Magic’ Sequel

    Griffin Dunne in Greenwich Entertainment's 'Ex-Husbands'. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.
    Griffin Dunne in Greenwich Entertainment’s ‘Ex-Husbands’. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with actor and director Griffin Dunne about his work on ‘Ex-Husbands’, his first reaction to the screenplay, why his character crashes his son’s bachelor party, working with legendary actor and director Richard Benjamin, how Benjamin almost cast him in ‘My Favorite Year’, reuniting on screen with his friend Rosanna Arquette, the legacy of their classic movie ‘After Hours’, hosting ‘Saturday Night Live‘ in the 80s, and the status of ‘Practical Magic 2’ and why he’s not returning to direct the sequel.

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

    Griffin Dunne in Greenwich Entertainment's 'Ex-Husbands'. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.
    Griffin Dunne in Greenwich Entertainment’s ‘Ex-Husbands’. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to Noah Pritzker’s screenplay and your initial approach to playing this character?

    Griffin Dunne: Well, my first reaction was, “I can’t believe there’s a script out there for a guy my age to carry a whole movie.” That it speaks to the things I like doing, my talents of being funny, sad, tragic, and comic. The circumstance was funny, but also, it’s got a kind of great setup of a divorced father who crashes his son’s bachelor party, but then it becomes so much more complex and touching. I thought, “Well, this is really rare for a movie being made about this circumstance and how fortunate to get a part like this.”

    Griffin Dunne in Greenwich Entertainment's 'Ex-Husbands'. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.
    Griffin Dunne in Greenwich Entertainment’s ‘Ex-Husbands’. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

    MF: As a director yourself, what are you looking for from another director when you are acting on set and what was it like collaborating with Noah on this film?

    GD: I guess just support, someone who’s secure in what they’re doing and not insecure. The first sign of that is a director who’s telling you what to do or what they think before you even started working on the set and that gets in your head. But just (someone who) lets you kind of play and believes in you and doesn’t have buyer’s remorse when you’re showing up to work. They just want to see what you’re going to do and hopefully like it and add to it and make it better and just have an open dialogue. But mainly I just like a director who is secure and wants to be where they are and feels good about the choices they’ve made, always, from day one. We knew each other. Noah came to me with this script at least a year or so before we went because we were going to go ahead and then COVID put us back. During all that time, we really got to know each other during all that downtime. So, there were no sort of surprises, and I didn’t find out that he had a vicious, awful temper that I never knew. I knew him, he was funny, and he remains a great friend of mine.

    James Norton in Greenwich Entertainment's 'Ex-Husbands'. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.
    James Norton in Greenwich Entertainment’s ‘Ex-Husbands’. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

    MF: Can you talk about Peter’s relationship with his sons and why he decides to crash their bachelor party?

    GD: Yeah, that was the endless question that we talked about on set all the time. I think he does know (that he was not invited), and he was told, but he’s at an age, and I remember I had seen it in my own father, where you convince yourself, you didn’t know. You hear what you want to hear. I have a daughter who’s an adult, and we’ll argue about something, and she will say, “What? I told you this. I mean, how can you not remember this? I told you.” I’ll say, “No, I don’t think you did. I’m telling you, you didn’t.” Then about two weeks later, I’ll remember we were in a restaurant, and we had an entire discussion about it, whatever the thing was, it was important to me, and I just blocked it. We’re messed up, complex people.

    (L to R) Griffin Dunne, James Norton and Miles Heizer in Greenwich Entertainment's 'Ex-Husbands'. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.
    (L to R) Griffin Dunne, James Norton and Miles Heizer in Greenwich Entertainment’s ‘Ex-Husbands’. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

    MF: What was it like working with Miles Heizer and James Norton to create those father and son relationships?

    GD: It was so easy. We just sort of fell into it. I was not aware of Miles’s work. I knew he was in the Netflix series (’13 Reasons Why’). I knew he was a big deal because we’d be in Mexico City, and girls would just squeal like I was with Justin Timberlake or something. But the one I really did know that I was a big fan of, that was James Norton, who I had never met until we worked together. But his work had blown me away in so many things, in English series and movies. He has a huge breadth of work. Of course, no one knew who James, or I were in Mexico City. I go, “Wait, yes. Miles is great, but do you know who this guy is?” They had no idea. Anyway, we had an easy chemistry on camera and hung out a lot off camera. We even vacationed when we had a break from shooting, so we could move locations in Mexico. We all took a trip and went to an island off somewhere in the Pacific and vacationed together. It was like family. We each gave each other COVID too which really brings people together. Now we’re really family.

    (L to R) Griffin Dunne, Rosanna Arquette, Richard Benjamin and Marcia Jean Kurtz in Greenwich Entertainment's 'Ex-Husbands'. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.
    (L to R) Griffin Dunne, Rosanna Arquette, Richard Benjamin and Marcia Jean Kurtz in Greenwich Entertainment’s ‘Ex-Husbands’. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

    MF: Can you talk about Peter’s relationship with his own father and your experience working with legendary actor and director Richard Benjamin on that dynamic? Did your own life experience with your father help inform those scenes for you?

    GD: Well, first there were so many parallels to my life and who I played having lost my father and mother, who I was very close with, and having been married and divorced and a father of an adult child, so I had a lot of personal things to draw from. I also have been a lover of movies from the earliest of age and grew up on Richard Benjamin. He was one of those actors, he and Dustin Hoffman, when I saw as a kid, were I go, “Hey, they’re kind of weird looking, and they’re really funny. I think I can do that. I think I can be one of those guys.” It was one of my earliest, “I want to be an actor feeling” was seeing Richard Benjamin. I think he was in ‘Goodbye, Columbus’ and both movies, ‘The Graduate’ and ‘Goodbye, Columbus’, I was too young to even be allowed in the theater but got in anyway. So, working with Richard was really like an honor. He was so patient with me because I just had so many things to talk to him about, so many questions and wanting to go over different things from his different movies, not only as an actor but as a director as well. I reminded him of maybe a delusion I’ve had for many years that it came down to me and Mark Linn-Baker to be the kid in ‘My Favorite Year’. I don’t know where I got that idea. I did audition for Richard, and I wanted that part so badly. I think every actor remembers the one they didn’t get. This is the one that’s haunted me for decades. So, when I meet Richard, one of the earliest things I said was, “You almost cast me in ‘My Favorite Year’.” He had absolutely no recollection of me. But it just shows you the things that we carry around that we believe at the time are part of my DNA. I know Mark was lovely but you always remember the one that got away.

    (L to R) Griffin Dunne, Rosanna Arquette and Adam Heller in Greenwich Entertainment's 'Ex-Husbands'. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.
    (L to R) Griffin Dunne, Rosanna Arquette and Adam Heller in Greenwich Entertainment’s ‘Ex-Husbands’. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

    MF: Your ‘After Hours’ co-star Rosanna Arquette plays your ex-wife in the film. What was it like reuniting with her after all these years, and did your past experiences working together help you both slip into these characters and their relationship rather effortlessly?

    GD: Yeah, it was an interesting experience in mortality and a life experience because Rosanna and I first worked together, we met in Poland in 1980, which led to me casting her, with director John Sayles, in ‘Baby It’s You’, which she starred in and so many things since then. So, we’ve always stayed friends, but imagine how much aging takes place from 1980 to us working together as a couple with grown children. So, it really was like we spent a lifetime together as soon as we were working. Our backstory was already written.

    (L to R) Griffin Dunne and Martin Scorsese on the set of 'After Hours'. Photo: Warner Bros.
    (L to R) Griffin Dunne and Martin Scorsese on the set of ‘After Hours’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    MF: Speaking of ‘After Hours’, the film has had an incredible renaissance in recent years inspiring an album by The Weeknd and an episode of ‘Ted Lasso’. What are your memories of making that movie with Martin Scorsese and are you surprised by the legacy of the film?

    GD: Yes, I guess I am. What surprises me, when it came out, I think it invented a genre of humor, which is anxiety humor. I don’t think there were movies, and people have done them since, ‘After Hours’ has become almost an adjective for a kind of genre. But at the time, in the States it was not hugely received. I remember (film critic) Pauline Kael kind of dismissed it, called me a second-rate Dudley Moore, by the way, but it was not a big box office extravaganza. It was also very much outside of the box of what people expected a Martin Scorsese film to do. So, there was a cultural adjustment and you had to let things settle. I didn’t know at what point it happened, but it was after VHSs and once HBO was pretty much well established, it started to really pick up steam. By the time it really did, the film was filled with anachronisms like there are no cell phones, and its subway fares, and Soho being a wasteland of an empty neighborhood, which by the time the popularity picked up, it was basically a mall shopping district. So, the world had changed so much, but the kind of sensibility of life going sideways, that sort of (Franz) Kafka meets ‘Alice in Wonderland’ sensibility never changed. I think people really embraced it and saw how exciting and how unique it was that Scorsese made a movie at this point about that, and that he was funny. Who thought he was funny? He made a movie called ‘The King of Comedy’, which didn’t do very well, which now is also embraced as brilliant, as it is. So, I find that that happens quite a lot to tell you the truth. That’s why we have the Criterion Channel. They remind us how great the movie was that we didn’t quite get at the time. But look, it was right there, and it’s still here, and you can go back and look at it anytime you want.

    'Saturday Night Live' celebrates its 50th anniversary. Photo: NBCUniversal.
    ‘Saturday Night Live’ celebrates its 50th anniversary. Photo: NBCUniversal.

    MF: ‘Saturday Night Live’ recently celebrated its 50th anniversary and you hosted the show back in the 80s. What are your memories of that experience?

    GD: Yeah, it was a season, the first season that Lorne (Michaels) came back after being away. I was a huge fan of the show, of course, like anyone from the very beginning, and I remember how nervous I was. I remember how terrible the dress rehearsal went, and I remember my friend, Mitch, who was with me, came to my dressing room with a look of like, “Are you really going to go out there again?” I thought, “Well, this is never going to work. I’ve never seen such a catastrophe.” Once 11:30 pm hit, and the moment I went out on stage, it just worked. Everything just flowed. Everything was where it was supposed to be. It was like a miracle, and that miracle happened every Saturday night at 11:30pm before and since. The dress rehearsal was hardly the first disastrous dress rehearsal. They were completely used to it, just the hosts weren’t. So, it was exhilarating, and it was the rushing and getting into different costumes and wigs and everything during a commercial break and being shoved back up on stage. It was a rush. The whole thing was a rush.

    MF: You appeared in the infamous sketch where cast member Damon Wayans went off script and was immediately fired by Lorne Michaels. What are your memories of that?

    GD: Yeah, he didn’t so much go off script, but I think it was, I was a Tony Montana kind of drug dealer, and it was an interrogation room with cops. So, he was doing a tough cop in the dress, and I think he just suddenly lisped during the show, which I don’t know where that came from, but I really didn’t, it didn’t register. I’m not on live TV going, “Well wait a minute, what’s he doing?” I’m just like, “I got my own problems.” So, I wasn’t aware of any of that, but I’ve read about it since, and apparently, he was dismissed as soon as he walked off the set, but I was the last one to know. I ended up reading about the incident years later.

    Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    MF: Finally, there has been a lot of talk in the trades recently about a possible sequel to ‘Practical Magic’, which you directed. Reports have said that ‘Bird Box’ filmmaker Susanne Bier will direct the sequel. Is that true? Are you still involved with that project as a producer, and why have you decided not to return as director?

    GD: Well, I think rightly so. I think we should see what a woman would bring to that magic. It was an extraordinary experience to be asked to direct a movie that was so driven with female characters as a man. At the time it was something I could anchor onto much more than the magic and spell books and everything, but it was family. Having had a very formidable grandmother and a mother and then sister, I grew up around strong, interesting women, and I understood the generational, but I think so much has happened in the world. It’s funny, I had a reputation at that time of being a woman’s director, like George Cukor or something. I think that there’s no such thing as a man being a woman’s director anymore, there’s a woman director. So anyway, there’s no director hired or anything yet, but I’m sure that they’re mainly focused on hiring a woman. I’m included as executive producer, but not involved in a day-to-day or any of that.

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    What is the plot of ‘Ex’Husbands’?

    Manhattan dentist Peter Pearce (Griffin Dunne) is facing a midlife crisis after his wife (Rosanna Arquette) of 35 years leaves him. On the spur of the moment, he books a trip to Tulum, Mexico, only to crash his son’s (James Norton) bachelor party.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Ex’Husbands’?

    (L to R) Griffin Dunne, James Norton and Miles Heizer in Greenwich Entertainment's 'Ex-Husbands'. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.
    (L to R) Griffin Dunne, James Norton and Miles Heizer in Greenwich Entertainment’s ‘Ex-Husbands’. Credit: Wyatt Angelo, Courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

    Griffin Dunne Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Griffin Dunne Movies on Amazon

     

  • Susanne Bier to Direct ‘Practical Magic 2’

    (Left) Susanne Bier attends the Academy’s 2018 Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, CA, on Sunday, November 18, 2018. Credit/Provider: Troy Harvey / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S. (Right) Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in 'Practical Magic'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (Left) Susanne Bier attends the Academy’s 2018 Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, CA, on Sunday, November 18, 2018. Credit/Provider: Troy Harvey / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S. (Right) Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Preview:

    • Susanne Bier is in talks to direct the developing ‘Practical Magic’ sequel.
    • Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman will return to star.
    • Akiva Goldsman is also returning to write the new movie.

    The mystical energy is clearly flowing for the ‘Practical Magic’ sequel, the follow up to the 1998 movie which saw Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock as sisters growing up in a witchy family.

    With both stars confirmed as returning, and a script from original co-writer Akiva Goldsman falling into place, it also now has a director, as ‘In a Better WorldOscar winner Susanne Bier is now in negotiations to handle the movie.

    According to Deadline, which broke news of the new development, a deal isn’t signed and sealed yet, but Bier certainly feels like a good fit for the story.

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    And it’s certainly a positive step forward for a sequel, and also represents a reunion for the director and both lead actors (more on that below).

    This is what Kidman said last year to People about her return alongside Bullock:

    “Yes I will be in it. And Sandy will be in it. And that’s that. There’s a lot more to tell which is why we go, ‘OK, this is kind of interesting now to be able to do this.’ We found a way in.”

    Related Article: Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman Ready to Return for ‘Practical Magic’ Sequel

    What’s the story of ‘Practical Magic’?

    Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    ‘Practical Magic’ adapts Alice Hoffman’s 1995 novel. The movie follows two sisters, Sally (Bullock) and Gillian Owens (Kidman), who come from a long line of witches.

    Orphaned at a young age, they are raised by their eccentric aunts, who embrace their magical heritage. However, the Owens family is cursed: any man who falls in love with an Owens woman is doomed to an untimely death.

    Subsequently, Sally and Gillian struggle with their powers and the consequences of the family curse. Sally attempts to lead a normal life, distancing herself from magic, but tragedy strikes when her husband dies.

    Gillian, on the other hand, lives a wild life, embracing her magical abilities. The sisters are reunited when Gillian finds herself in a dangerous relationship with Jimmy Angelov (Goran Visnjic), a violent man. In an effort to protect Gillian, the sisters accidentally kill Jimmy, leading to a series of supernatural events as they attempt to hide his death and ultimately break the family curse.

    What will be the story for ‘Practical Magic 2’?

    Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Zero official details are available for whatever storyline Goldsman is cooking up in his cauldron, but we could conceivably see the sisters confronting issues with Kidman’s character’s daughters, themselves dealing with the family legacy.

    Who is making the ‘Practical Magic’ sequel?

    Griffin Dunne in 'After Hours'.
    Griffin Dunne in ‘After Hours’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    That first movie was written by Robin Swicord, Goldsman and Adam Brooks, but at this point, it seems only Goldsman is returning to craft the sequel.

    Griffin Dunne was in the director’s chair for the original, but clearly has either opted not to return –– or not asked.

    Bullock and Kidman will also produce the movie alongside the original’s Denise Di Novi.

    What else has Susanne Bier made?

    Susanne Bier, Oscar®-nominee for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year, arrives for the 83rd Annual Academy Awards® at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, CA February 27, 2011. Credit/Provider: Ivan Vejar / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Susanne Bier, Oscar®-nominee for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year, arrives for the 83rd Annual Academy Awards® at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, CA February 27, 2011. Credit/Provider: Ivan Vejar / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Bier is a hugely respected Danish filmmaker who is more normally found in the indie sphere, though has been diversifying into premium TV in recent years.

    She got her start with 1991’s ‘Freud Leaving Home’ and has since made the likes of ‘Like It Never Was Before,’ ‘Credo,’ ‘The One and Only,’ ‘Open Hearts,’ ‘After the Wedding,’ ‘Things We Lost in the Fire,’ ‘Serena’ and ‘In a Better World,’ which won the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year in 2011.

    Her work has scored many other accolades and trophies, and she’s also been behind projects such as John le Carré adaptation ‘The Night Manager’ and White House drama ‘The First Lady.’ She is the first female director to win a Golden Globe, Emmy and European Film Award, collectively.

    Perhaps most pertinent to ‘Practical Magic’ and its stars is her previous collaborations with both Bullock and Kidman.

    Bullock starred in Bier’s Netflix thriller ‘Bird Box,’ the story of a world plunged into chaos when aliens arrive who send anyone who glimpses them mad.

    As for Kidman, Bier handled HBO drama ‘The Undoing,’ which saw the actor starring alongside Hugh Grant in a murder mystery. And more recently, Bier tackled all the episodes of Netflix drama ‘The Perfect Couple,’ with Kidman playing the icy matriarch of a wealthy, dysfunctional family.

    When will ‘Practical Magic 2’ be in theaters?

    With the movie still in its relatively early stages, there are no release details –– we don’t for example, know whether it’ll be in theaters or go straight to streaming service Max (where the original has now landed), but given the potential star power, we don’t imagine Warners will want to shove it straight to streaming.

    Nicole Kidman in 'Practical Magic'.
    Nicole Kidman in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Practical Magic 2′:

    Buy ‘Practical Magic’ Movie On Amazon

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  • Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman Returning for ‘Practical Magic 2’

    Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Preview:

    • Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman are in talks for a ‘Practical Magic’ sequel.
    • Akiva Goldsman is returning to write the new movie.
    • No director is attached yet.

    Are Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman ready to be magical again? It would appear that way, as Warner Bros. has announced a sequel to 1998 witch-powered romantic fantasy comedy drama ‘Practical Magic’.

    While most of the details are a mystery for now, we’ll likely see the return of the Owens sisters, this time confronting a different story of witchcraft and family.

    4202

    What’s the story of ‘Practical Magic’?

    Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    ‘Practical Magic’ adapts Alice Hoffman’s 1995 novel from Alice Hoffman. The movie follows two sisters, Sally (Bullock) and Gillian Owens (Kidman), who come from a long line of witches.

    Orphaned at a young age, they are raised by their eccentric aunts, who embrace their magical heritage. However, the Owens family is cursed: any man who falls in love with an Owens woman is doomed to an untimely death.

    Subsequently, Sally and Gillian struggle with their powers and the consequences of the family curse. Sally attempts to lead a normal life, distancing herself from magic, but tragedy strikes when her husband dies.

    Gillian, on the other hand, lives a wild life, embracing her magical abilities. The sisters are reunited when Gillian finds herself in a dangerous relationship with Jimmy Angelov (Goran Visnjic), a violent man. In an effort to protect Gillian, the sisters accidentally kill Jimmy, leading to a series of supernatural events as they attempt to hide his death and ultimately break the family curse.

    What will be the story for ‘Practical Magic 2’?

    Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in 'Practical Magic'.
    (L to R) Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock in ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Zero official details are available for whatever storyline Akiva Goldsman is cooking up in his cauldron, but we could conceivably see the sisters confronting issues with Kidman’s character’s daughters, themselves dealing with the family legacy.

    Related Article: ‘Hocus Pocus 2’s Sam Richardson and Doug Jones Talk New Disney+ Sequel

    Who is making the ‘Practical Magic’ sequel?

    Griffin Dunne in 'After Hours'.
    Griffin Dunne in ‘After Hours’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    That first movie was written by Robin Swicord, Akiva Goldsman and Adam Brooks, but at this point, it seems only Goldsman is returning to craft the sequel.

    Griffin Dunne was in the director’s chair for the original, but Warner Bros. has yet to confirm a filmmaker for the new movie.

    Bullock and Kidman –– assuming they lock down their deals –– would also produce the movie alongside the original’s Denise Di Novi.

    When will ‘Practical Magic 2’ be in theaters?

    With the movie at such an early stage, there are no release details –– we don’t for example, know whether it’ll be in theaters or go straight to streaming service Max (where the original has now landed), but given the potential star power, we don’t imagine Warners will want to shove it straight to streaming.

    1998's 'Practical Magic'.
    1998’s ‘Practical Magic’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Practical Magic 2′:

    Buy ‘Practical Magic’ Movie On Amazon

    6fE25Mgd

     

  • How Joan Micklin Silver Paved the Way for Chloé Zhao & Other Women Directors Today

    How Joan Micklin Silver Paved the Way for Chloé Zhao & Other Women Directors Today

    The films of the late Joan Micklin Silver
    The films of the late Joan Micklin Silver

    One of the first celebrity deaths to hit in 2021 was that of filmmaker Joan Micklin Silver. Not as well-remembered by the public today as she was at the height of her career – Silver was not included in the In Memoriam video that played at this year’s Oscars – she left a legacy that can be found in the careers of the women directors who came after her.

    This week Chloé Zhao’s third feature film ‘Nomadland’ was awarded three Oscars- including two for Zhao herself. She became the first woman of color, the first Asian woman, and only the second woman ever to win the award for Best Director. This success follows her previous critically-acclaimed features ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ (2015) and ‘The Rider’ (2017). Later this year Zhao’s highest-profile film – Marvel’s ‘Eternals’ – will finally make its debut after being pushed back from 2020 due to the ongoing pandemic.

    Zhao’s rise from the world of independent cinema to an Oscar-winning film to a big budget Marvel film like ‘Eternals’ recalls the similar rise to prominence from Ava DuVernay, whose feature film debut ‘I Will Follow’ she self-distributed, and whose third film ‘Selma’ made her only fifth woman nominated for Best Director at the Golden Globes (and first Black woman to be nominated), as well as the first Black female director to have her film nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture (though she was pointedly not nominated for Best Director at the Oscars that year). She followed that up with ‘A Wrinkle in Time’, which made her the first Black woman to direct a live-action film earning $100 million.

    But before both of these women smashed through the celluloid ceiling there was Joan Micklin Silver. In the 1970s, when there were so few women directors, women only made up 0.05% of all working directors (in 2020 they made up 12% of directors of the highest grossing films), and Silver fought like hell to forge a career in Hollywood.

    Like DuVernay, she self-financed her debut film, 1975’s ‘Hester Street’, which told the story of Jewish immigrants living on the titular Hester Street in the Lower East Side of New York City at the end of the 19th century. The film would go on to play at the Cannes Film Festival and its star Carol Kane received an Oscar nomination for Best Actress.

    Prior to making her directorial debut, Silver had worked as a writer in Hollywood, even selling a script called ‘Limbo’, a collaboration with Linda Gottlieb, to Universal Pictures in 1972. The film, directed by Mark Robson, follows the lives of women whose husbands are missing in action in Vietnam. Gottlieb would later write the screenplay that would become the basis for ‘Dirty Dancing.’ (The history of how her screenplay became the finished film is an entirely different story.)

    Silver reflected that she “had absolutely no chance of getting work as a director,” within the studio system and even after her success with ‘Hester Street’ she was told by a studio executive that, “feature films are very expensive to mount and distribute, and women directors are one more problem we don’t need.”

    She followed up ‘Hester Street’ with another self-financed film, 1977’s ‘Between The Lines,’ a prophetic look at the lives and loves of the staff at an alt-weekly that launched the careers of many actors including John Heard, Lindsay Crouse, Gwen Welles, Bruno Kirby, Joe Morton, Marilu Henner, Lane Smith, and Jeff Goldblum. Although the film played the Berlin International Film Festival and spawned a short-lived sitcom, it was largely hard to find until a recent restoration and revival from Cohen Media Group.

    Her next film ‘Chilly Scenes of Winter’, a biting romantic dramedy about an unfulfilled man named Charles (John Heard) whose infatuation with a woman named Laura (Mary Beth Hurt) becomes an unhealthy obsession, was produced in association with United Artists. Before the film’s release UA insisted Silver alter the film’s bleak ending to something happier and changed the name to ‘Head over Heels’. It bombed. In 1982 Silver convinced them to re-release the film with its original title and ending, to much better acclaim and box office success.

    Silver also found success working in television, like DuVernay’s ‘Queen Sugar’ and ‘When They See Us’. In 1976, she directed an adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s ‘Bernice Bobs Her Hair’ starring Shelley Duvall and in the 1980s she directed ‘How to Be a Perfect Person in Just Three Days’ for PBS and ‘Finnegan Begin Again’ for HBO.

    1987 saw Silver’s biggest hit to date: the romantic comedy ‘Crossing Delancey’ starring Amy Irving and Peter Reigert, an adaptation of the stage play by Susan Sandler. Irving plays Izzy Grossman, an independent 30-something who works at an upscale bookstore whose bubbe (Reizl Bozyk) hires a marriage broker (Sylvia Miles) to find a nice young Jewish man for her granddaughter. Izzy rebels against the match at first, but slowly finds herself falling for the most charming pickle salesman (Reigert) you’ll ever see on screen. The film had a rocky start as studios told Silver the film was “too ethnic,” which in an interview with the New York Times she said was a euphemism “for Jewish material that Hollywood executives distrust.” Eventually the film found its way to distribution by Warner Bros. thanks to a push from Irving’s husband at the time – Steven Spielberg.

    ‘Crossing Delancey’ received rave reviews and made more than four times its budget, but Silver’s next few films – 1989’s ‘Loverboy’ starring Patrick Dempsey, Kirstie Alley, Carrie Fisher, 1991’s ‘Big Girls Don’t Cry’ starring Hillary Wolf, Griffin Dunne, and Jenny Lewis, and ‘A Fish In The Bathtub’ starring Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara – received mostly mixed reviews and were box office disaster. She continued to direct films for television throughout the next decade; her last credit was 2003’s ‘Hunger Point’ starring Barbara Hershey and Christina Hendricks.

    Silver passed away at the age of 85 from vascular dementia on December 31, 2020.

    What was so remarkable about Silver’s career was her commitment to her vision and her voice, despite struggling against both sexism and anti-semitism within the industry. She paved the way for filmmakers like Zhao and DuVernay, who themselves have fierce voices and unique visions for what film can do. As more women break through in Hollywood and women helming multiple films becomes the rule rather than the exception, it’s important to remember the trailblazers like Joan Micklin Silver who paved the way.

  • Kathryn Hahn Pretty Much Loved ‘I Love Dick’ Immediately

    TheWrap Presents A Screening Of 'I Love Dick' And Q&A With Kathryn HahnI Love Dick” pretty much had her by the title alone.

    Of course, the major selling point that lured Hahn to her new, provocatively titled streaming series on Amazon was the fresh opportunity to work again with executive producer Transparent.”

    Drawing from Chris Kraus’s bestselling pseudo-memoir/novel of the same name chronicling a married woman’s increasingly obsessive and consuming sexual fixation on a guru-like artist and media theorist (Kevin Bacon) who has offered her philosopher husband (Griffin Dunne) a berth in his organization, “I Love Dick” casts Hahn as Krause — or a version thereof — and gives her some of the most unique and challenging opportunities of her career, while flipping the usual male-gaze oriented narrative in terms of psycho-sexual objectification.

    Hahn joined Moviefone for a look at why she felt drawn to the material, how she navigated some of its more risqué elements, and working with an all-too-rare female-led team behind the scenes.

    Moviefone: I want to know what made this role a must-do? What was that thing that you immediately grabbed on to and said, “This is going to test me.This is going to push me”?

    Kathryn Hahn: All of it! For one, it was because it was Jill Soloway, and I always know whatever world I dove into with her is going to stretch, and challenge, and push me, and it’s going to feel the most satisfying on the drive home for sure, creatively, and intellectually.

    I was not familiar with this book before Jill handed it to me as something to consider. There was a couple things that we were thinking about book-wise, and this was one of the titles. Of course I gravitated towards just the title alone! I was very curious.

    Then I was just like flabbergasted by the material. I loved Chris Kraus’s voice so much. I just loved how loud, and fearless, and vulnerable, and hilarious, and messy, and complicated, and just relentless she was as a character, and messy. I could not wait to get in there.

    How deep into research did you go with this? Did you meet Chris? Did you try to get a little bit more info than what was in the book, or did you just work with what was available on the page?

    Sure. I did a little bit, because I knew whatever the series, how it was going to develop, after reading the pilot, the amazing pilot that our producer Sarah Gubbins wrote, I knew that it was going to depart significantly from the source material. But I also knew that I just had brilliant, literal diaries, basically, of this woman’s life.

    So “I Love Dick” is kind of what Chris Kraus would consider one of a trilogy. The other two books, there’s a book called “Aliens & Anorexia,” and another one called “Torpor.” So I read all three, which kind of just, in varying ways, describe her relationship with her marriage. That was incredibly helpful. I met with Chris a couple times, and I fell madly in love. She’s just a phenomenal human being. She came to the set, which was incredible, and kind of told us how we were doing, kind of how it really, actually went down, which was very helpful.

    It was really trippy. There was a flashback scene in which Chris was there that day, I was there playing Chris, and then another young actress was playing my younger self. So to have the three of us together in a photograph was pretty trippy.

    Was there one sort of essential turnkey element that helped you unlock it all and get where you needed to go with this role? Was there something that made you truly get it and know what you needed to do to pull it off?

    Any one of these ventures is certainly a leap of faith. I’m trying to think what the one turnkey would be, because there’s so many things I had in my head! I think I described it as being like Richard Dreyfuss in “Close Encounters.”

    Then, when we met with all the women, it was an all-female writers’ room, which was incredible, and when we met to kind of talk about experience, we talked a lot about, even there’s so many writings of nuns’ kind of deep love devotion to Christ. So, many of those things just felt like whatever that kind of obsession feeling was, I just kind of tried to tap into that — that feeling of having the entire world before this person or thing that you’re obsessed with.

    It’s like when you become obsessed, the entire world is seen through that lens — the lens that you want to share it with or for that person. So yeah, kind of just to jump into that feeling.

    When you’re playing a role like this that has a considerable sexual element, and you know you’re going to be putting yourself out there, physically, how do you prepare yourself for that aspect of it all?

    Besides, like, a wax job? [Laughs] I would say, I think there is something about it, and I was talking about this last night with Kevin Bacon, that the emotional kind of reveal certainly feels scarier, sometimes — in most things — for me.

    I don’t know what that means, but there is something about it, especially in this environment, where you know that every eyeball looking at you behind the monitor, or behind the camera, is looking at you with love, and empathy, and not judgment, where you don’t feel, for a second, self-conscious, because you know that everybody in the room is there to support this journey, whether it be nude or not, it’s the same kind of feeling. I just trusted people so profoundly, that it really wasn’t that big of a deal.

    Also, I’ve had two children, so it’s like, “Who hasn’t seen it at this point?”

    Talk to me a little bit about finding those emotional spaces with Kevin and with Griffin. You’ve got two leading men here that you have some pretty intense work to do with.

    You never know, chemistry-wise, how things are going to land. I also think, as an actor, for me, I can do as much homework as I desire, or as I want, but it’s going to change, the alchemy is going to change whenever you meet whoever that person is. You are so much who you’re playing with, I think. I really found Chris through Griffin and through Kevin, for sure. I’m sure they would say the same thing about their characters, and any actor would say that, I’m sure, about their work. You can’t work or act in a vacuum, I don’t think, unless you’re like an ’80s comedy male movie star.

    I think, mostly, it’s more fun to find yourself with who you’re acting with. So I didn’t meet Griffin until the day of the first table read, and we immediately just felt like family. He’s a phenomenal bird, just an incredible brain, and so fast, and funny, and vulnerable, and game.

    Same with Kevin. I met Kevin, I knew Kevin a little bit more because we had met randomly at a party before, and we kind of went through the Sylvere audition process together, so we got to work together while we were auditioning, trying to find our Sylvere. We walked into that first table read having known each other, having sniffed each other creatively, for quite some time. But still, there was just enough mystery, I think, to make it work.

    I think we kind of just subconsciously withheld a lot from each other, because we knew that that bubble was so profound to making this work, that alchemy and that mystery. They’re both phenomenal, phenomenal performers. I learned so much from being in scenes with them, for sure, and they made me feel brave.

    Tell me what was pleasurable about this very female-driven production. It’s rare that you get to have that many women involved in telling a woman’s story.

    Which is insane to me, you know what I mean? It should all be the people who are telling their own stories, should be the ones that are making the decisions behind about the content of the stories. It’s just insane to me. It’s like, “Oh, it’s so rare for women to be behind a woman’s story.”

    I think it’s not as rare, certainly, as it was. It seems like a very galvanizing moment in our cultural history, for sure, and there are so many things I’m dying to see that women are in front and behind, not only making the decisions, but being the creative birds in front, and all of those things.

    We had an all-women writers’ room, which was pretty profound. I think it just added, when you know that you are the subject, and not the object, it makes the kind of work that we were being asked to do just that much safer, because you just know that there’s empathy and agency from behind the camera. You just don’t feel that weird handwringing judgement, or just someone that doesn’t quite know, or thinks knows. It just felt that much safer.

    They’re all really funny humans, too. All of them are deeply funny, which I was very buoyed by. Even in the reading of the book, I remember thinking, God, this is hilarious. It’s so hilarious because it’s so cringe-worthy. You’re just so embarrassed for this person who has no embarrassment herself. I feel like the women in that writers’ room are very giddy to dig into that.

    I was talking to your friend Kristen Bell about the genius of setting the second “Bad Moms” film at Christmas time. Tell me what you responded to when that idea was floated your way.

    We’d been all kind of sniffing about a sequel for a while, because we were like, “Come on!” because we were so excited about the success of the first one. Then, when we heard that it was going to be holiday theme, I was so excited. There’s no other time of the year that I feel like a mom would deserve and need to get the hell out of the house. There’s so much!

    I remember as a kid tearing open the Christmas presents so fast. We barely opened the presents from Santa, and my mom was already sweating in the kitchen trying to put bacon and eggs on. There’s no moment to savor the magic you’re creating for everybody else. So I’m really excited for the moms to get a chance to go out and have some mulled wine and enjoy a night out.

    “I Love Dick” streams on Amazon May 12th.

  • ‘Practical Magic’ Is a Two-Hour Identity Crisis: Podcast

    Practical Magic 1998, Sandra Bullock, Nicole KidmanWitches (played by box office royalty Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman), romance, a family curse, and sisters with an immutable bond — on the outside, that’s everything one would need to cast a spell of cinematica perfectum. Unfortunately, that did not happen.

    Yes, the CAN’T WAIT! crew grabbed their broomsticks (and tequila) and dove headlong into the 1998 romantic comedy / drama / thriller / supernatural drama / romance / [insert sixth genre here] “Practical Magic,” a movie that struggles for an hour and forty-five minutes to figure out exactly what it is, then leaves you wondering what, exactly, you just watched. But hey, the movie isn’t without its redeeming qualities — they’re just few and far between. Topics discussed include Bullock and Kidman unconvincingly playing teenagers, deadly curses with more patience than Mahatma Gandhi, Camilla Belle‘s eyebrows, and a town where it’s OK for kids to yell profanity at other kids, as long as those kids are witches.

    Next week we’ll be watching and discussing Tony’s pick, the 1993 career suicide machine “Super Mario Bros.” No one is happy about — except Tony.

    Subscribe to the CAN’T WAIT! podcast:

    Have thoughts/feelings/feedback about the podcast? Have a movie you really, really want us to watch and talk about? Hit us up on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram with the hashtag #CANTWAIT.

    CAN’T WAIT! A Movie Lover’s Podcast by Moviefone celebrates Hollywood’s guiltiest pleasures by taking a fresh look at critically ignored movies and giving them a second chance at life. Join Moviefone editors Tim Hayne, Rachel Horner, Phil Pirrello, and Tony Maccio as they extol the virtues and expose the failings (with love!) of nostalgic movies.

  • 7 Things You Never Knew About ‘My Girl’

    Macauley Culkin, Anna Chlumsky in MY GIRL (1991)My Girl,” the sophisticated, somewhat sugary coming-of-age drama released November 27th, 1991, is turning 25 this year.

    The movie, which stars Macaulay Culkin and Anna Chlumsky (25 years later, who would have thought she’d be the one with the successful career?), dealt with death and love and finding yourself, all set against a honeyed, nostalgia-choked period setting. Ah, the ’70s, when what you really had to worry about was bees. Simpler times, simpler times.

    To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the movie (and our continued, slow lurch towards the grave), here are seven things you probably don’t know about “My Girl.”

    1. Child Psychologists Were Worried It Would Wreck ChildrenAnna Chlumsky in MY GIRLOne of the larger plot points in “My Girl” is (spoiler alert for a movie that’s 25 years old) Macaulay Culkin dies after getting stung by many, many bees. It’s a powerful moment and adds to the movie’s themes of maturation and personal growth. But, back in 1991, child psychologists were worried about the damage it would inflict on children who watched the film. Yes, seriously.

    A Baltimore Sun article from November 17, 1991, proclaimed that “some child psychologists are worried” about the movie due to the Culkin character’s death, especially since the film was being released after the global phenomenon that was “Home Alone.” Please keep in mind that 1991 was the same year “Silence of the Lambs” became an unexpected blockbuster and would go on to sweep the Academy Awards. But, yes, let’s worry about the bees.

    2. It Won an MTV Movie Award for Best KissMacaulay Culkin and Anna Chlumsky kiss in MY GIRL (1991)Back when the MTV Movie Awards were more of a thing (and much, much more fun), “My Girl” won the award for Best Kiss. Years later, Chlumsky would marvel that her first kiss (ever!) would win an award. (It was Culkin’s first onscreen kiss, for those keeping score at home.) And even more years later, we would all marvel that the MTV Movie Awards are still around.

    3. Anna Chlumsky Hasn’t Spoken to Macaulay Culkin in More Than 20 Years"Light Up A Life" Benefit for the Children's Emergency Medical FundWhen E! caught up with Clumsky, who is having an incredible second wind thanks to parts in television series like “Veep” and “Hannibal” (where — it’s all connected! — she played a Clarice Starling stand-in) and movies like “In the Loop” and “The End of the Tour,” in 2013, she admitted that she hasn’t spoken to her “My Girl” costar in 20 years. Considering his somewhat outrageous behavior in the years since becoming a child superstar, it’s not all that surprising. But it’s still sad.

    4. It Inspired a Weird Video GameMy Girl The Movie - The Video GameIn 2014, the film inspired an online video game rendered in the classic 8-bit style. In the game, you play as Culkin’s character and are directed, as the game begins, to “Accept your fate.” And yes, there is a run-in with bees. UK paper The Guardian described the moment when the bees attack you in a surprisingly philosophical tone: “At this point, realise that you’re merely delaying the inevitable. You take your hands off the keyboards and let the bees attack Culkin at will. He dies. Anna Chlumsky wails: ‘HE WAS GONNA BE AN ACROBAT!’ The game ends.” Yikes.

    5. The Original Title Was TerribleBRITAIN-ENTERTAINMENT-MUSIC-CINEMA-BEATLESAccording to the semi-reliable IMDb page for “My Girl,” the movie’s original title was “Born Jaundiced,” which is just terrible. Producers then offered up $500 to whichever Imagine Entertainment employee could come up with the best title. (Imagine Entertainment is Ron Howard and Brian Grazer‘s company, by the way.) Since the movie is largely set in a funeral parlor, many suggested things like “Mourning Glory” (pun!), “In Lieu of Flowers,” and “Dearly Departed” which, arguably, are all just as horrible as “Born Jaundiced.” It was Grazer who came up with “My Girl,” probably because he was thinking about all of the trailers and TV spots that could trot out the Temptations song of the same name. It’s unclear whether or not he took the $500 and subsequently spent it on hair-care products.

    6. Thrash Rock Band Anthrax Loved ItGriffin Dunne in MY GIRL (1991)Apparently, Anthrax, the noisy rock band whose music inspires countless bored husbands to head bang in their cars on the way to the accounting firm where they work, was a huge fan of the movie. There’s a line of dialogue spoken by Griffin Dunne‘s teacher character in the film (Chlumsky is in love with him, but Culkin said it wouldn’t be fair because he’d give her straight As — ah, youth), “Be dangerous and unpredictable … and make a lot of noise.” At the end of their 1993 album “Sound of White Noise,” singer John Bush says that exact phrase. Incredible. Also, I had to go to the Ultimate Metal message boards to chisel this nugget out for y’all, so please give thanks.

    7. The House They Used for the Funeral Home Is Supposedly HauntedHouse used as funeral parlor in MY GIRL (1991)Hidden inside an Orlando Weekly article about the history of the building that served as the funeral home in the film is this tantalizing detail: The house, which for many years was known as The Stanford Inn, was supposedly haunted. According to the highly scientific Apollo Paranormal website, in 2010, a paranormal investigation took place and the evidence (weird sounds, blurry photos) speak for themselves. Actually they don’t speak to anything at all, but it’s still fun to think about. According to the site, “Guests for years have reported hearing what sounds like a party going on at various times of night in the dining and bar area of the Stanford.” Frustratingly, the site doesn’t talk at all about who the ghosts or supposed to be or if anything horrific or otherworldly went down inside the house, besides Dan Aykroyd‘s ghoulish over-acting.