Tag: haley-bennett

  • ‘The Last Frontier’ Interview: Haley Bennett and Dominic Cooper

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    Premiering on Apple TV October 10th is the new thriller series ‘The Last Frontier’, which was created by Jon Bokenkamp (‘The Blacklist’) and Richard D’Ovidio, and stars Jason Clarke (‘Dawn of the Planet of the Apes’), Dominic Cooper (‘Captain America: The First Avenger’), Haley Bennett (‘The Magnificent Seven’), Simone Kessell (‘Yellowjackets’), and Alfre Woodard (‘Captain America: Civil War’).

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    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Haley Bennett and Dominic Cooper about their work on ‘The Last Frontier’, Their first reaction to the screenplay for the pilot, their approach to their characters, and working with actor and executive producer Jason Clarke.

    (L to R) Dominic Cooper and Haley Bennett star in Apple TV+'s 'The Last Frontier'.
    (L to R) Dominic Cooper and Haley Bennett star in Apple TV+’s ‘The Last Frontier’.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Cooper, Bennett, Jason Clarke, Simone Kessell, and Jon Bokenkamp.

    Related Article: Jason Clarke Talks Apple TV+’s New Thriller Series ‘The Last Frontier’

    (L to R) Jason Clarke and Haley Bennett in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Jason Clarke and Haley Bennett in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Haley, this is a fantastic series! Can you talk about your first reaction to reading the screenplay for the pilot?

    Haley Bennett: Thank you. That just attributes to our incredible writer, Jon Bokenkamp and we were just in such good hands with Jon Bokenkamp, Apple TV and with Jason Clarke producing this show. We feel so grateful and so privileged to be getting the feedback we’ve been getting for the show. What I love about the show is that it has this epic scope and this incredible budget and it’s such elevated television. But at the same time, I’m used to just doing little independent films and getting to explore characters on a much smaller scale, but we were able to explore both with our scenes between us and to be able to create incredibly real and fleshed out characters. Which is what Apple, I think, is so genius and brilliant at creating. It’s like the balance of both of those things.

    (L to R) Alfre Woodard, Gray Powell and Haley Bennett in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Alfre Woodard, Gray Powell and Haley Bennett in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Haley, can you talk about your approach to playing Sydney and what is it like playing a character with so many secrets?

    HB: Sydney is a character who’s someone that obviously has a lot of problems, a lot of demons, she’s been condemned by the CIA. She’s sent to Alaska to help with this crisis of this plane crash, and she knows the person that is that the CIA is looking for better than anybody. I loved her shades of gray. I loved her moral ambiguity and how I felt about her at first glance was very different as I read kind of these later episodes. I realized that what she represented was something far different than what I had originally believed about her. So, I just felt that that was a great opportunity to get to play a character who has this incredible arc and isn’t always what you see is what you get, but that has all these secrets that can destroy and that have catastrophic consequences.

    'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Dominic, so much is said about Havlock in the first episode before we ever see you on screen. How did that help you to create this character?

    Dominic Cooper: There’s such a wealth of information in this script. For the first time ever, I don’t think it’s ever happened before, but we all 10 episodes have been handed to you before you begin. So, you have this wealth of information about the person you’re going to play, which is daunting. Just the character when I when I list the things that were presented in front of me, a Navy SEAL, CIA operative, mathematician, lecturer, I couldn’t come up with things that are further from who I am as a person, but it was a wonderful challenge to be presented with. Then a lot of the time you’re having to sit alone and write your history or decide on things that you have no real idea about. You’re not really that confident because you’ve made it up yourself. But with this, I could go backwards and forwards. I could listen to what people say about him. I could find the future and the flashbacks. It gave such a strong flavor of who this guy was. It’s been interesting to hear what people think of him. They keep mentioning devious and villainous and a bit of a murky moral compass. But I just saw him as someone who was trying to be killed and surviving and loved the people he cared about and was trying to do to reveal some truth and honesty about what was happening in the world. So, I had a lot of help and the showrunner who knew the material inside out because he’d had it for a long time. So, there’s no preparation. You still think you’re terrible in it, you still think that you’ve done a bad job, you still don’t believe in anything you do. But all you can do is have trust and utilize the information that’s presented before you.

    Sam Hargrave in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Sam Hargrave in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Finally, Dominic, can you talk about the cat and mouse game that begins between Havlock and Frank, and why Havlock takes an interest in him?

    DC: I realize more now in watching it again, another tough thing about playing him in the cat and mouse relationship, I don’t ever get any scenes with him (Jason Clarke). I have one scene with him, essentially, where we’re face to face. I remember thinking, what a relief and how lovely it was to work with him. I was really happy because you get so much from actors, you look in their eyes and you listen, and you absorb and that completely informs your reaction. Nothing else does. Half of my stuff was into a radio without the person there and that was hard. So, it was very nice. But you don’t have that feeling of the day’s work and we got somewhere together, that you reached somewhere together. It was a bit like, “Oh, that’s done” and you don’t know whether it’s right because you also don’t hear the tone of how that person’s going to play it. So, you’re just doing it into a void. It’s still quite interesting. He’s so he’s so ahead of Frank. I just had to think of the bigger picture and go, “Well, actually, it’s so clever this”, you know, he’s there, he’s not there. I felt like I was in safe hands in terms of the guidance from both director and showrunner, but it was sad to have that wonderful cat and mouse, but not be present with the person.

    Jason Clarke in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jason Clarke in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    What is the plot of ‘The Last Frontier’?

    A U.S. Marshal (Jason Clarke) in the outskirts of Alaska must protect his town while he investigates the plane crash that set free multiple fugitives, now on the loose.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Last Frontier’?

    • Jason Clarke as Frank Remnick
    • Dominic Cooper as Havlock
    • Haley Bennett as Sidney
    • Simone Kessell as Sarah Remnick
    • Tait Blum as Luke Remnick
    • Dallas Goldtooth as Hutch
    • Alfre Woodard as Bradford
    • Rusty Schwimmer as Kitty Van Horn
    Jason Clarke in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jason Clarke in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    List of Jason Clarke Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Jason Clarke Movies on Amazon

  • ‘The Last Frontier’ Exclusive Interview: Jason Clarke

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    Premiering on Apple TV October 10th is the new thriller series ‘The Last Frontier’, which was created by Jon Bokenkamp (‘The Blacklist’) and Richard D’Ovidio, and stars Jason Clarke (‘Dawn of the Planet of the Apes’), Dominic Cooper (‘Captain America: The First Avenger’), Haley Bennett (‘The Magnificent Seven’), Simone Kessell (‘Yellowjackets’), and Alfre Woodard (‘Captain America: Civil War’).

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    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Jason Clarke about his work on ‘The Last Frontier’, his first reaction to the screenplay for the pilot episode, his character’s pursuit of escaped convict Havlock, Frank’s reluctant partnership with CIA agent Sidney, and working with actress Haley Bennett.

    Jason Clarke stars in Apple TV+'s 'The Last Frontier'.
    Jason Clarke stars in Apple TV+’s ‘The Last Frontier’.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Clarke, Dominic Cooper, Haley Bennett, Simone Kessell, and Jon Bokenkamp.

    Related Article: Jason Clarke Talks Apple TV+’s New Thriller Series ‘The Last Frontier’

    Jason Clarke in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jason Clarke in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Moviefone: To begin with, this is a fantastic series! Can you talk about your first reaction to reading the screenplay for the pilot and did you recognize immediately that Frank Remnick would be a great role for you to play in particular?

    Jason Clarke: Thank you, mate. I do too and I love hearing that kind of response, man. We had a great time making it. I watch it when I don’t normally watch a lot of things, and I kept watching it. I’ve loved it, I really did. Dude, when they send you a script and they send you the pilot, you read it, and of course, that’s draft after draft. I’m now smart enough to go, “Well, this is, of course, their best foot forward” and I did love it. The plane crashing, the size and the scope, I thought, this is where Apple should be, and I want to be part of this. You know what I mean? I really did. I’ve been on a lot of sets in my career. So then, you know, it’s set in snow. I thought, “Well, that’s not easy.” I remember ‘The Revenant’ and I’m friends with Tom (Hardy) and Leo (DiCaprio), and I knew what they went through. So, I said, “Guys, how about the rest of them?” They sent me all 10 episodes, which was like, okay, they’ve done their work, because we’re going to have to shoot out of order. Then you read through and you’re just waiting with bated breath of when it’s going to fall down the hole. Because now, your hopes are up, and I read all 10 in like no time at all. Normally I go through with a marker on my iPad, and I’ll just mark that this doesn’t make sense in orange, and red is like that’s just not good. But I didn’t have any. I just read it straight through. I thought, “Man, he took me on a wild ride and brought me up the other side.” Sure, there’s a few things, I think some dialog, but I’m with that ride. That’s what it felt like to me, and then it was like, let’s get this 50 something year old body into shape and get on this roller coaster.

    'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Can you talk about the cat and mouse game that takes place between Frank and escaped convict Havlock and how Frank navigates that?

    JC: Frank in a way, he’s a very real person. You know, he’s not a superhero. He’s not the best fighter or the fastest gun. He doesn’t have the level of training and abilities that Havlock has, and you find it out when you realize things. But he’s cunning and his dogged, and he’s decent, and he’s going to get up more times and he gets knocked down. You know, you’re going to have to finish Frank off if you want to beat him, and I love those parts. They’re very human and it enables you to bring the audience in closer to the reality of who he is. I mean, when we talked about the fight sequences with (director) Sam (Hargrave), I was like, “I’m not going to be, you know, Chris Hemsworth or Spider-Man or something here”. Frank’s going be beaten more times that he beats, but he’s going to come back and that’s how we leaned into that. So, he’s learning from Havlock, and he doesn’t realize just how far down the rabbit hole and into the dark that Havlock has led him. Then it starts to dawn on him. I love “No Country for Old Men’ that speech that Tommy Lee Jones makes about the dream. Frank starts to realize, he’s seen a lot of bad and dark in Chicago, and he knows what criminals can do, and big organized criminals. So, he starts to realize, “Oh, man, I’m in some dangerous territory.” Then his family’s involved in it, too. That gets to the heart of it.

    (L to R) Jason Clarke and Haley Bennett in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Jason Clarke and Haley Bennett in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about Frank’s reluctant partnership with CIA agent Sidney and what it was like working on that relationship with actress Haley Bennett?

    JC: Well, Hayley bought a great, like a mist in terms of you couldn’t tell where she’s at. You know, I wanted to hold her, but then the next minute I feared her. You feel like with Frank, you’re trying to work out what her involvement is, what she is hiding, and then you’re also aware that she’s super dangerous. Even though she’s an alone operative, an alone agent and a woman in this foreign place, there’s something about the way she operates. She makes you lean into her and frank leans into her, and then he needs her as well. You just you realize he’s on a lake of ice, with her as well, too.

    Jason Clarke in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jason Clarke in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    What is the plot of ‘The Last Frontier’?

    A U.S. Marshal (Jason Clarke) in the outskirts of Alaska must protect his town while he investigates the plane crash that set free multiple fugitives, now on the loose.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Last Frontier’?

    • Jason Clarke as Frank Remnick
    • Dominic Cooper as Havlock
    • Haley Bennett as Sidney
    • Simone Kessell as Sarah Remnick
    • Tait Blum as Luke Remnick
    • Dallas Goldtooth as Hutch
    • Alfre Woodard as Bradford
    • Rusty Schwimmer as Kitty Van Horn
    Jason Clarke in 'The Last Frontier,' premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jason Clarke in ‘The Last Frontier,’ premiering October 10, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    List of Jason Clarke Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Jason Clarke Movies on Amazon

  • Movie Review: ‘The Luckiest Man in America’

    Paul Walter Hauser in Samir Oliveros’ 'The Luckiest Man in America'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    Paul Walter Hauser in Samir Oliveros’ ‘The Luckiest Man in America’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    ‘The Luckiest Man in America’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters on April 4th, ‘The Luckiest Man in America’ takes a real-life event as the basis for a comedy drama about a quiz show champ whose winning ways come into question during one fraught day filming ‘Press Your Luck.’

    Paul Walter Hauser leads a considerable cast for the new movie, directed by Samir Oliveros from a script he wrote with Maggie Briggs.

    Related Article: Paul Walter Hauser Joins Major League Wrestling’s Battle Riot VI

    Does ‘The Luckiest Man in America’ avoid the whammy?

    Walton Goggins in Samir Oliveros’ 'The Luckiest Man in America'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    Walton Goggins in Samir Oliveros’ ‘The Luckiest Man in America’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    While younger (well, younger-ish, the figures for the likes of Gen Z and Gen Alpha watching a legacy game show are probably not healthy) audiences know ‘Press Your Luck’ as the quiz show hosted by Elizabeth Banks, that version does sometimes call back to the history of the series, which stretches back to 1983.

    This new movie charts a real-life event that happened during a taping on the show, when the most unlikely player somehow managed to get on to set as a contestant. It’s certainly a strange story, and Samir Oliveros’ take on does include some invention wrapped around the basic facts. He only had the actual episode recording to go on (which is on YouTube), so there are scenes set in the control room and before Michael Larson gets on the set that are entirely fabricated.

    Yet the whole does hang together decently, the tone pretty much consistent and the ticking clock quality of the day on set giving the movie as a whole a propulsive quality. Yet it’s also burdened with a story that doesn’t quite work and despite some impressive work from a talented cast, not everything functions as it should.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Brian Geraghty and Paul Walter Hauser in Samir Oliveros’ 'The Luckiest Man in America'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    (L to R) Brian Geraghty and Paul Walter Hauser in Samir Oliveros’ ‘The Luckiest Man in America’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    Director Oliveros and his co-writer Briggs (who came up with the story –– at least the fictional chunks), have put plenty of work into figuring out the chaos that must have erupted between executives and other staff when Larson’s winning streak really got moving and the bosses started to suspect that he might have figured out the patterns of the board to make sure he kept winning and not land on the show’s famous “Whammy” characters, the little red cartoons who gleefully take any winnings (and ultimately banish a player from the show if they hit more than four).

    All of that is clearly conveyed in the script, and while Michael Larson was obviously a real person, it’s impressive how much detail the writers have filled in about him and those who are both on stage and off it. The issue comes when the story starts to run out of steam and little and even Larson isn’t well served.

    Oliveros’ directing style does well mimicking the look of the series back in the day, and segues effectively between an authentic 1980s style and the feel of the behind-the-scenes areas.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Brian Geraghty, Paul Walter Hauser, and Patti Harrison in Samir Oliveros’ 'The Luckiest Man in America'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    (L to R) Brian Geraghty, Paul Walter Hauser, and Patti Harrison in Samir Oliveros’ ‘The Luckiest Man in America’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    Paul Walter Hauser is a big part of why the movie succeeds at all. As Larson, he’s a complicated mix of quirky loner and desperate grifter. And he’s excellent as both sides of the character –– at once loveable and weird, but always believable.

    It’s a pretty perfect match for the actor’s skillset, since Hauser has bringing people like these to screens for years now, and he’s also had some experience walking the fine line when playing characters based on real-world personalities.

    You’ll completely buy him as this oddball, ice cream truck-driving obsessive, whose past life is littered with money making schemes and a marriage that is seriously on the rocks.

    Twitchy and nervous when it starts to appear that his appearance on the show might just be his latest scheme, Hauser is great portraying Larson.

    He’s matched by David Strathairn (no stranger to a based-on-truth story himself), the veteran actor playing egotistical, calculating executive producer Bill Carruthers. He’s all strutting peacock-disguised-as-homey-man-of-the-people, who makes the decision to override his casting team to invite Larson onto the show after the potential contestant takes someone else’s audition spot.

    David Strathairn in Samir Oliveros’ 'The Luckiest Man in America'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    David Strathairn in Samir Oliveros’ ‘The Luckiest Man in America’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    Strathairn is also great at portraying Carruthers’ flop sweat as Larson’s winning ways continue as he’s forced to justify the decision to those who write his paychecks.

    Walton Goggins makes an impact as Peter Tomarken, the host of the show, who becomes increasingly worried for his own job and starts to improvise as Larson’s earnings rack up. Playing one of the few well-known people in the story, he brings his own flair to it, but doesn’t deviate so far from the recognizable version of Tomarken.

    Shamier Anderson plays Chuck, the head of casting for the show, who buts heads with Carruthers’ over Larson’s last-minute selection. Anderson does excellent work as the character, fully channeling his frustration while keeping him relatable.

    In smaller roles, we have ‘Game of Thrones’ veteran Maisie Williams as Sylvia, a fresh-faced production assistant on the show who wrangles the talent and conducts tours. She’s fine in a more limited scope. Likewise Brian Geraghty and Patti Harrison as Larson’s fellow contestants.

    Finally, Haley Bennett doesn’t have too much to do as Larson’s wife, but she brings some healthy, genuine emotion to the proceedings.

    Final Thoughts

    Johnny Knoxville in Samir Oliveros’ 'The Luckiest Man in America'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    Johnny Knoxville in Samir Oliveros’ ‘The Luckiest Man in America’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    Given how fascinating the real-life story of the movie is, it’s frustrating at times that it rarely feels like ‘The Luckiest Man in America’ takes full advantage of it.

    Yet it’s still a well-considered take on a particular piece of quiz show history.

    What is the plot of ‘The Luckiest Man in America’?

    1984, Michael Larson (Paul Walter Hauser), an unemployed ice-cream truck driver from Ohio, steps onto the game show “Press Your Luck” harboring a secret: the key to endless amounts of money. But his winning streak gets threatened when the executives in the control room start to uncover his real motivations.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Luckiest Man in America’?

    'The Luckiest Man in America' opens in theaters on April 4th. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.
    ‘The Luckiest Man in America’ opens in theaters on April 4th. Photo Credit: Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films Release.

    List of Paul Walter Hauser Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Paul Walter Hauser Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Magazine Dreams’

    Jonathan Majors stars in 'Magazine Dreams'. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.
    Jonathan Majors stars in ‘Magazine Dreams’. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.

    ‘Magazine Dreams’ receives 7 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters March 21st is ‘Magazine Dreams,’ directed by Elijah Bynum and starring Jonathan Majors, Haley Bennett, Taylour Paige, Harrison Page, Harriet Sansom Harris, and Mike O’Hearn.

    Related Article: Director Michael B. Jordan and Jonathan Majors Talk Sequel ‘Creed III’

    Initial Thoughts

    Jonathan Majors stars in 'Magazine Dreams'. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.
    Jonathan Majors stars in ‘Magazine Dreams’. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.

    ‘Magazine Dreams’ originally premiered more than two years ago at the Sundance Film Festival, following which Searchlight Pictures planned to release the film later in 2023 and build an Oscar campaign about the performance of star Jonathan Majors. But Majors’ subsequent arrest for assaulting his then-girlfriend and conviction on misdemeanor charges of assault and harassment (which also cost him his role as Kang the Conqueror in the Marvel Cinematic Universe) led Searchlight to drop the film, which stayed in limbo until Briarcliff – the small indie also behind the release of last year’s controversial ‘The Apprentice’ – picked it up and is now releasing it.

    On the merits alone, there’s simply no question that Majors’ performance may have sent him home with an Oscar had events turned out differently. While ‘Magazine Dreams’ itself is uneven and begins to break down toward the end, the film is visually arresting and narratively gripping for most of the way. Majors is simply a force of nature in the movie, his work as aspiring bodybuilder Killian Maddox a vortex of physical, emotional, and psychological trauma that’s almost too intense at times. Whatever you think of Majors as a person, ‘Magazine Dreams’ is a powerful testament to his raw talent as an actor.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Jonathan Majors and Elijah Bynum on the set of 'Magazine Dreams'. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.
    (L to R) Jonathan Majors and Elijah Bynum on the set of ‘Magazine Dreams’. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.

    Killian Maddux is a young man with, literally, magazine dreams: he aims to land on the cover of bodybuilding magazines and become a celebrity like his idol, Brad Vanderhorn (played by real-life bodybuilder and magazine cover staple Mike O’Hearn). Posters and photos of Vanderhorn – who he writes constant, unanswered letters to — and others cover the walls of Killian’s room in the small house he shares with his grandfather, William (Harrison Page), who is ill and needs Killian to take care of him and the house. As we find out later, Killian has been raised by William following tragic events in the past.

    Killian’s daily routine otherwise consists of painful, lengthy, extensive workouts that leave him clutching his abdomen in agony while every muscle pops out in emulation of the inhuman standards set by this most bizarre of competitions. He works out maniacally, competes in local bodybuilding contests with hopes of ascending to national meets, and posts what he thinks are inspirational videos online that draw comments like “Why hasn’t this guy killed himself yet?” and “Hella incel vibes.”

    It’s clear from the start that Killian is lonely, isolated, psychologically scarred and emotionally stunted; his interactions with the customers at the supermarket where he works are awkward and socially inept, and his attraction to checkout girl Jessie (Haley Bennett) leads to a date that the word “disastrous” doesn’t really do justice to. But Killian’s other interactions with the world, unfortunately, end up in much worse places than his date slipping out the back on the pretense of going to the bathroom: after a dismissive phone call with a paint shop that refuses to come back to the house for some touch-ups, Killian heads there and promptly destroys the storefront, literally hurling himself through the glass windows in a senseless rage that can only be described as primal.

    Jonathan Majors stars in 'Magazine Dreams'. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.
    Jonathan Majors stars in ‘Magazine Dreams’. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.

    As we find out from the doctor that treats Killian after that incident (which oddly – in one of the movie’s strange lapses of logic – does not end up with Killian behind bars for even one night), he is wrecking his body with the steroids he takes to achieve his physical goals (he’s obsessed with the size of his deltoids, which one judge a while back told him were too small). He’s also decimating his mind: “I control my emotions, my emotions don’t control me,” he tells himself at one point, which is about as far away from the truth as even his delusional imagination can handle.

    But Killian is clearly a figure who also deserves our empathy: as a large Black man who can clearly intimidate people, he’s already isolated from normal social interaction to a certain extent, which writer-director Elijah Bynum emphasizes in subtle yet pointed ways (one customer in the supermarket apologizes to him for no discernible reason after she catches him glancing at her). On top of that, his haunted past, his search for human connection of any kind – which leads him to both his labored attempt at romance and his obsession with fame and celebrity culture – and the punishment he puts himself through all lead him down the same dark path we’ve seen in films like ‘Taxi Driver, ‘You Were Never Really Here,’ and ‘Nightcrawler.’

    (L to R) Jonathan Majors and Elijah Bynum on the set of 'Magazine Dreams'. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.
    (L to R) Jonathan Majors and Elijah Bynum on the set of ‘Magazine Dreams’. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.

    Bynum’s film doesn’t quite travel to the same conclusions as any of those, and as ‘Magazine Dreams’ rolls on, there’s a certain repetitive nature to the narrative that kicks in. The repercussions of some of Killian’s actions are never made quite clear, and during the movie’s third act we begin to wonder how much of what’s happening is real and how much is occurring in his head. After the excruciatingly intense realism of the earlier parts of the film, this more surreal final stretch isn’t quite as effective, and the ambiguous way in which ‘Magazine Dreams’ ends doesn’t match the power of the rest of the film.

    Despite its flawed structure, this is still a provocative film to watch, and a striking one as well: Bynum and cinematographer Adam Arkapaw have crafted a beautiful succession of images, often casting Killian in deep blues and reds to indicate his emotional wavelength while capturing every gleaming striation of the formidable physiques of him and other bodybuilders. Jason Hill’s original score complements this quite well, as do the passages of both classical music and screaming death metal that accentuate certain scenes – the latter effectively deployed as Killian races in his car to enact his wrath on the paint shop. The production design also captures the drab, rundown nature of Killian’s world, from the empty, staring windows of defunct businesses to the sweaty, kaleidoscopic club at which Killian finds himself one night, dancing frenziedly among others who have no idea of the human timebomb in their midst.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Haley Bennett and Jonathan Majors in 'Magazine Dreams'. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.
    (L to R) Haley Bennett and Jonathan Majors in ‘Magazine Dreams’. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.

    The supporting cast here is effective in what are truly minor roles: Haley Bennett brings a tentative grace to the role of Jessie, while Harrison Page delivers an exhausted, wounded dignity to William – a scene in which he gives some long-overdue comfort to his grandson stands out for its vulnerability. Elsewhere, Harriet Sansom Harris is a natural as the therapist that Killian sees, listening to him and encouraging him even as she knows he’s probably lying to her, while Taylour Paige is more or less wasted as a sex worker with whom Killian has an ultimately pointless encounter.

    But let’s face it: this movie is pretty much a one-hander, and Majors – for whom this movie would have followed earlier triumphs like ‘Creed III,’ ‘Lovecraft Country,’ and ‘The Harder They Fall’ – dominates the screen for the entire two-hour running time, much of which he spends alone. Not only did the actor clearly sculpt his own body into the tortured form that passes for excellence in bodybuilding, but he brings an intensity to Killian’s volatile nature that is often as frightening and unpredictable as it is uncomfortable to watch. He’s in many ways a truly tragic figure, and Majors also brings his pain, loneliness, and sadness to light in a way that is both electrifying and moving. While ‘Magazine Dreams’ and Majors’ portrayal are both extreme in many ways, Killian’s broken nature is not.

    Final Thoughts

    Jonathan Majors stars in 'Magazine Dreams'. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.
    Jonathan Majors stars in ‘Magazine Dreams’. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.

    The release of ‘Magazine Dreams’ brings up a question that has bedeviled society for almost a decade in the wake of #MeToo and its cultural impact: can people pay their debt to society, be forgiven as a result, and resume their lives and careers? There’s no definitive answer to that, and in a way, the movie itself echoes those concerns: can a person climb out of an abyss that’s at least partially self-imposed, achieve peace, and find a way to flourish in the world?

    The resolution is ultimately as uncertain for Killian Maddox as it is for the actor who portrays him, and on a moviegoing level, the age-old dilemma of separating the art from the artist is fully in play here. But if you can do that, ‘Magazine Dreams’ is a flawed, somewhat shaky, yet spellbinding experience that encapsulates the loneliness of living in a world where aspirations, connection, and serenity often elude our grasp.

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    What is the plot of ‘Magazine Dreams’?

    A lonely, deeply troubled aspiring bodybuilder (Jonathan Majors) pursues his dreams of fame and celebrity while also looking for human connection. But the damage he’s doing to both his body and psyche soon lead him to spiral down a dark, rage-fueled path.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Magazine Dreams’?

    • Jonathan Majors as Killian Maddox
    • Haley Bennett as Jessie
    • Harrison Page as William Lattimore
    • Harriet Sansom Harris as Patricia Waldron
    • Taylour Paige as Pink Coat
    • Mike O’Hearn as Brad Vanderhorn
    Jonathan Majors stars in 'Magazine Dreams'. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.
    Jonathan Majors stars in ‘Magazine Dreams’. Photo: Briarcliff Entertainment.

    List of Jonathan Majors Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Magazine Dreams’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Jonathan Majors Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Till’

    Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley and Whoopi Goldberg as Alma Carthan in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley and Whoopi Goldberg as Alma Carthan in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Out now in theaters, ‘Till’ has a powerful, shocking and important story to tell, but the film delivering the message isn’t always quite up to the task and occasionally dips into such earnestness that it verges on parody.

    The horrific lynching of Black teen Emmett Louis Till in Mississippi in 1955 remains both a terrible stain on human history and the spur for real, positive change in American race relations, mostly thanks to his crusading mother, Mamie Till-Mobley.

    What really makes the movie work is a full-power lead performance from actress Danielle Deadwyler, who completely owns the role of Mamie and absolutely holds your attention in a vice grip whenever she is on screen.

    The movie chronicles what happened when 14-year-old Emmett travelled from Chicago to Mississippi to visit his uncle and cousins. A worried Mamie – her anxiety at her son being away for an extended period of time understandably heightened by the seething racism pervading much of the South – packs him off on the train after numerous warnings about not attracting attention and being careful how he interacts with white people.

    Emmett, though, a vivacious, bright and sweet lad (played well here by Jalyn Hall) is mostly excited to be taking the trip and to hang out with his cousins. Frustrated by spending long hours in the sun picking cotton, he’s happier making everyone laugh.

    Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures.
    Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Andre Wagner / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    That evening, the group heads to a local store to enjoy cokes and conversation. Emmett heads in to buy candy. Working the counter is the nervy Carolyn Bryant (Haley Bennett), who is none too thrilled when Emmett compliments her by telling her she looks like a movie star. It’s an innocent encounter for him but compounded when he later wolf-whistles at her.

    Carolyn goes for a gun and the customers scramble, but while Emmett is convinced that the incident has blown over with no repercussions, tragedy strikes when a group of white men, including Bryant’s husband, Roy (Sean Michael Weber), and his half-brother J.W. Milam (Eric Whitten) abduct him from his uncle’s house at gun point.

    Emmett is tortured and lynched (the film chooses to have this happen mostly offscreen), and his bloated, scarred and ruined body shows up in a river days later.

    A heartbroken Mamie insists on having her son’s body sent back to Chicago, displayed in an open casket without his injuries being repaired, and allowing pictures to be sent out. Her hope is to spur the arm of justice and to bring such racist attacks to a wider audience.

    Teaming up with the NAACP and Civil Rights crusaders such as Medgar Evers (played by Tosin Cole), Mamie travels to Mississippi to speak at Bryant and Milam’s trial, hoping against hope that a jury composed entirely of old White men will actually deliver a guilty verdict.

    Director Chinonye Chukwu and actor Jalyn Hill on the set of TILL, released by Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Director Chinonye Chukwu and actor Jalyn Hill on the set of TILL, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    As history records, it doesn’t work out that way – even later, when the men confessed to the crime in a magazine interview and still remained free – but the stage was set for the eventual passing of the Civil Rights Act in 1957 and, with a typically slow crawl on such matters, the introduction of the Emmett Till Antilynching Act, which made lynching a Federal hate crime, this year.

    It is the sort of story that demands faithfulness and care, and director Chinonye Chukwu certainly delivers on that front, eschewing showy style and (usually) unnecessary dramatics to bring it to life.

    Working with co-writers Michael Reilly and Keith Beauchamp, she largely allows the importance of the message to shine through, but the real ace up her sleeve is her leading actor.

    Deadwyler is a revelation here: she has been working for years and impressed recently in Western ‘The Harder They Fall’. But in ‘Till’, she’s on another level, by turns crusading and crushed, human and heroic.

    She’s so magnetic, the movie sometimes suffers when she’s not on screen. Mamie is truly put through the wringer in this narrative, and Deadwyler has the skill to make every moment work. She is endlessly watchable whether she’s interacting with her son or keening over his battered body.

    Director Chinonye Chukwu and actor Danielle Deadwyler on the set of TILL, released by Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Director Chinonye Chukwu and actor Danielle Deadwyler on the set of TILL, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Andre Wagner / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    We’ll be surprised if her name doesn’t crop up in awards talk as a real Best Actress contender, such is the impressive level of work on display here. Directors will hopefully be beating down her door to cast her after this.

    Which is not to say the rest of the ensemble is in any way lacking. As mentioned, Hall infuses Emmett with such joyous life that his slaying is all the more tragic. Whoopi Goldberg, in a smaller role as Mamie’s own mother (she also co-produced the movie), is quietly powerful when called upon, though her character somewhat fades into the background when Mamie heads to Mississippi.

    On the troublesome side, the movie does tend to dip into indulgence at times, scenes and certain shots left to linger long past when they should have cut away. Other editing choices are confusing, scenes cutting away abruptly when they needed room to breathe.

    One or two of the performances also verge on cliched and overwrought. The issues with the movie don’t dilute the power of the message, though, and if you only know the tale Emmett Till as a vague, troubling moment in history, this is a way to educate yourself.

    If films such as this can sometimes feel like you’re being told to eat your vegetables, the story itself is worth digging into, as relevant today as it ever was. Which might be one of the saddest truths of all.

    ‘Till’ receives 3.5 out of 5 stars.

    Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till and Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till and Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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  • ‘Till’ Interviews: Danielle Deadwyler and Jalyn Hall

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    Opening in theaters on October 14th is the new biographical drama ‘Till,’ which was directed by Chinonye Chukwu (‘Clemency’) and is based on the heartbreaking true story of Emmet Till.

    The film tells the true story of 14-year-old Emmet Till (Jalyn Hall), who in 1955 traveled from Chicago to Mississippi and was murdered by white supremacists. The story also follows the aftermath of the tragedy and how Emmet’s mother, Mamie (Danielle Deadwyler) became an educator and activist in the Civil Rights Movement following her son’s death.

    In addition to Hall and Deadwyler, the cast also includes Frankie Faison, Jayme Lawson, Tosin Cole, Haley Bennett, and Oscar-winner Whoopi Goldberg.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Danielle Deadwyler and Jalyn Hall about their work on ‘Till,’ the true story it is based on, approaching their roles, and what they hope audiences learn from the film.

    Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till and Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till and Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Deadwyler, Hall, and director Chinonye Chukwu.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Danielle, what does it mean for you personally to be a part of a project like this, and how did your research help you prepare for this role?

    Danielle Deadwyler: This project is a part of a continuum of my experience in being a recipient of the legacy of civil rights. I’m from Atlanta. My family attended Cascade United Methodist Church, where the pastor at the time was Dr. Joseph Lowry. Dr. Joseph Lowry had the relationship with Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, and they started the SCLC, which is the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

    And that is where I did years along with my siblings of volunteer work and learned about organizing and learned about civil rights. I learned about the contributions of SCLC to the Civil Rights Movement, and from women who are unsung in a way that Mamie Till is unsung.

    So, all of that connects to Mamie Till, and that Dr. King was deeply impacted by her, Rosa Parks was deeply impacted by here, and by the choices that she made at this time. So, all of that personal history for me and experience goes into my understanding, my own spiritual personal research of what this project, what Mamie Till’s role was historically, and within the context of this, based on the true story narrative.

    In conjunction to that, there was just a host of other resources that I dove into, be them archival images, photographs, videos, a wealth of academic thesis, music, poetry, all kinds of stuff. As well as personal anecdotes that come from people, Chicagoans who had Interfacings with Mamie Till in the latter years of her life.

    Also talking with Keith Beauchamp, who was a mentee of Mamie, and was one of our producers and a co-writer of the film. So, I’ve just had a super well rounded, spiritual, familial, personal, academic, artistic resource well that enabled me to have as much as I could to go into this role with.

    Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures.
    Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Andre Wagner / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    MF: Jalyn, what does it mean to you personally to be part of a project like this?

    Jalyn Hall: This project means so much to me in a sense of, I myself am only one year older than how old Emmett was when these series of events happened. So, it’s that seeing myself in this person, in this child, and having the same personality traits, love for my mom, love for my family, love for the world in general, and just wanting to be happy and have fun.

    So, being able to portray that in such a manner so that the whole world can see this human being, this human child for who he was, was something that was so important to not only me, but to my team, my family, and my community in general. That’s something that wasn’t always shown.

    Unfortunately, not everyone knows about the story, but those who do know only know a little bit, a tiny fraction of who he was. Or not even who he was, but what happened to him that changed the world, that started revolutions. But not him as a single person. Not his relationship with his mother, not the love that his mother had for him, and what that made her do.

    So, it’s understanding the essence of these two people and what actually happened. That authenticity is amazing, and that’s what it is to me. It’s the authentic story that people can learn, educate, feel, connect with, and take back whatever it is that they do.

    MF: Finally, what do you hope audiences take away from Emmett’s story?

    JH: They will take back whatever is significant to them, and they will change in whatever way is unique to them. But hopefully just knowing the love and unity that was shown between Emmett and his mother and seeing the love and unity that was not shown from others in Mississippi at that time.

    Seeing the loving unity around people today, around themselves, around their people, around their family, around others, and just seeing where that came from and where it will go in the future. So, hopefully they see that. Hopefully they come back with knowing that.

    Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley and Whoopi Goldberg as Alma Carthan in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley and Whoopi Goldberg as Alma Carthan in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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  • New Photos from True-Life Drama ‘Till’

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    The tragic real-life murder of Emmett Till in 1955 is one that still resonates today. And United Artists’ ‘Till’ chronicles the story of his mother’s fight for justice.

    ‘Till’ stars Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till-Mobley, who was the mother in question.

    You can find the trailer above, which features emotional narration from Deadwyler’s Till-Mobley, and new images both from the film and behind the scenes are now available below.

    14-year-old Till (played in the film by Jalyn Hall) travelled from Chicago to Mississippi to spend time with his cousins. Till was abducted and killed in 1955 after a white woman, Carolyn Bryant Donham, falsely accused him of whistling at her, grabbing her, and making lewd remarks toward her in a store.

    Two white men, J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant, later kidnapped, tortured, and murdered Till. They were acquitted that year by an all-white, all-male jury, but later confessed to killing Till in an interview with Look magazine. And Donham later admitted that she fabricated the encounter with Till.

    Till-Mobley’s insistence on an open casket funeral for her battered teenage son at the hands of a white mob became a galvanizing moment that helped lead to the creation of the civil rights movement. The likes of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks both cited Till’s death as fueling their own activism.

    Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures.
    Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Andre Wagner / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    The film is based on the extensive research of award-winning documentarian Keith Beauchamp and his relationship with Mamie Till-Mobley and Emmett Till’s cousin, Simeon Wright. Latter was an eyewitness to the kidnapping of Till and served as a consultant to the project before his death in 2017.

    Director Chinonye Chukwu wrote the script with Beauchamp and Michael Reilly and started shooting the film last September in Atlanta. The cast for this one also includes Frankie Faison, Haley Bennett, Whoopi Goldberg, Jayme Lawson, Tosin Cole, Kevin Carroll, Sean Patrick Thomas, John Douglas Thompson and Roger Guenveur Smith.

    “I am deeply honored to be telling this story and working with such an incredible producing team,” Chukwu said in a statement when the movie was first announced. “Amidst the pain and brutality that is inherent to Mamie and Emmett’s story, I intend to delve deeply into their humanities, the love and joy they shared, and the activist consciousness that grows within Mamie as she seeks justice for her son.”

    “Today the return of open racism reminds us that the real danger is in not telling Emmett Till’s story,” Whoopi Goldberg, who also produces the film alongside ‘Bond’ veteran Barbara Broccoli, adds. “Chinonye Chukwu taking the helm as our director is an opportunity for us to step forward artfully and without fear to tell the truth. We could not be in better hands.”

    The movie will premiere at this year’s New York Film Festival, with screenings planned for high school students in the city and across America with post-film conversations as part of an educational initiative.

    ‘Till’ will be in select theaters on October 14th, before going wide from October 28th.

    Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till and Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Jalyn Hall as Emmett Till and Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley and Whoopi Goldberg as Alma Carthan in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Danielle Deadwyler as Mamie Till Bradley and Whoopi Goldberg as Alma Carthan in TILL, directed by Chinonye Chukwu, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    Director Chinonye Chukwu and actor Danielle Deadwyler on the set of TILL, released by Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Director Chinonye Chukwu and actor Danielle Deadwyler on the set of TILL, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Andre Wagner / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    Director Chinonye Chukwu and actor Jalyn Hill on the set of TILL, released by Orion Pictures.
    (L to R) Director Chinonye Chukwu and actor Jalyn Hill on the set of TILL, released by Orion Pictures. Credit: Lynsey Weatherspoon / Orion Pictures. © 2022 ORION PICTURES RELEASING LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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  • Movie Review: ‘Cyrano’

    (L to R) Haley Bennett and Peter Dinklage in 'Cyrano'
    (L to R) Haley Bennett and Peter Dinklage in
    ‘Cyrano’

    After a one-week run in Los Angeles beginning December 17th, the new musical comedy ‘Cyrano,’ which is based on the 2018 stage musical of the same name, will open in wide release on January 28th. Directed by Joe Wright (‘Darkest Hour’), the musical is loosely based on the 1897 play ‘Cyrano de Bergerac,’ and stars Peter Dinklage (‘Avengers: Infinity War’) in the title role as a man unable of telling his true love how he really feels and instead helps another man win her love. In addition to Dinklage, the film also stars Haley Bennett (‘The Magnificent Seven’), Kelvin Harrison Jr. (‘Ender’s Game’), and Ben Mendelsohn (‘Captain Marvel’). The result is a really fun, entertaining and romantic musical comedy with unforgettable songs and a powerful performance from Peter Dinklage.

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    Just like the original play, the film is set in 1640 Paris and begins with the introduction of the beautiful Roxane (Bennet), who attends a play with De Guiche (Mendelsohn), an officer in the French Army. The play is quickly interrupted by Cyrano de Bergerac (Dinklage), a cadet who is hopelessly in love with Roxane and trying to impress her. However, Roxane soon meets another cadet named Christian (Harrison Jr.) and falls instantly in love. She asks her Cyrano to introduce her to Christian and he reluctantly agrees. Christian has feelings for Roxanne too, but is too shy to talk to her. Eventually, Christian asks Cyrano for help winning Roxane’s love by writing romantic letters to her on his behalf. Fearing that Roxane could never love him because of his diminutive size, which has made him an outcast, Cyrano reluctantly agrees even though it breaks his heart. Meanwhile, De Guiche also has his eye on Roxane as well and threatens her new romance when he sends the cadets to the frontlines of the war. Roxane asks Cyrano to watch over Christian, but when he discovers Cyrano’s true feelings for her, it will threaten both of their lives.

    Full disclosure, I had no idea this film was a musical when I saw it, I only knew that it was based on the classic literary character. I was pleasantly surprised at what a wonderful, fun and entertaining film this turned out to be. Joe Wright, who is best known for his movies like ‘Atonement’ and ‘The Darkest Hour,’ creates a large and colorful world with beautiful camera movements and an impressive production design. What really stuck with me is how unforgettable the music in the film is, which was composed by members of The National, Aaron and Bryce Dessner. I wouldn’t be surprised if at least one of the songs from the film is nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song this year. One of the best numbers in the film comes toward the middle of the third act and features Cyrano, Christian and their fellow soldiers signing as they prepare for war. The music is haunting and the way the sequence is cut together really highlights the significance of the moment. Also, keep an eye in this scene for ‘Once’ star Glen Hansard who plays one of the soldiers. The film’s opening number, “Someone to Say,” is also a show-stopper and a fun start to the movie.

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    One of the clever concepts of the film, and the musical that it is based on, is that Cyrano is not an outcast because he has a large nose, but rather because of his size. This works exceedingly well, obviously because of the actor playing the role, but also because the old concept for making Cyrano an outcast seems so silly now. But Peter Dinklage plays the role beautifully giving his character other reasons for the way he is treated besides his size, such as his attitude and crass demeanor. But Cyrano is also kind of a badass in this version, with Dinklage’s character being a master fighter and marksman, and someone others would not want to cross. He also plays the character like he’s the smartest person in the room, which he usually is, and adds to his elitist attitude. The actor gives an absolutely brilliant performance and is definitely a frontrunner for an Academy Award nomination. I was also impressed with his singing ability, as the actor can carry quite a tune and is really terrific in all the musical numbers.

    Unfortunately, the same can’t be said for Ben Mendelsohn who has very strong acting scenes but struggles with his one musical number. The character is really the heavy in the film, a role the actor portrays well, so he really didn’t really need to have a song at all. That being said, no one plays a villain better than Mendelsohn and he is clearly having fun in his menacing role. In any retelling of this story, Christian is kind of a thankless role and Kelvin Harrison Jr. imbues the character with an innocence and naivety that makes him both vulnerable and relatable to the audience. Who hasn’t felt insecure around someone they are attracted to? As the attention of everyone’s affection, actress Haley Bennet is very sweet and charming, as well as a bit devious in the role. She is believable as a woman desired by several different suiters, but also totally believable as a woman who wants to choose her own destiny and find independence of her own. The actress is a very impressive singer and has great chemistry with Dinklage and Harrison.

    Obviously, the Cyrano de Bergerac story has been adapted to film several times before, probably most memorably in Steve Martin’s 1987 comedy classic ‘Roxanne.’ While that was a modern-day adaption, oddly, ‘Cyrano’ seems like a more relatable film in 2021, even though it is set in 1640. The important issues the film tackles, the performances and the music give the movie a relatable feeling for today’s audience. The screenplay by Erica Schmidt is smart and funny and translates the material superbly. The film itself is gorgeous to watch, thanks to Seamus McGarvey’s sweeping cinematography. In the end, director Joe Wright delivered a fantastic rom-com musical based on the most unlikely source material, with wonderful songs and a career-highlight performance form Peter Dinklage.

    ‘Cyrano’ receives 4 out of 5 stars.

  • Haley Bennett In Talks for Ron Howard’s ‘Hillbilly Elegy’

    Haley Bennett In Talks for Ron Howard’s ‘Hillbilly Elegy’

    Universal Pictures

    The cast for Ron Howard‘s adaptation of “Hillbilly Elegy” is shaping up:

    Haley Bennett, whose films include “The Girl on the Train” and “The Magnificent Seven,” is in in early talks to join Amy Adams, Glenn Close and Gabriel Basso in the Netflix’s adaptation of the best-selling book.

    The story is about a three generations of an Appalachian family as told by its youngest member (who’ll be played by Basso), a Yale law student forced to return to his hometown

    “The Shape of Water” screenwriter Vanessa Taylor adapted the script. Howard, Brian Grazer and Karen Lunder are producing for Imagine Entertainment.

    Bennett has two other Netflix films in the pipeline: The thriller “The Devil All the Time,” with Robert Pattinson and Bill Skarsgard, and “The Red Sea Diving Resort” with Chris Evans and Ben Kingsley.

    [Via Variety]

  • Have You Seen the Florida Teen Who Looks Just Like Jennifer Lawrence?

    No, that is not an old brunette photo of Jennifer Lawrence. It’s a photo of 17-year-old Alexia Maier of Ponte Vedra, Florida. And here we thought Haley Bennett was a close match!

    Alexia Maier has been getting a lot of attention in the past month, which is probably a good thing, since her Instagram bio says she’s a “Signed Actress/Model.” Is it a good thing, though, that she looks nearly identical to an already established actress? If someone needs to cast Jennifer Lawrence’s younger sister, they need look no further.

    Alexia told the Daily Mail she gets stopped on the street from fans thinking she’s the 27-year-old Oscar winner:

    “At first I thought it was a joke when people started saying I looked like Jennifer Lawrence. But when I started getting dozens of comments about my JLaw similarities, I started to realize it myself. In my hometown, people know they’re not going to see a real celebrity, so I’ve been told I look like her, but never confused. But when visiting New York, people will ask me for autographs. I think one of my favorite examples is when a woman said ‘Jennifer, I’m your biggest fan!’ I told her, ‘I’m not Jennifer!’ but the woman immediately said, ‘are you sure?’ I’ll never forget her reaction.”

    You know what? Send this non-Jennifer Lawrence out to meet Jennifer Lawrence fans, since the real one clearly hates to talk to them.

    Alexia told the Daily Mail she’s not even a big Jennifer Lawrence fan herself, but she knows the actress has definitely impacted her life in ways good and bad:

    “I got a lot of attention in the first couple years of high school because of my similarities to her. I was also subjected to a lot of online attention when I was pretty young, good and bad, but both have managed to help shape me as a person.”

    You can check out her Instagram to see how much she looks like JLaw — with blonde or brown hair — in some photos more than others:

    *posts another selfie bc make up is bomb af*

    A post shared by Alexia Maier (@alxmai) on

    Totally not in the bathroom pretending to be a supermodel ????????

    A post shared by Alexia Maier (@alxmai) on

    Outtake from a shoot last year with the absolutely amazing @AntPad for News Dog Media

    A post shared by Alexia Maier (@alxmai) on

    Rainbow – A Light in the Black

    A post shared by Alexia Maier (@alxmai) on

    Maybe Alexia should not only meet Jen’s fans for her, she should be the one to start wearing Mystique’s blue paint? All of these JLaw problems, instantly solved!

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