Tag: harry-styles

  • ‘The Apology’ Interview: Linus Roache Talks New Thriller

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    Opening in theaters on December 16th and streaming on Shudder and AMC+ simultaneously is the new thriller ‘The Apology,’ from writer and director Alison Star Locke.

    The new movie stars Anna Gunn (‘Breaking Bad’) as Darlene Hagen, a recovering alcoholic preparing for a family Christmas celebration, twenty-years after the disappearance of her daughter.

    On Christmas Eve, Darlene is unexpectedly visited by her estranged ex-brother-in-law, Jack (Linus Roache), who has been keeping a dark secret for decades. When the truth is revealed, and the two are trapped together by a dangerous storm, Darlene must fight for her life to survive.

    In addition to Gunn and Roache, the movie also features Janeane Garofalo (‘Wet Hot American Summer’).

    British actor Linus Roache is probably best known for his role as ADA Michael Cutter on NBC’s ‘Law & Order’ and ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,’ as well as playing Thomas Wayne in Christopher Nolan’s ‘Batman Begins.’

    Most recently the actor has appeared in such critically acclaimed movies as ‘Mandy’ opposite Oscar-winner Nicolas Cage and ‘My Policeman,’ where he played the older version of Harry Styles’ character.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Linus Roache about his work on ‘The Apology,’ his intense character, why he felt like rehearsing a play, and working with Anna Gunn, as well as making ‘My Policeman’ and sharing a role with Harry Styles.

    Linus Roache as Jack Kingsley in the thriller, 'The Apology.'
    Linus Roache as Jack Kingsley in the thriller, ‘The Apology,’ an RLJE Films, Shudder and AMC+ release. Photo courtesy of RLJE Films /Shudder/AMC+.

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

    Moviefone: To begin with, how did you get involved with this project and what was your first reaction to the screenplay?

    Linus Roache: Well, first of all, I got it as a direct offer with a beautiful letter from Alison Star Locke, the writer and director. I think she’d seen my work, and knew my work way back from the early days of a movie I did called ‘Priest,’ but also quite recently from ‘Mandy.’ I think she thought with that range of character that I might be able to do the job.

    I was very honored that she came to me with it, actually. When I read it, I was in a bit of shock. I was just kind of like, “Oh my God, this is very intense. What’s it going to be like to take this on?’ Then I just talked with her and I realized what a great person she is, and what a gifted writer she is. I felt this sense of trust and I thought, “Well, I’ve always liked to push the edge with what I do, try new things and go places I haven’t been. I’m on board.” So, I signed up. That’s why I did it.

    MF: Can you talk about your approach to playing the character, and since it is such an intense role, were you ever exhausted on set?

    LR: That’s a great question and I think there was a lot of anticipation around it. There was a lot of talking. We had a lot of Zoom rehearsals and conversations, and really understood the world that we were in and the dynamics of it. For a while I was chewing on Jack and just dealing with the darkness of his actions. There’s not a thing that you can condone about him as a person, but something broke.

    It was actually my wife who helped me see his pathology, he can only see himself as a good guy. He actually can’t take responsibility. So, the level of denial is so strong that for him, everything is just turned into, “I’m not a bad man, I’m not a bad guy.”

    What happened is it was an accident. So, he’s reinterpreted the past. Once I understood that, it gave me a through line and a key to how to play the role. It kind of kept me steady. Then I think that’s the theme of the movie, isn’t it? What it takes to get someone to be accountable and take responsibility, and she’s doubled down on that idea. It’s a brilliant idea, I think, for a movie.

    MF: Can you talk about Jack and Darlene’s dynamic at the beginning of the movie, and how that changes once he reveals his secret?

    LR: Well, I haven’t seen the movie by the way. I just work and I don’t watch what I do. But based on what we did and what was written, I always thought it should feel a little bit like Jude Law in ‘The Holiday’ turning up. It’s like, Christmas Eve, this nice guy walks in the door and they have this history, and anything could happen kind of feeling.

    It’s just this complex history that Alison did a beautiful job of layering into the script. We have all these touchstones of being an ex-brother-in-law and our children being connected. So, there’s just these layers and the two characters are very much dancing around each other. He’s in such avoidance that he’s willing to sleep with her again and she almost falls for it. So, it’s nicely sort of set up. Then of course, he didn’t come there for that really. He came for a different motive. So, that’s really the setup, I suppose.

    Anna Gunn as Darlene Hagen, and Linus Roache as Jack Kingsley in the thriller, 'The Apology,;
    (L to R) Anna Gunn as Darlene Hagen, and Linus Roache as Jack Kingsley in the thriller, ‘The Apology,’ an RLJE Films, Shudder and AMC+ release. Photo courtesy of RLJE Films /Shudder/AMC+.

    MF: Most of the film features just you and Anna Gunn on screen. What was it like working with her and did it ever feel like you were rehearsing for a play rather than making a movie?

    LR: It was very much like a play. In fact, I think it would make a wonderful play, actually. We rehearsed as much as we could because it was pandemic times. We did a lot of working on Zoom and just making sure we were comfortable understanding the world where we’re coming from. Interestingly enough, when it came to shoot it, you never quite know how things are going to go.

    We very much instinctually just left each other alone, which was actually very cool, because that meant that all the drama, everything just happens on camera. We’re not over talking it, we’re not overthinking it. We’re not trying to look after each other. You know what I mean? It was very much everything we did was on camera and it was happening there, and then we just left it and walked away, which actually is a great way to work. I like working like that.

    MF: Have you worked like that a lot? Is that common or uncommon?

    LR: No. It completely depends who your scene partner is, and what the dynamics are. I remember with Nicolas Cage in ‘Mandy,’ we chatted early on about the two roles. Then very quickly Nic said, “I think maybe it’d be better if we didn’t hang out and talk too much.” It was just such a relief that we would literally sit on set six feet apart from each other and not say a word, and then we’d just go on camera and do it. It brings something. So, I’m actually a fan of that, but only if someone else is too. It depends who you’re working with.

    MF: Can you talk about working with director Alison Star Locke on her debut feature film?

    LR: Ally, I think she’s an incredibly gifted writer, so she’d written something that was so strong. Its foundation was very firm. Then, this is low budget filmmaking and sometimes I think we felt like we could have had a bit more time to do some of the action oriented things, they got cut down.

    That’s always a painful part of movie making sometimes. But nevertheless, again, I haven’t seen it, but I felt like Ally was smart and she had wonderful producers around us, supporting her to make sure that what she’d written could be translated and shot in the time that we had. So, I believe we did that.

    Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: Finally, I really enjoyed your performance in ‘My Policeman.’ What was it like for you working on that project, and did you have to study Harry Styles, since you were playing the older version of his character?

    LR: Well, thanks for that question. Yes, I was very proud to be part of that project and very happy when Michael (Grandage) asked me to do it. We did talk a little bit about how we were going to connect these two worlds of the 1990s and the ’50s? Was I going to imitate Harry Styles? Michael made a very astute and really valid point that when 40 years have passed, are we really the same person 40 years later? No, we’re not.

    So, it kind of released us of the burden of trying to imitate the younger person, which would’ve been hard. But because they shot mostly in sequence, Michael shot the 1950s stuff first. I got to watch some of Harry’s stuff. What I learned from what Harry was doing was he was just very honest. He’s very simple, very interested and open. I thought, “Well, even though I’m playing the man who’s trapped and shut down for 40 years, I’m playing the result of what happens in the ’50s.”

    I just wanted to bring my own simplicity and honesty to the role. I think it works. It’s interesting. Otherwise, Michael would’ve aged Emma Corrin, Harry Stiles and David Dawson, and they would’ve put lots of latex on them and aged them up. It’s quite nice that you see they’re different people 40 years later.

    Anna Gunn as Darlene Hagen in the thriller, 'The Apology.'
    Anna Gunn as Darlene Hagen in the thriller, ‘The Apology,’ an RLJE Films, Shudder and AMC+ release. Photo courtesy of RLJE Films /Shudder/AMC+.
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  • ‘My Policeman’ Interviews: Michael Grandage and Gina McKee

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    Opening in theaters on October 21st and streaming on Prime Video November 4th is the new romantic drama ‘My Policeman,’ from director Michael Grandage.

    First set in 1950s Brighton, a gay policeman, Tom Burgess (Harry Styles), marries schoolteacher Marion Taylor (Emma Corrin) while being in a relationship with Patrick Hazlewood (David Dawson), a museum curator.

    The secret they share threatens to ruin them all and continues for decades, with a flash-forward to the late 1990s depicting an older Marion (Gina McKee) now caring for the ailing Patrick (Rupert Everett), against Tom’s (Linus Roache) wishes.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Michael Grandage and actress Gina McKee about their work on ‘My Policeman,’ why Grandage wanted to make the movie, setting the movie in two separate timelines, the pain and regret that Marion feels, why she chooses to help Patrick, and how McKee worked with actress Emma Corrin to create the character.

    Gina McKee and Rupert Everett star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Rupert Everett star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    You can read the full interviews below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with director Michael Grandage and Gina McKee about ‘My Policeman.’

    Moviefone: To begin with, as a director, what excited you about this project and what were some of the themes that you wanted to explore with this movie?

    Michael Grandage: Well, it’s always great when you think you can bring something of a personal voice to something. I was born in the England that this movie is set in, and the law didn’t change until I was quite young. When it did, there were years of prejudice left after it.

    I kind of thought it would be lovely to be able to make something quite apart from all of the cinematic reasons I wanted to make it, quite apart from all the thematic reasons, it would also be wonderful to make a movie that might be part of a slightly bigger debate. Because in spite of all of the wonderful advances that have been made, that I’m very proud of over the last 40 years by the LGBTQ+ community, I think for the moment it’s feeling a little fragile.

    I think right now it would be great to have a film in the consciousness of young people that helps them understand a little bit about what it’s like if you live in a society where you can’t be free to be yourself. So, for me, and I haven’t even touched on the answer to your question about all of the aesthetic and creative reasons, but that’s one big reason why I’d love to make a movie that is part of something that I think is important right now.

    MF: Can you talk about the challenges of setting the movie in two separate timelines?

    MG: Yeah, I mean for me, I actually see it almost as three because you can’t help but take the timeline you are in and watch it through the prism of 2022. You watch a film that takes place 23 years ago in 1999, and then beyond that. In a way, you go on some brief moment of time travel right up to the present to see what has changed from a societal point of view. I think that’s also helpful as part of the bigger picture.

    But the biggest reason I wanted to do it was because of the fact that I believe that missing 40 years in the film, I think we change hugely in our personalities in a period like that. I was wanting to explore the whole notion of time and memory and what it does and how, sometimes, it only seems like yesterday. The reason we have that phrase is sometimes it does, and other days it absolutely doesn’t.

    So, there’s a little moment when Rupert Everett’s character in the film is getting his pills from Gina McKee, and he looks up at Gina and just in a tiny flash he sees the younger Marion looking down at him. Because that’s what memory sometimes does, that’s how memory works, that’s how time works. But it’s a brief fleeting moment, and I think you can only do that if you’re playing with the two time periods.

    I knew I wanted to use it very fleetingly, the whole way you bring the one time period into another time period. I barely use it at all, but it’s there as a kind of unspoken thing, if you like.

    David Dawson, Emma Corrin, and Harry Styles star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) David Dawson, Emma Corrin, and Harry Styles star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: Gina, could talk about the pain and the regret that Marion has lived with through all these years?

    Gina McKee: I think that’s a really good starting point because as you may have established already, we meet three people in the 1950s, who are brought together by love and divided by prejudice. The things that they experience with each other and the things that they do for and against one another indelibly marks them. So, there’s a lot. All three characters have regret and certainly a huge amount of pain. In Marion’s case, a massive learning curve.

    She also has a huge sense of duty and love. The bond of love brings her together with Tom, and they find solace in that love. But I think ultimately, the courage to face the past is something that completely drew me to the film. What happens when somebody like that doesn’t continue to seek refuge, who says, “No, we’ve got to check this out. We’ve got to look at this.” I think that’s a wonderful dynamic and ultimately for me, a very hopeful thing.

    MF: Why does Marion decide to help Patrick, all these years later, even against Tom’s own wishes?

    GM: Because she has to, there’s no way forward. They’re in a holding pattern and that can’t continue. You’ve got a woman who is now in retirement and it’s now or never. So, I think that there is lots of forms of love and I think Marion’s duty to Tom is absolute. Sometimes, the way she interprets duty is completely screwed up as you see in the movie.

    But that is really the heart of her motivation. Then, what continues for decades is duty. It is a strong bond that they have, but it’s a bond which is about solace as opposed to moving forward. Those elements are really potent.

    MF: Finally, since you are playing the older version of Marion, did you work at all with Emma Corrin, who plays the younger version, to establish a connection between the two performance?

    GM: Emma Corrin and I, because it was COVID protocols, we couldn’t physically meet. We were in separate bubbles. But we did talk on the phone. We also all had a collective Zoom conversation, which was quite extensive and that was really useful. We talked with Michael Grandage, our director, who became a brilliant conduit.

    Also, I had the good fortune to look at about three or four of her scenes that Emma shot already, because they shot the 1950s stuff first. That was a brilliant resource. I also checked out as much as I could of Emma’s work and studied elements of the way she has a fantastic ability to watch and listen, and that comes across in her work enormously. So, those elements absorbed hopefully by osmosis. I found them really useful.

    Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.
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  • Movie Review: ‘Don’t Worry Darling’

    Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s 'Don't Worry Darling,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Merrick Morton. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Ent. Inc. All rights reserved.

    Releasing in theaters this week, Olivia Wilde’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling’ has been dogged by behind-the-scenes and tabloid drama, but the movie itself stands apart from all of that and proves that her debut, ‘Booksmart’, was no fluke.

    And the new film is a very, very different beast from that initial offering, swapping charming, warm coming-of-age antics and slapstick humor for paranoia, gaslighting and a theme that would feel right at home in a thriller from the 1970s.

    We’re introduced to Alice Chambers (Florence Pugh) and husband Jack (Harry Styles) who count themselves lucky to be living in the idealized community of Victory, the experimental company town housing the men who work for the highly top secret Victory Project and their families.

    The 1950’s societal optimism espoused by their boss Frank (Chris Pine) – who is equal parts corporate visionary and motivational life coach – influences every aspect of daily life in the tight-knit desert utopia, which is seemingly carved from the landscape in California’s Palm Springs.

    While the husbands spend every day inside the Victory Project Headquarters, working on the “development of progressive materials,” their wives, including Frank’s elegant partner, Shelley (Gemma Chan) fill their time enjoying the beauty, luxury and debauchery of their community. Life is perfect, with every resident’s needs met by the company. All they ask in return is discretion and unquestioning commitment to the Victory cause.

    Harry Styles and Florence Pugh in 'Don't Worry Darling.'
    (L-r) Harry Styles as Jack and Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All rights reserved. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.

    Alice and Jack are initially thrilled with their lives, sizzling with sexual chemistry and barely able to keep their hands off each other when they’re at home, and at one point in Frank’s bedroom during a party.

    Even though it might seem repetitive – Jack heads off to work, Alice cleans the house and busies herself with cooking, ballet and shopping – it’s so comfortable that no-one questions it. Until Alice starts to.

    She’s spurred by the behavior of another wife, KiKi Layne’s Margaret, who has been having serious second thoughts after taking her son out to the restricted desert area outside the community, where he disappeared and is seemingly dead.

    As Margaret’s actions grow more out of keeping with everyone else, Alice starts to feel a tingling sense of paranoia. Is this idealized life she’s living as, well, ideal? And her sense of reality starts to crumble.

    Given that this is a psychological thriller, you know there will be something going on, but we won’t get into that here – the basic set-up is all you really need.

    Director/producer/actor Olivia Wilde and Chris Pine on the set of New Line Cinema’s 'Don't Worry Darling,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    (L-R) Director/producer/actor Olivia Wilde and Chris Pine on the set of New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Merrick Morton. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Wilde weaves a compelling, mysterious and stylish story, stretching a relatively thrifty $20-$30 million budget into an effective, layered world. She drip-feeds tension into the narrative from the off with the mysterious rumbles that shake the houses from time to time, written off by the residents as a side-effect of whatever the men are working on.

    She and her team have built something that looks and sounds fabulous, whether it’s cinematographer Matthew Libatique’s sun-bleached visions of this community with its pastel, mid-century modern houses or John Powell’s score, which dials up the creepiness as the narrative moves on. Together with the sound team, it creates a real feeling of unease.

    The script, from ‘Booksmart’s Katie Silberman, based on a story by her alongside Carey Van Dyke and Shane Van Dyke (yes, as in Dick Van Dyke – they’re his grandsons) serves as a solid example of the paranoia genre, crafting this world before challenging it.

    While ‘Booksmart’ explored female friendship and teenage frustration, ‘Darling’ switches genres and attitude, but still keeps the focus on the experiences of women, taking in divided gender expectations of the past and gaslighting.

    Pugh is, of course, fantastic, breathing conflicted life into Alice at every moment, whether she’s happily cooking up a roast, engaging in enthusiastic romance with her husband or seeing a plane crash in the desert that no one else wants to acknowledge.

    Styles isn’t quite on her level, but he brings a charm and eagerness to Jack that works for the character, and when he’s called upon to do more than that, he handles it effectively.

    Olivia Wilde as Bunny, Nick Kroll as Dean and Chris Pine as Frank in New Line Cinema’s 'Don't Worry Darling,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L-R) Olivia Wilde as Bunny, Nick Kroll as Dean and Chris Pine as Frank in New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Pine, meanwhile, is a smooth guru type, his voice full of a hypnotic, magnetic, confident smoothness that has everyone both ready to hang on his every word and yet remain slightly afraid of him.

    The rest of the cast fill their roles well too – Chan playing the alpha wife to the hilt, while Wilde is Alice’s best friend Bunny, an amusing and slightly sarcastic homemaker with two kids and a slight drinking problem (though given the 1950s period, everyone happily guzzles booze, so it’s not as noticeable to them).

    Despite being a key element of the story Layne doesn’t get as much to do, Margaret a slightly underserved character who edges towards cliché at times. It’s no fault of the actor, who brings a pained vulnerability to her role.

    As the truth begins to dawn on Alice, and on us, the pace speeds up and the overall effect unravels slightly, the final act never quite as compelling as the build-up, the various details undercut in a more straightforward action-focused finale.

    You might well figure out ahead of the characters what’s going on, and there are clues here and there sprinkled throughout the movie that verge on the less than subtle. Wilde has plenty of ideas that she wants to unpack, but not all of them arrive completely thought through – when the big revelations start to drop, the cracks in more than just Alice’s reality start to show and you’ll have questions not easily answered by the script.

    Yet it still doesn’t diminish what has gone before and Pugh remains as committed as ever, spurring you to empathize with Alice even as she worries that she might be losing her mind. It’s twisted, audacious and, at least until the end, surprising. Ignore the unnecessary noise around the movie and let it transport you.

    ‘Don’t Worry Darling’ receives 3.5 out of 5 stars.

    Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s 'Don't Worry Darling,' a Warner Bros.
    Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Merrick Morton. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Ent. Inc. All rights reserved.
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  • New Trailer For Romantic Drama ‘My Policeman’

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    His name has been all over the headlines of late, mostly thanks to the behind-the-scenes and press conference drama around ‘Don’t Worry Darling’. But Harry Styles has more than one film looking to grab audiences – and potentially awards – this year.

    And the new trailer for his other drama – forbidden love tale ‘My Policeman’ – has now arrived.

    Spanning two time periods and following its three central characters at different ages, ‘My Policeman’ adapts Bethan Roberts’ novel. With Ron Nyswaner, the man behind such well-regarded movies as ‘Philadelphia’ and ‘The Painted Veil’ writing the script here, and direction from Michael Grandage, it’s certainly positioned as a premium, awards-season possibility.

    The story is initially set in Britain in the 1950s. Police officer Tom (Styles), meets and falls for teacher Marion (Emma Corrin of ‘The Crown’). But while they’re very much in love, there’s a complication. Tom also starts a passionate relationship with museum curator Patrick (David Dawson).

    Though it looks like he might be able to balance the two sides of his romantic life, the pressure it puts on them all threatens to tear their friendship apart.

    And that’s never more evident then when the story moves to the 1990s (with Tom now played by Linus Roache, Marion by Gina McKee, and Patrick by Rupert Everett), where the three are still reeling with longing and regret, but now they have one last chance to repair the damage of the past.

    Harry Styles and Emma Corrin star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Harry Styles and Emma Corrin star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Courtesy of Prime Video. © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Possibly even more than ‘Darling’ (where the acting workload is reportedly more on Florence Pugh than Styles), this will be the chance for Styles to prove that he’s got what it takes to carry a drama where he’s at the core of the story.

    It’s hard to argue with the rest of the cast – Corrin has proved she’s got what it takes across screens big and small, while the likes of McKee, Everett and Roach are old hands at both drama and comedy.

    Grandage, meanwhile, is more known for his stage directing, but he’s got some movie work on his resume (including 2016’s ‘Genius’) and from the looks of this, he’s crafted a layered, visually distinctive film. And, of course, he knows how to draw emotive, effective performances from actors.

    With festival dates upcoming (see below), we’ll see how the movie goes over with initial audiences, though given its release being split between theaters and streaming, it’s likely not to have to worry so much about box office.

    The cast for ‘My Policeman’ also includes Andrew Tiernan, Jack Bandeira, Tristan Sturrock, Kadiff Kirwan, Richard Dempsey, Maddie Rice, Dora Davis, and Michael Ayala-Cole.

    Following premieres at the Toronto International Film Festival and the London Film Festival, the movie will be on limited release in theaters from October 21st before arriving on Prime Video on November 4th.

    Harry Styles, Emma Corrin, and David Dawson star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Harry Styles, Emma Corrin, and David Dawson star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Courtesy of Prime Video. © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Gina McKee and Rupert Everett star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Rupert Everett star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.
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  • Rosario Dawson Mistakenly Says a New ‘Punisher’ Show is Coming

    Jon Bernthal as Frank Castle in Marvel's 'The Punisher.'
    Jon Bernthal as Frank Castle in Marvel’s ‘The Punisher.’

    Given two recent examples, Marvel must be exploring some technology to stop actors saying much of anything about their movies and TV shows at all. Perhaps they could call it the Tom Holland Technique.

    Still, spoilers about projects that actually exist is one thing, but the company has now had to face performers who have roles in past projects announcing future work that isn’t yet official.

    Take Rosario Dawson, who played Claire Temple – a version of the Marvel character Night Nurse – on ‘Daredevil’ and various other ‘Defenders’ Marvel/Netflix series including ‘Jessica Jones’ and ‘Luke Cage’, took to the stage at Chicago Comic & Entertainment Expo this weekend.

    In answer to a question about her potential future in the Marvel Universe (and the possibility of Jon Bernthal coming back) now that the likes of Charlie Cox’s Daredevil are confirmed to return, she let slip that she’d heard that ‘The Punisher’ was coming back.

    And that excited Dawson, since ‘The Punisher’ was one of the few shows she never got the chance to appear on, and she loves Bernthal.

    Sadly for her, and for fans of the characters, it appears she had some bad intel and was indulging in some wishful thinking. Dawson walked back her comments on Twitter this morning:

    While we’re sure Team Marvel has at least discussed the return of Bernthal’s character, we doubt Kevin Feige and co. are all that happy with actors making announcements, especially given how secretive the studio tends to be about its new movies and shows.

    Which brings us to Patton Oswalt, nerd favorite and regular genre actor, who made his MCU debut (after, of course co-writing, producing and voicing a MODOK animated series) as Pip the troll in a post-credit scene for ‘Eternals’ opposite Harry Styles as Eros/Starfox.

    Appearing on ‘The Today Show’ last week, Oswalt told the hosts and audience the following: “They have announced there’s going to be an Eternals sequel. Chloé Zhao is going to direct it. So, hopefully there will be more adventures of Starfox and Pip” (See the full video via Today Show’s TikTok account.)

    Of course, Marvel has made no such announcement as of yet – even in its big Comic-Con presentation, ‘Eternals’ did not feature. It’s not to say Feige and his team aren’t considering more ‘Eternals’ action but given the muted reaction to the movie and its box office results, it hasn’t seemed to be a big priority for the company.

    We doubt Oswalt is in big trouble, though we’re sure someone from Marvel has at least said something to him.

    Right now, on the TV front, the return of Cox’s Matt Murdock and Vincent D’Onofrio’s Kingpin is official, on a show called ‘Daredevil: Born Again’. And the previous shows are available properly on Disney+. As for the future of ‘The Punisher’? We’d be thrilled to see the return of Jon Bernthal as Castle, and only too happy if Rosario Dawson shows up to interact with him.

    As for ‘Eternals’? Let’s wait and see, shall we?

    Don Lee, Angelina Jolie, Richard Madden, Salma Hayek, Gemma Chan, and Lia McHugh
    (L to R) Don Lee, Angelina Jolie, Richard Madden, Salma Hayek, Gemma Chan, and Lia McHugh in Marvel Studios’ ‘Eternals.’
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  • New Trailer for ‘Don’t Worry Darling’

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    You know how it is… you think you’re living the perfect life in an idyllic community with all your needs taken care of and your neighbors a group of the best-looking people around.

    And then you start to dig a little deeper and discover that it might all be built on a lie, and that the closer you get to the truth, the more danger there is.

    All right, so very few people actually live that sort of life out of the movies, but that’s exactly the quandary that Alice (Florence Pugh) finds herself in in the latest trailer for Olivia Wilde’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling’.

    The story for the new movie finds Alice and Jack (Harry Styles), who consider themselves lucky to be living in the idealized community of Victory, the experimental company town housing the men who work for the top-secret Victory Project and their families. The 1950’s societal optimism espoused by their CEO, Frank (Chris Pine) — equal parts corporate visionary and motivational life coach — anchors every aspect of daily life in the tight-knit desert utopia.

    While the husbands spend every day inside the Victory Project Headquarters, working on the “development of progressive materials,” their wives — including Frank’s elegant partner, Shelley (Gemma Chan) — get to spend their time enjoying the beauty, luxury, and debauchery of their community. Life is perfect, with every resident’s needs met by the company. All they ask in return is discretion and unquestioning commitment to the Victory cause.

    Olivia Wilde as Bunny, Nick Kroll as Dean and Chris Pine as Frank in New Line Cinema’s 'Don't Worry Darling,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.
    (L-R) Olivia Wilde as Bunny, Nick Kroll as Dean and Chris Pine as Frank in New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    But when cracks in their idyllic life begin to appear, exposing flashes of something much more sinister lurking beneath the attractive façade, Alice can’t help questioning exactly what they’re doing in Victory, and why. Just how much is she willing to lose to expose what’s really going on in this paradise?

    Wilde, who broke into directing with ‘Booksmart’ has made what looks like an intriguingly paranoid period thriller with shades of 1970s movies, ‘The Prisoner’ and the style of something that Stanley Kubrick would nod approvingly towards.

    She also steps in front of the camera this time, as Mary, one of the wives who seeks to keeps the others from looking to deeply into their situation. Wilde also has Nick Kroll, Douglas Smith, Timothy Simons and KiKi Layne on the roster.

    Working with cinematographer Matthew Libatique (a regular collaborator with Darren Aronofsky), and ‘Booksmart’ production designer Katie Byron, Wilde, who has a script from Katie Silberman, Carey Van Dyke, and Shane Van Dyke, certainly appears to have created something exciting, dramatic, and visually arresting.

    ‘Don’t’ Worry Darling’ will have you questioning the nature of your own reality when it arrives in theaters on September 23rd.

    Director/producer/actor Olivia Wilde and Chris Pine on the set of New Line Cinema’s 'Don't Worry Darling,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    (L-R) Director/producer/actor Olivia Wilde and Chris Pine on the set of New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Merrick Morton. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s 'Don't Worry Darling,' a Warner Bros.
    Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Merrick Morton. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Ent. Inc. All rights reserved.
    Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s 'Don't Worry Darling,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
    Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Merrick Morton. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Ent. Inc. All rights reserved.
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  • Florence Pugh and Harry Styles Star in the ‘Don’t Worry Darling’ Trailer

    Harry Styles and Florence Pugh in 'Don't Worry Darling.'
    (L-r) Harry Styles as Jack and Florence Pugh as Alice in New Line Cinema’s ‘Don’t Worry Darling,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Copyright: © 2022 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All rights reserved. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures.

    There’s a grand tradition of movies set in the 1950s and 60s that use seemingly perfect suburbia as a hotbed of paranoia and suspicion. Olivia Wilde is adding to it with her new film, ‘Don’t Worry Darling’.

    Having launched her directorial career successfully with charming, witty comedy ‘Booksmart’, Wilde has a boosted budget and a starry cast for this new movie, which looks sumptuous and sexy, and promises the sorts of paranoid thrills that can bubble under a manufactured community such as the towns that popped up in remote desert locations near government or military facilities.

    The story for the new movie finds Alice (Florence Pugh) and Jack (Harry Styles), who consider themselves lucky to be living in the idealized community of Victory, the experimental company town housing the men who work for the top-secret Victory Project and their families. The 1950’s societal optimism espoused by their CEO, Frank (Chris Pine) — equal parts corporate visionary and motivational life coach — anchors every aspect of daily life in the tight-knit desert utopia.

    While the husbands spend every day inside the Victory Project Headquarters, working on the “development of progressive materials,” their wives — including Frank’s elegant partner, Shelley (Gemma Chan) — get to spend their time enjoying the beauty, luxury, and debauchery of their community. Life is perfect, with every resident’s needs met by the company. All they ask in return is discretion and unquestioning commitment to the Victory cause.

    But when cracks in their idyllic life begin to appear, exposing flashes of something much more sinister lurking beneath the attractive façade, Alice can’t help questioning exactly what they’re doing in Victory, and why. Just how much is she willing to lose to expose what’s really going on in this paradise?

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    Wilde, who wowed the crowd at CinemaCon last week with the footage, has corralled quite the supporting cast for this one. In addition to taking a role herself (she plays Mary, one of the wives who seeks to keeps the others from looking to deeply into their situation), she has Nick Kroll, Douglas Smith, Timothy Simons and KiKi Layne on the roster.

    And the trailer also promises a whole lot of sexy chemistry between Pugh and Styles, who certainly appear to be happily married characters — at least, before Pugh’s Alice starts to wonder what lurks beyond at her husband’s job and soon discovers that the people behind it don’t want anyone digging into their secrets.

    Working with cinematographer Matthew Libatique (a regular collaborator with Darren Aronofsky), and ‘Booksmart’ production designer Katie Byron, Wilde, who has a script from Katie Silberman, Carey Van Dyke, and Shane Van Dyke, certainly appears to have created something exciting, dramatic, and stylish. We’re getting similar vibes to ‘The Stepford Wives’ and TV’s ‘The Prisoner’.

    ‘Don’t Worry Darling’ will be in theaters on September 22nd this year.

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  • Report: Harry Styles Has ‘Respectfully Declined’ To Play Prince Eric in ‘The Little Mermaid’

    Report: Harry Styles Has ‘Respectfully Declined’ To Play Prince Eric in ‘The Little Mermaid’

    CBS

    While the Internet was abuzz this morning with the news that One Direction star Harry Styles had signed on to play Prince Eric in the upcoming “Little Mermaid” live-action remake, it appears those reports were merely wishful thinking.

    According to The Wrap, the actor-singer has “respectfully declined” the plum role.

    Earlier today, AMC Theatres and Regal Cinemas tweeted that Styles had been cast in the role. Both theater chains later deleted the tweets.

    Styles would have starred opposite actress and singer Halle Bailey, who is playing Ariel.

    He made his acting debut in Christopher Nolan’s “Dunkirk,” and perhaps that was enough washing up on a beach and near-drowning for him. He also screen-tested for the role of Elvis Presley in Baz Luhrmann’s upcoming biopic, but the part went to Austin Butler.

    Production on “The Little Mermaid” is expected to begin in early 2020. Additional casting announcements are expected soon.

    [Via The Wrap]

  • Harry Styles in Talks to Play Prince Eric in ‘The Little Mermaid’

    Harry Styles in Talks to Play Prince Eric in ‘The Little Mermaid’

    Warner Bros.

    Disney’s latest live-action remake, “The Little Mermaid,” has been shoring up its cast in recent weeks, including finding its titular star. And now, it’s reportedly poised to cast a onetime singing superstar.

    Collider broke the news that none other than Harry Styles, the former One Directioner, is in talks to play Prince Eric, the hot human love interest to Ariel (Halle Bailey), a mermaid who falls head over tail for him at first sight, and trades away her voice for a chance to be part of his world. According to Collider, the talks are early, so this casting isn’t set in stone just yet — though it would make perfect sense.

    Styles definitely has the heartthrob part down pat, thanks to his boy band days, and according to The Hollywood Reporter, his built-in One Direction fan base should easily score some additional eyeballs for the flick. THR also points out that Eric doesn’t do any singing in the original 1989 film, though the 2000 Broadway musical changed that; if Styles is indeed cast, it seems likely that this new live-action version will be giving Eric some tunes to belt out, too.

    The singer has been attempting to carve out an acting career for himself after going solo from One Direction, including making his feature debut in Christopher Nolan‘s lauded 2017 WWII epic, “Dunkirk.” Styles also earned a spot on the shortlist for Baz Luhrmann‘s upcoming Elvis biopic, though the title role ultimately went to Austin Butler.

    “The Little Mermaid,” which is also negotiating roles for Melissa McCarthy, Awkwafina, and Jacob Tremblay, is planning to start production sometime early next year.

    [Collider, The Hollywood Reporter]

  • Ansel Elgort, Miles Teller Among Top Contenders to Star in Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis Film: Report

    Ansel Elgort, Miles Teller Among Top Contenders to Star in Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis Film: Report

    Ansel Elgort; Miles Teller
    Stage 6 Films and Vertical Entertainment; Universal Pictures

    Who will be The King? That’s what Baz Luhrmann has to decide.

    Casting remains underway for the director’s upcoming film about Elvis Presley and his manager Colonel Tom Parker. While Luhrmann has locked down Tom Hanks to play Parker, he’s still looking for his Elvis. As of now, four top contenders have emerged, according to Deadline.

    Lurhmann is reportedly deciding between Ansel Elgort, Miles Teller, Austin Butler, and Harry Styles. He tested their singing, dancing, and acting abilities last weekend, and Deadline’s sources indicate that they didn’t make it easy for Lurhmann to choose between them. Still, he intends to make his decision by next week, per the publication.

    Interestingly, none of these actors is exactly the newcomer Lurhmann was previously said to be looking for.  Elgort had a breakout year in 2014 when he starred in “The Fault in Our Stars” and the Divergent series. He has since starred in “Baby Driver,” “November Criminals,” and “Billionaire Boys Club,” among others. Teller was one of Elgort’s “Divergent” co-stars, and his work also includes films such as “Thank You for Your Service” and the upcoming “Top Gun: Maverick.” Meanwhile, Butler has numerous TV roles on his resume and stars in the star-studded “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” which is due out in late July. Compared to the others, Styles has the least acting experience, but he is still well-known for his music career.

    It’ll be interesting to see whom Lurhmann picks. Whoever gets the role will star alongside Hanks in a film written by Craig Pearce that follows Presley’s rise with Parker’s guidance.

    [via: Deadline]