Tag: Here

  • Jennifer Lopez Starring in ‘The Last Mrs. Parrish’

    (Left) Jennifer Lopez attends the Tribeca Festival Opening Night & World Premiere of Netflix's 'Halftime' on June 08, 2022 in New York City. Photo: Monica Schipper/Getty Images. (Right) 'Here' director Robert Zemeckis attends AFI Fest Director's Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.
    (Left) Jennifer Lopez attends the Tribeca Festival Opening Night & World Premiere of Netflix’s ‘Halftime’ on June 08, 2022 in New York City. Photo: Monica Schipper/Getty Images. (Right) ‘Here’ director Robert Zemeckis attends AFI Fest Director’s Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images

    Preview:

    • Jennifer Lopez will star in ‘The Last Mrs. Parrish.’
    • Robert Zemeckis is aboard to direct.
    • Netflix is behind the new novel adaptation.

    Both Jennifer Lopez and director Robert Zemeckis have had some hard times of late –– especially professionally.

    Zemeckis’ most recent movie didn’t exactly perform (more on that below) and Lopez has been beset by issues, including cancelling her most recent tour and less than positive reactions to her self-produced concept movie ‘This Is Me… Now,’ which tied into an album.

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    They’ll both be hoping for brighter prospects with a new project, which will be based at Netflix, where Lopez has enjoyed some better reviews for her work.

    The pair is teaming up for a movie that Lopez will co-produce and star in called ‘The Last Mrs. Parrish,’ with Zemeckis aboard to direct.

    Related Article: Tom Hanks Features in First Pictures of Robert Zemeckis’ ‘Here’

    What’s the story of ‘The Last Mrs. Parrish’?

    Jennifer Lopez at 2015 American Music Awards. Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images.
    Jennifer Lopez at 2015 American Music Awards. Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images.

    The new movie will adapt the 2018 Liv Constantine novel, which follows a con artist (to be played by Lopez) who targets a wealthy couple — the Parrishes — as her next victims.

    She infiltrates the pair by befriending the wife and seducing the husband, with the master plan of becoming the next Mrs. Parrish, only to discover that the wife’s life is far more complicated than she could have imagined.

    Constantine’s book was a Reese Witherspoon book club pick, has sold more than 1 million copies and been published in about three dozen countries.

    Oscar nominees Andrea Berloff and John Gatins are at work on the script, and it marks a reunion for Zemeckis and Gatins, who worked together on the Oscar-nominated Denzel Washington drama ‘Flight.’

    Liza Chasin is producing for 3dot Productions along with Molly Sims for Something Happy Productions, while Lopez, Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas and Benny Medina for Nuyorican Productions. Margaret Chernin of 3dot will be executive producers.

    Where else can we see Jennifer Lopez?

    (L to R) William Goldenberg (Director) and Jennifer Lopez (Judy Robles) in 'Unstoppable'. Photo Credit: Ana Carballosa/Prime Video.
    (L to R) William Goldenberg (Director) and Jennifer Lopez (Judy Robles) in ‘Unstoppable’. Photo Credit: Ana Carballosa/Prime Video.

    Aside from the aforementioned ‘This Is Me… Now,’ Lopez has had better luck with movies including Netflix sci-fi thriller ‘Atlas’ and based-on-truth wrestling tale ‘Unstoppable,’ which arrived via Amazon MGM Studios.

    Coming up, she has musical drama ‘Kiss of the Spider Woman,’ directed by Bill Condon, which garnered good notices at Sundance and is headed to theaters in an awards-consideration run via Roadside Attractions, Lionsgate and LD Entertainment this fall.

    This is what Condon said of the move:

    “All of us who made this film believe it needs to be experienced in a theatre, so we’re grateful and excited to be partnering with the very talented folks at Roadside Attractions, Lionsgate Studios, and LD Entertainment to make that happen. On a personal note, this feels like a homecoming –– Lionsgate picked up ‘Gods and Monsters’ out of Sundance in 1998, and I’ve worked with them and Roadside on three other films since then.”

    Currently, she’s shooting Netflix’s ‘Office Romance’ opposite Brett Goldstein, Betty Gilpin, and Jodie Whittaker.

    It’s the story of Jackie, President and CEO of Air Cruz, who runs a tight ship in her business, including a rigid anti-fraternization policy for all her employees.

    When a new sexy lawyer begins working for her, that policy becomes very tested. That one doesn’t have a release date on the books yet.

    Lopez also has ‘The Godmother,’ a crime drama about the rise and fall of the late drug lord Griselda Blanco, at the scripting stage.

    What else is Robert Zemeckis working on?

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Zemeckis, a respected filmmaker who has crafted some of the most memorable movies including ‘Forrest Gump,’ the ‘Back to the Future’ trilogy, ‘Contact’ and ‘Cast Away,’ hasn’t had the best of luck with more recent releases.

    Welcome to Marwen’ didn’t do great business, and his remake of ‘The Witches’ was widely panned. More recently, experimental drama ‘Here,’ despite boasting a ‘Forrest Gump’ reunion with Tom Hanks and Robin Wright leading the cast and a compelling visual hook of being set in one room that changes over time, also flopped at the box office.

    He has a new animated series called ‘Tooned Out’ at the Max streaming service and a variety of projects in development as either director or producer, including action biopic ‘The King’ and sci-fi drama ‘Ares.’

    When will ‘The Last Mrs. Parrish’ arrive on screens?

    Netflix has not yet announced a release date for the movie –– which, if it follows the pattern of other recent Lopez projects for the company, will debut on its servers rather than in theaters.

    'Here' director Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks attend the AFI Fest Director's Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.
    ‘Here’ director Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks attend the AFI Fest Director’s Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.

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  • Movie Review: ‘Here’

    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Opening in theaters November 1st is ‘Here,’ directed by Robert Zemeckis and starring Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Paul Bettany, Kelly Reilly, Michelle Dockery, Gwilym Lee, Ophelia Lovibond, and David Fynn.

    Related Article: Tom Hanks Features in First Pictures of Robert Zemeckis’ ‘Here’

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Robert Zemeckis has made some genuinely great films, including the ‘Back to the Future’ trilogy, ‘Contact,’ and ‘Who Framed Roger Rabbit,’ and the mark of much of his career has been his endless fascination with pushing the boundaries of filmmaking and visual effects forward with new technologies and techniques. But for much of the past two decades, he has focused on the latter seemingly at the expense of the former, turning out a variety of films that may offer up new and sometimes dazzling effects while skimping on good stories and well-developed characters.

    Such is the case with ‘Here,’ Zemeckis’ formally experimental new film in which he positions his camera, so to speak, slightly above and to the right of a single piece of land in Pennsylvania. The film then documents events that have happened on that spot, from millions of years ago when it was a dinosaur-inhabited swamp wiped out by an asteroid, to the romance between two First Nations lovers, to the series of families who inhabit a modest house over the course of the last century. Most of the focus, however, centers on one family and their rather banal history, with Zemeckis’ distant camera and constant changing of the scene failing to allow even the most perfunctory connection to these characters. The result is a shallow, trite film that also doesn’t do its lead actors any favors with the distracting digital de-aging foisted upon them.

    Story and Direction

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Here’ is based on a 2014 graphic novel by Richard McGuire, which he expanded from a six-page comic strip he first wrote and drew in 1989. In both the strip and the graphic novel, McGuire drew panels within panels, showing the space in different periods of time and connecting events from one panel to another whether they took place in the past, the present, or the future. Working from a screenplay he co-wrote with Eric Roth, Zemeckis attempts the same thing on film: as one scene plays out, a panel opens in a section of the screen and either expands or dissolves into the next scene, with the eras in time overlapping.

    The problem is that Zemeckis and Roth do very little to make connections between the different eras, and with the exception of the period during which the house (which is built in 1907) is owned by the Young family, not enough time is spent in any of the eras to give us meaningful insight into how these different periods correspond or how life plays out in similar ways even in varied circumstances. After a while the continually opening frames just become annoying because they signify little.

    That the most time is spent with the Young family is the second major problem with ‘Here.’ After a brief prologue in which the aged Richard (Hanks) and Margaret (Wright) enter the now-empty house, we flash back to when Richard’s dad Al (Bettany) and his new wife Rose (Reilly) first purchased it after World War II for the princely sum of $3,400. Beset by PTSD, Al drinks too much but nevertheless dutifully goes off to work for an insurance company, while Rose stays home and tends to their kids. They squabble, the frugal (almost penny-pinching) Al loses his job, they need to take out a second mortgage at one point, and their three kids grow up, including Richard, who is actually quite talented as an artist and harbors dreams of becoming one professionally. “Get a job where you wear a suit,” Al barks at him, giving us a preview of what’s ahead.

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Sure enough, Richard gets his sweetheart Margaret pregnant at 18, and he’s forced to abandon his dreams and go into the insurance business as well. We find out later on that Margaret also gave up on a whole slew of ambitions, including owning their own house: Richard is even more thrifty than his dad, always coming up with reasons to keep their family under his parents’ roof instead of making a home of their own. And that’s how it goes for the Youngs, whose repressed dreams, secret yearnings, family get-togethers and fights, and ultimate destinies offer nothing we haven’t seen before in numerous family dramas, and doesn’t even absorb us in any way because our view hangs in one place above the living room like a security camera we might as well be checking on our phone.

    The rest of the stories – minus the earliest dinosaur days and subsequent ice age – get even shorter shrift. The best is that of Leo (David Fynn) and Stella (Ophelia Lovibond), a free-spirited, bohemian couple in the 1920s who hit the big time when Leo invents the La-Z-Boy recliner (spoiler alert: it’s not true). The story of the First Nations couple goes nowhere (and seems tokenistic), nor does the tale of a woman (Dockery) who is worried sick that her early adopter aviator husband will die in a crash. A peek into the era of the Revolutionary War, when Benjamin Franklin lived a few hundred feet from where the Young house is eventually built, is simply pointless (the big connection? Richard and his brother wear Ben Franklin costumes at a family Halloween party).

    The sole story that takes place after the Young family sells the house, about the well-off Black couple who purchase it, settles on the father (Nicholas Pinnock) and mother (Nikki Amuka-Bird) instructing their teenage son (Cache Vanderpuye) on how to behave if he’s ever pulled over by a cop as its big moment. Instead of adding depth to their lives or how the neighborhood around them is changing, Zemeckis and Roth settle for simple button-pushing before paneling back to the whitebread, flavorless Youngs.

    In the end, none of it really sticks. The Youngs are too stereotypical to come across as real, and nobody else gets enough time to breathe. The single-shot framing becomes a box from which the story and the people in it cannot escape.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Much has been made of the fact that the teaming of Zemeckis, Roth, Wright, and Hanks constitutes a reunion of the principal creatives of 1994’s ‘Forrest Gump,’ perhaps accentuating the director’s sentimentality over the passage of time. But trying to turn back time for his stars by de-aging them is not the best way to address this. While de-aging has come a long way – even in just the past few years – it’s still a weird, jarring sensation to see Tom Hanks and Robin Wright with smoother versions of their faces plastered on their heads, especially when their voices and physical movements are of the moment.

    Wright probably fares best here, even given her stereotypical character and some of the grating dialogue that comes out of her mouth, while Tom Hanks continues his recent stretch of stilted performances and never relaxes into the role of the unmotivated Richard. Paul Bettany’s Al is supposed to be hard of hearing as a result of his WWII injuries, but the usually reliable Bettany ends up shouting most of his lines theatrically – as if projecting to the back row – whenever he speaks. The bottom line, however, is that it’s a shame to see capable actors like Bettany and Kelly Reilly do their best to animate these stock, post-war suburban disappointments.

    Zemeckis doesn’t do them any favors either with his fixed gaze, which forces the actors to move closer to the camera when it’s time to deliver important bits of story or foreshadowing (speaking of which, the latter is incredibly heavy-handed: one character makes sure to let us know three times that they’ve forgotten something before – surprise! – they end up with Alzheimer’s). This all just heightens the artificiality of the whole setup – bringing the actors closer to the lens ironically adds more distance to what we’re watching.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    We’ll always respect Robert Zemeckis for giving us some of our favorite films of all time – we stand by our assertion that ‘Contact’ is one of the finest sci-fi films of its time, while ‘Back to the Future’ is just about a perfect film (and the trilogy as a whole comes damn close to that hat-trick as well). And even when we don’t admire the films much – ‘Beowulf,’ ‘Death Becomes Her,’ or a truly dreadful outing like ‘Welcome to Marwen’ – we appreciate his curiosity about how far the medium can go and how it can continue to deliver sights that audiences have never seen.

    But he’s paid a price for that quest along the way – sacrificing stories and characters with depth and nuanced emotional honesty for stunts that try fruitlessly to replace both — and ‘Here’ is the latest casualty of that journey.

    ‘Here’ receives 4 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘Here’?

    A single area of land and the dwellings built on it is the scene for literally millennia of events, from the extinction of the dinosaurs to the COVID pandemic, with much of the focus on one mid-20th century family who live there for decades.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Here’?

    • Tom Hanks as Richard Young
    • Robin Wright as Margaret Young
    • Paul Bettany as Al Young
    • Kelly Reilly as Rose Young
    • Michelle Dockery as Mrs. Harter
    • Gwilym Lee as John Harter
    • Ophelia Lovibond as Stella Beekman
    • David Fynn as Leo Beekman
    'Here' director Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks attend the AFI Fest Director's Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.
    ‘Here’ director Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks attend the AFI Fest Director’s Spotlight. Photo by Stewart Cook/Sony Pictures via Getty Images.

    Other Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Here’ Movie Showtimes

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  • First Images from Robert Zemeckis’ New Movie ‘Here’

    Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robin Wright and Tom Hanks star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Preview: 

    • The first look at Robert Zemeckis’ new movie, ‘Here’ is online.
    • Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in the time-spanning drama.
    • It’s another experimental project for the ‘Forrest Gump’ team.

    The filmmaking team behind ‘Forrest Gump’ certainly know a thing or three about a story that spans a large amount of time, and one that required considerable effect advances to support its main character’s encounters with historical figures.

    So, as you might presume, their reunion –– and in this case, we mean specifically ‘Gump’ director Robert Zemeckis, stars Tom Hanks and Robin Wright and screenwriter Eric Roth –– also offers an expansive chronological storyline and some experimental techniques.

    The first look at the result, ‘Here’, is now online via Vanity Fair.

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    What’s the story of ‘Here’?

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Here’ finds scriptwriter Roth adapting Richard McGuire’s much-loved graphic novel title.

    First published as a six-page comic strip in 1989, before being turned into a full graphic novel decades later, ‘Here’ is a high-concept story that focuses on one single room, telling the interconnected, overlapping stories of the many people who’ve inhabited that room over thousands of years.

    The film will feature a locked-down camera that never moves, with the action all occurring in one space, and, like the source material, overlapping panels representing changes in design for scene/time zone transitions.

    Hanks stars as baby boomer Richard, who grows up in the same house he ends up raising his own family in during the 1970s and 1980s, with Wright as his wife, Margaret.

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Zemeckis and his effects team are using a mixture of traditional make-up and cutting-edge digital techniques to portray the characters at different ages, and the story expands out further either way through time, showing Richard’s parents (played by Paul Bettany and Kelly Reilly), occupants of the house long before them and even people –– and creatures –– living in the space before the place was built. There will also be a segment set in 2020, following the couple who inhabit the house after Richard and Margaret.

    And though it features the very top end of de-aging effects, Zemeckis soon realized one way to make them work beyond what other filmmakers have tried:

    “It only works because the performances are so good. Both Tom and Robin understood instantly that, ‘Okay, we have to go back and channel what we were like 50 years ago or 40 years ago, and we have to bring that energy, that kind of posture, and even raise our voices higher. That kind of thing.”

    The aim, according to the director, is to show characters with whom the audience can connect.

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Here’s what Zemeckis says about that concept:

    The whole point was to make the story identifiable. We didn’t want people [in the house] to be criminals or spies in highly dramatic situations. There are some people who probably won’t like the fact that the conflicts in the movie are not over the top—that they’re pretty rooted in reality.”

    Who else is in ‘Here’?

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    The cast also includes Michelle Dockery, David Fynn, Ophelia Lovibond, Nicholas Pinnock, Nikki Amuka-Bird and Anya Marco Harris.

    When will ‘Here’ be in theaters?

    Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in 'Here'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Robin Wright star in ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Sony aims to have ‘Here’ in theaters on November 15th. So if you’re itching to see what Team ‘Gump’ have been up to, you only have a few months to wait now.

    Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of 'Here'.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis, Tom Hanks and Robin Wright on the set of ‘Here’. © 2023 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks Movies:

    Buy Robert Zemeckis Movies on Amazon

    You can watch the new trailer for ‘Here’ by clicking on the video player below:

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  • Tom Hanks and Robert Zemeckis Re-Teaming for ‘Here’

    Tom Hanks in 'Forrest Gump'
    Tom Hanks in ‘Forrest Gump’

    When star Tom Hanks and director Robert Zemeckis work together, the results are usually something special. They’ve collaborated on movies including ‘Forrest Gump’, ‘Cast Away’ and ‘The Polar Express’ and have another, future project to add to the list: they’ll work together on graphic novel adaptation ‘Here’.

    And to keep the ‘Forrest Gump’ team together, Oscar-winning writer Eric Roth will handle the script.

    ‘Here’, created by Richard McGuire, was published in graphic novel form in 2014, though it has its roots in a six-page comic that appeared in RAW magazine in 1989. It is set in the unadorned corner of a seemingly unremarkable house.

    Which doesn’t sound like the basis of a blockbuster, but then you have to consider that it follows the same corner between 500,957,406,073 BC and the year 2033, jumping in a non-linear way between all sorts of scenes that take place there. It’s less a traditional story, and more an art experiment that grew to encompass different characters and experiences. Some stories move forward on the page, while others, in the corners, are told backwards. Upon its release, the graphic novel was described as “”an orgy of the ordinary that is slyly clever and unexpectedly moving.”

    While that would appear to be more along the lines of Hanks’ work on the Wachowskis’ ‘Cloud Atlas’, we’ve yet to see how Zemeckis, Hanks and Roth will adapt this one into a movie. And, given the talent involved, there’s reason to think it could be something unique – with Zemeckis given free rein to indulge his love of creative visual effects.

    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks excepting their Oscars at the 67th Academy Awards.
    (L to R) Robert Zemeckis and Tom Hanks accepting their Oscars at the 67th Academy Awards.

    That said, it also sounds like a complicated sell, harder to promote than, say, the latest Marvel or DC movie, and could represent a risk to companies looking to back it.

    Yet given the presence of the three Oscar-winners, this one is naturally generating a lot of interest. According to Deadline, several studios and the big streaming services are all clamoring to pick this one up. Zemeckis and Hanks have a history with Paramount, Warner Brothers, Sony and more, and both were involved in last year’s science fiction film ‘Finch’, which was sold by Universal to Apple TV+.

    We’re still waiting to hear which of the interested parties will end up announcing that a deal is in place, but chances are it’ll happen before too long.

    ‘Here’ is not the only Zemeckis-Hanks collaboration on the way – the pair has an adaptation of ‘Pinocchio’ in post-production now and headed to Disney+ this year. That film, written by Chris Weitz and Simon Farnaby, also features Luke Evans, Keegan-Michael Key and Joseph Gordon-Levitt in the cast.

    Additionally, Hanks will be back in theaters with Baz Luhrmann’s ‘Elvis’, which put out its first trailer yesterday.

    Tom Hanks in 'Cast Away'
    Tom Hanks in ‘Cast Away’