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  • ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ Season 2 – Part 2 Interview: Ted Humphrey

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    Premiering on Netflix beginning August 3rd is the second part of season 2 of ‘The Lincoln Lawyer,’ which is based on author Michael Connelly’s popular novels and was co-created by David E. Kelley (‘Boston Legal’) and showrunner Ted Humphrey (‘The Good Wife’).

    What is the plot of ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ Season 2?

    Season 2 of ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ is based on author Michael Connelly’s novel ‘The Fifth Witness,’ and sees lawyer Mickey Haller (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) taking on the case of Lisa Trammell (Lana Parrilla), a chef accused of murdering a real estate developer.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ Season 2?

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with executive producer and showrunner Ted Humphrey about his work on ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ Season 2 – Part 2, developing the series, adapting ‘The Fifth Witness,’ what fans can expect from the second half of season 2, why the season was split in two halves, Mickey’s current case, why Manuel Garcia-Rulfo was the right actor to play Mickey Haller, collaborating with Michael Connelly, and if we’ll ever see the show crossover with Connelly’s other series, ‘Bosch.’

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in 'The Lincoln Lawyer.'
    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’ Photo: Lara Solanki/Netflix © 2023.

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

    Moviefone: To begin with, why did you want to adapt Michael Connelly’s ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’ novels into a series?

    Ted Humphrey: I think first of all, it’s been one of the great pleasures of my career to work with Michael on this, and he’s super involved in it, just like he is with ‘Bosch’ and his other projects. He’s created a character that has a universal appeal. I’m a former lawyer myself. I love legal stories when they’re well done. I did a show called ‘The Good Wife’ for a long time. I love legal shows when they’re well-crafted. I think what Michael’s books have is an authenticity to the legal world. Everything that’s in the books, the nuts and bolts of what’s in the books is all accurate. That’s something that’s very important to me. We strove to do that on ‘The Good Wife,’ and I get very irked by legal shows and movies where things happen that aren’t realistic, often in terms of the timing of how they happen. Things happen very fast in a lot of legal TV shows. Somebody gets murdered and the next day somebody’s on trial. Of course, in real life, things take a lot longer than that. They take years sometimes. So I like to honor the real amount of time that things take, and I also like to honor the nuts and bolts of it. I think the nuts and bolts of it could be very interesting and the audience finds it very interesting when you make it dramatic, and Michael’s books do that. So, I thought this was a perfect vehicle to tell people interesting things about how the legal system works wrapped around this very compelling character. We’ve been able to do that now in both seasons with taking little tidbits of the legal process and building whole episodes around them. But ultimately, it all comes down to this very fundamentally hopeful character that Michael has created. I think the show tells a redemption story. When you meet this guy at the beginning of season one, he’s this broken man on a beach who’s lost everything. So, over the course of seasons, the show will tell this redemption story of this guy kind of growing into himself, becoming who he is, and figuring out who he is.

    MF: Can you talk about what happened in the first half of Season 2, and what fans can expect from the second half?

    TH: I’m going to actually take one step back and talk about season one for a second. Season one, again, had us meeting a man who has lost everything in his life to an addiction to pain pills. He’s lost his career, he has lost his family, he doesn’t really know where he is going, and he gets a lifeline thrown to him in the form of this very big media frenzy case that also will pay him a lot of money. It’s another thing our show does that I think smart legal shows do, which is they pay attention not just to the kind of big questions of right and wrong, but also to the nitty-gritty of what lawyers do with their day, which is make a living. Mickey’s a criminal defense attorney. He has to make a living. He needs clients who pay him money. He’s not a public defender. He used to be a public defender, but he’s not anymore. So, in seasons one, he wins this case and where we meet him in season two is he’s kind of in some ways the polar opposite of that guy. Now, he’s on top. Now, he’s this media celebrity and newspapers are interviewing him, and Jake Tapper is interviewing him and all of this stuff. Clients are pouring in and he’s flying a little too close to the sun. Hubris, a little bit of arrogance, and a little bit of stubbornness all play into him making some poor decisions about cases that he takes and so on. Then, in his personal life, he’s still struggling with the breakup of his marriage with his ex-wife, who he still pines for, who is played by Neve Campbell wonderfully. When that goes south, he meets this woman, Lisa Trammell, who’s a restaurateur. He has a one-night affair with her, and then she ends up becoming his client when she’s accused of the murder of this real estate developer who’s trying to buy her out and gentrify her neighborhood. Where we leave off at the end of the first half of season one is that he has been assaulted by persons unknown and left for dead in the garage of his building, kind of playing on the symbolism of cars and driving in our show that is so central to Los Angeles, but so central to this character as well. He’s literally beaten up and left for dead in front of his car in the garage of his building. So, when we pick up in the second half of season two, we find out what the aftermath of that was and how does he figure out who did this to him, and how does it play into the case? What are the twists and turns of figuring that out?

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in 'The Lincoln Lawyer.'
    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’ Photo: Lara Solanki/Netflix © 2023.

    MF: What was the reason for splitting season 2 into two parts?

    TH: It was not a decision we made. It’s something that Netflix does with some of their shows, particularly I think some of their bigger, more successful shows. They’ve done it with ‘Stranger Things.’ They’ve done that with ‘Ozark.’ They’ve done it with a lot of shows. It was something that they kind of toyed with and decided, “We’re going to try and do it here.” So, it was not really a creative choice of the producers of the show, but at the same time, it was something that we were fine with and we had a natural organic cliffhanger that came in the middle of the story to build to, so we didn’t have to kind of jam that in there. It was already going to be there. It worked out quite well. It gave us a natural place to split the season without us having to do anything artificial to make it happen.

    MF: Can you talk about why you decided to adapt ‘The Fifth Witness’ for the second season?

    TH: The way that worked, before we began the process of making the season, Michael Connelly and (executive producer) Dailyn Rodriguez, who I run the show with, and I got together for about a month and kicked around and decided that was the book that we wanted to do. We kind of figured out the tent poles of what that would look like for this season, so that we had a roadmap going into the season. We brought the writing staff in to write that, and ultimately the production staff in to make it, of course. It just felt like a natural progression from the first season to this season that we could make this transition from the broken man to the man who’s on top of the world. But of course, he’s not really on top of the world, and there will be a price to pay for that sort of hubris. In the series of books, there is a book in between them, which is called ‘The Reversal.’ We just felt, for story reasons that that book didn’t really fit as well here, but we love that book. So, it just kind of naturally organically fit. Now, having said that, Michael’s still writing these books, and he just published a new Mickey Haller book a couple of years ago and another one’s coming out this fall. But this particular book was written in the wake of the subprime mortgage crisis in 2008. The story of the book actually deals with a woman whose house is being foreclosed on by a mortgage banker, and that wasn’t particularly relevant to 2023 Los Angeles. So, one of the things we did was we changed that to the gentrification debate that’s going on in Los Angeles today and the world of foodie culture and celebrity chefs. We made it a chef in a rapidly-gentrifying neighborhood, who this big real estate developer wants to buy her out of the restaurant and put up condos, or something like that. We also made her a love interest for Mickey, which she was not in the book, as a way of expanding upon his personal relationships.

    Lana Parilla as Lisa Trammell, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in 'The Lincoln Lawyer.'
    (L to R) Lana Parilla as Lisa Trammell, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’ Photo: Lara Solanki/Netflix © 2023.

    MF: Can you talk about how Mickey’s judgment has been clouded with this case?

    TH: Well, I mentioned this is a man who can be arrogant at times and who can make poor choices. One of the things I love about our show is we’re a show about lawyers and crime and all of those things, but we’re also a show that, I hope, features real human beings, and real human beings make dumb choices sometimes and do things maybe they shouldn’t. In this case, everybody is sort of saying, Mickey, “Are you sure you want to do this? This might not be the best idea.” Yet, he does it anyway because he kind of lets his pride and maybe his feelings for this woman, and certain other things cloud his judgment as to whether or not this is really a good idea. Complications ensue, let’s put it that way.

    MF: Why was Manuel Garcia-Rulfo the right actor to play this specific version of Mickey Haller?

    TH: So, we looked at a lot of actors. We’re going back now several years to when we were just starting to make season one. We’re talking about the fall of 2020 at this point, or the late summer of 2020, so we’re going back three years. We looked at a lot of actors. When we brought the show to Netflix, it was very important to Netflix, and to us, that we honor the Latino heritage of character. The movie that they made with Matthew McConaughey, they decided to go a different direction and they didn’t do that at that time. It was very important to us to do that. We looked at a lot of choices. The character in the books is Latino-American, but more American in the sense that he was born and raised in Los Angeles and doesn’t have an accent, and doesn’t really speak Spanish in the books. He’s a person of Latino heritage, but he is not a Latino-forward person. We looked at choices across the spectrum, and many fine actors who were terrific and just for one reason or another weren’t right. We were starting to wonder, “Gosh, who is this person?” Then Manuel auditioned and we watched his tape and I just said, “That’s it. There’s Mickey right there.” It wasn’t maybe at first exactly what we had in mind in the sense that that Manuel is 100% Latino, he is 100% Mexican, he has an accent, and English is not his first language. Spanish is his first language. He’s certainly not a lawyer. On the surface, he maybe isn’t exactly what’s on the page of the book, but when you see him play a scene from the show, you just go, “That’s it.” He’s got the effortless kind of charm and intelligence. He’s saying one thing, but there’s something very clever going on behind his eyes while he’s saying it, that is exactly who this character is on the page. It gave us the wonderful opportunity to explore even more fully than Michael does in the books, the Latino heritage of the character. I mean, do it in a very organic way where he speaks Spanish because he speaks Spanish, and it’s not something we had to jam in there. It just is what it is. A lot of that was driven by Manuel himself, who very much wanted to explore the heritage of this character, and will pitch different things that we do. Then we’ve built on it now, introducing his mother. We found a wonderful piece of chemistry between him and his daughter, and that they both speak Spanish and can communicate to each other that way. So, finding Manuel to play this part was lightning in a bottle.

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in 'The Lincoln Lawyer.'
    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’ Photo: Lara Solanki/Netflix © 2023.

    Related Article: Actor Manuel Garcia-Rulfo Talks Legal Drama ‘The Lincoln Lawyer’

    MF: What’s your experience been like working with author Michael Connelly on this series?

    TH: Michael’s incredible to collaborate with. In the past, in my career when I’ve adapted novels, you don’t usually work really closely with the novelists. Sometimes they don’t really want to be involved in that process, and often, for good reason. They can be very precious about the work. Michael is one of the most collaborative people I’ve ever worked with and one of the least precious about the characters and the world that he’s created, and he should be precious about those. The raison d’être of the show is to honor what he’s done in the books and to honor those characters in that world. But he’s the first person to pitch, “Hey, I think we can do better than what was in the book. Let’s do this.” Or if somebody pitches a change, if it’s a good change, he’s the first person to say, “Yes, let’s do that.” So, he’s so refreshingly not precious about it. What he’s precious about is he wants to make the best show possible and whatever that is, the best idea wins. He’s 100% on board with that. So, it’s been really one of the great experiences of my career to work with him on this.

    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch in 'Bosch: Legacy.'
    Titus Welliver as Harry Bosch in ‘Bosch: Legacy.’ Photo: Tyler Golden. Copyright: Amazon Freevee.

    MF: Finally, as fans of the novels know, Mickey Haller is actually the half-brother of Connelly’s other popular literary character, Harry Bosch. Is there any chance that there could ever be a ‘Lincoln Lawyer’ and ‘Bosch: Legacy’ crossover, or is that impossible because the two shows are produced by different studios?

    TH: As I understand it, it’s an impossibility because of the different auspices involved. I mean, I guess one might never say never because stranger things have happened in the world. But we have approached it as these are two completely different worlds. We’ve had to approach it that way. They approached ‘Bosch’ that way as well because in the Bosch books, Mickey Haller occurs quite a bit, but Amazon didn’t have the rights to that character, so they’ve inserted different characters into those places, and we’ve kind of done the same thing. We’ve interestingly built two parallel worlds in two different shows on two different platforms, that both spring from a common source if you will. Interestingly, I’ve seen articles online about the crossover of actors between the shows, which is not something we’ve given any thought to, meaning we’re not purposely trying to cast actors that have been in ‘Bosch,’ nor are they purposely trying to cast actors that have been in our show, but yet, we appear to do that. There are a number of actors who’ve appeared in both shows in different roles, which is interesting. But it’s not something we’ve paid attention to. There have also been articles about common locations, and it’s like, we shoot in an authentic real world LA and they shoot in an authentic real world LA, so of course they’re going to be common locations. But I think, creatively, organically, they spring from the same source, and there’s a common ethos behind both series. of books, which then infuses both television series. So, I think people who enjoy one tend to enjoy the other, certainly because they both delve into certain things. I kid Michael, that my sister is a public defender and has been for a long time, and she said that Michael’s her favorite author and that Harry Bosch is her favorite character in fiction. I said to Michael that, “You’re doing something right If a public defender’s favorite character is a cop, because public defenders and cops don’t usually get along very well.”

    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in 'The Lincoln Lawyer.'
    Manuel Garcia-Rulfo as Mickey Haller in ‘The Lincoln Lawyer.’ Photo: Lara Solanki/Netflix © 2023.

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  • Olivia Colman, Antonio Banderas and Rachel Zegler Join ‘Paddington in Peru’

    (Left) Olivia Colman as Special Agent Sonya Falsworth in Marvel Studios' 'Secret Invasion,' exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Gareth Gatrell. © 2023 MARVEL. (Center) Antonio Banderas in Lucasfilm's 'Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.' ©2022 Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All Rights Reserved. (Right) Rachel Zegler as Anthea in New Line Cinema’s action adventure 'Shazam! Fury of the Gods,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (Left) Olivia Colman as Special Agent Sonya Falsworth in Marvel Studios’ ‘Secret Invasion,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Gareth Gatrell. © 2023 MARVEL. (Center) Antonio Banderas in Lucasfilm’s ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.’ ©2022 Lucasfilm Ltd. & TM. All Rights Reserved. (Right) Rachel Zegler as Anthea in New Line Cinema’s action adventure ‘Shazam! Fury of the Gods,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    After the first two ‘Paddington’ movies scored near universal acclaim, made more than $500 million worldwide and earned BAFTA nominations, a third is finally ready to go into production.

    We’d already learned that it will be titled ‘Paddington in Peru’ and now, per Variety, there is some casting news to share with cameras due to roll next month.

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    Much of it is good news on the casting front –– Olivia Colman (who seems to be everywhere at the moment, between ‘Secret Invasion’ and ‘The Bear’), Antonio Banderas and Rachel Zegler are all aboard.

    But in a move that might cause consternation for ‘Paddington’ fans, Sally Hawkins won’t return as Mrs. Brown. Instead, Emily Mortimer will take over the role.

    Emily Mortimer, writer, director, and co-star in 'The Pursuit of Love'
    Emily Mortimer, writer, director, and co-star in ‘The Pursuit of Love’

    Hawkins issued a statement about her decision to step away:

    “For me it has felt the right time to hand the reins over to another, and one can’t get much better than the truly wonderful Emily Mortimer, she is extraordinarily special. She will embody the essence of Mary Brown and yet make it utterly her own. However, I am, and will always be in love with Paddington’s world. I already greatly miss my on- and off-screen family — the experience of making the first two films has truly been some of the best and most creative times I have had in the world of film. They both gave me so much joy. I will forever hold them so very close to my heart indeed.”

    Fret not for the other usual stars, though –– Hugh Bonneville, Julie Walters, Jim Broadbent, Madeleine Harris and Samuel Joslin will be back as Mr. Brown, Mrs. Bird, Mr. Gruber, Judy and Jonathan Brown respectively. Ben Whishaw is once again voicing Paddington, while Imelda Staunton will return to voice Aunt Lucy.

    Which leads us on new information about the plot…

    What will happen in ‘Paddington in Peru’?

    StudioCanal's 'Paddington 2.'
    StudioCanal’s ‘Paddington 2.’

    Related Article: Third ‘Paddington’ Movie Will see the Cuddly Bear Character Head Back to Peru

    As the title suggests, the story will follow our furry hero returning to Peru to visit his beloved Aunt Lucy, who now resides at the Home for Retired Bears. Paddington and the Brown Family embark on an unexpected journey through the Amazon rainforest and up to the mountain peaks of Peru.

    Colman will play the reverend mother, a blithe and sunny guitar-playing nun who runs the home for retired bears. Banderas will play Hunter Cabot, a dashing and intrepid riverboat captain who offers to help the Brown family on their Peruvian adventure, while Zegler, will play Cabot’s daughter, Gina.

    Who is making ‘Paddington 3’?

    A scene from director Paul King's 'Paddington 2.'
    A scene from director Paul King’s ‘Paddington 2.’

    Co-writer/director Paul King, who crafted the first two, has moved on to other projects, in particular musical prequel ‘Wonka’. Dougal Wilson, who hasn’t made a movie before, but has a wealth of short films, music videos and commercial experience, will be making his feature debut with this.

    But King is still involved. He wrote the story with collaborators Simon Farnaby and Mark Burton with a screenplay by Burton, Jon Foster and James Lamont.

    Wilson said of the new cast,

    “I am absolutely delighted to be working with such a wonderful cast on the next installment of the ‘Paddington’ story. I was already an enormous fan of our returning actors, but for them to be joined by Olivia, Antonio, Emily and Rachel is beyond thrilling.”

    ‘Paddington in Peru’ has yet to set a release date.

    Hugh Grant in StudioCanal's 'Paddington 2.'
    Hugh Grant in StudioCanal’s ‘Paddington 2.’

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  • Movie Review: ‘Flamin’ Hot’

    Jesse Garcia in 'Flamin' Hot.'
    Jesse Garcia in ‘Flamin’ Hot.’ Photo by Emily Aragones. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

    Premiering on Hulu and Disney+, ‘Flamin’ Hot’ tells the compelling true story of Richard Montañez, a man who rose from a life of struggle and struck with a great idea for an untapped market in the chip industry, made his life dreams come true.

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    What’s the story of ‘Flamin’ Hot’?

    The movie tells the story of Montañez (Jessie Garcia), who was born in an East Los Angeles barrio community to Mexican-American parents in the late 1950s. He was gifted with a smart mind, an ambitious soul, and a dream for a better life. He dropped out of school in his mid-teens –– one of his greatest regrets –– only to discover that without a high school diploma or college education, the only jobs he could get were window washers and gas station attendants. This was not what he wanted for himself or his future.

    It was his perseverance that eventually landed him a janitor gig at a local Frito-Lay factory. On the job, his inquisitive mind wanted to learn more about how the snacks were made, and about the machines and the production line, which made his colleagues and his supervisors suspicious. Who was this man who dared to think he was somebody he wasn’t and who wanted more out of his life?

    While his coworkers told him that his chances of getting a meeting with the CEO were about the same as flying to the moon, Montañez wanted to make sure his ideas got the top. He ultimately would spend years toiling away on the factory floor before the opportunity finally presented itself, when PepsiCo CEO Roger Enrico (Tony Shalhoub) was on-site for a factory tour. Amazingly, the man with no formal education and no business marketing training or tools managed to get a moment of facetime with the boss, who was intrigued enough to ask for a formal presentation. The rest is history, Montañez’ ideas leading to him joining the executive ranks at the company.

    Tony Shalhoub and Matt Walsh in 'Flamin' Hot.'
    (L to R) Tony Shalhoub and Matt Walsh in ‘Flamin’ Hot.’ Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

    Who else is in ‘Flamin’ Hot?

    The cast also includes Annie Gonzalez as Judy Montañez, Richard’s wife, Dennis Haysbert as Richard’s mentor at Frito-Lay, Clarence C. Baker, Matt Walsh as his boss, Lonny Mason, Bobby Soto as Richard’s friend Tony Romero and Emilio Rivera as his father, Vacho Montañez.

    Eva Longoria on set of 'Flamin' Hot.'
    Eva Longoria on set of ‘Flamin’ Hot.’ Photo by Anna Kooris. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

    Breaking stereotypes

    While there was some debate in 2021 as to whether Montañez’s story truly holds up (Frito-Lay has cast doubt on the tale as it stands, as reported in this LA Times piece) there’s no denying that he did have a role to play in expanding the flavors of the company’s products to appeal to Latino audiences. And it doesn’t diminish the power of the movie itself.

    Longoria might be making her movie directorial debut here, but she brings a wealth of experiences from both in front of and behind the camera –– an extensive acting resume, and work both producing and directing all sorts of TV series, from the dramatic likes of ‘Grand Hotel’ to the more comedic tones of ‘Black-ish’ and ‘Jane the Virgin’, which blends both together.

    Here, she whips through Montañez’s narrative, touching on the important parts and never leaving out the love he shows for his family and the struggles he and his wife went through. And the movie even nods to how Montañez had to hustle in less-than-legal fashion early on, while disrupting and disputing common misconceptions about Mexican culture in particular. This is a story of determination and enthusiasm, with a supporting family that belies the standard TV and movie representation of Latino culture as gang bangers or immigrants.

    Highlights for ‘Flamin’ Hot’ include the charming lead performance from Garcia as Montañez, narrating his life story in a manner that keeps you interested, and working well off of Linda Yvette Chávez’s script.

    Jesse Garcia and Dennis Haysbert in 'Flamin' Hot.'
    (L to R) Jesse Garcia and Dennis Haysbert in ‘Flamin’ Hot.’ Photo by Anna Kooris. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

    Haysbert also gets a solid arc as Clarence, the gruff, genius engineer who maintains the machines at the plant where Montañez sweeps the floors. Spotting something in the ambitious man, he mentors him towards success, even as he longs to be on the executive level himself and is frustrated that some of the people he has trained have been promoted above him. His and Richard’s relationship is far more equal and warmer, the sheer enthusiasm and openness of Montañez’s approach breaking through Clarence’s barriers and proving a boon for them both.

    Shalhoub, meanwhile, is good value in a relatively small (but still crucial) role as Frito-Lay’s CEO, one of the people who inspires Richard to dream bigger. And he’s the focus of quick, funny scenes where Richard imagines how the company’s executives get the job done, the stuffed suits transforming into gangsters who threaten each other in cartoony voices provided by Richard.

    This is the sort of movie that gets made a lot, but far more rarely about people who look like Richard Montañez and his family, which is all the more remarkable. And while it’s regrettable that Disney’s Searchlight decision opted to push it to Hulu, it has a chance to reach a wider audience than a limited engagement in theaters.

    Director Eva Longoria and DP Federico Cantini on set of 'Flamin' Hot.'
    (L to R) Director Eva Longoria and DP Federico Cantini on set of ‘Flamin’ Hot.’ Photo by Emily Aragones. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

    Not as tasty

    It’s not a perfect movie –– you can certainly see moments where the budget outstripped the ambition of Longoria and her team, with some dodgy wig moments and scenes that could have been excised without losing any of the flavor of the film.

    An engaging, funny and charming story well told, ‘Flamin’ Hot’ sometimes feels like it needed to be a limited series rather than a movie, so full of incident was its subject’s life.

    But if it serves to inspire just one or two people to go the extra mile in chasing their dreams, it’ll be a worthwhile movie, while entertaining even if you’re not searching for a new direction in life.

    ‘Flamin’ Hot’ receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

    Jesse Garcia and Eva Longoria on the set of 'Flamin' Hot.'
    (L to R) Jesse Garcia and Eva Longoria on the set of ‘Flamin’ Hot.’ Photo by Emily Aragones. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2023 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

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    ‘Flamin’ Hot’ is produced by Franklin Entertainment and Searchlight Pictures, and is scheduled for release on Hulu and Disney+ on June 9th.

  • ‘Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio’ Director Interview

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    Premiering on Netflix December 9th is Oscar-winning director ‘Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio.

    A stop-motion-animated adaptation of Carlo Collodi’s 1883 fairy tale novel of the same name, the film is a long-in-development passion project of Del Toro, who’s co-directed it with veteran animation director Mark Gustafson.

    The new film features the voices of Ewan McGregor, David Bradley, Burn Gorman, Ron Perlman, John Turturro, Finn Wolfhard, Cate Blanchett, Tim Blake Nelson, Christoph Waltz, Tilda Swinton, and Gregory Mann as the titular puppet.

    Pinocchio reworks the classic fable into a tale of fathers and sons, of the virtue of disobedience, and – like so much of Del Toro’s work – of the dangers of fascism.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Guillermo Del Toro about the film’s inspirations and its unique style of animation.

    Director Guillermo del Toro for 'Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio.'
    Director Guillermo del Toro for ‘Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio.’

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interview with Del Toro about ‘Pinocchio.’

    Moviefone: One of the interesting things about ‘Pinocchio’ is that rather than recall other animated movies, it shares the emotional immediacy of Italian Neorealism and Luis Bunuel‘s films from the 1950s. How did you approach balancing its real life horrors with its fantasy elements? Did you take much the same approach you did with ‘Pan’s Labyrinth’?

    Guillermo del Toro: Yeah, it’s very much the same. I mean, it’s instinctual partially, certainly in shaping the first iterations of the tale. Then you’re really, really careful on the composition of the scenes and how they flow from one another. Tonally, it’s a movie that is going to fluctuate between moments of musical comedy or comedy to drama, to melodrama, to conversations that have a gravity for me and an importance for me that is almost existential.

    So you have to be able to circulate between Mussolini arriving in a Tex Avery Warner Brothers Cartoon limousine and Pinocchio having a conversation with a fellow bedmate in a fascist reeducation youth camp. So that’s what is difficult. But every time I think about one of my movies, it is that disparity of flavors that attracts me. ‘Shape of Water’ was a love story between a cleaning woman and an amphibian man done by Douglas Sirk with musical numbers. So it is not exactly easy, but it’s what I do. I don’t know if I do it well or not, but I do it.

    Gepetto (voiced by David Bradley) and Pinocchio (voiced by Gregory Mann) in Guillermo del Toro's 'Pinocchio.'
    (L to R) Gepetto (voiced by David Bradley) and Pinocchio (voiced by Gregory Mann) in Guillermo del Toro’s ‘Pinocchio.’ Photo: Netflix © 2022.

    MF: You’ve said that in making this film you sought to avoid the pantomime shorthand that infects so many animated films today and overly hip characters and how instead you called upon the animators to animate silence and “failed physical acts.” How did you develop this technique?

    GDT: It started when I was younger and I saw ‘My Neighbor Totoro’ for the first time. (Director Hayao) Miyazaki has a moment in which the father goes to put on a shoe and he fails to get the shoe in the first and the second time, and finally gets the shoe in. I was transfixed. I thought, “This is amazing.” I read more about Miyazaki of course, and at one point or another, the master Miyazaki said, “If you animate the ordinary, it will be extraordinary.” I decided that real life, in animation, lives in the portions that nobody animates in North America, in the West, in the

    industrial animation scene. I started trying it on ‘Tales of Arcadia’ – ‘Troll Hunters,’ ‘3Below,’ and ‘Wizards’ – which were three series that we developed for Netflix and Dreamworks. Little by little I realized, A, how difficult it was, and B, how rewarding it was. So we decided to put eight rules of animation together for the animated crew on ‘Pinocchio.’ I guaranteed them that no one would interfere with our movie, that I would protect it from notes or previews or changes that we didn’t want. I guaranteed them that and I was able to deliver and they invested themselves into animating it as subtle and as naturalistic as they possibly could.

    Director Guillermo del Toro on the set of Netflix's 'Pinocchio.'
    Director Guillermo del Toro on the set of Netflix’s ‘Pinocchio.’ Photo: Netflix © 2022.
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  • Andy Garcia Talks ‘Big Gold Brick’

    Andy Garcia in 'Big Gold Brick.'
    Andy Garcia in ‘Big Gold Brick.’

    Opening in theaters, on digital, and On Demand beginning February 25th is the new movie ‘Big Gold Brick,’ which marks writer and director Brian Petsos’ feature film debut.

    The movie stars Academy Award nominee Andy Garcia (‘The Godfather Part III’) as the eccentric Floyd Deveraux, who is involved in a car accident with fledgling writer Samuel Liston (Emory Cohen). Floyd soon takes Samuel under his wing as his biographer, and introduces him to his wife and children, before his deepest secrets are revealed.

    In addition to Garcia and Cohen, the cast also includes Megan Fox (‘Jonah Hex’), Lucy Hale (‘Borrego’), and Oscar Isaac (‘Dune’).

    Acting legend Andy Garcia has been making movies for almost forty years! He’s appeared in such classic films as ‘The Untouchables,’ ‘Black Rain,’ ‘Internal Affairs,’ ‘When a Man Loves a Woman,’ ‘Things to Do in Denver When You’re Dead,’ ‘Night Falls on Manhattan,’ and ‘Smokin’ Aces.’

    He was nominated for Best Supporting Actor at the Academy Awards for playing Vincent Mancini in Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘The Godfather Part III,’ but may be best known for his role as Terry Benedict in Steven Soderbergh‘s ‘Ocean’s Eleven,’ ‘Ocean’s Twelve,’ and ‘Ocean’s Thirteen.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking to Andy Garcia about his work on ‘Big Gold Brick,’ as well as his thoughts on Frances Ford Coppola’s recently released director’s cut of ‘The Godfather Part III.’

    The iconic actor discussed his new film, his unusual character, working with Oscar Isaac, the difference between performing in a comedy or a drama, and his reaction to ‘Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone.’

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    You can read the full transcript of our interview with Andy Garcia about ‘Big Gold Brick’ below, or watch our interviews with Garcia, Lucy Hale, Emory Cohen and writer/director Brian Petsos by clicking on the video player above.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how would you describe this movie to our audience?

    Andy Garcia: It’s a very unique movie and encompasses many different genres, twists and turns in a way that’s unique to Brian (Petsos), the writer and director. This is his absurdity and sense of humor. What I can tell you, is that I play a gentleman who has an encounter, an accident with someone on the street, and hits him with his car. That relationship happens because of that, what ensues after that, as I begin to try to take him to heal and I bring him home to my house to get him well, because I feel responsible.

    But that relationship quickly turns into other needs that I have, I would say. In that process, the relationship begins to formulate and take different turns. It’s very hard to explain the nature of what it is because immediately you’ll start anticipating things that, certainly, I don’t want you to anticipate.

    MF: I thought Floyd was a perfect role for you as an actor. Did you recognize that when you first read the screenplay, and what was your approach to playing this character?

    AG: Thank you. I mean, I’d recognize something because, obviously, I got all the way through the script and said, “What the hell did I just read?” I called Oscar Isaac, who had sent it to me, who was a producer on it and was going to play a part in it. He had worked with Brian Petsos on several shorts they did together.

    So, I was aware of their relationship and the shorts. I said, “Oscar, this is really a bizarre script, and I’m trying to figure out what it’s all about and who this guy is.” I think, we started talking and I said, “Is it this? Is it that?” He would say something like, “Oh, I don’t know. I don’t know how you see that, but maybe.” Then finally I said something like, “I think it’s like that.” He said, “Yeah, that’s it.” I went, “Oh, okay. I’ll do it.”

    Oscar Isaac in 'Big Gold Brick.'
    Oscar Isaac in ‘Big Gold Brick.’

    MF: You have a wonderful scene in the movie with Oscar Isaac, what was it like acting opposite him?

    AG: Well, we’ve worked together before. We did a movie a while back ago called, ‘For Greater Glory: The True Story of Cristiada.’ Listen, Oscar’s an actor I admire, tremendously. He’s A wonderful actor. We’ve only had wonderful times working together in the past. We had a desire to work together and to work together, yet again. So, whenever I’m with him, we have a good time, and it was a joy. His character is so inspired, and the juxtaposition of putting Floyd in this man’s world there and how Floyd deals with it, also gives insight into how comfortable Floyd is in the most unique and dangerous situations.

    MF: Can you talk about working with Emory Cohen on Floyd and Samuel’s unusual relationship?

    AG: Well, Emery was great. He came on the first scene we did, where already I could tell that he was locked into a very specific character that he was committed to, and a state of mind and a state of angst. Also, the physical choices with the hair and all that. My job is to support that idea and engage in that idea, and have Floyd have to deal with it. I said, “Okay, I got this guy I just hit with a car,” and then he brings him home and then he goes, “Oh, you’re a writer.” Then the movie begins. Anyway, it’s a movie that encompasses so many different genres.

    (L to R) Andy Garcia and Emory Cohen in 'Big Gold Brick.'
    (L to R) Andy Garcia and Emory Cohen in ‘Big Gold Brick.’

    MF: As an actor, is there a difference for you between doing comedy and drama?

    AG: Well, I mean, it’s an art form. The sense of comedy and understanding how it works, and the timing of it all, and the choices you can make, depending on the tone of the comedy, have many different styles. But they always have to, I feel, be rooted in a real sense of truth, which it makes it even more poignant when you laugh. So, with Brian, that came from Second City and an improv background. I studied with a lot of people earlier out in my career and did a lot of improvisational theater.

    So, we had a nice way of language, that if I would say, “Let me try something” and then I would just do it. Then, he would engage and laugh, and that’s part of the creative process, I think, it’s important, whether it’s a comedy or drama. Because you just want to take all the raw material you can to the cutting room and let the movie then tell you, even if the director goes, “I want it to be this.” The movie over here is going, “No, no, no, no. You got to go over here, because that’s the take you should use.” Then you go, “Yeah. Okay.”

    MF: Finally, I was curious if you’ve had an opportunity to see ‘Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone,’ which is Frances Ford Coppola’s director’s cut of ‘The Godfather Part III’ that was recently released. What were your thoughts on his new version of the film?

    AG: I thought it was beautiful. I loved the movie the first time. I love it again the second time. I was aware of the sort of narrative structures and choices he made, to take out and restructure, which I thought was great. To me, that was a great privilege, obviously, to be a part of that world and to share that time with Francis.

    So, like I said, I really enjoyed it, but more importantly to me, if this is what Francis wants to do, and that’s what he perceives, he’s the man. So, I want him to be happy and content. You know what I mean? And finish the ideas that he originally wanted to do. That’s what’s most important thing as a filmmaker, to leave that legacy the way he wanted to leave it.

    Because he explained a lot, why the first version came out and sense of time and all that stuff. So, I think it’s great. There’s the 50th anniversary of ‘The Godfather’ happening this week at Paramount. They’re naming a street after Francis. Unfortunately, I’m leaving town and I’m going to miss it, but I’ll be there in spirit, for sure. He’s a very special man and a very special director.

    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of 'The Godfather' event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of ‘The Godfather’ event and historic street naming ceremony at the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
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