Tag: if-beale-street-could-talk

  • What’s New on Digital, DVD/Blu-ray, TV, & Netflix This Week: March 25-31

    What’s New on Digital, DVD/Blu-ray, TV, & Netflix This Week: March 25-31

    Warner Bros.

    At a loss for what to watch this week? From new DVDs and Blu-rays, to what’s streaming on Netflix, we’ve got you covered.

    NEW ON DVD AND BLU-RAY

    ‘Aquaman’ (March 26)

    The highest-grossing movie in the DC universe is already generating buzz around a sequel and a spinoff. Jason Momoa stars as the titular superhero AKA Arthur Curry, the half-human heir to the heir to the underwater kingdom of Atlantis. He must step forward to prevent his brother from starting a war between the worlds of ocean and land.

    The movie arrives on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, and DVD on March 26 (and is already available on Digital HD). Bonus features include multiple making-of featurettes.

    ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ (March 26)

    Barry Jenkins follows up his Oscar-winning film “Moonlight” with this adaptation of James Baldwin’s acclaimed novel. The beautiful and tragic love story follows young adult Tish (KiKi Layne) and her fiancé, Fonny (Stephan James), whose future is derailed when he is arrested for a crime he didn’t commit. The stunning performances are led by Oscar winner Regina King.

    The movie arrives on Blu-ray, and DVD on March 26 (and is already available on Digital HD). Bonus features include deleted scenes, a “Poetry in Motion” featurette, and audio commentary by Jenkins.

    ‘Second Act’ (March 26)

    Jennifer Lopez stars as Maya, a 40-year-old woman frustrated by not having achieved more in life. After getting passed over for a promotion solely because she doesn’t have a college degree, she gets the chance to prove that street smarts are as valuable as book smarts.

    The movie arrives on Blu-ray and Digital HD on March 26. Bonus features include behind-the-scenes featurettes.

    ‘Capernaum’ (March 26)

    The intense, moving Lebanese drama won the Jury Award at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival and earned an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Film. The story follows Zain El Hajj, a 12-year-old living in the slums of Beirut who winds up suing his parents for child neglect.

    The movie arrives on Blu-ray, and DVD on March 26 (and is already available on Digital HD).

    ‘The Body Snatcher’ (March 26): Robert Wise’s 1945 horror classic is the last to feature both Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi. The Blu-ray release comes with a 4K remaster and new featurette, “You’ll Never Get Rid of Me: Resurrecting The Body Snatcher.”

    ‘For a Few Dollars More’ (March 26): Kino’s Blu-ray release brings a 4K restoration to Sergio Leone’s classic 1965 western starring Clint Eastwood as a bounty hunter on the bloody trail of the territory’s most dangerous bandit.

    ‘Pet Sematary’ (March 26): For its 30th anniversary, and ahead of the new remake opening April 5, the movie gets a 4K Blu-ray release. The 1989 version is one of the better adaptations of Stephen King’s works.

    NEW VIDEO ON DIGITAL, DEMAND, AND STREAMING

    ‘On the Basis of Sex’ (March 26)

    Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg gets her own biopic, with Felicity Jones playing the younger version of the pioneering legal icon.  As a woman and young mother, the struggling attorney faces numerous obstacles in her fight for equal rights. When Ruth takes on a groundbreaking tax case with her husband, attorney Martin Ginsburg (Armie Hammer), she knows it could  gender discrimination laws forever. Available on Digital HD.

    ‘Welcome to Marwen’ (March 26)

    Based on a true story, the movie centers on Mark Hogancamp (Steve Carell), a man who loses much of his memory after being nearly beaten to death. He copes with the physical, mental, and emotional trauma by building a 1/6-scale World War II-era Belgian town in his yard, populated by dolls representing himself, his friends, and even his attackers. Available on Digital HD.

    ‘Stan & Ollie’ (March 26)

    In the 1930s and 1940s, Stan Laurel (Steve Coogan) and Oliver Hardy (John C. Reilly) were the world’s greatest comedy team. But by the 1950s, they are has-beens. They embark on a tour of small theaters in Britain reconnect with fans — and each other. Available on Digital HD, Blu-ray and DVD.

    ‘Hanna’ (March 29)

    Amazon drops the first season of this action drama, which follows an extraordinary young girl raised in the forest, as she evades the relentless pursuit of an off-book CIA agent and tries to unearth the truth behind who she is.  The show reunites “The Killing” stars Mireille Enos and Joel Kinnaman.

    NEW ON NETFLIX

    ‘The Highwaymen’ (March 29)

    The film stars Kevin Costner and Woody Harrelson as former Texas Rangers on the hunt for the notorious outlaws Bonnie and Clyde. While the FBI’s latest crime-solving technology isn’t enough to capture the criminals, these old school investigators use their gut instincts and time-honed techniques.

    ‘On My Block’ (March 29)

    The coming-of-age comedy returns for Season 2, picking up where it left off: After Olivia’s quinceañera ends tragically due to gang violence and leaves two people bleeding from gunshots.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ed0T7VbJXs0

    ‘Santa Clarita Diet’ (March 29)

    In Season 3, realtor couple Sheila (Drew Barrymore) and Joel (Timothy Olyphant) confronting a previously undiscussed reality of her zombie-hood. Namely, she’s immortal; he’s not. Time for couples counseling!

    ‘Traitors’ (March 29)

    The six-episode British spy drama is set in 1945 London and centers on Feef (Emma Appleton), who is seduced by a rogue American spy into spying on her own country. Her task? To uncover a Russian agent in the heart of the British Government.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5eCW3vdEPLo

    For more, see what else is new on Netflix in March 2019.

    TV WORTH WATCHING

    ‘Jane the Virgin’ Season 5 Premiere, The CW (March 27, 9 p.m.)

    The final season of the acclaimed and beloved dramedy picks up where it left off, with Jane (Gina Rodriguez) having made the shocking discovery that her dead husband, Michael, may be alive. But how will this affect her budding relationship with Rafael?

    ‘What We Do in the Shadows’ Series Premiere, FX (March 27, 10 p.m.)

    Based on the 2014 feature film of the same name from Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi, the vampire comedy is a mockumentary look at the daily (or rather, nightly) lives of four vampires who’ve “lived” together for hundreds of years … in Staten Island.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyZi3rJPENs

    ‘Broad City’ Series Finale, Comedy Central (March 28, 10 p.m.)

    The hilarious antics of Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson come to an end after five seasons.

    ‘Barry’ Season 2 Premiere, HBO (March 31, 10 p.m.)

    Barry (Bill Hader) tries to convince his class to go ahead with a performance, despite the absence of teacher Gene Cousineau (Henry Winkler), who’s grief-stricken after the disappearance of Detective Moss.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ir1_hjemxNA

    ‘Veep’ Season 7 Premiere, HBO (March 31, 10:30 p.m.)

    The final season of the Emmy-winning comedy finds Selina (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) hitting the campaign trail as she runs for president. She visits early primary states, wooing uber-wealthy donors while navigating threats from primary challengers, including aide-turned-congressman Jonah Ryan.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EadSyNe1sEo

  • What’s New on Digital, DVD/Blu-ray, TV, & Netflix This Week: March 11-17

    What’s New on Digital, DVD/Blu-ray, TV, & Netflix This Week: March 11-17

    Jude Law in Fantastic Beasts 2
    Warner Bros. Pictures

    At a loss for what to watch this week? From new DVDs and Blu-rays, to what’s streaming on Netflix, we’ve got you covered.

    NEW ON DVD AND BLU-RAY

    ‘Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald’ (March 12)

    The second film in the “Harry Potter”-adjacent franchise introduces Jude Law as a younger Albus Dumbledore, who recruits protagonist Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne) to take down the dark wizard Gellert Grindelwald (Johnny Depp) before he divides and destroys the wizarding world. Lots going on there.

    The movie arrives on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, and DVD on March 12 (and is already available on Digital HD). Bonus features include an extended cut of the movie, deleted scenes, and making-of featurettes.

    ‘Green Book’ (March 12)

    The Best Picture Oscar winner is the feel-good tale of an unlikely interracial friendship based on a true story. Rough-and-tumble Italian-American bouncer Tony Lip (Viggo Mortensen) is hired to drive Dr. Don Shirley (Mahershala Ali), a refined black black pianist, on a concert tour through the Deep South. While the film generated some controversy for its depictions of race relations (and questionable history of some of its key creative personnel), it still triumphed at the Academy Awards and Ali won his second Oscar.

    The movie arrives on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, and DVD on March 12 (and is already available on Digital HD). Bonus features include behind-the-scenes featurettes.

    ‘Mortal Engines’ (March 12)

    The sci-fi adventure is set in a post-apocalyptic world where everyone lives in giant moving cities on wheels, roaming the Earth to find resources. When an assassin and historian team up, they lead a band of outcasts to prevent London from gobbling up everything in its path. You know, that old story.

    The movie arrives on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, and DVD on March 12 (and is already available on Digital HD). Bonus features include behind-the-scenes featurettes and an audio commentary.

    The Kid Brother‘ (March 12): The Criterion Collection has a new 4K digital restoration of this 1927 Western romp starring silent comedy legend Harold Lloyd that’s an irresistible blend of action, romance, and slapstick invention.

    The Magic Flute‘ (March 12): Ingmar Bergman‘s 1975 version of Mozart’s opera is considered one of the best opera films of all time. It fulfilled a longtime dream of the director and showcases his deep love of music. Criterion’s release has a 2K digital restoration with uncompressed stereo soundtrack.

    Someone to Watch Over Me‘ (February 12): After the fantastical flop of Tom Cruise‘s “Legend,” Ridley Scott returned to more earthbound intrigue with “Someone to Watch Over Me,” an oddly underrated entry in the director’s oeuvre. A sturdy romantic procedural starring Tom Berenger and Mimi Rogers (hey, it was 1987), this new edition from our friends at Shout Factory includes new interviews with writer Howard Franklin and cinematographer Steven Poster. If you’ve never seen it and consider yourself a Scott enthusiast, seek it out. It’s got style to spare.

    NEW VIDEO ON DIGITAL, DEMAND, AND STREAMING

    ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ (March 12)

    Barry Jenkins follows up his Oscar-winning film “Moonlight” with this adaptation of James Baldwin’s acclaimed novel. The beautiful and tragic love story follows young adult Tish (KiKi Layne) and her fiancé, Fonny (Stephan James), whose future is derailed when he is arrested for a crime he didn’t commit. The stunning performances are led by Oscar winner Regina King. Now available on Digital HD.

    ‘Mary Poppins Returns’ (March 12)

    The sequel stars Emily Blunt as the magical nanny, who returns to the Banks family to help the grown-up Michael (Ben Whishaw) and his children through a difficult time. Lin-Manuel Miranda plays a lamplighter, while original star Dick Van Dyke makes a special cameo. The movie features brand-new songs, including the Oscar-nominated “The Place Where Lost Things Go.” Now available on Digital HD.

    ‘Vice’ (March 12)

    Christian Bale’s eye-popping transformation into former Vice President Dick Cheney nabbed the movie’s makeup artists an Academy Award. The often-satirical movie, from “Big Short” director Adam McKay, follows Cheney on his path to becoming the most powerful VP in American history. Now available on Digital HD.

    ‘Catastrophe’ (March 15)

    Amazon’s rom-com-with-a-twist series comes to a close with a final season that follows Rob (Delaney) and Sharon (Horgan) continuing to struggle with parenthood and adulting. Rob is now attending AA, while Sharon tries to keep their family together.

    ‘Shrill’ (March 15)

    In Hulu’s new comedy series, Aidy Bryant stars as Annie, an overweight woman who wants to change her life — but not her body. She’s trying to get ahead in her career while juggling bad boyfriends, a sick parent, and a perfectionist boss.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyUr_-jxWZA

    NEW ON NETFLIX

    Triple Frontier‘ (March 13)

    The heist movie teams up quite a cast of Hollywood heavy-hitters: Ben AffleckOscar Isaac, Charlie Hunnam, Garrett Hedlund, and Pedro Pascal. They play former Special Forces operatives who reunite for a heist in a sparsely populated multi-border zone of South America. And though they’re used to carrying out dangerous missions, this one is solely for self-gain. But when events take an unexpected turn, their loyalties and moral code are pushed to a breaking point.

    ‘Arrested Development’ Season 5, Part 2 (March 15)

    The Bluths are back and in more trouble than ever. Buster’s on the run, no one has seen Lucille 2, and the wall is still unfunded. Then the gay mafia gets involved and even Michael can’t seem to save the day.

    ‘Love, Death & Robots’ Series Premiere (March 15)

    David Fincher and Tim Miller team up for what’s being billed as the first animated anthology series for adults. The 18 stories span the science fiction, fantasy, horror and comedy genres; have unique animation styles, from traditional 2D to photo-real 3D CGI; and deal with topics including racism, government, war, free will, and human nature.

    ‘Queer Eye’ Season 8 Premiere (March 15)

    The Fab Five — Antoni Porowski (Food & Wine), Bobby Berk (Interior Design), Jonathan Van Ness (Grooming), Karamo Brown (Culture), and Tan France (Fashion) — head to Kansas City, Missouri to help people of different backgrounds be their best selves. Can you believe?!

    ‘Turn Up Charlie’ Series Premiere (March 15)

    Idris Elba, who DJs himself in real life (he spun at Prince Harry’s wedding), plays a struggling DJ named Charlie who reluctantly becomes a manny to his best friend’s problem-child daughter.

    For more, see what else is new on Netflix in March 2019.

    TV WORTH WATCHING

    ‘The Good Fight’ Season 3 Premiere, CBS All-Access (March 14, 3:01 a.m.)

    The legal drama returns to CBS All-Access for a no-holds-barred third season. Diane Lockhart (Christine Baranski) continues to try to resist a crazy administration without going crazy herself. Meanwhile, Lucca Quinn (Cush Jumbo) balances a new baby with a new love.

    ‘Project Runway’ Season 17 Premiere, Bravo (March 14, 8 p.m.)

    Bravo’s venerable fashion design competition show gets an almost complete makeover. Host Heidi Klum and mentor Tim Gunn are out; Karlie Kloss and Christian Siriano are in.

    ‘Billions’ Season 4 Premiere, Showtime (March 17, 9 p.m.)

    A new war is brewing in the financial and political circles of New York City. But where the fighting used to be between Bobby Axelrod (Damian Lewis) and Chuck Rhoades (Paul Giamatti), now the two enemies are allies in a union brokered by Wendy Rhoades (Maggie Siff).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LK06SXKPQ-c

  • Every Movie You Need To See Before Oscar Night

    Every Movie You Need To See Before Oscar Night

  • WGA Awards 2019 Film Nominees Include ‘Green Book,’ ‘Black Panther’

    WGA Awards 2019 Film Nominees Include ‘Green Book,’ ‘Black Panther’

    Universal

    Awards season is officially in full swing, and the latest group to announce nominations for its annual awards is the Writers Guild of America.

    The WGA revealed its nominees for the best film screenplays of the year on Monday, in three different categories: Original, adapted, and documentary. There are plenty of names in the WGA’s lineup that should already sound familiar to those that have been following awards season, including “Black Panther,” “A Star Is Born,” “Roma,” and newly-minted Best Comedy Golden Globe winner “Green Book.”

    But the WGA is also known for including some less high-profile nominees each year — titles that are critically beloved, but not entirely on the Best Picture Oscar radar, either. This year’s honorees feature films such as “Eighth Grade,” “Can You Ever Forgive Me?,” and potential-but-not-a-lock-just-yet candidate “A Quiet Place.”

    The full lineup — including nominees in the video game writing category — is below. The Writers Guild Awards winners will be announced at simultaneous ceremonies in New York City and Los Angeles on Sunday, February 17.

    ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

    Eighth Grade
    Written by Bo Burnham; A24

    Green Book
    Written by Nick Vallelonga & Brian Currie & Peter Farrelly; Universal Pictures

    A Quiet Place
    Screenplay by Bryan Woods & Scott Beck and John Krasinski, Story by Bryan Woods & Scott Beck; Paramount Pictures

    Roma
    Written by Alfonso Cuarón; Netflix

    Vice
    Written by Adam McKay; Annapurna Pictures

    ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

    BlackKklansman
    Written by Charlie Wachtel & David Rabinowitz and Kevin Willmott & Spike Lee, Based on the book by Ron Stallworth; Focus Features

    Black Panther
    Written by Ryan Coogler & Joe Robert Cole, Based on the Marvel Comics by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby; Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

    Can You Ever Forgive Me?
    Screenplay by Nicole Holofcener and Jeff Whitty, Based on the book by Lee Israel; Fox Searchlight

    If Beale Street Could Talk
    Screenplay by Barry Jenkins, Based on the novel by James Baldwin; Annapurna Pictures

    A Star is Born
    Screenplay by Eric Roth and Bradley Cooper & Will Fetters, Based on the 1954 screenplay by Moss Hart and the 1976 screenplay by John Gregory Dunne & Joan Didion and Frank Pierson, Based on a story by William Wellman and Robert Carson; Warner Bros.

    DOCUMENTARY SCREENPLAY

    Bathtubs Over Broadway
    Written by Ozzy Inguanzo & Dava Whisenant; Focus Features

    Fahrenheit 11/9
    Written by Michael Moore; Briarcliff Entertainment

    Generation Wealth
    Written by Lauren Greenfield; Amazon Studios

    In Search of Greatness
    Written by Gabe Polsky; Art of Sport

    VIDEOGAME WRITING

    Assassin’s Creed Odyssey
    Associate Narrative Directors Matthew Zagurak, Joel Janisse, James Richard Mittag; Narrative Director Melissa MacCoubrey; Story by Jonathan Dumont, Melissa MacCoubrey, Hugo Giard; Scriptwriters Madeleine Hart, Betty Robertson, Jesse Scoble, Diana Sherman, Kelly Bender, Jojo Chia, Ian Fun, Zachary M. Parris, Ken Williamson, Daniel Bingham, Jordan Lemos, Simon Mackenzie, Katelyn MacMullin, Susan Patrick, Alissa Ralph, Stephen Rhodes; Team Lead Writer Sam Gill; AI Writers Jonathan Flieger, Kimberly Ann Sparks; Ubisoft Quebec

    Batman: The Enemy Within, Episode 5-Same Stitch
    Lead Writer James Windeler; Written by Meghan Thornton, Ross Beeley, Lauren Mee; Story by Meghan Thornton, Michael Kirkbride; Telltale Games

    God of War
    Written by Matt Sophos, Richard Zangrande Gaubert, Cory Barlog; Story and Narrative Design Lead Matt Sophos; Story and Narrative Design Richard Zangrande Gaubert; Narrative Design Orion Walker, Adam Dolin; Sony Interactive Entertainment

    Marvel’s Spider-Man
    Story Lead Jon Paquette; Writers Benjamin Arfmann, Kelsey Beachum; Co-Written by Christos Gage; Additional Story Contributions by Dan Slott; Insomniac Games & Sony Interactive Entertainment

    Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire
    Narrative Designers Alex Scokel, Eric Fenstermaker, Kate Dollarhyde, Megan Starks, Olivia Veras, Paul Kirsch; Additional Writing Tony Evans, John Schmautz, Casey Hollingshead, Nitai Poddar; Narrative Design Leads Carrie Patel, Josh Sawyer; Obsidian Entertainment

    [via: Deadline]

  • Barry Jenkins ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ on How He Pulled Off One of 2018’s Best Movies

    Barry Jenkins ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ on How He Pulled Off One of 2018’s Best Movies

    Annapurna Pictures

    If Beale Street Could Talk” offers an extraordinary adaptation of the novel of the same name by James Baldwin, about a young black man (Stephan James) arrested for a crime he did not commit, and the young woman (KiKi Layne) who fights to free him before the release of their first child.

    With his breakthrough film “Moonlight,” Barry Jenkins proved himself a gifted storyteller capable of rendering the lives of characters audiences seldom see on screen with humanity and intelligence. Amplifying Baldwin’s work, Jenkins exceeds even his previous effort, counterbalancing issues of racial injustice and systemic oppression with a singular and transcendent portrait of the love between these two people.

    Jenkins recently spoke with Moviefone about the choices that helped shape one of 2018’s very best films. In addition to discussing what about Baldwin’s story initially resonated with him, Jenkins talked about juggling the challenges of telling a good story and shouldering the responsibility of providing representation for a group too infrequently depicted on film. Lastly, he reflected on the seeds in the source material, and the decisions that he made both in the writing and directing, that helped audiences identify this as both an honest depiction of events and a powerful and inspiring message of hope.

    Moviefone: What about this particular story by James Baldwin stood out to you among his very prolific body of work?

    Barry Jenkins: Mr. Baldwin, he wrote nonfiction and he wrote fiction. He wrote essays, reviews, he was a critic, but he also wrote these novels and I felt like in this book there was just this fusion of those two voices — the one voice that was very passionate about romance and sexuality and sensuality and then the other voice that was just as passionate about systemic injustice in American society, and holding that society  up to a higher standard. And I felt like those two voices were just blended in the story of Tish and Fonny. And to me that was the difference.

    What, if anything, do you feel like this story had that maybe you hadn’t seen before on screen — or that you thought that audiences had not seen on screen?

    When I first read the book, there was an element of that and this idea of Tish and Fonny as soul mates. I had seen very few depictions of young black characters in that kind of a very extremely pure, almost fated kind of love. And so for me that was the thing that not that I’m looking for — I’m not trying to fill a void, so to speak, but I did recognize that I haven’t really seen this. I’m missing this kind of love.

    Annapurna Pictures

    Through Tish and Fonny there’s a very real and palpable sense of the inequality and mistreatment that people of color have to deal with every day. What to you made this a story of hope rather than one of maybe kind of melancholy recognition about that truth?

    I think part of it is the parity in the film between those dynamics. I think we do — and Mr. Baldwin does this — in the source material, so all respects and praise due to him, but I think for as much as we don’t shy away from the trauma, the systemic injustice, and to be honest, the way that trauma reverberates into the families and communities, we also do due diligence about celebrating the love and the life — there’s literally a birth in this film despite all the despair and suffering, and I think that birth is presented in a way that almost inoculates them from the suffering and the despair that is going on in the world around it. And I do think that despite all the traumas that our characters face, in the end, the family is intact and the child is healthy. And I do think, in a very grounded way, that there is hope and optimism in that.

    There’s a real sensitivity, not only to the sexual assault did Victoria experiences, but to the way that the characters and the female characters in particular sort of regard her accusation when it’s being discussed. How much of that was sort of baked into Baldwin’s writing and how much of that was sort of foregrounded as you were adapting it for the screen?

    It was a combination of the two, and it wasn’t as I was adapting it to the screen. It was just so much what’s happening in the world at large. We filmed this in the fall of 2017 and we couldn’t help but be extremely sensitive to that dynamic of the story. I think for me Mr. Baldwin is holding the system to task in a certain way in his novel — that’s the thing that’s being interrogated and not this woman. She is not the antagonist in the film. Case in point, Fonny is not accused of anything. He’s chosen out of a police lineup and he’s placed in that police line-up by an officer who has a vendetta, and by an officer who is willfully manipulating his power under the law — and he doesn’t care who did this to this woman. So she’s been disenfranchised as well.

    And again, it’s Baldwin, so it’s always going to be dense. And I think the more we unpacked it, the more we understood that the sensitivity that we were keen to be aware of was already there in the text and it’s why very early in the film we wanted to present Victoria Rogers. And Emily Rios did such a great job, and she looks directly at the audience because we want the audience to acknowledge her trauma just as well as the other characters do.

    Talk more about that choice to have this direct engagement with the audience. How did you find the right moments to employ that as a way to connect as opposed to turning it into a gimmick?

    You know, less is more with those things. And so that’s why we filled them at a high frame rate. They’re always in slow motion because what I’m looking for when I’m on set and I’m always watching and listening to the actors is if there’s a point where it seems as though the distance, the remove between the actor and the character has disappeared, I think it’s time for the audience to look directly into the eyes of the character. That way it goes from passive empathy to active empathy. And so even if the shot lasts for, in the case of Regina [King], it’s like a two minute shot, in reality, I think we filmed that at 60 frames per second. So in reality it’s still a lot, but it’s like 30 seconds.

    But all of these emotions that the audience might miss, especially if the camera’s outside the actor, now we have to revel in those things. We must walk a mile or inhabit that character’s shoes and I think that’s a very potent thing. And I think if used, I want to say wisely but also used very carefully and thoughtfully, those things can take a performance and really place the audience with the character.

    Director Barry Jenkins (center) and actor KiKi Layne on the set – Annapurna Pictures

    The film portrays a really fascinating spectrum of relationships, some perhaps healthier than others. How universal did you see those as being, and then how inextricable did you see them from people within the African American community?

    The idea of universality is never the goal. I feel like by making them inextricable, you almost make it universal in a certain way. The specific is universal – and again, these characters are a gift from Mr. Baldwin, so most of the work has already been done. But for me it’s just about having extreme fidelity to that character’s experience, because we showed this film in Rome, in Italy and it just never occurred to me that Italians could really get inside the lives of these Harlem-based black actors. And you have the scene with the two families coming together trying to find accord but ending up in this almost battle royale, and I had these Italian moviegoers say to me, that is one of the most Italian sequences you will ever see. And I was like, “oh yeah, I guess I could see that!”

    But again, I’m not engineering this to be relatable to Italians. It’s just about this one family. This is another family. And this is what happens when two families composed of very different people have a difference of opinion.

    I feel it is often unfortunately foisted upon you as a director of color to represent or speak for your community or what people may consider your community. How eager or reluctant or you to sort of take on that responsibility?

    I’m not eager per se, but I accept it. Yeah, it is a great responsibility, but I’ve also been granted great privileges, and there’s a generation of filmmakers not far prior to mine that didn’t have these same privileges and yet they shouldered a much greater responsibility. And so that’s something that I acknowledge — I must.

    And yet at the same time, I think the goal for me is never to create quote-unquote positive imagery, but to create grounded and productive and imagery about telling the truth. And so  it is something that always has to be taken into consideration because there’s been such a dearth of stories featuring characters like ours, people who look like me. And so when they arise or when they arrive, there is a bit of an added weight attached to them and yeah, that requires a great responsibility.

    “If Beale Street Could Talk” is now playing in select theaters.

    MvcIIm7ujJHRs2g5baMKb6
  • Oscars 2019: Academy Reveals 347 Films Eligible for Best Picture

    Oscars 2019: Academy Reveals 347 Films Eligible for Best Picture

    Marvel Studios

    As the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences gears up to begin voting on Oscar nominees, the awards body has revealed which features will be vying for statuettes at next year’s ceremony. And if any members happen to be indecisive, they may have a hard time sifting through this huge collection of films.

    The Academy revealed on Tuesday that there are 347 films that are eligible for feature-length Oscars this year, including the coveted Best Picture prize. That shortlist (can we still call it that when it has more than 300 entries? Whatever, we’re sticking with it) is a slight uptick from 2018’s eligible films pool, which contained 341 options.

    Among the films included in this year’s lineup are names that have already been heard plenty of times this awards season, such as “Black Panther,” “The Favourite,” “If Beale Street Could Talk,” “Roma,” “A Star Is Born,” and “Vice.” Then there are the flicks that have no chance at any sort of recognition — but we won’t name any names. (Though you can probably figure them out for yourself.)

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, the Academy has a strict set of parameters that films need to follow in order to qualify for a Best Picture (or editing, or acting, or writing, or what have you) prize. THR writes:

    ” … [A] feature-length motion picture qualifies if it has a running time of more than 40 minutes, is exhibited theatrically on 35mm or 70mm film or in a qualifying digital format, and opens in a commercial motion picture theater in Los Angeles County by Dec. 31 and completes a minimum run of seven consecutive days.”

    The Academy also revealed on Tuesday its shortlists in specific categories, including Best Original Song, Best Documentary Feature, and Best Foreign Film. There’s a bunch of overlap between that list and this newest one, so keep your eyes peeled for films that can break through multiple different format categories. (Obviously, “Roma” is the biggest contender here.)

    Nominees for the the 91st annual Academy Awards will be announced on January 22. The Oscars telecast will take place on Sunday, February 24 on ABC.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter, Oscars.org]

  • Box Office: ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse’ Soars, ‘Mortal Engines’ Flops

    Box Office: ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse’ Soars, ‘Mortal Engines’ Flops

    Sony Pictures

    Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” dethroned “Ralph Breaks the Internet” as king of the box office: It brought in a solid $35.4 million during its first three days of release.

    That’s not the best opening for an animated film this year, but it is the best for one opening in December. It edges out “Sing,” which debuted with $35 million in December 2016.

    “Into the Spider-Verse” uses a mix of CGI and hand-drawn animation to bring several incarnations of Spidey to life. Audiences gave it a glowing A+ CinemaScore. It’s also earned a Golden Globe nomination for best animated feature, and boasts an impressive 97% critics rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

    Warner Bros.

    Clint Eastwood‘s drug-smuggling drama “The Mule” opened in second place with $17 million. It’s his first aging gig since 2012’s “Trouble With the Curve” (which he didn’t direct). Critics were fairly “meh” on it, giving it a 62% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Audiences liked it slightly more: It currently has a 74% audience score.

    “The Mule” performed better than Eastwood’s other 2018 film, the docudrama “The 15:17 to Paris,” which opened to  $12,554,286 in February.

    Universal

    Meanwhile, the Peter Jackson-produced sci-fi epic “Mortal Engines” is no “Lord of the Rings.” It had a disastrous opening with only $7.5 million from 3,103 venues.

    The film, based on a YA novel, is expected to lose over $100 million. The reviews were also terrible: The New York Post called it “a wearying blast of CGI and genre-cribbing,” the AV Club said it was “a headache-inducing spectacle,” and RogerEbert.com described it as “truly crummy.”

    Marvel/Fox

    Once Upon a Deadpool,” a PG-13 re-release of “Deadpool 2” with a few new and alternate scenes, picked up $2.6 million on 1,566 screens. That adds to the $322 million North America take and $736 million global box office of the R-rated original.

    Annapurna

    Earning the best screen average of the weekend was Barry Jenkins’s “If Beale Street Could Talk,” which debuted in four theaters with $219,173. That comes out to $54,793 per location. Based on James Baldwin’s novel, the awards contender has already received a number of honors, including Golden Globe nominations for Regina King, Jenkins’s screenplay, and Best Drama.

    Sony Pictures Classics

    Also in limited release: Sony Pictures Classics’ “Capernaum” made $27,588 from three screens, averaging $9,196 per location. The drama about a boy who sues his parents for giving birth to him won the Jury Prize at Cannes. It’s also Lebanon’s official entry for foreign language film at the Oscars.

    IFC

    Lars von Trier‘s serial killer film “The House that Jack Built,” which prompted more than 100 walkouts at its Cannes premiere, didn’t drum up much interest. It opened at 33 theaters with a measly $40,000 for a $1,225 per-screen average.

    This weekend’s total haul came in 61% below the same frame in 2017, according to Comscore, when “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” ruled the box office.

    Here are the top 10 estimates for December 14 – 16, 2018

    1. “Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse,” $35,400,000
    2. “The Mule,” $17,210,000
    3. “Dr. Seuss’s The Grinch” (2018), $11,580,000
    4. “Ralph Breaks the Internet,” $9,589,000
    5. “Mortal Engines,” $7,501,000
    6. “Creed II,” $5,398,830
    7. “Bohemian Rhapsody,” $4,125,000
    8. “Instant Family,” $3,720,000
    9. “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald,” $3,650,000
    10. “Green Book,” $2,780,000

    [Via Variety, BoxOfficeMojo.com]

  • ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ Stars KiKi Layne and Stephan James on Acting In One of the Year’s Best Films

    ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ Stars KiKi Layne and Stephan James on Acting In One of the Year’s Best Films

    Annapurna Pictures

    The story of a black man arrested for a crime he did not commit and the woman seeking to free him before the birth of their child, “If Beale Street Could Talk” offers a powerful portrait of hope under the bitterest of circumstances.

    Barry Jenkins’ follow-up to “Moonlight” adapts a 1974 novel by James Baldwin, whose fearless, poetic honesty has for decades given a deeply-needed voice to the black community and to the forgotten, mistreated and disenfranchised everywhere. Anchored by breakthrough performances from newcomers KiKi Layne and Stephan James, this creative collaboration brings together multiple generations of storytellers for a powerful experience that often feels unlike any other brought to the screen.

    Moviefone recently spoke with James and Layne about their work in the film, both under the watchful direction of Jenkins, as well as with each other. In addition to talking about the inspiration and clarity they drew from Baldwin’s source material, they discussed the challenges of charting the evolution of these two complex, intertwined characters, and finally, reflected on the ways that their solidarity through the adversity of the story — even arriving at something much less than a fairy tale ending – should be viewed as optimistic and hopeful.

    Moviefone: This is a story about people of color created from the ground up by people of color. How did this maybe feel unique among the acting challenges you’ve tackled before?

    KiKi Layne: What was unique was seeing these two young black people who are essentially soul mates. We don’t see too many stories like that where it’s something so much deeper — and that can’t really be explained between Tish and Fonny. I thought that was so beautiful. But because it’s written by James Baldwin, who had an ability to speak about social issues and injustices and such a special way, to see this beautiful love story but also this commentary on social issues interwoven so beautifully, that’s what makes this story so special and unique.

    Stephan James: It was different because it was Baldwin. It was the first time that anyone had adapted Baldwin for the English language, so I think that the cast and the crew, starting with Barry, really accepted the weight of that sort of responsibility and understood how important it was to accept his language and to live through his words, and if anything it felt different because of that.

    How did you map out that evolution of their maturity – the parallel lines of their happy times, and then the events that force them to grow up a little faster than they’re ready?

    Layne: A big part of navigating all of that was communicating with Barry. He helped me to better understand where is Tish at, and to navigate where Tish was at in what moments — what has she experienced up to that point? Am I speaking as the 19-year-old that’s currently going through all of these things, or am I speaking as the woman we see at the end of the movie who’s already been through it and has grown so much because of it? Barry was a big part of me navigating that.

    James: I was excited about the arc that Fonny was going to take in the film; you see him at his most joyous moments and at his darkest times. And it’s sort of a balancing act, that vulnerability with strength, and wanting to be strong in the face of my fiancée and trying to uplift her and support her, knowing that she’s carrying my unborn child. So, I think there’s that and not letting the situation that he’s found himself in tear him down too much. So for me it was a big balancing act trying to find strength when you know everything has sort of been taken away from you.

    How did you and Kiki find a way to maintain that connection between Fonny and Tish, even though you were separated for so much of the story?

    James: KiKi and I just sort of accepted the responsibility that — if anyone was going to believe this story — it would have to start with Tish and Fonny. So we decided together to let our guards down and be vulnerable and to try things with each other. I think that’s a big credit to Barry in terms of the environment that he helped to create in making us comfortable to explore each other. And KiKi is such a giving actress that it was easy for me to play off of her. We only really got time to hang out during the chemistry read that we had in New York before she had been cast, so we really had no time to develop the material and to dive in with each other.

    Layne: The way they set up the shooting schedule gave Stephan and I time to do lighter scenes towards the beginning of the shoot, and then those more difficult scenes in the prison and everything else after we had had more time to get to know each other. Steph and I really had an understanding coming into the project that the love between Tish and Fonny is the film, and to best serve that we understood that we would have to let some walls down a lot faster than a whole lot of people would be comfortable with. But Baldwin created such a beautiful and rich love story, and then Barry had such a beautiful vision for it that even in those really tough prison scenes and everything, it seemed to come more naturally by the time we got through them.

    Annapurna

    Was there something from either the script, or maybe even Baldwin’s writing, that you drew upon that informed you as you were sort of figuring out how this character would be portrayed on screen?

    James: I think it was everything. A scene that was cut out of the film was the scene where Fonny asks Tish to marry him in his apartment, and to me that scene sort of embodied everything that Fonny is — this emotional artist, at the end of the day. He feels and he describes things in a different sort of way. It’s not in the film, but it’s in the performance. And that’s the beauty of Baldwin, that he was able to give us so much sub-context in the novel for us to refer to. And I must have read [the novel] two or three times while making this film. So it’s an incredible piece of source material when you have someone who’s so transparent, brutally honest in the language. So to me it was an incredible thing to be able to adapt Baldwin.

    Layne: There’s one line in the book where Tish is kind of describing herself and she says people [think] she looks like she needs help – like she just had such a softness to her. I was like, what does that look like and feel like and sound like? Because that’s not how I come off at all. So I latched on to that aspect of Tish, and then started playing around with it — because she’s not weak. As I dove deeper into the character and the story, Tish is a very strong woman. So I had to figure out how do I communicate all of the strength that actually lies in her?

    Is there anything that you think Beale Street is exploring that other movies haven’t before, or maybe is especially in need of being given attention right now?

    Layne: Even though this film is based in the early seventies, we are still very much having so many of those same conversations and dealing with those same issues. I think what’s special about “Beale Street” is that it forces you to have conversations about these issues, not just from a place of facts and statistics but really talking about the humanity of these people who are experiencing this really unfair, painful situation. You are forced to really see them and everything that they are fighting for, which I think is often missed in how these stories are portrayed.

  • ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ Star Regina King on the Oscar-Hopeful’s Emotional Story

    ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ Star Regina King on the Oscar-Hopeful’s Emotional Story

    Annapurna

    The engine that drives “If Beale Street Could Talk,” Barry Jenkins’ adaptation of the 1974 novel by James Baldwin, is the relationship — and love — between Tish (KiKi Layne) and Fonny (Stephan James), a young woman fighting to free her unfairly detained fiancée before the birth of their child. But as Tish’s mother, Sharon, Regina King is that engine’s most important mechanic, brilliantly evidencing exactly where this young woman got the untold reserves of strength to fight against an unjust system and still remain hopeful about their future.

    In a particularly crowded field of amazing Supporting Actress performances, King’s work has drawn considerable and deserved praise, earning recognition from critics groups across the country, and receiving Critics Choice and Golden Globe nominations. As “Beale Street” arrives in theaters for audiences to experience its powerful story, King spoke to Moviefone about her incredible work in the film. In addition to talking about the inspiration she drew upon personally, professionally, and culturally for the role, she discussed her collaborations with director Barry Jenkins and her co-stars to bring the story to life, and finally, reflected on its bittersweet but absolutely essential message of perseverance and love.

    Moviefone: Talk about how this story is perhaps unique among the ones that you’ve helped tell in the past.

    Regina King: Well, the Rivers family — Sharon and Joe — as black people, we have a version of them in our lives somewhere – several versions of them, whether it’s a mother, father, aunt, uncle, grandmother. Because of that, I think we all infused a bit of those real people into our performances, and Barry infused those real people into his vision of how he saw of the story being told. Also it informed James Baldwin, and how he told the story. It started there. And that’s what’s resonating for a lot of people, because that person exists in other families, not just black families. And so often when you talk about another black man who has been in prison, he’s just looked at as a criminal and we don’t get to see the humanity, and that’s what you’re getting here. You’re fighting for Fonny because you get to see what he’s made of and where he’s come from. You’re fighting for Tish because you get to see what she’s a product of, and you’ve seen that somewhere in your life no matter who you are. And I think that’s why it’s resonating so strongly. I think a lot of people are seeing this movie and coming out and saying, “I’ve never looked at someone the way Barry makes us have to look into Fonny’s eyes. I’ve never done that before.” And some people are like, I had to look away, but then I had to look back. So that’s powerful.

    The moment you say “Yes, baby?” to Tish in the first scene where she is about to tell Sharon she’s pregnant… it exudes such a palpable understanding and sensitivity to what she’s going to say, even before she says it. Does that come from your preparation as an actor, direction from Barry, or just life experience as a parent hearing information from a child who seems reluctant to or nervous about confessing it?

    Honestly, a combination of all of the above. Just being a mother. My son and I, very early on, I told him: Even if you are concerned about disappointing me, you have to tell me the truth. Because if I don’t know the truth, I can’t fight for you. I can’t feel for you because I don’t know what to feel for. And I think most parents can relate to that. But did I think that just that line would affect people the way it has? No. That’s Barry understanding how he wanted that to be shot, and how he wanted to display the connection between mother and daughter. And while KiKi’s looking in the camera, KiKi and I aren’t looking at each other, but he makes me feel like we are looking not only at each other but through each other to you. And Barry did that.

    So you’ve got two actors that are prepared and have done their homework and studied this book, and the nuances of the characters that we’re playing. And me being a mother, and my life experience as a mom, my most favorite thing about myself is being a mom. I cherish my relationship with my son. So that lives in that moment, and then you have Barry, the captain of the ship, creating how we’re going to see all of those things come together.

    Annapurna Pictures

    Was there a passage from Baldwin’s book or a line of dialogue in the script that gave you particular insight into Sharon, or maybe inspired choices that you made in your performance?

    Honestly, it was not a particular line, but just in the way Tish describes her mother throughout the book.  Sometimes it would be, like, three pages that’s just Tish talking about her mom, and how her mom and dad met. And Baldwin writes that whole scene when she first tells her mom that she’s pregnant, and while she’s scared, somehow for me in reading the book, I felt like Tish knew, “Mom is going to make me feel okay.” And just the way he painted Sharon through Tish’s eyes made her feel like a hero to me. So just the way he painted Sharon through Tish’s eyes was all I needed, and all I would keep going back to.

    This film shows such a remarkable sensitivity and understanding to Victoria’s situation by these other women. How much of that was built into the dialogue, and how much of that was brought by you and the other actresses in terms of trying to be empathetic despite Fonny’s circumstances?

    It was equal parts of both. Some have actually had that experience unfortunately, so they’re pulling on real life experience — being there with someone who has experienced that and being sensitive to that. God willing, you can leave this earth and have never been violated sexually, but for those who have, and those of us who have stood with them to get through to the other side, it’s devastating. That pain takes your breath away. It’s debilitating. So we are sensitive about telling that story and knew that we had to take care and honor that pain, because it’s real. And Emily Rios [who plays Victoria] is such an amazing actress, and at that moment where she’s just standing up there on the hill and she’s looking in the camera, there’s no dialogue, you know the whole story just looking at her face and you know that this woman had had something huge taken away from her that she’ll never be able to get back.

    The scene between Sharon and Victoria in Puerto Rico is just so powerful. How do you work with another actress, or with Barry, to make each other feel safe when the moment on screen feels out of control for both of them?

    Well, it definitely starts with Barry creating a space that felt safe. We were shooting in a location that was not a built set. It was a really gnarly living situation for the people who actually live there. So as an actor, you pull on all those things — you use the environment — to help motivate the performance. Even with that though, we did not feel unsafe in that space, and Barry was so smart in finding the women that come and surround Victoria and take her off. Those women were real straight-up Dominican abuelas, and they gave me some looks. I don’t even think they necessarily knew what the work that they were a part of actually meant, but they would just explain to them “You’re coming to help this woman because she’s feeling not safe” — and the look that those women gave me? They were heartbreaking, like “I will cut you if you hurt her!” Barry gave them enough of the story that they were tapping into that protection that we as women have for each other in those moments. And knowing that a woman has been raped, knowing that a woman has been violated, it doesn’t matter what age or color you are, you’re coming to the rescue. And Barry created that so Emily and I were able to just fall into it and be Victoria and Sharon. Emily and Regina are gone in those moments. And we would not really speak much in between scenes, so that discomfort was palpable.

    There is a sense to me that this movie is more about perseverance than it is about aspiration. How positive or optimistic do you feel like this story is when it feels like it’s about the experience that people of color have to live with every single day of their life.

    And with that, being black in America, there are so many essays and interviews that you can see of James Baldwin and the passion and the fervor that he has when he’s describing what it is. But underneath all of that, it comes from loving being black, even though you are treated as if how you were born, how God created you, is a crime. But with that, we have persevered and we have made amazing accomplishments throughout history. And this movie — I feel like it is a reminder of how we have been able to persevere.

    And for those who did not know, now you know that — even with a knife in your back — we still find a way to laugh, to love, to dance. And it’s a beautiful thing that we get to show that. That we get to allow the world to really see us and see what we come from, and how we’ve been able to persevere.

    “Beale Street” is now playing in theaters.

  • ‘Black Panther’ Named Best of 2018 By African-American Film Critics

    ‘Black Panther’ Named Best of 2018 By African-American Film Critics

    Marvel

    Naming “Black Panther” as the best film of the year was a “no-brainer” African-American Film Critics’ Association co-founder Shawn Edwards said today in a statement.

    “Beyond its tremendous reviews and historic box office performance, the film changed the culture and became a defining moment for Black America. … Many have waited a lifetime for a moment like this and ‘Black Panther’ delivered with a multi-generational appeal never before seen.”

    The film also earned Best Director for Ryan Coogler and Best Song for Kendrick Lamar and SZA’s “All the Stars.”

    (Sorry, no love for “Creed II,” which Coogler produced but didn’t direct, or its star, Michael B. Jordan, who won AAFCA’s Breakout Performance in 2015 for the first film.)

    The Hate U Give,” “If Beale St. Could Talk,” and “BlacKkKlansman” scored two prizes each.

    “Beale Street”‘s Regina King (who’s racking up kudos across the board this season) Won Best Actress and the movie (directed by Barry Jenkins) won Best Independent Film. Spike Lee‘s “BlacKkKlansman” won Best Screenplay and Best Actor for John David Washington, the son of frequent Lee collaborator Denzel Washington.

    And Regina Hall (who was also nominated by the Gotham Awards and the Independent Spirit Awards) was named Best Actress for “Support the Girls.”

    “AAFCA’s Top 10 marks the first time so many films by or about black identity have made our list, presenting storylines that reflect the diversity that lives within the black community,” AAFCA president Gil Robertson said in a statement.

    AAFCA’s awards ceremony will take place on Feb. 6, 2019 at the Taglyan Complex in Los Angeles.

    Last year, the group’s winners included “Get Out,” “Mudbound” and Tiffany Haddish in “Girls Trip.”

    Here are all the winners:
    Best Film: “Black Panther”
    Best Director: Ryan Coogler (“Black Panther”)
    Best Screenplay: Charlie Wachtel & David Rabinowitz and Kevin Willmott & Spike Lee (“BlacKkKlansman”)
    Best Actor: John David Washington (“BlacKkKlansman”)
    Best Actress: Regina Hall (“Support the Girls”)
    Best Supporting Actor: Russell Hornsby (“The Hate U Give” )
    Best Supporting Actress: Regina King (“If Beale Street Could Talk”)
    Best Breakout Performance: Amandla Stenberg (“The Hate U Give” )
    Best Animated Film: “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse
    Best Independent Film: “If Beale Street Could Talk”
    Best Foreign Film: “Roma”
    Best Documentary: “Quincy
    Best Song: “All The Stars” (“Black Panther”)
    Best New Media: Red Table Talk
    Best TV Drama: “Queen Sugar”
    Best TV Comedy: “Insecure”

    AAFCA’s Top Ten List:
    “Black Panther”
    “If Beale Street Could Talk”
    “The Hate U Give”
    “A Star is Born”
    “Quincy”
    “Roma”
    “Blindspotting”
    “The Favourite”
    “Sorry to Bother You”
    “Widows”

    [Via THR]