Tag: interview

  • Danielle Brooks & Lea DeLaria on ‘OITNB’ Season 3: ‘Bombs Are Dropped’

    danielle brooks Life in lockup is about to test the faith of many of your favorite “Orange Is the New Black” inmates, including the increasingly less self-defeating Taystee and the allegiance-shifting Big Boo.

    The actresses behind those two fan favorite characters –- Danielle Brooks and Lea DeLaria, respectively -– admit they’ve been sworn to secrecy about how the third season of the Netflix sensation will shake down, but they risked a stint in showbiz solitary to offer some tantalizing clues about what’s in store for Taystee and Big Boo, along with revealing their own off-screen experiences with prison life and prison-themed entertainment.

    On what’s ahead for their characters:

    Danielle Brooks: I feel like Season 3 for Taystee is another whirlwind of change. She keeps growing every season, and she dealt a lot with Vee last season. And this season, we’re figuring out how she’s dealing with Vee being there -– or not being there -– and you’re definitely going to see her going through a transformation, without a doubt. And one that really threw me off! I kept going to the writers over and over, like, “Is this really what we’re doing?” And they’re like, “Yeah.” I’m like, “Are you sure this is the choice you want?” So it’s going to be exciting to see the evolution of her, because she is a child of the system, so she is constantly growing in prison. She’s becoming a woman in prison. So we get to see what that’s going to be.

    Lea DeLaria: God, that’s such an actor answer. You’re such an actor, and I’m a standup comic. I don’t even think of any of that. Whoa…I’m like, “Big Boo, Season 3. She’ll be funny.”

    Brooks: Your Season 3 is actually pretty dope. There’s so many times that I’ve watched you and another actor –- I’m not going to talk about that –- who worked closely together, and I’m just like, sneaking behind the chair like watching them work.

    DeLaria: I do think that they’ve really, really gotten into an interesting place with Boo, and even more so. I have to say, like Dani, what I was having to do in season two, I was like, “Really? You want me to turn on Red? Really? You want Boo to do that? And is this right?” And it’s really interesting how that helped me explore who she was and the kind of loner existence that she had lived. So yeah, I think that they’re continuing to push that character and push the boundaries, really explore who she is as an individual in Season 3, def.

    On what they feel sets the new season apart:

    DeLaria: What I liked particularly about this season is that I’ve always felt that there are no sacred cows on our show, that we’re constantly pushing the envelope. We really go for it this season, I feel like. And I’ve got to give it up to Jenji [Kohan, the series’ creator] on that. Jenji’s always trying to say something with everything that she does. And she’s definitely making a statement about women, about the disenfranchised, about the prison system. All that’s going to continue and get deeper, maybe even a little darker.

    Brooks: Yeah. I think you worded that perfectly. I mean, if I was to add anything to it, I would say, after speaking to Jenji in the top of Season 3 and asking her like, trying to pick her brain about what this is going to be, she just kept saying “This season’s about faith. It’s about faith.”

    DeLaria: Really?

    Brooks: Yeah. And I was like, “Really? I don’t think so.” But as the season started to reveal itself to me, it did start to make sense on why she chose that theme. And especially for a lot of characters when you’re always in survival mode, you do sort of have to reach out to some sort of faith, and I think that’s why they played on the theme this year of the candles for the promo key art. So yeah, I think that’s what it’s about Season 3.

    On the new inmate Stella Carlin, played by Australian actress and model Ruby Rose, who stirs things up between Piper and the re-incarcerated Alex:

    DeLaria: I don’t think we can say anything.

    Brooks: All I can say is: bombs are dropped.

    DeLaria: That was so good! What she said. Please, somebody attribute it to me.

    On what they hear from actual inmates:

    Brooks: I love everything about it because you know with social media, it’s so easy to reach out to your fans. But to actually get a handwritten letter from someone, that is so dope. But yeah, I do have a friend that is incarcerated, and I’ve written to him recently in hopes of receiving something back. But I’m waiting for that.

    DeLaria: Although we’re not getting the fan mail, I have people stop me on the street who are involved with the prison system, and say that we’re getting it right -– that we’re getting it absolutely right. I figured we got it right when the Women’s Prison Association started following us on Twitter, right? I mean, that’s when I went, we must be doing it right.

    On their own experiences behind bars:

    Brooks: None. Thank the Lord.

    DeLaria: I’ve been arrested in protests, you know, the standard kind of American that’s not really jail. That’s not really prison. That’s not really jail. You’re out in minutes. There’s always a group of you. You sing “Kumbaya”… When I was younger, in summer camp took us to a DJJ -– a Detention Juvenile Justice system -– to scare us straight, the young kids straight. But mine was not as intense as the ones on TV. The girls that I was with, these 13, 14-year-old girls were so dramatic. They handcuffed a few of us, and they’re passing out. It’s like, “I can’t breathe!” It was really dramatic. But we all turned out pretty good. But that’s the only experience I’ve had actually walking into one… A lot of the girls have gone to prison, in terms of acting [research].

    Brooks: Taylor Schilling has.

    DeLaria: Kate [Mulgrew] has, I know. And my research was watching “Lockup.” I’m just not that kind of actor who’s going to go to a prison and find my spine. [Points thumb at Brooks] She’s Miss Juilliard.

    Brooks: I would have loved it. A) the process happened so quickly, that I found out maybe a week or a few days before I had actually started shooting. So I kind of just jumped right into it. There was no time to actually do that kind of research. But like Lea said, I watched so much “Lockup” and “Scared Straight.” And I watched it before getting the job -– me and my dad, strangely enough, but my dad works third shift, so when I would come home from college, we would stay up really late and watch prison shows. That was our thing. So strange, but we did. I guess we’re both intrigued with human nature and why we do things in this world that is so foreign to us. So I think I did my research before getting the part. It was done.
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  • Tim Curry to the ‘It’ Remake’s Pennywise: ‘Good Luck’

    Tim Curry at The Actors Fund's 19th Annual Tony Awards Viewing Party - ShowCongrats to Tim Curry, who made a rare public appearance Sunday night in Los Angeles to accept an award. It was one of the first times the beloved “Rocky Horror Picture Show” star has been in the public eye since a 2012 stroke left him in a wheelchair.

    The 69-year-old star may not be the same energetic force we remember as “sweet transvestite” Frank-N-Furter, but he told Moviefone he’s “very lucky” to be honored by his peers. “It feels amazing. I feel very lucky,” he said of accepting his Lifetime Achievement Award from the Actors Fund.

    He also wished “good luck” to Will Poulter (“We’re the Millers”), who’s been cast as the new Pennywise the clown in the upcoming remake of Stephen King’s “It,” a role Curry played to perfection in the 1990 mini-series. “It’s a wonderful part,” Curry said of Stephen King’s unforgettable evil clown, who terrorizes a group of children. When I mentioned that a lot of people consider Curry’s Pennywise a tough act to follow, the actor humbly said, “I don’t know about that.”

    We also remember Curry fondly from 1982’s “Annie,” in which he played con artist Rooster Hannigan to Aileen Quinn‘s orphan. Quinn was also at the June 7 event held at L.A.’s Skirball Center. She hadn’t seen Curry since making the film 33 years ago, but had great memories of his kindness on set. “He was so caring and nurturing. I know he’s known for these crazy, wild, evil characters, but offscreen, he was so kind to me. He would protect me and hold my hand real tight during stunt work. He would ask, ‘Are you nervous?’ He was so sweet. I can’t wait to give him a big hug,” she said.

    As part of the tribute to Curry, the show began with a performance of “The Time Warp” from “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” featuring Sebastian La Cause (“Orange Is the New Black”), Renée Marino (“Jersey Boys”) and Ashley Argota (“The Fosters”).

    Even if he can’t do “The Time Warp,” it’s great to see Curry out and about again.
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  • Laverne Cox and Selenis Leyva Say ‘OITNB’ Season 3 Will Have You Taking Sides

    laverne coxThe only thing that could land the stars of Orange Is the New Black” in jail with their bosses is to spill the hotly guarded secrets of the much-anticipated third season.

    But just like the ladies inside Litchfield Penitentiary, actresses Laverne Cox — who plays transgender inmate Sophia Burset — and Selenis Leyva — head cook and Santeria practitioner Gloria Mendoza — are willing to bend the rules a bit: they offer Moviefone a peek behind the bars of Season 3.

    On what little they can say about their characters’ interaction:

    Selenis Leyva: Conflict! Sophia and Gloria are going to have an interesting journey in Season 3. I’m really excited about it -– and a little scared because I think that we really go to a dark place.

    Laverne Cox: I’m scared too! I think there’s going to be people that take sides. Will they hate us? Yeah. I wonder that too.

    Leyva: I think so. But I’m really excited about where we went acting-wise and the stories and all that stuff. It was really great.

    Cox: We had a really great time. And it was a pleasure.

    On the new season’s overall theme of faith:

    Leyva: I love that they focus on that this season — with all of us — in a different way. We touched on it with Gloria in Season 2. You got to see her coming into the Santeria and showing her faith. I think we all hold on to something –- we all have to hold onto something, and if you’re behind bars, then you really do. And I love the exploration of that.

    Cox: What’s interesting to me, too, is you can hold onto faith, but you can also hold onto resentments. You can hold onto anger. You can hold onto revenge plots. There’s so many things that one can hold onto. If that’s all you have, then you’re going to hold onto it with all you’ve got.

    Leyva: I think it’s the sake of survival. I love the idea of holding onto faith. And every single woman you will see somehow dealing with it in a beautiful way.

    On making bold storytelling choices:

    Leyva: I think we always do -– every season, we do. The good thing about Season 3, is that it’s doing the same thing that we started. We’re sticking true to the original plan, which is to tell compelling stories in a truthful manner and respectful way. And also, we go for it. We really do go for it. Some of the stories that we are dealing with this season I’m really excited about.

    Cox: Were you scared at all? Because I was scared.

    Leyva: I was. Every time I got a script, I was like, “Really? Like, you’re going to take me there?” And I love that.

    Cox: I think as an artist, you want to be scared. And it constantly scares us, which is good.

    On the new inmate Stella Carlin, played by Australian actress and model Ruby Rose, who stirs things up between Piper and Alex:

    Cox: I can say personally that I got to hang out with her a few times, and she’s lovely and sweet and funny and beautiful. Like, stunning. She’s like a stunning girl, not to objectify her or reduce her to that. But it’s very obvious — like, “Wow! You’re a talented actress, but whoa, girl!”

    Leyva: Literally, like, “What is she doing here? What’s going on? You’re going to start bringing models into the prison?” She’s bringing some real nice caliente moments, yes.

    On Sophia’s evolving relationship with her son, Michael:

    Cox: It’s so complicated, their relationship. She just wants to be there for him in any way that he needs her, and if he’ll take advice from her, she’s going to give it. There’s a desperation, for me, that is really real — a desperate need to connect with him to be there as a mother, as a father, whatever you need. And it’s really complicated. I think that conversation that she has with Michael [in the season opener] sets off the events for Sophia for the rest of the season, now thinking back on it, in a really brilliant way. Stuff goes down in like a really intense way. It’s interesting because the first season she sort of lost control a little bit with the threat of losing her hormones. I think now the threat is losing her son.

    On the typical mood on set during a full day of shooting:

    Cox: If there are cafeteria scenes, we all have to kind of get loose because those are really long days. It depends on what we’re shooting, but I think we’re all like, “OK, she’s got something intense today. We’re going to leave her alone.” And then if it’s a little more fun…

    Leyva: In the hallway with all the dressing rooms, that famous hallway, we are always sitting on the floor outside talking. There’s a lot going on. There’s music, there’s singing, there’s dancing — we have a really good time. Then when we go into that sound stage, that’s when everybody knows it’s like, “OK, it’s on. Today is on.” Laverne and I did a scene this past season that was so difficult, so incredibly difficult that I kept checking in with her, and we would look at each other and be like, “You good?” “Good, I’m good.” And at the end of the day I’d text her, and I was like, “Are you OK?” She’s like, “Yeah.” We had to check in because we were able to go there.

    Cox: Every time you say that I start getting [emotional]…

    Leyva: Yeah, because you go back. That was a hard day. I was exhausted…[But] It’s such a fun environment, too. It really is. I don’t want to sound like I’m BS-ing, but it really is a fun place to go to. It could be four in the morning and I’ll step on to that stage, and I’m like “Yay!” It’s just fun.

    On the unique nature of the show, given its large female-centric cast:

    Cox: There are a lot of women on the crew, too.

    Leyva: Yeah, but with the crew involved, I’d say we’re pretty even. There’s a lot of men. Thank goodness…. It is unusual, and it is special. We’re so funny, because if a guy comes to set, we’re like, oh there’s a man on set! Do you smell that? So it is very different in that sense. We get very excited. We’re like, did you see the new guest star?!

    Cox: We have some hot men guesting on our show!

    Leyva: Yes, we do, so that’s always fun. We’re like, “So who’s going to play my boyfriend?”
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  • ‘Outlander’s’ Tobias Menzies Breaks Down the ‘Sadistic and Cruel’ Black Jack Randall

    Tobias Menzies at The Paley Center For Media's 32nd Annual PALEYFEST LA - "Outlander" - Arrivals Is there a nastier character on television than “Outlander’s” Black Jack Randall?

    As cruel a schemer as “Game of Thrones’” Cersei Lannister, as cunningly manipulative as “Gotham’s” Oswald Cobblepot, as homicidally ruthless as “Scandal’s” Rowan Pope and as sexually sadistic as “GoT’s” Ramsay Snow, Black Jack’s may be the blackest hearted Big Bad of them all, played to malicious, all-too-believable perfection by Tobias Menzies.

    With the first season of the Starz drama, adapted from novelist Diana Gabaldon’s bestselling series by acclaimed writer-producer Ronald D. Moore, concluding on Saturday, Black Jack has only just begun his brutal, bloody torment of the heroic Highlander Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan), who sacrificed himself to her freedom for his time-traveling love Claire (Caitriona Balfe) — and, as readers of the books know, things get far, far uglier.

    In an exclusive conversation with Moviefone, Menzies meditates on the nature and motives behind monstrous Black Jack –- as well as his lookalike ancestor Frank Randall –- with some surprising perspectives.

    WARNING: There are a few spoilers ahead for those unfamiliar with the flow of the first and second novels’ storylines.

    Moviefone: When “Outlander” first came your way, what was your initial reaction to it?

    Tobias Menzies: I did think about it. It’s always a particular type of commitment to sign up for multiple years on a TV show. However, I mean, the thing that initially drew me to it was, obviously, the opportunity to play two different people is an unusual thing for a TV show — and, obviously, interesting. And also Ron [Moore] – I had admired “Battlestar Galactica.” That was a very character-driven – albeit sci-fi, but really that wasn’t the point. It was about the characters and very well-written, sort of psychological, really interesting. I thought it was really great TV.

    So I was struck by the fact that he was going to be creating the show. And then, in a way, much later came the awareness of the books and Diana and the sort of global phenomenon that is “Outlander.” But yeah, that was really the things that struck me first.

    Which Randall were you most drawn to at first? Black Jack or Frank?

    For obvious reasons, I think Black Jack is obviously the flashier and more sort of attention grabbing of the two, but I have really enjoyed having the variety of the two different people. It’s been a really enjoyable job to do for that reason, really. And yeah, I am now, equally as fond of them for their different reasons. And I think they both bring sort of different textures to the overall kind of show. And I think one of Diana’s strengths is she writes very good characters.

    One of the things I enjoy about your performance is there’s no gimmick to making one or the other work. There’s no limp or mustache. How did you navigate making them very different individuals?

    That’s interesting. I’m glad that you brought that up. I’m interested that you like that, because that was something I was very keen to do, was not to ink in the difference too heavily. But obviously that comes with a certain amount of risk. The danger is that you don’t quite delineate them enough. And obviously, I get asked this quite a lot, and I can’t really come up with a satisfactory answer. It’s been quite sort of –- it wasn’t particularly logical. It was intuitive.

    I remember the fittings, putting on the clothing, being very helpful. The very different sort of weight of cloth and made me stand differently, especially the uniform for Jack. But in a way, I just to a certain degree was daring to trust that the costumes and the script and the setting would do a lot of the work for me – and then daring to be maybe at times a little bit similar. And wanting the difference to be in the eyes rather than, as you say, the mustache or a limp.

    But yeah, there’s an element of risk about that. And I’m, obviously very encouraged that people do feel there is a definite difference between the two people. Because, as you say, I’m not doing anything particularly radically different with my face. But that was certainly much more interesting to me to have that rather than something very overt. Because in a way, then you take away what is kind of fun and interesting about having the same actor play two different people.

    Once the scope of Jack’s story was revealed to you –- and the fact that he’s quite vicious –- how did you work with that to make him as evil as he needs to be, but also to make him a realistic person?

    I think I was keen from the beginning -– and Ron had a similar kind of sensibility in this regard -– to make him as three-dimensional as I could possibly make him. Make him very much a product of his time, of his experiences, of the Jacobite rebellion, to root him very strongly in that. To avoid him being just purely evil, just sort of a black-and-white villain. I wanted him to be as complicated as I think Diana has written it, actually.

    And so Ron and the writers really helped me to do that, with, for instance, taking what in the book is only, I think, half a page, which is the interrogation of Claire by Jack, and taking that sort of small piece of the book and folding that out in an entire episode, which then gave me the opportunity for us as an audience and as a show to look into the psyche and the thinking of Jack. And I think that’s gone a long way to helping us fill him out a bit and give some context, some understanding, if not empathy, for how he behaves and what he does.

    In every interaction with him, he goes to a cruel or vicious place. Is there another side to him that we’re going to see or delve into what got him to that place?

    I’m not completely clear about this, because I have not completely crossed the second book. But my understanding is that some of the softer sides of Jack are revealed in his interactions in the second book with his brother. His brother, Alex, comes into it -– who, in my correspondence with Diana, is of the opinion that really maybe that’s the only person that he truly ever loved was this younger brother.

    So it will be interesting to see what the writers come up with, but I think certainly that might be an opportunity to see a softer aspect of Jack in an intimate situation. Because you’re right: thus far, he never lets anyone close. And whenever he becomes one-on-one, seeks to dominate. But so far, we haven’t seen him interact with family. Family is, obviously, always different.

    I think that’s what’s good about the character is you feel there’s plenty of rope for us to sort of continue to understand and unpack what drives someone who, on the face of it, is so sadistic and cruel. It’s inevitable that you then raise questions about why, how does someone arrive to this place?

    When the sexual element of the character came up for you, was that an exciting place to go, or did you have to wrap your head around “How am I going to navigate these scenes?”

    I wasn’t nervous about it. I’m not nervous about nudity or portraying sexuality. But here’s the one thing that I wrestled with a little bit was, the point of the sexuality. The sexual aggression or the sexual attacks that he does, I suppose I was very keen to make that a tool that he used, rather than the goal. That he’s not about -– his interest is not to rape someone. His interest is to use rape to break someone down, as a tool of war in a way. Since war began, it’s been a tactic that’s been used, and Jack is no different.

    And also, I feel that’s, in a way, not completely the objective when it comes to Jamie as well. And I know there are plenty of people who probably disagree with me in that regard about Jack. Fans have written about the fact that he’s in love with Jamie, and I’m not sure I completely agree with it. I was more interested in the attraction being more psychological and more about his sadism, about meeting someone who was his equal. Beginning with this event where he flogs him a hundred times after he had already been flogged a hundred times. And he finds or encounters a young man who is able to endure more pain than he’s ever administered to anyone else.

    And on his journey as a sadist, in his life, that is a red letter day. And so it functions on different levels. There may well be a sexual attraction, but that’s only one of a mixture of things that attracts him or interests him about Jamie.

    What makes me curious is the encounter with Jamie’s sister Jenny, where Jack had the intent but not the ability. What did you make of that?

    Again, I wanted that to be not just about a gay man not getting it up with a woman, because I’m not sure that that’s what Jack is. I’m not sure he is. And also, the idea of homosexual was not even a language, or an idea that was really fully formed in that period. Sexuality was much more… the lines were less clearly drawn. So no, what interested me about that encounter was to see a chink in his armor, really.

    For whatever reason, the sister stumbles on a response that unmans him. And I suppose that you could make that argument that out of tyrannical behavior, he’s unraveled by ridicule or satire. That you could probably make the Nazi regime… one of the strongest against megalomania is satire and humor, and so it feels like quite a modern moment there. I think it was less about Jack not getting it up, but about what gets under his skin. And I think it makes it quite a peculiar kind of moment.

    Tell me about the aspect of the cast having to go to those dark places and everybody coming away not too traumatized by the acting exercise. Has it been pretty smooth sailing with everybody?

    I think the truth is, when you do it, you can’t see what you’re doing, so it’s really cathartic — and often, by the nature of filming, it’s strangely technical. About hitting that mark and not covering that light. And really, the true impact of it only really comes together when it’s all cut together and the music, and then you see it on the screen. And you go, “Okay — that’s what we made.” But in a way, you’re worrying about the details at the time. And so you rarely get a chance to look up and see the bigger picture, and that’s probably a helpful thing [laughs].

    After a day of that on set, do you shake it off right away?

    The funny thing about that — and this may be a peculiarity of me, but I don’t find it — it’s not something I have to shake off really. It feels… because it’s a sort of cathartic thing, in the doing of it, in a way, you burn it. So no, I’ve never really had moments of going “Oh, I feel sullied or uncomfortable about what we’ve done.” Because I think that’s why we tell dark stories is because they can be the story and not in our lives, you know. And so I think that cathartic thing stops it maybe seeping into your life or feeling the need, as you say, to shake it off.

    Did you and Sam use humor about these two characters’ relationships amongst yourselves, so when you got to the point you had to act this out you had a comfort zone?

    There wasn’t that. I was always kind of wary of doing that. But it was interesting that people would sort of josh about it. In some ways, I was interested that we never really sat down and talked about it. And that’s probably kind of right, that we sort of saved it for doing it in a way. Because I think you can drain something of energy, if you talk it to death. And for whatever reason, I noticed that we both avoided that conversation, I think [laughs]. Which is interesting.

    For Frank Randall, what was the hook you saw in him?

    I remember Ron saying something interesting when we first started working together, was he noticed that both Jack and Frank were products of war: men of war, who’d been through war. Frank had been through the Second World War. Jack had been through the Jacobite rebellion. So I think the war was certainly a touchstone for Frank. Understanding what that had been. Then, I feel like the main sort of thematic role that Frank plays in the stories and going forward is probably a study in loss, really. Obviously, in this story, it’s the rather esoteric, sci-fi example of someone disappearing through time. But in a way, I think we can all relate to losing people from our lives, however they live. Whether they just leave or whether they die. And that’s what’s beautiful about his story, I think. And going forward into the second book, when he then has to encounter her again, she returns to him with this apparently absurd story. And the fact that his love is able to transcend those barriers and those difficulties, speaks to a lot of stoicism in him, a lot of character.

    And so that portrayal of love between Claire and Frank is a very different beast than the much more maybe youthful, romantic, dashing love that is between Claire and Jamie. But I think no less interesting and sort of heartfelt for all that. And so I look forward to bringing that different sort of colors of what love is, I suppose, into the story. Because, obviously, there’s a huge amount of the sort of romantic aspect of it.

    But of course, I turn 41 this year, and love and what it is becomes more and more multi-faceted the older you get. I don’t know whether you’d agree, but what love has to endure, what love is when it’s had to encounter loss or disappointment or betrayal, it becomes maybe less idealistic, but maybe richer for it. I feel like that relationship between Frank and Claire is all about that, really.
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  • Chris Hemsworth Had No Idea ‘What the Hell Was Going on’ in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’

    Chris Hemsworth at the "Avengers: Age Of Ultron" - European Premiere - Red Carpet ArrivalsWhen we were on the set of “Avengers: Age of Ultron” last summer, we watched Chris Hemsworth shoot a scene set in Avengers Tower, where he has a chat with The Vision, the new, purplish robo-god introduced in the third act of the highly anticipated sequel. The Vision (played by Paul Bettany) looked cool and imposing, every square inch of his skin covered in prosthetics, but Hemsworth? Well, Hemsworth was Thor. In between takes he chatted with his stunt double, a burly man who throws the hammer when the megawatt star is unable, and it became clear, after a few minutes, that Hemsworth was bigger than his stunt double. Truly, he is an Asgardian king.

    And in “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” you get to remember why you liked Thor so much in the first place, after the dreary sequel “Thor: The Dark World.” Thor is funny again, with Hemsworth’s comic timing once again calibrated to perfection, and he also has his own mysterious mini-arc, brought about by the Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) showing him a potential vision of the future. It’s all great stuff for Hemsworth to play with. Now if only he could fit through human-sized doorways.

    We got to chat with the Avenger about what it was like being funny again, why Loki wasn’t in this movie, what went wrong on “Blackhat” and what he thought of his particular Doritos flavor.

    Moviefone: In this movie, Thor gets to be funny again! Was that something you were excited about returning to?

    Chris Hemsworth: Yes, definitely. It was something that I had wanted to do. It was the first thing I said to Joss. We had fallen into a bit of a dark thing in the second one, and it was a little too earnest. But that was also the story and that’s fine, I’m proud of that. But this time I wanted to do something different. It’s more relatable in this one; there’s humor and he’s grounded. I’m glad you seemed to think so because I haven’t seen the film and I’m glad it made the final cut.

    Was there anything else you lobbied for Joss to include?

    The humor was the thing, but also just being relevant — not just being there for the sake of it. There’s so much going on and so many characters being introduced that your insecurity goes into overdrive and you go, “Well, wait, am I even going to be in this film?” So I was just making sure that I was still a part of the Marvel team.

    You get to have a lot of screen time with The Vision, which is very cool. What was it like to see Bettany in one of these movies in physical form?

    He’s one of my favorite actors, and for that character to be so memorable as just a voice in the previous films says something about his talent. Until he turned up and read those lines and embodied that character, I didn’t even know what the story was about. And then he brought it to life on such a scale, the whole thing was amazing; we just fall in step and follow suit. That was certainly the case for me as Thor.

    There’s a crazy scene where you go into some kind of mystical pool. Do you know what I’m talking about?

    Yeah yeah yeah.

    In the movie, in the final cut, it seems like you go back to Asgard or have a vision quest. But Loki isn’t there. Did you shoot something with Tom Hiddleston?

    Ohhhh, I’m not sure if I’m allowed to answer that. I haven’t seen the movie. Ask me again after I’ve seen the movie. [Laughs] It was all about nightmares, wasn’t it? That’s what she stirred up, and the setting was, I guess, irrelevant on the larger scale but quite relevant to us as individuals. It being set in Asgard or some similar kind of place was quite poignant for those characters, and Thor’s vision obviously takes place in Asgard. And I think he’s tapping into a larger threat; there’s the immediate problem on earth but Thor is sensing the universe colliding, so to speak, which ties into the next bunch of Marvel films. So it was nice to be clued into that.

    Did they tell you that it was going to pay off later? How much do they let you in on?

    A little bit, but ultimately they’re the creators of it all, and we just turn up. But you know it’s always evolving. Even this film, the original script was quite different than what ended up on screen. So who knows.

    Can you talk about those differences?

    Well, I just mean how we’re all involved in it and what our relationship is to it. I mean, a lot of my stuff, to be honest, we were putting off because it wasn’t shot until the second half of the shoot. So I was on set as a placeholder and, through the process, me and Joss were workshopping ideas and leading towards what would happen towards the end of the film. We wedged it into the end of the schedule. I don’t remember it in any great detail, I just remember constantly trying to figure out what the hell was going on. Maybe it wasn’t changing; I was just trying to understand it.

    You obviously have some very lovely action figures but this time around you’re also on a Doritos bag.

    [Laughs] Okay.

    Your flavor is Spicy Nacho.

    Uhhhhhhh…

    What about Thor says “Spicy Nacho” to you?

    [Laughs] I don’t even know. I didn’t even know that was the case until you told me. Let me tell you now — thank you for telling me that, I better now get a lifetime supply of Doritos.

    Just your flavor, not anybody else’s flavor.

    Yeah, I don’t want that other crap.

    I was a big fan of “Blackhat,” which came out earlier this year. But it wasn’t really widely accepted. Do you have any theories about what happened there?

    [Laughs] Look, for me to be able to work with Michael Mann, who has made some of the greatest films out there, from “Last of the Mohicans” to “Heat,” two of my favorite films, it was such an amazing opportunity to work with him. If we could figure out the formula to why things work and how they’re received, great; we’d all be incredibly successful. But it’s a roll of the dice every time and you just do the best you can. They either land or they miss, and that’s kind of it, but you can’t think of the end result as much. I try and think, Am I going to learn something from this process or have an experience that’s memorable or work with someone whom I admire? And that was the case.
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  • Jeremy Renner Loves Hawkeye’s ‘F–k You Moment’ in ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’

    Jeremy Renner at the World Premiere Of Marvel's "Avengers: Age Of Ultron" - Red CarpetThe first “Avengers” movie was supposed to incorporate Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner), a lethal sharpshooter who works for S.H.I.E.L.D. and who, after being briefly introduced in “Thor,” would have taken a much larger role in the superhero team-up movie. But then, after being on-screen for about 15 seconds, the character was hypnotized by Loki into doing his evil bidding and ostensibly written out of the movie until the final action sequence in New York City. That’s when Hawkeye really shined… the other two hours of the movie, not so much.

    So it should delight and surprise just about everyone that Hawkeye pretty much steals the show in this week’s “Avengers” sequel, “Avengers: Age of Ultron.” A second-run character in everyone’s eyes, since he can’t fly or turn into a giant green range monster, Hawkeye’s humanity ends up being his true superpower and he not only gets the most interesting subplot of the entire, overstuffed spectacle, but he also gets the single best line in the entire movie.

    We got to talk to Renner about how much of his character stuff was supposed to be for the first movie, if he would star in a stand-alone film, what he thinks of his Doritos flavor, and we press him for updates on those other two franchises he’s a part of: “Mission: Impossible” and “The Bourne Legacy.”

    Moviefone: When the first “Avengers” came out, you were pretty vocal about the character not being exactly what you had talked to Marvel about. So when you read the script for this one, what was your reaction?

    Jeremy Renner: It was a sigh of relief. It was kind of what we had talked about for the first one. But I knew for a very long time what they were wanting to do and then they were finally able to do it. I mean, writing that first “Avengers” movie is almost an impossible feat. And now, knowing what they know now and doing it and that first one being successful, they can sort of dig into the character a little bit more, which I found to be very, very exciting. Finally! Amazing! Can’t wait!

    How much of it was stuff that you had talked to Joss about for the first one?

    A lot of it. But in a different way. I can’t really speak to it because there’s a lot of things hidden away in this one that mean a lot of different things for a lot of different characters.

    Scarlet Witch kind of goes into the Avengers’ minds and drudges up their darkest fears, but she doesn’t get to do that for Hawkeye. Did you guys ever shoot anything for that stuff?

    Well, again, that was part of the whole redemption thing. Since he was hypnotized by Loki last time, eventually everybody gets hypnotized this time around by Scarlet Witch. But I didn’t. That was another sort of, for lack of a better word, “f*ck you moment.” That was amazing. I really loved that moment in the movie. It was like, Yes! He might only be a human with a bow and arrow, but that doesn’t mean that I’m the weakest guy in the thing.

    You also get the best line in the movie, when you’re explaining to Scarlet Witch how none of this craziness makes sense.

    Yes! I love it!

    Did you know, while reading it, that it was going to kill. Or did you come up with that on the day?

    Well, that little speech to Scarlet Witch, which was definitely in one of the earlier drafts and definitely stayed throughout, which I was happy about since sometimes things get lost. So I thought it was a cool moment and you never know how those things will feel or play. We shot it and it seemed to go well but you never know.

    You’ve seen the final movie, right?

    Yes, I have seen the final movie!

    There are obviously so many things happening, all the time. Was there anything that you shot that you wish had stayed in the movie?

    Actually, I don’t think so. That was one of the first things I said coming out of it. I was really, really happy with the movie, and I thought everybody was terrific in it, and the movie was terrific and there were things that I knew, in the back of my head, that didn’t make it in, but I didn’t miss any of it. I was very happy with what made it in and the end result of it all.

    Hawkeye has this amazingly full arc. Where do you think he goes from here?

    It’s beyond my pay grade. But Kevin [Feige] and others have ideas… I could be dead. I could be a lot of things. But I think they laid a lot of great starting points. What’s great about this world is the relationships. They have made some great scenes with other people and other Avengers.

    Well, he certainly seems ripe for further exploration. Is a solo movie something that you’re ready to do?

    Well, I know that there’s a lot going on with this character. I never thought about a solo movie and, again, this is beyond my pay grade and not really my decision to make. So it’s hard to really want or not want any of these things in my life. But after seeing this movie, I thought, Oh, wow, there’s really a lot to explore here. And I thought that for a lot of these characters. I’m not sure what they’ve got planned, but I’m excited to be a part of it.

    It’s cool that you’re an action figure, but you’ve also got your own Doritos bag. Have you seen that?

    They just showed that to me today! I’m actually drinking a can of Diet Dr. Pepper that I’m on. It’s a little weird. A lot of people have action figures, and I call them the touch-myself dolls. Like I don’t really want to touch myself. So I find it kind of weird. It looks kind of cool. The Hot Toys action figure is pretty amazing. But I don’t want it. Maybe somebody else does. But I don’t know what they’d want to do with it.

    Your flavor is Chile Limon Dynamite.

    [Howls with laughter] I’m hot! I’m en fuego baby! [Continues laughing]

    Does Hawkeye scream “Chile Limon Dynamite” to you?
    [Laughs] He’s a little spicy! I’m not quite sure…

    You’re so good in “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol.” And you’ve got another one coming up. How did that turn out?

    You know, I don’t know a whole lot about that one. I haven’t seen it, and it was quite a big movie with a lot of moving parts, so it’s hard to speak to. I know that a lot of the boys are back, with Simon Pegg and Ving Rhames and the addition of Alec Baldwin, who is amazing, and of course Tom. So we had good fun and I think there’s going to be some really great action. But I’m sure it’s going to be a fantastic part of the series.

    When you were initially cast in the last movie it seemed like you were being groomed to take over the franchise. Is that still the case?

    No, no, no. That’s always been Tom’s movie. He’s never really done any sequels ever. [Super-nerdy editor’s note: Cruise starred in “Color of Money,” which was a Paul Newman-led sequel to “The Hustler,” and had a brief role in “Austin Powers in Goldmember,” the third film in that franchise. At the time of Tony Scott’s suicide, he was in development for “Top Gun 2” and is currently in talks for a sequel to “Jack Reacher.”] But there were no discussions of me taking over, really, but just joining that world, whatever that means. I think they liked the idea of me being the mysterious guy, where you’re not quite sure of what my skill set is and what side he’s on. I find myself in those roles often. [Laughs] But I have no problem with that. Keep people guessing, keep people guessing…

    What’s going on with your “Bourne” series?

    Yeah, they’re going again pretty soon, I think. But I’m not sure what’s going on with Aaron Cross and that whole part of that world. Again, that’s outside my pay grade. I’m sure they want to make something. But I’m just focused on doing press for this movie and maybe having some lunch. I can’t think that far ahead. But I’m sure there are some discussions somewhere, talking about those things.
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  • Mark Ruffalo on ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron,’ Forbidden Love, and Embracing the Hulk (EXCLUSIVE)

    Mark Ruffalo attends the Chinese premiere of Avengers: Age of UltronWhen Marvel’s “The Avengers” was released in 2012, one of the bigger question marks was: how was Mark Ruffalo, an actor known for his proclivity for esoteric indies, going to fare stepping into a giant franchise like this? (Especially since, we shouldn’t forget, he was the third actor to inhabit the role in the past decade.) Of course, we all now know that Ruffalo, performing not only the human side of Bruce Banner but the motion capture role of The Hulk as well, would handily be the highlight of the entire movie, stealing every scene he was in and even generating an internet-sweeping meme centered around his bromance with Robert Downey Jr‘s Tony Stark.

    In “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” the ridiculously anticipated (and ridiculously wonderful) sequel, Ruffalo returns as both Bruce Banner and the Hulk and this time he does more than just brood and get really angry. That’s right folks — Bruce Banner is in love. And with Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson) no less! Oh, and he and Tony are also responsible for creating the malevolent robot Ultron (James Spader) who has grand plans to take over the world. But the Black Widow romance is probably more serious!

    We got on the phone with Ruffalo to talked about all of these new developments in Banner’s life, his new ownership of the character, working on the performance capture for the Hulk with a veteran of the technology, Andy Serkis (who pioneered its usage with characters like Gollum and Caesar), and what it was like when he tried his own Doritos flavor.

    Moviefone: Bruce has so much more to do in this movie. What was your first reaction when you read the script?

    Mark Ruffalo: I was thrilled. To be honest with you, I got to the part where you saw Banner really vulnerable. In the scene where Banner may or may not be embarking on another Avenger who may or may not be Black Widow but is definitely not a male Avenger, I was really moved by it to be honest with you. I thought, Wow, what a cool place to go in the middle of all this mayhem. And, of course, the Science Bros stuff was really satisfying and then I also knew that, technologically speaking, we had made a pretty significant advance in motion capture and facial motion capture that we were going to be able to do a lot more with Hulk. So I was really excited.

    Did you lobby for any of this stuff?

    I didn’t do it while [Joss Whedon] was writing, but I did when we were doing the first “Avengers,” I did say, “Wouldn’t it be interesting to see Banner and Widow have something going on?” I was playing with that when we were doing the first one. I just thought those two characters had something that was kindred and something that would be really interesting to explore. So I laid that in there, almost half-jokingly. And then I am friends with Joss and I’d check in every now and again and I was shooting “Foxcatcher” and I was feeling particularly blue and I reached out to him and said, “How’s it going? I haven’t heard from you in a while.” And he said, “Hey buddy, I just wrote one of my favorite scenes and it’s you and Scarlett hooking up, having this forbidden love that could not be.” And I just thought, Oh my god this is going to be great.

    And you get to be one of the co-creators of Ultron!

    Yeah, that’s pretty cool.

    You talked about the advancements in motion capture and there was talk of you and Serkis working together. What was that situation like?

    Andy is on the frontier of this stuff and he, more than anyone, has developed it into a really performance-based tool. So he’s got a really strong philosophy about that and has created a work environment that is really geared towards an actor creating a performance within that technology. And so we were working together on the physicality of it and also the attitude towards it — that it is an extension of an actor’s performance, that it is performance-driven and that there has to be a specific type of space created for that performance to happen in. He taught me an enormous amount about how to do that and how to insist upon it and how to work within it.

    One of the big set pieces in the movie is the Hulkbuster fight. Did you do any of that?

    Yeah, it was me with a stuntman that was about 7 foot 6. And so we did all of that. Sometimes it would be one or two stuntmen and it was with another stuntman. We did all that, all of those sequences.

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but you seem to be embracing the character more this time around. With the first movie you seemed very happy to be invited, but now you’re really taking ownership of the character. Is that the case?

    I feel more comfortable in it and, especially with the motion capture stuff, that is something that we really haven’t figured out completely yet. And it needs input and I had a lot of input before. But it is this interesting thing because you’re working with this team of artists. It’s a collaboration with the artists who are doing the CGI and so there’s a dialogue going on there. As it develops, I really want to make sure it’s as sacred a space and time as when the actors are rolling on any actor. So that’s been an interesting journey to take with production and with myself and with the technicians as well. So yeah, we’re creating it, and I do feel some sort of ownership in how it’s coming along, because it’s basically a completely new frontier.

    Especially for you.

    Especially for me! [Laughs]

    Did Joss tell you where the Hulk is headed?

    He’s not going into space, although a lot of people think that he may be. He’s definitely on his own and he’s definitely heading far, far away from the Avengers. Nobody’s talked about where, exactly. It’s been an open question, I think because no one really knows what’s coming next. We both love the idea that he jettisons himself away.

    I know a lot of people dream about an action figure, but you get your own Doritos bag.

    [Laughs]

    Your flavor is “Jacked 3D.” What about you, what about the Hulk screams “Jacked 3D”?
    [Laughs] I don’t know what that is either! It’s jalapeño flavored and I’ll tell you, I had some yesterday. The bag itself weighs about seven pounds. And literally I had one and I drank a bottle of water and literally that one Dorito absorbed the entire bottle of water and then turned into cement in my stomach. Then it dried in my stomach.

    “Avengers: Age of Ultron” opens everywhere May 1st.
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  • ‘The Breakfast Club’: Molly Ringwald and Ally Sheedy Look Back 30 Years Later (EXCLUSIVE)

    Last week the Internet had a collective heart attack as it became apparent that the anniversary of the day that “The Breakfast Club” is supposed to take place happened 31 years earlier. Of course, “The Breakfast Club” is a movie and not a historical document (one that came out 30 years ago), but that doesn’t matter. Because talking about John Hughes‘s immortal classic is fun and people will do it at every conceivable juncture.

    “The Breakfast Club,” of course, starred Emilio Estevez, Anthony Michael Hall, Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, and Ally Sheedy, as a group of disparate teens united for a Saturday’s worth of detention (Paul Gleason very memorably essayed the role of the meddling principal — “I make over $30,000 a year!”). Recently, to celebrate the movie’s anniversary and commemorate the newly released (and truly incredible deluxe edition Blu-ray package), the film held a pair of screenings in Austin, Texas, as part of the South by Southwest Film Festival. At one screening, in the morning, they handed out pastries — hey, it is the Breakfast Club after all!

    That’s where we were given the unique opportunity to sit down with Sheedy and Ringwald, actresses who gained immediate superstardom for the movie (with the press naming them as two members of the Hughes-cultivated Brat Pack) and are still talking about it today. While this kind of retrospective discussion can drive some actors up the wall, they were both gracious and lovely. We talked about whether or not they immediately recognized that the film would be a classic, why John Hughes didn’t have any gay or ethnic characters in the script, and whether or not the movie would (and should) ever be remade.

    Put on the Simple Minds theme song (really loud) and take a walk down memory lane, won’t you?

    Moviefone: When you first read the script did you have any idea it would be a classic?

    Ally Sheedy: I loved doing the movie and I felt like it was a special experience and I thought it would probably turn out really well but I had no idea it would be this.

    Molly Ringwald: I knew that it was special and like nothing else I had ever read before or since and I knew I wanted to be involved immediately. I loved it. It was my favorite script that I had read of John Hughes’s. But how could you possibly know that we’d still be talking about it thirty years later?

    Is that the thing that most people still come up to you to talk about?

    Ringwald: For me, it’s one of the three movies I’ve done for John and it happens to be my favorite of the three. But there are other people who love “Sixteen Candles” or some people think I was great in “St. Elmo’s Fire…”

    Sheedy: And you were!

    What about you, Ally?

    Sheedy: Well, I live in New York, so people talk to me about “Breakfast Club,” “High Art,” and because I work with these high school kids, I hear about this crazy character I play on “Psych” a lot.

    I can’t believe kids are watching “Psych.”

    Sheedy: I don’t know what to say! But they go nuts!

    The new Blu-ray has this trivia track that runs along the bottom of the screen. One of the more interesting bits was that you guys shot in sequence. Is that true?

    Ringwald: Yeah, pretty much.

    How did that affect your performances?

    Ringwald: I think it helped a lot, definitely. Because by the time we got to that group therapy moment we already knew each other really well. We were actors and it’s possible to shoot out of sequence and still do it. But I think it really helped.

    And you were taking classes while this was going on?

    Ringwald: I was, because I was so young. So Anthony Michael Hall and I were 15 and 16 and Ally and Emilio and Judd were in their 20s.

    Were you taking classes in the same high school where you were shooting?

    Ringwald: Yeah, pretty much.

    Sheedy: It was actually tutoring. That’s what they had to do. There was an hourly thing with the union. So they would shoot and then have to leave the set and go do work.

    So you weren’t showing up to Home Ec down the hall?

    Ringwald: No no no. I had a studio teacher who was with me on most of those movies, who I loved dearly. She was great. She was Jodie Foster’s teacher and then she was mine and then she was Winona’s.

    Sheedy: Fair enough.

    Ringwald: But she was great. She really made the experience as great as possible because it was hard to actually have to leave the set. “Sixteen Candles” was shot during the summer, so I got to be on set all the time, but it was hard to have to leave because it seemed like there was a party going on without me. It was very frustrating.

    Do you think this movie would be made today?

    Ringwald: No, I don’t.

    Nobody would let it be rated R.

    Ringwald: Probably not. There would have to be a vampire in there, at some point.

    Sheedy: There would have to be a sex scene.

    Ringwald: Yeah, there would have to be a sex scene in it.

    Sheedy: Somebody would have to get undressed. And there would have to be some kind of special effects. I think it might be meaner if they made it today.

    Would you change anything about it?

    Ringwald: Obviously, if they ever made a “Breakfast Club”-like movie, I don’t think they should ever remake “The Breakfast Club,” but if they did something inspired by, I think it would be interesting to have something with more racial diversity.

    One of the kids probably should have been gay.

    Ringwald: Oh, definitely. John didn’t have the vocabulary for that. I’m convinced that in “Pretty in Pink” Ducky is gay, because that character was based on my best friend Matt who is gay, who was not out at that time but we had a very similar relationship. But that just wasn’t in his vocabulary. Also, John became very conservative later in life. Did you know that? It was very strange.

    Sheedy: Yeah.

    Did you guys keep in touch with Hughes?

    Ringwald: Um… No. Not really. We came back into contact and I had always hoped that we would work together again in some way, but we weren’t close.

    Sheedy: I got to hang out with him a little bit because I did this movie “Only the Lonely.”

    Ringwald: Oh, with John Candy?

    Sheedy: Right. And he was a producer on that one.

    He was living in New York at some point, right?

    Sheedy: He may have been but he was only in Chicago at that point, so I got to go to Chicago to do it and spend a whole bunch of time with him.

    Ringwald: I think once his family moved to LA and then hated it and moved back to Chicago, he never left Chicago again.

    Do you keep in touch with your costars?

    Ringwald: We see each other, usually at some event or a tribute or something. Or out of the blue.

    I know that some of you dated and were very good friends. Do those emotions ever come back?

    Ringwald: It was a long time ago. Life soldiers on.

    Sheedy: Yeah!

    Ringwald: I’ve been with somebody for 14 years and have 3 kids so I think I’m pretty well ensconced.

    How does it feel to come back and introduce the movie to a whole new generation? Do you feel like the ambassadors of planet “Breakfast Club”?

    Sheedy: It’s fun. You feel good about the movie and the experience, so it’s nice.

    Ringwald: Yeah, I think the movie has become so beloved and it’s been discovered by so many generations without our help. It’s incredible. Everybody in my daughter’s school has seen it and they’re 11. So I feel really proud to be a part of the movie.

    Sheedy: This is a very cool thing, that South by Southwest did this big screening, that they’re re-releasing this DVD and putting it back into movie theaters. It’s pretty joyous.

    If you didn’t know that it was immortal when you read it, looking back on it, what do you think makes it such a timeless classic?

    Ringwald: You can take that one.

    Sheedy: I think it takes a group of five teenagers and very realistically puts their lives on the screen. They’re basically normal; anybody could relate to them, there’s nothing huge going on. But it’s that their experience at that time matters enough and is interesting enough to make a movie about without embellishing. And I think for a young person, seeing that, it’s like, Oh, that’s me up there and somebody cares about my story.

    Ringwald: And also, the issues that we’re dealing with haven’t really changed. I just noticed from watching my kids grow up, that political atmosphere of cliques at school, the bullying, the feeling that you don’t belong that everyone feels no matter who they are, those themes really still resonate today and probably always will.
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  • Will Ferrell and Kevin Hart on the ‘Get Hard’ Scene Everyone Will Be Talking About (EXCLUSIVE)

    Will Ferrell and Kevin Hart at This weekend, “Get Hard” opens in theaters nationwide. And it is insane. The movie stars Will Ferrell as a white-collar criminal who is sentenced to 10 years in jail for cooking the books. He hires Kevin Hart, the guy who runs his car wash, to teach him how to prepare for prison, assuming that he’s served time (he hasn’t). What follows is a wildly profane and outrageous comedy about the stereotypes we see in others and the ones we perpetuate in ourselves.

    I got to sit down with Hart and Ferrell in Austin, Texas, where the film was making its world premiere as part of the South by Southwest Film Festival. And it was just as insane as the actual movie. The first two minutes or so of the interview Ferrell was investigating my beard. The exchange follows.

    Will Ferrell: You’ve got a great beard.

    Me: You should grow one.

    Ferrell: When I do it comes in salt and pepper. Hold the pepper. Lot more salt.

    Kevin Hart: No. I get it. Will. I get it.

    And then the interview began.

    We discussed how long they’d been wanting to do a project together, whether the movie ever got stuck with an NC-17 rating, the political subtext of the film, and whether or not Ferrell will be back for “Zoolander 2.”

    Had you guys been looking for a project to do together for a while?

    Ferrell: Quite the opposite. We’d been avoiding each other.

    Hart: We’d been trying to avoid this for some time now. But everybody was like, “Please. Guys. It’s good. Just read it.” And after reading it I knew it had to happen. But there was a road that I took purposely. I could go this way, or I could go this way…

    Ferrell: Kevin! Why is this so hard? I can’t figure out how to get a hold of you.

    Hart: There were literally times when I know Will saw me when he called me. He would say, “Hey I’m in town, let’s meet.” And I said, “Sorry, I’m not here.” I think he saw me.

    Ferrell: I said, “Alright. Okay. So I guess you’re not on Ventura Blvd right now.”

    Hart: “No, that can’t be me. That can’t be me.”

    Ferrell: “Right in front of the Starbucks.”

    Hart: “Nope. Not me.”

    Ferrell: “You’re in yellow Adidas tennis shoes. And you’re waving at me? Okay. Fair enough.”

    Hart: “No. Not me.”

    Will could have been the Ice Cube part in “Ride Along.”

    Hart: He could have. It would have been a completely different movie.

    Ferrell: But I don’t want to go up against Cube.

    Hart: No.

    Why was this project the one that you guys decided to do together?

    Ferrell: Well, this was one that my company had developed. I mean… This really came from us. And Kevin was the perfect piece to complete the puzzle.

    Hart [mocking Ferrell]: I’ve got a company! And we develop stuff. We and Adam [McKay], all we do is genius sh*t!

    Ferrell: That’s all. That’s all we do. I’m going to subscribe to that theory of yours.

    Hart: No, it was a great idea.

    Ferrell: It was an idea we had and the more we talked about it, it was like, “Let’s develop that.” And we’ve known each other for a long time and Kevin’s meteoric wise.

    This ascension!

    Ferrell: Exactly.

    Hart: That’s a great word.

    Ferrell: So we thought, Kevin Hart is so freakin’ funny. What if he’s the guy? We called him, he was into it and then helped us develop the script.

    In a more straightforward buddy movie, Kevin’s character would have just been a criminal.

    Hart: 100% I would just be the criminal.

    Ferrell: He would be the guy with the real past who is trying to do right and it just became much more interesting to just have a guy who gets thrown into the situation.

    Hart: There was a first draft, and it wasn’t that it was far away, but there were holes. There were things that we felt were this and that. And Etan Cohen [the director] came in and did a pass and I will give him a lot of credit because his writing background is strong and while this is the first one that he’s directed, he knows comedy. And what he wanted to do was meet and talk, and what he allowed me to do was make my guy human. I want to give a sh*t about the character, and I thought you should give a sh*t about Will’s character, too. On the page it was a little bit more defined. But my guy was just coming in and doing some funny sh*t. I wanted to make both worlds interesting. And Etan came in and came up with the idea to show the other life with him with his wife and kids and everything…

    Ferrell: …To show the B-side to that story — that this is a family guy, really a middle-class guy who’s fronting all the time makes it much more interesting.

    Obviously, there’s a lot of improvisation…

    Hart: Well, I can’t read.

    That’s going to be a good headline for this interview: “Kevin Hart Can’t Read.”

    Hart: It’s tough.

    Ferrell: And is against learning to read. “Reading is for suckers.”

    Hart: Yeah, I don’t want to learn. It’s the dumbest thing to do. It takes so much time. I know how to talk. I’ve got other sh*t to do. Who wants to sit here and learn all this sh*t when I can just get up there, “Yappa yappa yappa.” It’s just a better route.

    Ferrell: “Yappa yappa yappa?”

    You know that expression.

    Ferrell: Yeah yeah yeah.

    Hart: I read that.

    So what was the percentage between written word and improvised material?

    Ferrell: It just depends. We’re both used to getting down what we had in the script. You know, it really began in rehearsals. We were already writing in the improvisations we’d done and add that into the scene. Then you’ve got Etan, who’s got a stack of alt lines to feed us as well. So that makes us think of other things, too. That’s the recipe now for these movies. We’d have to sit and go through scenes with you and go, “Oddly enough, that’s 100% from the page. This one we totally went for it.” So it’s that combination.

    Hart: It was a loose set. We wanted to make sure we got what was on the page but you don’t hire these two guys without allowing us to bring something or try something.

    Ferrell: And nobody’s allowed to be precious.

    Hart: That’s a good thing.

    Ferrell: And we both are encouraging of each other, saying, “It would be funny if you did this.” So all of that makes for a creative dynamic.

    I think there are nine separate cuts of “Anchorman 2” on home video.

    Ferrell: I know.

    What’s the craziest thing that didn’t make it into this movie?

    Hart: So much. Damn. There’s one scene where we go to jump on the yacht and you’re hanging off and I jump on his back and there are so many variations of me hanging off of your back. I know we have a shorter version in the movie but the versions we did of me hanging on his back, me grabbing his face, me pulling your hair, that sh*t there, is about five or six different versions.

    Ferrell: And the scene in the movie after I have stabbed myself in the head with my own homemade shiv, we riffed on that for… hours.

    Hart: And I have to take responsibility. I messed up 70% of those takes. 70% of those takes were unusable because of me laughing that day. I couldn’t get it together.

    This is an R-rated movie. Was it always R from the get-go?

    Hart: Well, I’m a filthy motherf*cker.

    Ferrell: I like how your voice got lower: I’m a filthy motherf*cker. [continuing with his low Kevin Hart voice] Here’s the thing. You come to a Kevin Hart joint, you’re about to go on a ride. It’s gonna get nasty.

    Hart: Expect some nasty sh*t when you come to a Kevin Hart movie.

    Ferrell [still doing the Kevin Hart voice]: You’re going to feel a little sick to your stomach. But ultimately you’re going to laugh. [Will resumes his normal voice] Well this was a decision… There was a discussion from other powers that be asking us, “Is there any way you can do this PG-13?” And there’s just no way. Prison is a horrible, nasty place, and for us to do a PG-13 version… We just had to have the free reign to talk about any subject any way we wanted to. That being said, there were certain cuts of the movie that were still NC-17, before we made some choices.

    Hart: Oh Jesus.

    What made it NC-17?

    Hart: There was one scene in particular.

    Ferrell: I don’t want to spoil it.

    Hart: It’s a bad one. Trust me, when you see the movie, there’s no way you won’t know. But I remember about midway through, we talked about this during the movie, we’re cussing. We’ve got a lot of stuff in it. But we said, “Hey, let’s make sure it’s not overkill.”

    Ferrell: It’s a weird thing.

    Hart: I know it sounds crazy. And you had told me during “Step Brothers…”

    Ferrell: Yeah, that was our first R-rated movie and we got so excited that we had to come back and pull out so many F words because we were too excited to say it and we just became immune to it.

    Hart: I remember on this one, you telling me that story and me talking to Etan saying, “We know that we’ve got our cuss words here and there and at a certain point the dialogue doesn’t need that.” You know you’ve got your moments where that works but it probably works better because we didn’t overkill it. That was something we were both conscious of.

    There’s some subtle political stuff there, and you and McKay are obviously political dudes.

    Hart: They’re into that sh*t.

    Ferrell: Yeah, he’s all about the Black Panthers.

    Hart: I’m all about the goddamn revolution.

    How important was that political element?

    Ferrell: The genesis of the idea is thought that if, for whatever reason, you, after this interview, find out that you’re going to prison. How would you react? And what’s the comedic potential in what you would do. That’s where the comedy comes from. But once we had this whole other thing we could talk about too. You’re constantly bombarded with news about the hedge fund guy who’s fined one dollar for scamming millions of people. So we get to comment on that a little bit and we get to comment on, in this racial world we live in, stupid perceptions we have of each other and how silly they can be. So it was a platform for that as well. Ultimately we were just trying to make people laugh.

    Hart: I’m just trying to start the revolution.

    Are you guys going to work together again? Is this the new Crosby and Hope?

    Hart: No. This is it for me.

    Ferrell: You’re seeing the new Crosby, Stills and Nash.

    Hart: [laughs uncontrollably]

    Ferrell: We just need a third person and we’ll play some folk music.

    I think you’re looking at him.

    Ferrell: Are you musical?

    Hart: Are you musical?

    No. Are you?

    Hart: I am.

    Ferrell: Oh yeah. Just listen to him.

    Hart [singing]: If I’m gonna fly…

    Ferrell: You know what? Save it.

    Hart: That’s what I got.

    Just before they kick me out, are you coming back for “Zoolander 2”?

    Ferrell: Oh yeah. I’ll be in Italy the entire month of May.

    “Get Hard” opens in theaters nationwide March 27.
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  • Miles Teller on ‘Insurgent’ and What’s in Store for ‘Fantastic Four’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Miles Teller at It’s one thing to be a part of a huge franchise, spanning several films and carrying the weight of untold box office expectations, but it’s an entirely separate thing to be involved in two huge franchises. And that’s the position that Miles Teller has found himself in, with the second chapter in the “Divergent” series, “Insurgent,” opening this week, and a brand new reboot of Marvel’s “Fantastic Four” hitting theaters later this summer. But if he’s feeling the pressure, he’s certainly not showing it.

    I sat down with Teller in Austin, Texas, during the South by Southwest Film Festival, a weeklong celebration of mostly independent films, to talk about “Insurgent,” a towering behemoth of a movie whose production budget is probably equal to most of the independents screening at South by Southwest combined. (We also talked about Teller’s “Whiplash,” the indie movie that seduced Sundance last year and went on to be nominated for a gaggle of Academy Awards.)

    Teller was open and honest, talking about how he was able to film “Insurgent” and “Fantastic Four” at the same time, what was on the mix tapes the director would make for him, how he chooses his projects, what’s in store for “Fantastic Four,” and all about that bank robbing movie he just signed on for.

    Moviefone: When we spoke for “That Awkward Moment,” it was interesting because you were angling…

    Miles Teller: Was I angling? Here’s the thing about me: I’m always angling. I just don’t show it.

    …But you were very clinical about why you did “Divergent” — that you wanted to broaden your appeal and make yourself known to international audiences. Did that work out like you had planned?

    Yeah, absolutely. It’s been great to be a part of a franchise that continues to grow and the fact that they’re making “Insurgent” and prepping for “Allegiant,” they feel like they have a nice franchise on their hands. As much as you can angle and try to be a part of something that does well, you never know how anything is going to do, and the fact that I can be a part of this world with these actors and producers and a new director who I really get along with so well; I look forward to filming these movies every summer and will be upset when they’re done. You just get so accustomed to working with these people.

    And Robert Schwentke is coming back?

    Yes. We all love Robert. He works on what’s called French hours — it’s 7 to 5 every day. You don’t break for lunch you kind of work through lunch, but you get done at 5 every day. Also, Robert is an aficionado in mix CDs, cigars, and meat. And he was going to this one store in Atlanta and he’d give Shailene a big hunk of meat that we’d grill up and usually had a cigar for me and he made me like six mix CDs.

    What was on these CDs?

    His taste is all over the map. He gets into some very industrial German techno, early house stuff, and he loves this Icelandic folk escapist stuff. It’s hit or miss. But when it’s good, it’s really good.

    You seem to be in this one less than the first movie.

    I feel like I’m in it more. Zoe Kravitz was so upset because I was filming “Fantastic Four” at the same time. So I went over for two weeks, then left and came back for a month. And I’m in the whole movie, whereas Zoe was like, “What the hell man? I was there for the whole summer and I’m barely in it.” I just said, “I have a better lawyer than you. I don’t know.” But I feel like I’m in it more.

    Is it like summer camp?

    Yeah, I love being in Atlanta. I grew up in Florida, so if I can get back to the southeast I feel pretty comfortable there. When I look around, I say “I know these kinds of people.” And it’s fun to come back with this world and mess with Theo. He’s always very serious, and it’s fun to play a character where the stakes aren’t as big and you can be a little looser.

    What was it like going from “Whiplash” to this giant studio thing?

    As an actor it should feel the same, in the sense that you prepare for it the same way, there really isn’t any difference there. It’s just on set you get a lot more downtime. With “Whiplash,” you’re getting to film four or five scenes because you’re literally getting a quarter of the days. And this one, it’s all about timing. So you do a take and then you get 30 minutes and have to do it from another angle, you have to be comfortable with turning it off, turning it on. But me and Shailene were still talking to each other like “Spectacular Now.” It is pretty funny when you’re in these big action movies because it’s funny to take yourself that seriously.

    Are you going to continue to oscillate between the giant movies and the tiny movies?

    For sure. And what people don’t understand is that if acting is your job, your life is these movies. So if you’re doing a big movie that films in Utah for nine months, that’s where you’re at. And you might not want to, even if there are two scripts that you really like and one films in Hawaii and the other films in Canada, you very well make the one that shoots in Hawaii. It’s all about where you’re at in your life. If I’m in a dark place and want to explore that, I’m going to choose a movie that lets me go there. And if I’m feeling like I just did a bunch of dark stuff and I want to smile and be happy, then you’re going to choose something that’s a little lighter. It takes a while to get to that place, where you can choose a movie that suits your life and what you want to do.

    Does getting locked in, well, not locked in…

    You can say it! Locked in!

    But does getting involved in these big franchises make it harder to do these smaller projects?

    Actually, it makes it easier. I know that every summer I’m doing either “Divergent” or I’m doing “Fantastic Four.” And “Fantastic Four” shoots every other year, this is shooting every summer and it’s always good to have your next job — so I know that I have that; I know that I have some income coming in, which is great. And then you can choose around there. So you say, “For this movie I’m going to be busy from June to September and let’s try and figure out what I’m going to do after that.” So that’s your main course. I know I’m having turkey.

    And it’ll allow you to do the other stuff?

    Yeah, something that you’ll get paid $6,000 for and will be freezing on the side of the road because you gave away your trailer to give a little more money to the budget and it’s 20 degrees outside.

    Looking back on the whole “Whiplash” experience, did you ever think it would get so big?

    No, never. When we were at Sundance, it was the second year in a row that I had a film that people seemed to enjoy and got some attention. And I saw my good friend Michael B. with “Fruitvale” and I saw that film win the Audience and Jury Awards. And he was around all year campaigning and doing the whole thing of shaking hands, which they tell you you have to do. And then the film just falls off, which a lot of independent films do. Even though everybody was telling me and the Sony Pictures Classics guys were telling me, “Oh, it’s going to get nominated,” I didn’t think so. Because once it finally did, it was revealed that “Whiplash” is the second least financially successful movie of any movie nominated. But I wear that with a badge of honor. Because it’s like, it doesn’t matter that you didn’t see it and you didn’t see it, because it’s good. You want to do a movie that people respond to but getting any kind of award attention is such a different game. But I was happy where it seemed like people had spoken, in a way, for a film that was just so well-reviewed actually did make it the whole year.

    And you’re going from “Insurgent” to “Fantastic Four.” How is that shaping up?

    When I saw the sizzle trailer, that was the first I had seen of it. I saw that at the same time as everyone else, literally. I was excited about it. Because when you’re shooting a movie you can kind of get a sense of the tone of it from the director and how they’re directing it, but in terms of how you shoot it, the lighting and everything, you’re not aware of it. Because I’m just in a scene and I’m talking to another actor but the way he’s seeing it in his head, where it’s grittier or darker, I’m not acting grittier or darker. All that stuff comes in with the edit. So I’m excited by it. All the actors are really interesting in those parts and it should be fun. I hope people go on that ride with us. Because we’re making it our own, we’re taking a lot from the “Ultimate Fantastic Four” but I think we’re humanizing these characters in a way that’s never been done.

    Are you excited to do the sequel? I’m assuming this is an origin story, so for the sequel you’ll be Mr. Fantastic from the get-go.

    I mean, the more superhero stuff you get to do, the cooler it is. We’ll see what happens, but yes, absolutely, as the thing evolves they should start to materialize to the Fantastic Four people more readily associate with.

    Did you read the comics growing up?

    I didn’t read the comics growing up, but it was my dad’s favorite comic. I played a lot of video games, and comic books I collected just because I thought they’d be a cool thing to collect, but I didn’t engage with them narratively.

    Did you read them after you got the part?

    I did a lot of research, yes.

    So they’re kind of the Beatles of the superhero world.

    Who’s Ringo? Who’s Ringo?

    Maybe The Thing.

    Fair enough.

    But everybody knows who they are. Do you play with that in this one, or is it more in the sequel? Is someone going to come in and take us out for talking about this?

    Yeah, you’ve got a red dot on your jacket. I think there are going to be little things and Josh and those guys put some little nuggets in the trailer. There are a few things that hint at what we’re going for. I’m excited to see it, man. And so much of what you’re doing, like I’m obviously not stretching for however long, so I’m really looking forward to seeing the effects.

    Like Jamie’s character?

    Well, Jamie was there, he was doing this thing, and Jamie has done a lot of motion capture performances before. He was Tin-Tin, so he’s great. I love watching that kid act.

    Does it seem like Josh is going to come back?

    I don’t know. I’m assuming [writer/producer Simon] Kinberg is going to be back because he is so good at creating those worlds. He’s invaluable to Fox. He’s really smart and seems to have a good handle on these worlds and what he was able to do with “X-Men” and being able to re-energize that with the younger cast.

    And your heist movie is getting off the ground.

    Yes! “The Stopwatch Gang”! It’s this really cool story that I was able to adapt. I read it as soon as it came out, as this 35-page short story hosted on this website. And from there, once people knew I was interested in it, started to attach themselves to it. And Ruben Fleischer, who I worked with on “Two Night Stand” as a producer, he said he wanted to direct it, and with me and him together people got interested in it. I’m really looking forward to it because it’s the first movie I’m producing. I saw this movie “The Newton Boys” that I loved and these guys became these huge mythological characters. It’s an incredible true story and it spans over 40 years and right now we’re getting writers to come in and pitch their ideas for it. I’ve been wanting to produce something for a while.

    Tonally, what are you thinking of?

    I think it would have to be rated R. It would be an action adventure like “Newton Boys,” like “Tombstone” with a little bit of “Maverick.” It’s got to be fun. You want to be rooting for these guys. And Ruben really wants me to watch this movie “Straight Time” with Dustin Hoffman.

    “Insurgent” is in theaters now.
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