Tag: isaiah mustafa

  • TV Review: ‘Cross’

    Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in 'Cross'. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.
    Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in ‘Cross’. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    Launching on Prime Video on Thursday 14th November with all eight episodes, ‘Cross’ is the newest cop thriller based on the work of prolific author James Patterson.

    While previous versions have been on the big screen –– Morgan Freeman famously played the character in a couple of movies and Tyler Perry was Cross in the 2012 film named for the character –– this incarnation features Aldis Hodge as the main character.

    But is TV, famously home to the police procedural genre, the right place for the character? The answer to that is complicated.

    Related Article: Aldis Hodge Talks Writing and Starring in ‘Parallel’ and His DCU Future

    Does ‘Cross’ make its case?

    Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in 'Cross'. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.
    Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in ‘Cross’. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    Perhaps the biggest issue that Patterson fans may have with ‘Cross’ is that it takes some big liberties with the character. Show creator Ben Watkins skirts around that by having this take on the conflicted cop be “inspired” by the books, which means he’s not beholden to any one plotline.

    And it’s certainly true that a lot of what you might expect from Cross –– his intelligence, his tragic past, his determination –– is present and correct here. Hodge is also an asset, playing the character with grit, steel and charm. The biggest problem is that a lot of ‘Cross’ is essentially the usual serial killer plot with a few extra layers, and it doesn’t always work.

    Script and Direction

    Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in 'Cross'. Credit: Quantrell Colbert/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.
    Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in ‘Cross’. Credit: Quantrell Colbert/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    With Watkins leading the writers’ room, the ‘Cross’ story will probably be familiar to anyone who has watched a serial killer thriller, and that’s partly by design. After all, the Alex Cross books are very much in that mold. Yet while Watkins has got a better handle on what makes Cross tick as an African–American man than Patterson might, what that inspires feels like fairly standard stuff.

    Tensions a running high on the initial case Cross is working, as a local leader and activist is found dead, and the Washington, D.C. community is up in arms. But it soon transpires that the dead man is just one of the targets of a devious serial killer who has a twisted extra reason for getting creative with his victims.

    While Watkins has a way with Cross’ sweary attitude, the feeling is less of Alex Cross than just a generic homicide on cop on the trail of a killer.

    Stacey Muhammad, Craig Siebels and Nzingha Stewart, share directing duties on the series, and while the show is generally well shot, there’s not much that makes it stand out from a hundred other offerings in the genre.

    Performances

    A show like this lives and dies on the casting of its central figure, and fortunately for ‘Cross,’ it has a strong leading man in Aldis Hodge. In fact, he stands out to such a degree that it’s hard for many others to make an impact.

    Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross

    Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in 'Cross'. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.
    Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in ‘Cross’. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    We’re introduced to Cross (well, after a quick flashback to see how his wife died) in the midst of an interrogation where his smarts and charisma are allowed full flow. Hodge nails the scene and the rest of the show, bringing the character life in a way that’s different from how he’s been seen on screen before.

    It might not quite be the Cross of the books, but he’s the one thing that actually makes the show stand out more from the pack. There’s a real feeling of energy and intensity from the actor, and he carries the baggage of Cross effectively. It’s not his fault that his character’s background is so straight-from-the-shelf it nears parody at times.

    Ryan Eggold as Ed Ramsey

    Ryan Eggold as Ed Ramsey in 'Cross'. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.
    Ryan Eggold as Ed Ramsey in ‘Cross’. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    Eggold does his best as Ramsey, the twisted mind who has been kidnapping people and… well, the rest would be a spoiler. But while he’s suitably creepy and weird, undercutting his handsome looks with twitches and glassy-eyed moments, the role is still very much seen-it-before serial killer stuff: lots of speeches about his own genius and ideas and preening when he thinks he’s gotten away with it all.

    Isaiah Mustafa as John Sampson

    Isaiah Mustafa as John Sampson in 'Cross'. Credit: Quantrell Colbert/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.
    Isaiah Mustafa as John Sampson in ‘Cross’. Credit: Quantrell Colbert/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    Cross’s best friend and fellow detective is a key part of this story, and Mustafa plays well against Hodge, though the role doesn’t often give him much of a chance to shine, at least until tension creeps in between the pair.

    Supporting cast

    Cross (the man) comes complete with two adorable moppets who are also mourning their mother’s death and a kindly, but no-nonsense mother-in-law. Dotted around are the usual gathering of cop colleagues and criminals.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Isaiah Mustafa as John Sampson, Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in 'Cross'. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.
    (L to R) Isaiah Mustafa as John Sampson, Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross in ‘Cross’. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    There’s some entertainment value in ‘Cross,’ but at times it is painfully generic. There’s only so much you can do to jazz up an Alex Cross tale, and honestly, while this has an edgier feel than the Morgan Freeman movies, it can’t overcome the strictures of its own genre.

    Yet if you enjoy the show, there’s good news to report –– Prime Video has already announced that a second season has already been commissioned.

    ‘Cross’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Cross’?

    ‘Cross’ follows the investigations of brilliant forensic psychologist and DC Metro Detective Alex Cross (Aldis Hodge). Together with his best friend and partner Detective John Sampson (Isiah Mustafa), Cross delves into the psyches of insidious murderers while fighting to protect his family from the dangers of the criminal world.

    Cross and Sampson are backed by a team of Washington DC detectives, along with FBI agent Kayla Craig (Alona Tal). Together, they help Cross uncover the truth behind serial killers, high–profile kidnappings, and even a deadly personal stalker.

    Yet all the backup in the world can’t save Cross from himself. Cross is driven by a deep desire to do right –– especially by victims who don’t have the power to defend themselves. But he struggles with the psychological fallout of his work, desperate to insulate his family and everyone he loves.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Cross’?

    (L to R) Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross, Isaiah Mustafa as John Sampson in 'Cross'. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.
    (L to R) Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross, Isaiah Mustafa as John Sampson in ‘Cross’. Credit: Keri Anderson/Prime Video. Copyright: Amazon MGM Studios.

    Movies in the ‘Alex Cross’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Alex Cross’ Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Boy Kills World’

    Bill Skarsgård in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    In theaters on Friday, April 26th, ‘Boy Kills World’ is a revenge thriller that choose to layer dark, madcap humor over its clear ‘John Wick’ influence. Powered by a solid, committed central performance from Bill Skarsgård and some entertaining quirk from elsewhere in the cast, it does somewhat fall victim to a thin storyline that gives it much more of a style over substance feel and sometimes comes across as a video game rather than a movie.

    Still, with some interesting permutations later in the plot, it does prove to have a little more going on under the surface.

    Related Article: Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman Talk Action Thriller ‘Boy Kills World’

    Does ‘Boy Kills World’ punch above its weight?

    Yayan Ruhian in 'Boy Kills World'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    Yayan Ruhian in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    If you only watch one movie this year where Bill Skarsgård goes on a violent rampage intent on wiping out the people who did him wrong… well, we’ve yet to see ‘The Crow’, so we can’t tell you whether ‘Boy Kills World’ is the better of the two.

    But it certainly has a level of originality to put it above a new adaptation of a graphic novel that was first brought to screens in 1994. That said, what we have here is very much a blend of ‘John Wick’, ‘The Hunger Games’ with just a dash of a twisted take on ‘The Karate Kid’.

    Script and Direction

    Sharlto Copley in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Sharlto Copley in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Tyler Burton Smith wrote the script here, working with Arend Remmbers to adapt the short film that the latter created alongside director Moritz Mohr.

    While Skarsgård’s performance is mute, the screenplay for the movie is nevertheless full of entertaining voice-over from H. Jon Benjamin (‘Bob’s Burgers’), who provides an insight into what’s going through his character’s head. Whether it’s quoting from the dictionary that the younger version of Boy studies or commenting on what’s going on, it’s a real highlight of the movie as a whole –– all credit to the team for hiring someone who knows what they’re doing on the voice-over front.

    Yet for the most part, the movie is reliant on its fight scenes, and they are certainly numerous, even if they eventually start to make you a little numb. Even with the invention on display here, the sheer brutality of every clash is to such a level that you start to feel battered by it yourself. Still, as the credit implies, it’s fight designer/director and coordinator Dawid Szatarski who deserves the lion’s share of the credit here.

    But Mohr, who expands his original concept here, certainly has a lot of flare to spare when it comes to camera moves and performances. It’s clear he and his team were working to a tighter budget than the likes of either ‘Wick’ or ‘Hunger Games’, but he gets a lot out of it.

    Performances

    Michelle Dockery in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Michelle Dockery in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Appearing in almost every scene (aside from early story moments when the younger version of his character is on screen, played by twins Nicholas and Cameron Crovetti), Skarsgård brings his typical intensity to the role, and very clearly threw himself into training (he’s essentially carved from stone here) to pull off the various fights.

    And his “Boy” is more than simply a savage, revenge-happy warrior –– he’s a damaged personality who has suffered years of trauma and has a mission on his mind (even if it’s not the mission he thinks it is). In tandem with Benjamin’s quirky delivery, it combines to make for a watchable lead role.

    As his Guru, Yayan Ruhian channels the film’s anarchic style, bringing a deranged Mr. Miyagi energy to the screens, the world’s most dangerous mentor. He doesn’t have a lot to do besides show off his considerable martial arts skills (you’ll have seen him in the ‘Raid’ movies and the third ‘John Wick’ outing), but he does the job well.

    On the villainous side of things, we have an assembled group who are clearly having a blast playing atrocious, dystopian autocrats, a collection of paranoid ramblers and scheming social climbers.

    Michelle Dockery in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Michelle Dockery in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Famke Janssen does a lot with relatively little as the power-obsessed Hilda Van Der Koy, one part Hitler, one part Margaret Thatcher. Around her are the likes of Brett Gelman (superbly sleazy as the script-happy brother-in-law Glen), while Sharlto Copley leans into his ability to make smarmy assholes likeable. Well, sort of. But even when he’s at his worst, he’s utterly entertaining.

    Michelle Dockery, meanwhile, is creepy on a whole other level as Hilda’s sister Melanie, the real power behind the throne.

    And then there’s June 27, played by Jessica Rothe. The star of the ‘Happy Death Day’ movies is just as committed as the rest, and proves she’s got the action chops as much as Skarsgård. Plus, she delivers when called upon to show other sides to her character.

    Final Thoughts

    Jessica Rothe in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Jessica Rothe in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    ‘Boy Kills World’ is certainly frenetic and action-packed, with a healthy line in dark, zany comedy and some clever ideas.

    But in a world where movies such as ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’, ‘John Wick’ and other exist, it doesn’t seem as completely original as it might, and it frequently mistakes punching for plot. Don’t let that stop you from checking out something that could use the support, though.

    ‘Boy Kills World’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the story of ‘‘Boy Kills World’?

    The new movie stars Bill Skarsgård as a young man known only as “Boy”, who vows revenge after his family is murdered by Hilda Van Der Koy (Famke Janssen), the deranged matriarch of a corrupt post-apocalyptic dynasty that left the boy orphaned, deaf and voiceless.

    Driven by his inner voice, one which he co-opted from his favorite childhood video game, Boy trains with a mysterious shaman (Yayan Ruhian) to become an instrument of death and is set loose on the eve of the annual culling of dissidents. Bedlam ensues as Boy commits bloody martial arts mayhem, inciting a wrath of carnage and blood-letting.

    As he tries to get his bearings in this delirious realm, Boy soon falls in with a desperate resistance group, all the while bickering with the apparent ghost of his rebellious little sister.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Boy Kills World’?

    • Bill Skarsgård as Boy
    • H. Jon Benjamin as Boy’s “inner voice”
    • Jessica Rothe as June 27
    • Michelle Dockery as Melanie van der Koy
    • Brett Gelman as Gideon van der Koy
    • Isaiah Mustafa as Benny
    • Andrew Koji as Basho
    • Famke Janssen as Hilda van der Koy
    • Sharlto Copley as Glen van der Koy
    • Yayan Ruhian as a shaman
    Brett Gelman in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Brett Gelman in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Movies Similar to ‘Boy Kills World’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Boy Kills World’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Bill Skarsgård Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Boy Kills World’ Interview: Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman

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    Opening in theaters on April 26th is the new action thriller ‘Boy Kills World,’ which was directed by Moritz Mohr and stars Bill Skarsgård (‘John Wick: Chapter 4‘), Jessica Rothe (‘La La Land’), Michelle Dockery (‘The Gentlemen‘), Brett Gelman (‘Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile’), Famke Janssen (‘X-Men‘) and Sharlto Copley (‘The A-Team‘).

    Related Article: Bill Skarsgård Talks ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ and Working with Keanu Reeves

    Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman talk 'Boy Kills World'.
    (L to R) Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman talk ‘Boy Kills World’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Famke Janssen and Brett Gelman about their work on ‘Boy Kills World’, the plot, their characters, the action, their first reaction to the screenplay and working with director Moritz Mohr.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Janssen and Gelman, Isaiah Mustafa, and Andrew Koji.

    Michelle Dockery in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Michelle Dockery in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Famke, can you talk about your character and why everyone fears her?

    Famke Janssen: Well, I think she’s misunderstood. I think this is someone who’s being confronted with her past, and it’s been a bit dodgy and shady. So, she’s now down a very slippery slope of a mental state that’s not stable, a family history that’s probably very troubled, and a very violent, obviously present time that we’re in, in the world and in this movie. So, I would say unhinged, to put it lightly.

    MF: Brett, can you talk about your character and his odd commitment to theater? Did you draw influence from any former directors that you have worked with?

    Brett Gelman: It was fun. I mean, that was great to sort of be this maniacal dictator who wants to be an artist and a writer. There’s nothing more fun than playing an insane director, even if it’s just for a few moments like it is in the film. Yeah, I’m always channeling some of the stranger directors that I’ve worked with in the past who would flip out, or acting teachers.

    Brett Gelman in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Brett Gelman in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    MF: Famke, what was your first reaction to the screenplay and the ‘Boy Kills World’ universe?

    FJ: It was different. To me it was all going to be about, what’s the execution going to be like? How is this going to look visually? That’s where I think I was pleasantly surprised. We had an idea about it in terms of production design, costumes, the stunt team and stunt coordinator and the visuals of all of it, and the acting. But it’s a visual feast unlike anything you’ve ever seen. It’s a hyper-reality.

    MF: Finally, Brett, what was your experience like collaborating with director Moritz Mohr on this project?

    BG: Moritz is the opposite of how Gideon behaves as a director in the movie. Moritz is like somebody who you’d always picture holding a chocolate bar and giggling. But in a wholesome way. He was a dream to work with. He’s the perfect combination of somebody who knows exactly what they want, but then is also open to collaborating with you. The best kind of directors, beyond having vision, are the directors who have vision and then also enjoy actors. Because a lot of them hate us. Some of us deserve to be hated. Moritz didn’t give us less love. Moritz gave us Moritz love, and you can quote me on that. That’s the best quote I’ve ever quoted.

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    What’s the plot of ‘‘Boy Kills World’?

    The new movie stars Bill Skarsgård as a young man known only as “Boy”, who vows revenge after his family is murdered by Hilda Van Der Koy (Famke Janssen), the deranged matriarch of a corrupt post-apocalyptic dynasty that left the boy orphaned, deaf and voiceless.

    Driven by his inner voice, one which he co-opted from his favorite childhood video game, Boy trains with a mysterious shaman (Yayan Ruhian) to become an instrument of death and is set loose on the eve of the annual culling of dissidents. Bedlam ensues as Boy commits bloody martial arts mayhem, inciting a wrath of carnage and blood-letting.

    As he tries to get his bearings in this delirious realm, Boy soon falls in with a desperate resistance group, all the while bickering with the apparent ghost of his rebellious little sister.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Boy Kills World’?

    • Bill Skarsgård as Boy
    • H. Jon Benjamin as Boy’s “inner voice”
    • Jessica Rothe as June 27
    • Michelle Dockery as Melanie van der Koy
    • Brett Gelman as Gideon van der Koy
    • Isaiah Mustafa as Benny
    • Andrew Koji as Basho
    • Famke Janssen as Hilda van der Koy
    • Sharlto Copley as Glen van der Koy
    • Yayan Ruhian as a shaman
    Bill Skarsgård in 'Boy Kills World'.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘Boy Kills World’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Movies Similar to ‘Boy Kills World’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Boy Kills World’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Bill Skarsgård Movies On Amazon

     

     

  • Thomas Jane Talks ‘Murder at Yellowstone City’

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    Opening in theaters, On Demand and digital beginning June 24th is the new Western ‘Murder at Yellowstone City,’ which was directed by Richard Gray (‘Robert The Bruce’).

    When a prospector is found dead in Yellowstone City, Sheriff Ambrose (Gabriel Byrne) quickly arrests the town’s newcomer and former slave, Cicero (Isaiah Mustafa). The town’s new preacher, Thaddeus Murphy (Thomas Jane) and his wife Alice (Anna Camp) soon discover Cicero is innocent and now must stand up to the Sheriff in order to bring the true murderer to justice.

    In addition, the film also features Nat Wolf (‘The Fault in Our Stars’), Aimee Garcia (‘Lucifer’), Zach McGowan (‘Terminator Salvation‘), Scottie Thompson (‘Star Trek’), Emma Kenney (‘The Conners’), and Oscar winner Richard Dreyfuss (‘Jaws’).

    Thomas Jane has appeared in dozens of popular movies including ‘Face/Off,’ ‘Boogie Nights,’ ‘The Thin Red Line,’ ‘Magnolia,’ ‘61*,’ ‘Dreamcatcher,’ ‘The Mist,’ ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,’ and ‘The Predator.’

    But he is probably best known to Marvel fans as Frank Castle in 2004’s ‘The Punisher.’ He currently stars as Ted Conkaffey on the Freevee series, ‘Troppo.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Thomas Jane about his work on ‘Murder at Yellowstone City.’

    Thomas Jane in 'Murder at Yellowstone City.
    Thomas Jane in ‘Murder at Yellowstone City.

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Jane, and director Richard Gray.

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

    Thomas Jane: Me and my partner Courtney Penn started a production company in 2019 called Renegade. Renegade’s logo is a horse made out of fire. So, it was natural for us to be attracted to Westerns and to have Westerns sent to us. This was the second Western that we did that we shot in 2020. The first was called ‘The Last Son’ and that’s come and gone.

    This one we’re real proud of. It’s a script that came across our desk and we thought “this is a classic Western that does good things with the genre, but doesn’t break the genre or step outside of it, or try to twist it around in some funny way, like bringing aliens in.” Not that there’s anything wrong with that. But this was a classic Western and when they work, they work. They’ve been around for a long time for a reason.

    It’s that tension between the individual, the freedom of the individual and the town, which is society, the rules of society and the morals of society that can be constricting in some ways. Yet you need the society in order to survive. No man is an island, but there’s always an outsider. The outsider comes into the town. The town is either a good town, full of decent people, but ultimately weak and in need of protection, open to the predations of villainous and murderous men.

    Or the town is a strong town, but bad. There’s a corrupt sheriff, there’s some corruption creeping through the veins of the town, keeping people off balance. In both cases, a hero is needed from the outside to come in and at first, he’s shunned and then he’s needed. Then at the end, he has righted some wrongs, stomped out some evil and rides off into the sunset.

    That’s the basic Western. There’re different variations on that theme. There’s the vengeance theme, which we have a little bit. There’s the professional theme, which came around in the 70’s. It was with Lee Marvin‘s ‘The Professionals,’ and ‘The Wild Bunch’ with William Holden. This was a new twist. It really didn’t exist before the late 60’s and 70’s where you had a group of professional gun fighters. It was always a group. It’s a group of pros and they’ve come in and they don’t care. They’re just being paid to do their job. Along the way their own morality is challenged and then they have to step up and write the wrongs because wrongs need righting.

    MF: Director Richard Gray has referred to you as a “Western movie expert.” Do you agree with that statement and how did your work on previous Westerns prepare you to make this movie?

    TJ: On both films we were lucky enough to meet and then work with the Schultz brothers who are a group of horse wranglers that live in the Dakotas and they are expert horsemen. The value of good horsemen to a Western, you can’t put a price on it. It is absolutely necessary in order to get your shots on time, to make your days, to get what you need out of the actor and the horse when they’re working together, it’s vital. So, I’m very happy to have teamed up with the Schultz brothers, plan on doing that again many times.

    My experience with the Western mostly comes from watching them with my dad. The Western is such a father/son relationship and me and my dad on the weekends would sit down and pop in a Western. We had a lot of great times, a lot of great discussions and a lot of interesting insights into what it meant to be a man, and what it meant to be a good man. The role of masculinity in society, how that role is both needed and despised, and how that changes over the years and the decades.

    It’s a purely an American invention, the myth of the American West. It’s like baseball and jazz. These are real American products and it spread all over the world, and now you find Italian Westerns, Japanese Westerns, Bollywood Westerns. So, it speaks to people. It doesn’t really matter where you’re from. It speaks to people who live in a society, the rights and the wrongs and the morality of that. It’s changed over the years.

    The classic Western always had a damsel in distress. She represented the weak society that needed protecting from the bad guys, and the hero would step in and say, “get behind me, woman.” He would take care of business. But then the 60’s came around and that evolved to a woman that was strong enough to be the hero’s equal. They would partner up as a couple and then take on the bad guys. That evolution you didn’t see before the 60’s or 70’s.

    Then the Western died in the eighties. There were no Westerns in the 80’s. ‘Heaven’s Gate’ in 1980 killed it. It was a huge movie and a financial disaster. It’s actually a very good film if you watch the director’s cut. It is really good, and a real tragedy that the movie didn’t do better. But that killed the Western for the 80’s.

    Then they revived again in the 90’s with ‘Dances With Wolves’ and ‘Unforgiven.’ Then you the variations start to creep in like ‘Desperado,’ or ‘The Quick and the Dead,’ where you had a strong female character taking over the role of the hero. Then ‘Posse,’ when you had a black man step up as the hero. So, we started seeing variations. Some of those variations worked better than others. You can bend the genre, but you can’t break it.

    Hopefully people have tuned into that now because it plays a very specific role in the American psyche. If you mess with it too much, then it no longer plays that role and then Westerns die again for another 10 years.

    Isaiah Mustafa and Anna Camp in 'Murder at Yellowstone City.'
    (L to R) Isaiah Mustafa and Anna Camp in ‘Murder at Yellowstone City.’

    MF: A lot of clues about your character’s past are given with very little dialogue, but its’ clear from your behavior that he hasn’t always been a preacher. Can you talk about creating his backstory for yourself and how that helped you create the character?

    TJ: I like that you mentioned that we accomplished it with very little dialogue. I’m a big fan of stripping away as much dialogue as you can and leaving only the essentials, letting the audience put the pieces together. That’s how I like to watch movies. I like to watch movies that aren’t spoon fed, that respects my intelligence enough that I will be able to put the pieces together without having somebody give a long speech.

    We accomplished that, me and Richie Gray went through the script and we were able to excise as much material as we possibly could in order to boil it down to its essentials. That allows the audience to fill in the blanks with their own imagination, much like you do when you read a novel. That’s always the goal, so it’s nice to hear you say that.

    MF: Finally, I understand that this is the first Western that Gabriel Byrne has ever made. What was it like for you working with him on this film?

    TJ: As he gets older, he has got a great face for Westerns. I think Westerns are all about faces. Sergio Leone, you look at those movies, you look at the smaller characters and the faces, the grit, the grime and the sweat, but they always had these faces that were hard road. They’ve been ridden hard. You really got that sense that life was tough. It was nasty, brutish, and short, and people were lucky to be alive every day. You could be wiped out any day by the simplest thing. Step on a rattlesnake while you’re digging a grave. So that has always appealed to me.

    Byrne is a classically trained, and a wonderful actor. He’s got a great voice. I love the Irish brogue. I love the fact that Westerns are all about immigrants, and there were a lot of immigrants coming in. So, you got a Swedish accent, or an Irish accent, or a British accent. They were all coming in. I like that aspect of the reality that we bring to it. Gabriel is a pro, he’s a real pro and he was a lot of fun to work with.

    Gabriel Byrne in 'Murder at Yellowstone City.'
    Gabriel Byrne in ‘Murder at Yellowstone City.’

    ‘Murder at Yellowstone City’ will be in Theaters, On Demand and Digital on June 24th.

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  • The Adult Losers Club Assembles in New ‘It 2’ Cast Photo

    Warner Bros.

    The Losers Club is now officially back in session, in a new photo featuring the main adult cast of “It: Chapter 2.”

    The official “It” Twitter account debuted the behind the scenes snap on Monday, featuring the ensemble sitting around a table, Last Supper-style, reading through the sequel’s script.

    Pictured in the photo are Jessica Chastain (playing Beverly Marsh), James McAvoy (Bill Denbrough), Isaiah Mustafa (Mike Hanlon), Jay Ryan (Ben Hanscom), James Ransone (Eddie Kaspbrak), Bill Hader (Richie Tozier), and Andy Bean (Stanley Uris). Aside from those Losers, other recent additions to the cast include Teach Grant (playing Henry Bowers), Xavier Dolan (Adrian Mellon), Will Beinbrink (Tom Rogan), and Jess Weixler (Bill’s wife, Audra).

    Set 30 years after the first film, “Chapter 2” brings our heroes back to Derry, Maine to once again fight off the evil Pennywise (Bill Skarsgaard), who’s resurfaced after a long absence. “It” director (and new Academy member) Andres Muschietti is returning, as are the original kid cast in flashbacks.

    Based on what we’ve seen so far, it seems safe to say that we’ll be getting plenty of updates from the cast and crew throughout the film’s production. Stay tuned for more behind the scenes scoop as it becomes available.

    “It: Chapter 2” is due in theaters on September 6, 2019.