Tag: james-hawes

  • Laura Linney Reportedly Joins DC’s ‘Lanterns’

    (Left) Actress Laura Linney attends the Academy’s 7th Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, CA, on Saturday, November 14, 2015. Credit/Provider: Matt Petit / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S. (Right) Aaron Pierre as John Stewart and Kyle Chandler as Hal Jordan in 'Lanterns'. Photo: John P. Johnson/HBO.
    (Left) Actress Laura Linney attends the Academy’s 7th Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, CA, on Saturday, November 14, 2015. Credit/Provider: Matt Petit / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S. (Right) Aaron Pierre as John Stewart and Kyle Chandler as Hal Jordan in ‘Lanterns’. Photo: John P. Johnson/HBO.

    Preview:

    • Laura Linney is being linked to a role in DC/HBO series ‘Lanterns.’
    • There is speculation that she’s playing Carol Ferris.
    • Kyle Chandler and Aaron Pierre star in the new show.

    Though it already has an impressive cast, new DC Studios/HBO comic book-based series ‘Lanterns’ appears to have gotten an extra shot of dramatic power.

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    According to reporter Jeff Sneider, Laura Linney –– who worked with the new show’s co-creator Chris Mundy on ‘Ozark’ is aboard the show.

    No official confirmation has emerged yet, but Sneider is already speculating that she could be playing Carol Ferris, the love of Lantern Hal Jordan’s life (that role is being brought to screens by Kyle Chandler) and someone who ultimately –– in the comics, at least –– becomes the villain known as Star Sapphire.

    That’s all still rumor and conjecture at this point, but we do know that Aaron Pierre is co-starring alongside Chandler as fellow Lantern John Stewart.

    Related Article: Nathan Fillion to Reprise ‘Superman’ Guy Gardner Role in HBO’s ‘Lanterns’

    What’s the story of ‘Green Lantern’ in comics form?

    Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps from DC Comics. Photo: DC Comics.
    Hal Jordan and the Green Lantern Corps from DC Comics. Photo: DC Comics.

    Created in its first incarnation (a Lantern named Alan Scott) in 1940 by Martin Nodell and Bill Finger, the concept of the ‘Green Lantern’ comics is that of a super-powered, police force, battling evil doers with rings that allow them to channel energy into different forms. There are many Lanterns, who patrol the known and unknown universe.

    ‘Green Lantern’s history on screen has been seriously mixed. Though different takes on the character have flourished in animated movies and series, their live-action counterparts have had less luck. Ryan Reynolds played the Hal Jordan version in a 2011 movie that didn’t triumph at the box office, and there have been fleeting glimpses on the small screen.

    Even Zack Snyder didn’t manage to realize his chosen Lantern –– John Stewart –– in his mammoth Snyder Cut of ‘Justice League’. Despite shooting a cameo with Wayne T. Carr as Stewart, Warners asked him to remove the character because of the studio’s own plans. In the end, Snyder swapped in Martian Manhunter.

    And the show had been in development before Gunn and Safran made their big DC Studios announcement. Back in 2020, ‘Pride and Prejudice and ZombiesSeth Grahame-Smith hopped aboard to write and run what HBO Max (as the streaming service was then called) was picturing its most expensive series to date, a space-set ‘Green Lantern’ drama whose focus would be the Alan Scott and Guy Gardner iterations of the character among the first and most popular versions.

    (Left) Aaron Pierre as Terry Richmond in 'Rebel Ridge'. Photo: Allyson Riggs/Netflix © 2024. (Right) DC Comics' Green Lantern John Stewart. Photo: DC Comics.
    (Left) Aaron Pierre as Terry Richmond in ‘Rebel Ridge’. Photo: Allyson Riggs/Netflix © 2024. (Right) DC Comics’ Green Lantern John Stewart. Photo: DC Comics.

    ‘Lanterns’ will follow the Chandler and Pierre characters, as new recruit Stewart and Lantern legend Jordan are described in the latest official synopsis as “two intergalactic cops drawn into a dark, earth-based mystery as they investigate a murder in the American heartland.”

    So, think ‘True Detective’ meets ‘Green Lantern’…

    Here’s Chris Mundy on the tone for the show:

    “From the start, our driving force has been to deliver a layered drama –– rooted in nuanced storytelling and rich world building –– that balances tension and mystery with honest, authentic emotion. The goal is to create something that feels timeless and grounded without sacrificing the magic of the source material.”

    But there will be some powerful antagonism involved, as Ulrich Thomsen is playing Sinestro a former Green Lantern who turned rogue and is described as ruthless yet charming.

    His manipulative nature drives his enduring obsession with his former mentee, Hal Jordan. The character was created by John Broome and Gil Kane and first appeared in the comic book “Green Lantern, Volume 2, #56” released in 1961.

    Who else is in ‘Lanterns’?

    Nathan Fillion in 'Superman', a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2024 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved. TM & © DC.
    Nathan Fillion in ‘Superman’, a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2024 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved. TM & © DC.

    The cast also includes ‘No Country for Old Man’s Kelly Macdonald, ’12 Years a Slave’ actor Garret Dillahunt, Poorna Jagannathan (who appeared in (‘The Night Of’), Jason Ritter and the aforementioned Thomsen.

    In breaking news, Deadline brings word that Chris Coy is also part of the ensemble.

    In a guest starring role, Coy will be the new character of ‘Waylon Sanders,’ an intelligent survivor… or a nervous truck driver. Age and real name unknown, he’s unbound by the laws of nature.

    More recently, we learned that Nathan Fillion would be bringing his Guy Gardner character –– another Lantern –– to the show, following his debut in James Gunn‘s ‘Superman’ this summer.

    Who is working on ‘Lanterns’?

    James Gunn at CinemaCon 2025. Photo: Warner Bros.
    James Gunn at CinemaCon 2025. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Mundy, whose resume includes stints on Netflix’s ‘Ozark’ and HBO’s ‘True Detective: Night Country’, is running the new series, working alongside ‘Watchmen’s Damon Lindelof and DC comics writer Tom King (whose ‘Supergirl’ comic is the basis for the new movie featuring the character).

    And James Hawes, who has worked on series including ‘Black Mirror’ ‘Snowpiercer’ and Season 1 of ‘Slow Horses,’ will direct the first two episodes.

    Here’s what Hawes has had to say to Collider about his approach to the show:

    “There is a very particular humor that they brought to this. It’s very rooted in a way that I like to think we achieve with ‘Slow Horses,’ that I achieve with things like my ‘Black Mirror’ [episodes], and yet there is a rich vein of humor running through it. I’m such a huge fan of Damon [Lindelof] and Chris [Mundy] and the writing that they’ve done in the past… You always find a scene or two that you think, ‘I cant wait to be stood beside the camera and the cast, directing this scene on the day.’ “

    He’s not alone –– ‘Watchmen’ veteran Stephen Williams, ‘Under the Bridge’s Geeta Vasant Patel, and former ‘Ozark’ director Alik Sakharov are also handling episodes.

    Since they oversee the whole DC Studios arm, filmmaker Gunn and producer Peter Safran are executive producers alongside Ron Schmidt.

    Where else have we seen Laura Linney?

    (L to R) Laura Linney and Mark Ruffalo in 'You Can Count on Me.' Photo: Paramount Classics.
    (L to R) Laura Linney and Mark Ruffalo in ‘You Can Count on Me.’ Photo: Paramount Classics.

    ‘Ozark’ is just one of this talented actor’s many credits.

    She’s enjoyed a healthy career on screens big and small, appearing in movies such as ‘Nocturnal Animals,’ ‘Sully,’ ‘Mr. Holmes,’ ‘The Fifth Estate,’ ‘The Exorcism of Emily Rose,’ ‘Mystic River,’ ‘The Savages,’ (for which she was Oscar nominated) ‘Love Actually,’ ‘You Can Count on Me,’ ‘The Truman Show’ and ‘Congo.’

    On TV, her roles include ‘Tales of the City,’ ‘The Big C,’ ‘John Adams’ and ‘Frasier.’

    When will ‘Lanterns’ be on screens?

    We’re still waiting to learn when HBO will premiere the show, though it is reportedly targeting an early 2026 launch.

    Green Lanterns Hal Jordan and John Stewart from DC Comics.
    (L to R) Green Lanterns Hal Jordan and John Stewart from DC Comics. Photo: DC Comics.

    List of Green Lantern Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy ‘Green Lantern’ Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘The Amateur’

    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studios' 'The Amateur'. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Amateur’. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘The Amateur’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters April 11 is ‘The Amateur,’ directed by James Hawes and starring Rami Malek, Laurence Fishburne, Rachel Brosnahan, Caitriona Balfe, Holt McCallany, Julianne Nicholson, Michael Stuhlbarg, Danny Sapani, and Jon Bernthal.

    Related Article: Laurence Fishburne Talks ‘Slingshot’ and Working with Casey Affleck

    Initial Thoughts

    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studios' 'The Amateur'. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Amateur’. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    It’s something that a lot of moviegoers of a certain age all say they want: an adult, intelligent, dramatic thriller, perhaps based on a novel but not adapted from already heavily exploited IP, comic books, toys, or video games. For a little while, ‘The Amateur’ seems to check that box. Based on a novel by Robert Littell (which was filmed previously in 1981 as a Canadian production starring John Savage), directed by James Hawes (who’s got episodes of ‘Doctor Who,’ ‘Black Mirror,’ ‘Snowpiercer,’ and ‘Slow Horses’ under his belt), and featuring an admirable cast of seasoned, reliable actors, ‘The Amateur’ seems almost like a throwback to a different era of filmmaking.

    In the end, however, it doesn’t quite live up to its potential. With a largely TV background, Hawes directs the film in almost leisurely, episodic fashion, giving it a stop-and-start pace that never really builds in tension. And too many of the characters – including the lead – are either underused or underdeveloped, leaving the feeling that there’s a longer film – or perhaps, yes, a TV show – somewhere on the cutting room floor.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Rami Malek as Heller and Holt McCallany as Moore in 20th Century Studios' 'The Amateur'. Photo by Jonathan Olley. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Rami Malek as Heller and Holt McCallany as Moore in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Amateur’. Photo by Jonathan Olley. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Rami Malek plays Charlie Heller, an extremely introverted CIA cryptographer whose wife Sarah (Rachel Brosnahan) has to fly off to London for some kind of conference (we don’t really know what she does). But it’s only a couple of days before Charlie is pulled into the office of Deputy CIA Director Moore (Holt McCallany) and informed that Sarah has been killed in a brutal terrorist attack.

    A stunned Charlie wants the CIA to retaliate, but when Moore and another superior, Caleb (Danny Sapani), drag their feet, Charlie does some digging – that’s his job – and discovers that Moore has been running a number of unauthorized black ops, some of them against our own allies and involving members of the same terrorist group. So he extorts Moore and Caleb instead: he’ll reveal everything about their operations to the public and the press – unless they give him enough training to go hunt down his wife’s murderers himself.

    Forcing their hand for the moment (“What else do you want?” asks a disbelieving Moore. “An Aston-Martin? A jet-pack?”), Charlie comes under the tutelage of master assassin Henderson (Laurence Fishburne). He quickly learns that he can’t shoot worth s**t, but he can build a mean explosive and hack his way into any surveillance or computer system, both of which come in handy when he escapes and heads for Europe after getting wind that Moore plans to have Henderson kill him.

    (L to R) Rami Malek and Caitríona Balfe in 'The Amateur'. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Rami Malek and Caitríona Balfe in ‘The Amateur’. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Once overseas, Charlie begins tracking down the people responsible for his wife’s murder, tormenting them in cleverly sadistic ways: in Paris, the sole woman in the group (Barbara Probst) is locked in an isolation booth at an allergy clinic and choked on pumped-in pollen, before she and Charlie engage in a vicious fight that doesn’t end well; later in Madrid, one of the terrorists meets a watery end when Charlie blows up the high-rise glass swimming pool he’s in (which you’ve seen in the trailer about 400 times by now). But as the CIA closes in, Charlie asks for help from “Inquiline” (Caitriona Balfe), an informant he’s been speaking with for years who helps point him in the direction of mastermind Horst Schiller (Michael Stuhlbarg).

    James Hawes directs all this in an almost casual fashion, with the occasional shocking bursts of violence (many played in enclosed spaces) frequently followed up by dialogue scenes that dial the energy back down. “How will you fill the silence?” Inquiline asks Charlie at one point, after revealing that she lost a loved one and missed all his sounds around their home. Charlie’s response is to fill it with noise, screams, explosions, and drinks – a sly nod, perhaps, to the much more haunted James Bond of Ian Fleming’s novels than the film franchise. In a way, ‘The Amateur’ is an anti-Bond film: none of this is glamorous, jet-setting or particularly exotic, and Charlie increasingly loses more of his humanity as he pursues his goal.

    Unfortunately, these interesting ideas aren’t given more than lip service. ‘The Amateur’ never delves too deeply below the surface, and its 10 screenwriters (only two are credited) fall back on only superficial and predictable thriller tropes. The villain even rolls out a version of the old “we’re not that different” chestnut toward the film’s end, an indication that despite an attempt at a more thoughtful approach, ‘The Amateur’ is slickly professional and nothing more.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Rami Malek as Heller and Rachel Brosnahan as Sarah in 20th Century Studio's 'The Amateur'. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Rami Malek as Heller and Rachel Brosnahan as Sarah in 20th Century Studio’s ‘The Amateur’. Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    The cast here is great on paper, but despite working hard a lot of them end up shortchanged. Malek is front and center for most of the two hours, but while this Oscar-winning actor has charisma and presence, his retiring performance as Charlie Heller is both nuanced and self-defeating. We want to believe Charlie’s turn from reserved, intensely non-verbal analyst to cold-blooded killer, but the lack of a fully defined character and even some background (does Charlie have parents? Does his dead wife? Is he possibly on the spectrum?) doesn’t put enough texture on Charlie’s character to make him fully come alive.

    Laurence Fishburne as Henderson in 20th Century Studios' 'The Amateur'. Photo by Jonathan Olley. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Laurence Fishburne as Henderson in 20th Century Studios’ ‘The Amateur’. Photo by Jonathan Olley. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    The same could be said of much of the rest of the ensemble. Laurence Fishburne probably comes off best and gives us the sense of a more complex soul underneath his tough exterior, but he only shows up sporadically. Rachel Brosnahan’s presence as Charlie’s wife is as ghostly as the flashbacks she’s in. Holt McCallany (so good in ‘The Iron Claw’) might as well have a big ‘VILLAIN’ sign stamped across his forehead, while Michael Stuhlbarg goes for the restrained, cultured heavy in his five or so minutes on screen. But the shortest end of the stick is handed to Jon Bernthal as a CIA spook who turns up in exactly two scenes, neither of which have any real point to them at all. We have to believe a lot of his material got the chop – why would you hire Jon Bernthal and give him nothing to do?

    Final Thoughts

    Rami Malek in 'The Amateur'. Photo: 20th Century Studios.
    Rami Malek in ‘The Amateur’. Photo: 20th Century Studios.

    Its initially restrained pacing and low-key atmosphere had us on board with ‘The Amateur’ at first, but Malek’s performance and the film itself never quite catch fire. Too many red herrings – like the completely bizarre reappearance of Bernthal late in the film – also diffuse any rising sense of danger or confrontation.

    ‘The Amateur’ does have its moments: the fight scenes provide a jolt of whiplash, violent oomph, and Charlie’s inventive traps for his targets are the thriller equivalents of something out of a ‘Saw’ film. While ‘The Amateur’ does provide a certain level of entertainment for a more grown-up audience, it may not be enough to get them to a movie theater – which is exactly where we need more of this stuff.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Amateur’?

    A quiet CIA cryptographer (Rami Malek) is driven by grief and vengeance to seek out the terrorists who killed his wife (Rachel Brosnahan), but soon finds himself pursued by his own agency instead.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Amateur’?

    • Rami Malek as Charles Heller
    • Laurence Fishburne as Robert Henderson
    • Rachel Brosnahan as Sarah
    • Caitríona Balfe as Inquiline
    • Jon Bernthal as The Bear
    • Michael Stuhlbarg as Horst Schiller
    • Holt McCallany as CIA Deputy Director Alex Moore
    • Danny Sapani as Caleb
    • Julianne Nicholson as CIA Director Samantha O’Brien
    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studio's 'The Amateur'. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    Rami Malek as Heller in 20th Century Studio’s ‘The Amateur’. Photo by John Wilson. © 2024 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    List of Rami Malek Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Amateur’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Rami Malek Movies on Amazon

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