Tag: jason schwartzman

  • Movie Review: ‘Mountainhead’

    (L to R) Cory Michael Smith, Steve Carell, Ramy Youssef, Jason Schwartzman in 'Mountainhead.' Photo: HBO
    (L to R) Cory Michael Smith, Steve Carell, Ramy Youssef, Jason Schwartzman in ‘Mountainhead.’ Photo: HBO

    ‘Mountainhead’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

    Premiering on Max on May 31st is ‘Mountainhead,’ the directorial debut of ‘Succession’ creator Jesse Armstrong and featuring a similar mix of cold-eyed satire and spiky, swear-laden dialogue.

    The new movie stars Steve Carell (‘The Big Short’), Jason Schwartzman (‘Asteroid City’), Ramy Youssef (‘Ramy’) and Cory Michael Smith (‘Saturday Night’).

    Related Article: Steve Carell, Jason Schwartzman, Ramy Youssef to Star in Jesse Armstrong’s Directorial Debut

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Jason Schwartzman, Ramy Youssef, Steve Carell in 'Mountainhead.' Photo: Macall Polay/HBO
    (L to R) Jason Schwartzman, Ramy Youssef, Steve Carell in ‘Mountainhead.’ Photo: Macall Polay/HBO

    How exactly do you follow a zeitgeisty hit like HBO’s ‘Succession,’ the story of a family of wealthy, entitled people squabbling over control of a media empire?

    If you’re Jesse Armstrong, who created and ran that award-winning black comedy drama across four seasons, the answer has been to quickly whip up another tale of wealthy, entitled people, this time not related, but still squabbling and in this case, over control of even higher stakes.

    Yet was it a mistake for Armstrong, who clearly showed he knew how to create compelling, if toxic characters and give actors chewy, chatty role, to head back so quickly to familiar territory? The answer is a mixture of yes and no.

    Script and Direction

    Jason Schwartzman in 'Mountainhead.' Photo: Macall Polay/HBO
    Jason Schwartzman in ‘Mountainhead.’ Photo: Macall Polay/HBO

    Armstrong, whose credits stretch back to the likes of the movies ‘Four Lions’ and ‘In the Loop’ and on TV, UK series ‘The Thick of It,’ ‘Peep Show’ and ‘Fresh Meat,’ has a particular style and sensibility he has developed working with the likes of fellow creators Chris Morris and Armando Iannucci (the latter created ‘The Thick of it’ and also worked on HBO’s ‘Veep’).

    There are no sacred cows safe from slaughtering, but Armstrong’s focus in recent years has been the super-rich, the fact that all the money, gadgets and excess in the world can’t buy you happiness and their disdain for the “common” working people. It’s a 21st century spin on out-of-touch rulers, these titans who either inherited their wealth or got lucky through routes such as paradigm-shifting technology and their craven ways.

    ‘Mountainhead’ is no different, featuring at its core four toxic techies who revel in their wealth, swap insults and make big plans for how they’re going to shape the world to their own ideas.

    The script for the new movie is full of Armstrong’s trademark, sniping zingers, including one of the foursome describing the décor of another’s new mountain retreat as “Ayn Bland” (yes, the film’s title, which is also the name of the sprawling, concrete-and-glass monstrosity, is a nod to Ayn Rand’s novel ‘The Fountainhead’).

    Cory Michael Smith in 'Mountainhead.' Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.
    Cory Michael Smith in ‘Mountainhead.’ Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.

    But though Armstrong certainly draws some darkly-hued, often cruel laughs at the expense of these people, the actual character work is somewhat lacking. Empathy is not necessarily a requirement, but there is so little to hold on to here: merely a slow devolution into rivalry and endless preening or lack of accountability. It becomes more punishing than entertaining after a while and a late-turn dive into farce doesn’t help matters.

    With just a couple of short films under his belt as director, Armstrong relies more on the tools he’s picked up working with other directors on the shows and movies he’s been involved in the past. In fact, the look of the movie is essentially ‘Succession,’ all frosty structures and minimal action. It gets the job done and the screenplay is the focus anyway.

    Cast and Performances

    Steve Carell in 'Mountainhead.' Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.
    Steve Carell in ‘Mountainhead.’ Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.

    To his credit, Armstrong has an eye for casting, and the leads are either an established talent or a rising star.

    Carell plays Randall, the “Papa Bear” of the main four, who made his millions (and later, billions) before the others. He’s got fingers in a multitude of pies, but his good-natured charm –– feeding off the actor’s own –– hides a mercenary zeal.

    Schwartzman has specialized in slightly offbeat characters for years, and his Hugo Van Yalk (nicknamed “Soup” as in “soup kitchen,” because he’s the only multimillionaire among this group of “b-nut” bros) is a typically needy, funny type, desperate to secure investment for a new wellness app. When things take an even crazier turn, Schwartzman’s talent for physical comedy shines.

    Cory Michael Smith has been making a name for himself on screens both big and small, and was particularly impressive as a young, unpredictable Chevy Chase in Jason Reitman’s ‘Saturday Night’ last year. Here, he’s Venis, an Elon Musk-type peacock with a social media app that is sowing chaos across the globe (not that Venis is willing to admit or even perceive that). Despite Smith’s best efforts and a small nod towards flecks of humanity lodged in his blackened soul, the role is a loathsome one.

    Ramy Youssef in 'Mountainhead.' Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.
    Ramy Youssef in ‘Mountainhead.’ Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.

    Finally, Ramy Youssef has been creating and starring in his own work, including sitcom ‘Ramy,’ and he provides the slightly sweeter –– which is not saying much with this group –– Jeff, whose own A.I. counterpoint to Venis’ lie-spewing social media is causing friction between the pair. Youssef is good in the part, and clearly has a handle on Armstrong’s sharp dialogue, but even he can’t make the character all that likeable.

    Outside of the main foursome, pretty much everyone else has little time or opportunity to pop, as they are tiny supporting roles.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Cory Michael Smith, Steve Carell, Ramy Youssef, Jason Schwartzman in 'Mountainhead.' Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.
    (L to R) Cory Michael Smith, Steve Carell, Ramy Youssef, Jason Schwartzman in ‘Mountainhead.’ Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.

    While ‘Mountainhead’ certainly shows off the sharp, satirical and expletive-peppered writing for which Armstrong has become known, the doomy, oppressive feel of the movie makes this sometimes more punishment than entertaining.

    We certainly wouldn’t recommend hitting social media afterwards –– maybe go for a walk? Or find something nice to look at instead?

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    What’s the story of ‘Mountainhead’?

    A group of billionaire friends get together against the backdrop of a rolling international crisis.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Mountainhead?

     

    (L to R) Steve Carell, Ramy Youssef in 'Mountainhead.' Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.
    (L to R) Steve Carell, Ramy Youssef in ‘Mountainhead.’ Photo: Macall Polay/HBO.

    List of Steve Carell Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Steve Carell Movies on Amazon

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  • Shia LaBeouf Joins ‘Megalopolis’

    Shia LaBeouf in 2019's 'Honey Boy.'
    Shia LaBeouf in 2019’s ‘Honey Boy.’

    At lot of recent headlines around Shia LaBeouf have not been positive. There have been the ‘Don’t Worry Darling’ exchanges leaked between LaBeouf and director Olivia Wilde, leading to a she-said, Shia-said story about why he left the movie – she claims she fired him; he argues that he left because there wasn’t enough rehearsal time.

    Then there’s his mea culpa on both his abusive treatment of ex-girlfriend, musician FKA Twigs and his admission that his based-on-truth tale ‘Honey Boy’ about his younger days and his troubled relationship with his father was not based on so much truth as he claimed.

    Still, he’s looking to get his career back on track and scored a big new job. He’ll be one of the leads in Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Megalopolis’, according to Giant Freakin’ Robot.

    The director’s passion project, a hugely ambitious movie he’s been trying to bring to life for 20 years, is crawling towards reality. After a false start or two, he recently locked in Adam Driver, Nathalie Emmanuel, Forest Whittaker, Jon Voight, and Laurence Fishburne for the cast.

    Alongside LaBeouf, Coppola has also added the likes of Talia Shire (Coppola’s sister) Jason Schwartzman (Shire’s son), Grace Vanderwaal, Kathryn Hunter and James Remar.

    Jason Schwartzman in 1998's 'Rushmore.'
    Jason Schwartzman in 1998’s ‘Rushmore.’

    Strict story details are sketchy, but the logline is equally ambitious: The fate of Rome haunts a modern world unable to solve its own social problems in this epic story of political ambition, genius, and conflicting interests. To be a little clearer on that, it’ll focus on political and social wrangling in a giant city (modeled on, or even actually, New York) looking to rebuild after a disaster.

    The quest to make this one has consumed Coppola in recent years, and he’s pouring a lot of his own money into making the movie. With a budget in the region of $100 million, it’s a project that has seen backers come and go, but he’s finally setting up a shoot for the fall.

    Speaking to Deadline, Coppola outlined why he’s really making this movie. What would make me really happy? It’s not winning a lot of Oscars because I already have a lot and maybe more than I deserve. And it’s not that I make a lot of money, although I think over time it will make a lot of money because anything that the people keep looking at and finding new things, that makes money,” he says.

    Coppola adds: “So somewhere down the line, way after I’m gone, all I want is for them to discuss ‘Megalopolis’ and, is the society we’re living in the only one available to us? How can we make it better? Education, mental health? What the movie really is proposing is that utopia is not a place. It’s how can we make everything better? Every year, come up with two, three or four ideas that make it better. I would be smiling in my grave if I thought something like that happened, because people talk about what movies really mean if you give them something.”

    ‘Megalopolis’ has yet to set a release date. As for LaBeouf, he’ll next be seen in Abel Ferrara’s ‘Padre Pio’, due for its debut at the Venice Film Festival’s Venice Days section.

    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of 'The Godfather' event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
    Director Frances Ford Coppola at the 50th Anniversary of ‘The Godfather’ event and historic street naming ceremony the Paramount Theater in Hollywood, CA on February 22nd, 2022. Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Paramount Pictures.
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  • ‘Fargo’ Season 4 Adds Jack Huston, Jason Schwartzman to Cast Led by Chris Rock

    ‘Fargo’ Season 4 Adds Jack Huston, Jason Schwartzman to Cast Led by Chris Rock

    Audience

    Chris Rock will be joined by an impressive ensemble cast for “Fargo” Season 4.

    FX announced the new cast members, who include Jack Huston (“Boardwalk Empire”), Jason Schwartzman (“Grand Budapest Hotel”), and Ben Whishaw (“Mary Poppins Returns”).

    The anthology drama created by Noah Hawley will shift to Kansas City in 1950. The location in that era is the crossroads and collisions of two migrations — African Americans fleeing the Jim Crow South and Italians immigrating from their homeland. They’re both fighting for a piece of the American dream via two crime syndicates.

    Rock plays the head of one of those crime families, who has who has traded his youngest son to his enemy and must raise his enemy’s son as his own.

    Huston will play a character named Odis Weff, while Schwartzman is Josto Fadda. Whishaw will portray Rabbi Milligan.

    The other new cast members are Jessie Buckley (Oraetta Mayflower), Salvatore Esposito (Gaetano Fadda), Andrew Bird (Thurman Smutney), Jeremie Harris (Leon Bittle), Gaetano Bruon (Constant Calamita), Anji White (Dibrell Smutney), Francesco Acquaroli (Ebal Violante), Emyri Crutchfield (Ethelrida Pearl Smutney), and Amber Midthunder (Swanee Capps).

    Season 4 begins production in Chicago this fall and is expected to premiere on FX in 2020.