Tag: jim-gaffigan

  • Movie Review: ‘Greedy People’

    (L to R) Himesh Patel and Joseph Gordon-Levitt in 'Greedy People'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Himesh Patel and Joseph Gordon-Levitt in ‘Greedy People’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Opening in theaters on August 23rd, ‘Greedy People’ comes across like a Coen brothers movie made by people who have not actually seen the siblings’ work, only heard it described by someone who remembered the wrong things.

    Though Joseph Gordon-Levitt leads an accomplished cast, the film around them simply can’t find the right gear and is neither as funny nor as impactful as it believes.

    Related Article: Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Taylour Page On For New ‘Beverly Hills Cop’ Movie

    Does ‘Greedy People’ hit it rich?

    Darkly comic crime thrillers are a tricky genre to get right. And yes, while we keep bringing up the Coen brothers, that’s because they effectively mastered it with the likes of ‘Fargo’ and ‘The Big Lebowski’, among others.

    Which is not to say that other directors haven’t made it work, but when you have a movie that so clearly wants to stand alongside some of the classics, you need to make sure it really works. It’s regrettable to report that ‘Greedy People’ simply doesn’t. It’s far from unwatchable but scuppered by some serious issues.

    ‘Greedy People’: Script and Direction

    (L to R) Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Himesh Patel in 'Greedy People'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Himesh Patel in ‘Greedy People’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Writer Mike Vukadinovich is probably better known for TV than movies –– he’s worked on shows such as ‘Kidding’ and Marvel’s ‘Runaways’. Yet his big screen script work has been eclectic, including ‘Rememory’ and contributing to one of the many development drafts of the upcoming ‘Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’.

    Here, though, he’s come up with a spin on a familiar concept –– cash found in a small town that has all manner of shysters, grifters and struggling family types willing to go to any lengths to get their hands on it –– and, well, pumped out the latest generic version of said story. There are quirky characters galore, but so many of them feel like bland copies of earlier, better examples. And tonally, the movie is all over the place, seemingly unable to decide if it wants to be wacky, somber or wannabe-insightful about human greed.

    Director Potsy Ponciroli, sadly, never overcome the issues of the script given to him. While he gets a handful of solid performances from a game cast, none of it adds up to anything really worth spending much time with. And one moment in particular –– which features the death of an animal played for laughs –– is so unfortunate as to sour reactions to even the most interesting character of the story.

    ‘Greedy People’: Performances

    The one person who truly seems to be having fun here is Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who absolutely consumes the role of corrupt cop Terry. Around him, everyone else (except possibly Tim Blake Nelson and, in a brief appearance, Traci Lords) feel like they’re in another movie.

    Joseph Gordon-Levitt

    Joseph Gordon-Levitt in 'Greedy People'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    Joseph Gordon-Levitt in ‘Greedy People’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    A wacky whirlwind of a performance, Terry the cop allows Gordon-Levitt to truly cut loose in a way he’s rarely allowed. And he commits, bringing the foul-mouthed, moral-free law enforcement officer to life with gusto. Yet, as mentioned before, he feels apart from pretty much everyone else, as if he wandered in from another set.

    Himesh Patel

    Effectively our audience surrogate leading us into the weird world of the Nantucket island setting, Patel opts mostly for earnest, which sort of works when playing off Gordon-Levitt’s firecracker of a role, but more honestly fits with Lily James (in a ‘Yesterday’ reunion) as his wife.

    He’s not bad by any means, but he’s also something of a wet sponge compared to his co-star.

    Tim Blake Nelson

    Nelson –– a Coen stalwart –– definitely knows what he’s doing in this type of movie, ratcheting up the quirk levels and committing to being a scheming weirdo. Yet his role is still relatively small and what happens to him is fairly predictable.

    Supporting cast

    Around the main characters, there is the typical ensemble of townsfolk and friends/family. All the cast do what they can, some with underwritten roles. Lily James does what she can with the part of Will’s pregnant wife, playing her with a welcome mix of pragmatism, spirit and vulnerability. Traci Lords has a glorified cameo as the housewife (and aggrieved other half to Nelson’s character), whose 911 call sets the film’s plot into motion.

    Other notable people deserving of praise? Jim Gaffigan is great in small role (and a big wig) as local assassin-for-hire The Irishman. His delivery and manner are really suited to this sort of movie, and he makes the character believably odd. Ditto Uzo Aduba as the police captain, whose cheery professionalism masks real grief.

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    ‘Greedy People’: Final Thoughts

    ‘Greedy People’ is probably best described as a worthy failure. It certainly has some watchable performances, decent lines and a handful of fun scenes, but overall, it just can’t maintain its momentum, nor figure out exactly what it wants to be.

    As the body count rises, the tone becomes increasingly tiresome, and while Joseph Gordon-Levitt shines in his role, even Terry becomes grating. If you’re a small-town noir completist, maybe give this a look, but otherwise it never works as well as it might.

    ‘Greedy People’ receives 5.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the story of ‘Greedy People’?

    Rookie cop Will (Himesh Patel) and his rogue partner Terry (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) upend their small island town when they accidentally discover one million dollars at a crime scene (of their own making).

    After the duo unwisely decides to steal the money, the community’s quirky residents are lured into the mad dash for cash — ranging from an expectant mom (Lily James) to a masseur (Simon Rex) to a shrimp company owner (Tim Blake Nelson) — and everyone learns just how far they are willing to go for the almighty dollar.

    Who else stars in ‘Greedy People’?

    The cast also includes Uzo Aduba, Nina Arianda, Jim Gaffigan, José María Yazpik and Joey Lauren Adams.

    (L to R) Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Himesh Patel in 'Greedy People'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Himesh Patel in ‘Greedy People’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Joseph Gordon-Levitt Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Greedy People’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Joseph Gordon-Levitt Movies on Amazon

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’

    Jude Law as Captain Hook in Disney's live-action 'Peter Pan & Wendy,' exclusively on Disney+.
    Jude Law as Captain Hook in Disney’s live-action ‘Peter Pan & Wendy,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Eric Zachanowich. © 2023 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    On Disney+ now, ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ is the latest attempt by the studio to transform one of its animated classics into live action. And thankfully, despite being pushed straight to streaming, this reveals itself to be far better than the much-maligned ‘Pinocchio’ conversion job that (dis)graced screens last year, even that had Robert Zemeckis directing and Tom Hanks starring.

    And that’s largely thanks to director David Lowery, who finds a lyrical, visually lush approach and ups the emotional ante to give the story more meaning.

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    What’s the story of ‘Peter Pan & Wendy?’

    Given that author J.M. Barrie’s original play premiered back in 1904 and it, and the novel spawned from it have been adapted many, many times through the years, it’s hard to imagine anyone doesn’t know the narrative for this one. But just in case…

    ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ introduces us to Wendy Darling (Ever Anderson), a young girl on the verge of leaving her family and childhood home behind to attend boarding school. One night, Wendy and brothers Michael (Jacobi Jupe –– yes, the younger brother of ‘A Quiet Place’s Noah) and John (Joshua Pickering) meet Peter Pan (Alexander Molony), a boy who refuses to grow up.

    Alongside her brothers and a tiny fairy, Tinker Bell (Yara Shahidi), she travels with Peter to the magical world of Never Land. There, she encounters an evil pirate captain, Captain Hook (Jude Law), and embarks on a thrilling and dangerous adventure that will change her life forever.

    Alexander Molony as Peter Pan in Disney's live-action 'Peter Pan & Wendy,' exclusively on Disney+.
    Alexander Molony as Peter Pan in Disney’s live-action ‘Peter Pan & Wendy,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Eric Zachanowich. © 2023 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Danger Pan

    Even with a seemingly failsafe story, Peter Pan has offered mixed blessings to filmmakers through the years. Disney famously made a successful animated version way back in 1953, but in more recent times, it has become something of a third rail for directors who dare to go near it.

    It has provided flops for ‘Muriel’s Wedding’ filmmaker P.J. Hogan, whose 2003 traditional ‘Peter Pan’ boasted Jason Isaacs as Captain Hook but could only wrangle $121 million worldwide from a $100 million budget (not counting advertising etc.) ‘Atonement’s Joe Wright tried a punkier, revised version in 2015 with Hugh Jackman playing Hook. That did even worse, losing money. And even more recently, ‘Beasts of the Southern Wild’s Benh Zeitlin turned the focus to Wendy Darling with, well, ‘Wendy’, which was made for $6 million and has so far returned less than $300,000 on limited, pandemic-impacted release after it landed in 2020.

    Yet Lowery has pulled off something that feels like it both channels Barrie’s original story and does interesting things with it that make it feel fresh.

    Alyssa Wapanatâhk as Tiger Lily in Disney's live-action 'Peter Pan & Wendy,' exclusively on Disney+.
    Alyssa Wapanatâhk as Tiger Lily in Disney’s live-action ‘Peter Pan & Wendy,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Eric Zachanowich. © 2023 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Related Article: Jude Law and Nicholas Hoult Starring in ‘The Order’

    This is, of course, not Lowery’s first ride on the Disney rodeo either –– he previously brought the world a fine adaptation of ‘Pete’s Dragon’. With that movie there was a lot more scope for change, the director swapping the live action/cartoon musical story for a more grounded (aside from the whole dragon thing), story of a lost boy who finds solace in a giant winged creature.

    Lost boys –– and girls –– are, of course a big part of the ‘Pan’ story (Peter has a group he’s collected through the years), and in finding his young cast, Lowery has tracked down some authentic (and authentically diverse) actors to bring the roles to life.

    Ever Anderson, daughter of Milla Jovovich and director Paul W.S. Anderson, brings charm and a soulful quality to Wendy and also does well on the stunt front when called upon (the apple not falling far from the tree there). As her brothers, Pickering and Jupe aren’t called upon to handle too much, but what they bring is kids who are appealing and never precociously annoying.

    Ever Anderson as Wendy in Disney's live-action 'Peter Pan & Wendy,' exclusively on Disney+.
    Ever Anderson as Wendy in Disney’s live-action ‘Peter Pan & Wendy,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo by Eric Zachanowich. © 2023 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Molony as Peter initially feels smug and arrogant, but those are a slightly in keeping with his base character. And as the movie probes deeply into his reasons for being the way he is, he warms up.

    Law as Hook is a fantastically preening villain at first, but the actor is also talented enough to handle the deeper origin story that Lowery and co-writer Toby Halbrooks hand him. And he’s ably supported by Smee (Jim Gaffigan, who unveils a solid British accent), who is also handed more of a character than the usual comedy sidekick.

    Lowery kicks off with a very theatrical feel, upping the fantasy levels and, if there’s a problem to be found, the earlier scenes (which take place at night) are a little muddy with the digital filming. And Molony, for one, sometimes looks like he’s been crafted with CGI, even more so than Shahidi’s Tink.

    Yara Shahidi as Tinkerbell in Disney's live-action 'Peter Pan & Wendy,' exclusively on Disney+.
    Yara Shahidi as Tinkerbell in Disney’s live-action ‘Peter Pan & Wendy,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Disney. © 2023 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    But once the movie gets to Neverland, sunshine arrives and the canvas expands, the movie becomes much more watchable. And the effects –– such Hook’s ship going flying and the infamous ticking-belly crocodile (to whom Peter fed Hook’s hand once he cut it off years ago) –– are effective, even if they sometimes stretch the more limited budget offered by a movie produced for the streaming service as opposed to ‘Pete’s Dragon’s lush theatrical look.

    The music, meanwhile, both in score form from musicians Daniel Hart and Oliver Wallace (who channels John Williams at times) and the pirate songs from the original animated movie given fresh treatment, really help to enhance the experience.

    This is Lowery bringing his carefully crafted indie sensibility to the film, once again putting his stamp on it rather than feeling like it rattled off of a construction conveyor belt. It might not appeal to fans of his more esoteric work such as ‘A Ghost Story’, but it’s a perfectly fun story for family audiences, especially with young children who have yet to see their first ‘Pan’ adaptation.

    You won’t feel like a codfish for catching this one.

    ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ receives 7 out of 10 stars.

    A scene still from Disney's live-action 'Peter Pan & Wendy,' exclusively on Disney+.
    A scene still from Disney’s live-action ‘Peter Pan & Wendy,’ exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Disney. © 2023 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Peter Pan & Wendy:’

    Where to Stream and Watch Online: ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’

    Buy ‘Peter Pan’ Movies on Amazon

    ‘Peter Pan & Wendy’ is produced by Walt Disney Pictures. It is set to premiere on Disney+ April 28th, 2023.

  • ‘Linoleum’ Interview: Rhea Seehorn Talks New Sci-fi Comedy

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    Opening in select theaters on February 24th is the new sci-fi comedy ‘Linoleum’ from writer and director Colin West.

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    What is the plot of ‘’Linoleum?’

    ‘Linoleum’ stars Jim Gaffigan as Cameron Edwin, a depressed man living a rather boring life in a small Ohio town with his wife Erin (Rhea Seehorn) and daughter Nora (Katelyn Nacon). Cameron hosts a children’s science television show in a small market that runs at midnight, but he has always wanted to be an astronaut and grew up in the shadow of his more successful scientist father.

    When part of a rocket falls from orbit and crashes into his backyard, he decides to fulfill his unrealized dream and rebuild it into his own rocket. However, his wife, who has started divorce proceedings, thinks he is having a midlife crisis. As some other surreal events occur in his life, Cameron not only feels his mission is justified but he begins to question the nature of reality itself.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Linoleum?’

    ‘Linoleum’ stars Jim Gaffigan (‘Troop Zero’) as Cameron Edwin and Kent Armstrong, Rhea Seehorn (‘Better Call Saul’) as Erin Edwin, Katelyn Nacon (‘The Walking Dead’) as Nora Edwin, Gabriel Rush (‘The Kitchen‘) as Marc, Amy Hargreaves (‘Michael Clayton’) as Linda, Michael Ian Black (‘Wet Hot American Summer’) as Tony, and Tony Shalhoub (‘Men in Black’) as Dr. Alvin.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Rhea Seehorn about her work on ‘Linoleum,’ how she got involved with the project, the complex script, her character, working with Jim Gaffigan, and looking back at her time on ‘Better Call Saul.’

    Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West's 'Linoleum.'
    Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West’s ‘Linoleum.’

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Seehorn and Jim Gaffigan.

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

    Rhea Seehorn: Colin sent the script through my reps to me, I read it and I loved it. The script had notations in it, or I guess they’re called stage directions or actions, that made me understand where it was going in a way that you wouldn’t if you weren’t watching it. So it wasn’t about a surprise element, but it was quite the jigsaw puzzle for me to think about as I was reading it. Then I really loved the characters and I really loved these big questions it was asking. But it was Colin’s letter that he sent along with it, explaining that this was born out of his experience, going through his grandfather’s dementia. He had these huge philosophical questions that ultimately had hopeful answers.

    There was something very beautiful about the way he was approaching it and these large questions he wanted to ask with this quite allegorical magical realism tale. Then when I got on the phone with him, I was definitely sold. He’s a gifted filmmaker and artist. and just sort of very humbly with a light touch, goes about asking very large questions and he is not afraid to not supply the answers.

    MF: There is a big reveal at the end of the film. As an actress, how did you approach playing this character without playing the reveal?

    RS: Yeah, it was a lot of mental gymnastics. In every project, you have all the different techniques and classes and craft things that I’ve learned and it’s a hodgepodge and you’re taking out the pieces that are appropriate. It’s just how I work for that film. Now, a lot of them stay the same, but some change. In this film, it was really necessary for me to wrap my head around, usually with Colin, Jim and sometimes Caitlin, what is actually the truth if I, Rhea, watched this film and decided to write it again, knowing what I know, what is the actual truth of the scene where I am giving my daughter advice is a good example.

    Now some people might say, “Forget it, I’m just going to play the scene.” But because I already knew, it was important for me to understand where it fits logically as best I could and then put that aside and talk about what is the scene if it was just simply me giving my advice to my daughter. Because ultimately my job is to be truthful in the scene. It’s not my job to tell the whole story. Jim and I approached our scenes the same. Because as we find out, Erin is ultimately sort of the narrator by necessity of what you’re watching, even when you don’t realize it.

    Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West's 'Linoleum.'
    Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West’s ‘Linoleum.’

    Related Article: Vince Gilligan Plans New Show After ‘Better Call Saul’

    MF: Erin says that she wanted to do “something fantastic” with her life. Can you talk about what she means by that, and could you relate to that idea personally yourself?

    RS: This is one of many of the themes and big questions that Colin was asking, which is why I think having this little bit of sci-fi magical realism is a brilliant way to go about it. That line, “I wanted to do something fantastic” is repeated by multiple characters, used in different ways, said in inspirational ways and also said in mocking ways, that it’s somehow petty and childish. I think for Erin, she had big dreams too and, through no fault of her own, got assigned the pragmatic bill-paying role. She’s the only one being responsible and she didn’t ask for this job, and it’s a really heavy sack to carry around. She’s asking to not be alone in that. “Can we share this burden so that we can both be dreamers?”

    But Erin has lost touch with her spark and being fascinated by science and space has diminished at the same time that the spark has diminished in their marriage. I think a lot of people that I’ve spoken to say that part resonates with them, when you’re just too exhausted to be the best you in a relationship and in life. But I think ultimately, there’s this love story at the core of the whole thing where, from my point of view, ultimately Erin is trying to let her husband know that loving someone unconditionally and being in a partnership is doing something fantastic. They have done something fantastic, and that sort of frees her to start being a dreamer again, and to let it go, which dovetails into the second part of your question.

    You can obsessively focus on, “Oh, I’ll finally believe in myself and think that I have done something fantastic when it’s this thing and when it’s that thing.” You keep moving that goalpost for yourself. When really, getting to do what you love for a living at all is such a small percentage of the population period. What a gift to be afforded that luxury, because not everyone gets to do something they love. That is fantastic. Now at this stage in my life, having a fiancé and two boys that are my stepsons, it’s like you really do start to take stock. I think Erin, when you first see her, if she looks around her, there’s a whole lot that’s fantastic.

    Jim Gaffigan as Cameron Edwin and Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West's 'Linoleum.'
    (L to R) Jim Gaffigan as Cameron Edwin and Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West’s ‘Linoleum.’

    MF: Can you talk about Erin and Cameron’s marriage, and working on that relationship with Jim Gaffigan?

    RS: I loved working with Jim. He’s so great. I’m so glad that so many people will see the breadth of his work because I knew him as a stand-up, although he told me that he started in dramatic roles. That’s what he thought was going to be in his career before he ever was a stand-up. He’s such a gifted comedian. But you know what? So is Bob Odenkirk. So is Michael McKean. I think comedians are broken people and that’s why they can do drama so well. I was known as a sitcom actress before I got ‘Better Call Saul.’ It’s a funny thing, but Jim is incredibly deft at really nuanced attacks on a scene. We had such a good time finding that because the relationship had to be real.

    It doesn’t matter if we’re standing in the middle of a tornado or whatever, we knew these are two people that love each other. Depending on which scene you’re looking at, one of them has fallen in the ditch and the other one is trying to pull them up. No matter how lost or how bad the miscommunication is, they need to want something from each other at all times in any room that they’re in together. Even when you’re seeing them not speaking, like in that wonderful bedroom scene, it doesn’t mean they don’t want something. Erin I think is just desperately saying, “Can you please come back to me because I am doing this alone and I can’t do it anymore.” That has a double meaning by the time you get to the end, realizing what she’s been through and why she does feel alone.

    MF: Finally, now that ‘Better Call Saul’ is over, what was that experience like for you as an actress to be a part of?

    RS: It’s not possible to overstate what a gift that show was to me, the family of people that are very close friends of mine, the gift of that writing and direction, and the gift of having people like Peter Gould, Tom Schnauz, Michelle MacLaren, my entire cast, and Vince Gilligan.

    The experience was doing something in your career where you’re like, “Wow, am I capable of that? Because that looks really hard, but I want to be that good.” Then you have all of the people that you thought were the best at their jobs saying, “No, you can do it. You are capable of this and you’re going to soar.” That is what they gave me every day on the set. You go home a better actor every single day and it’s joyful.

    Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut and Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman / Gene Takavic in AMC's 'Better Call Saul.'
    (L to R) Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut and Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman / Gene Takavic in AMC’s ‘Better Call Saul.’

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Linoleum:’

    Buy Tickets: ‘Linoleum’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Rhea Seehorn Movies on Amazon

    ‘Linoleum’ is produced by Brain Scratch Productions, Storm City Films, and Sub_Sequential Pictures, and is scheduled for release on February 24th.

  • ‘Most Wanted’ stars Josh Hartnett, Jim Gaffigan, and Antoine-Olivier Pilon and director Daniel Roby discuss their true-life crime drama

    ‘Most Wanted’ stars Josh Hartnett, Jim Gaffigan, and Antoine-Olivier Pilon and director Daniel Roby discuss their true-life crime drama

    ‘Most Wanted’ is based on the real story of one man’s conviction for drug smuggling and his 8-year prison stint in Thailand, and the subsequent scandal caused when it turned out that the Canadian Security Intelligence Service had set him up.

    In this exclusive interview with Made in Hollywood, cast members Josh Hartnett, Jim Gaffigan, and Antoine-Olivier Pilon, and director Daniel Roby discuss bringing this story to film.

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  • Ethan Hawke electrifies in the ‘Tesla’ trailer

    Ethan Hawke electrifies in the ‘Tesla’ trailer

    Ethan Hawke continues to impress as an actor, and has garnered acclaim in the last couple of years for performances in ‘The Truth,’ ‘First Reformed,’ and ‘Juliet, Naked’ (just to name a few).

    And if the ‘Tesla’ trailer is any indication, his upcoming appearance as famed inventor Nikola Tesla is going to be something special.

    The official synopsis shows us a powerhouse supporting cast, as well as a hint of some daring filmmaking choices:

    Brilliant, visionary Nikola Tesla (Ethan Hawke) fights an uphill battle to bring his revolutionary electrical system to fruition, then faces thornier challenges with his new system for worldwide wireless energy. The film tracks Tesla’s uneasy interactions with his fellow inventor Thomas Edison (Kyle MacLachlan) and his patron George Westinghouse (Jim Gaffigan). Another thread traces Tesla’s sidewinding courtship of financial titan J.P. Morgan (Donnie Keshawarz), whose daughter Anne (Eve Hewson) takes a more than casual interest in the inventor. Anne analyzes and presents the story as it unfolds, offering a distinctly modern voice to this scientific period drama which, like its subject, defies convention.

    ‘Tesla’ was written and directed by Michael Almereyda (‘Marjorie Prime’ & ‘Experimenter’) and the film will be released in theaters and on demand on August 21.

  • Exclusive: ‘Playmobil: The Movie’ Brings Your Favorite Toys to Life

    Exclusive: ‘Playmobil: The Movie’ Brings Your Favorite Toys to Life

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    Things are about to get epic.

    We are so thrilled to be able to debut the brand-new trailer for “Playmobil: The Movie,” which images your favorite childhood toys as the stars of a film that features espionage, romance, and, we’re guessing, more than a few pratfalls. Directed by animation legend Lino DiSalvo (head of animation for some little movie called “Frozen”), and featuring the voices of Daniel Radcliffe, Anya Taylor-Joy, Jim Gaffigan, Adam Lambert and Kenan Thompson, from the looks of this trailer it’ll be a non-stop ride, both thrilling and utterly adorable.


    “Playmobil: The Movie” is out everywhere on August 30.