Tag: Jonathan Pryce

  • New Trailer for ‘The Crown’ Season 6

    Preview

    • The full new trailer for ‘The Crown’ Season 6 has arrived.
    • This new season will deal with the death of Princess Diana (Elizabeth Debicki).
    • ‘The Crown’ returns for its sixth and final season on Thursday, November 16th for a four-episode Part 1 followed by the six episodes of Part 2 on Thursday, December 14th.

    Following on from the teaser that arrived a couple of weeks ago, we now have a longer, proper trailer for the sixth and final season of ‘The Crown’.

    While that initial look at the season was more focused on Queen Elizabeth II (Imelda Staunton) contemplating her legacy, this latest footage instead revolves around Princess Diana (Elizabeth Debicki), who is trying to find some happiness outside the Royal family.

    As history records, it does not end well at all for her, and the tragedy is one of the most impactful to hit the modern Royal Family, with fallout affecting both her sons, William and Harry, and how the public perceives the monarchy.

    And this is certainly meaty but tricky material for the series to cover, given the emotional weight it carries. But as one of Netflix’s premium series, it has shown sensitivity and weight in the past.

    What’s the story of ‘The Crown’ Season 6?

    Elizabeth Debicki in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Elizabeth Debicki in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Copyright: Netflix / LeftBank.

    Diana (Debicki) is being courted by the Fayeds in the South of France, giving the young Princes a taste of luxury yachts, video games and movie nights. Charles (Dominic West) is sticking to tradition in Balmoral. The comparisons play out in the press, fueled by a fervent paparazzi, and some of the Royal press team.

    As yacht life and the constant media scrutiny lose their appeal, Diana longs to return to see her boys, who are back in Balmoral. A diversion to Paris sees matters come to a head –– against the backdrop of an intensified and aggressive media pursuit.

    After the news breaks of Diana and Dodi’s fatal car accident, a vast outpouring of public grief catches the Queen (Staunton) off-guard. With shockwaves resonating through the Palace, Mohamed Al Fayed (Salim Daw) is also processing the loss of his cherished son. Hoping that the news will bring him and the Royal Family together in shared grief; he instead finds himself increasingly shunned.

    Who appears in ‘The Crown’ Season 6?

    Jonathan Pryce in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Jonathan Pryce in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Netflix.

    The cast for this latest season also includes Jonathan Pryce (Prince Philip), Lesley Manville (Princess Margaret) and Khalid Abdalla (Dodi Fayed).

    The growing Windsor children will see more re-casting, as Rufus Kampa plays Prince William and Fflyn Edwards is Prince Harry in Part 1. For Part 2, Ed McVey takes over as William, joined by Luther Ford as Harry, while Meg Bellamy is Kate Middleton.

    Related Article: Imelda Staunton’s Queen Elizabeth II Reflects on Her Duty and Sacrifice in the First Teaser for ‘The Crown’s Sixth Season

    When can I watch ‘The Crown’ Season 6?

    Imelda Staunton in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Imelda Staunton in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Credit: Keith Bernstein/Netflix. Copyright:
    © 2022 Netflix, Inc.

    The four episodes of Part 1 will debut on November 16th , while the six-episode Part 2 follows on December 14th.

    Elizabeth Debicki in 'The Crown' season 6.
    (Center) Elizabeth Debicki in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Credit: Daniel Escale. Copyright: Netflix / LeftBank.
    Rufus Kampa, Dominic West, and Flynn Edwards.
    (L to R) Rufus Kampa, Dominic West, and Flynn Edwards. Credit:
    Keith Bernstein/Netflix. Copyright: © 2022 Netflix, Inc.
    Rufus Kampa in 'The Crown' Season 6.
    Rufus Kampa in ‘The Crown’ Season 6. Photo: Netflix.
    Dominic West in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Dominic West in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Netflix.
    Oliva Williams in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Oliva Williams in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Netflix.
    Lesley Manville in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Lesley Manville in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Netflix.
    Imelda Staunton in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Imelda Staunton in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Justin Downing. Copyright: Netflix / LeftBank.
    Imelda Staunton and Elizabeth Debicki in 'The Crown' season 6.
    (L to R) Imelda Staunton and Elizabeth Debicki in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Netflix.
    Bertie Carvel in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Bertie Carvel in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Credit: Des Willie/Netflix. Copyright: © 2022 Netflix, Inc.
    Elizabeth Debicki in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Elizabeth Debicki in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Netflix.
    Elizabeth Debicki and Khalid Abdalla in 'The Crown' season 6.
    (L to R) Elizabeth Debicki and Khalid Abdalla in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Credit: Daniel Escale/Netflix. Copyright: Netflix / LeftBank.
    Elizabeth Debicki in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Elizabeth Debicki in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Credit: Des Willie/Netflix.
    Elizabeth Debicki in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Elizabeth Debicki in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Netflix.
    Elizabeth Debicki in 'The Crown' season 6.
    Elizabeth Debicki in ‘The Crown’ season 6. Credit: Daniel Escale. Copyright: Netflix / LeftBank.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The Crown’ Season 6:

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  • First Teaser for ‘The Crown’ Season 6

    Preview

    • The Crown returns for its sixth and final season on Thursday, November 16th for a four-episode Part 1 followed by the six episodes of Part 2 on Thursday, December 14th.
    • Princes William and Harry will be played by different actors across the two parts.
    • This new season will deal with the death of Princess Diana (Elizabeth Debicki).

    If it feels like we’ve been waiting a long time for the return of ‘The Crown’, it’s not like we’ve had to be patient for two years like the break between casts –– Season 4 arrived in 2020 and we had to wait two years for the fifth.

    Now, though Season 6 will be with us a little over a year after Season 5, but there is an extra twist –– it’s being split into two parts, which means a wait of roughly a month to get the whole season.

    But yes, the Royal Family –– or at least Netflix’s version of them, as created by Peter Morgan ––will be back next month: November 16th, to be exact. And the new teaser for the season finds Imelda Staunton’s Queen Elizabeth II looking back almost as much as she confronts the future.

    What’s the story of ‘The Crown’ Season 6?

    Meg Bellamy as Kate Middleton and Ed McVey as Prince William in Netflix's 'The Crown' season 6.
    (L to R) Meg Bellamy as Kate Middleton and Ed McVey as Prince William in Netflix’s ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Justin Downing.

    The sixth and final season covers events from 1997 through 2005. The first four episodes (Part 1) depict a relationship blossoming between Princess Diana (Elizabeth Debicki) and Dodi Fayed (Khalid Abdalla) before a fateful car journey has devastating consequences.

    The final chapter (Part 2) is told across six episodes. Prince William (Ed McVey) tries to integrate back into life at Eton in the wake of his mother’s death as the monarchy has to ride the wave of public opinion. As she reaches her Golden Jubilee, the Queen reflects on the future of the monarchy with the marriage of Charles and Camilla and the beginnings of a new Royal fairytale in William and Kate.

    Related Article: Imelda Staunton’s Queen and the Royal Family Appear in New ‘The Crown’ Imagery

    Who appears in ‘The Crown’ Season 6?

    Ed McVey as Prince William in Netflix's 'The Crown' season 6
    Ed McVey as Prince William in Netflix’s ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Keith Bernstein.

    The cast for this latest season also includes Jonathan Pryce (Prince Philip), Lesley Manville (Princess Margaret) and Salim Daw (Mohamed Al Fayed).

    The growing Windsor children will see more re-casting, as Rufus Kampa plays Prince William and Fflyn Edwards is Prince Harry in Part 1. For Part 2, McVey takes over as William, joined by Luther Ford as Harry, while Meg Bellamy is Kate Middleton.

    The teaser certainly continues the feeling of the Queen reflecting on her reign, as Claire Foy’s young Queen pops up on the TV in her chambers and we hear voiceover from the previous holder of the role, Olivia Colman.

    ‘The Crown’s final season is also tasked with portraying possibly the trickiest and most tragic topics of the Royals’ recent history –– the death of Diana and its emotional fallout for not just the family, but the U.K. at large.

    And no, we don’t predict a flash-forward to 2011, with the family gathered around the TV, intrigued by the pilot episode of new TV drama ‘Suits’…

    When can I watch ‘The Crown’ Season 6?

    Meg Bellamy as Kate Middleton in Netflix's 'The Crown' season 6.
    Meg Bellamy as Kate Middleton in Netflix’s ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Netflix/TheCrown.

    Part 1 will debut on November 16th, while Part 2 follows on December 14th.

    Imelda Staunton as Queen Elizabeth II in Netflix's 'The Crown' season 6.
    Imelda Staunton as Queen Elizabeth II in Netflix’s ‘The Crown’ season 6. Photo: Netflix/TheCrown.

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  • First Images from ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3

    Academy Award winner Gary Oldman returns for the third season of 'Slow Horses,' coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.
    Academy Award winner Gary Oldman returns for the third season of ‘Slow Horses,’ coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.

    Apple TV+ has certainly reaped rewards with spy series ‘Slow Horses’, which won Best English-Language Drama Series at the 2022 C21 International Drama Awards and has been drawing a big following.

    In fact, so successful was the show out of the gate that Apple kept to its policy of crafting two seasons at a time, which meant that a teaser for the second run was attached to the end of the first, and new episodes appeared mere months after that.

    We’ve had to wait a little longer for the third season, but now we know the show will be back in November and the first images are online, showing star Gary Oldman and the rest of the gang.

    What’s the story of ‘Slow Horses’?

    Jack Lowden returns for the third season of 'Slow Horses,' coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.
    Jack Lowden returns for the third season of ‘Slow Horses,’ coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.

    ‘Slow Horses’ is adapted from Mick Herron’s eponymous novel series, which is also known as ‘Slough House’, named for the low-rent MI5 office our heroes work from.

    Oldman stars as Jackson Lamb, the brilliant but misanthropic leader of the spies, who end up in Slough House due to their career-ending mistakes as they frequently find themselves blundering around the smoke and mirrors of the espionage world.

    In season three, a romantic liaison in Istanbul threatens to expose a buried MI5 secret in London. When Lamb and his team of misfits are dragged into the fight, they find themselves caught in a conspiracy that threatens the future not just of Slough House… But of MI5 itself.

    Who stars in ‘Slow Horses’?

    Saskia Reeves and Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù star in the third season of 'Slow Horses,' coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.
    (L to R) Saskia Reeves and Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù star in the third season of ‘Slow Horses,’ coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.

    The ensemble for the show also includes Kristin Scott Thomas, Jack Lowden, Saskia Reeves, Rosalind Eleazar, Christopher Chung, Freddie Fox, Chris Reilly, Samuel West, Sophie Okonedo, Aimee-Ffion Edwards, Kadiff Kirwan and Jonathan Pryce.

    Ṣọpẹ Dìrísù joins the season three cast as Sean Donovan, the former head of security at the British embassy in Istanbul, along with Katherine Waterston who plays Alison Dunn, an MI5 agent who uncovers a dark secret at the heart of the agency.

    Related Article: Gary Oldman and Saskia Reeves Talk Apple TV+’s ‘Slow Horses’ Season 2

    Will there be a fourth season of ‘Slow Horses’?

    Jack Lowden and Rosalind Eleazar star in the third season of 'Slow Horses,' coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.
    (L to R) Jack Lowden and Rosalind Eleazar star in the third season of ‘Slow Horses,’ coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.

    In keeping with the filming plan, a fourth season, adapting Herron’s book ‘Spook Street’, was shooting in London this past April, which hopefully means it’ll be arriving next year.

    Gary Oldman talks ‘Slow Horses’?

    Gary Oldman in 'Slow Horses' season 2, premiering December 2, 2022 on Apple TV+.
    Gary Oldman in ‘Slow Horses’ season 2, premiering December 2, 2022 on Apple TV+.

    Here’s what Oldman told The Wrap about his role as Lamb:

    “It is oddly very liberating to play a character who is openly hostile and publicly humiliates people. But at the core, he has a very strong moral sense. I think that’s why, ultimately, you can like Lamb even though he’s not P.C.”

    When will ‘Slow Horses’ return for Season 3?

    Christopher Chung stars in the third season of 'Slow Horses,' coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.
    Christopher Chung stars in the third season of ‘Slow Horses,’ coming to Apple TV+ on Friday, December 1, 2023.

    With the first two seasons already streaming on Apple TV+, the third will launch globally on Wednesday, November 29th with two episodes, while one new episode will land weekly on Wednesdays through December 27th.

    Gary Oldman in 'Slow Horses' season 2, premiering December 2, 2022 on Apple TV+.
    Gary Oldman in ‘Slow Horses’ season 2, premiering December 2, 2022 on Apple TV+.

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    Please click on the video player below to watch our interviews with the cast of ‘Slow Horses’ season one.

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  • ‘Slow Horses’ Season 2 Interviews: Gary Oldman and Saskia Reeves

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    Premiering on Apple TV+ beginning December 2nd is the second season of the popular spy series ‘Slow Horses.’

    The first season followed British MI5 agent River Cartwright (Jack Lowden), who after a botched mission is exiled to Slough House, which is nicknamed “Slow Horses” and is an administrative purgatory for service agents.

    Cartwright and his fellow former agents now perform boring administrative tasks and work for the miserable Jackson Lamb (Gary Oldman), who expects everyone to quit out of frustration, but the team soon becomes entangled in a dangerous mission at London’s Regent’s Park.

    The second season will revolve around the investigation of a retired Cold War era spy, who is found dead on a bus miles away from where he works or lives.

    In addition to Lowden and Oldman, the cast also includes Kristin Scott Thomas, Saskia Reeves, Olivia Cooke, and Jonathan Pryce.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Gary Oldman and Saskia Reeves about their work on ‘Slow Horses’ season 2, the new plot, how Reeves prepares for her role, and how Catherine and Jackson’s relationship has changed since season one.

    Saskia Reeves and Gary Oldman star in Apple TV+'s 'Slow Horses' season 2.
    (L to R) Saskia Reeves and Gary Oldman star in Apple TV+’s ‘Slow Horses’ season 2.

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Oldman, Reeves, and Jack Lowden about ‘Slow Horses’ Season 2.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you both talk about what fans can expect from season 2 of ‘Slow Horses?’

    Gary Oldman: Well, season two begins with a suspicious death, a Cold War era spy, retired ex-spy Dickie Bow is found on a bus miles away from where he works or lives. We are told that he has died from a heart attack.

    Jackson had a relationship with Dickie back in the old days and is suspicious that he died, that it was natural causes and thinks that there’s something a little more mysterious to this death that meets the eye. He gathers his dysfunctional team to really start to investigate.

    Saskia Reeves: He’s known to Catherine as well because they’re part of the same crew as it were years ago. Dickie has a reputation, a very bad reputation. So, there’s all sorts of little clues that bring these two characters together.
    It’s almost like they can’t not get involved, isn’t it? Sometimes when I’m working on this story, I often imagine that we’re not spies, we’re actors. So, it’d be like an actor you worked with in Liverpool 30 years ago or something.

    Saskia Reeves in 'Slow Horses' season 2, premiering December 2, 2022 on Apple TV+.
    Saskia Reeves in ‘Slow Horses’ season 2, premiering December 2, 2022 on Apple TV+.

    GA: When he mysteriously dies you think, “Oh no, there’s something up,” and you want to find out.

    SR: And he got really bad reviews when in fact he was actually quite a good actor. So, I do synonyms. I think, oh, how can I get closer to this material? So, it’s like Jackson and Catherine share a knowledge of him and the history and everything. Then even more history comes up.

    GA: Mind you though, there’s probably a few actors that would come up from the old days and you would say, “Well, okay.”

    MF: Finally, Saskia can you talk about how Catherine and Jackson’s relationship has changed since the first season?

    SR: I mean there’s a definite undertone in the backstory and it actually exists through quite a few of the books written by Mick Herron, and is rumbling in the background in the series, which is great to have as you build the story and the characters. She takes the opportunity to be helpful and get involved, which is great fun to do.

    Gary Oldman in 'Slow Horses' season 2, premiering December 2, 2022 on Apple TV+.
    Gary Oldman in ‘Slow Horses’ season 2, premiering December 2, 2022 on Apple TV+.
  • New Trailer for ‘The Crown’ Season 5’

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    Following on from the release of new photos from ‘The Crown’s fifth season, Netflix has now revealed the first full trailer for the next batch of episodes for the show, which is described as a fictional dramatization inspired by real events (all the better to answer back to Dame Judi Dench, who has no connection to the show and wrote to a London newspaper calling it “cruel” to the royal family and demanding a disclaimer before each episode).

    With the 1990s in full swing, the Royal Family are presented with possibly their biggest challenge to date as the public openly question their role in Britain.

    As Queen Elizabeth II approaches the 40th anniversary of her accession, she reflects on a reign that has encompassed nine prime ministers, the advent of mass television and the twilight of the British Empire. Yet new challenges are on the horizon.

    The collapse of the Soviet Union and the transfer of sovereignty in Hong Kong signals a seismic shift in the international order presenting both obstacles and opportunities.

    Meanwhile, trouble is brewing closer to home. Prince Charles pressures his mother to allow him to divorce Diana, presenting a constitutional crisis of the monarchy.

    Rumors circulate as husband and wife are seen to live increasingly separate lives and, as media scrutiny intensifies, Diana decides to take control of her own narrative, breaking with family protocol to publish a book that undermines public support for Charles and exposes the cracks in the House of Windsor.

    Tensions are set to rise further, as Mohamed Al Fayed (Salim Daw) arrives on the scene. Driven by his desire for acceptance of the highest order, he harnesses his self-made wealth and power to try and earn him and his son Dodi (Khalid Abdalla) a seat at the royal table – and Dodi’s connection to Diana will forever shape the monarchy going forward.

    Elizabeth Debicki, and Dominic West in 'The Crown' Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    (L to R) Elizabeth Debicki, and Dominic West in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.

    Imelda Staunton inherits the role of The Queen from Olivia Colman, while Jonathan Pryce is the new incumbent in the part of her husband, Prince Philip, following Tobias Menzies.

    Swapping in for Josh O’Connor and Emma Corrin as Prince Charles and Princess Diana are Dominic West and Elizabeth Debicki.

    Teddy Hawley is Prince Harry and Timothee Sambor is Prince William, though because of the young princes aging more obviously than their elders, the roles of Harry and his brother will switch to Will Powell and Senan West (Dominic’s son) in later episodes.

    Lesley Manville takes over as Princess Margaret (following Helena Bonham-Carter’s run), with Claudia Harrison as the new Princess Anne and Olivia Williams replacing Emerald Fennell as Charles’ lover (and future wife) Camilla Parker Bowles.

    More tellingly, and presaging future tragedy, Salim Daw is playing Mohamed Al Fayed, who would romance Diana after her divorce, and Khalid Abdalla has the role of Dodi Fayed, his father.

    Perhaps most intriguing is the casting of Jonny Lee Miller as John Major, who succeeds Margaret Thatcher as Prime Minster.

    Scored to The Verve’s ‘Bittersweet Symphony’, the new trailer really highlights the mood of this new season. The episodes will arrive on Netflix on November 9th.

    Imelda Staunton, and Jonathan Pryce in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    (L to R) Imelda Staunton, and Jonathan Pryce in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
  • New Images for ‘The Crown’ Season 5

    Imelda Staunton in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    Imelda Staunton in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.

    The real-life Royal Family have seen many changes through the years, most recently the death of Queen Elizabeth II in September.

    And as happens every two seasons, there is change coming to the Netflix series that chronicles – with a blend of fact and fiction – their lives.

    Season 5 sees the arrival of a whole new cast playing royals, some friends and lovers, and a new Prime Minister.

    Imelda Staunton inherits the role of The Queen from Olivia Colman, while Jonathan Pryce is the new incumbent in the part of her husband, Prince Philip, following Tobias Menzies.

    Elizabeth Debicki, and Dominic West in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    (L to R) Elizabeth Debicki, and Dominic West in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.

    Swapping in for Josh O’Connor and Emma Corrin as Prince Charles and Princess Diana are Dominic West and Elizabeth Debicki.

    Teddy Hawley is Prince Harry and Timothee Sambor is Prince William, though because of the young princes aging more obviously than their elders, the roles of Harry and his brother will switch to Will Powell and Senan West (Dominic’s son) in later episodes.

    Lesley Manville takes over as Princess Margaret (following Helena Bonham-Carter’s run), with Claudia Harrison as the new Princess Anne and Olivia Williams replacing Emerald Fennell as Charles’ lover (and future wife) Camilla Parker Bowles.

    More tellingly, and presaging future tragedy, Salim Daw is playing Mohamed Al Fayed, who would romance Diana after her divorce, and Khalid Abdalla has the role of Dodi Fayed, his father.

    Jonny Lee Miller in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    Jonny Lee Miller in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.

    Perhaps most intriguing is the casting of Jonny Lee Miller as John Major, who succeeds Margaret Thatcher as Prime Minster. Largely seen as mild and stable (though later revealed to be wrapped up in private scandals), we would not have predicted that ‘Trainspotting’s Sick Boy would one day end up playing a man mocked as so bland that his puppet on satirical series ‘Spitting Image’ was gray.

    The nineties were a particularly turbulent decade for the Royals, including the continued dissolution (and end) of Charles and Diana’s marriage. And the endless reportage and legacy writing about it was a handy resource for much of the cast as Elizabeth Debicki explained to Netflix’s TUDUM blog. “That’s the amazing thing about playing these people at this time, because in the journey of ‘The Crown’ so far out of all the seasons, this is the most visual content we have of the Royal Family. In the ‘90s everything had started to be filmed and also it was the birth of the 24-hour news cycle so there’s just this incredible amount of content that we have access to.”

    Dominic West, meanwhile, is keen to make clear that he and his fellow actors are not simply impersonating the royals. “I think people understand, because the cast has changed every two seasons, that this is not an imitation,” he says. “This is an evoking of a character.”

    Yet for Imelda Staunton, the most pressing concern is that people are happy about her work as Her Majesty. “What has been nice, and I hope I don’t prove them wrong, is people saying, ‘I’m really looking forward to seeing her as the queen.’ So, let’s just hope that works out for them because I’ve done it. Nothing I can do about it now!”

    Imelda Staunton in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    Imelda Staunton in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Imelda Staunton, and Jonathan Pryce in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    (L to R) Imelda Staunton, and Jonathan Pryce in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Elizabeth Debicki in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    Elizabeth Debicki in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Elizabeth Debicki in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    Elizabeth Debicki in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Dominic West, Teddy Hawley, Elizabeth Debicki, and Timothee Sambor in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    (L to R) Dominic West, Teddy Hawley, Elizabeth Debicki, and Timothee Sambor in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Dominic West in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    Dominic West in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Dominic West in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    Dominic West in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Claudia Harrison in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    Claudia Harrison in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Khalid Abdalla, and Salim Dau in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    (L to R) Khalid Abdalla, and Salim Dau in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Lesley Manville in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    Lesley Manville in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.
    Jonathan Pryce, and Natascha McElhone in 'The Crown' Season 5.
    (L to R) Jonathan Pryce, and Natascha McElhone in ‘The Crown’ Season 5. Photo: Netflix.

    ‘The Crown’ Season 5 arrives on Netflix on November 9th.

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  • Gary Oldman and Jack Lowden Talk ‘Slow Horses’

    Gary Oldman and Jack Lowden
    Gary Oldman and Jack Lowden in “Slow Horses,” now streaming on Apple TV+.

    Premiering on Apple TV+ beginning April 1st is the new spy series ‘Slow Horses,’ which is based on author Mick Herron’s novel of the same name.

    The series follows British MI5 agent River Cartwright (Jack Lowden), who after a botched mission is exiled to Slough House, which is an administrative purgatory for service agents. Cartwright and his fellow former agents now perform boring administrative tasks and work for the miserable Jackson Lamb (Gary Oldman), who expects everyone to quit out of frustration.

    But soon the former agents of Slough House, or Slow Horses as they’ve been nicknamed, become entangled in a dangerous mission at London’s Regent’s Park. In addition to Lowden and Oldman, the cast also includes Olivia Cooke, Kristin Scott Thomas, and Jonathan Pryce.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Gary Oldman and Jack Lowden about their work on ‘Slow Horses.

    You can read our full interview with Gary Oldman and Jack Lowden below, or watch a video of our interviews with Oldman, Lowden, Olivia Cooke, Kristin Scott Thomas, and Jonathan Pryce in the player above.

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    Moviefone: To begin with, Gary can you talk about your approach to taking this character from the page to the screen?

    Gary Oldman: Well, I was very lucky because Jackson Lamb is really created, he’s from the imagination of Mick Herron, who is the writer of the books that the series is based on. He created this world and this incredible character, and it was all there. It was all pretty much on the page. All I had to do was just follow all the signposts.

    I knew immediately when I read the book and read the scripts, I just thought I could have a lot of fun playing Jackson. I don’t particularly like him, but I do like playing him and his interaction with the characters in the piece. But a lot of the work, I must say, was done for me in the writing, because it’s very, very good writing.

    MF: Finally, Jack can you talk about your character’s journey and how he feels about being sent to Slough House?

    Jack Lowden: He goes there because he is pushed into making a mistake, given the wrong information, which only adds to his constant frustration. The fact is that he’s just in this one big, bad mood for all six episodes. So, it’s definitely not his fault. I think we were talking earlier about the fact that Jackson, his boss, knows that because he knows everything and chooses to sort of beat him with it.

    I think his career, when we meet him is probably going brilliantly well. I think it’s probably going very well. I think where he then ends up is just not something that he could foresee at all. Then it all just comes crumbling down through no fault of his own.

    Gary Oldman and Jack Lowden in car
    Gary Oldman and Jack Lowden in “Slow Horses,” now streaming on Apple TV+.
  • ‘All the Old Knives’ Trailer

    Chris Pine and Thandiwe Newton
    (L to R) Chris Pine and Thandiwe Newton in Prime Video’s ‘All the Old Knives.’

    Digging through past relationships can be a thorny, emotional prospect in the best of circumstances. But when you’re part of the CIA, and the romance is intertwined with a mission gone tragically, treacherously wrong? Well, that’s surely enough to buy a therapist a new house.

    No therapy is seemingly involved in the story for ‘All the Old Knives’, which has its first trailer online. Not least because the main characters – Chris Pine’s Henry Pelham and Thandiwe Newton’s Celia Harrison – are, or in her case, were, intelligence operatives who can’t really go spilling their secrets to some stranger, no matter how many certificates they have on their wall or how much confidentiality they promise.

    The new thriller, directed by ‘Borg/McEnroe’s Janus Metz, adapts Olen Steinhauer’s 2015 novel. And, unusually, the writer himself worked up the script. Though he does have some experience – he created successful CIA series ‘Berlin Station’.

    ‘All the Old Knives’ finds him back in espionage territory, as the story follows what happens when the CIA discovers that one of its agents leaked information that cost more than 100 people their lives during a particularly tricky hostage situation on a plane six years previously in Vienna.

    Veteran operative Pelham is assigned to root out the mole from among his former officemates at the agency’s Vienna station. His investigation takes him from Austria to England to California, where he is reunited with his one-time colleague and ex-lover Harrison.

    The pair are forced to blur the lines between profession and passion in a tale of global espionage, moral ambiguity, and deadly betrayal. And not everyone will leave the reunion alive…

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    This latest spy outing for Pine (who starred as Jack Ryan in 2014) also has the actor working as an executive producer. Also in the cast are Jonathan Pryce (having quite the spy moment between this and his role as a retired MI5 agent in Apple TV+’s upcoming ‘Slow Horses’ series), and Laurence Fishburne, who has no little experience in on-screen espionage with the likes of ‘Five Fingers’ and ‘Bad Company’.

    And that’s not all, as the ensemble also includes Gala Gordon, Corey Johnson, Colin Stinton and Ahd Kamel.

    There’s a definite John le Carré feel to this one, with characters trying to give up the life while others are still deep within it. That’s not surprising, since Steinhauer’s novels have been favorably compared to the spy master’s work.

    Yet despite a seemingly compelling story, the movie has had some issues on its journey to the screen: Kate Winslet and Idris Elba were at one point seriously considering the lead roles, with Neil Burger attached to direct before they all moved on to other things. And Michelle Williams was starring opposite Pine until development delays meant she didn’t have time on her schedule.

    You’ll be able to watch ‘All the Old Knives’ on limited theatrical release and via Prime Video on April 8.

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    (L to R) Chris Pine, Thandiwe Newton, Laurence Fishburne, and Jonathan Pryce in Prime Video’s ‘All the Old Knives.’
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  • ‘The Two Popes’ Trailer: Anthony Hopkins, Jonathan Pryce Face Off Over Future of Catholic Church

    ‘The Two Popes’ Trailer: Anthony Hopkins, Jonathan Pryce Face Off Over Future of Catholic Church

    Netflix

    “Two Popes” aren’t better than one, as the trailer for the upcoming Netflix film from Fernando Meirelles (“City of God”) proves.

    The movie is based the real-life tumultuous transition from traditionalist Pope Benedict XVI (Anthony Hopkins) to his more open-minded successor, Cardinal Bergoglio, later known as Pope Francis (Jonathan Pryce).

    The movie follows the cardinal after he requests permission to retire in 2012 from the pope. Instead, facing scandal and self-doubt, Benedict summons his harshest critic and future successor to Rome to reveal a secret that would shake the foundations of the Catholic Church. 

    Behind Vatican walls, a struggle commences between both tradition and progress, guilt and forgiveness, as these two very different men confront elements from their pasts in order to find common ground and forge a future for a billion followers around the world.

    “We are no longer part of this world,” Bergoglio declares, while Benedict muses on being able to see the “correction” following his tenure as pope.

    “The Two Popes” will have its world premiere at the Telluride Film Festival this weekend. It will open in select theaters on November 27, then begin streaming on Netflix on December 20.

  • 11 Great Movie Performances By ‘Game Of Thrones’ Stars

    11 Great Movie Performances By ‘Game Of Thrones’ Stars