Tag: Josh Lucas

  • ‘Queen of the Ring’ Interview: Emily Bett Rickards and More

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    Opening in theaters on March 7th is the new biographic sports drama ‘Queen of the Ring’, which is based on the book of the same name and tells the inspiring true story of groundbreaking professional wrestler Mildred Burke.

    Written and directed by Ash Avidsen (’American Satan’), the film stars Emily Bett Rickards (‘Arrow’) as Burke, as well as Josh Lucas (‘Ford v Ferrari’), Deborah Ann Woll (‘Marvel’s Daredevil’), Martin Kove (‘Cobra Kai’), and Walton Goggins (‘Fallout’).

    Related Article: Robbie Amell and Stephen Amell Talk Netflix Sequel ‘Code 8: Part II’

    Emily Bett Rickards in 'Queen of the Ring'. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.
    Emily Bett Rickards in ‘Queen of the Ring’. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Emily Bett Rickards and filmmaker Ash Avildsen about their work on ‘Queen of the Ring’, developing the screenplay, Rickards’ approach to the character and learning to wrestle, how Avildsen wanted to shoot the wrestling sequences, Mildred’s complex relationship with Billy Wolfe and working with Josh Lucas, Mildred’s importance to the history of wrestling and female athletes, and if Rickards would want to be a “Babyface” or a “Heel” if she were a professional wrestler.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews.

    (L to R) Emily Bett Rickards and Kamille in 'Queen of the Ring'. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.
    (L to R) Emily Bett Rickards and Kamille in ‘Queen of the Ring’. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Ash, can you talk about learning of Mildred Burke’s true story, developing the book the movie is based on into a screenplay and the themes that you wanted to explore with this film?

    Ash Avildsen: I grew up a huge pro wrestling fan. I never knew about her story. I was planning on telling a fictional 80s story that had a triumphant ending because it didn’t really exist in film with pro wrestling. ‘The Wrestler’ was a masterpiece, but it was also a much darker tale. So, I called (executive producer) Jim Ross, I said, “Would you be willing to make kind of a love letter with me to all of the best 80s stories, and we bring it into a fictional world?” He goes, “Yeah, but by the way, have you ever heard of Mildred Burke?” I said, “No, who’s that?” He goes, “Read the book, ‘Queen of the Ring’, and let me know what you think.” I read it that weekend. I called him on Monday. I said, “Forget about the 80s fictional thing. We have to tell Mildred’s story.” Because I was just so enamored by it. From there we started developing the script and it’s just inspiring and unorthodox. It’s really a unique family drama in the world of period women’s pro wrestling. I just felt it was a story that I hadn’t seen before, and the fact that it was true and that it was kind of forgotten gave me my own chip on my shoulder as a fan of the world. How did we let this get forgotten about it? I just really became emotionally invested into it and then the journey began to try and get it made. Then we got lucky that Emily was interested and available because I can’t imagine anyone else. I think people are really going to love her performance.

    MF: Emily, what was your first reaction to the screenplay and learning of Mildred’s story, and your approach to playing her?

    Emily Bett Rickards: When I first read the script, I was immediately hooked. I had to know more about this woman. I also was so touched that the script was written with such heart as well as in this world of wrestling that I didn’t know anything about. So, to have that immediate empathy on the page is sort of what we go to the movies for and what you hope every script will have. It’s a delight when you get a gem like that. Then diving deep into her life, there was no turning back. We’re lucky enough that there’s so many photos of her, which I think are important. She wanted herself to be seen, and you can kind of see the gentrification of who she became in a sense, and who she was driving her persona to become, which as an actor is like candy. It’s just such a treat. Then, once we started filming, I don’t know, I feel like she’s here. It was like she had arrived in a sense. We very much wanted to tell this story in a way that she’d be proud of and would do her story justice. There were moments where I felt like she was with us. So yeah, it was a true honor.

    (L to R) Kamille and Emily Bett Rickards in 'Queen of the Ring'. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.
    (L to R) Kamille and Emily Bett Rickards in ‘Queen of the Ring’. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.

    MF: Emily, can you talk about how you prepared physically for this role and was it difficult learning all the wrestling moves?

    EBR: When I arrived in Louisville, I think we had about three weeks of wrestling training, wrestling rehearsals strictly, which pretty much is, get in the ring as much as possible. Learn not only choreography, but be around this wrestling world, which was everybody at OVW (Ohio Valley Wrestling) who sort of took me under their wing, shared their wrestling stories, and their love for wrestling with me, which was also helpful. It wasn’t just about what was on the mat, it was about why do we fall in love with this? Why do you personally fall in love with your persona and what that means to you and what is this performance behind the physical aspect of this stage work? Then before that, I was at home in Vancouver and I was training with my trainer Thomas Taylor, as well as Dr. Diego Botezelli, who created a workout and meal plan for me for the rest of the shoot as well as while I was away. So, it was about six months of weightlifting and eating a lot of chicken breast, having chicken at the ready and pumping weights at the ready at any chance I could get.

    MF: Ash, can you talk about how professional wrestling was different back then and specifically how you wanted to shoot the wrestling sequences?

    AA: So sometimes in other films, they do a great job of going tight in the ring, going handheld, and making it a bit shakier and more stressful, which is a great way of showing the intensity. With ‘Queen of the Ring’, I wanted it to be more kind of showing the beauty of the art form versus the danger of it. We obviously have moments of danger in the ring, especially when they’re having shoot matches, but it’s such a beautiful art form of storytelling and circus, and it’s like this destructive but magical ballet that they’re doing, and we wanted that to be seen. So, there’s a lot of shots where you can see it a bit more as you’d be seeing it if you were in the audience at the event. That was intentional, especially because we had actors and wrestlers that had so committed to it that we were going to be able to pull off the moves and the stunts and have them look great, which that’s kind of the big thing for the pro wrestling community. Is it going to be authentic? Do they know what they’re doing? I think we, thankfully, because of OVW and because of the actors and the stunt team and Andy Strahorn our fantastic DP, we were able to pull that off. So, we intentionally wanted to show the beauty of wrestling. Then of course, there’s certain things we had to limit for the time-period. They didn’t really start jumping off the top rope until later. So, we didn’t show any of that. We did take some creative liberties with the holds and the submissions because we felt in the present day it would be a bit easier to translate on the screen if we manipulated some of the moves a little bit but keeping the heart of the match the same. Then we have to kind of take creative liberties from the book to making a formidable screenplay and what’s going to play right. But yeah, what they were doing back then was so unheard of that we wanted to show that more than showing like, “Hey, this is really stressful.” We’re in the ring. They’re doing these moves. There’s no right or wrong. It was just a creative choice, but we wanted people to really have fun watching the matches versus getting stressed unless that was the point of it, which is what happens with the shoot matches, which is a great fight without a script.

    (L to R) Emily Bett Rickards, Josh Lucas and Gavin Casalegno in 'Queen of the Ring'. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.
    (L to R) Emily Bett Rickards, Josh Lucas and Gavin Casalegno in ‘Queen of the Ring’. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.

    MF: Emily, can you talk about Mildred’s complicated relationship with Billy Wolfe and what it was like working with Josh Lucas?

    EBR: Me working with Josh is, it’s an honor. From the moment we met over Zoom to read through the first maybe five or six scenes of Billy and Mildred, I was very aware that I was in the presence of someone who was going to be able to share this experience with me. Not only that but strengthen it and deliver what was on the page. Their relationship, I think we even toned down to a certain extent from their real lives. But from that perspective, there’s abuse and manipulation and Mildred’s drive for her dream is really where she got her strength from to keep going. As a woman of the time, I think we at least show her in the light of strength and show her going after what she wants. Though she is making sacrifices for that, she is choosing to hopefully go after this dream of what she wants and for the betterment of women and women today.

    MF: Ash, can you talk about Mildred’s importance not just to the history of wrestling but also to the history of women athletes in America?

    AA: I mean, on a cultural level, just from physique, I think it was big to show that women could be muscular and fit and have definition to their bodies and be beautiful and considered sexy and glamorous because it just wasn’t, from my research up until Mildred Burke, that was not really in culture at all. She brought it into pop culture in a major way. Also showing that, you see how they must keep dealing with Billy Wolfe because there’s no other places, they can go to do what they love and keeping the audience on the ride of Mildred, even though there are things like domestic violence and repeated infidelity. Part of the thing that made me love the story so much is that you’re still rooting for this woman in such a flawed, dark world. It’s not that the movie’s going to be like some crazy hard R. We chose to tell it in a more, I think PG-13 world, mainly because I want young people to be inspired by it and be allowed to see it. But when I try to describe it to people, I say, imagine that back then you’re an actress and there’s only one studio that has female actors in movies, and that studio is controlled by a Weinstein type guy, who’s violent, and that’s the only way you can do your dream. What are you going to do? There’s no right or wrong or perfect answer. It’s a messed-up situation. But that’s how it was back then because it was illegal in a lot of places. He was the only person that was really giving the women a platform. So, you love this guy for his brilliant mind and his bravery to do it for women, but you hate him because of all his horrible flaws. That’s what really drew me to the story, because life isn’t perfect. People aren’t perfect. Chasing your dreams if you’re trying to do something like this is not easy. Same thing with acting or music or anything in entertainment. It’s a messy, confusing world where lines get blurred. So much of this story, is that’s how it was back then. But even worse, because there weren’t options to go to. It was if you want to do this, you got to deal with this complicated and dangerous man. But that was also what Emily was saying earlier. I urge everyone to read the book. The book is a lot more brutal, and we did make creative choices to keep the audience still relating to Mildred’s decisions to continue the road she was on. Because when some of the things that happened, you’re going, “Oh, forget it. Don’t go back.” But then you realize, this is the only way. So, it was a balancing act of staying true to the story, but also not having the audience just throw their hands up in the air going, “What is this woman doing?”

    (Left) Emily Bett Rickards in 'Queen of the Ring'. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.
    (Left) Emily Bett Rickards in ‘Queen of the Ring’. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.

    MF: Finally, Emily, if you were a professional wrestler, would you be a “Babyface” or a “Heel’?

    EBR: I think I’d want to be a heel. Everyone says heels have more fun. I would have to say that I’ve had the experience of playing Mildred, so maybe I’ll go for the heel next time around.

    MF: Ash, which would you want to be?

    AA: I mean, the best path, which really what started happening later in the 90s was that you become a heel, but you’re so good at being a heel, that the audience starts to love you and you transform into a face. That’s kind what happened with The Rock (Dwayne Johnson), Stone Cold (Steve Austin) and Macho Man (Randy Savage). He’s my personal favorite. Oh, (Rowdy Roddy) Piper is great, and ‘They Live’ is great. That movie was ahead of its time. I recommend everyone go see Roddy Piper in ‘They Live’. They need to re-release that movie. But heels do have more fun. It’s easier to get someone to hate you than it is to love you.

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    What is the plot of ‘Queen of the Ring’?

    The film chronicles the life of revolutionary female wrestler, Mildred Burke.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Queen of the Ring’?

    (L to R) Emily Bett Rickards and Josh Lucas in 'Queen of the Ring'. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.
    (L to R) Emily Bett Rickards and Josh Lucas in ‘Queen of the Ring’. Photo: Intrinsic Value Films & TV.

    Other Emily Bett Rickards Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Emily Bett Rickards Movies On Amazon

     

  • ‘The Black Demon’ Interview: Josh Lucas Talks New Shark Movie

    Josh Lucas as Paul in the action film, 'The Black Demon,' The Avenue release.
    Josh Lucas as Paul in the action film, ‘The Black Demon,’ The Avenue release. Photo courtesy of The Avenue.

    Opening exclusively in theaters on April 28th is the new shark movie ‘The Black Demon,’ which was directed by Adrian Grunberg (‘Rambo: Last Blood’).

    What is the plot of ‘The Black Demon?’

    ‘The Black Demon’ follows Oilman Paul Sturges’ (Josh Lucas) on an idyllic family vacation that turns into a nightmare when they encounter a ferocious megalodon shark that will stop at nothing to protect its territory. Stranded and under constant attack, Paul and his family must somehow find a way to get back to shore alive before it strikes again in this epic battle between humans and nature.

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    Who is in the cast of ‘The Black Demon?’

    ‘The Black Demon’ stars Josh Lucas (‘Ford v. Ferrari,’ ‘Poseidon‘) as Paul Sturges, Fernanda Urrejola (‘Blue Miracle‘) as Ines Sturges, Venus Ariel (‘Exposed‘) as Audrey Sturges, Hector Jimenez (‘Nacho Libre‘) as Chocolatito, and Julio Cesar Cedillo (‘Sicario‘) as Chato.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Josh Lucas about his work on ‘The Black Demon,’ his approach to his character, his relationship with his wife, the challenges of working in water, his love for shark movies, and the film’s environmental message.

    Fernanda Urrejola as Ines, Josh Lucas as Paul, Carlos Solórzano as Tommy and Venus Ariel as Audrey in the action film, 'The Black Demon,' The Avenue release.
    (L to R) Fernanda Urrejola as Ines, Josh Lucas as Paul, Carlos Solórzano as Tommy and Venus Ariel as Audrey in the action film, ‘The Black Demon,’ The Avenue release. Photo courtesy of The Avenue.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Paul Sturges is a character that is very sure of himself and thinks he has all the answers. Can you talk about your approach to playing the character?

    Josh Lucas: I wanted to bring what I think are some of the problems with American tourists, American capitalism and corporate philosophy of how American oil companies will go into these beautiful countries and just wreak havoc on it, and not even think about it because they go back to their big cars and their big lives back in America. I love the idea that this guy, he’s married to a Mexican woman. His children are half Mexican, and yet he refuses to speak Spanish. I’ve seen these travelers all over the world, where you go into a cafe in France and see the ugly American, right? So, I felt like that’s kind of what Paul is. He’s trying to be a great dad and trying to be a good guy, but the reality is, the things that he’s done, they’re nasty karma. I like the idea that the karma kind of presents itself as this angry God, who’s enraged about not just what this individual guy has done, but the way this corporation has come in and caused so much havoc on that beautiful, idyllic little small Baja town. The reality is, those oil rigs are out there. They’ve had problems with them. They were put out there without a lot of regulations, and it’s kind of got weird true elements that way.

    MF: Is it nice to be in a film that is not only entertaining, but also has an important message about the environment?

    JL: I’ve thought this from so early in my career, because I love movies. I’ve always loved movies, and just purely at their best, they are entertainment, right? But the best entertainment, of course, it’s so obvious to say, has something deeper going on. If you listen to Francis Ford Coppola, the greatest behind the scenes interview I’ve ever heard was the director’s commentary of ‘The Godfather.’ It is just so brilliant and so moving, because he talks at length about how he did not want to make a movie about violence, but he made a movie that’s intensely violent; and that he was trying so hard to tell this story about America, family and love. So, ever since that, and that’s obviously one of my favorite movies, as it is so many people, but hearing him talk about his responsibility and what he was trying to do as a filmmaker. Sure, we can go do something that’s just simply a fun little piece of entertainment, but if there’s something underneath it that is going on, and in this case, I don’t want to say a cautionary tale, but there really is the true element that these oil rigs were put off the coast of Baja California and they are causing damage. They were done without regulation. Not that I hope that there’s an angry God who’s going to unleash a megalodon on the people to get revenge, but I thought it was a really fun, silly way to approach quite a serious subject.

    Josh Lucas as Paul and Fernanda Urrejola as Ines in the action film, 'The Black Demon,' The Avenue release.
    (L to R) Josh Lucas as Paul and Fernanda Urrejola as Ines in the action film, ‘The Black Demon,’ The Avenue release. Photo courtesy of The Avenue.

    Related Article: Josh Lucas Talks New Spectrum Originals Series ‘Long Slow Exhale’

    MF: Can you talk about the relationship between Paul and his wife, Ines, and what it was like working on that dynamic with Fernanda Urrejola?

    JL: Look, she’s a really interesting actress. She’s from Chile, and so she’s a very environmental-minded person, Fernanda is. So, we talked about how to have these moments where, you see these marriages in life, where there’s a cultural separation between the two people. It’s funny. My ex-wife is Colombian, and her family, they do not speak Spanish, ever, when they’re in America. I was always like, “Why don’t you teach our son how to speak Spanish?” She goes, “They only speak English, because they so wanted to assimilate.” So, I think what happens is, particularly when I see Americans go into other cultures, they don’t try and assimilate at all. But when people come to our country, oftentimes they work very hard to assimilate, to be part of the American culture. I’s an interesting thing that I’ve seen within my own family, that my son does not speak Spanish, and I wish he did. So we tried to bring some of those kind of honest family dynamics. At the same time, we’re trying to tell a story where the family, I don’t want to say has “Spielbergian” elements, but where it’s got those kind of real rhythms. It’s why I love going back and looking at ‘E.T.’ and seeing the great moment of Drew Barrymore being like, “You’re a dick.” These little kid moments that Spielberg movies are so great at capturing. We were trying to capture some of that kind of lightness and humor, but also to then have the family seem real enough that when you put them in an obvious ridiculous situation on an oil rig being attacked by a megalodon shark, you are interested in them and the struggle they’re going through, and why they would obviously be so desperate to survive. It’s a fun environment, and yet at the same time, we tried to bring little levels of depth and authenticity to the understory of it, basically.

    MF: As an actor, can you talk about the challenges of working in water, and did you have any ‘Poseidon’ flashbacks while making this movie?

    JL: I think any director or actor would say working on water is the hardest thing and the hardest environment to work in. The big difference here was that ‘Poseidon,’ when we made that movie, they flooded the stages of Warner Brothers, which is 100-year old stages, and they recreated the entire environment on a sound stage. Everyone got what was called the “Poseidon Crud”, which was this terrible illness that everyone was getting from the water and everyone was sick all the time. It’s just a weird, tough place to shoot. ‘The Black Demon’ was very much, in a way, the opposite, because we shot outside in a tank in the Dominican Republic, kind of on the ocean. They built this oil rig for real inside the tank. So, the water, there’s an organic thing when you’re inside real water and you’re working. I love diving and I love being in the ocean, and there’s something so different. I find there’s a kind of a Marvel fatigue these days, because when I watch those movies, I feel like everything about them is CGI. They’re standing on a green stage, on a green floor. So, every single thing is created. I tell you, it’s very hard to act in those environments. But in a much better way, when you’re in the ocean, as hard as it is, the reality of being there and the reality of the rig was built for us, even in our small little movie. It was done in a way that wasn’t at all fake. The only thing that’s fake is the shark. So, it’s a much more enjoyable environment. Even being underwater for 8 to 10 hours a day during the scuba/snorkeling scenes is a cool challenge. It’s something I really like.

    Josh Lucas as Paul, Fernanda Urrejola as Ines and Julio Cesar Cedillo as Chato in the action film, 'The Black Demon,' The Avenue release.
    (L to R) Josh Lucas as Paul, Fernanda Urrejola as Ines and Julio Cesar Cedillo as Chato in the action film, ‘The Black Demon,’ The Avenue release. Photo courtesy of The Avenue.

    MF: Finally, are you a fan of shark movies in general, and can you talk about how they made the shark look real in ‘The Black Demon?’

    JL: Man, I am. I definitely, like everybody loved ‘Jaws.’ But I think there’s some great ones out there. ‘The Shallows’ is great, ‘Open Water,’ and ‘Deep Blue.’ There’s a bunch of really fun shark movies. It’s a very hard and interesting genre. It goes back to the 1930s, we’ve been making monster movies since silent films, and environmental monster movies like ‘The Creature From The Black Lagoon.’ These great movies that my dad talked about loving when he was a 10-year old boy, and that my parents would take me to the drive-in movie theater when I was younger. So, it’s a genre that I find there’s a reason why people love it. It’s hard to do well. It’s hard to get it right, and particularly because we rely so much these days on CGI. So I think filmmaking wise, sure, we’ve gotten much better. The CGI is pretty seamless these days. But I don’t know, man. It’s the mystery of filmmaking, right? The mystery of trying to make it be authentic, make it real, and make it fun. It’s always a great challenge, let me tell you.

    Jorge A. Jimenez as Junior, Venus Ariel as Audrey and Josh Lucas as Paul in the action film, 'The Black Demon,' The Avenue release.
    (L to R) Jorge A. Jimenez as Junior, Venus Ariel as Audrey and Josh Lucas as Paul in the action film, ‘The Black Demon,’ The Avenue release. Photo courtesy of The Avenue.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘The Black Demon:’

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Black Demon’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Josh Lucas Movies On Amazon

    ‘The Black Demon’ is produced by Lantica Media, Mucho Mas Media, and Silk Mass. It is scheduled to release in theaters on April 28th, 2023.

  • Josh Lucas Talks ‘Long Slow Exhale’

    Josh Lucas in 'Long Slow Exhale."
    Josh Lucas in ‘Long Slow Exhale.” Photo: Nathan Bolster/BET/Spectrum.

    Premiering on Spectrum and available On-Demand, free and without ads beginning April 4th is the new original series ‘Long Slow Exhale,’ from showrunner and creator Pam Veasey (‘L.A.’s Finest’).

    The new drama series follows J.C. Abernathy (Rose Rollins), a successful Head Coach of a competitive women’s college basketball team who finds herself in the middle of a potentially career shattering sexual abuse scandal. As she tries to find the truth among the many secrets she uncovers, she has to make hard decisions that will affect her, her family and the team of female athletes who all rely on her.

    In addition to Rollins, the cast also includes Josh Lucas (‘Ford v Ferrari‘),Ian Harding (‘The Hater‘), and Famke Janssen (‘X-Men‘).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Josh Lucas about his work on ‘Long Slow Exhale.’

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    You can read our full interview with Josh Lucas below, or watch a video of our interviews with Lucas, Rose Rollins, Ian Harding, creator Pam Veasey, director Anton Cropper, and executive producer Casey Haver by clicking on the player above.

    Moviefone: To begin with, what was your first reaction to the script for the pilot when you read it?

    Josh Lucas: Well, you know, I did a movie years ago called ‘Glory Road,’ which is a basketball movie that I really love. It’s actually one of my favorite movies I ever made. But it does tell a little bit of the inside college athletics story. It’s a very different story than this, but I started to have a real deep understanding and appreciation for college coaching and the process of what the players are going through.

    Then when I spoke to the creator of the show, Pam Veasey, she was really telling me about where this story came from and her personal passionate reason why she wanted to tell it. Her boys were trying to be professional athletes at that point in her life. She looked at the Duke lacrosse scandal and she was so struck by it.

    So, wondering about all the lives that were being destroyed and everything that was swirling around that tornado of a news story. She created this concept and she talked to me about this character, Hillman Ford, who’s at the center of it. He’s basically the guy that you don’t realize is pulling the strings and the real puppet master of the whole thing. That he himself doesn’t even realize the situation that he’s found himself in with this storm.

    I was just struck by it. I was really intrigued by the world of it and I don’t know, I felt like it makes for just great television. You want to really know; how did this happen? What’s going on here? How did this whole thing just keep turning and turning and becoming messier and more complicated? In our own lives, it’s a horrible experience to go through. But as a television audience, it’s really fun to watch.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about the importance of tackling a subject like sexual misconduct in the workplace on a series like ‘Long Slow Exhale?’

    JL: Well, I think there’s part of it that, sure there’s the Me-Too movement of it all. There’s the sexual accusation element of this show, but really if you go to it, it’s bigger than that. It’s about false accusations and fake news, and what’s real, and who’s telling the truth.

    It’s about all the things that make us as human beings such messy little creatures, and that our own little worlds that we find ourselves in suddenly can blow up and become national news, which is what happens in this case.

    Then when we are on the outside we have to look at it and say, what’s really going on here? You know, it’s a big political scandal or a big sports scandal in a way. I mean, think about it, Tom Brady un-retiring is worldwide news, you know?

    So, look, I think that’s part of it. We are so intrigued by these figures in our lives. That’s why, thankfully, women’s sports have become as big as men’s sports in so many ways finally. Yet, they have the same problems. We all have the same problems.

    Josh Lucas and Rose Rollins in 'The Long Slow Exhale.'
    (L to R) Josh Lucas and Rose Rollins in ‘Long Slow Exhale.’ Photo: Boris Martin/Spectrum/BET.
  • Stars Katie Holmes and Josh Lucas discuss ‘The Secret: Dare to Dream’

    Stars Katie Holmes and Josh Lucas discuss ‘The Secret: Dare to Dream’

    In this exclusive interview with Made in Hollywood, the stars of ‘The Secret: Dare to Dream,’ Katie Holmes and Josh Lucas talk about shooting in Louisiana, and how the message of the film resonates in their own lives.

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  • Watch Katie Holmes, Josh Lucas, and Jerry O’Connell in the trailer for ‘The Secret: Dare to Dream’

    Watch Katie Holmes, Josh Lucas, and Jerry O’Connell in the trailer for ‘The Secret: Dare to Dream’

    You might remember Rhonda Byrne’s 2006 best-seller “The Secret.” The message of that book was lauded by Oprah Winfrey (among others), and millions of copies have been bought worldwide.

    You wouldn’t necessarily think that a self-help book would work as a narrative feature, but the filmmakers behind ‘The Secret: Dare to Dream’ have done just that. They’ve created a story about a single mother, played by Katie Holmes, who learns a new way of thinking from a man played by Josh Lucas. And that new way of thinking is, of course, what’s laid out in the wildly popular book.

    Here’s the official synopsis for the film:

    Based on the groundbreaking best-selling book about the law of attraction by Rhonda Byrne, The Secret: Dare to Dream follows Miranda (Katie Holmes), a young widow trying to make ends meet while raising her three children and dating her boyfriend (Jerry O’Connell). A devastating storm brings an enormous challenge and a mysterious man, Bray (Josh Lucas), into Miranda’s life. Bray reignites the family’s spirit but, unbeknownst to Miranda, also holds an important secret — one that will change everything. With its timeless messages of hope, compassion, and gratitude, The Secret: Dare to Dream is an inspiring and heartwarming film that shows how positive thoughts can transform our lives.

    Directed by Andy Tennant, ‘The Secret: Dare to Dream’ will be available on demand and streaming on July 31.

  • ‘Sweet Home Alabama’ Star Josh Lucas Is Trying to Get Reese Witherspoon to Do a Sequel

    Reese Witherspoon and Josh Lucas in Sweet Home Alabama
    Buena Vista Pictures

    The 2002 film “Sweet Home Alabama” turns Sweet 16 in September, and its fans are ready to celebrate … with a sequel.

    Josh Lucas, who starred opposite Reese Witherspoon in the romantic comedy, has been busy promoting his latest film, “Yellowstone,” and in the process, he’s been making the case for a followup to “Sweet Home Alabama.” In fact, he has gone so far as to try and get his former co-star on board.

    “I’ve even reached out to Reese,” he said on “Access Live” on Tuesday. “I would love it, because I would love to see where these characters ended up, or where they are at this point in their life.”

    Lucas has given the idea a lot of thought, to the point that he has a story in mind. He’d like to see Melanie and Jake divorced again, with Jake having to win his ex-wife back for the second time. The idea didn’t land well with the “Access Live” hosts at first, but as Lucas discussed the connection between the characters and their “eternal love,” he was able to win them over.

    Of course, there’s the issue of how busy Witherspoon is now that she’s not only an actress but also a producer, the head of a media company, and more. Lucas said that he knew even early on that his co-star would go on to do huge things. Still, he thinks “Sweet Home Alabama” is “iconic” and hopes she’ll want to do a sequel at some point.

    Now that Lucas has mentioned the possibility, fans are right there with him, calling for “Sweet Home Alabama 2.” The tweets have begun:

    https://twitter.com/c_ddawn/status/1019578106036793344

    If Witherspoon is willing to do yet another “Legally Blonde” sequel, maybe it’s not out of the realm of possibility.

    [via: “Access Live”; h/t: Us Weekly]