Tag: Julia Fox

  • ‘HIM’ Digital Release Interview: Tyriq Withers

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    Available on digital now and debuting on DVD, Blu-ray, and Ultra HD Blu-ray on November 11th is the new horror movie ‘HIM’, which was co-written and directed by Justin Tipping (‘Kicks’) and produced by Jordan Peele (‘Get Out’), and stars Tyriq Withers (‘I Know What You Did Last Summer (2025)’), Marlon Wayans (‘Requiem for a Dream’), Julia Fox (‘Uncut Gems’), Tim Heidecker (‘Us’), and Jim Jefferies (‘Killing Hasselhoff’).

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    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Tyriq Withers about his work on ‘HIM’, his first reaction to the screenplay, how he related to the character, quarterback bootcamp, Cam and Isaiah’s relationship and working with Marlon Wayans, director Justin Tipping’s vision for the project, and finding out he won his role from producer Jordan Peele.

    Marlon Wayans is Isaiah (back, pointing) and Tyriq Withers is Cam (foreground) in 'HIM', directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Marlon Wayans is Isaiah (back, pointing) and Tyriq Withers is Cam (foreground) in ‘HIM’, directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.

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

    Related Article: 30 Best Football Movies of All Time!

    Tyriq Withers as Cameron Cade in 'HIM', directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Tyriq Withers as Cameron Cade in ‘HIM’, directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Moviefone: To begin with, what was your first reaction to the screenplay and the way it blends professional football with the horror genre?

    Tyriq Withers: I think it’s a script that I couldn’t put down. Coming from sports, whether it was soccer and transitioning into college football, it was a dream come true to be able to pick up a script that paid its respects to the sport of football. I think it talked about an athlete that was in pursuit of greatness and I think it just transcends sports in a way where it talks to us all who want to pursue greatness. I think that that road to that can get a little hectic and scary in real life. I think that’s the beauty of horror, where you can really exaggerate or hyperbolize themes and the obstacles it takes to reach that level of greatness.

    MF: As a former athlete yourself, could you relate to the pressure on Cam and his dedication and sacrifice to pursue greatness on the field?

    TW: I think chasing greatness in the world of sports as Tyriq, it was always rooted in love and family and who I was doing it for was my mom. I think Cam’s story is rooted in that with his parents and specifically his father, that he lost. I think that grief of losing his father pushed him even further because there is no literal validation he could get after his father passed and, “This is what my dad would want.” As an athlete, that’s where I lived and as an artist now, that’s where I live, where I want to prove something to my brother that I lost. I think the world of sports and of college football, the crazy interactions with players or coaches, that is a direct reflection within this movie. Obviously, things are heightened in the film, but I think there are certain feelings. There is a beautiful scene where Marlon’s yelling in my face. He’s saying, “What are you willing to sacrifice?” One of the lines was, “Your father didn’t love you.” I think I’ve come from a world of sports where whether it’s middle school, high school or college, where coaches say things to invoke certain emotions to get a certain performance. That’s not a great way to coach. But I pulled from those experiences and in that scene where I’m saying I want to sacrifice everything; you can hear it in my voice because I’m really triggered and frustrated. I think that’s the beauty of art, the catharsis of art, if you will.

    (from left) Isaiah White (Marlon Wayans) and Cameron Cade (Tyriq Withers) in 'HIM', directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (from left) Isaiah White (Marlon Wayans) and Cameron Cade (Tyriq Withers) in ‘HIM’, directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    MF: Can you talk about Cam and Isaiah’s mentor/mentee relationship, and did you have a bit of that with Marlon Wayans off screen? Was he an actor that you admired growing up, and if so, what was it like working with him on this project?

    TW: Yeah, Marlon is an actor who I have looked up to all my life and not only on screen, but him as a human being, and his comedy. So, there was a mentor/mentee relationship developed initially coming on the set. It didn’t get weird like Cameron and Isaiah. I think watching Cameron’s journey between the respect of his idol and pulling back the layers of who Isaiah White is, allowed him to really see Isaiah for who he truly was and really understand, your idol becomes your rival. You know, that’s the beauty and ugliness of sports, where people you look up to will become your rivals. Where Allen Iverson had to crossover Michael Jordan, and AI grew up loving Jordan, but we must do what we must do. So that was a fun thing to play with and Marlon took me under his wing as a younger brother, or an honorary Wayans, I always say. I’m grateful for that brotherhood.

    MF: How did you physically prepare to play this role? Did you go to a quarterback bootcamp or have any type of football training before shooting?

    TW: I just kind of went to set and showed up. No, I’m kidding. I went in the gym. I had to get physically in shape. So, I was working out six days a week, twice a day. eating 4,000 calories while going to a football camp with Jordan Palmer training with actual QBs prepping for the NFL draft. So, I got to see the training, but also the interview process, the playwriting process, the studying process, and we had Joe Milton there, who currently plays for the Cowboys. Then, Josh Allen popped through to give some words. So, it was a real authentic football experience to really bring to the character and I carried that on screen. Hopefully that resonates with everyone, because I took it serious coming from football. I played wide receiver, so it was a bit of a transition to learn the quarterback position.

    (from left) Marlon Wayans, director Justin Tipping and Tyriq Withers on the set of 'HIM', directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (from left) Marlon Wayans, director Justin Tipping and Tyriq Withers on the set of ‘HIM’, directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    MF: What was director Justin Tipping like to collaborate with on set?

    TW: Justin was a beauty to have as a director where he allowed us the freedom to bring ourselves to the role, but also pushing us to places that we couldn’t even imagine. I think his vision, his eye for story, is immaculate and I think there’s certain themes and writing aspects of this film that he fought for that I’m grateful to have. He paid his respects to the sport of football, even though he came from soccer. I think that’s a testament to him as a director, where he’s able to find the common themes and create specific stories. I feel like the more specific a story is, the more universal and relatable it will become, and he created a piece that I think will be studied for generations. I think it will age like fine wine.

    MF: Finally, how much interaction did you have with producer Jordan Peele on this project? Was he on set during production and what were some of his contributions while filming?

    TW: Yeah, he was on my initial casting Zoom when they told me I got the part. They were like, “Jordan Peele is hopping on the call. Do you know who Jordan Peele is?” I’m like, “Do I know who Jordan Peele is?” He was there to share the news and we had a couple meetings and we got to hang. He came to set a few days, but wasn’t there every day because as a producer, you put the right people in the right positions to curate the art that you want to tell. I think that’s the genius of Jordan Peele, where he knows exactly who to put where. He gave me some words of affirmation and really gave me the extra added confidence to walk on set and really do my thing as Cameron Cade.

    (L to R) Director Justin Tipping, Tyriq Withers (as Cam), Producer Jordan Peele, and Marlon Wayans (as Isaiah) on the set of 'HIM', from Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Director Justin Tipping, Tyriq Withers (as Cam), Producer Jordan Peele, and Marlon Wayans (as Isaiah) on the set of ‘HIM’, from Universal Pictures.

    What is the plot of ‘Him’?

    When rising quarterback Cameron Cade (Tyriq Withers) is attacked by an unhinged fan and suffers a potentially career-ending brain trauma, legendary championship quarterback Isaiah White (Marlon Wayans) offers to train Cam at his isolated compound. But Cam’s training and Isaiah’s charisma soon begin to curdle into something darker, which may cost Cam more than he ever bargained for.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Him’?

    Jordan Peele attends the Academy’s 2019 Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom on Sunday, October 27, 2019, in Hollywood, CA. Credit/Provider: Troy Harvey / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Jordan Peele attends the Academy’s 2019 Annual Governors Awards in The Ray Dolby Ballroom on Sunday, October 27, 2019, in Hollywood, CA. Credit/Provider: Troy Harvey / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    List of Films Directed Or Produced By Jordan Peele:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Him’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Jordan Peele Movies On Amazon

  • Movie Review: ‘Him’

    (L to R) Tyriq Withers is Cam, Marlon Wayans is Isaiah, and Maurice Greene is Malek in 'Him', directed by Justin Tipping. © Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Tyriq Withers is Cam, Marlon Wayans is Isaiah, and Maurice Greene is Malek in ‘Him’, directed by Justin Tipping. © Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters September 19 is ‘Him,’ directed by Justin Tipping and starring Marlon Wayans, Tyriq Withers, Julia Fox, Tim Heidecker, Jim Jefferies, Maurice Greene, Tierra Whack, Don Benjamin, and Naomi Grossman.

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    Related Article: Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans and Keenen Ivory Wayans to Return For ‘Scary Movie’ Reboot

    Initial Thoughts

    Tyriq Withers as Cameron Cade in 'HIM', directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Tyriq Withers as Cameron Cade in ‘HIM’, directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Producer Jordan Peele’s name is prominent in the marketing for ‘Him,’ a film that lands in a category that might be called ‘sports horror.’ But while the Peele brand is associated with socially conscious genre fare – particularly the films he’s directed, like ‘Get Out’ and ‘Nope’ – he turns the reins here over to Justin Tipping, who helmed the 2016 urban drama ‘Kicks.’

    While Peele himself might have had a different outcome with ‘Him,’ Tipping does not seem on sure footing here. In fact, in an attempt to make ‘Him’ as dream-like and surreal as he can, Tipping turns the film into a progressively manic and borderline nonsensical string of sequences that are edited in such haphazard fashion as to almost induce withdrawal in the viewer. Though not without its merits, ‘Him’ turns out to be the cinematic equivalent of a game that got away.

    Story and Direction

    (from left) Marlon Wayans, director Justin Tipping and Tyriq Withers on the set of 'HIM', directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (from left) Marlon Wayans, director Justin Tipping and Tyriq Withers on the set of ‘HIM’, directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Cameron Cade (Tyriq Withers) is an up-and-coming college football star who many pundits see as the heir apparent to Isaiah White (Marlon Wayans), the rumored-to-be-retiring superstar quarterback of the fictional San Antonio Saviors. But when a senseless attack leaves Cam with a serious head injury and his career on the line, Isaiah invites him to come train at his secluded underground compound out in the desert, where Isaiah himself will personally determine whether Cam can still make the cut – and help him get there.

    It sounds too good to be true, and right off the bat it is: Isaiah’s massive crib/training facility is one of those labyrinthine, vault-like places, full of weird art and winding corridors, that automatically screams ‘bad things happen here.’ Sure enough, Cam’s training becomes increasingly unorthodox and violent, while Isaiah begins to behave in ways that are erratic and even dangerous. As the crucial date for Cam’s meeting with the owners of the Saviors draws near, it becomes apparent that he may have to fight not just for his signing bonus, but for his life.

    (L to R) Marlon Wayans (as Isaiah), director Justin Tipping, and Tyriq Withers (as Cam) on the set of 'HIM', from Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Marlon Wayans (as Isaiah), director Justin Tipping, and Tyriq Withers (as Cam) on the set of ‘HIM’, from Universal Pictures.

    ‘Him’ lets us know early on that it’s using horror as a metaphor for the toxic masculinity and abusive culture that permeates professional sports. In an early flashback, Cam as a boy watches Isaiah get gravely injured on live television during a playoff game. ‘That’s what men do,’ intones his (soon-to-be-deceased) father. ‘They sacrifice. No guts, no glory.’ Later, at Isaiah’s compound, Isaiah repeatedly barks, ‘This isn’t a f**king game!’ His staff physician injects Cam daily with some unknown substance. Even the cult of personality around certain sports stars gets a sharp poke thanks to the menacing Isaiah fans that hang around outside the gates.

    This could all be worthy material in the right hands, and indeed the script by Zack Akers and Skip Bronkie made the prestigious Black List of unproduced screenplays. But Tipping turns it all into a mashup of music video, montage compilation, and fever dream, with frenetic editing, battering-ram sound, and occult imagery that makes less and less sense as it goes on. Perhaps the idea is to make us feel like we’re inside Cam’s already damaged head, but instead of a rising tide of dread and tension we’re just subjected to a string of barely connected episodes that make us feel instead like the movie is falling apart. By the time we find out the answer to what’s behind it all, we no longer care nor are we even sure what the hell it is.

    Cast and Performances

    Marlon Wayans is Isaiah in 'HIM', directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Marlon Wayans is Isaiah in ‘HIM’, directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Although his performance is big – and increasingly over the top and beyond — Marlon Wayans easily holds the screen here. His Isaiah White is charismatic and charming until he’s not – and then he sometimes is again, even after going off the rails one scene earlier. Wayans’ natural presence and abilities provide the most interest in ‘Him,’ especially in one quiet scene toward the end that allows some insight into the character of Isaiah for a moment (“Find your own way to greatness,” he tells Cam, “Don’t be me”) before the mayhem starts up again.

    We can’t quite say the same for Tyriq Withers. The former college football star (for real) has the physical prowess and good looks to make for a credible rising phenom, but except for a flash of rage or sadness here and there Withers just doesn’t have the range or expressiveness to carry the film’s critical role. As for the rest of the cast, no one stands out much except Julia Fox as Isaiah’s social influencer (and sex toy peddler) wife, Elsie, with Fox giving her usual downtown girl schtick a witchy twist.

    Final Thoughts

    Marlon Wayans is Isaiah (back, pointing) and Tyriq Withers is Cam (foreground) in 'HIM', directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    Marlon Wayans is Isaiah (back, pointing) and Tyriq Withers is Cam (foreground) in ‘HIM’, directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    There are probably some fascinating horror stories that could come out of the world of sports – particularly when it comes to body horror and the way that athletic competition can crush both the flesh and spirit – but despite its ambitions, ‘Him’ is not one of those movies.

    Whatever was in that original script by Akers and Bronkie just seems to get lost here in Tipping’s frenzied, headache-inducing style of direction. ‘Him’ just pummels you with nonstop, almost assaultive imagery that is both nightmarish and gratuitous. If it’s meant to make the viewer feel like he’s getting hammered on all sides by the other team’s defensive line – well, perhaps in that regard it succeeds, but as a movie, not so much.

    ‘Him’ receives a score of 45 out of 100.

    'HIM', directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    ‘HIM’, directed by Justin Tipping. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    What is the plot of ‘Him’?

    When rising quarterback Cameron Cade is attacked by an unhinged fan and suffers a potentially career-ending brain trauma, legendary championship quarterback Isaiah White offers to train Cam at his isolated compound. But Cam’s training and Isaiah’s charisma soon begin to curdle into something darker, which may cost Cam more than he ever bargained for.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Him’?

    • Marlon Wayans as Isaiah White
    • Tyriq Withers as Cameron Cade
    • Julia Fox as Elsie White
    • Tim Heidecker as Tom
    • Jim Jefferies as Marco
    • Naomi Grossman as Marjorie
    • Maurice Greene as Malek
    • Akeem ‘Guapdad 4000’ Hayes as Murph
    • Tierra Whack as Adrienne
    • Don Benjamin as Cam Sr.
    (L to R) Director Justin Tipping, Tyriq Withers (as Cam), Producer Jordan Peele, and Marlon Wayans (as Isaiah) on the set of 'HIM', from Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Director Justin Tipping, Tyriq Withers (as Cam), Producer Jordan Peele, and Marlon Wayans (as Isaiah) on the set of ‘HIM’, from Universal Pictures.

    List of Films Directed Or Produced By Jordan Peele:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Him’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Jordan Peele Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Presence’

    Callina Liang as Chloe in 'Presence'. Photo: Neon.
    Callina Liang as Chloe in ‘Presence’. Photo: Neon.

    ‘Presence’ receives 6 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters on January 24th, ‘Presence’ is the latest film from Steven Soderbergh, who seemingly never stops wanting to play with format and style, and usually to interesting effect.

    While his new supernatural drama certainly has some elements to recommend it, what works about the movie does end up getting a little lost within his format-tinkering, the style somewhat overcoming the substance of the emotional, human story at its core.

    Related Article: Lucy Liu and Chris Sullivan Talk Steven Soderbergh’s ‘Presence’

    Will ‘Presence’ haunt your thoughts?

    Callina Liang as Chloe in 'Presence'. Photo: Neon.
    Callina Liang as Chloe in ‘Presence’. Photo: Neon.

    Soderbergh really does enjoy pushing boundaries, trying out different genres such as action or heist movie and seeing what he can do within the playground he assigns himself.

    For ‘Presence,’ the focus is seemingly on the likes of the ‘Paranormal Activity’ movies, supernatural stories with people at their core, though with a twist –– using the camera as main viewpoint, the drama here unfolds before the gaze of a spirit haunting a house that sees a new family move in.

    As they bicker and deceive, we watch, initially passively until the entity decides to try and influence matters. And suffice to say, there are plenty of reasons to get involved, since bad decisions lead to life-threatening situations and head into areas we won’t spoil.

    Trouble is, with the main story effectively happening in front of our floating eyes, the connection with most of the characters feels remote, and its hard –– at least until the later stages –– to really empathize with much of the drama unfolding.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Callina Liang, Chris Sullivan, Eddy Maday, Lucy Liu and Julia Fox in 'Presence'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Callina Liang, Chris Sullivan, Eddy Maday, Lucy Liu and Julia Fox in ‘Presence’. Photo: Neon.

    Veteran writer David Koepp, who has some experience working with Soderbergh at this point (via the likes of pandemic era-thriller ‘Kimi’ and 2025 release ‘Black Bag,’ is also no stranger to supernatural themes.

    As both writer and director, he previously brought us ‘Stir of Echoes’ (coincidentally featuring a “Special Thanks” credit for Soderbergh, who presumably gave notes on the film as it was developed and then edited), in which a haunted Kevin Bacon sees visions of a missing girl.

    While that movie saw him adapting a Richard Matheson story, ‘Presence’ is an original work from Koepp, albeit one that was clearly written to satisfy Soderbergh’s wish to look at viewpoint and family from a different angle.

    The trouble is, as mentioned above, it also sacrifices connection –– when the technical prowess and experimentation with style subsumes relatability with the characters, that distance makes the film less than the sum of its parts. And the storylines contained within are fairly rote; you’ll likely see where the one truly satisfying plot is going from early on.

    As director (plus cinematographer and editor), Soderbergh is someone who has plenty of skill and talent to bring to bear, but you do sometimes wonder if he gets lost in the joy of experimentation and forgets to craft a truly rounded project. Still, no one should reject him for trying something different.

    ‘Presence’: Performances

    As has been discussed, the performances here, barring one that stands out, are a little limited in terms of their impact.

    Callina Liang as Chloe

    Callina Liang stars in director Steven Soderbergh's 'Presence'.
    Callina Liang stars in director Steven Soderbergh’s ‘Presence’.

    Liang, a relative newcomer with some TV credits and a couple of other movies to her name, is tasked with carrying the emotional heavy load here. As the haunted Chloe (literally), grieving the death of her friend and dealing with the fact that her mother is focused almost entirely on her athlete brother, Liang brins nuance and pain to the role.

    And when things become more dangerous for her down the line, she is one of the few performers who invites you into the story, her expressive face conveying more than the script.

    Lucy Liu as Rebecca

    Lucy Liu stars in director Steven Soderbergh's 'Presence'.
    Lucy Liu stars in director Steven Soderbergh’s ‘Presence’.

    The matriarch of the family, Liu’s Rebecca is a seemingly complicated person who us in some trouble at work, but like most of the family, she’s largely a cipher, driving the plot along and saddled with a storyline that sometimes dips into very familiar squabbling parent syndrome.

    Chris Sullivan as Chris

    Chris Sullivan stars in director Steven Soderbergh's 'Presence'.
    Chris Sullivan stars in director Steven Soderbergh’s ‘Presence’.

    Sullivan is good at bringing world-weariness and unease to his character, Rebecca’s husband and the one person in the family who really seems to connect with Chloe. Sullivan does what he can with a role that, like the others, is at times underwritten.

    Eddy Maday as Tyler

    Eddy Maday stars in director Steven Soderbergh's 'Presence'.
    Eddy Maday stars in director Steven Soderbergh’s ‘Presence’.

    As the eldest child of the family a swimmer with ambition and ego, Maday makes a solid acting debut, bringing the right levels of petulance and a loaded mean streak to the role.

    Like Liang, he’s also entirely believable as a teenager used to getting their own way and also seeking friendship and acceptance in the world.

    West Mulholland as Ryan

    West Mulholland stars in director Steven Soderbergh's 'Presence'.
    West Mulholland stars in director Steven Soderbergh’s ‘Presence’.

    Ryan is the chaotic element of the movie; though we won’t exactly say how –– he’s Tyler’s new friend from school and shows a lustful interest in Chloe, one she initially indulges. Mulholland is solid in the part, particularly when called up to show the character’s more dangerous side.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Chris Sullivan and Lucy Liu in 'Presence'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Chris Sullivan and Lucy Liu in ‘Presence’. Photo: Neon.

    If there’s one movie that ‘Presence’ puts me in mind of, it’s Robert Zemeckis’ recent effort ‘Here,’ whose gimmick was locking down the camera to show one room through decades and even millennia of time.

    While Soderbergh’s effort is more successful, it still doesn’t feel like a complete movie, and at times like a film school project that is on the way to working but hasn’t quite gotten to that point. A skimpy 85-minute running time means you’ll never be bored, but it also tries to cram in several different character arcs and only really has time for one of them to become satisfying.

    A sudden surprise near the end as the revelation occurs can’t compensate for what is an experiment that is noble yet crucially flawed.

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    What is the plot of ‘Presence’?

    A family moves into a suburban house and becomes convinced they’re not alone.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Presence’?

    • Lucy Liu as Rebecca
    • Julia Fox as Cece
    • Chris Sullivan as Chris
    • Callina Liang as Chloe
    • Lucas Papaelias as Carl
    • West Mulholland as Ryan
    • Eddy Maday as Tyler
    Lucy Liu in 'Presence'. Photo: Neon.
    Lucy Liu in ‘Presence’. Photo: Neon.

    List of Steven Soderbergh Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Presence’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Steven Soderbergh Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Presence’ Interview: Lucy Liu and Chris Sullivan

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    Opening in theaters on January 24th is the new supernatural thriller ‘Presence’, which was written by David Koepp (‘Jurassic Park’) and directed by Oscar-winner Steven Soderbergh (‘Traffic’ and ‘The Limey’).

    Shot entirely in the first-person perspective, the movie stars Lucy Liu (‘Kill Bill: Volume 1’), Chris Sullivan (‘This Is Us’), Julia Fox (‘Uncut Gems’), Callina Liang (‘Bad Genius’), West Mulholland (‘Dark Harvest’), and Eddy Maday.

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance’

    (L to R) Lucy Liu and Chris Sullivan star in 'Presence'.
    (L to R) Lucy Liu and Chris Sullivan star in ‘Presence’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Lucy Liu and Chris Sullivan about their work on ‘Presence’, collaborating with director Steven Soderbergh on set, navigating shooting from a first-person perspective, and Liu’s character’s different relationship with her children.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Liu, Sullivan, Callina Liang, West Mulholland, and Eddy Maday.

    Lucy Liu in 'Presence'. Photo: Neon.
    Lucy Liu in ‘Presence’. Photo: Neon.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Lucy, what was it like working with Steven Soderbergh on this film, particularly in the style in which he was shooting from the first-person perspective? And as an actor, did you have to make any adjustments to work in that way?

    Lucy Liu: It was really a dream come true working with Steven and working in this way, in this experimental fashion with this one camera being the audience and the presence was wonderful. Because I think I would prefer working with him in this manner over a traditional style of filmmaking, because it was taking a chance on something new and seeing how it worked. That’s exciting to me, because it just makes it that much more fun and interesting that you’re taking a risk with somebody who you find to be such an inspiration in that world of cinema.

    (L to R) Chris Sullivan and Lucy Liu in 'Presence'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Chris Sullivan and Lucy Liu in ‘Presence’. Photo: Neon.

    MF: Chris, what was your experience like working with Steven Soderbergh, and because of the way he shot it, did you feel like the camera was another character on set?

    Chris Sullivan: Yeah, it was a unique realization. Even reading the script, I was like, okay, this is how this is going to work. Then getting on set, it wasn’t even so much the one camera, it was the type of lens that he used, which was this 14mm super wide lens. Just realizing that no matter where you are, you’re just always on camera. It took me the first day of shooting to figure out, “Okay, this is how this is going to work. Okay, we can do this”. Because even on that first day, Steven was like, “I’m not sure if this is going to work, so I guess we’ll find out.” Which was kind of thrilling, because you knew you were in the most capable hands. If anybody was going to try this and it was going to work, Steven Soderbergh was going to make it work, and he has, and it’s one of the scariest movies that’s been released in a long time. So, there you go. We’re not in Kansas anymore, baby!

    Callina Liang as Chloe in 'Presence'. Photo: Neon.
    Callina Liang as Chloe in ‘Presence’. Photo: Neon.

    MF: Finally, Lucy, Rebecca has a very different relationship with her son than she has with her daughter. Can you talk about that and what it says about the character?

    LL: I think the character is not concerned with what other people think about her. I think she is very particular about her affection towards her son. That dialogue that she has with him is almost like the horror movie itself to me, that she really is dislocated so much from her daughter and from her husband, frankly. I think the dynamic of their family and their dysfunction is what is kind of fascinating and at the same time terrifying.

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    What is the plot of ‘Presence’?

    A family moves into a suburban house and becomes convinced they’re not alone.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Presence’?

    • Lucy Liu as Rebecca
    • Julia Fox as Cece
    • Chris Sullivan as Chris
    • Callina Liang as Chloe
    • Lucas Papaelias as Carl
    • West Mulholland as Ryan
    • Eddy Maday as Tyler
    (L to R) Callina Liang, Chris Sullivan, Eddy Maday, Lucy Liu and Julia Fox in 'Presence'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Callina Liang, Chris Sullivan, Eddy Maday, Lucy Liu and Julia Fox in ‘Presence’. Photo: Neon.

    List of Steven Soderbergh Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Presence’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Steven Soderbergh Movies on Amazon

     

  • Don Cheadle, Jon Hamm, more stars talk ‘No Sudden Move’

    Don Cheadle, Jon Hamm, more stars talk ‘No Sudden Move’

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    No Sudden Move,’ Steven Soderbergh‘s new crime thriller, is set in Detroit in 1954, and the film boasts a very impressive cast. Don Cheadle, Benecio Del Toro, and Kieran Culkin play a trio of hoods, Brendan Fraser plays the man that put the trio together, and David Harbour, Amy Seimetz, and Noah Jupe play the family that the hoods take hostage. Bill Duke and Ray Liotta play crime lords, and Jon Hamm plays the detective trying to get to the bottom of it all. The cast of the movie took some time to tell us about their characters and the movie’s twists and turns.

    Don Cheadle and Benecio Del Toro talk about working with director Steven Soderbergh.


    Moviefone: Don, did you see the tension in the film when you signed on?


    Don Cheadle:
    Yeah, I really enjoyed the script that Ed Solomon wrote. I thought it was really good. And when I knew Benicio was in, it was a no-brainer to say yes, and we had a lot of fun. It was pretty intense working under those conditions. We were one of the first projects to come back with the COVID protocols and Steven wrote the protocols for the DGA. So we felt like we were in good hands with him, but it was, yeah, the whole thing was an experience and shooting in Detroit and these locations that are still there, this great architecture in these cars and then the costumes. It was just great.

    MF: Benecio, how do you describe these two characters, these two guys, and what they do and who they are?

    Benicio Del Toro: Well, I think they are two criminals that come together and they just go on this journey to, led by greed, or so we think, and then we go on this roller coaster of all kinds of situations that happens to them, and the betrayals that happen and all that stuff. I think this movie’s a lot of fun that way.

    Cheadle: No doubt.

    MF: I just talked to Ray Liotta and he summed it up by saying, “Everybody is scummy,” and I thought that was kind of perfect. What I really love too, Don, is I feel like as an audience member, I was finding out things and discovering things along with the characters.

    Cheadle: Yeah. That’s some of the fun of this, I think, is that you don’t really get ahead of it. You don’t know what’s going to happen and things keep being revealed along the way. People’s motivations are shifting and allegiances that you think are one way go the other way. And I think between David and Benicio’s and my character, we’re all on these separate journeys that somehow come together, which is really a testament to the script and Steven.

    Del Toro: Yeah. Yeah.

    MF: Benicio, what is it about Steven Soderbergh, or a Soderbergh production?

    Del Toro: I tell you what, he gets you home early while you’re shooting on the movie. We finish about 10 days early. I think he knows exactly what he wants.

    Cheadle: Yeah.

    Del Toro: He knows that story back and forth better than anyone on the set. And he’s just a 100% there while you’re shooting. He’s like a machine. And the minute I knew that Don Cheadle and Steven Soderbergh were attached to the project, Steven called me up and I said, “I’m in. I don’t have to read it.” It was that simple for me. So I’m just happy that the movie also is working.

    MF: It worked so well, and I was thinking about the name of the movie, No Sudden Move, because as I was watching it, when any of you guys made a move, I was like, “Oh, well, that’s not good. That door opening, that’s not good.”

    Cheadle: Right.

    MF: It’s literally someone turned their head and I was like, “Oh, what’s about to happen next?” I mean, it was a fun little ride.

    Cheadle: Yeah. The movie was renamed during production because the other name that it had that we won’t even bring up was used by another movie. So Steven just kind of came up with “No Sudden Move.” And he said before he even kind of told us that he was on the set and the guy drove by in a car and said, “What’s this movie?” And he said, “It’s called No Sudden Move.” And the guy said, “Sounds like a thriller.” And he went, “Okay, that title works.”

    MF: Thank you to that guy for driving by and saying that.

    Del Toro: Yeah. That’s right.

    MF: I also liked the idea in your work that you guys do, you really have to trust your director and editors and all that, but the world that these guys live in the characters, there’s no trust.

    Cheadle: No trust. Yeah. Nobody trusts anybody. Everybody’s waiting for the person next to them to cut their legs out from under him, which is great. I mean, it’s cool for the audience, I think, to try to figure out who’s scummier than the last, and who’s going to come out on top.

    Del Toro: Right.

    Cheadle: And I think the film holds that tension for the whole time.


    Bill Duke and Brendan Fraser discuss how the movie keeps the audience guessing.

    MF: I can’t remember the last time I cussed this much watching a movie because every time something happened, because it was really a ride. Did you guys have that kind of same experience being in the movie, Bill?

    Bill Duke: Well, working with the actors that we worked with, was a wonderful experience. And following the script, it’s like, it’s one thing to memorize your lines, but when you’re in a scene with Don Cheadles of the world and the Matt Damons et cetera, and all the actors, it was like a very, very, very insightful, wonderful experience. Put it that way.

    MF: Brendan, and the same for you, kind of just riding the moment?

    Brendan Fraser: I knew it would be exciting. It’s a multi-layered screenplay with plenty of twists and turns. It’ll keep you guessing. It’s a story of redemption in many ways. Although we see these anti-heroes that populate the screen and everyone gets what they deserve by stories. And I felt great knowing that this is a genre that Steven Soderbergh absolutely excels with. And I guess the excitement just came mostly from seeing the film in its entirety and going, wow, that’s the product that you get when you work with the best that there is in the business. It was exciting.

    MF: I really enjoyed, as a member of the audience, that I felt like I was finding out stuff, as you guys were founding out, or the characters, like we were all in it together.

    Duke: And that’s not easy to do, because the thing is, as I said before, he has the ability to stay ahead of the audience, because once the audience catches up, you’re done. Right? And he doesn’t do it in a corny way. I mean, he just hooks you and just takes you through his journey until the end. And sometimes there’s not an end-to-end, but it’s the end of the movie, but there’re other things that’s why this movie didn’t have an end-end. Don walks off, right? But what is he walking off into? Nobody knows. He doesn’t even know really.

    Fraser: And he entered the world of this film with a walk too. So it really completes his journey. And as the credits roll, we learned that the overriding theme of what we’ve seen and how exciting it is, and it is. Prior to that, there’s some truth to what really happened in those days, with regard to what the prize is in this film that everyone’s chasing up. And they’re all chasing something different. Exactly. And that’s really the technology behind the catalytic converter, which is, was suppressed by the car companies for some 25 years, until it was mandated by law, that this technology is put into cars so that we can all breathe cleaner air. And it leaves you wondering, why couldn’t we have done this sooner? Well, there’s some very powerful forces of greed at work in our world. And hopefully we can move on from there. I don’t know. That’s the answer. That’s the takeaway I get from it.

    MF: Quickly tell me like who your characters are. Brendan, who is Jones?

    Fraser: Doug Jones likely fought in the war. He survived it. I don’t think he participated in a way that… I just think he probably got up to no good during that time. Came back to America and didn’t get with society and the program and decided that a life of crime was his. He’s working his way up the management chain of organized crime. I found it helpful to understand the character as being rotten to the core by wearing false teeth that were really nasty. He gets his, just like everybody else. So I’m not telling tales out of school.

    MF: And Bill for you is, is your character just a bad-ass boss?

    Duke: No, he is part of a tradition. I think his family, his father was an O.G. and I think his father’s father, maybe it was what they taught him was about power. In power, you don’t talk power. You be power. As I said before, if I know where your kids go to school and where you asleep, I’m going to ask you a question. And I just expect an honest answer, because you’ll know if you lie to me, there’ll be consequences.


    Amy Seimetz and Frankie Shaw share their experiences making the movie.

    Moviefone: Frankie, let’s talk about life on the set. What is life on a Steven Soderbergh set like? What was that experience?

    Frankie Shaw: So he’s super collaborative. He makes you feel like you’re a genius and he knows exactly what he wants, and has the whole movie in his head already. And there’s no fat on it, so he just shoots what he needs, because he’s going to edit later that day. And yeah, it’s like a really fun vibe. He’s serious and he’s jokey. And he’s just like maybe the smartest person we’ve probably ever met.

    MF: Well, that’s a nice review of a guy. I was talking about this movie, how, what you guys do, you trust your director, you trust your sound people and your editors, but this world that we’re living in, there’s no trust for anyone in any of these characters. I didn’t trust anyone from the very beginning, and that helped me throughout the entire movie.

    Amy Seimetz: I think that’s part of the fun and part of, with the twists and turns, it’s like, you’re never, in the way that he’s shooting it, even just watching it again and also being on set and seeing how he framed everything. Everything’s like a little off-kilter, so you never feel completely grounded. And that goes for with the characters too. You can’t trust, you’re never on firm grounding with any of the characters.

    MF: Yeah, Frankie, I thought the name of the movie was perfect because as a viewer, as an audience member, anytime anyone in the film made a sudden move, or any kind of move, I was like, well, that’s a bad sign. Like if a door opened, I was like, that’s a bad sign. Someone looked to the left. I was like, what’s he looking at?

    Shaw: Yeah, there wasn’t a lot of reason for these characters to trust. So then they became untrustworthy, I felt like. But if you really go, and all the actors were so incredible. And I feel like did such a good job bringing in the history, their history to the current moment of where they were at. And so, I don’t know, even through their deep untrustworthiness, you really felt for them.

    Jon Hamm and Noah Jupe talk about the complex plot.

    Moviefone: Jon, my gift and curse in life is that I can usually tell where a movie is going. I’m like, I see what’s happening here. This movie proved me wrong time and time again in the best way possible. Did you see that when you guys first signed on?

    Jon Hamm: It’s baked into the script, for sure. The complexity is there on purpose and Ed Solomon is a phenomenal writer and set out to write a very twisty and turny heist movie, essentially about the catalytic converter, which on its face sounds like a ridiculous idea, but is actually, especially because it’s based on true events and reality, it’s an ambitious story to tell, and it’s a very compelling story. Cause it wraps up so much about American history and racial politics and how the car culture basically ruined neighborhoods in inner cities that were low income and majority minority neighborhoods. And this is all part of history that kind of got literally bulldozed, but it should not be forgotten.

    MF: Noah, your character is one of the few people I trusted in this movie. How did you find him? What did you make of Matthew?

    Noah Jupe: I really liked Matthew. I thought he was really interesting. I connected with him a lot. I feel like in that situation, I had actually hoped I would also do the same thing as he did. I thought it was very strong. He knew he could read a person very well. I felt like he knew exactly who to trust and when to trust them, and who he couldn’t quite get a handle on. And for example, his relationship with Don’s character is very interesting. Because I think by the end of the meeting, I think they always do trust each other a little bit. And so it’s very interesting to explore that in the scenes and yeah. Honestly, I just love playing Matthew.

    MF: Jon, what was life like on a Steven Soderbergh set? What is that experience?

    Hamm: You feel very taken care of. I will say that, especially given the fact that we were shooting this in October-November of last year, so pretty deep into the pandemic situation in Michigan, but you definitely feel there was a very strong hand on the tiller, so you know that there’s a plan for the day, there’s a plan in case something goes wrong, everything is planned out, and you get your work done, and then you go home. And we were all staying in the same hotel. We were in a bubble, so to speak. So, we all got to go home early and have dinner like adults. And it was very much a professionally run set. And then to be able to be a part of something that’s so creatively ambitious and beautifully crafted was kind of a bonus.


    Lastly, Ray Liotta and Julia Fox discuss their married character’s relationship.

    Moviefone: I don’t know if this is a direct reflection of the movie, but I no longer trust either one of you. That’s kind of the world we’re living in. Ray, what was it about this whole concept that made you want to sign on?

    Ray Liotta: Well, basically I liked the script, and to work with Steven. I’d worked with Don before, not Benicio, which I wanted to do. So, the combination of things made me… Yeah, I was just in and out really quick, but I just wanted to do it.

    MF: Julia, this whole concept of we can’t trust one person. You literally can’t trust the next guy. Did you see that in the script originally when you first read it, or did it kind of open itself up as you guys shot the film?

    Julia Fox: It definitely opened itself up, I think. I did not see what I did coming at all. But I totally understood it, and I sympathized with her, and I think being a woman in the forties must’ve been really tough, and she wanted to level the playing field. So, I loved her and when I read her. I said, “this is me, I can do this, I have to do this, I was born to do this,” and I did.

    MF: Let’s talk about their relationship, then. This is a couple, you two play a couple? But it’s complicated, is it not?

    Liotta: Yeah. No question. I think we probably got married young, and I was doing the stuff that I do, and she ends up cheating on me. And so, it was just interesting.

    Fox: You deserved it, though. (Laughing)

    MF: Julia, how did you find the relationship? What did you make of it?

    Fox: Yeah, it just seemed like what Ray said, that back in those days, a woman’s worth was dictated by who she’s married to. And if you’re not married, you’re worthless. And if you… You know what I mean? And, I think it was that same thing. It was kind of out of opportunity, out of convenience. I’m sure maybe there was love or lust there at some point, but eventually love is not enough. Money comes then, and that’s the overpowering force, I think.

    And the theme of the root of this whole movie, is just the greed and desire for more, and it’s not enough. Keep pushing more, and more, and more, and never satisfied. And then eventually the house of cards falls.

    MF: I just watched the movie last night, Ray, and I’m still in knots. Did you get a sense of that when you guys were shooting? That this was going to be so tension filled?

    Liotta: Well, you don’t really know how they’re going to put it together, but each scene has, for lack of better words, a rhythm within itself in the way that it’s written. Yeah, but the stakes are intense, and I know Benicio, and I don’t know he’s fooling around with my wife. No, I do eventually figure it out, because I confront him.

    So, you never know how they’re going to put it together. It’s more Steven and the editors, with the music, and the way it’s cut that makes it move along.

    MF: I bet that’s interesting, though, because you do have to trust your director. You have to trust everyone on the crew. You have to trust your editors. And then this world that the movie encompasses is a world where no one trusts anyone else, there’s no trust at all.

    Liotta: Yeah. Not at all. Everyone’s kind of scummy.

    ‘No Sudden Move’ is now streaming on HBO Max.

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