Tag: julia-roberts

  • Movie Review: ‘After The Hunt’

    (L to R) Ayo Edebiri as Maggie and Julia Roberts as Alma in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Ayo Edebiri as Maggie and Julia Roberts as Alma in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    In limited release now and expanding October 17 is ‘After The Hunt,’ directed by Luca Guadagnino and starring Julia Roberts, Andrew Garfield, Ayo Edebiri, Michael Stuhlbarg, Chloë Sevigny, and Lío Mehiel.

    C0AZzX9S4IqB9OAprVa6y

    Related Article: George Clooney Says ‘Ocean’s 14’ Budget is ‘Approved’; to Shoot in 2026

    Initial Thoughts

    (L to R) Andrew Garfield as Hank and Julia Roberts as Alma in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Andrew Garfield as Hank and Julia Roberts as Alma in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Luca Guadagnino’s ‘Challengers’ was one of our favorite movies of 2024, which makes it strange to say that ‘After The Hunt’ might end up on our list of the worst films of 2025. This muddled drama, set in the elite halls of academia at Yale, focuses on a ‘he said/she said’ situation that is ripped right out of the headlines – of 2017, when #MeToo was dominating the cultural conversation.

    But while the topic is certainly just as relevant and important now as it was a few years ago, ‘After The Hunt’ doesn’t add anything interesting to the conversation. Instead, Nora Garrett’s screenplay pushes a bunch of increasingly unlikable characters around on a chessboard of vagueness masquerading as ambiguity, while Guadagnino shoots it as if he’s not looking through the lens half the time. It’s a disappointingly sloppy effort in which even the blaring, burping score – by the usually spot-on Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross – sounds off.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Ayo Edebiri, director Luca Guadagnino and Julia Roberts on the set of 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Ayo Edebiri, director Luca Guadagnino and Julia Roberts on the set of ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    ‘After The Hunt’ kicks off with a credit sequence that immediately draws attention to itself by being done in the same font, with the same layout, that Woody Allen has used for his films for 50 years. Does Guadagnino see his film as a homage to some of Allen’s upper-class social dramas? Is he trolling Allen or Allen’s cancellation from the culture at large? It’s hard to tell.

    Either way, the film opens during a party being given by Yale assistant philosophy professor Alma Imhoff (Julia Roberts) and her psychiatrist husband Frederick (Michael Stuhlbarg) for faculty and student friends, with Alma clearly the center of attention for fellow professor Hank Gibson (Andrew Garfield) and pupil Maggie Resnick (Ayo Edebiri). After a spirited if somewhat caustic night of drinking and long-winded debate, Hank escorts Maggie home – and Maggie turns up outside Alma’s door the next day, saying that he assaulted her.

    Maggie seems shocked when Alma doesn’t quite provide the full-throated support she expected, given Alma’s ‘history’ – a point we’ll go back to over and over again until it eventually comes out – and Hank later gives Alma (who is also his former lover, to the surprise of no one watching) his side of the story: that he called out Maggie – who’s gay, Black, and lives with a trans lawyer, just to make sure all the boxes are checked — for plagiarism on a paper and this is her way of getting revenge.

    (L to R) Director Luca Guadagnino and actor Julia Roberts on the set of 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Director Luca Guadagnino and actor Julia Roberts on the set of ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    This places the remote, chilly, deeply private Alma squarely in the middle of a classic ‘believe women’ scenario – except it doesn’t quite seem like she does. But she’s also not squarely in Hank’s corner either. And none of them seem on the level about what really happened or how they feel about it. Alma and Hank are both competing for a tenured slot, by the way, and Alma is occasionally gripped by intense stomach pains. The relentless conniving, contriving, and jockeying on all sides only seem to prove that everyone’s a jerk, with no moral compass, and that we all basically suck at being decent human beings.

    At least that’s the impression one walks out of ‘After The Hunt’ with, which drives home its point by being one of the more irritating films to watch in recent memory. Guadagnino’s camera droops inexplicably from the actors’ faces to their hands while they’re talking, as if looking for some secret code. Some shots are done in extreme close-up, with the actor talking directly into the camera – a jarring and purposeless trick in this scenario. The whole film feels airless, grimy, and ugly – even Guadagnino’s other 2024 movie, ‘Queer,’ was better visually than this.

    Is it all supposed to mean something, or is Guadagnino just drawing attention to the fact that this is – like the stories that Alma, Maggie, and Hank all may or may not construct about themselves – a fictional narrative? We even hear the director say “Cut!” at the very end of the film, suggesting that he’s not trying to get at any real psychological, social, or emotional truth. And the movie doesn’t feel like that either.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Michael Stuhlbarg and Julia Roberts stars in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Michael Stuhlbarg and Julia Roberts stars in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    Despite the disjointed script and characters they’re given to work with, Julia Roberts and Andrew Garfield do fine work here. Roberts gives a performance that is both mysterious and somehow intimate, and effectively conveys Alma’s increasing terror as her carefully woven world begins to unravel around her. Garfield is similarly nuanced, making Hank both somehow sympathetic and yet totally the kind of arrogant, brash, rock-star academic who thinks he floats above the rules.

    The movie’s secret weapon may be Michael Stuhlbarg, who exhibits patience, wariness, exasperation, and his own quirky, embittered set of values as Frederik – although he can be an intrusive boor with the best of them as well. The weakest link here is the gifted comedian Edebiri, who exhibits flashes of Maggie’s inner rage and cynicism, but who can no more carry this weighty material than she could the flat ‘Opus’ from earlier this year (the one in which John Malkovich attempted to play a rock god).

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Andrew Garfield as Hank and Julia Roberts as Alma in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Andrew Garfield as Hank and Julia Roberts as Alma in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    From time to time in ‘After The Hunt,’ Guadagnino puts a loudly ticking clock on the soundtrack as just another signifier that something dreadfully urgent and important is happening. But like everything else in the film, it’s instead merely annoying. And what exactly is happening anyway? Is the film indicting cancel culture, the #MeToo movement itself, or the insular bubble of academic life?

    It’s all too incoherent to get a straight answer, and no one seems to know (except maybe Stuhlbarg) whether to play this as serious drama or histrionic soap opera. Either way, ‘After The Hunt’ is an empty mess that tries to say too much about a lot of different topics, and ends up saying nothing at all.

    ‘After The Hunt’ receives a score of 40 out of 100.

    Julia Roberts stars as Alma in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    Julia Roberts stars as Alma in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    What is the plot of ‘After The Hunt’?

    A college professor is forced to grapple with her own secretive past after one of her colleagues is faced with a serious accusation.

    Who is in the cast of ‘After The Hunt’?

    Julia Roberts as Alma Imhoff
    Ayo Edebiri as Margaret “Maggie” Resnick
    Andrew Garfield as Henrik “Hank” Gibson
    Michael Stuhlbarg as Frederik Imhoff
    Chloë Sevigny as Dr. Kim Sayers
    Lío Mehiel as Alex

    (L to R) Julia Roberts as Alma, Michael Stuhlbarg as Frederik and Chloë Sevigny as Dr. Kim Sayers in 'After the Hunt', from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Julia Roberts as Alma, Michael Stuhlbarg as Frederik and Chloë Sevigny as Dr. Kim Sayers in ‘After the Hunt’, from Amazon MGM Studios. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios. © 2025 Amazon Content Services LLC. All Rights Reserved.

    List of Luca Guadagnino Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘After The Hunt’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Luca Guadagnino Movies on Amazon

    RCitUbJz
  • Julia Roberts and More Likely Returning for ‘Ocean’s 14’

    (L to R) George Clooney, Julia Roberts and Brad Pitt. Photo: Warner Bros.
    (L to R) George Clooney, Julia Roberts and Brad Pitt. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Preview:

    • George Clooney says ‘Ocean’s 14’ budget has been approved.
    • The movie, with director David Leitch attached, should be shooting next year.
    • Stars Julia Roberts, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon and Don Cheadle are all likely to return.

    It has been years since we last saw the heist-happy crew of the ‘Ocean’s’ movies. There has been chatter about an ‘Ocean’s 14’ in recent years, and things are clearly moving forward. ‘The Fall Guy’s David Leitch was reported as in talks to direct in January, and now, per star/producer George Clooney says that it’s looking good for production in 2026.

    oUblYF7BYjUMm9SXKoN1J7

    This is what Clooney told E! News about the new development:

    “We just got the budget approved at Warner Bros. and we’re trying to set up. It’s just scheduling, so it’s just setting a start date for us. Probably start in about nine or 10 months, shooting.”

    Related Article: ‘Bullet Train’ and ‘The Fall Guy’ Director in Talks to Roll the Dice on ‘Ocean’s Fourteen’

    What has happened with the ‘Ocean’s’ movies?

    The cast of 2001's 'Ocean's Eleven'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    The cast of 2001’s ‘Ocean’s Eleven’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    The original ‘Ocean’s’ trilogy, directed by Steven Soderbergh, launched in 2001 with ‘Ocean’s Eleven,’ a critical favorite and a commercial hit with just over $450 million at the worldwide box office.

    The franchise continued with 2004’s ‘Ocean’s Twelve’ ($362 million) and 2007’s ‘Ocean’s Thirteen’ ($311 million).

    A spinoff, 2018’s ‘Ocean’s 8,’ starred Sandra Bullock as the sister of Clooney’s Danny Ocean. The movie hit the $297 million mark worldwide.

    As for the new movie, Clooney has previously described the tone of the movie as akin to Martin Brest’s 1979 heist comedy ‘Going in Style’.

    Who will show up for ‘Ocean’s 14’?

    George Clooney in 'Ocean's Eleven'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    George Clooney in ‘Ocean’s Eleven’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    In terms of who from the sprawling ‘Ocean’s ensemble might be back, let’s throw it back to Clooney, shall we?

    “Yeah, Brad [Pitt], Matt [Damon], Don [Cheadle] and Julia [Roberts]. I had dinner last night with Julia. They’re all still really dear friends. And so, the chance to work together would be fun.”

    What else is happening in the ‘Ocean’s’ world?

    'Barbie' CinemaCon 2023 Presentation and Press Line, April 25th. Photos By Eric Charbonneau.
    ‘Barbie’ CinemaCon 2023 Presentation and Press Line, April 25th. Photos By Eric

    Along with the new sequel for the main crew, a prequel, set in 1960s Europe, is also in development.

    That one has Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling attached to star, with Lee Isaac Chung on board to direct.

    Other Movies in the ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Ocean’s Eleven’ Movies On Amazon

    uSsyZPBU
  • ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’ Sequel in Development

    (L to R) Julia Roberts and Rupert Everett in 'My Best Friend's Wedding'. Photo: TriStar Pictures.
    (L to R) Julia Roberts and Rupert Everett in ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’. Photo: TriStar Pictures.

    Preview:

    • Celine Song is writing a ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’ sequel.
    • Sony is backing the new movie.
    • There is no word yet if original cast members Julia Roberts or Rupert Everett will return.

    Though the company hasn’t exactly had the best luck dusting off its back catalogue for sequel treatment –– neither ‘Karate Kid: Legends’ nor especially ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer’ have set the box office aflame or won over legions of new fans –– that, apparently isn’t stopping Sony.

    According to Collider, Celine Song, the acclaimed writer/director behind ‘Past Lives’ (which was nominated for two Oscars) and this year’s ‘Materialists’, has been hired to work on script for a sequel to 1997 romantic comedy ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’.

    4123

    The movie, which starred the likes of Julia Roberts, Dermot Mulroney, Cameron Diaz and Rupert Everett, was directed by P.J. Hogan and was a hit for the studio, earning almost $300 million on a $38 million budget.

    It’s also something that, if the starry cast can be tempted back, feels worthy of a follow-up.

    Related Article: ‘Killing Mary Sue’ Actor Dermot Mulroney Talks Monologues and Madness

    What was the story of ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’?

    (L to R) Cameron Diaz, Dermot Mulroney and Julia Roberts in 'My Best Friend's Wedding'. Photo: TriStar Pictures.
    (L to R) Cameron Diaz, Dermot Mulroney and Julia Roberts in ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’. Photo: TriStar Pictures.

    The original starred Roberts as food critic Julianne Potter, who discovers that her longtime friend, Michael (Mulroney), is planning to get married to Kimmy Wallace (Diaz). The two, who had a relationship in college, had vowed to get hitched with each other if they each remained unmarried by the ripe old age of 28.

    Realizing she is in love, Jules plans to sabotage the event…

    ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’ has been remade several times in other countries, including Mexico and China.

    Song certainly seems like a solid choice to write this –– she’s proved she can channel romantic longing and adult relationships, and would have a good take on where the characters are now.

    What has the cast said about progress on a sequel?

    (L to R) Dermot Mulroney, Julia Roberts in 'My Best Friend's Wedding'. Photo: TriStar Pictures.
    (L to R) Dermot Mulroney, Julia Roberts in ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’. Photo: TriStar Pictures.

    Mulroney, while making the promotional rounds for one of his latest projects, Netflix series ‘The Hunting Wives’ teased what he’s heard in an interview with the New York Post:

    “I know nothing about it. Last I heard, quote, lawyers were talking, unquote.”

    So… yes, hardly the biggest update, but Song’s hiring surely points to the studio looking to propose something.

    When will the ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’ sequel be in theaters?

    That’s tough to answer at this point –– with Song only just starting work on a script, no director attached and deals yet to be locked in with cast old or new, a release date is unlikely for now.

    And Sony may also look to see how other legacy sequels such as ‘Practical Magic 2’ perform before truly committing to this one.

    (L to R) Julia Roberts, Cameron Diaz in 'My Best Friend's Wedding'. Photo: TriStar Pictures.
    (L to R) Julia Roberts, Cameron Diaz in ‘My Best Friend’s Wedding’. Photo: TriStar Pictures.

     

    List of Movies and TV Shows Featuring Dermot Mulroney:

    Buy Dermot Mulroney Movies on Amazon

    hFEkLanU
  • Every Steven Soderbergh Movie, Ranked

    Every Steven Soderbergh Movie, Ranked

    Director Steven Soderbergh on the set of 'Black Bag', a Focus Features release. Credit: Claudette Barius/Focus Features © 2025 All Rights Reserved.
    Director Steven Soderbergh on the set of ‘Black Bag’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Claudette Barius/Focus Features © 2025 All Rights Reserved.

    Steven Soderbergh is one of the most prolific and celebrated filmmakers of his generation.

    The director’s breakthrough movie, 1989’s ‘sex, lies, and videotape‘, gave birth to the independent film movement of the 1990’s. Soderbergh would go on to helm such acclaimed films as ‘Out of Sight‘, ‘Erin Brockovich‘, and ‘Traffic‘, which earned him an Oscar for Best Director, before going on to make the popular ‘Ocean’s Eleven‘ and ‘Magic Mike‘ franchises.

    Soderbergh has two movies releasing in 2025, the experimental supernatural film ‘Presence‘, which opened in theaters on January 24th, and the spy thriller ‘Black Bag‘, which stars Michael Fassbender and Cate Blanchett, and is scheduled for release on March 14th.

    In honor of the upcoming release of ‘Black Bag’, Moviefone is counting down every film Steven Soderbergh has ever directed, including TV movies, documentaries, anthology films, and his latest.

    Let’s begin!


    38. ‘Full Frontal‘ (2002)

    (L to R) Blair Underwood and Julia Roberts in 'Full Frontal'. Photo: Miramax Films.
    (L to R) Blair Underwood and Julia Roberts in ‘Full Frontal’. Photo: Miramax Films.

    A day in the life of a group of men and women in Hollywood, in the hours leading up to a friend’s birthday party.

    11052

    37. ‘Bubble‘ (2006)

    Set against the backdrop of a decaying Midwestern town, a murder becomes the focal point of three people who work in a doll factory.

    23492

    36. ‘Unsane‘ (2018)

    A woman (Claire Foy) is involuntarily committed to a mental institution where she is confronted by her greatest fear.

    9Fy2qTbfjooY3TOmnvZLg

    35. ‘The Informant!‘ (2009)

    Matt Damon in 'The Informant!'. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.
    Matt Damon in ‘The Informant!’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    A rising star at agri-industry giant Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), Mark Whitacre (Matt Damon) suddenly turns whistleblower. Even as he exposes his company’s multi-national price-fixing conspiracy to the FBI, Whitacre envisions himself being hailed as a hero of the common man and handed a promotion.

    34202

    34. ‘And Everything Is Going Fine‘ (2010)

    From the first time he performed ‘Swimming to Cambodia‘ – the one-man account of his experience of making the 1984 film ‘The Killing Fields‘ – Spalding Gray made the art of the monologue his own. Drawing unstintingly on the most intimate aspects of his own life, his shows were vibrant, hilarious and moving. His death came tragically early, in 2004; this compilation of interview and performance footage nails his idiosyncratic and irreplaceable brilliance.

    10026315

    33. ‘Schizopolis‘ (1997)

    A man works for the unpleasant guru of a Scientology-like movement.

    3844

    32. ‘Let Them All Talk‘ (2020)

    A celebrated author (Meryl Streep) takes a journey with some old friends to have some fun and heal old wounds. Her nephew (Lucas Hedges) comes along to wrangle the ladies and finds himself involved with a young literary agent (Gemma Chan).

    Jw1UrjGNoD5urBkoKjOcK5

    31. ‘The Underneath‘ (1995)

    A recovering gambling addict (Peter Gallagher) attempts to reconcile with his family and friends but finds trouble and temptation when caught between feelings for his ex-wife (Alison Elliott) and her dangerous hoodlum boyfriend (William Fichtner).

    1317

    30. ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance‘ (2023)

    (L to R) Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza and Channing Tatum as Mike Lane in Warner Bros. Pictures musical comedy 'Magic Mike's Last Dance,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo: Claudette Barius. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Salma Hayek Pinault as Maxandra Mendoza and Channing Tatum as Mike Lane in Warner Bros. Pictures musical comedy ‘Magic Mike’s Last Dance,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo: Claudette Barius. Copyright: © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Mike Lane (Channing Tatum) takes to the stage again after a lengthy hiatus, following a business deal that went bust, leaving him broke and taking bartender gigs in Florida. For what he hopes will be one last hurrah, Mike heads to London with a wealthy socialite (Salma Hayek Pinault) who lures him with an offer he can’t refuse… and an agenda all her own. With everything on the line, once Mike discovers what she truly has in mind, will he—and the roster of hot new dancers he’ll have to whip into shape—be able to pull it off?

    JRZtLnMJ201cXpkoCOaJT7

    29. ‘Solaris‘ (2002)

    A troubled psychologist (George Clooney) is sent to investigate the crew of an isolated research station orbiting a bizarre planet.

    12772

    28. ‘Gray’s Anatomy‘ (1997)

    The film documents, in an often dramatic and humorous fashion, Spalding Gray’s investigations into alternative medicine for an eye condition (Macular pucker) he had developed.

    3615

    27. ‘King of the Hill‘ (1993)

    Based on the Depression-era bildungsroman memoir of writer A. E. Hotchner, the film follows the story of a boy (Jesse Bradford) struggling to survive on his own in a hotel in St. Louis after his mother is committed to a sanatorium with tuberculosis. His father, a German immigrant and traveling salesman working for the Hamilton Watch Company, is off on long trips from which the boy cannot be certain he will return.

    8307

    26. ‘The Girlfriend Experience‘ (2009)

    Chelsea (Sasha Grey) is an in-demand call girl whose $2,000 an hour price tag allows her to live in New York’s lap of luxury. Besides her beauty and sexual skill, Chelsea offers her clients companionship and conversation, or, as she dubs it, “the girlfriend experience.” With her successful business and a devoted, live-in boyfriend, Chelsea thinks she has it made… until a new client rocks her world.

    36559

    25. ‘Kimi‘ (2022)

    Zoë Kravitz in 'Kimi'. Photo: HBO Max.
    Zoë Kravitz in ‘Kimi’. Photo: HBO Max.

    A tech worker (Zoë Kravitz) with agoraphobia discovers recorded evidence of a violent crime but is met with resistance when she tries to report it. Seeking justice, she must do the thing she fears the most: leave her apartment.

    SgQr4HkPa0N86FKXxzKIv2

    24. ‘Eros‘ (2005)

    A three-part anthology film about love and sexuality: a menage-a-trois between a couple and a young woman on the coast of Tuscany; an advertising executive under enormous pressure at work, who, during visits to his psychiatrist, is pulled to delve into the possible reasons why his stress seems to manifest itself in a recurring erotic dream; and a story of unrequited love about a beautiful, 1960s high-end call girl in an impossible affair with her young tailor.

    21244

    23. ‘The Good German‘ (2007)

    An American journalist (George Clooney) arrives in Berlin just after the end of World War Two. He becomes involved in a murder mystery surrounding a dead GI who washes up at a lakeside mansion during the Potsdam negotiations between the Allied powers. Soon his investigation connects with his search for his married pre-war German lover (Cate Blanchett).

    26233

    22. ‘Che: Part Two‘ (2009)

    After the Cuban Revolution, Che (Benicio del Toro) is at the height of his fame and power. Then he disappears, re-emerging incognito in Bolivia, where he organizes a small group of Cuban comrades and Bolivian recruits to start the great Latin American Revolution. Through this story, we come to understand how Che remains a symbol of idealism and heroism that lives in the hearts of people around the world.

    28063

    21. ‘The Laundromat‘ (2019)

    When a widow (Meryl Streep) gets swindled out of insurance money, her search for answers leads to two cunning lawyers (Gary Oldman and Antonio Banderas) in Panama who hide cash for the superrich.

    cue8WeQ6qIjkzVBC83pDc4

    20. ‘High Flying Bird‘ (2019)

    André Holland in 'High Flying Bird'. Photo: Netflix.
    André Holland in ‘High Flying Bird’. Photo: Netflix.

    During an NBA lockout, a sports agent, Ray Burke (André Holland), presents his rookie client, Erick Scott (Melvin Gregg), with an intriguing and controversial business opportunity.

    32NjaTSmJF5NWYqexsmtU2

    19. ‘Side Effects‘ (2013)

    A woman (Rooney Mara) turns to prescription medication as a way of handling her anxiety concerning her husband’s (Channing Tatum) upcoming release from prison.

    57075

    18. ‘Che: Part One‘ (2009)

    The Argentine, begins as Che (Benicio del Toro) and a band of Cuban exiles (led by Fidel Castro (Demián Bichir)) reach the Cuban shore from Mexico in 1956. Within two years, they mobilized popular support and an army and toppled the U.S.-friendly regime of dictator Fulgencio Batista.

    20023930

    17. ‘Behind the Candelabra‘ (2013)

    Based on the autobiographical novel, the tempestuous 6-year relationship between Liberace (Michael Douglas) and his (much younger) lover, Scott Thorson (Matt Damon), is recounted.

    1414584

    16. ‘No Sudden Move‘ (2021)

    A group of criminals are brought together under mysterious circumstances and have to work together to uncover what’s really going on when their simple job goes completely sideways.

    KHUMCoAjjNdSSHE9222bA3

    15. ‘Presence‘ (2025)

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

    A family becomes convinced they are not alone after moving into their new home in the suburbs.

    qIVA8Hh5nYXEU3DBf95qJ1

    14. ‘Ocean’s Thirteen‘ (2007)

    Danny Ocean’s (George Clooney) team of criminals are back and composing a plan more personal than ever. When ruthless casino owner Willy Bank (Al Pacino) doublecrosses Reuben Tishkoff (Elliott Gould), causing a heart attack, Danny Ocean vows that he and his team will do anything to bring down Willy Bank along with everything he’s got. Even if it means asking for help from an enemy.

    24822

    13. ‘Kafka‘ (1991)

    Kafka (Jeremy Irons), an insurance worker gets embroiled in an underground group after a co-worker is murdered. The underground group is responsible for bombings all over town, attempting to thwart a secret organization that controls the major events in society. He eventually penetrates the secret organization and must confront them.

    20006977

    12. ‘Haywire‘ (2011)

    A black ops soldier (Gina Carano) seeks payback after she is betrayed and left for dead.

    10014848

    11. ‘Ocean’s Eleven‘ (2001)

    Less than 24 hours into his parole, charismatic thief Danny Ocean (George Clooney) is already rolling out his next plan: In one night, Danny’s hand-picked crew of specialists will attempt to steal more than $150 million from three Las Vegas casinos. But to score the cash, Danny risks his chances of reconciling with ex-wife, Tess (Julia Roberts).

    10060

    10. ‘Logan Lucky‘ (2017)

    (L to R) Channing Tatum, Riley Keough and Adam Driver in 'Lucky Logan'. Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R) Channing Tatum, Riley Keough and Adam Driver in ‘Lucky Logan’. Photo: Bleecker Street.

    Trying to reverse a family curse, brothers Jimmy (Channing Tatum) and Clyde Logan (Adam Driver) set out to execute an elaborate robbery during the legendary Coca-Cola 600 race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway.

    6sgLIIpOjUyPvSONt1DFP5

    9. ‘Magic Mike‘ (2012)

    Mike (Channing Tatum), an experienced stripper, takes a younger performer called The Kid (Alex Pettyfer) under his wing and schools him in the arts of partying, picking up women, and making easy money.

    10059666

    8. ‘Contagion‘ (2011)

    As an epidemic of a lethal airborne virus – that kills within days – rapidly grows, the worldwide medical community races to find a cure and control the panic that spreads faster than the virus itself.

    10038290

    7. ‘Ocean’s Twelve‘ (2004)

    Danny Ocean (George Clooney) reunites with his old flame and the rest of his merry band of thieves in carrying out three huge heists in Rome, Paris and Amsterdam – but a Europol agent is hot on their heels.

    16233

    6. ‘sex, lies, and videotape‘ (1989)

    Ann (Andie MacDowell), a frustrated wife, enters into counseling due to a troubled marriage. Unbeknownst to her, her husband John (Peter Gallagher) has begun an affair with her sister. When John’s best friend Graham (James Spader) arrives, his penchant for interviewing women about their sex lives forever changes John and Ann’s rocky marriage.

    2530

    5. ‘Black Bag‘ (2025)

    Michael Fassbender stars as George Woodhouse in director Steven Soderbergh's 'Black Bag', a Focus Features release. Credit: Claudette Barius/Focus Features © 2025 All Rights Reserved.
    Michael Fassbender stars as George Woodhouse in director Steven Soderbergh’s ‘Black Bag’, a Focus Features release. Credit: Claudette Barius/Focus Features © 2025 All Rights Reserved.

    ‘Black Bag’ is a gripping spy drama about legendary intelligence agents George Woodhouse (Michael Fassbender) and his beloved wife Kathryn (Cate Blanchett). When she is suspected of betraying the nation, George faces the ultimate test – loyalty to his marriage or his country.

    OiCJgRdzm4ogYvxRINmy97 fStNj0Es

    4. ‘Erin Brockovich‘ (2000)

    A twice-divorced mother (Julia Roberts) of three who sees an injustice, takes on the bad guy and wins — with a little help from her push-up bra. Erin goes to work for an attorney and comes across medical records describing illnesses clustered in one nearby town. She starts investigating and soon exposes a monumental cover-up.

    7234

    3. ‘Out of Sight‘ (1998)

    Meet Jack Foley (George Clooney), a smooth criminal who bends the law and is determined to make one last heist. Karen Sisco (Jennifer Lopez) is a federal marshal who chooses all the right moves … and all the wrong guys. Now they’re willing to risk it all to find out if there’s more between them than just the law.

    2932

    2. ‘Traffic‘ (2000)

    An exploration of the United States of America’s war on drugs from multiple perspectives. For the new head of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (Michael Douglas), the war becomes personal when he discovers his well-educated daughter (Erika Christensen) is abusing cocaine within their comfortable suburban home. In Mexico, a flawed, but noble policeman (Benicio del Toro) agrees to testify against a powerful general in league with a cartel, and in San Diego, a drug kingpin’s sheltered trophy wife (Catherine Zeta-Jones) must learn her husband’s ruthless business after he is arrested, endangering her luxurious lifestyle.

    8486

    1. ‘The Limey‘ (1999)

    (L to R) Luis Guzmán and Terence Stamp in 'The Limey'. Photo: Artisan Entertainment.
    (L to R) Luis Guzmán and Terence Stamp in ‘The Limey’. Photo: Artisan Entertainment.

    The Limey follows Wilson (Terence Stamp), a tough English ex-con who travels to Los Angeles to avenge his daughter’s death. Upon arrival, Wilson goes to task battling Valentine (Peter Fonda) and an army of L.A.’s toughest criminals, hoping to find clues and piece together what happened. After surviving a near-death beating, getting thrown from a building and being chased down a dangerous mountain road, the Englishman decides to dole out some bodily harm of his own.

    6656

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Leave the World Behind’

    Mahershala Ali as G.H., Myha’la as Ruth, Julia Roberts as Amanda and Ethan Hawke as Clay in 'Leave the World Behind.'
    (L to R) Mahershala Ali as G.H., Myha’la as Ruth, Julia Roberts as Amanda and Ethan Hawke as Clay in ‘Leave the World Behind.’ Photo: Courtesy Netflix.

    Opening in select theaters on November 22nd before premiering December 8th on Netflix, ‘Leave the World Behind’ represents ‘Euphoria’ creator Sam Esmail putting his own stamp on the sort of the mystery box thriller that M. Night Shyamalan has been cranking out for years.

    Featuring a starry lead cast that includes Julia Roberts, Mahershala Ali, Ethan Hawke and, in a small but impactful role, Kevin Bacon, the movie cranks up the tension as it throws ever more problems at the main characters, causing them to grow increasingly paranoid, desperate and swear like sailors (or the cast of ‘Succession‘).

    Does ‘Leave the World Behind’ Prepare You for the Worst, or the Best?

    Ethan Hawke as Clay, Julia Roberts as Amanda and Mahershala Ali as G.H in 'Leave the World Behind.'
    (L to R) Ethan Hawke as Clay, Julia Roberts as Amanda and Mahershala Ali as G.H in ‘Leave the World Behind.’ Photo: JoJo Whilden/Courtesy Netflix.

    Starting in unexpected fashion –– with Julia Roberts’ stressed ad exec proclaiming that she has rented an isolated luxury house outside of New York to spirit her family away on an impromptu vacation because she “f*****g hates people”. Esmail’s latest film starts to ratchet the tension slowly –– of course cell service might be spotty in a place like the woody spot that Amanda picks to stay. The story pushes ‘Leave the World Behind’ in directions that are both understandable and, in a few places, ridiculous, reaching for a dark seam of comedy it can’t quite make work, which somewhat lessens the impact.

    Clearly Netflix has stumped up for a decent budget on this one (witness an early scene where an oil tanker runs aground at the beach where Amanda and co. have been sunning themselves, or a plane crash later on), but in some ways it could function as a play, the main characters spending most of their time in the spacious, luxurious main house spitting out truths about suspicion in particular and the world in general.

    ‘Leave the World Behind’: Script and Direction

    Mahershala Ali as G.H. and Julia Roberts as Amanda in 'Leave the World Behind.'
    (L to R) Mahershala Ali as G.H. and Julia Roberts as Amanda in ‘Leave the World Behind.’ Photo: JoJo Whilden/Courtesy Netflix.

    Esmail is known for his slightly stylized dialogue (no one accuses ‘Euphoria’, for all of its searing portrait of teen life, of being completely naturalistic), and here he’s free to let loose, even though he’s adapting the novel by Rumaan Alam.

    As mentioned above, the script can seriously start to sound, well scripted. Though Roberts and Ali’s characters in particular are accomplished with backgrounds in reading people (she works with advertising clients, he manages money for wealthy types), which offers some extra leeway, but when almost everyone has a hyper-literate way of talking, it verges into unbelievability.

    How many 13-year-old daughters (Rose, played by Farrah Mackenzie), for example, are bingeing ‘The West Wing’ enough to remember a particular quote that lends itself to the situation? And given that Esmail’s current big job airs on HBO and streams on Max, you wonder at raised eyebrows from Netflix at endless references to a competing company’s series.

    Which bring us to the ‘Friends’ thing. Rose is obsessed with the sitcom about the Manhattan pals and is desperate to find out how the show’s final season ends; no easy feat in a world where phones, the internet and TV aren’t working. It’s resolved in a way that is likely to divide audiences, though we found it somewhat laughable, and not perhaps in the way Esmail intended.

    The look of the movie is part Hitchcockian, part David Fincher in his ‘Fight Club’/’Panic Room’ era. You’ll wonder how many times Esmail and his team can send the camera flowing through holes in windows or rise up through rooves, and the answer is: many. He’s looking to keep you off-kilter (the frame goes that way from time to time), but at times it’s more likely to make you roll your eyes rather than keep them glued to the screen.

    Related Article: Actor Ethan Hawke Talks Marvel’s ‘Moon Knight’

    ‘Leave the World Behind’: Performances

    Ethan Hawke as Clay and Julia Roberts as Amanda in 'Leave the World Behind.'
    (L to R) Ethan Hawke as Clay and Julia Roberts as Amanda in ‘Leave the World Behind.’ Photo: JoJo Whilden/Courtesy Netflix.

    If you hire Julia Roberts, you know you’re going to get good work –– Esmail, in fact, has worked with her before on Amazon’s ‘Homecoming’ series. She’s more than up to the challenge of playing Amanda, who is by turns paranoid and flinty.

    You’ll absolutely buy her increasing distrust of everyone around her, and the slight thawing that happens later on.

    Ali is right there on her level, his G.H. initially somewhat mysterious (though the screenplay does rather bend over backwards to keep him that way in his initial moments, since he really doesn’t bother to immediately explain why he’s at the house –– and that he’s the owner. But in Ali’s hands, it’s still a convincing, well-rounded performance.

    Hawke has less to do, his initially easy-breeze Clay curdling into desperation as more and more problems present themselves, and he has a great moment between Ali and Kevin Bacon on the porch of a house.

    Oh yes –– Bacon. He makes a meal of the smaller role of Danny, having him believably walk the line of crazed prepper and sense-talking human.

    Myha’la, keeps Ruth sensibly snarky and mistrusting given the situation. It’s perhaps not surprising to learn that she auditioned for the role of Rue in ‘Euphoria’ that went to Zendaya, and that Esmail kept her in mind.

    ‘Leave the World Behind’: Final Thoughts

    Julia Roberts as Amanda in 'Leave the World Behind.'
    (L to R) Julia Roberts as Amanda in ‘Leave the World Behind.’ Photo: Courtesy Netflix.

    ‘Leave the World Behind’ can at times feel like a knock-off Shyamalan or Esmail’s attempt to crossbreed his ‘Euphoria’ style with ‘The Twilight Zone’. There are chunks that don’t really work (a recurring motif with deer is overegged and suffers from occasionally less-than-convincing VFX) but on the whole, it’s an effectively creepy and paranoia-inducing movie.

    Just don’t blame us if you start stocking up on water and nonperishable food after watching it.

    ‘Leave the World Behind’ receives 7 out of 10 stars.

    g55iFYT0USP6QSnuTrOfw4

    What’s the story of ‘Leave the World Behind’?

    Amanda (Julia Roberts) and Clay’s (Ethan Hawke) aspirational vacation with their teenage children is interrupted by the arrival of a middle aged couple who own the holiday home and who have fled an unprecedented blackout in the city.

    When the internet, television and radio stop working, as does the landline, they have no way of finding out what is happening. As strange sonic booms shatter the peace of the countryside, and animals start to migrate in strange ways, the physical and mental health of the families –– because the renters are joined by G. H. (Mahershala Ali) and his daughter Ruth (Myha’la Herrold), spooked by the unfolding chaos –– begins to disintegrate.

    The renters are upscale and White; the owners are upscale and Black. The issues of race clash and become distractions to the more alarming things are happening all around them.

    Who else is in ‘Leave the World Behind’?

    The cast for the thriller also includes Farrah Mackenzie as Clay and Amanda’s daughter Rose, Charlie Evans as son Archie, and Kevin Bacon as G.H.’s neighbor/contractor/doomsday prepper Danny.

    Myha’la as Ruth, Mahershala Ali as G.H., Ethan Hawke as Clay and Julia Roberts as Amanda in 'Leave the World Behind.'
    (L to R) Myha’la as Ruth, Mahershala Ali as G.H., Ethan Hawke as Clay and Julia Roberts as Amanda in ‘Leave the World Behind.’ Photo: Courtesy Netflix.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Leave the World Behind:’

    Buy Tickets: ‘Leave the World Behind’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Julia Roberts Movies On Amazon

    8jEtLQcJ

     

  • New ‘Mission: Impossible’ Nearly Featured De-Aged Julia Roberts

    Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures' 'Ticket to Paradise.'
    Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures’ ‘Ticket to Paradise.’

    While it might not have been as big a box office success as ‘Barbie’ or ‘Oppenheimer’, plenty of people have been to see ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’. And if you’re among them, chances are you’ll have seen an early scene set years before Tom Cruise’s Ethan Hunt is part of the Impossible Mission Force.

    The scene takes place largely in shadow, because while writer/director Christopher McQuarrie considered using the sort of de-aging technology as employed by movies such as ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny’ he ultimately rejected the idea, thinking it would be distracting.

    But that wasn’t the full extent of what McQuarrie originally planned. Sitting down to talk at length about the movie on the Empire Podcast Spoiler Special for ‘Dead Reckoning’, he revealed that the sequence –– and de-aging –– was going to go further.

    Related Article: Director Christopher McQuarrie Talks ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’

    McQuarrie’s Idea

    Christopher McQuarrie, writer and director of 'Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One.'
    Christopher McQuarrie, writer and director of ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One.’

    Originally, McQuarrie had thought to include another huge superstar besides Cruise in the sequence.

    Here’s what McQuarrie said of the initial idea:

    “I said, ‘OK, if I were doing this sequence, it would be Tom in, say, 1989. It would be Tony Scott’s ‘Mission: Impossible.’ That’s who would have been directing the movie before Brian De Palma, you know, in that era. We looked at ‘Days of Thunder’ and we looked at the style of it, and we started thinking what would it look like if Tony Scott had shot this, and who would it have been? I looked back at who was the ingenue, who was the breakout star in 1989? And right around then was ‘Mystic Pizza’. And I was like, ‘Oh my God. Julia Roberts, a then-pre-‘Pretty Woman‘ Julia Roberts, as this young woman.’”

    Ultimately, he decided that it didn’t make sense for the budget:

    “The only way I could have seen doing the sequence justice [using de-aging] was to somehow convince Julia Roberts to come in and be this small role at the beginning of this story. And of course, as you’re conceptually going through it, you’re like, ‘Now all anybody’s going to be doing is thinking about the de-aging of Julia Roberts, and Esai (Morales) and Tom, and Henry Czerny.’ I got the bill for de-aging those people before their salaries were even factored into it. And if you put two of them in a shot together, or three of them in a shot together, it would have been as expensive as the train [sequence that ends the movie] by the time we were done. It was so… the force multiplier of — and the way we shoot scenes, and the fluidity, and the camera movement. And of course, that wouldn’t be the style of the movie in 1989. That wouldn’t make sense if you were shooting an ’89 ‘Mission’ like a 2023 ‘Mission.’”

    Given how expensive ‘Dead Reckoning’ already was given covid complications and delays in shooting, you can see why he might have been less willing to spend that money.

    ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’ is in theaters now.

    (L to R) Tom Cruise and Christopher McQuarrie on the set of 'Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One' from Paramount Pictures and Skydance.
    (L to R) Tom Cruise and Christopher McQuarrie on the set of ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’ from Paramount Pictures and Skydance.

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One:’

    Buy Tickets: ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy ‘Mission: Impossible’ Movies On Amazon

    ‘Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One’ is produced by Paramount, Skydance Media, New Republic Pictures, and TC Productions. The movie is scheduled to release in theaters on July 12th, 2023.

  • Best Julia Roberts Movies

    George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures' 'Ticket to Paradise.'
    (L to R) George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures’ ‘Ticket to Paradise,’ directed by Ol Parker. Photo Credit: Universal Pictures.

    Julia Roberts is one of the most popular actresses of all time!

    From ‘Pretty Woman’ to ‘Erin Brockovich,’ everyone loves Julia Roberts!

    Her new comedy, ‘Ticket to Paradise‘ reunites Roberts with her ‘Ocean’s Eleven‘ and ‘Money Monster’ co-star George Clooney, and opens in theaters on October 21st.

    In honor of the new film, Moviefone is counting down the fifteen best Julia Roberts movies of all time.

    Without further ado, let’s begin!


    15) Larry Crowne (2011)

    When he suddenly finds himself without his long-standing blue-collar job, Larry Crowne (Tom Hanks) enrolls at his local college to start over. There, he becomes part of an eclectic community of students and develops a crush on his teacher (Roberts).

    10034948

    14) Money Monster (2016)

    Financial TV host Lee Gates (Clooney) and his producer Patty (Roberts) are put in an extreme situation when an irate investor takes over their studio.

    20073851

    13) The Mexican (2001)

    Jerry Welbach (Brad Pitt), a reluctant bagman, has been given two ultimatums: The first is from his mob boss to travel to Mexico and retrieve a priceless antique pistol, known as “the Mexican”… or suffer the consequences.

    The second is from his girlfriend Samantha (Roberts) to end his association with the mob. Jerry figures alive and in trouble with Samantha is better than the more permanent alternative, so he heads south of the border.

    9154

    12) Ocean’s Twelve (2004)

    Danny Ocean (Clooney) reunites with his old flame and the rest of his merry band of thieves in carrying out three huge heists in Rome, Paris and Amsterdam – but a Europol agent is hot on their heels. Roberts reprises her role as Tess Ocean, and also plays herself in the film.

    16233

    11) Sleeping with the Enemy (1991)

    A young woman (Roberts) fakes her own death in an attempt to escape her nightmarish marriage, but discovers it is impossible to elude her controlling husband (Patrick Bergin).

    1032350

    10) Mystic Pizza (1988)

    The Samuel Goldwyn Company
    The Samuel Goldwyn Company

    Three teenage girls (Roberts, Annabeth Gish and Lili Taylor) come of age while working at a pizza parlor in Mystic, Connecticut.

    13015

    9) Flatliners (1990)

    Five medical students (Roberts, Kiefer Sutherland, Kevin Bacon, William Baldwin, and Oliver Platt) want to find out if there is life after death. They plan to stop one of their hearts for a few seconds, thus simulating death, and then bring the person back to life.

    28522

    8) Closer (2004)

    Two couples (Roberts and Clive Owen, Natalie Portman and Jude Law) disintegrate when they begin destructive adulterous affairs with each other.

    18194

    7) Steel Magnolias (1989)

    A young beautician (Daryl Hannah), newly arrived in a small Louisiana town, finds work at the local salon, where a small group of women (Sally Field, Dolly Parton, Shirley MacLaine, Olympia Dukakis, and Roberts) share a close bond of friendship and welcome her into the fold.
    13624

    6) The Pelican Brief (1993)

    Two Supreme Court Justices have been assassinated. One lone law student (Roberts) has stumbled upon the truth. An investigative journalist (Denzel Washington) wants her story. Everybody else wants her dead.

    8717

    5) My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997)

    Sony Pictures
    Sony Pictures

    When she receives word that her longtime platonic pal Michael O’Neal (Dermot Mulroney) is getting married to debutante Kimberly Wallace (Cameron Diaz), food critic Julianne Potter (Roberts) realizes her true feelings for Michael — and sets out to sabotage the wedding.

    4123

    4) Charlie Wilson’s War (2007)

    The true story of Texas congressman Charlie Wilson’s (Tom Hanks) covert dealings in Afghanistan, where his efforts to assist rebels in their war with the Soviets had some unforeseen and long-reaching effects. Also starring Roberts, Amy Adams, Emily Blunt and Philip Seymour Hoffman.

    23212

    3) Notting Hill (1999)

    William Thacker (Hugh Grant ) is a London bookstore owner whose humdrum existence is thrown into romantic turmoil when famous American actress Anna Scott (Roberts) appears in his shop. A chance encounter over spilled orange juice leads to a kiss that blossoms into a full-blown affair. As the average bloke and glamorous movie star draw closer and closer together, they struggle to reconcile their radically different lifestyles in the name of love.

    6141

    2) Erin Brockovich (2000)

    A twice-divorced mother of three (Roberts) who sees an injustice, takes on the bad guy and wins — with a little help from her push-up bra. Erin goes to work for an attorney and comes across medical records describing illnesses clustered in one nearby town. She starts investigating and soon exposes a monumental cover-up. Roberts won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance.

    7234

    1) Pretty Woman (1990)

    Buena Vista Pictures
    Buena Vista Pictures

    When a millionaire wheeler-dealer Edward Lewis (Richard Gere) enters a business contract with Hollywood hooker Vivian Ward (Roberts), he loses his heart in the bargain.

    2974 sde4mxJ8
  • Movie Review: ‘Ticket to Paradise’

    George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures' 'Ticket to Paradise.'
    (L to R) George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures’ ‘Ticket to Paradise.’

    Opening in theaters on October 21st, ‘Ticket to Paradise’ aims to make up for several years without a star-focused romantic comedy. And it has two major, not-so-secret weapons in Julia Roberts and George Clooney.

    The film, written by Ol Parker and Daniel Pipski, and directed by Parker, is also a throwback to an earlier era of rom-com, one before the cast were even born (think 1940’s ‘His Girl Friday’).

    ‘Ticket to Paradise’ kicks off with divorced couple David (Clooney) and Georgia (Roberts) who begrudgingly reunite to attend daughter Lily’s (Kaitlyn Dever) graduation. The pair jumped into marriage 25 years ago, only for the relationship to flame out after half a decade.

    Since going their separate ways, they’ve largely stayed away from each other, since their interactions tend to devolve into sniping (“worst 19 years of my life,” David cracks when Georgia mentions to someone that they used to be married. “We were only married for five,” Georgia reminds him. “I’m counting the recovery,” says David).

    But when Lily and best friend Wren (Billie Lourd) head off to Bali to celebrate finishing college, Lily ends up meeting hunky, sweet local Gede (Maxime Bouttier), and decides she’s going to stay and marry him. Horrified at the idea of their genius offspring ditching a promising law career for life with a seaweed farmer, the parents agree to put aside their differences and work to stop Lily making what they see as a huge mistake – just like the one they made.

    George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures' 'Ticket to Paradise.'
    (L to R) George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures’ ‘Ticket to Paradise.’

    Upon arrival in Bali, though, they discover how open and agreeable Gede’s large extended family is, and, despite going through with part of their plan to curtail the wedding (George steals the rings that form a vital part of the ceremony), their time spent together on the island makes them start to reconsider their attitude – and not just to Lily’s decision.

    Like a path established through a jungle, ‘Ticket to Paradise’ knows exactly where it is going and no one should be surprised by where it ends up. Frustratingly, though, there is one moment where it appears the movie will completely subvert your expectations, undercutting a particularly romantic sequence with a realization between two characters that it’ll never work before going right back to the expected denouement at the very end.

    Still, the real joy in ‘Ticket’ is the journey it takes to get there and the people you meet along the way. Roberts and Clooney are, of course, screen dynamite, bringing decades of real-life friendship to the role, one that has only been exploited to full use a few times on screen before.

    They’re entertaining whether they’re delivering rat-a-tat insults towards each other or trying to work together for a common goal. Though this bickering twosome could be seen as charmless complainers, the sheer likability of the pair short-circuits that.

    And, though it is primarily the George-and-Julia show, the movie smartly doesn’t forget to create supporting characters who matter and recruit talented people to play them.

    George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures' 'Ticket to Paradise.'
    (L to R) George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures’ ‘Ticket to Paradise,’ directed by Ol Parker. Photo Credit: Universal Pictures.

    Dever, who shined in ‘Booksmart’ and more recently in her own rom-com twist with ‘Rosaline’, imbues Lily with sweetness and smarts and makes you believe she is the product of these two slightly damaged people. Plus she can hold her own on the comedy front, even if she doesn’t get as much chance to. She’s ably assisted in that by Lourd, who appears to be channelling her real-life mother (Carrie Fisher) as the party-happy, snark-tastic Wren.

    French-born Indonesian actor Bouttier, meanwhile, fits well as the Balinese local who is the object of Lily’s affections. He and his family portray local customs and attitudes without the movie using them for cheap comedic effect. They come across as actual people, not stereotypes (even if the movie was shot on Australia’s Gold Coast, more than 2,000 miles away).

    And Georgia’s current beau, commercial pilot Paul (Lucas Bravo from the recent ‘Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris’) also shows up to profess his undying love for her, proposing marriage at a romantic, secluded location that unfortunately also happens to be a local snake habitat.

    We’ll leave you to figure out what happens there, but his storyline is perhaps one of the weaker elements of the movie, which, alongside an unexpectedly violent encounter between Clooney and a pod of dolphins represent the movie stretching to add unnecessary comic business to a movie that works better when it is letting the stars talk and not pratfall.

    Still, Parker, who has made the likes of ‘Imagine Me & You’, ‘Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again’ along with writing wrote both of ‘The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel’ movies, is a past master at this genre, bringing a light touch to lightweight material.

    Director Ol Parker, Julia Roberts and George Clooney on the set of 'Ticket to Paradise.'
    (L to R) Director Ol Parker, Julia Roberts and George Clooney on the set of ‘Ticket to Paradise.’ © 2022 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    The scenery’s beautiful, the time passes by, and before you know it, you’re sucked into the story of squabbling adults realizing that maybe, just maybe their daughter has this whole romance thing figured out to a far greater degree than they can ever claim.

    Parker’s latest effort might not challenge the great romantic comedies of our time, but it has enough charisma and laughs to work. It’s fluffy and unchallenging, but anchored by star performances and a solid enough script, it has the goods as a rom-com.

    Those after an easy date night or pick-me-up – or are interested whether Roberts and Clooney still have the chemistry after the ‘Ocean’s movies (spoiler alert: they do), will be charmed by this one.

    ‘Ticket to Paradise’ proves that if you put the right pieces together, any genre can be made to work in today’s movie marketplace. It’s not perfect, by any means and the stakes are so low they could win a limbo competition, but it’s light, frothy, funny, and despite the seemingly unlikeable main duo, carries it off with aplomb.

    ‘Ticket to Paradise’ receives 3.5 out of 5 stars.

    sde4mxJ8 tFHgXpMJEQ9JwOwmP3uPf4

     

  • George Clooney and Julia Roberts Argue in the ‘Ticket to Paradise’ Trailer

    sde4mxJ8

    George Clooney and Julia Roberts always had a sparky, snarky chemistry in the ‘Oceans’ films, and they’re drawing on that – plus their real-life friendship – for new romantic comedy ‘Ticket to Paradise’, which has its first trailer online.

    ‘Paradise’, however, turns that chemistry into more of a sparring, insulting back-and-forth as they play exes who definitely (at first) don’t seem to have the same sense of lingering longing shown by Danny and Tess Ocean.

    Instead, Clooney refers to their 19 years together, while Roberts snaps back that they were only married for five. “I’m counting the recovery”, Clooney quips.

    But they’re forced to work together as they’re headed to Bali, where their daughter Lily (played by ‘Booksmart’s Kaitlyn Dever) is vacationing with her best pal Wren (Billie Lourd) after they graduate college.

    Turns out Lily has fallen hard for a local called Gede (Lucas Bravo) and is planning a quickie wedding. With their bitter experience of marriage and convinced she’s making a horrible mistake – they also got hitched quick – the couple agree a shaky truce to work together and stop it from going forward. And if that means stealing the wedding rings, then so be it!

    Director Ol Parker, Julia Roberts and George Clooney on the set of 'Ticket to Paradise.'
    (L to R) Director Ol Parker, Julia Roberts and George Clooney on the set of ‘Ticket to Paradise.’ © 2022 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    Yet as the pair spend time in the tropical paradise, get drunk together and embarrassing their offspring by dancing in true parental style, it appears that feelings might just be rekindling between the two of them. Who would’ve seen that coming?

    ‘Ticket to Paradise’ boasts the considerable star charm of its leading duo, plus Dever and Lourd, who have both been fun in other movies. Sean Lynch, Talha Şentürk, Maxime Bouttier, Cintya Dharmayanti and Rowan Chapman are also all in the cast.

    And it comes from romantic comedy old hand Ol Parker, who directs and wrote the script with Daniel Pipski. Parker, of course, was behind the likes of ‘The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel’ and its sequel, plus ‘Mama Mia! Here We Go Again’, which all delivered easygoing, comedy set in tropical locations.

    It wasn’t exactly plain sailing behind the scenes, though, as production was interrupted by a Covid outbreak in Australia’s Queensland state where the movie was using the Whitsunday Islands, Brisbane and the nearby Gold Coast to stand in for Bali.

    The movie was two weeks away from finishing shooting when 12 members of the cast and crew came down with the virus and production shut down for a few weeks. Fortunately, the team was able to get back in action quick enough for the film to meet its release date.

    ‘Ticket to Paradise’ has a premiere scheduled for the Venice Film Festival in August, ahead of an October 21st release in theaters.

    George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures' 'Ticket to Paradise.'
    (L to R) George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Universal Pictures’ ‘Ticket to Paradise.’
    tFHgXpMJEQ9JwOwmP3uPf4
  • Best Movies Featuring Actors Playing Themselves

    Nicolas Cage in 'The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent.'
    Nicolas Cage in ‘The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent.’ Photo: Katalin Vermes/Lionsgate.

    Oscar winner Nicolas Cage is currently receiving rave reviews for his performance in ‘The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent,’ where he plays well, Nicolas Cage!

    But this is certainly not the first time an A-list actor has portrayed themself in a film, and we thought it would be a good time to look back at the the greatest movies featuring actors playing themselves.

    For this list, we are only including actors who’ve portrayed themselves in a movie and not athletes, musicians, or other celebrities.

    Let’s begin!


    10. This Is the End (2013)

    (L to R) James Franco, Jay Baruchel, Jonah Hill, Craig Robinson, and Seth Rogen in 'This Is the End.'
    Sony Pictures.

    While attending a party at James Franco‘s house, Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel and many other celebrities including Jonah Hill, Danny McBride, Michael Cera, Rihanna, Emma Watson, Mindy Kaling, Paul Rudd, Channing Tatum, and Kevin Hart are faced with the apocalypse.

    A movie about the apocalypse set in Hollywood was a clever idea, but having the actors play exaggerated versions of themselves is what makes this movie really fun to watch, and Jonah Hill being possessed by a demon is a definite highlight.

    10085974

    9. Ocean’s Twelve (2004)

    Danny Ocean (George Clooney) reunites with his old flame (Julia Roberts) and the rest of his merry band of thieves in carrying out three huge heists in Rome, Paris and Amsterdam – but a Europol agent (Catherine Zeta-Jones) is hot on their heels.

    One of the “cons” in the movie that Ocean and his friends are running is based on the idea that Tess Ocean (Roberts) looks remarkably like the actress “Julia Roberts.” Posing as Roberts, Tess helps Linus (Matt Damon) get close to their mark but are interrupted by the actor Bruce Willis (played by Willis), who is friends with the real Roberts.

    16233

    8. Cold Souls (2009)

    Paul Giamatti (played by Paul Giamatti) is agonizing over his interpretation of ‘Uncle Vanya’ and, paralyzed by anxiety, stumbles upon a solution via a New Yorker article about a high-tech company promising to alleviate suffering by extracting souls. He enlists their services—only to discover that his soul is the shape and size of a chickpea.

    Giamatti plays himself as a depressed yet “serious” thespian, which plays off of the actor’s real-life persona, while Emily Watson portrays Paul’s fictional wife, Claire Giamatti.

    36222

    7. Always Be My Maybe (2009)

    Reunited after 15 years, famous chef Sasha (Ali Wong) and hometown musician Marcus (Randall Park) feel the old sparks of attraction but struggle to adapt to each other’s worlds.

    After years apart, Sasha and Marcus reconnect, only to go on a double date with their significant others. The date goes terribly wrong for Marcus when he realizes that Sasha is dating movie star Keanu Reeves (played by Reeves). The actor plays himself with all the coolness and charisma we expect from Reeves, before eventually getting into a brawl with Marcus.

    hLuZEnZ7XZiiMEaf69HPG7

    6. Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle (2004)

    Nerdy accountant Harold (John Cho) and his irrepressible friend, Kumar (Kal Penn), get stoned watching television and find themselves utterly bewitched by a commercial for White Castle. Convinced there must be one nearby, the two set out on a late-night odyssey that takes them deep into New Jersey. Somehow, the boys manage to run afoul of rednecks, cops and even a car-stealing Neil Patrick Harris (played by Harris) before getting anywhere near their beloved sliders.

    Harris spoofs his own history as a child actor, playing himself as a drug-addicted, has-been child star. It’s also worth noting that ‘Harold & Kumar’ predates ‘How I Met Your Mother,’ and marked the beginning of Harris’ own career resurgence.

    18018

    5. My Name is Bruce (2007)

    Bruce Campbell in 'My Name is Bruce.'
    Image Entertainment.

    B-movie Legend Bruce Campbell (played by Campbell) is mistaken for his character Ash from ‘The Evil Dead‘ trilogy and forced to fight a real monster in a small town in Oregon.

    Campbell basically plays himself like his ‘Evil Dead’ character Ash. He’s confident and self-assured when there is no danger, but once trouble begins, he becomes a complete coward. The movie was directed by Campbell, and is a fun spoof on the actor’s own cult status.

    34448

    4. Zombieland (2009)

    Columbus (Jesse Eisenberg) has made a habit of running from what scares him. Tallahassee (Woody Harrelson) doesn’t have fears. If he did, he’d kick their ever-living ass. In a world overrun by zombies, these two are perfectly evolved survivors. But now, they’re about to stare down the most terrifying prospect of all: each other.

    When Columbus and his friends enter a Beverly Hills mansion, they meet actor Bill Murray (played by Murray), who survived the zombie apocalypse by wearing makeup and pretending to be a zombie himself. The actor even busts-out his old ‘Ghostbusters‘ costume before Columbus accidentally kills him.

    35587

    3. I’m Still Here (2010)

    ‘I’m Still Here’ is a portrayal of a tumultuous year in the life of actor Joaquin Phoenix (played by Phoenix). Directed by Casey Affleck, the film follows the future Oscar-winner as he announces his retirement from a successful film career in the fall of 2008 and sets off to reinvent himself as a hip-hop musician. The film is a portrait of an artist at a crossroads and explores notions of courage and creative reinvention, as well as the ramifications of a life spent in the public eye.

    Sold as a documentary, it was later revealed that the entire movie was a fictional spoof. Unknown which it was at the time of release, Phoenix gives a performance playing an exaggerated version of himself that is so believable the entire world really thought that the actor had gone crazy! It all culminated with his infamous appearance on ‘The Late Show with David Letterman,’ which is included in the film.

    51962

    2. The Player (1992)

    Directed by Robert Altman, a Hollywood studio executive (Tim Robbins) is being sent death threats by a writer whose script he rejected – but which one?

    ‘The Player’ could easily have been called ‘Cameo: The Movie.’ While some actors play fictional characters (like Robbins and Whoopi Goldberg), because of the Hollywood setting, dozens of famous actors play themselves in cameo roles like Joel Grey, Anjelica Huston, and John Cusack.

    Then, in a film within the film, Bruce Willis and Julia Roberts play themselves, playing fictional characters.

    6330

    1. Being John Malkovich (1992)

    'Being John Malkovich'
    USA Films.

    One day at work, unsuccessful puppeteer Craig (John Cusack) finds a portal into the head of actor John Malkovich (played by Malkovich). The portal soon becomes a passion for anybody who enters its mad and controlling world of overtaking another human body.

    ‘Being John Malkovich’ is ‘The Godfather‘ of movies featuring actors playing themselves. Malkovich brilliantly plays-off of his odd and mysterious off-screen persona and gives a dark comedic performance as good as any of his previous dramatic work. it’s also hilarious when it is revealed that his best friend is Charlie Sheen (played by Sheen himself).

    6737