Tag: katherine-waterston

  • Movie Review: ‘Fackham Hall’

    (L to R): Thomasin McKenzie, Katherine Waterston, Damian Lewis and Tom Felton in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Thomasin McKenzie, Katherine Waterston, Damian Lewis and Tom Felton in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    In theaters on December 5 from Bleecker Street is ‘Fackham Hall,’ a new spoof in the ‘Airplane!’ style that has British period pieces such as ‘Downton Abbey’ firmly in its sights.

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    The movie stars Thomasin McKenzie (‘Last Night in Soho’), Ben Radcliffe (‘Masters of the Air’), Tom Felton (‘Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets’), Damian Lewis (‘Billions’) and Katherine Waterston (‘Inherent Vice’).

    Related Article: Damian Lewis Talks ‘The Radleys’ and Looks Back at TV Series ‘Life’

    Initial Thoughts

    Jimmy Carr in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    Jimmy Carr in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    In a year where ‘The Naked Gun’ brought spoof movies back to relevance with a swift, funny script, you might be happy to have another in the genre arrive. Unfortunately for fans of joke-laden parodies, ‘Fackham Hall’ turns out to be a grave disappointment.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R): Damian Lewis and Nathan McMullen in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.'<br /> Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Damian Lewis and Nathan McMullen in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’
    Photo: Bleecker Street.

    Written by comedian Jimmy Carr alongside brother Patrick Carr and colleagues Andrew Dawson, Steve Dawson and Tim Inman and based on an idea by the Carr siblings, ‘Fackham Hall’s script can best be described as “hit and miss” with an emphasis on “miss.”

    True, there are one or two very funny jokes in the movie, and it generally moves along in amiable fashion, but so many other gags are either dull, trite or beaten into the ground. Or all three.

    And when you end up stealing not one joke (a vicar stumbling over his words) but two (about a wedding guest replying that they’re not the bride or groom) from 31-year-old comedy classic ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral,’ there’s cause for concern.

    Director Jim O’Hanlon, meanwhile, has worked on some great TV series, including ‘Catastrophe,’ ‘Inside No. 9’ and iconic spoof miniseries ‘A Touch of Cloth.’ But here, the script lets him down and try as he might to bring some comic momentum, the result is still only fitfully funny.

    Cast and Performances

    Ben Radcliffe in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    Ben Radcliffe in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    McKenzie and Radcliffe make for an appealing central pair, and they and the rest of the cast do what they can with what the screenplay has to offer. Katherine Waterston spends most of the movie looking like she’d rather be anywhere else, while the Damian Lewis throws himself wholeheartedly into the role of the dim Lord Davenport.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R): Tom Felton and Thomasin McKenzie in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Tom Felton and Thomasin McKenzie in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    ‘Fackham Hall’ feels more of a piece with the lame ‘[insert-genre-here] Movie’ and other low-energy spoofs that showed up in the wake of ‘Scary Movie’s success post-‘Scream.’ There are laughs, but they’re few and far between.

    ‘Fackham Hall’ receives 60 out of 100.

    (L to R): Tom Felton, Ramon Tikaram, Thomasin McKenzie, Damian Lewis, and Nathan McMullen in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Tom Felton, Ramon Tikaram, Thomasin McKenzie, Damian Lewis, and Nathan McMullen in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    What’s the story of ‘Fackham Hall’?

    New porter Eric Noone (Ben Radcliffe) forms a romantic bond with Rose (Thomasin McKenzie), youngest daughter of a well-known UK family. As the Davenport family, headed by Lord and Lady Davenport, deals with the epic disaster of the wedding of their eldest daughter to her caddish cousin, new schemes reveal themselves.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Fackham Hall’?

    • Ben Radcliffe as Eric Noone
    • Thomasin McKenzie as Rose Davenport
    • Damian Lewis as Lord Davenport
    • Katherine Waterston as Lady Davenport
    • Lizzie Hopley as Phyllis Davenport
    • Emma Laird as Poppy Davenport
    • Tom Felton as Archibald
    • Jimmy Carr as Vicar
    • Tom Goodman-Hill as Inspector Watt
    (L to R): Sue Johnston, Katherine Waterston, Tim McMullan, Thomasin McKenzie, Nathan McMullen, Ben Radcliffe, Damian Lewis, and Emma Laird in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Sue Johnston, Katherine Waterston, Tim McMullan, Thomasin McKenzie, Nathan McMullen, Ben Radcliffe, Damian Lewis, and Emma Laird in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    Movies Similar to ‘Fackham Hall’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Fackham Hall’ Movie Showtimes

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  • Movie Review: ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen’

    (L-R) India Fowler as Lori Granger and Fina Strazza as Tiffany Falconer in 'Fear Street: Prom Queen.' Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.
    (L-R) India Fowler as Lori Granger and Fina Strazza as Tiffany Falconer in ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen.’ Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.

    ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen’ receives 5.5 out of 10 stars.

    On Netflix May 23rd is ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen,’ co-written and directed by Matt Palmer, who adapts R.L. Stine’s novel ‘The Prom Queen,’ published in 1992.

    The new movie stars India Fowler (‘The Agency: Central Intelligence’), Suzanna Son (‘Red Rocket’), Fina Strazza (‘Paper Girls’), Chris Klein (‘American Pie’), Ariana Greenblatt (‘Barbie’) and Lili Taylor (‘The Nun’).

    Related Article:  Author R.L. Stine Says That Netflix has Three New ‘Fear Street’ Movies in Development

    Initial Thoughts

    (L-R) Fina Strazza as Tiffany Falconer and David Iacono as Tyler Torres in 'Fear Street: Prom Queen.' Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.
    (L-R) Fina Strazza as Tiffany Falconer and David Iacono as Tyler Torres in ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen.’ Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.

    Released across three weekends back in 2021, Netflix scored itself a success with the ‘Fear Street’ trilogy, which brought a trio of terrifying tales drawn from R.L. Stine’s work to bloody, effective life.

    Yet this new standalone entry, even though it is set in the same divided town as those previous entries, has a lot of pressure riding on it to keep the kills sharp and the characters memorable. Unfortunately, it doesn’t really achieve either aim.

    Script and Direction

    (L-R) Director Matt Palmer, Ella Rubin as Melissa and Fina Strazza as Tiffany Falconer on the set of ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen.’ Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.

    Director Matt Palmer worked with co-writer Donald McLeary (‘Calibre’) on the screenplay for the new movie, but the results are disappointing.

    While the other ‘Fear Street’ movies were full of inventive moments, gnarly kills and compelling characters, ‘Prom Queen’ kicks off with a seen-it-all-before exposition dump opening narration which briskly outlines who’s who and why they’re competing.

    Unfortunately, it’s all surface level stuff, barely rising beyond the most basic slasher movie cliches –– how many high school tales have we already seen with mean girls, outsiders and the rest. And honestly, this new offering is so first-draft that we really only get those two types.

    Everyone else is also barely sketched out –– the imperious educator who is trying to turn the reputation of the Shadyside High School around, the driven parents of the primary Prom Queen candidate, and one or two others.

    Nothing here truly stands out, from stock characters to dull kills that come across as carbon copies of other, better moments from other movies, including the other ‘Fear Street’ entries.

    And McLeary’s direction is also sadly fairly inert, offering little in the way of invention or interest. While there is one extra sting in the tale once the chaos is seemingly over, it’s not enough to save what has gone before.

    Cast and Performances

    (L-R) Ella Rubin as Melissa, Chris Klein as Dan Falconer, Ariana Greenblatt as Christy Renault and Ryan Rosery as Chad in 'Fear Street: Prom Queen.' Photo: Netflix © 2025.
    (L-R) Ella Rubin as Melissa, Chris Klein as Dan Falconer, Ariana Greenblatt as Christy Renault and Ryan Rosery as Chad in ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen.’ Photo: Netflix © 2025.

    Without a really chewy script to draw from, the cast never really comes alive.

    India Fowler does what she can as Lori Granger, the outsider-with-a-dark past who is swimming against the current of public opinion about her by trying to win the Prom Queen title. Fowler’s got some spirit to her, but Lori is really just another stock heroine.

    Slightly more interesting is Suzanna Son as Lori’s best –– and pretty much only –– friend Megan Rogers, a creative outsider herself who specializes in horror pranks. She also has a few more moments of heart that even Lori is allowed.

    Fina Strazza as queen bee Tiffany Falconer falls into several expected mean girl pitfalls, saddled with a character who is so annoyingly perky/plotting that you can’t really see as a human being.

    (L-R) Suzanna Son as Megan Rogers and India Fowler as Lori Granger in 'Fear Street: Prom Queen.' Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.
    (L-R) Suzanna Son as Megan Rogers and India Fowler as Lori Granger in ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen.’ Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.

    Ariana Greenblatt, playing Christy Renault is barely in the film, so any attempts to make her character interesting are wasted.

    On the adult side of things, Katherine Waterston is at least having some fun playing Tiffany’s alpha mother Nancy, who channels her own frustrated legacy through demands on her daughter. She’s well matched by Chris Klein as her husband, who expects a lot from both his students (he’s also a teacher at the school) and his family.

    Lili Taylor, playing the no-nonsense Vice Principal Dolores Brekenridge (the real power behind the throne, pulling the strings of Principal Wayland, played by Darrin Baker), mostly just gets to scowl and shout.

    Final Thoughts

    Ella Rubin as Melissa in 'Fear Street: Prom Queen.' Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.
    Ella Rubin as Melissa in ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen.’ Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.

    ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen’ would seem like a misfiring, less-than-satisfying stalk ‘n’ slash effort even take on its own hardly stellar merits.

    But matched up against the impressive previous ‘Fear Street’ outings, it’s that much more disappointing, filled with shallow characterizations and vapid stabs at horror.

    If it’s looking for high school horror glory, it’s not worthy of your support.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen’?

    Welcome back to Shadyside. In this next installment of the blood-soaked ‘Fear Street’ franchise, prom season at Shadyside High is underway and the school’s wolfpack of It Girls is busy with its usual sweet and vicious campaigns for the crown.

    But when a gutsy outsider puts herself in the running, and the other girls start mysteriously disappearing, the class of ’88 is suddenly in for one hell of a prom night.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen’?

    • India Fowler as Lori Granger
    • Suzanna Son as Megan Rogers
    • Fina Strazza as Tiffany Falconer
    • Chris Klein as Dan Falconer
    • David Iacono as Tyler Torres
    • Ella Rubin as Melissa
    • Ariana Greenblatt as Christy Renault
    • Lili Taylor as VP Dolores Brekenridge
    • Katherine Waterston as Nancy Falconer
    The Killer in 'Fear Street: Prom Queen.' Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.
    The Killer in ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen.’ Photo: Alan Markfield/Netflix © 2025.

    List of Movies in the ‘Fear Street’ Franchise:

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  • TV Review: ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3

    Gary Oldman in 'Slow Horses' season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Gary Oldman in ‘Slow Horses’ season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Launching on Apple TV+ on November 29th (with two episodes), ‘Slow Horses’ makes a triumphant return to screens with another winning blend of character work, memorable dialogue and compelling action.

    While Gary Oldman’s Jackson Lamb continues to be the standout, but there isn’t a weak link in this cast, and some new recruits (including one who is only in the first episode) only add to that feeling.

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

    What works about ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3?

    Kristin Scott Thomas in 'Slow Horses' season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Kristin Scott Thomas in ‘Slow Horses’ season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Apple TV+ is clearly happy with the success of this adaptation of Mick Herron’s popular spy thriller novels, as the streaming service commissions seasons in batches of two –– which is why we got a taster of the second as the credits rolled on the first.

    That will continue with Season 4, which has already been shot, and on the evidence of the quality of Season 3, that’s a very good thing.

    Even in this era of peak television and shorter streaming seasons, there are shows that have run out of steam only a couple of seasons in. Fortunately, ‘Slow Horses’ is most definitely not one of them. Showrunner Will Smith (not that one) and his team have kept the entertainment value consistent through all the seasons so far, and the third is no exception.

    If you’ve never seen the show, this is a very different world to the usual heroics of, says James Bond or Jason Bourne. It’s much more street level, scruffier and set in the world of MI5’s rejects, who have somehow fouled up on duty and are shunted off to a satellite office of the security service.

    Gary Oldman in 'Slow Horses' season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Gary Oldman in ‘Slow Horses’ season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Slough House (from where the team gets its nickname) is the butt-end of the intelligence world, a place careers go to die when they can’t hack it at the sparkling glass and solid concrete world of the service HQ in Regent’s Park.

    And yet… As led by the drunken, flatulent Jackson Lamb (Gary Oldman), they somehow always manage to make it work. When big crises threaten the UK, the team is often drafted in, usually without really wanting to take part.

    Oldman is very clearly having the time of his life playing Lamb, all stained shirts and stringy hair whose outward appearance and brusque manner (a choice line of his from this season is, “you’re about as welcome as a turd in a hot tub”) hides a keen intelligence and a strong feeling of loyalty to those who earn it. While he insults his team constantly, he’d lay down his life to help any one of them in truly dire straits.

    Saskia Reeves and Jack Lowden in 'Slow Horses' season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Saskia Reeves and Jack Lowden in ‘Slow Horses’ season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    He’s primarily supported by Saskia Reeves’ Catherine Standish, an alcoholic but longstanding officer who runs Slough House and gives Lamb the counterbalance he needs.

    Elsewhere, River Cartwright (Jack Lowden), who started to show as the audience’s point of view when he’s banished to Lamb’s team after a bad call on a training exercise, has really become part of the gang –– realizing that he might have actually found the perfect place to work. Even if he complains about it from time to time.

    The rest of the team are all interesting characters, including the arrogant (without much cause besides his hacking skills) tech bro agent Roddy Ho (Christopher Chung), the world-weary Louisa Guy (Rosalind Eleazar), who is still recovering from the death of her partner/lover in Season 2 and newer recruits Shirley Dander (Aimee-Ffion Edwards) and Marcus Longridge (Kadiff Kirwan) get some much-needed depth, even if it does mean they’re both thrust into danger.

    This is a perfectly gathered ensemble that play well off of each other, and the supporting cast is just as good –– Kristin Scott Thomas brings icy cool to the role of Diana Taverner, essentially second-in-command at the Regent’s Park HQ and endlessly bristling at being passed up for the top job.

    That position went to Sophie Okonedo’s Ingrid Tearney, and she takes plenty of pleasure in reminding Diana of the place. Okonedo is so good as the bookish bureaucrat whose owlish nature sheathes a spine of steel.

    When it’s time for the action to kick in, ‘Slow Horses’ doesn’t stint –– we won’t go into spoilers for this season’s big confrontation, but if you’ve seen the previous seasons, you’ll know it truly leans into the idea of conflict with stakes.

    What doesn’t work in ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3?

    Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù in 'Slow Horses' season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù in ‘Slow Horses’ season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    There is very little that’s wrong with the new season of ‘Slow Horses’ –– while some could quibble that each new storyline brings some variation of espionage genre tropes: a threat to the nation; a conspiracy to keep secrets long buried; one of the team being kidnapped for leverage.

    Each time, however, the writers undercut them with the humor and style of the show.

    ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3: Final Thoughts

    Jack Lowden in 'Slow Horses' season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Jack Lowden in ‘Slow Horses’ season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    In a world where spies are usually slick operators who save the day with complicated gadgets or by seducing the right woman, it’s reassuring to know that ‘Slow Horses’ offers the alternative, a downplayed, grungy but very, very human look at intelligence work. Long may these horses ride (even if it is slowly).

    ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3 receives 9 out of 10 stars.

    Kristin Scott Thomas in 'Slow Horses' season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Kristin Scott Thomas in ‘Slow Horses’ season 3 premiering November 29, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    What’s the story of ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3?

    In Season 3 of ‘Slow Horses’, a romantic liaison in Istanbul threatens to expose a buried MI5 secret in London.

    When Jackson Lamb (Gary Oldman) and his team of misfits are dragged into the fight, they find themselves caught in a conspiracy that threatens the future not just of Slough House –– but of MI5 itself.

    Who else is in ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3?

    The cast includes Gary Oldman, Jack Lowden, Kristin Scott Thomas, Saskia Reeves, Rosalind Eleazar, Christopher Chung, Freddie Fox, Aimee-Ffion Edwards, Kadiff Kirwan, Jonathan Pryce and Sophie Okonedo.

    Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù and, in a small role, Katherine Waterston is among the new faces this year.

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

    Movies Similar to ‘Slow Horses’:

    Buy Gary Oldman Movies on Amazon

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

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  • First Images from ‘Slow Horses’ Season 3

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

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

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

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

    What’s the story of ‘Slow Horses’?

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

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

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

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

    Who stars in ‘Slow Horses’?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Gary Oldman talks ‘Slow Horses’?

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

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

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

    When will ‘Slow Horses’ return for Season 3?

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

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

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

    Movies Similar to ‘Slow Horses’:

    Buy Gary Oldman Movies on Amazon

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

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  • ‘Babylon’ Interview: Composer Justin Hurwitz

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    Currently available on digital and streaming, and arriving on Blu-ray and DVD beginning March 21st is the Oscar nominated movie ‘Babylon,’ which was directed by Oscar winner Damien Chazelle (‘La La Land’).

    What is ‘Babylon’ about?

    ‘Babylon’ follows the rise and fall of a group of characters during Hollywood’s transition from silent film to talkies in the 1920s.

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    Who is in the cast of ‘Babylon?’

    ‘Babylon’ stars Brad Pitt as movie star Jack Conrad, Margot Robbie as young actress Nellie LaRoy, Diego Calva as assistant turned producer Manny Torres, Jean Smart as journalist Elinor St. John, Jovan Adepo as musician Sidney Palmer, Li Jun Li as performer Lady Fay Zhu, and Tobey Maguire as gangster James McKay.

    The movie also features appearances from Lukas Haas, Max Minghella, Katherine Waterston, Flea, Jeff Garlin, Ethan Suplee, Samara Weaving, Spike Jonze, Chloe Fineman, and Olivia Wilde.

    How many 2023 Academy Award nominations did ‘Babylon’ receive?

    ‘Babylon’ has received three 2023 Academy Award nominations including Best Costume Design, Best Production Design, and Best Original Score for composer Justin Hurwitz.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with two-time Academy Award winning composer Justin Hurwitz about his Oscar nominated work on ‘Babylon,’ collaborating with his friend director Damien Chazelle, watching dailies and creating music for the elephant.

    'Babylon' Composer Justin Hurwitz.
    ‘Babylon’ Composer Justin Hurwitz.

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

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to Damien Chazelle’s screenplay for ‘Babylon’ and the themes that you wanted to explore with the score?

    Justin Hurwitz: So I got the draft in fall of 2019, and I was just so entertained by it. I mean, my jaw was kind of on the floor for a lot of these scenes, and there were great monologues and really beautifully written emotional scenes as well. So it was just such a great read. The first thing I thought was, “Oh, my God, there’s going to be a lot of music in this movie.” So Damien and I started talking about it.

    Of course it’s set in old Hollywood, but what got me excited about it was right off the bat, Damien said he didn’t want the music to sound like 1920s jazz. He didn’t want it to sound like old movie music. He wanted to do something very different than that. So that got me excited, because I was thinking the same thing as I was reading the script. I was thinking super entertaining movie, but I don’t want to have to write period music, and luckily he didn’t want to do that either.

    Director Damien Chazelle on the set of 'Babylon' from Paramount Pictures.
    Director Damien Chazelle on the set of ‘Babylon’ from Paramount Pictures.

    MF: You’ve composed all of director Damien Chazelle’s previous movies. Can you talk about collaborating with him, your working relationship, and how the process of scoring one of his films works?

    JH: Well, so much of it feels exactly like it did when we were 20-years old working on the ‘Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench,’ which was our student film that kind of ballooned into a small feature. Just the process of sitting at the piano, coming up with ideas, making voice notes, sending idea, after idea to Damien getting, “No, no, no, maybe, no, no, no,” before you finally get, “Yes, I love it, that’s the one.” I rely on him so much to help steer me into my best ideas, and that has never changed. Even the process of sitting at the piano and making little MP3s hasn’t changed. But we’ve gotten more efficient over the years at certain things.

    I love the way we have sort of developed it in post-production where we get offices next to each other so he can cut the movie with (editor) Tom Cross for a year or so, and I can be there the entire time, literally sharing a door. We have a suite with a shared door, so I can be in their room all the time and Damien’s coming into my room. We’re just going back and forth working on picture and music. That’s a process we’ve kind of refined over the years, and I love it. Probably my favorite time is when we’re in post, and we’re all under one roof, and we can finish the movie together, and the score can really take shape and come together. So that’s something that we learned from the past couple of movies, and we’ve sort of fallen into those practices.

    Damien is full-time with Tom Cross, the editor, so they’re working together, and then Damien’s full-time with me, really. So that’s why we have these shared offices. So he can be very hands-on with the editing and very hands on with the score. What’s great about Damien is he has such a specific vision, and he’s such a specific filmmaker. He knows what he wants visually, sonically, everything, but he also lets creative people do what we do.

    So it’s this very tricky balance and I think he’s found the right balance. He does it very well, and you don’t want to work with a filmmaker that doesn’t know what they want. It’s good to work with filmmakers that are very specific, and very hands on, but they need to give the latitude to the collaborators to come up with their own ideas, and explore, and be creative people of our own. So Damien does both of those things very well.

    Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy and Diego Calva plays Manny Torres in 'Babylon' from Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy and Diego Calva plays Manny Torres in ‘Babylon’ from Paramount Pictures.

    Related Articles: Damien Chazelle Talks ‘Babylon’ and Working with Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie

    MF: Do you watch dailies and take inspiration from the actor’s performances for the score?

    JH: Absolutely. There were kind of two phases of scoring this movie. We had to create about an hour of music in pre-production before we could even shoot the movie. So I was doing tons and tons of demos. We were building that for about a year and a half. We were in the studio recording that. All of that was before the movie was shot. I was going off of the script, and I was going off of Damien’s storyboards. He makes literally thousands of pages of hand-drawn storyboards, and he cuts animatics and we build to that.

    Then the movie’s shot, and I’m on set. So I’m there experiencing the feeling of the shoot and the scene. The performance is actually live in front of the camera. Then we have post-production and I made about another hour of music in post-production. At that point, that’s more of the traditional film scoring approach, where I’m watching the dailies, the cuts, the scenes, and then the entire cuts.

    For that last hour of score, these are the scenes that you have to just watch, and you have to just respond to what’s in the scenes. So the Manny/Nellie cues, those relationship cues, you just have to watch and respond to the rhythms of the dialogue, and the feeling of it, and the way it’s cut, and what you’re seeing in the design of it all. There were plenty of cues of that sort. So there is really kind of two totally different approaches to this movie. The hour of music we did before it was shot, and then the hour of music we did after it was shot, and it’s about two hours of score in total.

    I mean, it’s so well planned because like I said, Damien has storyboarded this thing down to the fraction of a second. While I’ve been building the demos, he’s been building the storyboards. He’s like, “Give me two more seconds here, cut a half second from there.” It’s like we are refining this. Of course things change, and that becomes part of my job. I said, an hour of music is created beforehand. I’m still rebuilding that music through post-production as well, because as the cut comes together, we are lengthening, or shortening, or rebuilding, and moving things around. Things are always changing. But I don’t think there were any pieces of music that we recorded that just got cut from the movie or anything that was that drastically rethought when it comes to those pre-recorded tracks.

    MF: Finally, what was it like scoring the scenes with the elephant?

    JH: Well, I wasn’t on set for the actual defecation scene. But the elephant does burst into the party a little bit later. That was fun because the track “Voodoo Mama” is the track that’s going on, and that’s where Nellie, Margot Robbie’s character is dancing, crowd surfing, and completely owning this room. It’s a real fun jazz band meets rock and roll, meets dance music sort of track. That track, as soon as the elephant bursts through the door, takes a big turn into circus music. So we have kazoos and slide whistles, and the band starts playing almost like a circus band in with all these crash symbols and circus sort of music. So the track takes a big turn there, and that was a very fun genre to play in.

    We actually use circus sounds throughout the score. We bring a lot of those sounds back even during some of those really intimate Manny/Nellie cues. Those cues are kind of this mixture of three pianos that have this very fragile, broken, half out of tune quality. But in those cues, sometimes we pull in little circus sounds as well because their relationship is a bit of a circus, and it’s just sort of a motif in this movie. So we had a lot of fun with many different colors in this score, including circus colors.

    Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy in 'Babylon' from Paramount Pictures.
    Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy in ‘Babylon’ from Paramount Pictures.

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    ‘Babylon’ is produced by Paramount, Marc Platt Production, Material Pictures, C2 Motion Picture Group, Wild Chickens and Organism Pictures. ‘Babylon’ debuts on digital and streaming January 31st, and will be available on Blu-ray and DVD beginning March 21st.

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Babylon’

    Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy in 'Babylon' from Paramount Pictures.
    Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy in ‘Babylon’ from Paramount Pictures.

    Debuting in theaters on December 23rd, ‘Babylon’ is the latest film from Damien Chazelle, the writer-director of ‘Whiplash’ and ‘La La Land’. Unfortunately, it is also his weakest effort, though not for lack of ambition and scale.

    Starting, perhaps as it means to go on with a desire for shock and even a metaphor for what happens to many of the characters in the movie, ‘Babylon’ features an elephant defecating noisily and filthily across an unfortunate man helping to push the truck it is riding in up a hill, the result also splattering the camera.

    The animal is on its way to be the star attraction a lavish Hollywood bash being held in the hills, and one of the people helping to get it there is Manny Torres (Diego Calva), who fortunately avoids being covered in Proboscidea poop.

    He ends up hired to help out at the party and has his first experience of roaring ‘20s Hollywood––or at least its decadent, wild excessive side––where sweaty, near-naked crowds writhe in time to jazz music. Drugs and booze are in free supply, all thanks to the host, veteran actor Jack Conrad (Brad Pitt) who shows up with his latest soon-to-be-ex-wife, played in a brief scene by Olivia Wilde.

    Brad Pitt plays Jack Conrad and Diego Calva plays Manny Torres in 'Babylon' from Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Brad Pitt plays Jack Conrad and Diego Calva plays Manny Torres in ‘Babylon’ from Paramount Pictures.

    Looking to gatecrash is Nellie LaRoy (Margot Robbie), an ambitious young woman convinced she has untapped star power, and who ends up scoring a lucky break, setting her star on the rise as Jack starts to see his own begin to fall.

    Manny––who befriends Nellie––is captivated by the idea of working in Hollywood, and sees his own prospects enhanced when one of Jack’s team asks him to make sure the sozzled actor gets home safely. From there, Manny works his way up the ranks, his good ideas for movies helping boost his career in the fictional film studio of the story.

    ‘Babylon’ is primarily the story of Manny, Nellie and Jack, with some attention paid to jazz musician Sidney Palmer (Jovan Adepo), who will carve his own path out in the entertainment industry, performer Lady Fay Zhu (Li Jun Li), and gossip columnist Elinor St. John (Jean Smart).

    The characters’ arcs weave in and out of each other, as Nellie becomes more and more famous (while her gambling habits and other addictions catch up to her) and Chazelle roams from party to party, interspersed by scenes where movies are made.

    Jovan Adepo plays Sidney Palmer in 'Babylon' from Paramount Pictures.
    Jovan Adepo plays Sidney Palmer in ‘Babylon’ from Paramount Pictures.

    Around them, Hollywood begins to evolve from the silent era to the age of talkies, and from rough-and-ready shooting in the desert to cavernous soundstages.

    Robbie is particularly vibrant in the film, finding different layers to her character as she moves through the business, and is convincing at every step. Whether she’s conniving to get her name in lights, or overhearing people talking her down, this is further proof that she’s one of the best working at the moment. Pitt, meanwhile, commits to the easy charm of Conrad, whose career is on the wane as audiences don’t warm to him once talking pictures come along.

    Calva, who is probably best known to American audiences from ‘Narcos: Mexico’, is something of a revelation, a soulful presence in the movie who worries that his soul is tainted as he climbs the executive ranks and then has to help Nellie out of her money problems.

    Smart, whose gossip hound flits in and out of the story, is particularly strong, though she’s not often on screen for more than a minute or so. But her big scene with Jack, where she explains his downward slide, is a highlight. Li, meanwhile, who is also largely on the sidelines, makes the most of her role.

    Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy in 'Babylon' from Paramount Pictures.
    Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy in ‘Babylon’ from Paramount Pictures.

    And there are certainly elements to recommend here: in some scenes, ‘Babylon’ has a pleasing level of comedy, especially when director Ruth Adler (Olivia Hamilton) and Nellie are trying to shoot a scene in the early sound era, where mic positions, concerns over volume and particularly an overheating cameraman, provide memorable laughs.

    A stacked cameo cast largely exists for the audience to play Spot The Actor, with the likes of Eric Roberts, Max Minghella (playing Irving Thalberg, one of the few actual Hollywood legends in the mostly fictionalized movie), Katherine Waterston, Lukas Haas, Flea and Samara Weaving all showing up at different times.

    Chazelle unfortunately loses focuses when it comes to the theme of the film, though. Certainly, there is plenty to be mined from the idea of Hollywood and this time, but ‘Babylon’, for all its length and intertwined stories, merely scrapes the surface. The concept that the entertainment industry is a place for excess and fraught with problems for those who seek stardom is hardly a fresh one, and the movie has little to say that is new or interesting.

    This is much bigger than his previous efforts, but it soon becomes ungainly, and is loaded down with flabby scenes that add little. Even a crazed moment for Calva, where he’s seeking financial help from the distinctly dodgy James McKay, played by Tobey Maguire, which takes in freaks, torture implements and an alligator, feels like it could easily be lost in the service of reducing the movie’s overinflated running time.

    Tobey Maguire plays James McKay in 'Babylon' from Paramount Pictures.
    Tobey Maguire plays James McKay in ‘Babylon’ from Paramount Pictures.

    The less said about the final montage that wraps up the movie, the better, to be honest. It’s meant to celebrate the movies but ends up an embarrassingly amateur example, cramming in easy highpoints and coming across as something out of a film school offering.

    Given that he’s been planning and writing the movie in his head for around 15 years, we’re sorry to report that Chazelle has fumbled this one. ‘Babylon’ is not without its charms and some diversion, but beyond the main cast’s appeal, it is a lot of sound and fury, signifying––not nothing––but not much.

    ‘Babylon’ receives 2.5 out of 5 stars.

    Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy and Diego Calva plays Manny Torres in 'Babylon' from Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Margot Robbie plays Nellie LaRoy and Diego Calva plays Manny Torres in ‘Babylon’ from Paramount Pictures.
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  • ‘State Like Sleep’ Trailer: Katherine Waterston Explores Husband’s Mysterious Death

    ‘State Like Sleep’ Trailer: Katherine Waterston Explores Husband’s Mysterious Death

    State Like Sleep trailer still
    The Orchard Movies/YouTube

    A complicated puzzle emerges in the new “State Like Sleep” trailer.

    Released Wednesday, Nov. 28, the preview introduces Katherine Grand (Katherine Waterston), a widow whose actor husband (Michiel Huisman) died unexpectedly by suicide the year before. When she gets a phone call that prompts her to search for answers, her trail leads her to a gentleman’s club and its owner (Luke Evans).

    The trailer only shows us some of the many puzzle pieces, of course. How they fit together is an even bigger question, but it looks like it’ll be fascinating to get answers. Watch the trailer below.

    The drama is directed by Meredith Danluck, who also wrote the screenplay. Her cast includes Waterston, Huisman, and Evans, plus Mary Kay Place, Michael Shannon, Mark O’Brien, Bo Martyn, and Ian Matthews.

    “State Like Sleep” had its world premiere in April at the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival, and it opens in theaters on Jan. 4. The film also hits on demand on Jan. 1.

  • Here’s Why ‘Alien: Covenant’ Is a Box Office Disappointment

    If you saw “Alien: Covenant” this weekend, you probably have a lot of questions. Some involve plot holes big enough to pilot the Covenant colony spaceship through, and some involve whether or not you’ll ever be able to get the image of Michael Fassbender kissing Michael Fassbender out of your head. (Or if you even want to.)

    This column can’t answer any of those — sorry — but it can answer those regarding the movie’s razor-thin victory over “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” at the box office. The latest “Alien” prequel claimed an estimated $36.0 million debut, keeping “Guardians” from a three-peat at No. 1 by a margin of less than $1 million.

    Going into the weekend, “Alien’s” projections were near $40 million, but a Friday to Saturday dip crushed those hopes. Still, what does this photo finish mean for the franchise, its director and stars, its studio, and a summer movie season that has hobbled out of the gate? Let’s break it down.

    “Guardians” is holding up very well after three weeks; it just crossed the $300 million mark on its 17th day in theaters, and it’ll almost certainly surpass the $333 million total earned by the first “Guardians” within the next several days. Plus, Ridley Scott‘s previous “Alien” prequel — 2012’s confusing “Prometheus” — may have squandered a lot of the franchise’s good will.
    Nonetheless, anticipation for “Covenant” was keen, reviews were good-ish (73 percent at Rotten Tomatoes), word-of-mouth was just okay (as measured by a B grade at CinemaScore), and the R-rated sci-fi/horror installment was able to deliver gore, thrills, and chills that franchise fans have come to expect over the last 38 years. Plus, it’s competition among new wide releases skewed a lot younger, so it didn’t have to worry about losing viewers to teen romance “Everything, Everything” or family comedy sequel “Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul.” No wonder people 25 and older made up 66 percent of the “Covenant” audience.

    Is “Covenant’s” Opening Weekend a Triumph or Disappointment?
    The argument is leaning toward the latter.

    It’s a lot less than the $51 million debut of “Prometheus,” but no one expected it to open anywhere near that big anyway. After all, anticipation for “Prometheus” was even greater, since that marked the beginning of Scott’s prequel series, as well as the celebrated director’s return to the franchise he launched in 1979, after a 33-year absence.

    Some pundits predicted that “Covenant” would premiere with as little as $35 million, though others predicted it would open as much as $40 million. So $36 million is within the range of expectations, and — assuming the weekend estimates hold up when final figures are released Monday — “Covenant” will claim bragging rights as the movie that dethroned “Guardians.”

    Is Katherine Waterston the Next Sigourney Weaver?
    It’s not clear whether her role as the plucky “Covenant” heroine will make her as famous as the original “Alien” made the then-unknown Weaver. But certainly, Hollywood is trying its darnedest to make her a star, between this and her recent supporting-lead role in the Harry Potter franchise-reviving “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.”

    Still, in “Covenant,” she has to compete for the spotlight against not just one but two Michael Fassbenders, as well as a large ensemble cast, so she’s probably still a few movies away from a breakthrough role.

    Is “Covenant” Going to Make a Profit?
    That could depend on what it cost, which in turn depends on who you ask.

    Trade reports cite Fox as saying the movie cost $97 million, but the typically blunt and candid Scott has said $111 million. Both figures seem remarkably low for an effects-heavy space opera, especially since “Prometheus” cost a reported $130 million five years ago.

    Then again, Fox is reporting that “Covenant” has already earned $81.9 million overseas, so its global total of $117.9 is above even Scott’s figure. Of course, once you add marketing costs and subtract the theater owners’ take, “Covenant” is going to have to gross as much as $450 million just to break even.

    That’s not impossible. Scott’s previous “Alien” prequel grabbed $403 million from earthling ticketbuyers, and that was at 2012 prices. In any case, what will save “Covenant,” like nearly every other big-budget Hollywood release this year, will be the foreign audience. The domestic release was always going to be just gravy, which is another reason why Fox shouldn’t be too disappointed by $36 million North American debut.

    What Do This Weekend’s Results Say About the Summer 2017 Movie Season
    Don’t forget, even if domestic box office is an afterthought these days, summer sales still traditionally make up 40 percent of the year’s take, or about $4.5 billion at the North American box office.
    The current summer movie season is just three weeks old, but already, it’s seen “Covenant” do “meh” business, “Guardians 2” slightly underperform them, and “King Arthur: Legend of the Swordbomb outright. The box office for the year to date is just slightly ahead of this time last year (by 2.4 percent, or about $102 million). That’s not much of an edge; a couple more shaky debuts or massive flops and this year’s box office will fall behind and struggle to catch up with previous years. There’d better be a lot of gold in Wonder Woman’s lasso.

    Scott has said he has at least one and as many as four ideas for future “Alien” installments. As long as the 79-year-old’s health holds out, and as long as the $1.4 billion franchise keeps delivering solid worldwide numbers like “Covenant” has, those facehuggers and chestbursters should keep coming back to terrify us for years to come.

  • 6 Things You Need to Know Before Seeing ‘Alien: Covenant’

    You’d think at some point the residents of the “Alien” universe would learn to stop traveling to remote worlds where hungry Xenomorphs are waiting to eviscerate them. Oh well. Their loss is our gain, as franchise returns to theaters with “Alien: Covenant.”

    If you’re not sure where this latest film falls on the increasingly complicated “Alien” timeline, fear not. We’re breaking down everything you need to know about “Covenant, from how it connects to 2012’s “Prometheus” to what to expect from this new crew of unfortunate souls/future chestburster incubators.

    1. It’s More of a Sequel to “Prometheus” Than You ThinkWhile it’s not actually called “Prometheus 2,” “Covenant” is a follow-up to that 2012 “Alien” prequel.

    Set ten years after the events of that polarizing prequel, “Covenant” will reveal (sort of) what became of Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) and the damaged android David (Michael Fassbender) after they left LV-223 in search of the Engineers who created humanity. The film will also feature Guy Pearce reprising his role as the late Peter Weyland (despite having suffered a violent death last time around).

    2. You’ll Meet Mostly New CharactersWhile it’s a continuation of “Prometheus,” “Covenant” looks to be focusing more on a new cast of characters. The film revolves mainly around the crew of the Covenant, who are responsible for ferrying a group of interstellar colonists to their new home. This crew is the latest in a long line of Weyland-Yutani teams to run afoul of the ruthless Xenomorphs (HR and legal must love these workman’s comp claims).

    The crew includes terraforming expert Daniels (Katherine Waterston), first mate Christopher Oram (Billy Crudup), chief pilot Tennessee (Danny McBride), and security officer Sgt. Lope (Demián Bichir).

    Fassbender will be pulling double duty this time around, as he’ll also be playing the Covenant’s helpful (and kind of badass) android, Walter.

    3. The Film Goes Back to Its RootsNot all “Alien” fans were thrilled with the direction in which “Prometheus” pulled the franchise, complaining about director Ridley Scott‘s emphasis on philosophy and fleshing out the origins of the Xenomorphs with complicated and convoluted mythology, rather than finding a worthwhile way of exploring those questions by way of the claustrophobic horror — and character-driven stakes — that made the first two “Alien” films so memorable.

    Luckily, early reviews suggest that “Covenant” is bringing the franchise back to its roots. Expect more emphasis on horror and bloodshed this time around, as the Covenant crew slowly come to grips with the deadly threat awaiting them when they detour to an undiscovered planet while en route to their new home.

    4. There’s Even More Mythology
    Despite the “back to basics” mentality of this prequel, “Covenant” will still feature some of the philosophical elements of “Prometheus.” The original title of the film was actually “Alien: Paradise Lost,” which gives you some idea of where Ridley Scott is drawing inspiration from.

    “Covenant” goes deeper into the world of the mysterious Engineers while expanding on what the black goo is that seems to have birthed both humanity and the Xenomorphs.

    5. There’s a New Xenomorph
    It wouldn’t be a proper “Alien” movie without at least one new variation on the Xenomorph. “Covenant” will introduce the Neomorph, a smaller, more feral version of the iconic monster. The Neomorphs are native to the seemingly idyllic world the Covenant crew discover in the film, created after the Engineers’ black goo interacted with, well, you’ll have to see for yourself.

    Traditionalists needn’t worry — the film will also feature plenty of the classic “Big Chap” Xenomorph we know and love. But rather than a tall guy in a rubber suit, the Xenomorphs are now mostly computer-animated creations, making them quicker, deadlier, and more flashy than ever.

    6. “Covenant” Starts a New TrilogyWe can only hope “Covenant” recaptures the appeal of the first two “Alien” movies, otherwise, it might be the last entry in the franchise. Scott intends “Covenant” to be the first part of a new trilogy of films that will progressively shed more light on David and his plans to continue a more deadly version of what the Engineers started.

    The goal is to eventually link this trilogy to the events of the original “Alien.” Scott already has developed screenplays for both sequels, with production on “Alien: Covenant 2” hoping to begin in 2018.

    “Alien: Covenant” hits theaters May 19. Get your tickets here.

  • Katherine Waterston: What Those Aliens Really Look Like Up Close

     

    Katherine Waterston from Alien: Covenant
    Katherine Waterston from Alien: Covenant

    Shut your eyes and you might miss them. Open your eyes and you’ll be scared to death. In the “Alien” movies the terror comes from getting only glimpses of those outer-space creatures and letting the imagination fill in the frightening details.

    But as the star of “Alien: Covenant,” Katherine Waterston got to be up close and personal with director Ridley Scott’s scary playthings.

    “When you’re on set you can see every little detail of these creatures and it’s kind of incredible that (Scott’s) able to use them so minimally in a sense when they look so amazing,” Waterston tells Made in Hollywood reporter Kylie Erica Mar. “These people they work so hard to build these creature and you just see them for a flash here and there. So on set it was more like being in a museum to get to see these creatures up close and really appreciate the level of artistry required to create them.”

    Bound for a remote planet on the far side of the galaxy, Waterston and costar Billy Crudup discover what they think to be an uncharted paradise that soon turns dark and dangerous when a hostile alien life-form forces the crew into a deadly fight for survival.

    “This is probably going to reveal what a twisted individual I am,” says Waterston, “but I was so excited to watch everybody bite the dust, and see how they shot all of those things.”

    But if she really had to fly to a planet colony, she’d choose as companion a different costar.

    “I really have a soft spot for Danny McBride,” says Waterston. “He might not be protect me so well but at least I’d go down laughing.”

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