Tag: kelsey-grammer

  • IMDb Announces First Scripted Series, ‘You’re Not a Monster’

    IMDb Announces First Scripted Series, ‘You’re Not a Monster’

    IMDb

    IMDb just announced its first scripted series, called “You’re Not a Monster.”

    It stars Eric Stonestreet as therapist Max, the great-great grandson of a former psychiatrist-turned-vampire (Kelsey Grammer) whose clients are famous movie monsters, including Frankenstein, The Invisible Man and Medusa.

    (Do we expect “Frasier” in-jokes? Yes, yes we do. And some Sideshow Bob jokes as well.)

    Aparna Nancherla costars as Max’s demon receptionist and Ellie Kemper as a therapist who thinks Max is imagining everything. Other voice talent announced so far: Patton Oswalt and Amy Sedaris.

    Each episode will be only 4-5 minutes.

    “You’re Not a Monster” is created and written by Emmy winner Frank Lesser (“The Colbert Report”).

    It will debut sometime this fall. Look for a sneak peek at San Diego Comic Con.

    [Via Deadline]

  • Kelsey Grammer, Julia Stiles Starring in ‘The God Committee’

    Kelsey Grammer, Julia Stiles Starring in ‘The God Committee’

    Kelsey Grammer; Julia Stiles
    Netflix; Sky Atlantic

    Kelsey Grammer and Julia Stiles have been chosen for “The God Committee.”

    The actors nabbed starring roles in the upcoming medical thriller centering on the U.S. organ transplant system, Variety reports. The film is in production now and also stars Colman Domingo, Janeane Garofalo, and Dan Hedaya.

    The script comes from Austin Stark, who is also directing the film. It centers on a donor heart that is taken to a New York hospital and on the transplant committee’s decision as to who gets to receive it. The impact of that decision, six years later, is also part of the story. We don’t know yet what roles the actors will be playing.

    Both Grammer and Stiles are veteran actors — Grammer, especially. He is well-known for his roles on the TV series “Frasier” and “Cheers,” and he recently starred in Netflix’s “Like Father.” Stiles’s body of work includes roles in the Bourne film series, among others, and she currently stars in the Irish TV series “Riviera.”

    “The God Committee” is produced by Paper Street Films, Phiphen Pictures, and Crystal City Entertainment. Producers include Phiphen’s Molly Conners, Amanda Bowers, Vincent Morano, and Jane Oster; Crystal City’s Ari Pinchot and Jonathan Rubenstein; and Paper Street’s Benji Kohn, Bingo Gubelmann, and Stark. Meanwhile, the project’s executive producers are Joanna Meek, Ray Masucci, Erika Hampson, Richard J. Berthy, and Mark Trustin.

    [via: Variety]

  • Kelsey Grammer Exploring ‘Frasier’ Reboot

    Kelsey Grammer Exploring ‘Frasier’ Reboot

    frasier
    NBC

    The ’90s reboots keep on coming. Next up: A possible revival of “Frasier.”

    Deadline reports star and executive producer Kelsey Grammer is exploring a new version of “Frasier,”  likely set in a new city still centered around the title character.

    The project, which would be produced by CBS TV Studios, is still in the very early stages of the exploration and Grammer is only just beginning to listen to pitches from writers about ideas for the reboot.

    Frasier Crane is well-used to moving to a new city; Grammer’s character, a psychiatrist, was first introduced on NBC’s “Cheers” before getting his own spinoff set in Seattle, where he became a talk radio host and reconnected with his father and brother. In the series finale, Frasier moved to Chicago to be with his girlfriend (Laura Linney).

    The series was a hit with audiences and critics and earned over 37 Emmy wins, including five straight for Best Comedy.

    It’s no surprise that Grammer and CBS TV Studios is looking into rebooting the show, after the success of “Will & Grace” and “Roseanne” and optimism for the upcoming “Murphy Brown” revival.

  • ‘Fraiser’ Star John Mahoney Dead at 77

    Fraiser,” died Sunday. Deadline confirmed the actor’s passing. He was 77.

    Mahoney was a hit with fans of the Emmy-winning “Cheers” spinoff, playing the recliner chair-bound patriarch to Fraiser Crane (Kelsey Grammer) and his brother, Niles (David Hyde Pierce). The series aired from 1993 to 2004 and earned Mahoney two Emmy nominations for his role as the opinionated, fussy, and very likable Martin Crane. The late actor also was nominated for two Golden Globes for the role — and he won a Screen Actors Guild award for playing Martin.
    Born in England, Mahoney first discovered acting at the Stretford Children’s Theater. He excelled as an actor with a successful theater career, and made his feature film debut in 1987’s “Tin Men.” Mahoney is arguably best known to movie fans for playing the father of Diane Court (Ione Skye) in Cameron Crowe’s ’80s classic, “Say Anything…”

    Other feature film credits include the Coen Brothers’ “Barton Fink,” “In the Line of Fire,” and “The American President.”

  • Marc Guggenheim Talks del Toro’s ‘Trollhunters,’ Confirms More DC/CW Crossovers

    Netflix & DreamWorks Animation's TROLLHUNTERSAs any fan of the The CW’s superheroic series “Arrow” and “Legends of Tomorrow” knows, writer/producer Marc Guggenheim‘s got a pretty solid track record for translating imaginative adventure projects from the page to the screen.

    For his latest effort, Guggenheim’s turning his attention from the comic book page to the world of young adult fantasy fiction by “Trollhunters,” the 2015 novel by acclaimed filmmaker Guillermo del Toro along with Daniel Kraus. Long before the book was published — five years, to be precise — Guggenheim was collaborating with del Toro on an animated adaptation of the tale that finds seemingly average teenager Jim inadvertently elevated to the role of Trollhunter, defender of a secret, centuries-old community of trolls hidden beneath his hometown, and finds himself balancing the demands of his title with making sure he makes it to gym class.

    When del Toro’s expansive universe proved too big to be contained in a single film, Guggenheim put on his executive producer hat and built out a “Trollhunters” saga for the small screen as a 26-episode animated series for DreamWorks Animation, debuting on Netflix Dec. 23, featuring an all-star voice cast (including Steven Yeun, Kelsey Grammer, frequent del Toro collaborator Ron Perlman and the late Anton Yelchin in his final performance as Jim)

    Guggenheim joined Moviefone to delve into his behind-the-scenes experiences bringing del Toro’s vision to animated, serialized life, and he also shares his thoughts on the wildly positive reception to the ambitious recent crossover of all four of the DC Universe TV series and what it promises for the future.

    Moviefone: You’re no stranger to adapting characters that are created by somebody else or in some other medium, but Guillermo del Toro has such a specific vision for everything he does; he’s such a very specific type of artist. How was the process different in trying to realize Guillermo’s very specific vision for “Trollhunters”?

    Marc Guggenheim: I think that’s a really smart and savvy question. I will say it helps enormously that Guillermo is able to, I think in many ways, sort of square the circle in the sense that, you’re right, he does have an incredibly specific vision, and that’s amazing, and that’s why he’s, quite frankly, Guillermo del Toro.

    At the same time, it threatens to be contradictory. I think, for anyone else, it is contradictory. But in Guillermo’s case, it really isn’t. He is incredibly collaborative, and he’ll take a good idea from anywhere. He goes into these things without any ego. He’s able to always keep his eye on the ball of what he wants, and he never looses sight of that, which is terrific. But at the same time, that vision still has room for other people’s contributions. It’s a remarkable thing, and it’s a very rare thing, as you might imagine.

    What did you learn from collaborating with Guillermo?

    Oh gosh. I honestly don’t know if we have the kind of time to list it all! The truth of the matter is that I always describe working with Guillermo as like going to film school. I don’t think there’s a single meeting, or phone call, even from the longest story breaking session to the shortest touch base, where he doesn’t end up saying something where I don’t learn something either about the business or the craft, or about storytelling in general.

    I would say probably the biggest thing I learned from Guillermo is trusting your audience. I think Guillermo, he really does trust the audience. Even when we’re working on something where we intend for the audience to include young kids. He’s very much about trusting the audience. They’ll get it. They will follow the narrative, no matter how rich, no matter even how complex, and I don’t think he’s wrong. He trusts that the audience can handle it, even young kids can handle it.

    I think he’s right. I think it’s something that we tend to lose sight of, particularly in television. It’s a very, very invaluable lesson.

    This is a great time for animated work on TV, with shows incorporating a little bit more complexity and serialization in the storytelling. For you, what was the fun and the challenge of a serialized story in the animation sphere?

    First of all, it was a huge amount of fun. It’s funny. I never really looked at it as like a challenge. It honestly really felt like a series of opportunities. I think the project ended up benefiting a little bit from the fact that I hadn’t really done animation, and I hadn’t done children’s television. The approach that we all took, consistent with Guillermo’s vision, was that we’re not writing it for kids. We’re just writing it basically for people, and for people of all ages. So it’s something that kids can watch, but there’s plenty of humor that adults can appreciate.

    There’s a timeless quality to the setting that makes it appeal to people of all ages. I think the story is very universal. It’s essentially a “Chosen One” story, but sort of within that very generic description there was a huge amount of room for us to play with those tropes, and tweak them, and turn them on their head a little bit, which I think, again, is the kind of thing you come to associate with Guillermo’s writing.

    I think one of the things Guillermo doesn’t get enough credit for is, everyone understands and recognizes he’s a visionary director, and he has this incredible visual style, but he’s also a remarkable writer, and brings a lot of heart and humor to his work. It’s a lot of fun to put that all in the mix and see what we ended up with. I’m sorry, I realize I started to run very far field of your original question.

    Are you energized to develop some more stuff in the animation field? Is that now a territory that you feel really attracted to?

    Yeah. I have to say that this whole experience — and I’ve been working on “Trollhunters” now for about five years — has been just so joyful. I can’t express that enough. Part of it’s the animation side of it. Part of it is just the wonderful people at DreamWorks who we work with.

    Whenever I go over to DreamWorks and see the animators, and see the designers, and just even walk around the space, quite frankly, it’s so inspiring, and I come back to my offices at “Arrow” and “Legends” almost re-energized.

    So, yeah, I would like to think that it’s not my last foray, as always. I’m very much about not picking things based upon the genre, but rather “Is the story interesting to me? Is the world compelling? And are the people involved people that I want to be spending time with?”The CW DC crossover 2016I imagine you were pretty gratified to see the enthusiastic response to the big crossover among the DC/CW series, particularly to the 100th episode of “Arrow.” When you started seeing the fan reaction to what was happening on-screen, how did you feel?

    I’d probably have to say, first of all — just because it’s the nature of my personality — relieved. You know what was really nice? What was so great about the response — I was reading Twitter and checking social media and everything, was for one night at least, the “Arrow” 100th, we all sort of dropped the tribalism of which relationships we wanted, and what plotlines were upsetting us, and it was just the celebration of the show. And that was really, really wonderful.

    Both the 100th episode and the crossover, it really was written with fans in mind. The whole thing really was an exercise in “What do we think is cool? What do we think the audience will think is cool? Trust that what we think is cool and what the audience thinks is cool is the same thing, and just go for it.”

    I think the cherry on top of the sundae was, I think everyone watched with an eye towards what we were trying to accomplish. They recognized it was a TV show and it wasn’t a movie, so they were I think impressed by the scope of it. They recognized that each of these shows has their own identity, so they understood that the “Flash” episode is an episode of “Flash,” same with “Arrow,” same with “Legends.”

    I think what was most gratifying was just the fact that everyone was on board for this ride that we had constructed for them. It was super great. Definitely everyone, both here at the office and the studio and network, we’ve still been on a high.

    Do you see this as being an annual event?

    Yeah. I think, certainly, each year we’ve done a crossover, and each year it’s gotten bigger and more ambitious. Those sorts of decisions are actually made well above my head — though I don’t think it’s hard to look at the landscape and go “Well, surely there will be a proper four night crossover next year with all four shows — ‘Supergirl’ properly included.”

    But who knows? I think all of us are still recovering a little bit from this crossover. It is a lot of work. I’m not going to lie to you. It’s a labor of love for sure, but it’s definitely — it’s kind of like childbirth. You don’t want to immediately start thinking about the next baby. You’re still holding the newborn in your arms.

    I felt with the “Arrow” 100th in particular, by the time we got to the end of that particular episode, for “Arrow,” the table’s really been reset; everything seems open to a whole new way of looking at things and the possibilities are wide open. Do you guys feel that way creatively on staff?

    Yes and no, in the sense that, look: I think on “Arrow,” we’ve always sort of felt like, once we introduced Barry Allen, and once the universe sort of expanded to include metahumans, and now time travel and parallel universes, and now aliens, I think we all recognize that the world is much bigger, and that “Arrow” can absolutely do episodes where he’s fighting a metahuman, or, like we did last year, introduce magic.

    I think, last year, we leaned pretty heavily into metahumans and magic. I wouldn’t say the results were mixed — I would say that the response was mixed. I think what’s a fun challenge for us on “Arrow”; how do we acknowledge this larger universe that has grown, while at the same time allowing “Arrow” to do what it does best? Which is: each of these shows has its own identity, and “Arrow” is the gritty, grounded crime drama. We do 23 episodes a year. So that’s a pretty big canvas, and I think that out of 23 episodes, the show can benefit from, and withstand, the occasional foray into genre.

  • The First ‘Storks’ Trailer Shows Off ‘New and Improved’ Baby Delivery

    This ain’t your grandpappy’s stork drop. That “quaint” baby delivery system is a thing of the past, as shown in this first official teaser trailer for “Storks,” touted as “from the studio that delivered ‘The Lego Movie,’” and featuring the voices of Kelsey Grammer, Andy Samberg, Keegan-Michael Key, and Jordan Peele.

    This teaser just features Grammer’s executive stork as he explains Stork Mountain’s “new and improved human infant production facility. We have perfected and streamlined the process, devising a zero mistake workflow!” Of course, in the background — while he’s promising “the opposite of the Titanic” — we see the not-so-perfect process going hilariously awry.

    Here’s the teaser:

    And here’s Warner Bros.’s synopsis for the family film:

    “Storks deliver babies…or at least they used to. Now they deliver packages for global internet giant Cornerstore.com. Junior, the company’s top delivery stork, is about to be promoted when he accidentally activates the Baby Making Machine, producing an adorable and wholly unauthorized baby girl. Desperate to deliver this bundle of trouble before the boss gets wise, Junior and his friend Tulip, the only human on Stork Mountain, race to make their first-ever baby drop – in a wild and revealing journey that could make more than one family whole and restore the storks’ true mission in the world.”

    Sounds like it might actually be a bit of a heart-tugger. “Storks” is scheduled for release in September 2016.

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