Tag: kiernan-shipka

  • Movie Review: ‘The Last Showgirl’

    Pamela Anderson in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Pamela Anderson in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    Opening in theaters January 10th is ‘The Last Showgirl,’ directed by Gia Coppola and starring Pamela Anderson, Dave Bautista, Jamie Lee Curtis, Billie Lourd, Kiernan Shipka, Brenda Song, and Jason Schwartzman.

    Related Article: Pamela Anderson and Jamie Lee Curtis Talk Drama ‘The Last Showgirl’

    Initial Thoughts

    Pamela Anderson in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Pamela Anderson in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    It’s lately been a thing that a number of our best-known actresses have delivered performances that were especially raw physically, emotionally, or both, with many of them involving a change in appearance about as far from red carpet movie star glamour as one could imagine. Amy Adams in ‘Nightbitch.’ Demi Moore in ‘The Substance.’ Jamie Lee Curtis in ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once.’ And now you can add one-time ‘Baywatch’ star and all-around TV sexpot Pamela Anderson to that list with her achingly poignant work in ‘The Last Showgirl.’

    The movie itself, directed by Gia Coppola (yes, a third-generation Coppola filmmaker), isn’t going to change the world, and it may not even change much about the current status of Anderson’s career. But it shows that underneath the pneumatic figure and red bathing suit that defined much of her tenure, Anderson is capable of pulling a fine piece of acting out of her heart and soul. Shelley Gardner, the last showgirl of the title, is far from perfect, but she’s endearing and human and worth your time, even if the movie itself is merely okay.

    Story and Direction

    'The Last Showgirl' director Gia Coppola.
    ‘The Last Showgirl’ director Gia Coppola.

    As ‘The Last Showgirl’ opens – after a prologue in which we see Shelley nervously about to embark on an audition – we learn that the Las Vegas show she’s been part of for 30 years, “Le Razzle Dazzle,” has been given its last rites and will close in two weeks. Shelley and some of her friends in the ensemble – younger dancers like Jodie (Kiernan Shipka) and Mary-Anne (Brenda Song) who treat her like a reluctant mother figure – are informed of this by Eddie (Dave Bautista), their quiet stage manager with whom it’s hinted that Shelley has a history. But the more immediate concern for all is where they go from here.

    For Shelley, it’s an especially tough blow: she sees “Le Razzle Dazzle” as “the last true showgirl show in Vegas,” with its peekaboo nudity and old-school raunchiness giving way to either more explicit sexcapades or family-friendly spectacles like the circus that’s taking over their stage. “They used to treat us like movie stars,” Shelley says mournfully at one point. “Ambassadors for style and grace.” She’s even in the 1980s press shots for the show – which means it’s going to be even harder for her to find work in something new, as a casting director (Jason Schwartzman) viciously points out in the scene that we eventually circle back to from the prologue.

    Jamie Lee Curtis in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Jamie Lee Curtis in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    She could become a cocktail waitress like her friend Annette (Jamie Lee Curtis), a former dancer who can barely fit into her work uniform and can’t make ends meet when she’s around slot machines all the time. But Shelley has always aspired to be onstage – an ambition in life that once almost led her to the Rockettes (“I found all that kicking very redundant”) but that also led her, on a more serious note, to all but abandon her daughter Hannah (Billie Lourd), now about to graduate college, who Shelley wants to reconnect with.

    The tension between Hannah and Shelly forms the main spine of ‘The Last Showgirl,’ in addition to the impending end of the show, but it turns out that those are barely enough to sustain the film’s 90-minute runtime. It’s not an expensive movie, to be sure, with much of it taking place either in Shelley’s cramped little house or the equally small backstage area of the show. But despite its meaningful themes, it’s also not as fleshed-out as it could be. Bewildering montages of Shelley and/or Hannah wandering the avenues of Vegas among its monstrous edifices of vice make it painfully obvious that Coppola is stretching the film to feature length.

    Which is a shame because there’s room for more here. Shelley is no angel: “Mothers aren’t saints or saviors,” she says, “Just regular people doing the best they can with the tools they have.” Yet the movie kind of papers over the fact that she left her child behind to pursue her dreams – dreams which led her to spend most of her life in what Hannah calls “a stupid nudie show” when she finally sees what she lost her mom to. There’s something subversive about the idea of Shelley sacrificing a normal relationship with her child and not exactly regretting it, but the movie doesn’t examine this – or much else – in too much depth, relying instead on Anderson to carry it forward.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Jamie Lee Curtis and Pamela Anderson star in 'The Last Showgirl'.
    (L to R) Jamie Lee Curtis and Pamela Anderson star in ‘The Last Showgirl’.

    Make no mistake, this is the Pamela Anderson show. She still cuts an impressive figure even though she’s a long way from her TV lifeguard days, and there’s no doubt that in her work here she is channeling her own journey from ‘Baywatch’ breakout to failed movie star to sex tape joke to righteous animal activist. But while we don’t imagine this will jumpstart her acting career, this is still surprisingly resonant work from the actor. Anderson brings both a vulnerability and a steely dignity to the role of Shelley, and certainly stretches herself for this role in a way that her previous onscreen work never hinted at.

    Also impressive is Jamie Lee Curtis disappearing again into an almost unrecognizable, deglammed role as Annette, while Dave Bautista adds to his own catalog of sensitive, empathetic performances that belie his physical bulk. Less memorable are Billie Lourd as Shelley’s daughter and both Brenda Song and Kiernan Shipka as her friends from the show, all of whom are fine but don’t get quite the character depth as the three leads. Lourd’s Hannah in particular has a reactive turn halfway through the movie that doesn’t seem believable, although the emotions between Hannah and Shelley feel real. Meanwhile, Jason Schwartzman cameos as that callous casting director in what must be his 118th film appearance of the past year.

    Final Thoughts

    Pamela Anderson in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Pamela Anderson in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    ‘The Last Showgirl’ touches on a lot of genuine issues: aging, identity, responsibility, and the fear of irrelevance, all filtered through the perspective of women who almost always have it way tougher when it comes to these challenges. Yet “touches” is the right word, because ‘The Last Showgirl’ doesn’t spend a lot of time on any of them and as a film is rather evanescent and lightly developed.

    As a vehicle for a woman who has no doubt grappled with these issues herself, ‘The Last Showgirl’ is fascinating. It will change your perspective on Pamela Anderson, who appears here – to trot out a well-worn phrase – like you’ve never seen her before, and it will make you think about the way women are carelessly tossed to the side in show business – and other businesses – like clothes that are no longer in fashion. “I just have to disappear,” Shelley says bitterly near the end, before asserting that she has “no regrets, none.” Despite its flaws, Anderson should have no regrets about starring in ‘The Last Showgirl,’ and in the end you should have none about watching her in it.

    ‘The Last Showgirl’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Last Showgirl’?

    After a successful thirty-year run, a seasoned showgirl (Pamela Anderson) must plan her future after the show closes abruptly.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Last Showgirl’?

    • Pamela Anderson as Shelly
    • Jamie Lee Curtis as Annette
    • Dave Bautista as Eddie
    • Brenda Song as Mary-Anne
    • Kiernan Shipka as Jodie
    • Billie Lourd as Hannah
    • Jason Schwartzman as a director
    Pamela Anderson in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Pamela Anderson in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    Movies Directed By Gia Coppola:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Last Showgirl’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Pamela Anderson Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘The Last Showgirl’s Pamela Anderson and Jamie Lee Curtis

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    Opening in theaters in wide release on January 10th is the new film from director Gia Coppola (‘Palo Alto’) entitled ‘The Last Showgirl’, which stars Golden Globe nominee Pamela Anderson (‘Baywatch’), Dave Bautista (‘Guardians of the Galaxy’), Brenda Song (‘The Social Network’), Kiernan Shipka (‘Red One’), Billie Lourd (‘Star Wars: The Last Jedi’), and Oscar winner Jamie Lee Curtis (‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’).

    Related Article: 20 Best Jamie Lee Curtis Movies

    (L to R) Jamie Lee Curtis and Pamela Anderson star in 'The Last Showgirl'.
    (L to R) Jamie Lee Curtis and Pamela Anderson star in ‘The Last Showgirl’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Pamela Anderson and Jamie Lee Curtis about their work on ‘The Last Showgirl’, Anderson’s first reaction to the screenplay, how she related to her character, why Curtis wanted to work with Anderson and their characters’ friendship, and working with director Gia Coppola.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Anderson, Curtis, Brenda Song, Kiernan Shipka and director Gia Coppola.

    Pamela Anderson in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Pamela Anderson in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Pamela, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and your approach to playing Shelly? Did you relate to the character right away?

    Pamela Anderson: Well, once the script finally found me through a few obstacles, I just fell in love with it. When I read it, I could hear the voice already, I could see it so clearly, I just couldn’t wait to get started. I had happy feet. I was just like; I must get started. I got to get that first scene done, what do you call it, “in the can”. Once it was there, we hit the ground running and everyone jumped in headfirst. But I was so appreciative because I’ve always dreamt of, I always wanted to do something good. I want my legacy to be something I’m proud of and I’ve always wanted to make my family and my kids proud. I remember seeing my kid’s front row when I played Roxie in ‘Chicago’ on Broadway on the opening night and when the lights came up and they were there, it was so amazing to see them proud of me. So same thing with this movie.

    Jamie Lee Curtis in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Jamie Lee Curtis in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    MF: Jamie Lee, can you talk about the friendship between Annette and Shelly, and what it was like for you creating that relationship with Pamela on screen?

    Jamie Lee Curtis: Instantaneous. I signed up to do the movie because Pamela was going to be in it. We’ve never met, we don’t know each other, but I knew who she was. My female friendships are incredibly important to me, and so this is just a beautiful extension of a female friendship. This is that ride-or-die bestie that have been through everything together and we don’t need to have known each other because we know each other because women know each other because we’ve all been there, we’ve all done it. So, I’m just thrilled to have been able to meet her and fall in love with her the way that we have done so on film.

    Pamela Anderson in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Pamela Anderson in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    MF: Jamie Lee, has the friendship between you and Pamela that you created for this movie continued after filming was completed?

    JLC: Oh, absolutely. Are you kidding? That’s not fake. We may not see each other a lot. Pamela lives in Vancouver. I live in Los Angeles. We’re both working all the time now. Chances are we aren’t going to be having sleepovers, but we will now forever be in each other’s hearts for sure.

    'The Last Showgirl' director Gia Coppola.
    ‘The Last Showgirl’ director Gia Coppola.

    MF: Pamela, what was it like collaborating with director Gia Coppola on set?

    PA: Oh, she’s a wonderful director. She’s very soft-spoken, but very decisive. You feel completely safe with her. Like I said, this is a new world for me, these are all new feelings that I’m savoring, and she’s such a big part of that. But she’s sneaky because she’s very kind and sweet but then when she’s on set, she has her own video monitor, and she doesn’t have everybody chiming in.

    Pamela Anderson in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Pamela Anderson in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    MF: Finally, Pamela, can you talk about the challenges of shooting this movie in only 18 days in Las Vegas?

    PA: It was challenging, fun and exciting, and that’s how you want it. You want it to break you down and find things that you never knew existed, and it takes a challenge like that. The whole thing was just 18 days, I know movies take longer than that, but I don’t really have that experience, so I just shot eight or nine scenes a day. I needed to be ready when I got there.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Last Showgirl’?

    After a successful thirty-year run, a seasoned showgirl (Pamela Anderson) must plan her future after the show closes abruptly.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Last Showgirl’?

    • Pamela Anderson as Shelly
    • Jamie Lee Curtis as Annette
    • Dave Bautista as Eddie
    • Brenda Song as Mary-Anne
    • Kiernan Shipka as Jodie
    • Billie Lourd as Hannah
    • Jason Schwartzman as a director
    Pamela Anderson in 'The Last Showgirl'. Photo: Roadside Attractions.
    Pamela Anderson in ‘The Last Showgirl’. Photo: Roadside Attractions.

    Movies Directed By Gia Coppola:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Last Showgirl’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Pamela Anderson Movies on Amazon

     

  • Movie Review: ‘Red One’

    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Opening in theaters on November 15th is ‘Red One,’ directed by Jake Kasdan and starring Dwayne Johnson, Chris Evans, J.K. Simmons, Lucy Liu, Bonnie Hunt, Kiernan Shipka, Kristofer Hivju, and Nick Kroll.

    Related Article: 10 Things We Learned at ‘Red One’ Press Conference with Cast and Crew

    Initial Thoughts

    'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Not to be confused with Netflix’s ‘Red Notice,’ another algorithm-induced action movie starring Dwayne Johnson and a Marvel superhero, ‘Red One’ aims to be something for everyone: it’s not just an action movie, but it’s also trying to be a fantastical Christmas story and a heartwarming family yarn. As often happens, however, the effort to please all audience quadrants results in something bland, boring, and derivative.

    Directed by Jake Kasdan, who also collaborated with The Rock on the recent, overrated ‘Jumanji’ movies, ‘Red One’ does feature a cute idea at its core and a winning performance from J.K. Simmons as a very different kind of Santa Claus. But a lethargic pace, an often-murky visual palette and a ton of half-baked CG, along with less than stellar efforts from some of the cast, makes ‘Red One’ the kind of holiday present you hope they included the gift receipt for.

    Story and Direction

    'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    ‘Red One’ opens with a prologue in which a young boy named Jack O’Malley (Wyatt Hunt) shows his disappointed cousins where the Christmas gifts are hidden, simultaneously smashing their dreams and foreshadowing his adult career as a cynical, clandestine tracker and bounty hunter (now played by Chris Evans) who claims he can find anything. He’s also – as par for the course for this kind of thing – divorced and a largely absentee dad to his son. But Jack’s life takes an unexpected turn when he helps an anonymous client pinpoint a security breach at some kind of mysterious location near the North Pole.

    That location happens to be the complex where Santa Claus (J.K. Simmons), his wife (Bonnie Hunt), and their many human and non-human employees live and work behind a security shield that might give Wakanda a run for its money. But that security is compromised thanks to Jack, and despite the best efforts of Santa’s head of security, Callum Drift (Dwayne Johnson), a quasi-military squad parachutes in and kidnaps “Nick” – as Callum calls him – whisking him into the clutches of Gryla (Kiernan Shipka), a legendary winter witch who wants to channel Santa’s magical powers to disrupt Christmas with her own nefarious plans.

    That leaves it up to Drift and Zoe Harlow (Lucy Liu), head of the Mythological Oversight and Restoration Authority (M.O.R.A.), which oversees the existence of mythological creatures around the world, to forcibly recruit Jack in their efforts to reacquire Santa and keep Christmas on schedule. Along the way they’ll interact with more creatures out of legend, including Santa’s estranged brother Krampus (Kristofer Hivju), while Jack learns the value of family and Drift slowly regains the positive outlook he’s lost over the centuries as more and more humans migrate to – you guessed it – the Naughty List.

    (Right) Dwayne Johnson in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    (Right) Dwayne Johnson in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    On paper, this sounds like a fun, even fresh premise for a Christmas movie – all the creatures of myth and folklore are real and live in a cautious détente with humanity, while Santa himself trains for Christmas like an Olympian and covertly visits department stores in presidential-style motorcades just to reconnect with the public. Some of this material elicits a smile for sure, even as the world-building threatens to overwhelm the narrative at times.

    The bigger issue is the film moves at the pace of an elf who’s had far too much spiked egg nog. It’s also tonally all over the place; one minute it’s a self-referential action movie, the next it’s a family comedy desperate to tug at the heart. Either way, none of the jokes or emotional beats land very well, and when a comic performer like Nick Kroll gets wasted in a painful cameo you know this is the cinematic equivalent to the Christmas that you really wanted that Xbox and got a sweater instead.

    And it looks like hell too. Large swaths of the movie take place at night in the snow, but Kasdan makes it inexplicably murky, particularly the climactic sequences, and there’s enough bad CG to make ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ look like ‘Dune: Part Two.’ One scene set at a beach resort can’t escape painfully looking like it was shot on a Volume stage, with the digital snowmen that launch a surprise attack in the sequence looking pasted into the action. For a movie that reportedly cost $250 million to make, ‘Red One’ doesn’t deliver on the kind of big-screen wonder necessary to make this work.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans in 'Red One.' Photo: Amazon MGM Studios.
    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans in ‘Red One.’ Photo: Amazon MGM Studios.

    If there is one thing that stands out in ‘Red One,’ it’s J.K. Simmons’ performance as Santa. Playing against the archetype – this wiry St. Nicholas lays off the holiday cookies and trains relentlessly for his ‘Mission: Impossible’-like Christmas Eve run – Simmons nevertheless generates real warmth, good will, and wisdom as the jolly old fellow. It’s a shame that he’s only active for the beginning and end of the film, as a movie built around him might have been more interesting.

    As for the leads, both Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans seem to be in something of a rut lately. The Rock has lost some of the self-deprecating sense of fun that has powered some of his best performances, and takes Callum Drift – a centuries-old head of security – so seriously that he comes across as monotonous. Evans as well, seemingly intent on getting past his earnest Captain America image, plays a variation here on the kind of cynical wisenheimer he’s essayed in recent duds like ‘The Gray Man,’ although he’s also trapped by the script’s rote characterization. Other members of the cast, like Lucy Liu and an underused Bonnie Hunt, more or less understand the assignment, although Kiernan Shipka is miscast as the villain, delivering no real menace at all. Kristofer Hivju stands out under a mountain of prosthetics as Krampus, although the scene at his castle goes on way too long.

    Final Thoughts

    J.K. Simmons in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    J.K. Simmons in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    You can’t just manufacture a holiday classic, but that certainly isn’t stopping Jake Kasdan, Dwayne Johnson, and company from trying. But Kasdan, who brought a certain amount of surreal humor to the ‘Jumanji’ movies, can’t work any magic here. ‘Red One’ huffs and puffs so hard to be all things to all people that it just ends up playing in similar fashion to one of those Netflix pics that’s good for Sunday-afternoon-chores background noise.

    Perhaps a different, less ponderous, and less digitized story starring J.K. Simmons’ Nick could have concentrated on generating some real holiday spirit, but ‘Red One’ is likely to be packed away with the rest of the Christmas trinkets in the attic once the season is over, never to be seen or heard from again.

    ‘Red One’ receives 4 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘Red One’?

    A hacker (Chris Evans) is recruited by the head of Santa Claus’s security team (Dwayne Johnson) to help rescue St. Nick (J.K. Simmons) after he’s kidnapped by a witch intent on ruining Christmas for everyone.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Red One’?

    • Dwayne Johnson as Callum Drift
    • Chris Evans as Jack O’Malley
    • Lucy Liu as Zoe Harlow
    • J. K. Simmons as Santa Claus
    • Kiernan Shipka as Grýla
    • Bonnie Hunt as Mrs. Claus
    • Kristofer Hivju as Krampus
    • Nick Kroll as Ted
    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson, J.K. Simmons, Chris Evans and Lucy Liu in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson, J.K. Simmons, Chris Evans and Lucy Liu in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    List of Other Christmas Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Red One’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Dwayne Johnson Movies On Amazon

    Buy Chris Evans Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Red One’ Press Conference with Dwayne Johnson and More

    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson, J.K. Simmons, Chris Evans and Lucy Liu in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson, J.K. Simmons, Chris Evans and Lucy Liu in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    With ‘Red One,’ stars Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans, along with director Jake Kasdan (‘Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle’), hope to create a modern Christmas classic infused with the sensibility of a large-scale action film and the heart of a family comedy. Johnson plays Callum Drift, the head of security for Santa Claus (J.K. Simmons), whose annual mission to deliver gifts around the world is run with the precision of a military operation out of his massive, well-hidden complex at the North Pole.

    But a security breach allows Santa to be kidnapped right out from under Drift’s nose, with the breach traced to Jack O’Malley (Evans), a dark web tracker and bounty hunter who is forcibly recruited to help Drift locate Santa and his kidnappers. The trail leads them to Gryla (Kiernan Shipka), a winter witch out of Icelandic folklore who plans to use Santa’s own magical powers to rid the world of naughty children forever – unless Drift and O’Malley can stop her and rescue the man who Drift simply knows as “Nick.”

    With ‘Red One’ scheduled to open in theaters on November 15 as an early holiday present for moviegoers, members of the cast and crew – including Evans, Johnson, Shipka, Simmons, Lucy Liu (Zoe Harlow), Kristofer Hivju (Krampus), Bonnie Hunt (Mrs. Claus), Kasdan, producer Hiram Garcia, and others — participated in a virtual global press conference that Moviefone had the opportunity to attend (minus the egg nog and cookies).

    Related Article: J.K. Simmons and Bonnie Hunt will be Santa and Mrs. Claus in Dwayne Johnson action comedy ‘Red One’

    1) A Christmas Story You’ve Never Seen Before

    'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    Director Jake Kasdan revealed that the initial impetus for ‘Red One’ was to bring audiences a whole new vision of Santa Claus – as an action hero who trains hard to get in shape for Christmas, and who leads a vast, well-organized, and tightly-secured operation.

    Jake Kasdan: That was absolutely one of the most exciting aspects of this movie, was sort of looking at a way that we could tell Santa’s story that we’ve never quite seen before. You’ve seen him a certain way your whole life, and we always thought that the great exciting idea for this was, what if you could sort of pull back the curtain and see what he’s really like? So all of those aspects of this came from that sort of seed idea.

    2) Making Santa Cooler Than Ever

    J.K. Simmons in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    J.K. Simmons in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    Producer Hiram Garcia, who also came up with the original story for the movie, said he wanted to create the “definitive” Santa onscreen and make him cool again.

    Hiram Garcia: I think when we did start working on this, one of the goals was, and actually when we were going around pitching it, we always ended the pitch with saying our hope was to tell a story that really inspired people, turn Christmas on its head in the mythology, but also to create the definitive Santa Claus. There’s been so many good Santa Clauses, but to find one that really took a connection with the audience to the next level and brought a coolness out in Santa that as a big Christmas fan, I always knew Santa’s got. I feel like we did that with J.K. and especially the way Jake envisioned him on screen. J.K.’s performance as Santa is everything we dreamed and more.

    3) A Christmas Action Movie Not Called ‘Die Hard’

    'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    Chris Evans said that making an action movie based around Christmas was easier than it might seem because the folklore around the world is full of such fantastical legends and creations.

    Chris Evans: We had a whole team of people who [were] trying to crack that code. I mean, I think it actually provides a lot of fun. There’s such great Christmas lore, folklore, not just the stories we all grew up with, but internationally…When you hear about some of these creatures and stories and mythology, it almost begs for some sort of action-adventure movie. So it’s not quite as hard as you think.

    4) The Secret Ingredient To This Christmas Confection

    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans in 'Red One.' Photo: Amazon MGM Studios.
    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans in ‘Red One.’ Photo: Amazon MGM Studios.

    Dwayne Johnson said that director Jake Kasdan brought something to ‘Red One’ that makes the movie special.

    Dwayne Johnson: Something that Jake inherently does in his films — and I’ve had the privilege of working with him now three times, on the first two ‘Jumanji’ movies and now ‘Red One’ — is heart. There’s so much heart in this movie. That’s often an overstatement, I think, in storytelling in Hollywood, but it’s true. One of my favorite parts of the movie is where J.K. as Santa Claus reminds me that it’s our job to see the best in people and look beyond if they’re on the naughty list, and look at the kid in everybody.

    5) Lucy Liu Didn’t Know At First She Had A Big Action Scene

    Lucy Liu in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    Lucy Liu in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    Lucy Liu plays Zoe Harlow, the director of MORA (Mythological Oversight and Restoration Authority), an agency charged with keeping track of the world’s mythological beings. Although initially it didn’t seem like she’d participate in any of the action, things took a different turn during filming.

    Lucy Liu: Well, it was impromptu. I had spoken to Jake and I said, “Is there any training or do you need me to prep anything?” He said, “No, I think maybe she’s going to throw a kick and maybe a punch. Maybe that’s it. You’re just the boss lady and then that’s all it’s going to be.” I said, “Okay, great. No problem.” I show up to the set, we’re doing the costume fittings and everything, and then the stunt coordinator comes in and he says, “I just want to give you a little bit of a previs of what we’re going to do.” He shows me this entire action scene. And my face just turned white. But then I was like, “Okay, let’s do this.” As soon as I got the sticks in my hands, it was like muscle memory kicked in. It was like I was alive again…I hadn’t done it in a long time, but it just came back to me. I love watching action movies. I grew up watching them, and actually being on the screen doing action is so exciting. I think that it gets kids excited, it gets girls excited, it gets women excited. So it’s nice that you still got it.

    6) Kiernan Shipka Got Her Villain On For The First Time

    Kiernan Shipka in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    Kiernan Shipka in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    Kiernan Shipka (‘Longlegs’) appears as Gryla, the legendary winter witch who masterminds Santa’s kidnapping, and said she relished her first opportunity to play the main villain in a movie.

    Kiernan Shipka: It was really fun. I loved it. I’ve never really played a proper villain before. I’ve definitely played people who were dark and twisted, but the film kind of hinges on this kidnapping. It was really cool to feel like I had a part in the movie that was sort of moving things in any sort of direction. That was really fun. I liked those stakes. I love that this movie’s so fun. I mean, there’s a lot of heart in it, there’s a lot of action in it, but at the end of the day, I think you sit down and it’s a really fun watch. So playing someone who is a villain, but also maintaining a sense of levity and fun with the whole thing was also really lovely. So it was great. I’ll play a villain anytime. It was fun.

    7) Kristofer Hivju Went A Different Way Playing Krampus

    Kristofer Hivju in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    Kristofer Hivju in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    The figure of Krampus, in European Alpine folklore, is said to accompany Santa/St. Nicholas on his rounds and punish the children who have been naughty. Although wearing a full, practical costume complete with horns, actor Kristofer Hivju (‘Game of Thrones’) decided to play him not as a horrific monster but as Santa’s estranged, self-absorbed brother, who indulges in wild parties and slapping contests with his obedient guests.

    Kristofer Hivju: For me it was like the character is more or less the suit, right? So I tried to play against the suit, and actually play him as feminine, as narcissistic, and self-indulging as possible. Suddenly that mixture became a bit disturbing. But the funny thing about Krampus is that he has the same objective as Nick. They want the same thing. It’s just the method [that’s different] — punishing or rewarding. Sometimes you need a bit of slapping.

    8) Practical VFX Made All The Difference

    (Right) Dwayne Johnson in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    (Right) Dwayne Johnson in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    Dwayne Johnson said that having Krampus played by an actor in a suit on the set was a huge advantage over the character being created via CG.

    Dwayne Johnson: For Chris and I, when we step on set and we had the privilege of obviously being on set for many, many days with Kristofer as Krampus, it is one of the most impressive things we had ever seen. He’s massive and he really does such a spectacular job as Krampus. In our story the mythology is that he’s the brother of Santa, and the prosthetics that he was wearing are from Joel Harlow, who’s an Academy Award winner, and you really see it. But the challenge is that there has to be so much life going on in his eyes because everything else is just these incredible prosthetics. Because he’s such a superior actor, you feel that in the movie.

    Chris Evans added that working with practical effects and creatures like Krampus on set brought back memories of the movies he loved growing up.

    Chris Evans: I grew up on movies like ‘Labyrinth’ and ‘NeverEnding Story’ where it was all practical and it was real. Those things stuck with you as a kid because it was things that you never saw in your normal life. I know now that every other movie is just loaded with CG. In a way there’s so much of it that when you do get a film that goes practical, it still sticks with you in that same way because it’s still rare like it was when I was a kid. That’s what makes it feel like a real character, a real performance. It’s not common anymore, which is nice.

    9) What Does The Rock Love Most About Christmas?

    Dwayne Johnson in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    Dwayne Johnson in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    Dwayne Johnson shared what was most important for him about the Christmas holidays.

    Dwayne Johnson: Just getting family together would be our #1 greatest family tradition. I know it’s simplistic, but a lot of times when I was growing up, my dad was always on the road and he wasn’t always home for Christmas. In the business that we’re in, sometimes it requires us to work over the holidays. So for me, just to have the entire family together, that’s the most important thing.

    10) Even Santa Has A Favorite Christmas Memory

    J.K. Simmons in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    J.K. Simmons in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    Santa himself, J.K. Simmons, shared a story about his family during the holidays and how Christmas taught him and his sister a valuable lesson.

    J.K. Simmons: I have an older sister, two years older. She was probably six and I was four, and my little brother was a baby. Of course on Christmas morning we’re up before the crack of dawn, bothering our parents and getting them out of bed and they’re dragging their butts out of bed. But I think that was the Christmas that my mom just said, “Go make some oatmeal.” My sister, she’s the oldest, so she’s the assistant mom. So from every Christmas from then on, my sister and I would get up, we would make the oatmeal, and after we ate the oatmeal, then we were allowed to open the stockings from Santa. Then we waited for mom and dad to wake up to open all the rest of the presents. So it taught us a real kind of self-sufficiency, and it gave my sister, especially, a sense of responsibility.

    3KNqvhA0Qekdd9wk024q03

    What is the plot of ‘Red One’?

    After a villain kidnaps Santa from the North Pole, an E.L.F (Extremely Large and Formidable) operative (Dwayne Johnson) must partner with the world’s most accomplished tracker (Chris Evans) to find Santa and save Christmas.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Red One’?

    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans in 'Red One'. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC
    (L to R) Dwayne Johnson and Chris Evans in ‘Red One’. Credit: Courtesy of Prime. Copyright: © Amazon Content Services LLC

    List of Other Christmas Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Red One’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Dwayne Johnson Movies On Amazon

    Buy Chris Evans Movies On Amazon

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  • ‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Season 2 Trailer Enters ‘Uncharted Territory’

    ‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Season 2 Trailer Enters ‘Uncharted Territory’

    Chilling Adventures of Sabrina part 2 trailer still
    Netflix/YouTube

    Life in Greendale is getting a lot darker — the proof is in the preview.

    Netflix released its official trailer for “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” Part 2 on Monday, and it showcases another side of its titular character. Now that she has signed her name in the Book of the Beast, half-mortal, half-witch Sabrina Spellman (Kiernan Shipka) is going to tap into her wicked side. “This is uncharted territory,” as the trailer teases.

    We get to see the dark path Sabrina has started down. Not only do her powers look stronger than ever, she is clearly embracing them. The footage shows Father Blackwood (Richard Coyle) calling her out on the trouble she has caused.

    “We’ve heard reports of levitation, the slaughter of demons, resurrection of witches,” he says. “How does a first-year, half-mortal student manage that?”

    And to top it all off, there’s a love triangle and a mysterious new character. Watch below.

    “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” Part 2 premieres April 5 on Netflix.

  • ‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Renewed Through Season 4 by Netflix

    ‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Renewed Through Season 4 by Netflix

    Netflix

    This teenage witch’s adventures are just getting started.

    Netflix has renewed “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” for two more seasons, a total of 16 more episodes, for what they are calling “parts three and four.” The renewal comes months before Season 2 debuts April 5.

    “Sabrina” was originally developed by The CW as a potential “Riverdale” spinoff, but when the network ended up passing, Netflix stepped in and ordered 20 episodes to air in two seasons. A holiday special also recently premiered.

    Kiernan Shipka stars as the titular teenage witch in a dark coming-of-age adaptation in the tone of “Rosemary’s Baby” and “The Exorcist.” Sabrina struggles to reconcile her dual nature — half-witch, half-mortal — while fighting against the evil forces that threaten her, her family and the daylight world humans inhabit. Miranda Otto and Lucy Davis also star.

    Seasons 3 and 4 will feature new cast members, including Jedidiah Goodacre as Dorian Gray and Alexis Denisof as Mary Wardwell’s boyfriend, Adam Masters.

  • ‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Season 2 Gets Trailer, Release Date

    ‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Season 2 Gets Trailer, Release Date

    Netflix

    “The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” is the gift that keeps on giving: After surprising fans with the announcement of an upcoming Christmas special (or Winter Solstice special, depending on your witch/religious affiliation), Netflix also revealed that the show’s second season will be dropping in only a matter of months.

    A new teaser trailer for season two of “Sabrina” includes the announcement that the series will be back on April 5, 2019. That follows the holiday episode, which is dropping on December 14.

    The teaser is packed with lots of witchy fabulousness, featuring plenty of scenes with Sabrina (Kiernan Shipka) embracing her new goth look. She may be a witch, but she’s also a teen girl, and she can rock dark lipstick, a bleached bob, and a miniskirt like nobody’s business.

    Of course, there are also multiple reminders of the show’s darker elements, with blood, bats, and ominous whispers galore (though Baphomet is missing — wonder why?). There’s even a pentagram maypole dance. Truly, season two will feature something for everyone.

    Look for all that and more when “The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina: Part 2” hits Netflix next April. We’re already digging through our makeup bags for our own black lipstick.

  • ‘The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Trailer Will Put a Spell on You

    ‘The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Trailer Will Put a Spell on You

    Netflix

    Something witchy this way comes on Netflix!

    The streaming service released the first trailer for “The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina,” which reimagines the “Sabrina the Teenage Witch” comics as a dark horror series.

    Kiernan Shipka stars the titular character, who is half-human and half-witch. She battles all kinds of evil in the trailer, from bullies at her high school to the Devil.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybKUX6thF8Q&feature=youtu.be

    The series comes from Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, the creator of The CW’s “Riverdale,” which reimagines the Archie comics as a darker mystery drama. “Sabrina” was developed as a spin-off of “Riverdale,” but then Netflix swooped in.

    The show also stars Ross Lynch as Sabrina’s boyfriend Harvey, Miranda Otto as Aunt Zelda, Lucy Davis as Aunt Hilda, Jaz Sinclair best friend Rosalind, and Richard Coyle as the evil principal Father Blackwood.

  • First ‘Chilling Adventures’ Teaser Shows Sabrina’s Not-So-Sweet 16th Birthday

    First ‘Chilling Adventures’ Teaser Shows Sabrina’s Not-So-Sweet 16th Birthday

    Chilling Adventures of Sabrina
    Netflix

    The “chilling” of “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” shows up right away in the first teaser.

    A chilling rendition of “Happy Birthday” plays through this first look at the new show, as Sabrina Spellman (Kiernan Shipka) celebrates her 16th b-day.

    Unlike some teens, the young witch doesn’t have a Sweet 16 party — it’s more like a Scary 16 party:

    Still looks like more fun than the average teen party, to be honest. And witches are a lot less scary than clowns.

    “Chilling Adventures” had teased out the first promo with this poster:

    You probably saw the photos Netflix released for the show, including a look at Sabrina’s “dark baptism” by Father Blackwood (Richard Coyle).

    The baptism photo also features Lucy Davis as Hilda Spellman; Miranda Otto as Zelda Spellman; and Abigail Cowen, Adeline Rudolph, and Tati Gabrielle as The Weird Sisters.

    Other key cast members include Jaz Sinclair as Sabrina’s best friend Rosalind Walker; Ross Lynch as Sabrina’s boyfriend Harvey KinkleBronson Pinchot as Baxter High’s puritanical principal; and of course Salem the cat.

    Stream the first season when it arrives on Netflix Friday, October 26.

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  • Sabrina Has a Dark Baptism in First ‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Photos

    Sabrina Has a Dark Baptism in First ‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina’ Photos

    Chilling Adventures of Sabrina
    Netflix

    The Powers That Be did warn/promise fans that “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” would be quite dark. Melissa Joan Hart may not even recognize Kiernan Shipka‘s Sabrina, who seems very rooted to the world of the comic book.

    Netflix just shared two new photos from “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina,” which streams its first season this October.

    These are the first official cast photos, including a shot of Sabrina herself (above), and another (below) of what TVLine called “the dark Baptism of Sabrina” by Father Blackwood (Richard Coyle).

    The baptism photo also features Lucy Davis as Hilda Spellman; Miranda Otto as Zelda Spellman; and Abigail Cowen, Adeline Rudolph, and Tati Gabrielle as The Weird Sisters.

    Chilling Adventures of Sabrina
    Netflix

    Here’s more on the series from The Hollywood Reporter:

    “The show will reimagine the origin and adventures of the comic book character ‘Sabrina the Teenage Witch’ as a dark coming-of-age tale that traffics in horror, the occult and witchcraft. It’s described as in the vein of ‘Rosemary’s Baby’ and ‘The Exorcist’ and finds Sabrina wrestling to reconcile her dual nature as a half-witch, half-mortal while fighting the evil forces that threaten her, her family and the daylight world humans inhabit.

    Sabrina Spellman is described as an empowered young woman, half-human, half-witch, who is just beginning her dark education as a sorceress, even as she tries to maintain a normal life as a sophomore at Baxter High. Intelligent, compassionate and brave to the point of recklessness, Sabrina is all that stands between us and the forces of darkness that threaten our world.”

    Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa — Chief Creative Officer at Archie Comics — created “Riverdale” and this series. He already showed off the first look at the new Salem the Cat, plus the perfect official poster for the series.

    Although “Sabrina” was originally conceived as a companion series to “Riverdale” — since they are both set in the same Archie Comics universe — “Sabrina” ended up on Netflix instead of The CW, and Aguirre-Sacasa said there are no plans for series crossovers at this time.

    “The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” starts streaming Friday, October 26 on Netflix.

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