Tag: life

  • Best TV Shows of the 21st Century: First 25 Years

    Moviefone's 25 Best TV Series of the first 25 years of the 21st Century.
    Moviefone’s 25 Best TV Series of the first 25 years of the 21st Century.

    With 2025 quickly coming to a close, so is the first 25 years of the 21st century!

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    While most consider that the modern golden age of television started with ‘The Sopranos‘ in 1999, it really came into prominence in the 2000’s with shows like ‘The Wire‘, ‘24‘, ‘Lost‘, ‘Mad Men‘, ‘Breaking Bad‘, and ‘The Walking Dead‘, and eventually ‘Game of Thrones‘, ‘Stranger Things‘ and ‘Succession‘.

    As we leave behind the first quester of this century, Moviefone is counting down the 25 best TV series of the first 25 years of the 21st century!

    Let’s begin!

    Related Article: The 25 Best Films of the First 25 Years of the 21st Century


    25. ‘Stranger Things‘ (2016-2025)

    (L to R) Sadie Sink, Noah Schapp, Millie Bobby Brown, Finn Wolfhard, and Caleb McLaughlin in Netflix's 'Stranger Things.'
    (L to R) Sadie Sink, Noah Schapp, Millie Bobby Brown, Finn Wolfhard, and Caleb McLaughlin in Netflix’s ‘Stranger Things.’

    When a young boy vanishes, a small town uncovers a mystery involving secret experiments, terrifying supernatural forces, and one strange little girl (Millie Bobby Brown).

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    24. ‘The Walking Dead‘ (2010-2022)

    Jeffrey Dean Morgan in 'The Walking Dead'. Photo: AMC Studios.
    Jeffrey Dean Morgan in ‘The Walking Dead’. Photo: AMC Studios.

    Sheriff’s deputy Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) awakens from a coma to find a post-apocalyptic world dominated by flesh-eating zombies. He sets out to find his family and encounters many other survivors along the way.

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    23. ‘30 Rock‘ (2006-2013)

    (L to R) Alec Baldwin and Tina Fey in '30 Rock'. Photo: NBC.
    (L to R) Alec Baldwin and Tina Fey in ’30 Rock’. Photo: NBC.

    Liz Lemon (Tina Fey), the head writer for a late-night TV variety show in New York, tries to juggle all the egos around her while chasing her own dream.

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    22. ‘Westworld‘ (2016-2022)

    (L to R) Evan Rachel Wood and James Marsden in 'Westworld.' Photo: HBO.
    (L to R) Evan Rachel Wood and James Marsden in ‘Westworld.’ Photo: HBO.

    A dark odyssey about the dawn of artificial consciousness and the evolution of sin. Set at the intersection of the near future and the reimagined past, it explores a world in which every human appetite, no matter how noble or depraved, can be indulged.

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    21. ‘The Boys‘ (2019-2024)

    Antony Starr as John Gillman / Homelander in Prime Video's 'The Boys' season 4. Copyright: Amazon Studios.
    Antony Starr as John Gillman / Homelander in Prime Video’s ‘The Boys’ season 4. Copyright: Amazon Studios.

    A group of vigilantes known informally as “The Boys” set out to take down corrupt superheroes with no more than blue-collar grit and a willingness to fight dirty.

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    20. ‘Justified‘ (2010-2015)

    Timothy Olyphant in 'Justified'. Photo: FX.
    Timothy Olyphant in ‘Justified’. Photo: FX.

    A character drama based on the 2001 Elmore Leonard short story “Fire in the Hole.” Leonard’s tale centers around U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens (Timothy Olyphant) of Kentucky, a quiet but strong-willed official of the law. The tale covers his high-stakes job, as well as his strained relationships with his ex-wife and father.

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    19. ‘Sons of Anarchy‘ (2008-2014)

    (L to R) Charlie Hunnam and Tommy Flanagan in 'Sons of Anarchy'. Photo: FX Productions.
    (L to R) Charlie Hunnam and Tommy Flanagan in ‘Sons of Anarchy’. Photo: FX Productions.

    The Sons of Anarchy (SOA) are an outlaw motorcycle club with many charters in the United States and overseas. The show focused on the original and founding charter, Sons of Anarchy Motorcycle Club, Redwood Original, often referred to by the acronym SAMCRO, Sam Crow, or simply Redwood Charter. The charter operates both legal and illegal businesses in the small town of Charming, California. They combine gun-running and a garage, and involvement in porn film industry. Clay (Ron Perlman), the charter president, likes it old school and violent; while Jax (Charlie Hunnam), his stepson and the club’s VP, has thoughts about changing the way things are done. Their conflict has effects on both the club and their personal relationship, especially when Jax goes on a personal quest to cleanse the SAMCRO name and image.

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    18. ‘Arrow‘ (2012-2020)

    (L to R) Stephen Amell, Katie Cassidy, and David Ramsey in 'Arrow'. Photo: Warner Bros. Television.
    (L to R) Stephen Amell, Katie Cassidy, and David Ramsey in ‘Arrow’. Photo: Warner Bros. Television.

    Spoiled billionaire playboy Oliver Queen (Stephen Amell) is missing and presumed dead when his yacht is lost at sea. He returns five years later a changed man, determined to clean up the city as a hooded vigilante armed with a bow.

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    17. ‘The Closer‘ (2005-2012)

    (L to R) J.K. Simmons and Krya Sedgwick in 'The Closer'. Photo: Warner Bros. Television.
    (L to R) J.K. Simmons and Krya Sedgwick in ‘The Closer’. Photo: Warner Bros. Television.

    Deputy Police Chief Brenda Leigh Johnson (Kyra Sedgwick) transfers from Atlanta to LA to head up a special unit of the LAPD that handles sensitive, high-profile murder cases. Johnson’s quirky personality and hard-nosed approach often rubs her colleagues the wrong way, but her reputation as one of the world’s best interrogator eventually wins over even her toughest critics.

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    16. ‘Billions‘ (2016-2023)

    (L to R) Daniel Breaker as Roger “Scooter” Dunbar, Corey Stoll as Mike Prince, Toney Goins as Philip Charyn, Damian Lewis as Bobby "Axe" Axelrod, Asia Kate Dillon as Taylor Mason, David Costabile as Mike ‘Wags’ Wagner, Paul Giamatti as Chuck Rhoades, Maggie Siff as Wendy Rhoades, Sakina Jaffrey as Daevisha ‘Dave’ Mahar, Dola Rashad as Kate Sacker and Jeffrey DeMunn as Chuck Rhoades, Sr. in 'Billions' Season 7. Photo Credit: Mark Seliger/Showtime
    (L to R) Daniel Breaker as Roger “Scooter” Dunbar, Corey Stoll as Mike Prince, Toney Goins as Philip Charyn, Damian Lewis as Bobby “Axe” Axelrod, Asia Kate Dillon as Taylor Mason, David Costabile as Mike ‘Wags’ Wagner, Paul Giamatti as Chuck Rhoades, Maggie Siff as Wendy Rhoades, Sakina Jaffrey as Daevisha ‘Dave’ Mahar, Dola Rashad as Kate Sacker and Jeffrey DeMunn as Chuck Rhoades, Sr. in ‘Billions’ Season 7. Photo Credit: Mark Seliger/Showtime.

    A complex drama about power politics in the world of New York high finance. Shrewd, savvy U.S. Attorney Chuck Rhoades (Paul Giamatti) and the brilliant, ambitious hedge fund king Bobby “Axe” Axelrod (Damian Lewis) are on an explosive collision course, with each using all of his considerable smarts, power and influence to outmaneuver the other. The stakes are in the billions in this timely, provocative series.

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    15. ‘Mad Men‘ (2007-2015)

    Jon Hamm in 'Made Men'. Photo: Lionsgate Television.
    Jon Hamm in ‘Made Men’. Photo: Lionsgate Television.

    Set in 1960-1970 New York, this sexy, stylized and provocative drama follows the lives of the ruthlessly competitive men and women of Madison Avenue advertising.

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    14. ‘Yellowstone‘ (2018-2024)

    Kevin Costner as John Dutton III in Paramount Network's 'Yellowstone' season 5.
    Kevin Costner as John Dutton III in Paramount Network’s ‘Yellowstone’ season 5. Credit: Paramount Network.

    Follow the violent world of the Dutton family, who controls the largest contiguous ranch in the United States. Led by their patriarch John Dutton (Kevin Costner), the family defends their property against constant attack by land developers, an Indian reservation, and America’s first National Park.

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    13. ‘Game of Thrones‘ (2011-2019)

    Emilia Clarke in HBO's 'Game of Thrones.' Photo: HBO.
    Emilia Clarke in HBO’s ‘Game of Thrones.’ Photo: HBO.

    Seven noble families fight for control of the mythical land of Westeros. Friction between the houses leads to full-scale war. All while a very ancient evil awakens in the farthest north. Amidst the war, a neglected military order of misfits, the Night’s Watch, is all that stands between the realms of men and icy horrors beyond.

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    12. ‘Breaking Bad‘ (2008-2013)

    Bryan Cranston in 'Breaking Bad'. Photo: Sony Pictures Television.
    Bryan Cranston in ‘Breaking Bad’. Photo: Sony Pictures Television.

    Walter White (Bryan Cranston), a New Mexico chemistry teacher, is diagnosed with Stage III cancer and given a prognosis of only two years left to live. He becomes filled with a sense of fearlessness and an unrelenting desire to secure his family’s financial future at any cost as he enters the dangerous world of drugs and crime.

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    11. ‘Succession’ (2018-2023)

    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO's 'Succession.' Photograph by Macall Polay/HBO.
    Brian Cox in season 4 of HBO’s ‘Succession.’ Photograph by Macall Polay/HBO.

    Follow the lives of the Roy family as they contemplate their future once their aging father begins to step back from the media and entertainment conglomerate they control.

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    10. ‘Prison Break‘ (2005-2017)

    (L to R) Amaury Nolasco, Robert Knepper, Wentworth Miller, Peter Stormare and Dominic Purcell in 'Prison Break'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    (L to R) Amaury Nolasco, Robert Knepper, Wentworth Miller, Peter Stormare and Dominic Purcell in ‘Prison Break’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    Due to a political conspiracy, an innocent man (Dominic Purcell) is sent to death row and his only hope is his brother (Wentworth Miller), who makes it his mission to deliberately get himself sent to the same prison in order to break the both of them out, from the inside out.

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    9. ‘Arrested Development‘ (2003-2019)

    The cast of 'Arrested Development'. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.
    The cast of ‘Arrested Development’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    The story of a wealthy family that lost everything, and the one son who had no choice but to keep them all together.

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    8. ‘Battlestar Galactica‘ (2004-2009)

    The cast of 'Battlestar Galactica'. Photo: Universal Media Studios.
    The cast of ‘Battlestar Galactica’. Photo: Universal Media Studios.

    When an old enemy, the Cylons, resurface and obliterate the 12 colonies, the crew of the aged Galactica protect a small civilian fleet – the last of humanity – as they journey toward the fabled 13th colony, Earth.

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    7. ‘The Shield‘ (2002-2008)

    The cast of 'The Shield'. Photo: Sony Pictures Television.
    The cast of ‘The Shield’. Photo: Sony Pictures Television.

    The story of an inner-city Los Angeles police precinct where some of the cops aren’t above breaking the rules or working against their associates to both keep the streets safe and their self-interests intact.

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    6. ‘Lost‘ (2004-2010)

    The cast of 'Lost'. Photo: ABC Studios.
    The cast of ‘Lost’. Photo: ABC Studios.

    Stripped of everything, the survivors of a horrific plane crash must work together to stay alive. But the island holds many secrets.

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    5. ‘The Wire‘ (2002-2008)

    (L to R) Wendell Pierce and Dominic West in 'The Wire'. Photo: HBO.
    (L to R) Wendell Pierce and Dominic West in ‘The Wire’. Photo: HBO.

    Told from the points of view of both the Baltimore homicide and narcotics detectives and their targets, the series captures a universe in which the national war on drugs has become a permanent, self-sustaining bureaucracy, and distinctions between good and evil are routinely obliterated.

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    4. ‘Luther‘ (2010-2019)

    Idris Elba in 'Luther'. Photo:BBC Studios Drama Productions.
    Idris Elba in ‘Luther’. Photo:BBC Studios Drama Productions.

    A dark psychological crime drama starring Idris Elba as Luther, a man struggling with his own terrible demons, who might be as dangerous as the depraved murderers he hunts.

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    3. ‘Life‘ (2007-2009)

    (L to R) Sarah Shahi and Damian Lewis in 'Life'. Photo: Universal Media Studios.
    (L to R) Sarah Shahi and Damian Lewis in ‘Life’. Photo: Universal Media Studios.

    Complex, offbeat Detective Charlie Crews (Damian Lewis) returns to the force after serving time in prison for a crime he didn’t commit. Crews’ new lease on life has provided him with a Zen-like outlook, peace of mind and no need for vengeance, an attitude which can be challenging to maintain when someone he cares about is threatened — or when he is investigating the mystery surrounding the murder he was falsely accused of.

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    2. ‘24‘ (2001-2014)

    Kiefer Sutherland as Jack Bauer in '24'.
    Kiefer Sutherland as Jack Bauer in ’24’. Photo: 20th Century Fox Television.

    Counterterrorism agent Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) fights the bad guys of the world, a day at a time. With each week’s episode unfolding in real-time, “24” covers a single day in the life of Bauer each season.

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    1. ‘Bosch‘ (2015-2021)

    Titus Welliver in season 4 of 'Bosch'. Photo: Aaron Epstein. Copyright: Amazon Studios
    Titus Welliver in season 4 of ‘Bosch’. Photo: Aaron Epstein. Copyright: Amazon Studios

    Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver), an LAPD homicide detective, stands trial for the fatal shooting of a serial murder suspect. A cold case involving the remains of a missing boy forces Bosch to confront his past. As daring recruit Julia Brasher (Annie Wersching) catches his eye and departmental politics heat up, Bosch will pursue justice at all costs.

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  • ‘The Radleys’ Exclusive Interview: Damian Lewis

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    Opening in theaters, digital and on demand beginning October 4th is the new horror-comedy ‘The Radleys’, which was directed by Euros Lyn (‘Doctor Who’).

    The film stars Damian Lewis (‘Billions’, ‘Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood’), Kelly Macdonald (‘Brave’), Harry Baxendale (‘Shadow and Bone’), Bo Bragason (‘Renegade Nell’), Jay Lycurgo (‘Titans’), Shaun Parkes (‘The Mummy Returns’), and Sophia Di Martino (‘Loki’).

    Related Article: Garret Dillahunt Talks ‘Red Right Hand’ and Working with Orlando Bloom

    Damian Lewis as “Will Radley” in the comedy horror 'The Radleys', a Lionsgate release. Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.
    Damian Lewis as “Will Radley” in the comedy horror ‘The Radleys’, a Lionsgate release. Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Damian Lewis about his work on ‘The Radleys’, his first reaction to the screenplay and making a vampire comedy, its underlying message about addiction and sobriety, and the challenges of playing two characters, as well as looking back at his short-lived but groundbreaking NBC series ‘Life’ and the possibility of a revival series in the future.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Lewis and Kelly Macdonald.

    Damian Lewis as “Peter Radley” in the comedy horror 'The Radleys', a Lionsgate release. Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.
    Damian Lewis as “Peter Radley” in the comedy horror ‘The Radleys’, a Lionsgate release. Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and this different take on the vampire mythos?

    Damian Lewis: Well, I’m not going to lie to you, my ego perked up enormously when Euros said, ” I want you to play two roles.” I thought, “Well, okay. I’m definitely going to read that script.” Then, I was just delighted to see what these two roles were, really, the duality of these two roles, the light and shade that all of us have, the rational, the sensible selves, and then, these darker corners that exist in all of us, the slightly naughtier sides to each of us, and our carnal, more desirous, lustful selves. They’re represented in these two twins. Then, I liked the comedic premise of it. I thought, “This might be a Mike Leigh movie.” We’ve got a suburban family in a suburban setting, sort of unhappy, slightly goofy, and you’re not quite sure who everyone is or why they’re behaving the way they’re behaving. Until you realize they’re essentially a family of vampires in the vampire program. That’s funny. The parents have decided, “We want to have a normal life for our children, and we don’t want to drink blood anymore.” That’s a good comedic style. Then, I think, every vampire movie really is a metaphor for something else. I think, in this, there’s a very strong love story in this, two strong love stories, and it’s really about love, in the end, but it’s also very clearly about addiction and I like that too.

    (L to R) Bo Bragason as “Clara Radley” and Kelly Macdonald as “Helen Radley” in the comedy horror 'The Radleys', a Lionsgate release. Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Bo Bragason as “Clara Radley” and Kelly Macdonald as “Helen Radley” in the comedy horror ‘The Radleys’, a Lionsgate release. Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.

    MF: The film deals with the ideas of addiction and sobriety in an interesting way, do you feel that that it is the underlining message of the movie?

    DL: I do. But look, it’s a comedic vampire movie, first and foremost. I think that someone will immediately see that and identify with that. I think that’s a great thing. Another thing I really liked about the movie is nothing is wrapped up with a bow. The morality in this film is complex, because the addict in the movie, who is Will, a confirmed very entertaining rock and roll bad boy vampire seems to be the happiest guy in the film and he is living his addiction. He is living all the bad things. So, the film, at its heart as well, is about, how do we find happiness in ourselves? How do we live our best lives? How do you find your true self, because that’s where you’re going to be happiest. The family, Peter and Helen, who have abstained from their addiction, drinking blood all these years, are not happy. They live a deadened boring suburban life. So, there’s no clear moral message here. The messaging is mixed and like life, that’s what I liked about it. It’s not going to give you any simple answers, but I liked it for that reason.

    (L-R) Bo Bragason, Damian Lewis, Kelly Macdonald, Damian Lewis, and Harry Baxendale in the comedy horror 'The Radleys', a Lionsgate release. Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L-R) Bo Bragason, Damian Lewis, Kelly Macdonald, Damian Lewis, and Harry Baxendale in the comedy horror ‘The Radleys’, a Lionsgate release. Photo courtesy of Lionsgate.

    MF: Can you talk about the challenges of playing two characters, the difference between Will and Peter, and how you technically shot those scenes?

    DL: Well, I had one major fight sequence, where I was fighting with thin air twice. That was quite interesting. So, it’s literally play acting. It’s like being six, and it was really good fun. But otherwise, I had a great stand-in, who always stood in, and was always dressed as either Peter or Will, when I was either Peter or Will. He would do the scenes with me, and then, I would reverse, and we’d do them back the other way. Then, of course, he’s removed, and I’m put into the cut. So, it was really good fun. I had to stay quite concentrated. The temptation, I think, was to make them wildly different. I know twins, and I’ve got a brother who’s very close in age to me. We’re different people, but there are also very identifiable similarities. So, it was trying to find those, like making the voice a little bit different, but not crazily different, for example. So, it was just about threading the needle and just keeping it real, I guess. I enjoy that as an actor. I enjoy that discipline as an actor. I enjoy the architecture of a role. I enjoy designing it and trying to be detailed.

    (L to R) Sarah Shahi and Damian Lewis in 'Life'. Photo: Universal Media Studios.
    (L to R) Sarah Shahi and Damian Lewis in ‘Life’. Photo: Universal Media Studios.

    MF: Finally, I’m a huge fan of your first series ‘Life’. Do you have fond memories of playing Charlie Crews and making that show?

    DL: Hugely fond memories. I play a lot of different, complex, complicated men, people who murder their wives like Henry VIII (‘Wolf Hall‘), and people like Bobby Axelrod (‘Billions’), who’s essentially a criminal punisher, sort of superhero billionaire. But playing Charlie Crews, he had a dark past but the sunny disposition of that man and the enlightened self that he had found and that just endless eating brightly colored fruit, he was wonderful to play. That was a screenplay by Rand Ravich, who is a great screenwriter, and did a fabulous job with that. I’m not going to say I wish that series had gone on for seven years, because then I would never have done ‘Homeland’, which I was very glad to have done. But that was a victim of the Writer’s Strike, the last Writer’s Strike in 2007. So, it kind of limped on for two seasons, but you know, I get stopped a lot for that. You wouldn’t think it, but yeah, people love that show. I’m really pleased you liked it. I thought it was great.

    MF: Any chance there could ever be a revival series? Is that something you’d be open to?

    DL: Well, there could be something in that.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Radleys’?

    Black comedy surrounding a family of vampires who chose to abstain from drinking blood, but when the inherent bloodlust of their teenage children (Harry Baxendale and Bo Bragason) is exposed, parents Helen (Kelly Macdonald) and Peter (Damian Lewis) are forced to confront who they are, with the help or hindrance of Peter’s twin brother Will (also Lewis), who is a practicing vampire.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Radleys’?

    • Damian Lewis as Peter Radley and Will Radley
    • Kelly Macdonald as Helen Radley
    • Harry Baxendale as Rowan Radley
    • Bo Bragason as Clara Radley
    • Jay Lycurgo as Evan Copeleigh
    • Sophia Di Martino as Lorna felt
    • Shaun Parkes as Jared Copeleigh
    (L to R) Adam Arkin, Damian Lewis, Sarah Shahi, Donal Logue and Brent Sexton on 'Life.' Photo: NBC Universal Television Studio.
    (L to R) Adam Arkin, Damian Lewis, Sarah Shahi, Donal Logue and Brent Sexton on ‘Life.’ Photo: NBC Universal Television Studio.

    Other Damien Lewis Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Damian Lewis Movies on Amazon

     

  • ‘Red Right Hand’ Exclusive Interview: Garret Dillahunt

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    Opening in theaters and on digital February 23rd is the new action thriller ‘Right Hand Man,’ which stars Orlando Bloom (‘Black Hawk Down’), Andie MacDowell (‘Hudson Hawk’), Scott Haze (‘Venom’) and Garret Dillahunt (‘No Country for Old Men’) and was directed by Ian and Eshom Nelms (‘Fatman’).

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with veteran actor Garret Dillahunt about his work on ‘Red Right Hand,’ his first reaction to the screenplay, his approach to playing a preacher, his character’s struggle with his faith, why he helps Cash, working with Orlando Bloom, Andie MacDowell’s villain, and working with the Nelms brothers, as well as taking a look back at his work on the groundbreaking short-lived series ‘Life’ starring Damian Lewis.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Dillahunt, Scott Haze, and Ian and Eshom Nelms.

    Related Article: Andie MacDowell and Sadie Laflamme-Snow Talk ‘The Way Home’ Season 2

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and why you wanted to be part of this project?

    Garret Dillahunt: Well, this was one of those cool ones where someone just gives you a call and says, “Hey, you want to be in this thing?” That saves us all a lot of time and eases a poor actor’s mind when he is wondering what’s next. I’d heard of the Nelms brothers, I’d seen a few of their movies and I’ve had some friends work with them. John Hawkes, who I knew from ‘Deadwood,’ worked with them and Walton Goggins did. They both had really nice things to say about them, Ian and Eshom. I was looking forward to it and I liked this character. I thought he was complex. I thought it was weird, and I was a little scared to play a preacher who preaches, so that was very nerve wracking. I had to talk to a few of those guys. He’s also a guy that does some violence and that’s a hard thing to reconcile. What are we saying here? Are we trying to justify this violence? I thought it was a good challenge to play this guy who’s flawed. This could be a mistake he’s making, but it’s still part of the old person he was. His main goal was to protect his flock, and I was anxious to see if I could pull that off in a human manner.

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: Can you talk about your approach to playing the character?

    GD: I’ve always been drawn to themes of shame, guilt and redemption. I don’t know what that says about me, maybe I need some kind of therapy. I’m always excited when people get another shot, and they get a chance and often fail again. But it’s about the getting up, isn’t it? I think this guy has failed a lot in his life, but if there’s one thing you could say about him, it’s that he takes care of his friends. He probably had a drug problem. He probably was a real addictive personality. He certainly had a rage problem and a violence problem, but he’s trying to be a different person. The way that he is doing that is through religion. A lot of people find religion and become a different person. I don’t know that it would work for me, but you must find something to hang your hat on to keep your demons at bay, don’t you? Sometimes this guy’s demons come out still, but that’s interesting to me.

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: While not a lot is said about your character’s backstory in the movie, his history and personality does come across in your performance. Did you create an extensive backstory for your character or just go off what was written in the script?

    GD: Well, certainly I look to the script for most of the clues but it kind of depends on the parts. Some people you just know what to do, you’re like, “I know this guy.” I always try to make a chronological outline of what happens to me, so I know what I know and what I don’t know in each scene because you don’t want to play the end. There are some people I never meet, so I can’t pretend I know something that’s not in my character’s orbit. For this one, like I said, I did work with a few preachers, more Pentecostal kind of preachers, just to learn the way they think and the way they talk to their people. I tried to draw on my own childhood. I remember different churches my family would go to and how it would make me feel or the tone they would take when they talk to us. There are some scenes that were cut that were very informative to me as a character. Just for time I’m sure, you never know why things don’t make it in, and you can’t worry about it. But those, even though they’re not there, I’m sure inform what is. It just depends on the project. Usually if there’s a scene, there’s just one incident maybe you need to come up with on your own that will just be reflective in your eyes, just to have something else going on that makes him a rounded person and not just some kind of cutout.

    Andie MacDowell in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Andie MacDowell in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: Can you talk about the power that Big Cat has over this town, as well as Andie MacDowell’s surprising performance?

    GD: Yeah, it was a nice departure for her. I think she was nervous about it a little bit. I didn’t get to work with her as much as I hoped, but there was obviously that one section where we all meet. You asked about her grip on this whole community, and particularly on Cash. I think Cash was very special to her. Cash is Orlando Bloom’s character. You saw what happens to us all when we leave her service. She marks us with the red right hand. That’s a bond that Orlando and I share in the movie is we’re both former employees. I think his character is one that she really misses having around because he was capable, he was scary, he was good at his job, and so she’s doing anything in her power to get him back in the fold, including blackmailing him with the safety of his own family. But he won’t put up with that, so he calls his friends, and we go get them.

    Garret Dillahunt in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Garret Dillahunt in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: Can you talk about Wilder’s struggle with his own faith and why he ultimately decides to help Cash?

    GD: I don’t know if it would hold up in a court of law. He puts on a ski mask and kidnaps. It’s not any kind of behavior that we would ever put up with outside of a movie, is it? But for some reason we like this kind of thing in our entertainment. I’m justifying it in the way that it’s a mistake in a lot of ways. This is not the way to go about it probably, but he’s a simple man by his own words. He’s an Old Testament kind of preacher, and he’s not afraid to throw a punch or a kick or pick up a gun. I think he’s also really upset that he failed. He failed in protecting this girl. He failed in protecting his friend’s family. That’s something he prides himself on, so he’s determined to go get them back. Cash is like, “I like your plan”, which is no plan at all. I think he’s one of those people. There’s a little bit of the zealot in him, isn’t there, which is dangerous because they’re not afraid to die. He’s like an old Ford pickup. He’s not a Ferrari but are you ready to redline your Ferrari because I’m ready to redline my Ford truck. He’s a hammer. In his world if he stands before the maker I don’t know if he’ll have good words to say about his actions, but I know he believes he’s doing what’s right.

    Orlando Bloom in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Orlando Bloom in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: What was it like working with Orlando Bloom?

    GD: Orlando’s great. I’d never met him before, but I found him to be really kind and really welcoming. Look, I work all the time and I get recognized plenty, but I don’t have to alter my life really. I can walk down the street; I can eat in a restaurant. I don’t know what it must be like for him and Katy (Perry) to move through the world. Two people, just massive stars, who everyone knows their names and their faces, and knows an awful lot about them. For him to still be patient, kind and giving with everybody else, it was cool. We talked a lot about the accent. He’s British, and so he’s playing a Kentucky guy, and he’s just the best kind of star to work with because he wants you to be good. He wants the whole thing to be good, and he surrounds himself with good people to make that happen. He doesn’t care where the good idea comes from, just that it’s a good idea and that it helps the film, and that just takes a lot of pressure off everybody else. We don’t have to change our behavior around him. We just got to be good at our jobs because he’s bringing it, so we better bring it too. He’s a good number one.

    Eshom Nelms and Ian Nelms, co-directors of 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    (L to R) Eshom Nelms and Ian Nelms, co-directors of ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    MF: What was it like collaborating on set with the Nelms brothers and watching them execute their vision for this film?

    GD: I really liked them. I work a lot and sometimes I’m a workaholic a bit. There’s a downside. Not only you don’t see your own family a ton, but you’re such a pro that you start to feel alone in a way, almost like you don’t need anything else. It’s a mistake, but it’s how you start feeling. You start feeling like, “Ah, what’s this? Okay, got it. Roll it. Let’s go. I got to be on a plane at 2:00pm for the next on.” It becomes this thing, and you don’t know everybody’s name. I expect the worst sometimes when I show up, which is unfair but there’s a lot of actors that don’t know what they’re doing. There’s a lot of directors that don’t know what they’re doing. You develop a thick skin, calluses and techniques so that you can survive and thrive even if you have no help. Sometimes you get to a place where you start expecting to have no help, and you’re like, “Okay, I’m on my own here. If I don’t want to show my ass public on this thing, then I better come up with a good idea.” It’s a great relief and reminder to sometimes let other people in and maybe you don’t know everything and let a new idea in. There was something about these two guys that I just trusted immediately. I don’t know if it’s because there’s two of them and they seemed like their strengths were both parts of my own personality, I thought. They’re very different, Ian and Eshom, but they’re great together. I think I like working with brother combos. The Cohen brothers were kind of similar. You have two minds. It’s like there’s this extra brain on set also coming up with ideas. They’re like comic book nerds who are also kind of jocks. Eshom is this incredible, almost pro-level paintballer. All the gunfight sequences make sense, and he knows about finding cover, so that was a load off. Ian was a former MMA fighter, so he did all the hand-to-hand stuff. He has a good eye. He’s got good things to say. But on top of that, they love making movies. They’re like cinephiles. They’re always watching movies. They’re always talking about movies. They’re excited about movies. I was like, “Oh yeah, this is fun. They’re having fun, aren’t they?” And they are. It makes you want to please them. It makes you want to do good for them. I just found myself totally at ease. You want to come up with ways to help them solve a problem, and they’re receptive to that. I look forward to working with them again.

    Adam Arkin, Damian Lewis, Sarah Shahi, Donal Logue and Brent Sexton on 'Life.'
    (L to R) Adam Arkin, Damian Lewis, Sarah Shahi, Donal Logue and Brent Sexton on ‘Life.’ Photo: NBC Universal Television Studio.

    MF: Finally, you had a pivotal role in a groundbreaking, yet short-lived TV series called ‘Life’ starring Damian Lewis, where you played the main villain, a Russian gangster named Roman Nevikov. What are your memories of making that series and working with Lewis and the rest of the cast?

    GD: It’s funny. That’s one of my wife’s favorite characters. I’m a shy person, especially when I was younger, and that came along at a time where I still was a little uncomfortable playing people with power. I always say, “I’m a good first mate. I’m not sure I’m a good captain.” Then when someone finally gives you an opportunity to lead, you’re like, “Oh, I don’t know if anyone’s going to buy this”, because you have an opinion of yourself that no one else has, but you believe that. It was a real breakthrough moment for me to play someone powerful like that. He was evil, but he was powerful, assured and calm. I had a style that I’d never had with this white outfit, but I had a good dialogue coach, and I felt good about the Russian accent. Some Russians were asking me where I was from on set, and I was like, “I’m from Yakima, Washington.” They’re like, “Oh, I thought you were Russian.” That made me feel good. But for just having a few episodes, a lot of people remember that and Damian Lewis, he’s a great actor. I haven’t seen him in a long time, but I really like him. I’ve stayed in touch with Sarah Shahi, probably the most gorgeous person on the planet, and we keep trying to work together and find something else to do, but it hasn’t worked out yet, but I hope we can. I think that was a good show.

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    What is the Plot of ‘Red Right Hand’?

    Cash (Orlando Bloom) is trying to live an honest and quiet life taking care of his recently orphaned niece Savannah (Chapel Oaks) in the Appalachian town of Odim County. When the sadistic kingpin Big Cat (Andie MacDowell) who runs the town forces him back into her services, Cash learns he’s capable of anything – even killing – to protect the town and the only family he has left. As the journey gets harder, Cash is drawn into a nightmare that blurs the lines between good and evil.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Red Right Hand’?

    Orlando Bloom in 'Red Right Hand,' a Magnolia Pictures release.
    Orlando Bloom in ‘Red Right Hand,’ a Magnolia Pictures release. © Red Right Hand Productions LLC, Steve Squall. Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Other Garret Dillahunt Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Red Right Hand’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Garret Dillahunt Movies on Amazon

     

  • What’s New on TV, Netflix, Digital, and DVD/Blu-ray This Week: May 29-June 4

    At a loss for what to watch this week? From new TV, we’ve got you covered.

    New Video on Demand, Rental Streaming, and Digital

    “Life”
    Jake Gyllenhaal, Rebecca Ferguson, and Ryan Reynolds are ready to go digital with you. Don’t reject them! In this sci-fi thriller, a team of scientists aboard the International Space Station discover a rapidly evolving life form that threatens the crew and all life on Earth. The truth is out there, starting this Friday, June 2 on digital, and then on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, and DVD June 20. Bonus features include deleted scenes, three behind-the-scenes featurettes, and the never before seen “Astronaut Diaries.”

    Here’s an exclusive look at one of the deleted scenes, showing Ariyon Bakare as Hugh Derry, working out in the International Space Station gym:“A Cure for Wellness”
    Dane DeHaan, Jason Isaacs, and Mia Goth star in this psychological thriller following an ambitious young executive sent to retrieve his company’s CEO from a remote and mysterious “wellness center.” Things go downhill for him from there, as he’s diagnosed with the same curious illness that keeps all the guests there longing for the cure. The movie arrives on digital May 30, then Blu-ray/DVD on June 6. Bonus features include a deleted sequence, and several featurettes.

    “A Stork’s Journey”
    This animated family film about an orphaned sparrow raised by storks will be available on Google Play from June 1 to June 28. The movie — featuring the voice of Drake Bell, Justine “iJustine” Ezarik, and Jane Lynch — debuts in theaters on June 30 and will be available on DVD, Digital HD, and On Demand on July 4.

    “Handsome Devil”
    This coming-of-age LGBT film, in theaters and on Demand June 2, follows a bullied outsider and a star athlete forced to room together at their boarding school. The boys take an instant dislike to each other, and seem destined to remain enemies, until their English teacher teaches them the value of finding their own voices.

    New on DVD and Blu-ray

    “The Shack”
    Based on the worldwide bestselling novel, this faith-based drama takes viewers through a father’s (Sam Worthington) transformative spiritual journey. After a family tragedy, Mack, is unable to move on until he gets a mysterious invitation to an abandoned shack. There, God reveals Himself in the form of three strangers led by Papa (Octavia Spencer). The movie arrives on Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand May 30. Special features include audio commentary, a deleted scene, and four behind-the-scenes making-of featurettes.

    Watch this exclusive clip from the behind-the-scenes features, with the cast and crew discussing Sam Worthington as lead character Mack:“Before I Fall”
    A young adult “Groundhog Day,” this drama — on Blu-ray/ DVD May 30 — follows a teen (Zoey Deutch) who seems to have it all, before she dies in a car crash … then magically wakes up to find herself reliving the same day over and over. As she tries to solve the mystery of her derailed life, she must also unravel the secrets of the people closest to her and discover how the power of a single day can make a difference.

    “Collide”
    Nicholas Hoult, Felicity Jones, Anthony Hopkins, and Ben Kingsley star in this action thriller about a guy who agrees to hijack a shipment of cocaine for his old boss in return for money to pay for his girlfriend’s transplant. Of course things go haywire, and you can see exactly how when the movie arrives on DVD and Blu-ray on May 30.

    “Fist Fight”
    Charlie Day and Ice Cube star in this R-rated comedy about a teacher who unwittingly causes another teacher’s dismissal, leading to an after-school fight challenge on the last day of the school year. Tracy Morgan, Jillian Bell, Dean Norris, Christina Hendricks, Dennis Haysbert, JoAnna Garcia Swisher, and Kumail Nanjiani co-star in the movie, which is out on DVD/Blu-ray on May 30.

    New on Netflix

    This week marks the start of a new month, and you know what that means: A ton of new stuff will be added to Netflix at the start of June, and many other things will be leaving. But May is going out in style, with several good titles ready for streaming at the end of the month — just in time for post-Memorial Day binge-ing!

    “House of Cards” Season 5“The American people don’t know what’s best for them…. I do.” YASSS, POTUS. Frank and Claire Underwood — and their epic disdain for every single one of us — are back in the fifth season of Netflix’s political drama. Maybe it won’t be able to hold a candle to the real-life White House drama, but we can only hope it’ll be more entertaining. Watch the drama play out starting May 30.

    “F Is for Family” Season 2 (Netflix Original)This says it all: “They’re F’ing back. “F Is For Family” returns May 30 on Netflix.”

    “Marvel’s Doctor Strange”
    Benedict Cumberbatch’s Dr. Stephen Strange is ready for Netflix streaming starting May 30. “Doctor Strange” was the second film to be released in Phase Three of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, following “Captain America: Civil War” and preceding “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,” July’s “Spider-Man: Homecoming,” November’s “Thor: Ragnarok,” Feb. 2018’s “Black Panther,” May 2018’s “Avenges: Infinity War,” July 2018’s “Ant-Man and the Wasp,” March 2019’s “Captain Marvel,” and 2019’s “Avengers 4.”

    TV Worth Watching

    “Prison Break” Season 5 (Tuesday on Fox at 9 p.m.)
    “Not everybody makes it out alive” in the season finale of “Prison Break.” Just saying. It’s right in the press release. It’s been so good to have Michael and Lincoln back, but they have to leave again after the Tuesday, May 30 finale, “Behind The Eyes.” Here’s the synopsis: “Dangerous threats keep Michael and Lincoln fighting to protect Sara and Mike. Meanwhile, Poseidon continues to try and outsmart Michael and the rest of the gang, which leads them to the ultimate showdown, and not everyone makes it out alive.” Practice being shook now!

    “Still Star-Crossed” Season 1 (Monday on ABC at 10 p.m.)
    ABC’s new period drama imagines what happened after Romeo and Juliet’s love story ended. The May 29 premiere, titled “In Fair Verona, Where We Lay Our Scene,” has this synopsis: “In the wake of Romeo and Juliet’s tragic deaths, the Montague and Capulet rivalry escalates. A new royal takes the throne in Verona and struggles to determine what is best for his city, which is at the epicenter of mayhem.”

    “World of Dance” Season 1 (Tuesday on NBC at 10 p.m.)
    Jennifer Lopez, DWTS pro Derek Hough, Ne-Yo, and Jenna Dewan Tatum judge this new reality show, with the best dancers from around the world competing for a $1 million prize. The 10-episode series divides competitors into three divisions: Junior (any size act, 17 years old and under), Upper (groups of 1-4, 18 and older), and Team (groups of 5+, 18 and older). The dancing begins May 30.

    “Fear the Walking Dead” Season 3 (Sunday on AMC at 9 p.m.)
    Are you still watching this show? You know, this might be the year it gets better than the other “Walking Dead.” Why not check out the Season 3 premiere and see. “Eye of the Beholder” has this synopsis from AMC: “The Clark family find themselves in a dire predicament. They must work together to discover a path to safety.”

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  • The ‘Life’ Writers Talk About the Movie’s Shocking Twist

    If you saw “Life” this weekend (and if you didn’t, well, you should), you know that the movie has some pretty big twists. In fact, it’s bookended with them. And we’re going to talk about them. So if you haven’t seen the movie, then shoo. We got this.

    Seriously, if you haven’t seen the movie please don’t read this. Come back afterwards; it’ll still be here.

    All right, so the movie opens with the crew of an international space station uncovering some Martian soil, which produces an honest-to-goodness Martian. Earth is alerted, everyone rejoices. Except that this Martian isn’t as cute and cuddly as it seems, and pretty soon it’s growing at an exponential rate and murdering crewmembers. You know, that old killer-space-beast chestnut.

    The shocking thing is who goes first, though. It’s Ryan Reynolds, a person so unnaturally handsome that you assume he’s going to make it until the end credits. (Maybe that “and Ryan Reynolds” distinction on the poster gave it away, though.) When we talked to director Daniel Espinosa about the twist, he said it was one of the things that drew him to the project, and referred to Reynolds’s death as his “Janet Leigh moment,” referencing the shocking death at the beginning of Alfred Hitchcock‘s “Psycho.”

    When I talked to the writers (Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick) about the movie, just before its world premiere at SXSW, I had to ask them about what it was like murdering Reynolds so early.

    “We tell people Ryan’s our muse,” Wernick said, sweetly. “We always have him in mind when we’re conceiving and writing projects, and it’s so great to continue our partnership with Ryan, which has lasted since 2009. We’ve worked hand-in-hand as one creative voice.” Reese then piped in: “They say kill your darlings. Well, we killed our darling.” There was a pause and Wernick added, “We can’t kill Ryan as Deadpool because he’s un-killable, but we can sure kill him in ‘Life.’”

    Sorry, Ryan. 🙁

  • Here’s How ‘Power Rangers’ and ‘Beauty and the Beast Crushed It at the Box Office

    Hollywood seems to think remakes are easy ways to make money; just pick a familiar title and let nostalgia do the work for you. Actually, as remake-weary viewers know, such movies are hard to do right.

    This week’s box office, however, proves it can be done, given the continuing success of “Beauty and the Beast” and the estimated $40.5 million debut of “Power Rangers.” Disney’s live-action remake of the animated classic held on to the top spot in its second weekend, with an impressive $88.3 million. (Some pundits predict that tally could go up to $90 or $91 million by Monday, a crazy-good total for a second weekend.)

    The weekend results also offer a cautionary tale of how not to do it, with “CHiPs” opening well below expectations in seventh place, with an estimated $7.6 million.

    Why did digging up the past work so well for “Beauty” and “Power Rangers,” and so poorly for “CHiPs”? Here are the reasons.

    1. Audiences Love Some Nostalgia — Unless You’re ‘CHiPs’
    “Beauty” and “Power Rangers” both date back to the ’90s, yet neither ever really went away.

    From the show and about $6 billion worth of toys out there.

    “CHiPs” (that’s how they spelled it then) may have had a big pop culture footprint 40 years ago, but aside from whatever lingering fondness our culture still has for the NBC motorcycle cop action series, which ran from 1977 to 1983, but the show hasn’t been seen much in reruns since then. So it’s hard to imagine too many fans, new or old, yearning to see Ponch and Jon ride side by side down the Pacific Coast Highway once more.

    2. Update What Fans Love
    “Beauty” maintained fan loyalty by not changing much at all. It did add just enough novelty (It’s live-action now! With IMAX-worthy spectacle! And some intriguing sorta-gay subtext!) to justify the new version’s existence.

    “Power Rangers” was a trickier adaptation. The original was fun and campy and colorful but also thoroughly juvenile. What could give the Lionsgate remake appeal to fans who are now grown-ups as well as teens who’ve never seen the old show? Make it into a young-adult sci-fi/fantasy movie (with a strong dose of Marvel). This YA-y approach worked very well for Lionsgate in the past, with the “Twilight” and “Hunger Games” franchises. The result seemed to hit the demographic sweet spot, with the movie drawing an audience that was 50 percent over age 25 and 30 percent under 18.

    “CHiPs” underwent a more radical overhaul, with writer/director/star Dax Shepard playing up the comedy and giving the characters elaborate backstories. In other words, it’s “CHiPs” in name and premise only; most of what original “CHiPs” fans may have loved about the old show is gone. Granted, this approach worked for the “21 Jump Street” movies, but at least those were well-written and acutely self-aware. And they also had one asset that “CHIPS” lacks —

    3. Star Power
    The “Jump Street” movies at least had proven box office draws in Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum. “CHIPS” stars Shepard and Michael Peña are not proven ticket-sellers, and they’re both lacking in the charisma department; they’re not even as charming as Estrada and Larry Wilcox were on the small screen. With all this stacked against the film, on top of audiences not caring about the TV show at all anymore, it’s amazing (and crazy) that Warners pulled the trigger on it at all. Let alone thought it was a good idea to begin with.

    “Beauty” and “Power Rangers” both get by without star power being much of an issue. Because the titles and brand are the draw. “Power Rangers” features “Hunger Games” alumna Elizabeth Banks in a well-tailored role as its diva villain, but no one’s coming to see her; it’s all about the quintet of heroes in the candy-colored costumes.

    4. Buzz Means Everything
    “Beauty” did just okay with critics (earning a 71 percent “Fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes) but wowed audiences, who gave it an “A” CinemaScore. “Power Rangers” did not wow critics (46 percent on RT), but audiences ate it up anyway and gave it an A CinemaScore, too. Both benefitted from strong word-of-mouth, which was not the case for “CHIPS.” Neither critics nor audiences cared much for it, judging by the movie’s 20 percent RT rating and B- CinemaScore.

    5. Family-Friendly Ratings
    It probably didn’t help that “CHiPs” was rated R, indicating a raunchiness that would both repel fans of the squeaky-clean TV show and keep out younger viewers.

    “Power Rangers” may be a lot more mature than its TV source, but it’s still rated PG-13, the ideal rating to draw fans who want to see a movie with some grit but without keeping young ticketbuyers away. Even “Beauty” is rated PG, which is about as far as it can go to indicate grown-up content while still being a family movie.

    6. Timing
    March has been a huge month for summer-style blockbusters, but this weekend was especially crowded, with three new wide releases competing. “Beauty” certainly benefitted from having last weekend all to itself. Still, even with the movie doing just half the business of last weekend’s record-smashing debut, “Beauty” was still impossible to compete with, doing about $28 million more than the three new wide releases combined.

    The week’s lone new movie that wasn’t a remake, sci-fi/horror thriller “Life,” should have been a bigger draw for women, both because of its horror premise and the casting of both Jake Gyllenhaal and Ryan Reynolds. Nonetheless, the film opened in fourth place, underperforming with an estimated $12.6 million. “Life” failed to draw women (its audience was just 45 percent female), maybe because they were all still lining up for “Beauty.”

    You’d think “Life” would have done well, thanks to its star power and decent reviews. But audiences didn’t like it (it earned a dismal C+ at CinemaScore), suggesting that the movie would have done poorly even on a less competitive weekend.

    It’s this kind of disappointing result, for an original screenplay filmed with a star-studded cast on a modest budget ($58 million), that leads Hollywood to believe it’s safer just to keep filming remakes.

  • Watch Jake Gyllenhaal FaceTime Ryan Reynolds During ‘Late Night’ to Prove They’re Friends

    Seth Meyers is the only loser in this story, since he missed the whole thing play out. “Late Night” talking more about his bromance with co-star Ryan Reynolds.

    Seth Meyers called the two yin and yang, surprised that they got along so well in real life. Gyllenhaal said he knew Reynolds in passing beforehand, but didn’t really get to know him until they started shooting. “He’s just a great dude.” Meyers asked if they’re really friends. Gyllenhaal quipped, “No. I mean I don’t know him, I’ve never really spoken to him.” Meyers asked if he could get Reynolds on the phone. Gyllenhaal said yes, and whipped out his phone in an attempt to FaceTime him.

    It did not work.

    The phone just rang and rang with no answer. You can just picture Reynolds on the other end, offering a deep sigh and an eyeroll to the heavens. Not this guy again.

    Meyers said Gyllenhaal didn’t really know Ryan Reynolds. Gyllenhaal swore he did, and said he’d try again while Meyers did something else. So they tried again.

    It did not work. Again.

    The phone rang and rang. However, when they went to a commercial break, and Meyers went backstage to deal with a microphone issue, Ryan Reynolds actually called back. So Gyllenhaal stole Meyers’s desk and chatted with Reynolds while the actor was out pushing his kids in a stroller.

    That part happens at the 3:10 mark:At least JGyll got to prove he’s friends with Ry-guy! Although, if you watched their classic junket interview, you already knew that.

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  • ‘Life’ Writers Talk Technological Advances, That ‘Venom’ Rumor, and ‘Deadpool 2’

    This week’s terrifying sci-fi odyssey “Life,” which stars Jake Gyllenhaal, Ryan Reynolds, and Rebecca Ferguson as crewmembers aboard a doomed international space station that comes in contact with a very nasty Martian (they nickname the squid-like beast “Calvin”), began, like the monster, as a simple, single-celled idea in the minds of writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick. The screenwriters, who have penned wise-ass classics like “Zombieland” and “Deadpool,” take a surprisingly straightforward approach with “Life.” This is a singularly scary movie. Prepare to clutch your significant other’s hand until you hear bones break.

    I got a chance to chat with them ahead of the film’s world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival, and we talked about the inspiration for the movie, what it was like seeing their visions come to life (not only Calvin but the entire space station), the possibility of a sequel, and what’s going on with “Deadpool 2.”

    Moviefone: What’s interesting about this movie, especially coming from you guys, is how straightforward it is. Had you always wanted to do a straightforward sci-fi horror movie?

    Rhett Reese: Absolutely. It really is. I grew up with a very active imagination, and movies like “Alien” and “The Shining” absolutely terrified me. When I was younger, I wouldn’t even get to see them, but I’d see the commercials and they would absolutely terrify me. Deep down inside I always wanted to write something that was really scary. And this was the attempt to do that. We had fun. It was certainly not going for the same things we normally go for, so we got to flex a different writing muscle.

    Technology seems to have freed you up, too. Because if you had been writing this 30 years ago there would have been no way to visualize something like this creature.

    Paul Wernick: Absolutely. And not just the creature but the technology of the weightlessness and how that all visualized itself on screen and visual effects and wirework it’s just … We’ve been afforded so many gifts on this movie, with the ability to do stuff we couldn’t have done even five years ago at the price point that we wanted to do it. And as for Calvin, he’s a creature that we did extensive research on going into this. He’s one of the seven main characters and the primary villain in the piece. We visualized him in a way that we tapped into research we did on the deep-sea world with these translucent sea creatures and the octopus was a great inspiration of ours. And then Daniel and the visual effects guys and the creature design guys brought it to life in a way that far exceeded even our expectations.

    Was there ever a point where you guys said, “Screw it, let’s give him a face”?

    Reese: There was, at some point, because you’re so used to seeing faces. But everybody felt that to anthropomorphize it too much would be a mistake. Because it really is based on the idea that it’s all these interconnected cells that perform the bodily functions of all the differentiated tasks of a human body. So a cell that could be an eye cell and a muscle cell and a nerve cell all at once. It doesn’t look as much like the average creature on Earth, let’s say.

    What was it like seeing the set for the first time?

    Wernick: It was amazing. There’s such detail, and I don’t know if you know this, but it was shot on two soundstages at Shepperton in London, and they built basically the entire space station. The level of detail on everything, there was Russian on buttons that you’d never actually see on screen. The level and attention to detail was incredible and really awesome. It shows on screen. We could have shot this on the space station. It’s pretty astonishing. And they had to build it in such a way that it had to be open air so the wires could move above it. It was a technological and artistic thing of beauty.

    [Director] Daniel Espinosa said the film is loaded with references to other movies.

    Reese: I’m not sure what he’s talking about.

    Wernick: He might have put in some definite Easter eggs. There were some on “Deadpool” we didn’t know about either. Everyone likes to throw stuff in there. I’m sure there’s a bunch of stuff in this one. You know, “Alien” was definitely a huge inspiration of ours. It’s a great movie, and almost 40 years ago it came out. For us it was making the thing as current and relevant and up to date as we could.

    It also has such an international feel, which is really great in today’s climate, with all of these countries working together. Was that something that you guys were cognizant of?

    Reese: Yes, and that’s the way the space station is, with astronauts from different countries aboard it. We didn’t want to get into the divisiveness between nations or the divisiveness between characters in the sense that one character wants to bring the sample back to Earth to turn it into a weapon or something like that. We wanted a diverse but united crew that did their jobs well and had each other’s back. That was part of the realism factor, with these astronauts putting aside their country’s differences to come together on that space station to do work together.

    Have you guys thought about a sequel to “Life”? The ending is terrific and definitely leaves the possibility for another film open.

    Reese: Well, the sequel is going to be “Venom.” [Laughs] We would love a sequel but it depends on whether or not people buy tickets.

    Wernick: We always felt that an unconventional ending to a big tentpole movie would be cool, to us at least. We’re always left-of-center and it felt left-of-center to us. But studios do love franchises so that set up the potential should the movie succeed, we’d love to make another one on Earth. It brings a smile to our face.Let’s talk about “Deadpool 2.” The first film was such a surprise for so many people. How do you do that again?

    Reese: I think we’ll find some more rules to break hopefully. I think sequels should have the familiar and the new in them. They shouldn’t feel too similar to the previous movie otherwise people will get bored but I think they should also carryover in terms of tone and character so that people will still see what they know and love in the new movie. So we have similar elements, the tone will be the same, but the story is very different — it’ll have more characters, different characters, Deadpool is going to go on a new emotional journey so we want to keep it emotional. So it’s all about striking that balance.

    How did you guys feel about the movie hitting the way that it did?

    Reese: It was probably the most gratifying moment of our careers. Because we’ve certainly reached big audiences but never a massive international audience like that, and the passion people had with it was so intense. We meet people all the time and the second you mention “Deadpool” they just light up. That, for us, is why we do it. There’s that line in “Zombieland,” when Woody Harrelson is gushing at Bill Murray and Bill says, “Well that’s why we do it.” That’s what we say about “Deadpool.” It’s really fun.

    Was it also fun introducing that character to the world?

    Wernick: Well, there was always the fear that “Deadpool” was a one-quadrant movie. I think that’s why it took six years to get made. And the fact that it extended all over age ranges, including kids as young as 10, which I cringe at, all the way to grandparents, to hit all four quadrants in a movie that could have, if it had gone wrong, was astonishing to us and really gratifying. Because it was a passion of ours, it remains a passion of ours. And to see that passion come across on screen and relay that to audiences is amazing and awesome for us.

    Can you talk about working with new director David Leitch and what he brings?

    Wernick: He’s the best. His mind works in ways that others don’t in terms of visualizing the action. We were just in the production offices and saw the pre-viz on one of the action scenes that we’d written and it elevated it in such a way that’s jaw-dropping. So we’re playing to his strengths and we feel like audiences are going to be blown away.

    Reese: He also really gets the tone and the character. There was no learning curve. He came in and just got it.

    So is it going to have more action?

    Reese: I think it’ll be a little bigger, just by virtue of it being a sequel and wanting to top ourselves. But we’re not going to be lifting cities into the air or having alien invasions.

    Wernick: We’re saving that for the third one.

    Reese: The first film was an underdog movie, and we don’t want to feel like “The Avengers” — that big and bloated and huge. It will always have a scrappy, underdog feel to it.

    Life” comes to our galaxy tomorrow.

  • Ryan Reynolds & Stephen Colbert Mock Green Lantern’s ‘Dumb Superpower’

    Not to pile on, but “courage bladder” really is a cooler superpower than what Green Lantern can do.

    Ryan Reynolds is promoting his new movie “Life,” but he’s also firing more shots at his 2011 movie “Green Lantern.” He’s been poking fun of himself and that DC Comics movie for years now, with its only saving grace being that it paired Reynolds with his future wife, Blake Lively.

    Reynolds was on “The Late Show” last night, taking a spot on the blanket for Stephen Colbert’s regular segment, “Big Questions With Even Bigger Stars.” While gazing up at the night sky, asking each other tough questions about the universe, they added a joke about Green Lantern:

    Ryan Reynolds: “Hey, Stephen, if you could have any superpower, what would it be?”

    Stephen Colbert: “Oh, I’d like to have, like, this super-cool alien high-tech ring, and it’s green and it has a lantern on it, and I could use my imagination to make anything out of green light.”

    Long pause, and applause.

    Ryan: “Wow. That’s a really dumb superpower.”

    Stephen: “Yeah. What superpower would you want?”

    Ryan: “I’d like to be able to pee at a public urinal when someone’s standing directly behind me.”

    Stephen: “Oh. Courage bladder.”

    Courage bladder! Watch the full segment; the joke about “Avatar” is pretty good, too:

    Green Lantern is about to get back in action in the DC Extended Universe. Henry Cavill (Superman) was just posting about the character, who may or may not be played by Armie Hammer in “Green Lantern Corps.”

    “Life” opens Friday, March 24. For more shenanigans, check out Ryan’s insane junket interview with co-star Jake Gyllenhaal.

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  • ‘Life’ Director Daniel Espinosa Won’t Tell Us Where the ‘Alien’ Easter Eggs Are

    I talked to director Daniel Espinosa the morning before his brand-new sci-fi thriller, “Life,” had its world premiere in front of an audience at the SXSW Festival. (One of the greatest film festivals in the world, by the way.)

    He said watching the film, in that setting, with an audience, would leave him a ball of “anxiety.” “It’s like a personal experience for me to sit there with other people. I’m sitting there going, Is this a good silence? Is this a bad silence?” I asked him what his ideal reaction would be. “It’s quite nice when people miss five minutes of the movie because they can’t look,” he said.

    And while I wasn’t at the screening, I’m sure that people missed five minutes of the movie because they were afraid to look. “Life” is a crackerjack sci-fi horror tale of six doomed astronauts (among them: Ryan Reynolds, Rebecca Ferguson, and Jake Gyllenhaal, who had great things to say about making the movie) who uncover a Martian life form in a soil sample and then … things go very bad.

    Espinosa is a Swedish director who made the breakout film “Easy Money,” before helming such big Hollywood productions as “Safe House” and “Child 44” and, based on our brief phone conversation, is a lovable madman. We talked about the obvious comparisons to “Alien” (and the multitude of Easter eggs he refused to divulge), how he shot the movie, and the joys of having an extremely truncated post-production schedule.

    Be advised, minor spoilers follow.

    Moviefone: “Life” obviously fits very literally into the monster-on-a-space-ship genre. Was that something that you’d always wanted to do?

    Daniel Espinosa: Well, the whole idea of moving into science fiction, when you work in Sweden it is such an absurd idea. So it was more that I adored many of those movies but I never thought it would be possible. But when I got the script it hit me that it had such a great turn towards the end and had such a great surprise in the beginning, which I thought were a little bit unusual. I got to have my own Janet Leigh/”Psycho” moment. And then what hit me was the realism that it had. Those two turns and the realism differentiated it from the obvious comparison, which is “Alien.” “Alien” took place in the future in this dystopian future, which is what we feared the most in the 1970s because of the atomic era, but I think the greatest fear right now is what happens tomorrow. I liked to pursue that.

    Were there any references you snuck in to “Alien” or any of those earlier movies?

    Oh my god, there’s tons! It’s littered with it! But that’s a fun game. If you made a science fiction movie wouldn’t you fill it with numbers, with what people are saying, with writings on the wall, with shapes? That’s what makes it so fun, making one of these movies. I don’t know about you, but I’ve watched “The Shining,” for example, so many times, looking at the numbers on the door and thinking about what they mean.

    Yeah, I mean, they made a whole documentary about the things hidden in “The Shining.” Maybe they’ll do that for “Life.”

    Yes!

    Can you tell us one really good, hidden Easter egg?

    I can’t because it’s hidden, man! You’ve got to find it yourself! That’s the fun of it. I can say this: Look at the walls.

    Was part of the appeal for you how streamlined the movie is?

    Yes, I loved that it had such forceful energy to it, which I think is quite nice. The pauses become moments like small breaths. But what I loved was — the combination of that energy usually leads to a cute Hollywood ending, but what I liked was that it was more like a zombie movie with a more noir ending, or a “Twilight Zone” ending.

    Can you talk about your approach to the film’s visuals?

    I looked a lot into still photography from the first voyage to the moon, which was shot with this Hasselblad big format. So what we decided to do was get these Hasselblad lenses and re-house them for the 65 mm Alexa [digital camera] to get the same kind of feeling. Those old Hasselblad lenses have this very particular kind of flair, which was actually the first encounter we, as human beings, had of how images looked in space. I thought if I’m going to do it naturalistic it would be nice to tap into the core essence of the first images that we saw as space images.

    The movie has such a wonderful combination of awe and terror. Was that something that you were going for?

    Oh, completely. We wanted to create a vignette around these characters that became stronger and stronger throughout the picture. I worked with this color grader who had done “The Revenant” and “Gravity,” and us three together could work on this bright movie to become darker and darker and walk into this almost Kubrickian red.

    This movie is pretty quick. Was there anything that you cut for time or pacing that you wish was still in the movie?

    No, I was quite lucky because we were supposed to have a six month post-production period, but we got so squeezed because Ridley Scott kept moving [“Alien: Covenant“] closer and closer to mine and I had to back off … the quickness of the post-production meant that the influences that usually drop down on you weren’t as strong as normal. We were pretty much able to do the movie the way we wanted to.

    “Life” opens in our galaxy this Friday.