Tag: mark strong

  • TV Review: ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2

    Nicole Kidman in 'Nine Perfect Strangers,' premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.
    Nicole Kidman in ‘Nine Perfect Strangers,’ premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.

    ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2 receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

    Released on Hulu on May 21st with the first two episodes followed by one weekly, the second season of ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ re-introduces us to enigmatic and experimental wellness “expert” Masha Dmitrichenko (Nicole Kidman), who is still finding ways to have her clients deal with their issues –– usually through the liberal application of pharmaceuticals.

    The cast this time also includes Henry Golding, Lena Olin, Annie Murphy, Christine Baranski and Murray Bartlett.

    Related Article: Hulu Orders Second Season of Mystery Thriller Series ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ With Nicole Kidman Back to star

    Initial Thoughts

    Henry Golding in 'Nine Perfect Strangers,' premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.
    Henry Golding in ‘Nine Perfect Strangers,’ premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.

    Given the chaos that enveloped the first season’s batch of clients, who showed up at a Californian retreat to be greeted by the mysterious Masha (Kidman), you might struggle to believe that anyone would want to subject themselves to her ministrations.

    Yet without that suspension of disbelief (and honestly in the word of the wealthy and emotionally desperate, there is plenty of that), Season 2 of ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ really wouldn’t exist.

    It has a dramatic kin in ‘The White Lotus’ –– sharing the idea of privileged types going through experiences and (sometimes) processing trauma –– and like Mike White’s show for HBO, does rather run the risk of repeating itself.

    Script and Direction

    Dolly De Leon in 'Nine Perfect Strangers,' premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.
    Dolly De Leon in ‘Nine Perfect Strangers,’ premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.

    While Season 1 was mostly based on Liane Moriarty’s source novel, here show bosses David E. Kelley and John-Henry Butterworth branch off on their own storyline, with a similar concept but a brand new setting.

    Here, the castle-like mansion of Zauberwald, nestled in breathtaking Alpine scenery is the location for the new retreat that Masha has been curating thanks to her old friend Helena (Olin).

    While the frosty locale feels like an even more fitting background for Kidman’s chilly manipulator, the scripts can’t completely get away from the feeling that we’re treading similar ground. True, the issues are slightly different –– while Season 1 had a family mired in grief over the death of a teen, here there two different dysfunctional parent/grown child dynamics, along with a collection of other troubled souls –– but you really know a lot more what to expect this time, and the surprise is not there.

    (L to R) King Princess and Maisie Richardson-Sellers in 'Nine Perfect Strangers,' premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.
    (L to R) King Princess and Maisie Richardson-Sellers in ‘Nine Perfect Strangers,’ premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.

    It won’t surprise you to learn (though we won’t specify how) that none of the guests are there by accident, but while the trippy sequences still work to some degree, with the highlights including Murray Bartlett’s disgraced children’s TV host talking with sentient versions of his own puppets and a standout sequence exploring the tortured history of Annie Murphy’s Imogen and mother Victoria, played by Christine Baranski, there’s less of a frisson this time.

    Jonathan Levine, who was an executive producer and directed all of Season 1, returns for the lion’s share of the episodes, with Anthony Byrne also handling some. The Alpine setting does provide some visual interest, and the stark, strange castle retreat makes for a fun location. The visual language of the drug trips has also expanded in entertaining ways this season.

    Cast and Performances

    (Lto R) Maisie Richardson-Sellers and Murray Bartlett in 'Nine Perfect Strangers,' premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.
    (Lto R) Maisie Richardson-Sellers and Murray Bartlett in ‘Nine Perfect Strangers,’ premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.

    As with the first season, one of the strongest elements of the new run lies in the casting. Once you get over the idea of anyone willingly putting themselves in Masha’s hands, you can revel in several solid acting turns.

    Murray Bartlett is prime among them. Having been on the other side of the retreat coin as the nervy, stressed Armond in ‘The White Lotus’ first season, here he’s still giving excellent energy as Brian, who was effectively cancelled after raging at his staff on camera. Bartlett is so good with this type of character, bringing nuance and depth to him.

    Christine Baranski is playing a familiar role as the booze-happy Victoria, but once again her sheer ability to bring something extra to what could be a basic role is a marvel to behold. She makes for a great parent/child pairing with Annie Murphy, who channels real frustration and entitlement as Imogen, her daughter.

    Mark Strong in 'Nine Perfect Strangers,' premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.
    Mark Strong in ‘Nine Perfect Strangers,’ premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.

    In similar fashion, Mark Strong and Henry Golding make for a good pair as billionaire David and troubled son Peter, whose relationship has been fractured by David’s past infidelity to Peter’s mother. They play well off each other, even if their storyline sometimes feels like an off-the-shelf dilemma.

    Dolly DeLeon, meanwhile, is another standard as questioning nun Sister Agnes, struggling over past decisions and questioning her faith in not just her Catholic religion.

    And, of course, Kidman, who while she’s really just doing a variation on her standard icy power play, still finds sparks of humanity within Masha, especially when the show takes a further dip into her past.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Annie Murphy and Aras Aydin in 'Nine Perfect Strangers,' premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.
    (L to R) Annie Murphy and Aras Aydin in ‘Nine Perfect Strangers,’ premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.

    The second season of ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ cannot entirely escape the feeling of déjà vu despite some fresh twists and turns. Still, the heightened reality works for the most part and the cast bring committed, watchable performances that carry this over the line.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2?

    Nicole Kidman returns as the enigmatic healing guru Masha in the second season, based on Liane Moriarty’s bestselling novel.

    A new batch of wellness-seekers arrive at a mysterious Alpine resort of looking for transformative paths to betterment and happiness. During their stay, the guests partake in unconventional methods to reach their goals while Masha is forced to confront some past demons… Threatening to destroy both her own personal wellness, and that of her guests.

    Who stars in ‘Nine Perfect Strangers’ Season 2?

    • Nicole Kidman as Masha Dmitrichenko
    • Henry Golding as Peter Sharp
    • Lena Olin as Helena
    • Annie Murphy as Brian
    • Christine Baranski as Victoria
    • Lucas Englander as Martin
    • King Princess as Tina
    • Murray Bartlett as Brian
    • Dolly De Leon as Sister Agnes
    • Maisie Richardson-Sellers as Wolfie
    • Mark Strong as David Sharp
    • Aras Aydin as Matteo
    Christine Baranski in 'Nine Perfect Strangers,' premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.
    Christine Baranski in ‘Nine Perfect Strangers,’ premiering May 21, 2025 on Hulu. Photo: Disney/Reiner Bajo.

    Other Nicole Kidman Movies and TV Shows: 

    Buy Nicole Kidman Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Shadow Force’ Exclusive Interview: Director Joe Carnahan

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    The new action thriller ‘Shadow Force’, which was directed by Joe Carnahan (‘The A-Team’) and stars Kerry Washington (’Django Unchained’), Omar Sy (‘X-Men: Days of Future Past’), Mark Strong (‘Shazam!’), Cliff “Method Man” Smith (‘Garden State’), and Oscar winner Da’Vine Joy Randolph (‘The Holdovers’), opens in theaters on May 9th.

    Related Article: Kerry Washington and Omar Sy Talk New Action Thriller ‘Shadow Force’

    Director Joe Carnahan on the set of 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    Director Joe Carnahan on the set of ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director and co-writer Joe Carnahan about his work on ‘Shadow Force’, developing the screenplay with co-writer Leon Chills, shooting the bank action sequence, Kyrah and Isaac’s relationship, working with Kerry Washington and Omar Sy, if Method Man’s Wu-Tang Clan reference was an improv, and the importance of Lionel Richie’s music to the film, as well as discussing his adaptation of ‘The A-Team’ and why Jon Hamm took an uncredited role.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Washington, Sy, director Joe Carnahan, and screenwriter Leon Chills.

    Director Joe Carnahan talks 'Shadow Force'.
    Director Joe Carnahan talks ‘Shadow Force’.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about working with screenwriter Leon Chills and what were some of the elements that you wanted to add to his script?

    Joe Carnahan: I think Leon had written such an interesting script. I think my perspective on it was to make it more about the nuclear family or this idea of these two people having to make this gut-wrenching choice of like, “Listen, I’m going to go out into the world and make sure that no one attacks you. You’re going to raise our son.” I think that in and of itself kind of opened the gates for all this wonderful drama and this interpersonal stuff with Omar and Kerry’s characters, and the tension and this forlorn notion of lost love or forsaken love or what have you, and then this event forcing them back together. I think that became the centrifuge, the family aspect of it that I think I brought to it. I think, again, a lot of these movies where they succeed when they’re good, it’s a very binary kind of emotional connections that the audience has developed because I think if they care deeply then they’re in. I still haven’t seen an elaborate visual effect that could beat it. There’s a moment where Kerry’s reunited with her son, and he has an action figure that looks like her. I remember looking around the test screening and everyone’s crying. I think once those things start happening and then you start to imperil and endanger those characters, there’s that much more of the buy-in and there’s that much more of the emotional investment from the audience. I think it’s not difficult to do, but it takes time to figure out how to hit those little keys and those little notes.

    MF: Can you talk about shooting the action scenes, particularly the bank sequence?

    JC: I thought, wouldn’t it be interesting if you shot the bank robbery from the point of view of the child, which is he can’t see any of this, so his dad’s telling him, “Close your eyes and cover your ears.” I just thought I’d never seen that. Listen, I’m not that smart. But I’ll think to myself oftentimes, “Have I seen it? No.” Sometimes that’s worth doing all by itself. If it’s a familiar thing, which is a bank robbery in a movie, audiences have seen tons of those. It’s how you execute it, and the fact that it stuck out to you. If I had shot it in a very traditional way, it may have not had the same impact, but because it’s from his point of view, it’s interesting. I think, I’m a father. I’ve got four kids; I’ve got two 10-year-old girls. I wouldn’t want them to see their father being violent, I’d want to shield them from that. So, I thought it was very cool the way we did that. It reminds you there’s this little kid in there. It’s tricky because the studio could have said, “It’s too much. You can’t put a kid in the middle of that,” but I thought the way we did it, we just were able to thread that needle. So, I was very happy with the way that came out.

    (L to R) Omar Sy as Isaac and Kerry Washington as Kyrah in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Omar Sy as Isaac and Kerry Washington as Kyrah in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    MF: Can you talk about the relationship between Kyrah and Isaac, the threat against them and what they are willing to do to protect their child?

    JC: Well, listen, it’s that we always say, “I’d go to the ends of the earth for my kid,” or “I’d do anything for my child.” Then the idea that you would have to physically separate to be safe, to ensure that there’s this kind of huntress out there, which is Kerry’s character, which is kind of a non-traditional way of doing it. Like Omar being the maternal figure, raising their son, I thought was intriguing. Because we have this whole society where it’s like, how could you do that? Her character says that. “Why will it work? Because no one would believe I’d walk away from my son.” That’s why it’ll work. To me that’s gut-wrenching. I think Kerry’s so lovely in delivering that sentiment because she’s a mom and she knows what that means. So, it puts a lump in your throat because it’s coming from her, the part of her that’s a wonderful actor. Then there’s that part of her that’s a mom and that infusion is lovely in a tugging your heartstrings kind of way. But I just thought it was an unusual way to set that whole thing up.

    MF: What was it like directing Kerry Washington and Omar Sy on set?

    JC: I mean, listen, they’re both just angels. They’re both just wonderful. Omar is possessed of just this innate decency and kindness as a man. Then, I was in Paris after we wrapped and Omar came to have dinner with me and my girls at Beef Bar in Paris, and you want to see what fame looks like? I told my girls, “Watch this restaurant when Omar walks in.” It was crazier than anything I’d ever seen. So, you got this, and you see him in ‘Lupin’ and then you have Kerry, they both have such generosity of spirit and instant chemistry with one another. Also, I think this really abiding respect from one another and their craft as actors. I think once you get that you have this mutual admiration society as they had, it’s very easy to do your job, at least it was for me.

    (L to R) Cliff “Method Man” Smith as Unc and Da'Vine Joy Randolph as Auntie in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Cliff “Method Man” Smith as Unc and Da’Vine Joy Randolph as Auntie in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    MF: In the film, Method Man’s character references the Wu-Tang Clan, was that line improvised?

    JC: It was not. I decided I was going to have him say it and ask the kid if he likes Wu-Tang. Then I told Jahleel (Kamara) to say that line and if you see the film Method Man’s reaction is his actual reaction to hearing Jahleel say it. He just froze. It was great. What I love about Cliff is that meta part of it, his understanding of like, “Okay, I’m going to wink, wink, nudge, nudge the audience and go, ‘We’re talking about me.’” But he was not so precious about that. He was just lovely about it. It was great.

    MF: Can you talk about the importance of Lionel Richie’s music to this film and how you chose the right songs to use?

    JC: I mean, that’s my junior high slow dance song with Kelly Hines at Shepherd Elementary School in 1980. I’m such a Commodores and Lionel Richie fan. I just loved the idea that this little kid would be a Lionel Richie fanatic and a Commodores fanatic because I was as a kid. My mom had all those albums. You can’t find anybody that doesn’t love Lionel Richie, you know what I mean? It’s like you forget how great that band was, and that guy was. I just thought that was truly great, and the scene in the car where he knows all the lyrics and you realize it’s like that’s the wedding song. You’re playing our wedding song, which I just thought was great and kind of the way that gets set up and paid off I thought was lovely.

    Jon Hamm in 'The A-Team'. Photo: 20th Century Fox.
    Jon Hamm in ‘The A-Team’. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

    MF: Finally, I’m a fan of your version of ‘The A-Team’ but I’ve always wanted to ask you, why did Jon Hamm make an appearance at the end of the movie? Were you setting him up to be the villain in a possible sequel?

    JC: Yes, that’s exactly it, Jami. He was going to be the Lynch character in the sequel. That is why Jon Hamm is in ‘The A-Team’. I’ll tell you this quick, the head of Fox Marketing at the time, who shall remain unnamed, because got destroyed by ‘The Karate Kid’ remake. Three weeks after the film opens, he sees me in the Fox commissary and he gives me a big hug and says, “I screwed up.” But if I had a nickel for everybody that said, “I love that movie. When are you going to do a sequel, can you do a sequel?” Not now. They could never afford Liam (Neeson) and they certainly couldn’t afford Bradley (Cooper), but it was fun to make. I had a blast making it, man. It was great. I mean, Jon’s so lovely and so unassuming and so great. It would’ve been nice to be able to go take that into the next movie, but alas, who knows. You never know, man. With sequels, sometimes years pass and then everybody wants another one.

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    What is the plot of ‘Shadow Force’?

    Kyrah (Kerry Washington) and Isaac (Omar Sy) were once the leaders of a multinational special forces group called Shadow Force, but broke the rules by falling in love, and they go underground to protect their son (Jaheel Kamara) with the rest of the Shadow Force hot on their trail.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Shadow Force’?

    'Shadow Force' opens in theaters on May 9th. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    ‘Shadow Force’ opens in theaters on May 9th. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    List of Joe Carnahan Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Shadow Force’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Joe Carnahan Movies on Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘Shadow Force’

    (L to R) Omar Sy as Isaac and Kerry Washington as Kyrah in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Omar Sy as Isaac and Kerry Washington as Kyrah in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    ‘Shadow Force’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

    Opening in theaters on May 9th is the new action thriller ‘Shadow Force’, which was directed by ‘The A-Team’s Joe Carnahan, and stars Kerry Washington, Omar Sy, Mark Strong, Cliff “Method Man” Smith, and Da’Vine Joy Randolph.

    Initial Thoughts

    Kerry Washington as Kyrah in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Juan Pablo Gutierrez.
    Kerry Washington as Kyrah in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Juan Pablo Gutierrez.

    Pulling inspiration from ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’ and the Roger Moore era James Bond movies, ‘Shadow Force’ is an entertaining enough action movie but struggles with cliché villains and a complicated third act that will leave viewers slightly puzzled.

    Director Joe Carnahan has crafted some unique action sequences that are really the highlight of the movie, while Kerry Washington and Omar Sy give strong performances that help to try and create the heart of the film. But in the end the film fails to establish a cohesive story and the action, and the lead performances are not enough to overcome the script’s shortcomings.

    Story and Direction

    Director Joe Carnahan on the set of 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    Director Joe Carnahan on the set of ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    The movie begins by introducing us to Isaac Sarr (Sy), a former member of s special forces group called Shadow Force, raising his young son Ky (Jahleel Kamara) in hiding. Ky’s mother, Kyrah Owens (Washington) is also a former member of Shadow Force, and the two broke ties with the group after they fell in love and she became pregnant with Ky, which was forbidden by the group’s leader, Jack Cinder (Strong). Kyrah has since gone underground to protect Isaac and Ky, so that she can confuse Cinder and keep her family safe.

    Trouble begins when Isaac, who has hearing loss, protects Ky during an unexpected bank robbery, and Cinder becomes aware of their location, sending the remaining members of Shadow Force to eliminate Isaac and Ky. This leads Kyrah no choice but to step out of the shadows and return to protect her family, reuniting for the first time with Ky since he was born.

    Meanwhile, Isaac and Kyrah’s former colleagues Auntie Clanter ( Randolph) and Marcus “Unc” Owens (Smith) are also on their trail, but do they want to help Kyrah and her family, or are they working for Cinder? What follows is a cat and mouse game that ends in a showdown between Kyrah and Cinder where all the characters’ true intentions are revealed.

    (L to R) Natalia Reyes as Moriti, Mark Strong as Cinder and Sala Baker as Scath in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Natalia Reyes as Moriti, Mark Strong as Cinder and Sala Baker as Scath in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    With films like ‘Smokin’ Aces’, ‘The Grey’, ‘The A-Team’, and ‘Boss Level’ under his belt, Joe Carnahan has established himself as one of the best action directors working today, but except for ‘Smokin’ Aces’, Carnahan’s films usually fall apart in the third act and only feature flashy characters and great action sequences. Unfortunately, ‘Shadow Force’ is no different.

    However, the movie is worth seeing for the director’s unique take on a bank robbery, as well as a chase sequence involving massive trucks, and the film’s final set piece, a very impressive boat chase. Co-written by Carnahan and screenwriter Leon Chills, you can tell that Chills original script was more of a character-driven story and that Carnahan’s contributions included the action sequences and the supporting characters and villains, that are not as fleshed out as much as the two main characters.

    While it would have been a completely different movie, it would have been interesting to see Chills’ original screenplay produced, which would have focused more on the relationship between Kyrah and Isaac, and less of the convoluted spy thriller plot and the generic villains. Although Carnahan’s chaotic shooting style lends itself well to some of his past films, it does become a burden here, but his choice to tie the movie’s music, several beloved Lionel Richie songs, to the core plot works surprisingly well.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Kerry Washington as Kyrah and Jahleel Kamera as Ky in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Kerry Washington as Kyrah and Jahleel Kamera as Ky in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    With the film drawing so heavily from ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’, it’s interesting to note that Kerry Washington was in that movie, but except for that, has not had a chance to do a lot of action in the past. Much like watching Viola Davis fight terrorists in the recent ‘Die Hard’ inspired ‘G20’, it was refreshing to see an actress of Washington’s caliber take on a role like this. But while she is strong in the action sequences, it’s the scenes when she’s with Sy, and especially reuniting with her son, where Washington shines the most.

    While American audiences might not be as familiar with Omar Sy’s work as European audiences are thanks to the French series ‘Lupin’, he did excel in last year’s action movie ‘The Killer’, which was directed by the legendary John Woo. Sy is again great here, especially in the action sequences and has a very strong presence on screen. I also loved the way his character’s hearing loss is treated like a superpower (Not unlike Marvel’s Daredevil character who is name dropped in the film) and not a disability.

    (L to R) Cliff “Method Man” Smith as Unc and Da'Vine Joy Randolph as Auntie in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Cliff “Method Man” Smith as Unc and Da’Vine Joy Randolph as Auntie in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    Oscar winner Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Cliff “Method Man” Smith add a good amount of humor to the film, but their characters are not given a lot to do, and the guessing game of their true intentions becomes trying by the film’s end. But Smith does have a funny moment with Jahlell Kamara, when Ky references the Wu-Tang Clan and Method Man breaks the fourth wall (He is a founding member of the seminal hip hop group in real life) after hearing the comment.

    But the weak point of the movie is by far Mark Strong’s performance, as well as the rest of the very forgettable Shadow Force members. Strong, who is typically a very good actor, is clearly phoning this performance in for a paycheck and it shows. To be fair, the character is underwritten to begin with, but Strong does nothing to elevate Cinder from a typical mustache-twirling Bond villain.

    Final Thoughts

    Omar Sy as Isaac in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    Omar Sy as Isaac in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    ‘Shadow Force’ is a flawed but still fun movie with some great action sequences and good performances from Washington and Sy but falls flat by the end. Carnahan’s vibey direction, the incredible set pieces, the Lionel Richie music and the main characters’ love story is not enough to make this a “rush out to the theaters to see it” movie. But I think it does have enough excitement to hold your attention on a Saturday afternoon once it is available to stream.

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    What is the plot of ‘Shadow Force’?

    Kyrah (Kerry Washington) and Isaac (Omar Sy) were once the leaders of a multinational special forces group called Shadow Force, but broke the rules by falling in love, and they go underground to protect their son (Jaheel Kamara) with the rest of the Shadow Force hot on their trail.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Shadow Force’?

    'Shadow Force' opens in theaters on May 9th. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    ‘Shadow Force’ opens in theaters on May 9th. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    List of Joe Carnahan Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Shadow Force’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Joe Carnahan Movies on Amazon

     

  • ‘Shadow Force’ Interview: Kerry Washington and Omar Sy

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    Opening in theaters on May 9th is the new action thriller ‘Shadow Force’, which was directed by Joe Carnahan (‘The A-Team’), and stars Kerry Washington (’Django Unchained’), Omar Sy (‘X-Men: Days of Future Past’), Mark Strong (‘Shazam!’), Cliff “Method Man” Smith (‘Garden State’), and Oscar winner Da’Vine Joy Randolph (‘The Holdovers’).

    Related Article: Kerry Washington and Delroy Lindo Talk ‘UnPrisoned’ and Working Together

    Kerry Washington stars in 'Shadow Force'.
    Kerry Washington stars in ‘Shadow Force’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Kerry Washington and Omar Sy about their work on ‘Shadow Force’, what audiences should expect from the movie, how Sy’s characters disability is really his superpower, what Washington’s character is willing to do to protect her family, shooting the incredible action sequences, and working with director Joe Carnahan.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Washington, Sy, director Joe Carnahan, and screenwriter Leon Chills.

    Kerry Washington as Kyrah in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Juan Pablo Gutierrez.
    Kerry Washington as Kyrah in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Juan Pablo Gutierrez.

    Moviefone: To begin with, Kerry, as both an actress and a producer, what would you say to moviegoers sitting down right now in a theater to see this film, to prepare them for the action-packed theatrical experience they’re about to have?

    Kerry Washington: I would say this film is so exciting because it is a big splashy action drama, but at its center, at the heart of the film, is this family story. It’s about love, it’s about sacrifice, and it’s about doing whatever it takes to protect the people you love the most. So, it really is a beautifully balanced film and a great film to see with the people you love most.

    Omar Sy stars in 'Shadow Force'.
    Omar Sy stars in ‘Shadow Force’.

    MF: Omar, your character has hearing loss, but he considers his disability to be a superpower, can you talk about that and your approach to playing Isaac?

    Omar Sy: I love that. I love that because I’m always saying that these movies, it has so many things to say about the family, about that, and even about people. To give that message that sometimes we have our specificities, we have something that we have, it’s our own, and even a disability can sometimes help you to work somewhere else and be stronger somewhere else. So, it is his superpower, like he’s described, not hearing gives him more focus on other things. They can feel more, so I like the idea, and then the thing for me was to approach that, it was a slow-mo. I was just breathing a lot and feel like everything. Like he says, everything slows down when you don’t hear. You can have your own rhythm and then you connect to Bruce Lee. He says, “It’s smooth. Smooth is fast.” So, you slow down and you’re going to get speed, so I was a little bit Bruce Lee in my head.

    (L to R) Kerry Washington as Kyrah and Jahleel Kamera as Ky in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Kerry Washington as Kyrah and Jahleel Kamera as Ky in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    MF: Kerry, can you talk about Kyrah and Isaac’s relationship, the threat against them and what she’s willing to do to protect her family and her child?

    KW: I really liked the relationship between Isaac and Kyrah because they’re obviously estranged lovers and they’re dealing with that estrangement, with what it means to be separated and to have been apart. There’s a lot of misunderstanding between them, so the fight scenes between Omar and I were fun because it was like a couple trying to figure each other out. The fight scene was like a dialogue, and we were remembering each other’s fight styles, just remembering each other’s hearts, so it was fun to think about how a couple who are both killers, how they love each other and how they communicate.

    Omar Sy as Isaac in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    Omar Sy as Isaac in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    MF: Omar, can you talk about preparing for the action sequences and which scene was the most challenging for you to execute?

    OS: Well, the boat (scene) because it was the end of the shooting. It was moving a lot and that was more exciting, but also, I think the most difficult because the balance is different. On the ground you know exactly what you do. On the boat, it’s also the boat moving, and you must find your balance on that. That was a little bit different and more challenging, but it was also the most exciting.

    Director Joe Carnahan on the set of 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    Director Joe Carnahan on the set of ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    MF: Finally, Kerry, can you talk about shooting the action sequences and what was your experience like working with director Joe Carnahan?

    KW: Well, it was fun. If you’re going to do badass action sequences, you want to be with a guy like Joe who is living it. Every take he’s screaming louder than we are. He’s just so into it, so passionate, and he loves it. For me, you want to work with somebody who’s most passionate about the area that you’re working in, and so I think he really pushed both of us, our stunt team, everybody, to really go beyond our comfort zone to try to find some extra magic.

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    What is the plot of ‘Shadow Force’?

    Kyrah (Kerry Washington) and Isaac (Omar Sy) were once the leaders of a multinational special forces group called Shadow Force, but broke the rules by falling in love, and they go underground to protect their son (Jaheel Kamara) with the rest of the Shadow Force hot on their trail.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Shadow Force’?

    (L to R) Omar Sy as Isaac and Kerry Washington as Kyrah in 'Shadow Force'. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Omar Sy as Isaac and Kerry Washington as Kyrah in ‘Shadow Force’. Photo: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    List of Joe Carnahan Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Shadow Force’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Joe Carnahan Movies on Amazon

     

  • TV Review: ‘Dune: Prophecy’

    Jihae as Reverend Mother Kasha in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Jihae as Reverend Mother Kasha in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    Launching on HBO and Max on Sunday, November 17th with its first episode, this six-episode new series is set in the recognizable portrayal of ‘Dune’ as established by director Denis Villeneuve with his two epic movies.

    Yet it’s also different enough –– partly because it’s set 10,000 years before those films takes place and has a decidedly alternate viewpoint –– that it succeeds in being a worthwhile supplement to the movies and boasts an impressively epic scale.

    Related Article: Director Denis Villeneuve Talks ‘Dune: Part Two’ Casting and Production

    Does ‘Dune: Prophecy’ Birth Greatness?

    (L to R) Jodhi May and Mark Strong in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    (L to R) Jodhi May and Mark Strong in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    Long shelved on the list of titles deemed “unfilmable,” Frank Herbert’s sci-fi epic novel ‘Dune’ has been brought to screens before –– David Lynch tried it in the 1980s with his mostly unsuccessful effort, while Denis Villeneuve has seen a lot more critical praise (not to mention box office power and awards) for his own 2021 effort, which led to this year’s follow-up.

    But in an era where studios and other media companies long to keep the cash cows mooing, a couple of films years apart was never going to be enough. Hence, the TV spin-off, adapted from 2012 novel ‘Sisterhood of Dune’ by Herbert’s son Brian and prolific genre author Kevin J. Anderson, who have continued the series.

    Tabu as Sister Francesca in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Tabu as Sister Francesca in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    Fortunately, ‘Dune: Prophecy’ ranks among the better supplement series, spotlighting a different chunk of the ‘Dune’ timeline and, as the novel’s title (and original title for the show, ‘Dune: Sisterhood’) suggests, a fresh perspective on the history and power struggles inherent in the story.

    While the ‘Dune’ movies certainly boast impressive and impactful women, including Zendaya’s Chani and Rebecca Ferguson’s Lady Jessica Atreides, they have skewed more towards the masculine side of the story, with Timothée Chalamet’s Paul Atreides the anchor.’

    ‘Prophecy’ instead forefronts Emily Watson’s Valya Harkonnen and sister Tula, who are looking to maintain the fledgling power of the mysterious Bene Gesserit movement, which seeks to guide the powerful houses of the imperium while also battling to restore their family’s honor.

    Script and Direction

    Chloe Lea in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Chloe Lea in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    ‘Dune: Prophecy’ has not been without its challenges –– it has gone through at least one team on its way to screens (the executive producer credits are an archeological dig through previous showrunners), but developers Diane Ademu-John and Alison Schapker (with Schapker as the current overseer of the series) have managed to bring the story to life successfully.

    Like Villeneuve’s movies, there is still the chilly air of plot over character at times, but the expansive running time of six episodes means there is certainly more room for development of the characters themselves.

    Probably the best way to describe this new show is ‘Dune’ crossed with ‘Game of Thrones,’ as the story (set 10,000 years before the events of the movies) has familiar themes of jockeying for power that the films use as a backdrop for its tale of a messiah and its action. Here, those machinations are front and center, the Bene Gesserit order leading the way in plotting the future of the empire by pulling strings through breeding programs and setting themselves up as advisors to the leaders of the great houses.

    Faoileann Cunningham in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Faoileann Cunningham in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    The scripts are meaty and work well in context –– this certainly feels like it belongs in the ‘Dune’ movie universe but isn’t just more of the same.

    Similarly, the direction of the show establishes a visual style that is akin to the ‘Dune’ films, yet has its own personality, set in chilly palaces and featuring water much more as a motif than the dusty dunes of Arrakis (though there is a key plot point/character whose story have their roots in the familiar desert locale).

    Main director Anna Foerster sets the tone and style early on, and the four episodes given to press certainly don’t dip in quality on that front.

    Oh, but as with ‘Game of Thrones’ there are the occasional moments (which fall away as the season moves on) where it feels like HBO pressure to deliver exposition while people have sex.

    ‘Dune: Prophecy’: Performances

    Though it features two powerful central figures (and fantastic actors playing them), the show never feels overbalanced.

    Emily Watson as Valya Harkonnen

    Emily Watson as Mother Superior Valya Harkonnen in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Emily Watson as Mother Superior Valya Harkonnen in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    Watson is in her element here, playing the imperious and crafty, yet believably driven Valya, who both wants to make sure the Bene Gesserit’s mission stays intact but also has plans to restore her family to what she sees as its rightful position of power.

    The actor is excellent as this sort of role, as Valya comes to life in way that is truly satisfying.

    Olivia Williams as Tula Harkonnen

    Olivia Williams as Reverend Mother Tula Harkonnen in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Olivia Williams as Reverend Mother Tula Harkonnen in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    Like her co-star, Williams delivers a commanding, if more vulnerable performance. Whereas some shows might have sidelined Tula, ‘Prophecy’ finds plenty for her to do as she takes over running the Bene Gesserit school in her sister’s absence.

    Williams is trusted with some great moments and carries them all off.

    Travis Fimmel as Desmond Hart

    Travis Fimmel as Desmond Hart in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Travis Fimmel as Desmond Hart in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    Fimmel plays a man whose motivations we won’t talk about too much so as to avoid spoilers, but suffice to say he’s a soldier with a secret, and he’s seeking to win favor from the emperor –– oh, and he’s no fan of Valya and her sect. His subtle yet burning charisma is a good counterpoint to the more mannered, colder performances of some of the other main cast.

    Sarah-Sofie Boussnina as Princess Ynez

    Sarah-Sofie Boussnina as Princess Ynez Corrino in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Sarah-Sofie Boussnina as Princess Ynez Corrino in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    Boussina’s princess is a key part of the early going –– daughter of the Emperor, she’s a prospect for a house-uniting marriage, which goes badly in a way nobody quite sees coming. The young actor brings spirit and attitude to her role.

    Mark Strong as Emperor Javicco Corrino

    Mark Strong in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Mark Strong in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    Strong is having a good run on HBO of late, between this and his role on ‘The Penguin.’ Here, his emperor is a man who is concerned that he’s inherited all his power and is sometimes unsure how to wield it. He can be led by others, but Strong brings him to complicated life.

    Other notable characters

    The various young women who attend the Bene Gesserit school all have their own personalities, and a couple come into play well in the main storyline.

    Final Thoughts

    Jihae as Reverend Mother Kasha in 'Dune: Prophecy'. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    Jihae as Reverend Mother Kasha in ‘Dune: Prophecy’. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    A worthy companion to the big screen offerings, ‘Dune: Prophecy’ shares a few of its weaknesses but finds its own strength in the characters and the welcome amount of time it has to develop them.

    With only four episodes of the six available, it’s hard to tell if it’ll stick the landing of the first season, but the signs are good so far.

    ‘Dune: Prophecy’ receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Dune: Prophecy’?

    From the expansive universe of ‘Dune,’ created by Frank Herbert, and 10,000 years before the ascension of Paul Atreides, ‘Dune: Prophecy’ follows two Harkonnen sisters as they combat forces that threaten the future of humankind and establish the fabled sect that will become known as the Bene Gesserit.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Dune: Prophecy’?

    'Dune: Prophecy' premieres November 17th on Max. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.
    ‘Dune: Prophecy’ premieres November 17th on Max. Photo: Courtesy of HBO.

    List of Movies and TV Shows in the ‘Dune’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘Dune’ On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘The Silent Hour’

    (L to R) Joel Kinnaman and Sandra Mae Frank in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Joel Kinnaman and Sandra Mae Frank in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    Opening in limited release on October 11th, ‘The Silent Hour’ is proof that one intriguing element is no guarantee that a thriller won’t turn out to be rote and mostly bland despite a decent cast.

    It’s even more surprising coming from a director such as Brad Anderson, who has made the far more striking and interesting likes of ‘The Machinist’ and ‘Transsiberian.’

    Related Article: Joel Kinnaman Talks ‘Silent Night’ and Working with Director John Woo

    Will ‘The Silent Hour’ make itself heard?

    (L to R) Joel Kinnaman and Sandra Mae Frank in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Joel Kinnaman and Sandra Mae Frank in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    With the feel of a straight-to-home entertainment movie cranked out on the cheap, ‘The Silent Hour’ doesn’t really have too much that makes it stand out, and too little to recommend it besides to Joel Kinnaman completists.

    It’s predictable and workmanlike, with decent performances, but rarely rises above the blandly basic in terms of its story or action.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Joel Kinnaman and Mark Strong in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Joel Kinnaman and Mark Strong in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    The movie appears to be the first produced credit for writer Dan Hall, and indeed the finished product does bear some hallmarks of a first-time writer whose early drafts ended up on screen.

    ‘The Silent Hour’s characters are serviceable at best, and perfunctory at worst –– the vast majority of them exist to be archetypes or plot devices, and even Ava, who is one of the lead characters, is mostly reduced to being a damsel in distress.

    Director Brad Anderson has certainly made better movies than this in his career, and while he shows a few flashes of the stylish, gritty flair he’s brought to those (he does, for example, make good use of the claustrophobic setting of the near-abandoned apartment building).

    And as a filmmaker who has gotten astonishing performances from actors before, this time he appears stuck in a rut.

    Performances

    Joel Kinnaman scores the lion’s share of the screen time, but beyond his condition, it’s hard to really empathize with his situation.

    Joel Kinnaman as Frank Shaw

    Joel Kinnaman in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    Joel Kinnaman in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    We’ve seen Kinnaman in gimmicky thrillers such as this before –– last year found him as a voiceless, vengeful, grieving father in John Woo’s ‘Silent Night’, but that at least boasted the filmmaker’s singular, stylish eye for action.

    Here, while the idea of a cop whose hearing is failing following an accident is sufficiently interesting at first, the character offers little for the actor to really dig into. His reliance on his less-than-proficient sign language and his sparky partnership with Sandra Mae Frank’s Ava work, but they’re not enough to support a film that has other, major issues.

    Sandra Mae Frank as Ava

    (L to R) Sandra Mae Frank and Joel Kinnaman in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Sandra Mae Frank and Joel Kinnaman in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    Frank is a deaf actor who campaigns for deaf performers to be cast in more roles, but here it still feels like she is used as a gimmick more than a layered character. As a drug-using occupant of a condemned apartment building, she spends most of her time being threatened or saved by the men around her.

    Mekhi Pfifer as Lynch

    Mekhi Phifer in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    Mekhi Phifer in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    Pfifer can bring nuance and subtlety when he’s given a chance, but the character of the gruff crooked cop who leads a group of similarly on-the-take officers gives him little chance to show that off.

    Instead, he’s reduced to barking orders, swearing and firing a gun (it’s somewhat hilarious that this movie’s villains have almost ‘A-Team’ levels of inability to shoot straight), or running around the apartment block looking for Kinnaman’s character.

    Mark Strong as Doug

    Mark Strong in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    Mark Strong in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    Playing Kinnaman’s partner, Strong is also fairly wasted. Introduced as the friendly, jokey best-pal cop, he largely disappears from the movie for large stretches of it, until called upon to return.

    Strong is a much better actor than this movie deserves, and though he does his best with what is on offer, even his talent can’t make it work.

    Supporting cast

    (L to R) Joel Kinnaman and Mark Strong in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Joel Kinnaman and Mark Strong in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    Most of the other characters are entirely forgettable; a bunch of baddies who run around and shoot guns (as mentioned above, badly) and shout vulgarity while trying to achieve their crooked aims. Frank’s daughter Sam, played by Katrina Lupi, primarily serves the purpose of being his concerned cheerleader in a couple of brief scenes. Her role falls to a cliched level we’ve seen many, many times before.

    Final Thoughts

    Joel Kinnaman in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    Joel Kinnaman in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    The idea of a cop who has to deal with failing hearing and comes up against corrupt colleagues should really have made for a more interesting movie than this.

    And given the talent involved –– particularly Anderson –– it feels like even more of a disappointment. The resulting film is akin to watching a good-looking car driving past that sounds like a broken-down jalopy; there’s a real sense of cognitive dissonance.

    There are much better thrillers out there in the world, and much more nuanced treatments of deafness on screen, where people who live with it are not just used as props.

    ‘The Silent Hour’ receives 5.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the plot of ‘The Silent Hour’?

    Frank Shaw (Joel Kinnaman) is a Boston detective who, after a line-of-duty accident, loses his hearing. Frustrated with his new life, Frank contemplates leaving the police force, but his partner Doug (Mark Strong) convinces him to prove he can still be a great cop.

    With his new role as a sign language interpreter for the department, Frank is now tasked with protecting Ava (Sandra Mae Frank), a deaf woman witness to a double murder.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Silent Hour’?

    • Joel Kinnaman as Frank Shaw
    • Sandra Mae Frank as Ava
    • Mekhi Phifer as Lynch
    • Mark Strong as Doug Slater
    (L to R) Sandra Mae Frank and Joel Kinnaman in 'The Silent Hour'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Sandra Mae Frank and Joel Kinnaman in ‘The Silent Hour’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    List of Joel Kinnaman Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Silent Hour’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Joel Kinnaman Movies on Amazon

     

     

  • Movie Review: ‘The Critic’

    Ian McKellen in 'The Critic'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    Ian McKellen in ‘The Critic’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Opening in theaters on September 13th, ‘The Critic’ adapts Anthony Quinn’s novel ‘Curtain Call’ for the story of a legendary (and legendarily hard to please) theatre critic who looks to escape irrelevance by cooking up a blackmail scheme.

    Yet despite boasting a quality cast anchored by British National Treasure Ian McKellen, the movie surrounding them feels like a lackluster effort more at home on PBS than up against big screen thrillers.

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    Does ‘The Critic’ have the write stuff?

    The world of theatre criticism is one you would think is bursting with the possibility of intrigue, infighting and –– at least in this case –– Faustian pacts between those who walk the stage and those who assess their work for the masses.

    Sadly, despite that compelling setup, ‘The Critic’ rarely rises above the level of a quiet, quaint TV movie. And that’s even with the likes of Ian McKellen, Gemma Arterton and Mark Strong providing good work as the leads.

    Related Article: ‘The Lord of the Rings’: Ian McKellen Says He’s “Open” to Returning as Gandalf

    Script and Direction

    (L to R) Ian McKellen and Gemma Arterton in 'The Critic'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Ian McKellen and Gemma Arterton in ‘The Critic’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    The weakest link here might be the screenplay, and that’s a real shame. With source material from Anthony Quinn’s novel and a script by Patrick Marber (who has been behind the far more impressive like of ‘Closer,’ and ‘Notes on a Scandal’), ‘The Critic’ nevertheless charts its course in the most languid fashion imaginable.

    There is nothing wrong with a film made almost entirely up of scenes of actors in rooms talking if the dialogue crackles and there is real wit or energy on display. Yet the cast struggle with some truly stultifying moments, the whole movie lying around them like a sodden sheet.

    While we’re not expecting car chases or big action set-pieces from the leading man (though we’re not sure what his excuse is given that the 93-year-old June Squibb went all ‘Mission: Impossible’ in this year’s ‘Thelma’), there really needed to be more passion on display here.

    Director Anand Tucker, meanwhile (a veteran of movies such as ‘Hilary and Jackie’ and ‘Shopgirl’) never quite finds the right tone to really make this one work. Visually, the film is impressively staged, and a few scenes make good use of light and shadow, but it can’t stop the whole thing seeming flat and uninspired.

    Performances

    McKellen is our focus here, but he’s not alone in performing well despite the script instead of because of it.

    Ian McKellen

    Ian McKellen in 'The Critic'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    Ian McKellen in ‘The Critic’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    McKellen can knock this sort of character out in his sleep, and there are times that he really brings the screenplay to life. Erskine is an interesting enough character –– a bon vivant and influencer before the term was ever really used, he’s a fading peacock of a man, used to his limited level of power and, when the situation changes, struggling with his place in society as the homophobia of the time creeps in on him.

    Gemma Arterton

    Gemma Arterton in 'The Critic'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    Gemma Arterton in ‘The Critic’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Arterton might not be on McKellen’s level, but she certainly has some spikiness and impressive emotion as Nina Land, the actress seemingly resigned to a less-than-satisfying career in the theatre at the mercy of critics such as Erskine. She plays well off of McKellen and Strong, but rarely gets enough of a chance to shine on her own terms.

    Mark Strong as David Brooke

    Strong has always been a reliable character actor, and here he is handed a slightly meatier role as the media mogul finding his feet following his father’s death, who becomes ensnared into Erskine’s scheme. With his conflicted nature, he’s more than just a victim.

    Alfred Enoch as Tom Turner

    (L to R) Alfred Enoch and Ian McKellen in 'The Critic'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Alfred Enoch and Ian McKellen in ‘The Critic’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Playing Erskine’s secretary and lover, Enoch doesn’t have as much to do as the rest, but he does get a few decent scenes, largely playing off of McKellen, but given the chance to make his mark later in the movie.

    Supporting cast

    Tucker has certainly loaded the film with good actors in small roles; Lesley Manville is fine as Nina’s mother, Annabel, while Ben Barnes and Romola Garai play David Brooks’ son-in-law and daughter, who have their own drama going on. The only downside is that the script never quite makes room for all the characters it has to juggle, so they are often underserved.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R) Ian McKellen and Gemma Arterton in 'The Critic'. Photo: Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Ian McKellen and Gemma Arterton in ‘The Critic’. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Given the talent involved, particularly in front of the camera, you would hope for better than this film, which tends to meander when it should be raising your pulse. There are some minor pleasures to be found –– McKellen in particular is entertaining, but most critics would probably not give this one a glowing review.

    ‘The Critic’ receives 5.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the story of ‘The Critic’?

    Jimmy Erskine (Ian McKellen) is the most famous and feared theatre critic of 1930s London. But his decades of dominance are under threat: the outlet for which he works, The Daily Chronicle, is under new ownership following the death of its owner.

    The new boss, the previous owner’s son, David Brooke (Mark Strong) is looking to make sweeping changes, adjusting the paper’s political outlook and sweeping out some of the older writers. And Jimmy’s outspoken behavior and homosexual lifestyle don’t fit with the “family values” image Brook is looking to portray.

    But when Jimmy notices that Brooke is particularly taken with fetching actress Nina Land (Gemma Arterton) at a performance, he concocts a plan: he’ll help Nina with her career if she’ll entice Brooke into blackmail scheme so Jimmy can secure his job. But as the twists and turns pile up, things turn dangerous –– and then tragic.

    Who else stars in ‘The Critic’?

    The cast also includes Lesley Manville, Ben Barnes, Romola Garai, Alfred Enoch and Beau Gadson.

    'The Critic' opens in theaters on September 13th. Photo: Lionsgate.
    ‘The Critic’ opens in theaters on September 13th. Photo: Lionsgate.

    Other Anand Tucker Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘The Critic’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Anand Tucker Movies on Amazon

  • ‘Dead Shot’ Interview: Directors Tom and Charles Guard

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    Opening in theaters, on demand and digital on August 18th is the new action thriller ‘Dead Shot’ from directors Tom and Charles Guard (‘The Uninvited’).

    What is the plot of ‘Dead Shot’?

    When a border ambush goes wrong, a retired Irish paramilitary Michael (Colin Morgan) witnesses the fatal shooting of his pregnant wife by British Sergeant, Tempest (Aml Ameen). Now wounded, and presumed dead, he escapes, taking his revenge to the dark and paranoid streets of 1970’s London.

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    Who is in the cast of ‘Dead Shot’?

    ‘Dead Shot’ stars Aml Ameen (‘The Maze Runner‘) as Tempest, Colin Morgan (‘Belfast‘) as Michael O’Hara, Mark Strong (‘Shazam!‘) as Holland and Felicity Jones (‘Rogue One: A Star Wars Story‘) as Catherine.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Tom Guard and Charles Guard about their work on ‘Dead Shot,’ the themes they wanted to explore, their directing process and style, their influences, the film’s music, the story’s lack of heroes and villains, its historical significance, Tempest’s guilt, Michael’s revenge, and what casting Mark Strong and Felicity Jones brought to the project.

    (L to R) Thomas Guard and Charles Guard behind the scenes of the action/thriller/drama film, 'Dead Shot' a Quiver Distribution release.
    (L to R) Thomas Guard and Charles Guard behind the scenes of the action/thriller/drama film, ‘Dead Shot’ a Quiver Distribution release. Photo Courtesy of Mark Mainz.

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

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about developing the screenplay with writer Ronan Bennett and what were some of the themes that you were excited to explore with this movie?

    Charles Guard: Well, the idea of the cat and mouse was something that we really responded to when we read Ronan’s original draft, and we he had set up a really interesting relationship between these two men. The stuff that we wanted to really explore was kind of issues of identity not so much the political aspects of the story, but the more universal aspects of the story like Michael’s need for revenge and where that takes him. Also the idea of almost toxic masculinity being a sort of sliding scale, being represented in this very pure form by these characters like Holland and Keenan, and how those kinds of characters can somehow manipulate and trap younger characters who perhaps have more innocent intentions or desires, characters like Michael and Tempest, who very quickly fall under the spell of these incredibly dangerous men.

    MF: Tom, can you talk about your directing process on set? Do you and Charles share duties, or split them between the two of you?

    Thomas Guard: Well, it was very fluid and open and we don’t divide roles. We talk. There’s no kind of division of labor, and we like creating within a core group. We find creating an open environment where everyone can talk, discuss and collaborate is always the most successful way of making a film. We really felt we had a great crew people like Mattias Rudh, who’s a fantastic cameraman, Tom Sayer, the art director and production designer, and also the actors. It was all very much part of the same conversation that everyone was in it together trying to make this thing.

    (L to R) Thomas Guard and Charles Guard behind the scenes of the action/thriller/drama film, 'Dead Shot' a Quiver Distribution release.
    (L to R) Thomas Guard and Charles Guard behind the scenes of the action/thriller/drama film, ‘Dead Shot’ a Quiver Distribution release. Photo Courtesy of Mark Mainz.

    MF: While the movie is set in the 1970s, it reminded me of 80’s movies like Michael Mann’s ‘Thief’ or the late William Friedkin’s ‘Cruising.’ Were those movies and filmmakers an influence on this film?

    CG: Very much so. ‘The French Connection’ was our jumping off point really. We wanted to tell a story that had that kind of propulsion. When you watch those 70’s movies, you watch actors reacting in the moment and deciding, and the course of the narrative seems to be right there. You’re not sat back watching it unfold. You are really in the driving seat as the stuff is happening and as they’re having to change direction. So we very much were trying to create that same spontaneity and immediacy of the storytelling, but also the visual style.

    MF: Tom, can you talk about adapting the visual style specifically for this story?

    TG: It was interesting. You talk about the early Michael Mann films, because we love those films like ‘Thief,’ and there’s a kind of hard-boiled purity about them where they’re very no nonsense and bare bones, but yet he somehow touches on great characters at the same time. By giving you very little, you actually get quite a lot. I think that was definitely, maybe a subconscious influence with us because we just like that type of storytelling where less is more, and both in terms of the narrative and the script, but also in terms of the visuals. We try to just pare things down as much as we can to get maximum impact.

    Colin Morgan as Michael O’Hara and Dara Devaney as Twomey in the action/thriller/drama film, 'Dead Shot' a Quiver Distribution release.
    (L to R) Colin Morgan as Michael O’Hara and Dara Devaney as Twomey in the action/thriller/drama film, ‘Dead Shot’ a Quiver Distribution release. Photo Courtesy of Mark Mainz.

    Related Article: ‘Dead Shot’ Exclusive Clip

    MF: The film utilizes synth music, which was also reminiscent of early 80s crime dramas. Can you talk about your choice of music for the film?

    TG: Well, Max de Wardener was our fantastic composer and we didn’t try to set out to do a historical film. It was never meant to be just a pastiche of 70’s films. We were just taking a lot of influences from just stuff we love and trying to make it our own. He gravitates to and has a great passion for that type of synth music from the late 70’s and early 80’s. When we were discussing stuff, it just started. We started to hear a voice through those sounds and it seemed to fit with the film, so we developed it.

    MF: The movie has protagonists and antagonists, but no one is really a good guy or a bad guy in the traditional sense. Was that by design?

    CG: Well, it was incredibly important to us because we felt that that was one of the things that made it incredibly relevant to today and very modern. That as much as we seem to love labels in our lives today, they very often don’t really reflect what is on the tin anymore. So we felt it was really important that you didn’t know who to root for. That was kind of tapping into, again, that 70’s thing where you’re watching a character and you are kind of living through the moment with them. It’s almost like you are forced into thinking, well, I would do the same as that person did right then, but then you kind of have to reflect on it later. So it is just an interesting way of approaching a narrative we felt to today. But yeah, no heroes and no villains was definitely something that we were pushing.

    Aml Ameen as Tempest in the action/thriller/drama film, 'Dead Shot' a Quiver Distribution release.
    Aml Ameen as Tempest in the action/thriller/drama film, ‘Dead Shot’ a Quiver Distribution release. Photo Courtesy of Anne Binckebanck.

    MF: Tom, can you talk about the guilt that motivates Tempest throughout the film, and working with Aml Ameen?

    TG: Well, Aml was fantastic, and he really gave a great entry point for us. We talked a lot about the character before we started shooting with him, and we loved this sense. What emerged very strongly was this idea of someone who feels trapped in a certain system, guilty for what he’s done and determined to do right by it in some ways. But then as he starts to try to do right by it, he actually realizes that he’s doing terrible things and he starts to feel angry about that and that anger leads inevitably to more violence. We thought that that was a complex arc for Tempest, and it felt, especially when you compare that to Michael’s journey, which is kind of almost the opposite. He begins with revenge and determined for revenge and violence, but then actually starts to thaw and want something else. He’s almost after freedom, but the two crossover with tragic consequences.

    MF: Charles, can you talk about the revenge that Michael seeks, and Colin Morgan’s performance?

    CG: Well, Colin was amazing. He committed to the film and he just gave us everything. He’s from the area where the film starts. He’s from South Hamar, so it was very much his backyard. We talked to him a little bit about what we felt, what we wanted from Michael, but we let him kind of go to places. He very much brought a lot of his own personal history, and he did it in such a beautiful way because it was so silent and you really felt it. We absolutely loved putting the camera on him because you felt his thoughts. He was so transparent in his face and in his eyes, and you felt the sadness, the sorrow and the depth of this time really, the depth of the Troubles, the depth of the sadness, and the devastation of it all. The tragedy of it really. We felt incredibly fortunate that he was with us, and he was prepared to go on that journey with us. It was amazing.

    Aml Ameen as Tempest in the action/thriller/drama film, 'Dead Shot' a Quiver Distribution release.
    Aml Ameen as Tempest in the action/thriller/drama film, ‘Dead Shot’ a Quiver Distribution release. Photo Courtesy of Anne Binckebanck.

    MF: The Northern Ireland conflict is the backdrop to the story, how important was it to you to make that seem as authentic as possible?

    TG: We certainly did a huge amount of research into the period and the conflict, but we were very determined to focus on more universal aspects of the conflict that perhaps weren’t so specific to the time and to the place and to the people just to access something else, because we were keen to make it appealing and of interest to as wide of an audience as possible. Whilst people in the UK and Ireland are very familiar with the troubles and what it means and the legacy of it, we are aware that people outside of these countries perhaps don’t have so much experience of it. So we wanted to still make it of interest to them. So we tried to focus more on mythic ideas of revenge rather than sectarianism and individual party politics and things like that.

    CG: I was going to say beyond that, the level of authenticity to the moment and to the fictional elements of the story, we were very keen that they felt, even though they were fiction, we wanted to make them feel exactly how they felt to people at that time so that when people who did live through that time watched the film, they could say, and they have said, that that level of paranoia and the level of confusion is exactly how they remember that time. That being very faithful to the authenticity of realizing that was very important to us. We felt a tremendous responsibility in doing that, to tell it as it was.

    Mark Strong as Holland in the action/thriller/drama film, 'Dead Shot' a Quiver Distribution release.
    Mark Strong as Holland in the action/thriller/drama film, ‘Dead Shot’ a Quiver Distribution release. Photo Courtesy of Mark Mainz.

    MF: Finally, did it elevate the project to have actors the caliber of Felicity Jones and Mark Strong join the cast?

    CG: I think we were just incredibly fortunate to have actors of that caliber working in roles that were not necessarily the principal roles. It was beyond amazing to work with them. It allowed us to tell the story in a really interesting way, because they were the ones that would’ve been overlooked in other times and in other stories, but they were the ones that we were actually focused on. When you’ve got just extraordinary actors like Felicity and Mark, we were just totally spoiled really, for being able to kind of contextualize the world with such an extraordinary sensitivity and depth that they brought to their characters.

    TG: Immeasurably the whole thing became elevated in a very exciting way. With Felicity, there was a scene early on when she was on the phone and as the scene was originally written, it was, she’s on the phone to Keenan (Tom Vaughan-Lawlor) in the phone box, and we ended up enjoying shooting her from so many different setups and points of view, and we just loved her performance. We couldn’t stop shooting her, basically. We filmed for ages. We got so much material and we ended up using all of it. We ended up taking that material and then turning it into three different scenes during the course of the film. You don’t often get opportunities like that with performers to explore things, but actually she was really interested in taking things as far as she could and seeing where she could go with it. We loved going on that journey with her.

    Felicity Jones as Catherine in the action/thriller/drama film, 'Dead Shot' a Quiver Distribution release.
    Felicity Jones as Catherine in the action/thriller/drama film, ‘Dead Shot’ a Quiver Distribution release. Photo Courtesy of Mark Mainz.

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  • Movie Review: ‘Murder Mystery 2’

    Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in ‘Murder Mystery 2.’ Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2022.

    Set to premiere on Netflix March 31st, ‘Murdery Mystery 2’ is an action comedy mystery film and is the sequel to 2019’s ‘Murder Mystery’ once again stars Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston, is directed by Jeremy Garelick (‘The Break-Up’) and is written by James Vanderbilt (‘Zodiac’ ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’).

    What happens in ‘Murder Mystery 2?’

    Four years after solving their first murder mystery, husband and wife duo Nick Spitz (Sandler) and Audrey Spitz (Aniston) are now full-time detectives and are invited to celebrate the wedding of their dear friend, the Maharajah (Adeel Akhtar) on his private island. However, trouble follows the Spitzes again when the groom is kidnapped for ransom and, subsequently, makes each guest, family member and the bride herself a suspect.

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    Who is in the cast of ‘Murder Mystery 2?’

    ‘Murder Mystery 2’ stars Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz, Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz, Mark Strong as Miller, Mélanie Laurent as Claudette, Jodie Turner-Smith as Countess Sekou, John Kani as Colonel Ulenga, Kuhoo Verma as Saira, Danny Boon as Inspector Delacroix, Enrique Arce as Francisco, and Adeel Akhtar as the Maharajah.

    Initial Thoughts

    ‘Murder Mystery 2’ is exactly the type of blockbuster comedy Netflix, and all other streaming platforms for that matter, are in need of. Sure, crime documentaries are all the rage and reality shows are still our guilty pleasures and dirty little secrets, but sometimes we come home from a long day and just need to have some escapism from our daily realities. That is exactly what this film provides – a trip to an exotic private island with crystal blue waters followed by a stunning and thrilling escapade through the city of love.

    Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in ‘Murder Mystery 2.’ Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2023.

    ‘Murder Mystery 2’ is bigger and more action-packed than its predecessor

    The original ‘Murder Mystery’ reunited Sandler and Aniston for a lightweight comedy that may not have gotten the most stellar reviews, but for many viewers at home, it was exactly what they were looking for and needed – an easy-to-watch and fun comedy-suspense film for the weekend.

    If you enjoyed the first film, you’ll be happy to know that the sequel is bigger, bolder and even more thrilling.

    In fact, the climactic stunt in the final act of ‘Murder Mystery 2’ takes place on the famed Eiffel Tower and is the first of its kind to ever be filmed. While other stunts have taken place on the tower’s observation decks, this is the first time a stunt has ever been performed at the very top, 1000 feet from ground level. As for getting to make history, director Jeremy Garelick told Moviefone that it, surprisingly, wasn’t that difficult gaining access to film on the Eiffel Tower once he name dropped Sandler and Aniston.

    However, it was actually a scene in which the two are in a blazing room of fire that Aniston told Moviefone was the most physically challenging for her, and it was cool to see the actress in more of an action role than we are used to seeing from her.

    Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in ‘Murder Mystery 2.’ Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2022.

    Related Article: Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston Talk Netflix Sequel ‘Murder Mystery 2’

    Where does ‘Murder Mystery 2’ take place?

    With Nick and Audrey Spitz back on the crime-scene, this high-stakes case finally takes them to the city of their dreams – Paris. Several of Paris’s most beloved landmarks make key appearances in the film, including the Arc de Triomphe, the Opera House, the Château de Vaux-le-Vicomte, the Love Locks Bridge and, of course, the Eiffel Tower, which serves as the location for the film’s epic finale.

    This is where that escapism kicks in. Even though the scenes are sometimes stressful because of the situations the Spitzes find themselves in, watching the characters zoom around some of Paris’s best and most stunning landmarks truly makes you feel like you’re transported there. Maybe it’s not a sweet romance-drama, but chances are, if you chose to watch this film, you were looking for some excitement.

    Enrique Arce, John Kani, Jodie Turner-Smith, Mélanie Laurent, and Kuhoo Verma in Netflix's 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Enrique Arce, John Kani, Jodie Turner-Smith, Mélanie Laurent, and Kuhoo Verma in Netflix’s ‘Murder Mystery 2.’ Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2022.

    The Supporting Cast aka the Suspects

    Mélanie Laurent plays Claudette Joubert, the bride-to-be is a Parisian shopgirl who won the Maharajah’s heart. Seen as a gold digger by others, the character is naive and is supposed to not fit into the world of billionaires.

    Meanwhile, the Maid of Honor, Countess Helene Sekou, played by Jodie Turner-Smith, who also happens to be the ex-fiancée of the Maharajah fits very well into the billionaire world, and actually has some fun moments in the film while bullying and bossing around her mini-me assistant, Imani.

    Enrique Arce plays Francisco Perez, a womanizer who attempts to flirt with any female character in the film he comes into contact with. He’s sort of the comedic relief within the comedy film, but can sometimes go a little too far and would most definitely be canceled if he were a person in real life.

    The Maharajah’s sister Saira is portrayed by Kuhoo Verma, who seems to be the most innocent, but we later find that she may be the worst of them all.

    Finally, we have former MI6 hostage negotiator Connor Miller (Mark Strong) and the return of Inspector Laurent Delacroix (Dany Boon), who serve as the mediators between the Spitzes and the suspects.

    Jennifer Aniston, Mark Strong, and Adam Sandler in 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Jennifer Aniston, Mark Strong, and Adam Sandler in ‘Murder Mystery 2.’ Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2022.

    Final Thoughts

    If it seems like I barely went into detail on the cast, it’s because, after watching the film, brief character descriptions are really the only thing memorable about them.

    Just as you’d expect, Sandler and Aniston are clearly the two leads of the film. That’s just fine because, once again, the two kill it with their on-screen chemistry. Following 2011’s ‘Just Go With It’ and 2019’s ‘Murder Mystery,’ these two are as funny as ever. Director Garelick said that it was easy directing these two professionals, since they don’t need that much direction, and that level of prestige doesn’t go unnoticed. It’s easy to see the duo’s presence on set elevates the rest of the cast’s performances and, ultimately, the overall film.

    However, while there is a fun cameo by a popular comedienne at the end of the film, the movie may have benefited by having a few more familiar and memorable faces to make up the ensemble cast.

    Still, expectations for movies released exclusively on streaming platforms tend to be slightly lower and, compared to the first film that primarily took place on a yacht, the sequel is easily bigger, bolder and more epic as our two leads are thrust into numerous action-packed scenes all around Paris. There’s also something about murder mysteries that, despite the quality of the film, you still need to finish the movie to find out – WHODUNNIT?!

    There’s no doubt ‘Murder Mystery 2’ will capture the number one spot on Netflix following its release.

    ‘Murder Mystery 2’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

    Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in ‘Murder Mystery 2.’ Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2023.

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    Where to Stream and Watch: ‘Murder Mystery 2’ 

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    ‘Murder Mystery 2’ is produced by Happy Madison Productions, Endgame Entertainment, Echo Films, and Vinson Films, and scheduled for release on Netflix March 31st.

  • ‘Murder Mystery 2’ Interview: Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston

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    Premiering on Netflix March 31st is the sequel to the popular film ‘Murder Mystery,’ entitled ‘Murder Mystery 2,’ which was directed by Jeremy Garelick (‘The Wedding Ringer’).

    What is the plot of ‘Murder Mystery 2?’

    Four years after the events of ‘Murder Mystery,’ Nick (Adam Sandler) and Audrey Spitz (Jennifer Aniston) are now full-time detectives struggling to get their private eye agency off the ground when they’re invited to celebrate the wedding of their friend the Maharaja (Adeel Akhtar) on his private island.

    But trouble follows the Spitzes again when the groom is kidnapped for ransom soon after the festivities begin ― making each glamorous guest, family member, and the bride herself a suspect. Now, Nick and Audrey Spitz are on a high-stakes case that could finally give them everything they’ve ever dreamed of: a shot at their detective agency finally becoming successful and a long-awaited trip to Paris.

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    Who is in the cast of ‘Murder Mystery 2?’

    ‘Murder Mystery 2’ stars Adam Sandler (‘Happy Gilmore,’ ‘The Wedding Singer’) as Nick Spitz, and Jennifer Aniston (‘Horrible Bosses,’ ‘We’re the Millers’) as Audrey Spitz, as well as Mark Strong (‘Shazam!’), Mélanie Laurent (‘Now You See Me’), Jodie Turner-Smith (‘Queen & Slim’), Tony Goldwyn (‘Ghost’), Annie Mumolo (‘Confess, Fletch’), Enrique Arce (‘Terminator: Dark Fate’), and Wilmer Valderrama (‘Larry Crowne’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston in person about their work on ‘Murder Mystery 2,’ reuniting together, reprising their roles, and the movie’s action sequences.

    Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in ‘Murder Mystery 2.’ Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2022.

    You can read our full interview below or slick on the video player above to watch our interviews with Sandler and Aniston, Jodie Turner-Smith, Enrique Arce, and director Jeremy Garelick.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how much more challenging were the stunts in this sequel compared to the first ‘Murder Mystery?’

    Adam Sandler: I’d say 86% more?

    Jennifer Aniston: 90% more. Were we physical? I mean, what did we do in (the first) movie? We ran down a flight of stairs and drove a car.

    AS: How about the worst part of shooting a scene where you have to walk downstairs is you’ve got to walk back up to do it again.

    Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz in ‘Murder Mystery 2.’ Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2023.

    MF: What was the toughest stunt to do in this film?

    JA: The van stuff was hard. The van stuff was just (challenging) because it was so many pieces, and the Eiffel Tower (scene). I didn’t love hanging from that, it was high up.

    AS: There was a lot of jumping around, getting hit, and punching. Axes were involved. What about the shot of me and you when we go out the window and we’re going down, we were in that little machine holding each other.

    JA: That was this crazy machine and the camera didn’t move.

    AS: You remember when we go out the window and fall into the moat?

    JA: Fully. That was a crazy contraption and I don’t know who came up with it. But that was actually you and me.

    AS: Some of the glass is CGI, but us falling out and going down, that was old me and Jenny.

    JA: The fire scene, though, was physically hard for me personally, just because there were fumes from the fire, fumes from the atmosphere smoke and the ambience, but it looks really beautiful. Then I had some crazy allergic reaction and I woke up and I couldn’t see. Anyway, I didn’t have to work the next day, so I got a day to get that back together.

    Zurin Villanueva as Imani, Melanie Laurent as Claudette Joubert and Jodie Turner-Smith as Countess 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Zurin Villanueva as Imani, Melanie Laurent as Claudette Joubert and Jodie Turner-Smith as Countess ‘Murder Mystery 2.’ Photo: Scott Yamano/Netflix © 2023.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about the big dance number in the movie? I understand that you were not told ahead of time that it was a dance sequence or shown any of the choreography. What were you told you would be filming before the cameras started rolling?

    JA: Well, we were told that there’s a dance, “Get ready for the dance,” and he had received an email that he forgot to tell me about. So, we were informed in some way.

    AS: (We knew) it was going to be a dance. We just didn’t know what the dance was.

    JA: I thought I would stay out of the way. (But I was) dragged into it.

    AS: We wanted to make it real that we didn’t know what it was, so we jumped in there and we did a few takes of that.

    Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston star in Netflix's 'Murder Mystery 2.'
    (L to R) Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston star in Netflix’s ‘Murder Mystery 2.’

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    ‘Murder Mystery 2’ is produced by Happy Madison Productions, Endgame Entertainment, Echo Films, and Vinson Films, and scheduled for release on Netflix March 31st.