Tag: mia-sara

  • ‘The Life of Chuck’ Interview: Tom Hiddleston

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    Opening in select theaters on June 6th before opening nationwide on June 13th is ‘The Life of Chuck’, which was written and directed by Mike Flanagan (‘Doctor Sleep‘) and based on author Stephen King’s 2020 novella of the same name.

    The film stars Tom Hiddleston (‘Loki’) in the title role, and features Chiwetel Ejiofor (‘Doctor Strange’), Karen Gillan (‘Guardians of the Galaxy’), Jacob Tremblay (‘Room’), Annalise Basso (‘Captain Fantastic’), Carl Lumbly (‘Captain America: Brave New World’), Mia Sara (‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’), and Mark Hamill (‘Star Wars’).

    Related Article: 20 Best Stephen King Movie Adaptations in Honor of ‘The Life of Chuck’

    Tom Hiddleston stars in 'The Life of Chuck'.
    Tom Hiddleston stars in ‘The Life of Chuck’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Tom Hiddleston about his work on ‘The Life of Chuck’, his first reaction to the screenplay by Mike Flanagan and the way he adapted Stephen King’s source material, and the challenges of preparing for and shooting the massive dance sequence.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Hiddleston, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Karen Gillan.

    Tom Hiddleston stars in 'The Life of Chuck'. Photo: Neon.
    Tom Hiddleston stars in ‘The Life of Chuck’. Photo: Neon.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay and the way Mike Flanagan was able to adapt Stephen King’s source material?

    Tom Hiddleston: I remember it so clearly. It was Easter of 2023 and I read it in a single sitting. In the UK, the Monday after Easter is a public holiday, so it’s a day off. Bank Holiday Monday, we call it. I was so moved and inspired by what I read because initially I felt like, I was so intrigued by the first act. It felt like a film about the end of the world, but with such tenderness and such truthfulness about the uncertainty of that experience through Marty and Felicia, the characters played by Chiwetel Ejiofor and Karen Gillan. Also, because I had the letter from Mike, I knew he’d asked me to play Chuck and just like everybody else, I was like, well, who’s Chuck? Who is this guy? Then when it was revealed, what was happening, in terms of the narrative, and I don’t want to spoil too much. But when the stars started to be extinguished and I understood what that meant for Chuck’s life and how it turned into a meditation on joy and an exploration of the magic of the ordinary life of every human being, that none of us are one thing. We all contain multitudes, which is to say that inside the soul of every ordinary human being is an internal world of infinite possibility. That infinite possibility can create a universe in every life, a universe of connections, of people, of experiences, of memories. That when that life comes to an end, so does that universe. It sums up the way I think about life and that sometimes the small moments aren’t small at all, and they end up, in your mind becoming the big moments, in your memory. Really, in the last hours of our lives, all we will carry in our hearts and our minds are the people we loved, the memories we shared with them, the connections we made. That is all that matters. I was so struck by it and so moved by it and so inspired by how Mike had put the film together, and I just immediately wanted to get on the phone with him and say, please, can I do this with you? It was a very special experience and a film that’s very close to my heart.

    (L to R) Annalise Basso and Tom Hiddleston in 'The Life of Chuck'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Annalise Basso and Tom Hiddleston in ‘The Life of Chuck’. Photo: Neon.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about rehearsing for the dance sequence and how many times did you have to shoot it to get it right?

    TH: Well, I had, in my own life, less formal dance training than Charles Krantz had. I’ve always loved dancing, but I’ve never danced like this. I had about five weeks and the brilliant, extraordinary Mandy Moore, our choreographer and her assistant, Stephanie Powell, who was working with me in London, we worked every day, and we did salsa, swing, Charleston, Bossa Nova, polka, samba, and jazz. I mean (we did) every dance under the sun, you name it. We put the thing together. It was so thrilling to do it, but by the time we got to set, I think the first four days of principal photography on the entire picture, we shot the sequence in the mall when Chuck starts dancing to the beat of those drums. It was me and Taylor Gordon on the drums and Annalise Basso. We shot it consistently across the same stretch of time so that the light matched, essentially. So, it was between about 11am and 3pm across four days. We just did it from every angle. Every camera was wide, it was high, it was dancing with us, it was Steadicam, and it was on a crane. But I will say, the very last take we did, because we’d do the whole sequence from start to finish every time, was on the fourth day, the Thursday. We went back to a setup we’d done before. It was almost an homage to the great musicals, which contained the entire thing. It wasn’t close-up; it wasn’t a mid-shot. It was both Annalise and me and the drum kit and Taylor and the crowd. We played it from start to finish. It was a moment I will never forget. It was a kind of magical take, and a lot of the sequence is from that take. Mike knew it. I knew it. Annalise knew it. The crowd knew it. Mandy knew it. It was like a perfect thing. That’s where we stopped.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Life of Chuck’?

    Charles ‘Chuck’ Krantz (Tom Hiddleston) experiences the wonder of love, the heartbreak of loss, and the multitudes contained in all of us.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Life of Chuck’?

    (L to R) Director Mike Flanagan and Tom Hiddleston on the set of 'The Life of Chuck'. Photo: Neon.
    (L to R) Director Mike Flanagan and Tom Hiddleston on the set of ‘The Life of Chuck’. Photo: Neon.

    List of Mike Flanagan Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Mike Flanagan Movies on Amazon

     

  • Matthew Broderick & Alan Ruck on for ‘The Best Is Yet To Come’

    (Right) Matthew Broderick in 'Only Murders in the Building' season 3. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu. (Left) Alan Ruck in 'Succession' season 3. Photo: Macall B. Polay/ HBO.
    (Right) Matthew Broderick in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 3. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu. (Left) Alan Ruck in ‘Succession’ season 3. Photo: Macall B. Polay/ HBO.

    Preview:

    • Matthew Broderick and Alan Ruck are starring in ‘The Best Is Yet to Come.’
    • It’s a new comedy from director Jon Turteltaub.
    • Allan Loeb adapted the script from a French movie.

    Next year will mark 40 years since the release of John Hughes’ classic road trip comedy ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.’

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    If you greet that news with, “what’s ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off?’ then we applaud your youth, but castigate your taste in movies. If you know exactly what we’re talking about, then congratulations, and that sound you hear is your mortal form slowly turning to dust.

    The movie starred Matthew Broderick, Mia Sara and Alan Ruck in the story of cheeky, scheming high schooler Ferris (Broderick) who tires of finding ways to skip school only to stay home, and instead hatches a plan for a wild day of adventure and fun, bringing along girlfriend Sloane (Sara) and nervous best pal Cameron (Ruck).

    Hughes’ movie has long been seen as among the best of its genre, and includes a variety of memorable scenes, soundtrack cues and even the sort of post-credits gag that predates Marvel and co. by decades.

    Now two of the stars of that movie –– Broderick and Ruck –– are, per Deadline, reuniting to share the screen once more, albeit in very different roles.

    Assuming their deals work out, the two will star in ‘The Best Is Yet to Come,’ a new comedy in the works from ‘National Treasure’ and ‘The Meg’s Jon Turteltaub.

    Related Article: ‘Ferris Bueller’ Spin-Off ‘Sam and Victor’s Day Off’ in the Works

    What’s the story of ‘The Best Is Yet to Come’?

    (L to R) Alan Ruck and Matthew Broderick in 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Alan Ruck and Matthew Broderick in ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    We say “new” comedy, though to put it strictly, this is a remake of a 2019 French comedy of the same name (though in French it’s ‘Le meilleur reste à venir’). That original movie was directed by Alexandre de La Patelliere  and Matthieu Delaporte, and has already been remade once for German audiences.

    Allan Loeb, who wrote ‘Collateral Beauty’ and ‘Just Go with It’ among others, is at work on an adaptation which would find Broderick and Ruck playing best friends who, through a colossal misunderstanding that creates a ticking clock, hop in a car to find the estranged son of one of them and also try to do all the things that life has prevented them from doing.

    It’s a heady mix of terminal illness mistakes, old pals bonding and a road trip, so not a million miles away from Ferris and co., though tackling it through a very different lens.

    Where else can we see Matthew Broderick?

    Matthew Broderick in 'Only Murders in the Building' season 3. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.
    Matthew Broderick in ‘Only Murders in the Building’ season 3. Photo: Patrick Harbron/Hulu.

    While Ferris was far from his first role (Broderick had already appeared in the likes of ‘WarGames’ and ‘Ladyhawke’), it was certainly a big break for him.

    He’s since gone on to a lengthy career on screens big and small and stage, finding particular success with the theatre adaptation of Mel Brooks’ ‘The Producers.’

    Other notable movies include ‘The Lion King’ (the animated original, where he voiced Simba), ‘The Cable Guy,’ 1996’s take on ‘Godzilla,’ ‘Election,’ ‘Deck the Halls’ and more recently, Jennifer Lawrence comedy ‘No Hard Feelings.’

    On TV, his recent resume includes appearances on ‘Elsbeth’ and as a heightened version of himself in the third season of ‘Only Murders in the Building.’

    Coming up, he has one of the main roles in director Simon Bird’s new comedy drama ‘Pretend I’m Not Here,’ which sees a couple in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands during World War II sheltering a Jewish perfume salesman.

    What else has Alan Ruck worked on?

    Alan Ruck in 'Succession' season 3. Photo: Macall B. Polay/ HBO.
    Alan Ruck in ‘Succession’ season 3. Photo: Macall B. Polay/ HBO.

    Like his co-star, Ruck had been working before ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,’ but his part as the rich, panicky Cameron Frye certainly helped bring him wider attention.

    He went on to appear in movies including ‘Speed,’ ‘Star Trek: Generations’ (where he played the harried, starstruck captain of the U.S.S. Enterprise-B), ‘Twister,’ ‘Cheaper by the Dozen,’ ‘War Machine,’ ‘Freaky’ and last year’s ‘Crust.’

    Yet it can be argued that it’s on TV where Ruck has really shined, with notable roles in ‘Spin City’ and as privileged, misguided older sibling Connor Roy in ‘Succession.’

    Ruck has a couple of movies on the way, including ‘People We Meet on Vacation’ and ‘Wind River: Rising.’

    When will ‘The Best Is Yet to Come’ be in theaters?

    All we know right now on this one is that the two stars are making deals and Turteltaub hopes to have the cameras rolling in the summer.

    Lionsgate is in talks to pick up the film, so a release date will likely be set when that contract is signed.

    (L to R) Mia Sara, Matthew Broderick and Alan Ruck in 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    (L to R) Mia Sara, Matthew Broderick and Alan Ruck in ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    List of Matthew Broderick Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Matthew Broderick Movies On Amazon

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  • Paramount Plans ‘Ferris Bueller’ Spin-Off Movie

    Mia Sara, Alan Ruck, and Matthew Broderick in 1986's 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off.'
    (L to R) Mia Sara, Alan Ruck, and Matthew Broderick in 1986’s ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.’

    While you might think that classic movies might be safe from remakes and other treatments, recent history (and even the likes of Gus Van Sant’s ‘Psycho’ years ago) has proved that’s not the case.

    But while John Hughes’ ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’ has passed into pop culture legend, referenced in a hundred different other movies and shows, no-one has seriously dared suggest a remake. And, indeed, that’s still the case – but Deadline reports that Paramount instead has plans for a spin-off.

    For those who are somehow unaware of the 1986 original, it starred Matthew Broderick as the canny, cheeky Ferris, who hatches a plan to skip school for the day and have fun hanging out with girlfriend Sloane (Mia Sara) and reluctant best pal Cameron (Alan Ruck).

    Faking illness, Ferris gets to spend the day driving Cameron’s father’s Ferrarri, dancing in a parade and visiting a Chicago art gallery. Yet, his day doesn’t go completely to plan.

    Ferris is an iconic character who breaks the fourth wall to address in the audience, and Hughes’ movie features a post-credit scene of Ferris telling the audience that it’s over and they should go home.

    Considered one of Hughes’ best works, it was also a success, it earned $70.7 million on a $5 million budget. And it even inspired a short-lived sitcom version, which ran for one 13-episode season between 1990 and 1991. It starred Charlie Schlatter as Ferris Bueller and a young Jennifer Aniston as his nemesis sister, Jeanie Bueller.

    Ami Dolenz, Charlie Schlatter, and Jennifer Aniston in the 1990's TV series 'Ferris Bueller.'
    (L to R) Ami Dolenz, Charlie Schlatter, and Jennifer Aniston in the 1990’s TV series ‘Ferris Bueller.’

    The new movie would focus on the valets who Ferris hands the Ferrarri over to at one point in the movie, and who proceed to take it on their own joyride.

    Though the characters were not named in the original movie, they were played by Richard Edson and the late Larry “Flash” Jenkins (who died in 2019).

    ‘Sam and Victor’s Day Off’ will give them names and a story to go along with their brief pop-up in the 1986 movie.

    Paramount has ‘Cobra Kai’ creators/show-runners Jon Hurwitz, Hayden Schlossberg and Josh Heald producing the movie, while the script will be by Bill Posley, who worked on the show as a writer and made his directorial debut with this year’s festival release ‘Bitch Ass’.

    ‘Cobra Kai’ has proved that the producers know what it takes to faithfully bring new angles to classic movies, as the series stands both as a sequel to the original ‘Karate Kid’ trilogy and an expansion of its world.

    Originally created for YouTube’s short-lived scripted original strand, it then moved to Netflix where it is about to launch its fifth season.

    Hurwitz, Heald and Schlossberg are also behind a new show for the streaming service, called ‘Obliterated,’ and are attached to produce a movie version of the History Channel’s ‘Ancient Aliens’ show, with Heald on to direct that one.

    ‘Sam and Victor’s Day Off’ doesn’t have a director attached yet, but we’ll see if it gets to that stage.

    Alan Ruck, Mia Sara, and Matthew Broderick in 1986's 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off.'
    (L to R) Alan Ruck, Mia Sara, and Matthew Broderick in 1986’s ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.’
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