Tag: Michael Ian Black

  • ‘Linoleum’ Interview: Rhea Seehorn Talks New Sci-fi Comedy

    VIyrxiL4

    Opening in select theaters on February 24th is the new sci-fi comedy ‘Linoleum’ from writer and director Colin West.

    KWdBNw9tqZBWF4qkNJrJQ4

    What is the plot of ‘’Linoleum?’

    ‘Linoleum’ stars Jim Gaffigan as Cameron Edwin, a depressed man living a rather boring life in a small Ohio town with his wife Erin (Rhea Seehorn) and daughter Nora (Katelyn Nacon). Cameron hosts a children’s science television show in a small market that runs at midnight, but he has always wanted to be an astronaut and grew up in the shadow of his more successful scientist father.

    When part of a rocket falls from orbit and crashes into his backyard, he decides to fulfill his unrealized dream and rebuild it into his own rocket. However, his wife, who has started divorce proceedings, thinks he is having a midlife crisis. As some other surreal events occur in his life, Cameron not only feels his mission is justified but he begins to question the nature of reality itself.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Linoleum?’

    ‘Linoleum’ stars Jim Gaffigan (‘Troop Zero’) as Cameron Edwin and Kent Armstrong, Rhea Seehorn (‘Better Call Saul’) as Erin Edwin, Katelyn Nacon (‘The Walking Dead’) as Nora Edwin, Gabriel Rush (‘The Kitchen‘) as Marc, Amy Hargreaves (‘Michael Clayton’) as Linda, Michael Ian Black (‘Wet Hot American Summer’) as Tony, and Tony Shalhoub (‘Men in Black’) as Dr. Alvin.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Rhea Seehorn about her work on ‘Linoleum,’ how she got involved with the project, the complex script, her character, working with Jim Gaffigan, and looking back at her time on ‘Better Call Saul.’

    Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West's 'Linoleum.'
    Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West’s ‘Linoleum.’

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Seehorn and Jim Gaffigan.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how did you get involved in the project and what was your first reaction to the screenplay?

    Rhea Seehorn: Colin sent the script through my reps to me, I read it and I loved it. The script had notations in it, or I guess they’re called stage directions or actions, that made me understand where it was going in a way that you wouldn’t if you weren’t watching it. So it wasn’t about a surprise element, but it was quite the jigsaw puzzle for me to think about as I was reading it. Then I really loved the characters and I really loved these big questions it was asking. But it was Colin’s letter that he sent along with it, explaining that this was born out of his experience, going through his grandfather’s dementia. He had these huge philosophical questions that ultimately had hopeful answers.

    There was something very beautiful about the way he was approaching it and these large questions he wanted to ask with this quite allegorical magical realism tale. Then when I got on the phone with him, I was definitely sold. He’s a gifted filmmaker and artist. and just sort of very humbly with a light touch, goes about asking very large questions and he is not afraid to not supply the answers.

    MF: There is a big reveal at the end of the film. As an actress, how did you approach playing this character without playing the reveal?

    RS: Yeah, it was a lot of mental gymnastics. In every project, you have all the different techniques and classes and craft things that I’ve learned and it’s a hodgepodge and you’re taking out the pieces that are appropriate. It’s just how I work for that film. Now, a lot of them stay the same, but some change. In this film, it was really necessary for me to wrap my head around, usually with Colin, Jim and sometimes Caitlin, what is actually the truth if I, Rhea, watched this film and decided to write it again, knowing what I know, what is the actual truth of the scene where I am giving my daughter advice is a good example.

    Now some people might say, “Forget it, I’m just going to play the scene.” But because I already knew, it was important for me to understand where it fits logically as best I could and then put that aside and talk about what is the scene if it was just simply me giving my advice to my daughter. Because ultimately my job is to be truthful in the scene. It’s not my job to tell the whole story. Jim and I approached our scenes the same. Because as we find out, Erin is ultimately sort of the narrator by necessity of what you’re watching, even when you don’t realize it.

    Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West's 'Linoleum.'
    Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West’s ‘Linoleum.’

    Related Article: Vince Gilligan Plans New Show After ‘Better Call Saul’

    MF: Erin says that she wanted to do “something fantastic” with her life. Can you talk about what she means by that, and could you relate to that idea personally yourself?

    RS: This is one of many of the themes and big questions that Colin was asking, which is why I think having this little bit of sci-fi magical realism is a brilliant way to go about it. That line, “I wanted to do something fantastic” is repeated by multiple characters, used in different ways, said in inspirational ways and also said in mocking ways, that it’s somehow petty and childish. I think for Erin, she had big dreams too and, through no fault of her own, got assigned the pragmatic bill-paying role. She’s the only one being responsible and she didn’t ask for this job, and it’s a really heavy sack to carry around. She’s asking to not be alone in that. “Can we share this burden so that we can both be dreamers?”

    But Erin has lost touch with her spark and being fascinated by science and space has diminished at the same time that the spark has diminished in their marriage. I think a lot of people that I’ve spoken to say that part resonates with them, when you’re just too exhausted to be the best you in a relationship and in life. But I think ultimately, there’s this love story at the core of the whole thing where, from my point of view, ultimately Erin is trying to let her husband know that loving someone unconditionally and being in a partnership is doing something fantastic. They have done something fantastic, and that sort of frees her to start being a dreamer again, and to let it go, which dovetails into the second part of your question.

    You can obsessively focus on, “Oh, I’ll finally believe in myself and think that I have done something fantastic when it’s this thing and when it’s that thing.” You keep moving that goalpost for yourself. When really, getting to do what you love for a living at all is such a small percentage of the population period. What a gift to be afforded that luxury, because not everyone gets to do something they love. That is fantastic. Now at this stage in my life, having a fiancé and two boys that are my stepsons, it’s like you really do start to take stock. I think Erin, when you first see her, if she looks around her, there’s a whole lot that’s fantastic.

    Jim Gaffigan as Cameron Edwin and Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West's 'Linoleum.'
    (L to R) Jim Gaffigan as Cameron Edwin and Rhea Seehorn as Erin Edwin in Colin West’s ‘Linoleum.’

    MF: Can you talk about Erin and Cameron’s marriage, and working on that relationship with Jim Gaffigan?

    RS: I loved working with Jim. He’s so great. I’m so glad that so many people will see the breadth of his work because I knew him as a stand-up, although he told me that he started in dramatic roles. That’s what he thought was going to be in his career before he ever was a stand-up. He’s such a gifted comedian. But you know what? So is Bob Odenkirk. So is Michael McKean. I think comedians are broken people and that’s why they can do drama so well. I was known as a sitcom actress before I got ‘Better Call Saul.’ It’s a funny thing, but Jim is incredibly deft at really nuanced attacks on a scene. We had such a good time finding that because the relationship had to be real.

    It doesn’t matter if we’re standing in the middle of a tornado or whatever, we knew these are two people that love each other. Depending on which scene you’re looking at, one of them has fallen in the ditch and the other one is trying to pull them up. No matter how lost or how bad the miscommunication is, they need to want something from each other at all times in any room that they’re in together. Even when you’re seeing them not speaking, like in that wonderful bedroom scene, it doesn’t mean they don’t want something. Erin I think is just desperately saying, “Can you please come back to me because I am doing this alone and I can’t do it anymore.” That has a double meaning by the time you get to the end, realizing what she’s been through and why she does feel alone.

    MF: Finally, now that ‘Better Call Saul’ is over, what was that experience like for you as an actress to be a part of?

    RS: It’s not possible to overstate what a gift that show was to me, the family of people that are very close friends of mine, the gift of that writing and direction, and the gift of having people like Peter Gould, Tom Schnauz, Michelle MacLaren, my entire cast, and Vince Gilligan.

    The experience was doing something in your career where you’re like, “Wow, am I capable of that? Because that looks really hard, but I want to be that good.” Then you have all of the people that you thought were the best at their jobs saying, “No, you can do it. You are capable of this and you’re going to soar.” That is what they gave me every day on the set. You go home a better actor every single day and it’s joyful.

    Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut and Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman / Gene Takavic in AMC's 'Better Call Saul.'
    (L to R) Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut and Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill / Saul Goodman / Gene Takavic in AMC’s ‘Better Call Saul.’

    Other Movies Similar to ‘Linoleum:’

    Buy Tickets: ‘Linoleum’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Rhea Seehorn Movies on Amazon

    ‘Linoleum’ is produced by Brain Scratch Productions, Storm City Films, and Sub_Sequential Pictures, and is scheduled for release on February 24th.

  • Eight Great Summer Vacation Movies

    Eight Great Summer Vacation Movies

    Meatballs

    16072
    Sometimes overlooked in favor of other “slobs vs. snobs” comedy classics from the same era, like Animal House and Caddyshack, this was Bill Murray’s first starring role, and the feature directorial debut for Ivan Reitman. Murray stars as Tripper, head counselor at Camp North Star, a bargain-basement summer camp in Ontario. Murray takes the lonely Rudy (Chris Makepeace) under his wing while still overseeing a group of oddball counselors-in-training as they have their own romances, pull pranks on the camp’s director, and take on wealthy Camp Mohawk in a yearly tournament. It’s ultimately a sweet story, without ever getting quite as crass as some of the era’s other films starring Saturday Night Live alumni. ‘Meatballs’ would turn out to be hugely successful, spawning three mostly unrelated sequels and countless knockoffs.


    Wet Hot American Summer

    9824
    If ‘Meatballs’ saw plenty of lesser imitations, ‘The State’ alumni David Wain and Michael Showalter stepped up with a satirical take on summer camp movies. Although it bombed at the box office, it’s since become a cult classic, spawning two series on Netflix (one prequel and one sequel). There’s an amazing cast here, including Bradley Cooper, Paul Rudd, Elizabeth Banks, Amy Poehler, Judah Friedlander, Janeane Garofalo, Christopher Meloni, and David Hyde Pierce, plus other alumni from ‘The State,’ such as Ken Marino, Michael Ian Black, and Joe Lo Truglio. There’s a plot here about the camp putting on a talent show, counselors in love, and a falling piece of Skylab that threatens everyone’s lives, but it’s really just an excuse to see some stars and future stars show off some great comic chops.


    Dirty Dancing

    4518
    For those that haven’t gotten around to seeing this classic, it’s easy to write off ‘Dirty Dancing’ as sappy romance. But that would be wrong. It’s an emotionally satisfying coming-of-age story about Frances “Baby” Houseman (Jennifer Grey) and her steamy summer romance with dancer Johnny (Patrick Swayze). The dancing is terrific, Grey and Swayze have terrific chemistry. Written by Eleanor Bergstein and based on her own summer trips to the Catskills, Baby’s adventure starts because she and her family are taking a summer vacation at Kellerman’s a tony resort. Baby sees hints of classism between some of the staff, and she finds herself drawn more to the working class staffers instead of the Ivy League-bound waiters. The film subversively gives Baby agency, letting her pick her own friends and make her own choices in her sex life; she has a summer fling with a sexy dancer and isn’t punished by fate for it. That was fairly groundbreaking in 1987, and is (sadly) might still be considered unusual in some corners even now.


    National Lampoon’s Vacation

    887
    This is another film that started a franchise, but the original version is still the best. Based on screenwriter John Hughes’ own National Lampoon story about a disastrous road trip, the movie focuses on the Griswold’s drive from Chicago to California for a visit to a thinly-veiled version of Disneyland called “Wally World.” Chevy Chase puts in a legendary turn as Clark, the increasingly obsessive patriarch of the Griswold clan. Clark is going to have a great road trip with his family whether they like it or not, and if he becomes Ahab in a station wagon, then so be it. Beverly D’Angelo hits just the right notes as Clark’s wife Ellen, as does Anthony Michael Hall and Dana Barron as their children Rusty and Audrey. Chase and D’Angelo would return for sequels, and it became a running joke that Rusty and Audrey would be recast in every subsequent film. This first adventure sees car trouble in the desert, an unwanted passenger, a temptress in a Ferrari, and a visit with Cousin Eddy (a reminder of when Randy Quaid was funny). It’s filled with laughs, but it will definitely make you think twice about future family road trips.


    Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants

    19138
    Based on the best-selling YA novel by Ann Brashares, this is the story of four teen girls, best friends since childhood, who are about to spend their first summer apart. But before three of them leave town, the quartet go shopping and find a pair of jeans that magically fit each one of them. The four decide that they’ll share the pants for the summer, and while each of them have these mysterious jeans in their possession, their individual summers are upended. Blake Lively, America Ferrara, Alexis Bledel, and Amber Tamblyn play Bridget, Carmen, Lena, and Tibby (respectively). The movie captures the charm of the novel, in no small part because of the charisma and chemistry of the stars, and it’s ultimately a heartwarming tale about female friendships and the bonds young women make that can last a lifetime.


    Girls Trip

    20087028
    The annual Essence Music Fest takes place in New Orleans every 4th of July, and that’s the backdrop for Ryan Pierce’s (Regina Hall) attempt to reunite with three of her friends from college. Pierce is a bestselling author and lifestyle guru, poised to be “the next Oprah.” She’s scheduled to speak at the festival, so she invites her college friends to join her, in the hopes of rekindling their friendships. These other three have lives of their own now; Sasha (Queen Latifah) is a celebrity gossip blogger, Lisa (Jada Pinkett Smith) is a working single mother, and Dina (Tiffany Haddish) is still party-girl Dina, all these years later. These four actors are great together, but Tiffany Haddish is a revelation here, stealing the movie and never giving it back. The film isn’t afraid to remind us that women can and do party hard, but it doesn’t lose sight of these friends repairing burned bridges and reaffirming their love for each other.


    Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar

    Uya6FAeGPtVqkWKvSILvg4
    One of the casualties of quarantine is that this film didn’t get a proper theatrical release. That’s a shame, because as funny as this movie is, it would have been even more side-splitting with a big audience. Make no mistake, this movie is straight up bananas from beginning to end. Kristen Wiig and Annie Mumolo wrote the script and star as Star and Barb, two middle-aged best friends that talk a bit too much, they can be both clueless and timid, but once they hit Vista Del Mar, the movie all but explodes into mayhem. To describe too much would be to take away some of the stunningly insane jokes packed wall-to-wall across the entire film. But suffice to say you may never look at Jamie Dornan the same way again.


    The Endless Summer

    30550
    This is one of the first and probably still the best surf movie ever made. Director Bruce Brown follows two surfers, Robert August and Mike Hynson, as they leave Southern California and travel to surf spots around the world, including South Africa, Ghana, Nigeria, Tahiti, Senegal, New Zealand, Hawaii, and Australia. Brown’s breezy narration is a far cry from the stiffer voices heard in most documentaries at the time, and it lends an inviting tone to the gorgeous cinematography of the both surf action and the local landscapes. This documentary might help non-surfers understand the appeal of surfing more than any other film ever made, and the idea of an “endless summer” means its welcome on any day of the calendar year.