Tag: michael-k-williams

  • John Boyega and Nicole Beharie Talk ‘Breaking’

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    Opening in theaters on August 26th is the new drama ‘Breaking,’ which was written and directed by Abi Damaris Corbin.

    Based on a true story, the movie centers on Lance Corporal Brian Brown-Easley (John Boyega), a former Marine Corps veteran in financial trouble.
    After not receiving several of his benefit checks from the VA, and with no one listening to his complaints, Brian takes two hostages (Nicole Beharie and Selenis Leyva) at a local bank, hoping to gain attention from the media.

    With a police Major (Jeffrey Donovan) itching to take him out, Brian deals with a sympathetic police negotiator (Michael K. Williams), and a local reporter (Connie Britton) willing to listen to his story.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with John Boyega and Nicole Beharie about their work on ‘Breaking,’ the true story it is based on, their characters, the mood on set, and working with writer/director Abi Damaris Corbin.

    John Boyega in 'Breaking.'
    John Boyega in ‘Breaking.’ Courtesy of Bleecker Street.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Boyega, Beharie, and writer/director Abi Damaris Corbin.

    Moviefone: To begin with, John, can you talk about your first reaction to hearing Brian’s story, reading the screenplay, and your approach to playing this character?

    John Boyega: My first reaction, I was quite surprised. I hadn’t heard of the story. It was shocking that this happened in Atlanta, in a major city, and at the same time that I hadn’t heard about it. But then going into the screenplay, going into script, I liked how detailed it was. I liked that this wasn’t just a typical thriller. I like that this was actually a character study.

    Also, at the same time, a moment to go back into the life of a vet, a perspective that personally, from my background, I didn’t necessarily have family members that have gone and done that. So, for me, it was an education and then excitement, because we have a lot of dramatic moments.

    I heard that Michael Kenneth Williams might be a part of it, and Nicole and Selenis. The combination of all those things was like, “Okay, cool. This is a project I would love to do if I get the opportunity.”

    MF: Nicole, can you talk about how Estel handles the situation she finds herself in and the sympathy that she ends up having for Brian?

    Nicole Beharie: It’s interesting. This is based on a true story and I did get to read what the protocol for a bank manager is. Initially, look, Nicole is not staying in the bank, okay? When that’s happening, I’m not staying in the bank, I’m running.

    But I felt like this woman’s heroism came from her training, and also this man, seeing something that she identified from other people that she knew, and wanting to protect him as best she could. I think that was a big part of it for me.

    Selenis Leyva, Nicole Beharie, and John Boyega in 'Breaking.'
    (L to R) Selenis Leyva, Nicole Beharie, and John Boyega in ‘Breaking.’ Courtesy of Bleecker Street.

    MF: Nicole, your scenes are incredibly intense, can you talk about how you prepared emotionally day-to-day to be a hostage?

    NB: Do you know what’s funny is my scenes are only intense because John came in with all the intensity. He provided the fire for us to be like, “We have to take this fire out.” So, I have to give that to my fellow cast in creating this world, keeping it alive so that we can be reacting and working off of the nuances, the little changes.

    I think that’s really what it’s about and so exciting when it works that way, and that’s exactly what happened. So, for me, I didn’t have to do a whole lot of work because everyone brought it. We were just there, keeping it alive.

    MF: Can you both talk about what the movie says about the way we treat our veterans in this country?

    JB: For me, it’s the loneliness that was so interesting. We have a lot of these people in our society who walk amongst us, but don’t have their perspective and their point of view heard. I think for me that can be so frustrating to go to several different avenues, the official avenues that comes with the veteran’s affairs, but also going to try and talk to family. Trying to get some form of empathy can be quite hard because a lot of people just don’t have that perspective.

    But then you do the full circle, when you think about it, you’re like, “Oh, well that’s the illusion.” Right? As civilians who are protected, we’re the babies in the bubble that the governments say, “Don’t tell them anything, they might freak out.” So, to have this perspective, especially when vets come back home and they’re trying to integrate back into society, to see their complications and their struggles is something that we can all learn from, for real.

    NB: Another reason I was drawn to this movie was because I have quite a few family members who’ve served in the military in different aspects. I, in particular, had one uncle who came back different and this speaks to everything in that. I feel like personally, as a civilian, as John said, I wasn’t able to be there in the way that Estel is. So, it’s like I vicariously get to have this other experience. I just wanted to add that, because it’s a big part of the pull for me.

    Nicole Beharie in 'Breaking.'
    Nicole Beharie in ‘Breaking.’ Courtesy of Bleecker Street.

    Finally, Nicole, what was your experience like working with writer and director Abi Damaris Corbin?

    NB: Abi was amazing. She also has a personal connection, having veterans in her family and she really cares about all the details in this story. I think also what’s really interesting is its Brian’s story, but there are all these different other characters that pop in here and there and they still feel very fleshed out.

    It feels like that dance that they have between corporate and what they’re told to do with bureaucracy, whether it’s at the VA, the detective or the news anchor, they all are dancing this line between institution and humanity, and what they want to do. I just think it’s really powerful the way that she executed that.

    John Boyega in 'Breaking.'
    John Boyega in ‘Breaking.’ Courtesy of Bleecker Street.
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  • What to Watch this Week: ‘Nomadland’, ‘Body Brokers’, ‘Supernova’, and more…

    What to Watch this Week: ‘Nomadland’, ‘Body Brokers’, ‘Supernova’, and more…

    If you’re curious as to what new movie this week might be best for you, Moviefone is here to help you find it and watch it. This week’s selection of movies features a lot of well-earned adult angst, stunning landscapes, wildlife (emphasis on wild), and rockin’ out. Here are the movies we’re suggesting this week:


    Nomadland (In Theaters & Hulu)

    Frances McDormand in 'Nomadland'
    Frances McDormand in ‘Nomadland’

    Frances McDormand plays Fern, a woman disenfranchised by the closing of a sheetrock plant in Nevada, and a wife devastated by the death of her husband. She decides to take to the open road as she ponders life and does whatever she pleases after a life that didn’t allow her that path. Along the way, director Chloe Zhao spotlights the stories of real life nomads that Fern meets, driving home the point that the America that people were promised sometimes fails to materialize. Set against the backdrop of incredible Western skies, the story allows for McDormand to make the intangible materialize. She has the power to turn lighting a sparkler into a clip they’ll use for her inevitable Oscar nomination.

    Watch It If: You’ve ever thought about how freeing it would be to sell your belongings, get in your car, and just drive. For any McDormand stans, and viewers that crave the scenery of Easy Rider with the relatability and quietness of Boyhood, with a dash of Tree of Life poetry.
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    Flora & Ulysses (Disney+)

    Matilda Lawler in 'Flora & Ulysses'
    Matilda Lawler in ‘Flora & Ulysses’

    Flora (Matilda Lawler) is really going through it. Her parents have separated, and her life as a self-proclaimed cynic isn’t helping her see the bright side of things. She’s also obsessed with superheroes but lamenting how she doesn’t have any of her own in real life. Soon, she rescues a squirrel that she names Ulysses, and life starts to get interesting, including when her family realizes Ulysses can type and is quite the poet. Her life (and feelings) will surely never be the same after this.

    Watch It If: You need a follow-up for this week’s Disney+ episode of Wandavision that will leave everyone in your family feeling warm and fuzzy…and much kinder towards rodents.
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    Supernova (PVOD)

    Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth in 'Supernova'
    Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth in ‘Supernova’

    More adults in a camper here, but this time in England, with Stanley Tucci as a man suffering from early-onset dementia, and Colin Firth as his husband struggling to care for him. They are on a farewell tour of sorts, before Tucci no longer remembers the friends they’re going to see. Firth has stepped back from his career as a pianist and silently wrestles with worry. Longtime friends in real life, the two paint an unforgettable, emotional picture of a couple, for better or for worse.

    Watch It If: You would like to know what’s it’s really like to hang out with The Tooch and Firthy. The intimacy in this film is off the charts.
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    I Care a Lot (Netflix)

    Rosamund Pike in 'I Care a Lot'
    Rosamund Pike in ‘I Care a Lot’

    Marla Grayson, a woman whose smile doesn’t ever reach her eyes, has a good thing going. She is played by an unsettling Rosamund Pike, and in the film is making a living stealing from the elderly. Her scheme involves hoodwinking judges into giving her legal guardianship over those who need her the most–or need someone anyway, hopefully one more honest. Unfortunately for Marla, her latest victim happens to have ties to the powerful people, and they have strong opinions about Marla’s methods.

    Watch It If: You get especially hot under the collar seeing predators targeting the more vulnerable members of our society, and then live for them getting their comeuppance. Also if you need a dose of Chris Messina, he’s here dropping truth bombs.
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    Body Brokers (In Theaters & VOD)

    Michael K. Williams and Jack Kilmer in 'Body Brokers'
    Michael K. Williams and Jack Kilmer in ‘Body Brokers’

    Utah (Jack Kilmer) and Opal (Alice Englert) are two kids in Ohio who abuse drugs and commit crimes. It doesn’t look like much more is on the horizon for them, until Wood (Michael K. Williams) shows up promising them a better life in a California live-in rehab center. Utah is intrigued by the idea to heal his body and finally get to see the ocean. Soon, his challenges with sobriety are compounded by learning that drug rehabilitation is big business, and there are plenty of scavengers looking to exploit it at the cost of others.

    Watch It If: You want to see another story about something helpful being destroyed by capitalism in a big grift that only hurts the little guy, a’la The Big Short. No bubble bath explainer scenes in this film, though.
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    Rock Camp (PVOD)

    Dave Mustaine (far right) in 'Rock Camp'
    Dave Mustaine (far right) in ‘Rock Camp’

    It turns out that anybody can share a stage with rock royalty like Gene Simmons, Alice Cooper, Roger Daltrey, and Steven Tyler, as long as they enroll in Rock and Roll Fantasy Camp. This documentary shows how 20 years ago, tour producer David Fischof wanted to give people the chance to live and jam like a rock star. With the help of music legends, he’s brought the dream to life, with rehearsals and performances, and now this documentary that’s going to make it impossible to get a spot–darnit, how is the line ALREADY busy?!

    Watch It If: Seeing rock legends bonding over their shared love of music with guys wearing Dockers makes you a little misty. Which it really should.
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  • Alec Baldwin on Fulfilling His Dream of Working with Emilio Estevez in ‘The Public’

    Alec Baldwin on Fulfilling His Dream of Working with Emilio Estevez in ‘The Public’

    Universal

    Alec Baldwin is one of those actors so legendary and iconic, everything he does seems like an event, even if it’s a small character drama like “The Public.” Written, directed and produced by Emilio Estevez, it’s the kind of movie they don’t seem to make anymore, full of wonderful, graceful character beats and genuine surprises, telling the story of a group of homeless people who decide to “occupy” a public library. (The cast also includes Taylor Schilling, Michael K. Williams, Christian Slater and Jena Malone.) In other words, it’s worth seeking out, even if you have to look extra hard for it.

    So you can imagine how thrilled we were to chat with Baldwin, about how he became involved in the project, how he goes about choosing his roles, and whether or not he misses the allure of big budget franchise filmmaking. He was wonderful, open and honest, just like “The Public” itself.

    Moviefone: How did you initially become involved with this project?

    Alec Baldwin: I think there’s a part of me that I’ve always been keen on the idea of working with Emilio. He’s on that short list of people who are making films that are smart and have strong subject matter and so forth. A lot of the people who were there today, the cast, are people who are making a living of it, doing jobs that are entertainment and they might have a lot of smart content. But at the same time they don’t necessarily get to make a movie like this. When someone like Emilio calls you, if you feel that you can bring something to the role and you’re available, in all likelihood you go. It’s not about getting paid. It’s not about money, maybe it’s about schedule. But I’ve always been very keen on the idea of working with Emilio.

    You’ve worked with several directors who are also actors and is that appealing to you as an actor?

    I think that actors historically have made very, very good directors. Whether it’s Warren Beatty or Redford or Clint Eastwood of people like that from a previous generation. And I think that actors often make excellent directors. But it doesn’t really matter. Woody Allen as a good example because it doesn’t really matter how good a director they are with actors if the script isn’t good. Some of those people have either written or have supervised some wonderful material. With Emilio, that’s key, the writing is key. He’s such a great writer. He’s a, very good director, he’s a wonderful actor. But what he really is, is a great writer. To balance this story and make it funny when you need to be funny and they can visually arresting. He knows pop things visually. And then to balance the supporting roles, to take these roles and make them interesting enough to attract a cast like this I think is a really great ability that he has.

    Universal

    This story has a social dimension to it, in terms of its themes and subject matter. Um, is that something that you are looking for when choosing projects?

    If it works as well as this does and it involve the people like this, then yes. I mean, I have people come to me periodically to either appear in a film or TV project or to produce documentary programming where it’s very straightforward and very earnest. One of the most complicated things in this business is to deal with people who are very, very passionate about their project. And you understand that passion. You say to yourself, I know what that’s like. I know this guy sitting there saying, ‘I think we need to have a new generation of dog collars.’ And they come to you with some out of left field idea that they’re burning about. You sit there and go, “Well I don’t know how much I can really help you with your documentary about dog collars, but I support you nonetheless.”

    You’ve seen that people come to you with great ideas and completely nutty ideas and yet they are passionate about that idea. And I, I always say, “God, I hope you get to make your film. I’ll be getting made an inch. I don’t know if I can help you.” The difficult thing is what Emilio pulled off because the final straw is a producer. He’s a writer, he’s a director, he’s an actor, he’s a producer that raise the money that got this made, that made deals and enticed people to come and shoot this film and got this will be sold and is getting it distributed. That’s such a Herculean task in the modern world with so much product out there, there’s so many people competing for the public’s attention.

    And I want to do movies I think work and if, if they’re supposed to be funny, I want them to be funny and if they’re supposed to be dramatic and weird and interesting than I want that to be taken care of. And if I want to do something that’s really a social drama, I think you couldn’t possibly do it with somebody better than Emilio.

    Well I was going to ask, you know, you said that you know that entertainment is obviously very important, but how important is it to you to keep doing movies of this scale?

    Well, I think that the movies that I do now really it’s all about schedule because I have so many little children. I got remarried and my wife and I have four kids, five and under, you know. And even when I say that out loud, I gasp myself, that we have so many kids. But they are really what calls the tune. So the things I’ve done like this Delorean project I have coming out that’s going to be a Tribeca I did Ed Norton‘s movie. I worked with Edward on “Motherless Brooklyn.” He had got to adapt this book that everybody was a wild about. Whenever I get a chance to work with the best people, that’s when you get excited. You know, you’ll say, “Well, who’s in the movie?” And they’ll say, “DeNiro!” And you go, “Oh my God,” and they’re going, “No, it’s Larry DeNiro.” But when you get to work with the best people, that’s when you really, you sense you have an opportunity to, you know, you really might be onto something.

    Paramount

    Well, I’m, I’m curious to see your relationship with these kinds of franchise movies. Earlier in your career you were a Jack Ryan, which I’m assuming you thought  were going to do sort of more of those. And now you’re in “Mission: Impossible.”

    But I’m dead!

    There are reports you could come back!

    [laughs] That’s funny. Again, I’ve made movies where the budget of the film was $1 million. And then you make a movie like “Mission: Impossible,” where $1 million is the budget for Diet Coke alone. And I mean, it’s like you make movies, it’s just so insane the amount of money, but that amount of money is required because filmmaking can be as much as you plan, because things can happen that are unexpected. And that goes beyond Cruise breaking his leg in the middle of the shooting schedule. They test things and they test things and they do things in terms of its cinematic effect and not everything works. These highly complicated films like “Mission,” they just have so many people on the set and when you’re there shooting. It’s Hollywood big budget studio film making like pretty much no one’s doing anymore unless it’s these franchises that have these huge audiences in this huge reach.

    I love doing films like that. I love Chris. I love Tom. There’s no one else I’d rather shoot with regardless of the content. They’re really great people to work for. The sad thing for me is there’s people I’ve wanted to work with that I might not get to work with. There might not be enough time in my life to work with. And a lot of the people I want to work with again. I see people all the time. I was talking to Michael K. Williams here and I was saying how much I loved ”The Night Of.” And I mean, I’m the first person when I see a show like that I like, I’m like, “You call them the phone. You tell them if they’re going to do ‘Night Of’ part 2, please call me, I’ll play a cop. Man, I don’t care.” You know?

    Are there any of these characters that you would want to revisit? At one point Jack Ryan was president.

    That is highly unlikely. Everything happens for a reason. I sometimes think of my career had gone in a direction where I had this bulletproof career where you literally live in the penthouse, like Hanks and Cruise and all these people who have these golden opportunities in their careers and they make wonderful films. I often think to myself, if I had that kind of career, what would my life be like? And I did not have that kind of career. I had a window where things were pretty good. And then like everybody else, you fall from the movie tree and they make you into the apple sauce of the TV business. You know what I mean? But I wound up doing “30 Rock,” which was one of the greatest experiences I’ve ever had. These people taught me what’s funny was. I never thought of myself as being that funny. I learned from Tina and Robert and on and on, even into my personal life and if I, if I hadn’t met my wife and had my kids, who cares how rich and famous you are if you’re miserable. And my life is exactly … I wouldn’t change a thing. I really wouldn’t change a thing because I’m happier now than I’ve ever been in my life.

    “The Public” opens in theaters tomorrow!

  • Chris Evans Mossad Thriller Picked Up By Netflix

    Chris Evans Mossad Thriller Picked Up By Netflix

    RADiUS-TWC

    Sad because Chris Evans was replaced by Sebastian Stan in a Netflix movie?

    Don’t worry, the “Captain America” star is getting his own movie on Netflix, “The Red Sea Diving Resort.”

    Per THR, it’s about a true story about a group of Mossad agents and  Ethiopians who used a deserted holiday retreat in Sudan as a front to smuggle thousands of refugees to Israel in the early ’80s.

    Evans will star as Ari Kidron, the Mossad agent who leads the mission together with courageous local Kabede Bimro, played by Michael Kenneth Williams.

    The film from “Killing Floor” director Gideon Raff costars Haley Bennett, Alessandro Nivola, Michiel Huisman, Greg Kinnear and Sir Ben Kingsley.

    Look for it in late 2019.

    [Via THR]

     

  • Michael K. Williams Cut from Han Solo ‘Star Wars’ Movie Amid Reshoots

    SAG-AFTRA Foundation's Conversations With Michael K. WilliamsThe original directors aren’t the only ones who have been cut from the upcoming Han Solo-centric “Star Wars” spinoff flick, with actor Michael K. Williams revealing that he has also had to leave the project thanks to scheduling conflicts with the film’s reshoots.

    In an interview with Deadline, Williams said that his busy slate of projects — including currently shooting spy drama “The Red Sea Diving Resort” in South Africa — made continuing with “Solo” impossible, since replacement director Ron Howard would have needed him back in London for additional filming while he was committed to other work. The actor told Deadline he wouldn’t have been available again until November, when he wraps his Sundance Channel drama “Hap and Leonard,” but that would have been too late to meet the Han Solo movie’s projected May 2018 premiere.

    “They wanted me now; I couldn’t go. So they had to clip-clip-clip,” Williams explained to the trade.

    While reshoots are common on big budget flicks, there was some extensive work that needed to be done on the spinoff, since Howard took the reins from departed directing team Chris Miller and Phil Lord months into production, after major reported creative differences between the helmers and Lucasfilm. That reworking included Williams’s character, which the actor told Deadline was “half-human, half-animal” and “kickass,” though he declined to provide any other details.

    It’s unclear at this point if the character will be recast with a different actor, or scrapped entirely. Either way, Williams is disappointed, but understanding, and said he’d be open to working on another “Star Wars” feature in the future, should Lucasfilm come calling again.

    “I felt great about what I created with the directors that I worked with,” the actor told the trade. “It is what it is.”

    The still-untitled Han Solo flick is currently slated for release on May 25, 2018.

    [via: Deadline]

  • ‘Wire’ Alum Michael K. Williams Confirmed for Han Solo ‘Star Wars’ Movie

    2017 Winter TCA - PortraitsCome at the king, you best not miss! And the Han Solo “Star Wars” prequel movie definitely did not miss by casting “The Wire” alum Michael K. Williams.

    Disney has confirmed Variety’s report that Williams is joining the highly-anticipated film in a “key role.”

    Williams already missed the first cast photo from the set, which featured Alden Ehrenreich as Han Solo, Woody Harrelson as Han’s mentor, Joonas Suotamo as Chewbacca, Donald Glover as Lando Calrissian, Emilia Clarke, and Phoebe Waller-Bridge.

    No other details about his character were revealed, but we can only hope Williams plays a ruthless rival smuggler with a strict code of honor.

    Williams recently appeared in the LGBT rights miniseries “When We Rise” and the acclaimed HBO crime/mystery drama “The Night Of” (opposite “Rogue One” star Riz Ahmed).

    The untitled Han Solo prequel is set to open in theaters May 25, 2018.

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  • Andy Garcia, Michael K. Williams Join ‘Ghostbusters’

    Sophia Loren's 80th Birthday Celebration At The Museo Soumaya In Mexico City, MexicoThe “Ghostbusters” cast is expanding, with several new additions to the already-impressive ensemble recently confirmed.

    The Wire” alum Williams is playing a character named Hawkins.

    Walsh (“Veep”) will play a character named Rourke. And according to TheWrap, local New York City news anchor Pat Kiernan will put those skills to use to play a TV news reporter in the flick.

    That foursome joins previously-announced “Ghostbusters” leads Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Leslie Jones, and Kate McKinnon, who play the titular heroines in the reboot of the 1984 comedy classic. Chris Hemsworth is starring as the foursome’s receptionist for their fledgling ghost-fighting business.

    Filming is already underway in Boston (which is standing in for NYC in the flick), and director Paul Feig has already revealed a few looks at the costumes and gadgets that the cast will use. Based on everything Feig has said so far about the film, we’re expecting some scary fun; with the addition of Garcia and Williams, especially, we’re looking forward to some intense dramatic moments, too.

    “Ghostbusters” is due in theaters on July 22, 2016.

    [via: TheWrap]

    Photo credit: Jesse Grant via Getty Images

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  • Get Ready for Queen Latifah in HBO’s ‘Bessie’ (VIDEO)

    Queen Latifah in BessieAre you ready to see Queen Latifah as the Empress of the Blues? HBO released a tiny teaser for “Bessie,” and it looks excellent. Latifah stars as legendary blues singer Bessie Smith in this TV movie from “Pariah” director Dee Rees, about Smith’s beginnings in vaudeville, her extraordinary rise to fame in the Jazz Age, and her increasingly troubled personal life.

    “Bessie” has an incredible cast and crew behind it, Michael K. Williams as Bessie’s husband Jack, and Mo’Nique as blues legend Ma Rainey. Oliver Platt, Charles S. Dutton, Bryan Greenberg, Mike Epps, Tika Sumpter, and Khandi Alexander also appear in the film.

    “Bessie” will premiere on HBO on Saturday, May 16 at 8 p.m. EST.

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